Medicare Program; Durable Medical Equipment, Prosthetics, Orthotics, and Supplies (DMEPOS) Policy Issues, and Level II of the Healthcare Common Procedure Coding System (HCPCS); DME Interim Pricing in the CARES Act; Durable Medical Equipment Fee Schedule Adjustments To Resume the Transitional 50/50 Blended Rates To Provide Relief in Rural Areas and Non-Contiguous Areas, 73860-73911 [2021-27763]
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DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
I. Executive Summary
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid
Services
This final rule makes changes related
to: The Durable Medical Equipment,
Prosthetics, Orthotics, and Supplies
(DMEPOS) fee schedule amounts to
ensure access to items and services in
rural areas; procedures for making
benefit category and payment
determinations for new items and
services that are DME, prosthetic
devices, orthotics and prosthetics,
therapeutic shoes and inserts, surgical
dressings, or splints, casts, and other
devices used for reductions of fractures
and dislocations to prevent delays in
coverage of new items and services; and
classification of CGMs under the Part B
benefit for DME to establish the benefit
category for these items. Finally, we are
finalizing provisions included in two
interim final rules with comment period
(IFC) that CMS issued on May 11, 2018,
and May 8, 2020.
A. Purpose
42 CFR Part 414
[CMS–1738–F, CMS–1687–F, and CMS–
5531–F]
RINs 0938–AU17, 0938–AT21, and 0938–
AU32
Medicare Program; Durable Medical
Equipment, Prosthetics, Orthotics, and
Supplies (DMEPOS) Policy Issues, and
Level II of the Healthcare Common
Procedure Coding System (HCPCS);
DME Interim Pricing in the CARES Act;
Durable Medical Equipment Fee
Schedule Adjustments To Resume the
Transitional 50/50 Blended Rates To
Provide Relief in Rural Areas and NonContiguous Areas
Centers for Medicare &
Medicaid Services (CMS), Health and
Human Services (HHS).
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
This final rule establishes
methodologies for adjusting the
Medicare durable medical equipment,
prosthetics, orthotics, and supplies
(DMEPOS) fee schedule amounts using
information from the Medicare
DMEPOS competitive bidding program
(CBP) for items furnished on or after the
effective date specified in the DATES
section of this final rule, or the date
immediately following the duration of
the emergency period described in the
Social Security Act (the Act), whichever
is later. This final rule also establishes
procedures for making benefit category
and payment determinations for new
items and services that are durable
medical equipment (DME), prosthetic
devices, orthotics and prosthetics,
therapeutic shoes and inserts, surgical
dressings, or splints, casts, and other
devices used for reductions of fractures
and dislocations under Medicare Part B.
In addition, this rule classifies
continuous glucose monitors (CGMs) as
DME under Medicare Part B. Lastly, this
final rule finalizes certain DME fee
schedule-related provisions that were
included in two interim final rules with
comment period (IFC) that CMS issued
on May 11, 2018, and May 8, 2020.
DATES: These regulations are effective
on February 28, 2022.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Alexander Ullman, 410–786–9671 or
DMEPOS@cms.hhs.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
SUMMARY:
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1. Durable Medical Equipment,
Prosthetics, Orthotics, and Supplies
(DMEPOS) Fee Schedule Adjustments
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The purpose of this provision is to
establish the methodologies for
adjusting the fee schedule payment
amounts for DMEPOS items and
services furnished in non-competitive
bidding areas (non-CBAs) on or after the
effective date specified in the DATES
section of this final rule, or the date
immediately following the duration of
the emergency period described in
section 1135(g)(1)(B) of the Act (42
U.S.C. 1320b–5(g)(1)(B)), whichever is
later. The emergency period we are
referring to is the Public Health
Emergency (PHE) for coronavirus
disease 2019 (COVID–19). We refer
readers to section III.A.6. of this rule for
details regarding the DMEPOS fee
schedule changes CMS has already
made as a result of the PHE for COVID–
19.
2. DMEPOS Fee Schedule Adjustments
for Items and Services Furnished in
Rural Areas From June 2018 Through
December 2018 and Exclusion of
Infusion Drugs From the DMEPOS CBP
The purpose of this section is to
finalize and address comments received
on the May 11, 2018 IFC (83 FR 21912)
titled ‘‘Medicare Program; Durable
Medical Equipment Fee Schedule
Adjustments to Resume the Transitional
50/50 Blended Rates to Provide Relief in
Rural Areas and Non-Contiguous Areas’’
(hereinafter referred to as the ‘‘May 2018
IFC’’).
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3. Benefit Category and Payment
Determinations for DME, Prosthetic
Devices, Orthotics and Prosthetics,
Therapeutic Shoes and Inserts, Surgical
Dressings, or Splints, Casts, and Other
Devices Used for Reductions of
Fractures and Dislocations
The purpose of this section of the
final rule is to establish procedures for
making benefit category and payment
determinations for new items and
services that are DME, prosthetic
devices, orthotics and prosthetics,
therapeutic shoes and inserts, surgical
dressings, or splints, casts, and other
devices used for reductions of fractures
and dislocations that permit public
consultation through public meetings.
Section 531(b) of the Medicare,
Medicaid, and SCHIP Benefits
Improvement and Protection Act of
2000 (BIPA) (Pub. L. 106–554) requires
the Secretary to establish procedures for
coding and payment determinations for
new DME under Part B of title XVIII of
the Act that permit public consultation
in a manner consistent with the
procedures established for
implementing coding modifications for
ICD–9–CM (which has since been
replaced with ICD–10–CM as of October
1, 2015). We decided to expand these
procedures to address all new external
HCPCS level II code requests in 2005.
We are finalizing procedures for making
benefit category determinations and
payment determinations for new items
and services that are DME, prosthetic
devices, orthotics and prosthetics,
therapeutic shoes and inserts, surgical
dressings, or splints, casts, and other
devices used for reductions of fractures
and dislocations. Consistent with our
current practices, the procedures will
incorporate public consultation on these
determinations.
The determination of whether or not
an item or service falls under a
Medicare benefit category, such as the
Medicare Part B benefit category for
DME, is a necessary step in determining
whether an item may be covered under
the Medicare program and, if applicable,
what statutory and regulatory payment
rules apply to the items and services. If
the item is excluded from coverage by
the Act or does not fall within the scope
of a defined benefit category, the item
cannot be covered under Medicare. On
the other hand, if the item is not
excluded from coverage by the Act and
is found to fall within a benefit category,
we need to determine what payment
rules would apply to the item if other
statutory criteria for coverage of the item
are met, such as the reasonable and
necessary criteria under section
1862(a)(1)(A) of the Act.
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Therefore, the procedures that we are
finalizing for use in determining if items
and services fall under the Medicare
Part B benefit categories for DME,
prosthetic devices, orthotics, and
prosthetics, surgical dressings, splints,
casts and other devices for the reduction
of fractures or dislocations, or
therapeutic shoes and inserts continue
our longstanding practice of establishing
coverage and payment for new items
and services soon after they are
identified through the HCPCS code
application process, promote
transparency, and prevent delays in
access to new technologies.
4. Classification and Payment for
Continuous Glucose Monitors Under
Medicare Part B
The purpose of this section of this
final rule is to address classification and
payment for CGMs under the Medicare
Part B benefit for DME.
5. DME Interim Pricing in the CARES
Act
The purpose of this section is to
finalize and address comments received
on the ‘‘DME Interim Pricing in the
CARES Act’’ section of the May 8, 2020
IFC (85 FR 27550) titled ‘‘Medicare and
Medicaid Programs, Basic Health
Program, and Exchanges; Additional
Policy and Regulatory Revisions in
Response to the COVID–19 Public
Health Emergency and Delay of Certain
Reporting Requirements for the Skilled
Nursing Facility Quality Reporting
Program’’ (hereinafter referred to as the
‘‘May 2020 COVID–19 IFC’’). This
provision revised § 414.210 to provide
temporarily increased DME fee schedule
amounts in certain areas, as required by
section 3712 of the Coronavirus Aid,
Relief, and Economic Security Act
(CARES Act) (Pub. L. 116–136, March
27, 2020).
B. Summary of the Major Provisions
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1. Durable Medical Equipment,
Prosthetics, Orthotics, and Supplies
(DMEPOS) Fee Schedule Adjustments
This rule revises § 414.210(g)(2) and
(9) to establish the fee schedule
adjustment methodologies for items and
services furnished on or after the
effective date specified in the DATES
section of this final rule, or the date
immediately following the duration of
the emergency period described in
section 1135(g)(1)(B) of the Act (42
U.S.C. 1320b–5(g)(1)(B)), whichever is
later, in non-CBAs.
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2. DMEPOS Fee Schedule Adjustments
for Items and Services Furnished in
Rural Areas From June 2018 Through
December 2018 and Exclusion of
Infusion Drugs From the DMEPOS CBP
This rule finalizes the following
provisions of the May 2018 IFC (83 FR
21912):
• Transition Period for Phase in of
Adjustments to Fee Schedule Amounts:
We are finalizing the amendments to
§ 414.210(g)(9)(i) to reflect the extension
of the transition period to December 31,
2016 for phasing in adjustments to the
fee schedule amounts for certain DME
and enteral nutrition, as required by
section 16007(a) of the 21st Century
Cures Act (Cures Act). In addition, we
are finalizing the changes to
§ 414.210(g)(9)(iii), which resumed the
fee schedule adjustment transition
period in rural areas and noncontiguous areas effective June 1, 2018
so that the fee schedule amounts for
certain items and services furnished in
rural and non-contiguous areas from
June 1, 2018 through December 31, 2018
were based on a 50/50 blend of adjusted
and unadjusted rates. We are also
finalizing changes to § 414.210(g)(9)(ii):
For items and services furnished with
dates of service from January 1, 2017 to
May 31, 2018, and on or after January
1, 2019, the fee schedule amount for the
area is equal to 100 percent of the
adjusted payment amount. We solicited
comments on the resumption of the
transition period for the phase in of fee
schedule adjustments.
• Technical Change Excluding DME
Infusion Drugs from the DMEPOS CBP:
Section 5004(b) of the Cures Act amends
section 1847(a)(2)(A) of the Act to
exclude drugs and biologicals described
in section 1842(o)(1)(D) of the Act from
the DMEPOS CBP. We are finalizing
changes to 42 CFR 414.402 to reflect the
exclusion of infusion drugs from the
DMEPOS CBP.
3. Benefit Category and Payment
Determinations for DME, Prosthetic
Devices, Orthotics and Prosthetics,
Therapeutic Shoes and Inserts, Surgical
Dressings, or Splints, Casts, and Other
Devices Used for Reductions of
Fractures and Dislocations
These provisions establish procedures
for making benefit category and
payment determinations for items and
services that are DME, prosthetic
devices, orthotics and prosthetics,
therapeutic shoes and inserts, surgical
dressings, or splints, casts, and other
devices used for reductions of fractures
and dislocations for which a HCPCS
Level II code has been requested.
Specifically, the purpose of the
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procedure would be to determine
whether the product for which a HCPCS
code has been requested meets the
Medicare definition of DME, a
prosthetic device, an orthotic or
prosthetic, a surgical dressing, splint,
cast, or other device used for reducing
fractures or dislocations, or a
therapeutic shoe or insert and is not
otherwise excluded under Title XVIII of
the Act, to determine how payment for
the item of service would be made, and
to obtain public consultation on these
determinations.
4. Classification and Payment for
Continuous Glucose Monitors Under
Medicare Part B
This provision classifies adjunctive
CGMs as DME, and addresses comments
received in response to the proposed
rule. Additional determinations
regarding whether a CGM is covered in
accordance with section 1862(a)(1)(A) of
the Act will be made by DME MACs
using the local coverage determination
(LCD) process or during the Medicare
claim-by-claim review process.
5. DME Interim Pricing in the CARES
Act
This section finalizes and addresses
comments received on the May 2020
COVID–19 IFC section titled ‘‘DME
Interim Pricing in the CARES Act’’.
Specifically, this section finalizes the
following policies that were included in
the May 2020 COVID–19 IFC:
• We made conforming changes to
§ 414.210(g)(9), consistent with section
3712(a) and (b) of the CARES Act,
omitting the language in section 3712(b)
of the CARES Act that references an
effective date that is 30 days after the
date of enactment of the law.
• We revised § 414.210(g)(9)(iii),
which describes the 50/50 fee schedule
adjustment blend for items and services
furnished in rural and non-contiguous
areas, to address dates of service from
June 1, 2018 through December 31, 2020
or through the duration of the
emergency period described in section
1135(g)(1)(B) of the Act (42 U.S.C.
1320b–5(g)(1)(B)), whichever is later.
• We added § 414.210(g)(9)(v) which
states that, for items and services
furnished in areas other than rural or
noncontiguous areas with dates of
service from March 6, 2020, through the
remainder of the duration of the
emergency period described in section
1135(g)(1)(B) of the Act (42 U.S.C.
1320b–5(g)(1)(B)), based on the fee
schedule amount for the area is equal to
75 percent of the adjusted payment
amount established under ‘‘this section’’
(by which we mean § 414.210(g)(1)
through (8)), and 25 percent of the
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unadjusted fee schedule amount. For
items and services furnished in areas
other than rural or noncontiguous areas
with dates of service from the expiration
date of the emergency period described
in section 1135(g)(1)(B) of the Act (42
U.S.C. 1320b–5(g)(1)(B)) through
December 31, 2020, based on the fee
schedule amount for the area is equal to
100 percent of the adjusted payment
amount established under
§ 414.210(g)(1) through (8) (referred to
as ‘‘this section’’ in the regulation text).
• In addition, we revised
§ 414.210(g)(9)(iv) to specify for items
and services furnished in areas other
than rural and noncontiguous areas with
dates of service from June 1, 2018
through March 5, 2020, based on the fee
schedule amount for the area is equal to
100 percent of the adjusted payment
amount established under
§ 414.210(g)(1) through (8) (‘‘this
section’’ in the regulation text).
C. Summary of Cost and Benefits
1. Durable Medical Equipment,
Prosthetics, Orthotics, and Supplies
(DMEPOS) Fee Schedule Adjustments
We estimate that the DMEPOS fee
schedule adjustment methodologies
established in this final rule will
increase payments an estimated $4.6
billion from the Federal Government to
DMEPOS suppliers from CY 2022 to CY
2026 (for the purposes of this estimate,
it is assumed the PHE ends on April 16,
2022, which is a necessary assumption
for accounting purposes and is not
intended to signal when the PHE will
end). In CY 2022, we estimate that
Medicare payments will increase about
$200 million due to this provision of the
final rule. Note, the Medicaid impact of
this policy is explained later in this
final rule.
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2. DMEPOS Fee Schedule Adjustments
for Items and Services Furnished in
Rural Areas From June 2018 Through
December 2018 and Exclusion of
Infusion Drugs From the DMEPOS CBP
This provision resumed the blended
adjusted fee schedule amounts during
the transition period for certain
DMEPOS items and services that were
furnished in rural and non-contiguous
areas not subject to the CBP beginning
June 1, 2018 and ending December 31,
2018. There is no impact assumed
against the baseline, which is explained
in the regulatory impact analysis section
(RIA) later in this final rule, as the
period during which these fee schedule
adjustments were in effect has passed.
The goal of the May 2018 IFC was to
preserve beneficiary access to DME
items and services in rural and non-
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contiguous areas not subject to the CBP
during a transition period in which we
would continue to study the impact of
the change in payment rates on access
to items and services in these areas. We
believe that resuming the fee schedule
adjustment transition period in rural
and non-contiguous areas promoted
stability in the DMEPOS market in these
areas, and enabled us to work with
stakeholders to preserve beneficiary
access to DMEPOS.
3. Benefit Category and Payment
Determinations for DME, Prosthetic
Devices, Orthotics and Prosthetics,
Therapeutic Shoes and Inserts, Surgical
Dressings, or Splints, Casts, and Other
Devices Used for Reductions of
Fractures and Dislocations
We are finalizing a process for making
benefit category and payment
determinations for items and services
that are DME, prosthetic devices,
orthotics and prosthetics, therapeutic
shoes and inserts, surgical dressings, or
splints, casts, and other devices used for
reductions of fractures and dislocations.
This policy is assumed to have an
indeterminable fiscal impact due to the
unique considerations given to
establishing payment for specific items.
4. Classification and Payment for
Continuous Glucose Monitors Under
Medicare Part B
We are finalizing a policy that
classifies adjunctive CGMs as DME. In
addition, we are addressing comments
on the proposed rule. This classification
is assumed to have no fiscal impact
when considered against the baseline,
which is further explained in the
regulatory impact analysis (RIA) section
of this final rule.
5. DME Interim Pricing in the CARES
Act
This section finalizes the temporary
increase to certain DME payment rates
from March 6, 2020 through the
remainder of the duration of the
emergency period (PHE) for COVID–19,
in accordance with section 3712 of the
CARES Act. Section 3712 of the CARES
Act increases Medicare expenditures
and beneficiary cost-sharing by
increasing Medicare payment rates for
certain DMEPOS items furnished in
non-rural and contiguous noncompetitively bid areas.
The increase is a result of paying a
blend of 75 percent of the fully adjusted
payment rates and 25 percent of the
unadjusted payment rates and is
estimated to increase affected DME fee
schedule amounts by 33 percent, on
average. This provision will have a
negligible fiscal impact if the emergency
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period for COVID–19 ends by April
2022.
II. Rulemaking Overview
In the May 11, 2018 Federal Register
(83 FR 21912), we published an interim
final rule with comment period (IFC)
titled ‘‘Medicare Program; Durable
Medical Equipment Fee Schedule
Adjustments to Resume the Transitional
50/50 Blended Rates to Provide Relief in
Rural Areas and Non-Contiguous
Areas’’. In the May 8, 2020 Federal
Register (85 FR 27550), we published an
IFC titled ‘‘Medicare and Medicaid
Programs, Basic Health Program, and
Exchanges; Additional Policy and
Regulatory Revisions in Response to the
COVID–19 Public Health Emergency
and Delay of Certain Reporting
Requirements for the Skilled Nursing
Facility Quality Reporting Program’’
(hereinafter referred to as the May 2020
COVID–19 IFC). Subsequently in the
November 4, 2020 Federal Register (85
FR 70358), we published a proposed
rule titled ‘‘Medicare Program; Durable
Medical Equipment, Prosthetics,
Orthotics, and Supplies (DMEPOS)
Policy Issues and Level II of the
Healthcare Common Procedure Coding
System (HCPCS)’’ (hereinafter referred
to as the November 2020 proposed rule).
We received 331 (208 on the May
2018 IFC, 6 on the May 2020 COVID–
19 IFC, and 117 on the November 2020
proposed rule) timely pieces of
correspondence containing multiple
comments on the provisions of the
previously mentioned IFCs and
proposed rule. Comments were
submitted by DMEPOS suppliers,
manufacturers, trade associations,
beneficiaries, the Medicare Payment
Advisory Commission (MedPAC), law
firms, and healthcare providers.
The provisions that we are finalizing
in this final rule range from minor
clarifications to more significant
modifications based on the comments
received. Summaries of the public
comments received and our responses to
those public comments are set forth in
the various sections of this final rule
under the appropriate headings. We also
note that some of the public comments
received for the provisions addressed in
this final rule were outside of the scope
of the previously mentioned IFCs and
proposed rule and as such, those out-ofscope public comments are not
addressed in this final rule.
Additionally, we will not be finalizing
three provisions of the November 2020
proposed rule in this final rule. The
provision titled ‘‘Exclusion of Complex
Rehabilitative Manual Wheelchairs and
Certain Other Manual Wheelchairs
From the CBP’’ was finalized in the FY
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2022 Inpatient Rehabilitation Facility
(IRF) final rule published on August 4,
2021 (86 FR 42362). Secondly, after
further consideration, we will not be
finalizing the proposed provisions titled
‘‘Healthcare Common Procedure Coding
System (HCPCS) Level II Code
Application Process’’ and ‘‘Expanded
Classification of External Infusion
Pumps as DME.’’
We are not finalizing any of the
‘‘Healthcare Common Procedure Coding
System (HCPCS) Level II Code
Application Process’’ proposals. We
intend to continue to evaluate our
processes, particularly as CMS and
stakeholders continue to gain
experience with the more frequent
coding cycles.
We received 34 public comments on
the HCPCS proposals. The public
comments raised concerns about the
HCPCS proposals. With regard to our
proposed HCPCS Level II code
application cycles, application
resubmission, and reevaluation policies,
commenters opposed the proposal for
CMS to potentially delay a preliminary
or final decision without placing a limit
on the number of cycles a decision
could be delayed.
Commenters also opposed our
proposal to allow only two
resubmissions of a code application for
reevaluation for the same item or service
particularly if new information is
provided with the resubmission. While
commenters mostly supported the
proposals to codify more frequent
coding cycles, a number of commenters
requested additional process changes
and increased transparency that in
many cases may be infeasible within the
proposed timelines for a coding cycle.
Overwhelmingly, commenters
responded negatively to our explanation
of the term ‘‘claims processing need’’
and how it would apply throughout the
HCPCS Level II code application
evaluation process. Commenters also
did not support CMS assessing whether
a given item or service is ‘‘primarily
medical in nature’’ as a threshold
HCPCS Level II code application
evaluation factor.
In addition, we are not finalizing the
‘‘Expanded Classification of External
Infusion Pumps as DME’’ proposal
because many commenters believed that
the proposed rule was unclear, needed
more development, raised concerns
about cost-sharing and cost-shifting to
the beneficiary, and raised safety
concerns related to decisions regarding
what drug therapies could safely be
administered in a home/non-facility
setting. Several commenters noted the
proposed rule could increase
beneficiary costs, and a commenter
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noted the policy would result in the use
of an infusion pump as the choice of
drug administration for payment
purposes even if it was the less optimal
method of administration. A commenter
believed that the proposal would result
in the beneficiary paying more for less,
in light of the higher out-of-pocket costs
for home administration of infusion
drugs, and the home not being the
highest-quality setting for infusion drug
administration.
We proposed that an external infusion
pump would be considered
‘‘appropriate for use in the home’’ if: (1)
The Food and Drug Administration
(FDA)-required labeling requires the
associated home infusion drug to be
prepared immediately prior to
administration or administered by a
health care professional or both; (2) a
qualified home infusion therapy
supplier (as defined at § 486.505)
administers the drug or biological in a
safe and effective manner in the
patient’s home (as defined at § 486.505);
and (3) the FDA-required labeling
specifies infusion via an external
infusion pump as a route of
administration, at least once per month,
for the drug. We received 31 comments
on this proposal from DME and infusion
suppliers, beneficiaries, manufacturers,
insurance companies, and trade
associations. Many commenters
supported the proposed interpretation
of ‘‘appropriate for use in the home’’
and the three proposed criteria for
determining when an infusion pump
was ‘‘appropriate for use in the home,’’
as well as the fact that if finalized, this
proposal would necessitate updates to
the LCD for external infusion pumps to
include additional drugs and
biologicals. However serious concerns
were raised about other aspects of the
proposed rule. Some commenters stated
that the proposal would be a very
narrow policy change that would offer
little in the way of expanded benefits for
patients and would create
administrative complexity and
uncertainty regarding Medicare
coverage. Some commenters supported
the first criterion in our proposed
standard for determining whether an
external infusion pump and associated
supplies could be covered under the
Medicare Part B benefit for DME.
However, those commenters advocated
that CMS remove the requirement that
the FDA-required labeling require the
associated home infusion drug be
‘‘prepared immediately prior to
administration.’’ They noted that this
requirement is unclear, as most drugs
have storage information which permits
use of a drug after mixing. Some
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73863
commenters supported the second
criterion in our proposed standard,
which required that a qualified home
infusion therapy services supplier
administer the drug or biological in a
safe and effective manner in the
patient’s home.
Commenters opposed the third
criterion in our proposed standard, and
recommended that CMS remove the
requirement that the FDA-required
labeling specify an external infusion
pump as a possible route of
administration. Commenters stated that
this requirement was too restrictive and
could limit access to therapies that
would otherwise be clinically
appropriate for use in the home. Several
commenters pointed out that not all
drugs included in the LCDs for
Intravenous Immune Globulin (policy
number L33610) currently have labels
that specify using an external infusion
pump as a possible route of
administration, though prescribers most
often require these pumps to control the
rate of infusion. Several commenters
believed that the proposed rule needed
more development, was unclear about
which drugs could be covered under the
Medicare Part B benefit for DME as
supplies, and could pose safety
concerns. A commenter noted the home
setting is not the ideal environment for
prepping sterile medications for
injection or infusion. This commenter
also stressed that the beneficiary may
not be aware when selecting an
administration site (home or outpatient)
of the large difference in cost-sharing.
Another commenter indicated that CMS
should not be the agency to decide if
home infusion was safe and appropriate.
This commenter urged CMS to delay the
expansion of the definition of DME to
include additional external infusion
pumps until CMS can gather an exact
list of the drugs and biologicals that
would be affected by this policy and
determine whether such drugs and
biologicals can be administered in the
home safely and effectively under the
parameters CMS proposed. We thank
the commenters for their input on the
HCPCS and infusion pump proposals.
III. Durable Medical Equipment,
Prosthetics, Orthotics, and Supplies
(DMEPOS) Fee Schedule Adjustments
A. Background
1. DMEPOS Competitive Bidding
Program
Section 1847(a) of the Act, as
amended by section 302(b)(1) of the
Medicare Prescription Drug,
Improvement, and Modernization Act of
2003 (Pub. L. 108–173), mandates the
Medicare DMEPOS CBP for contract
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award purposes to furnish certain
competitively priced DMEPOS items
and services subject to the CBP:
• Off-the-shelf (OTS) orthotics, for
which payment would otherwise be
made under section 1834(h) of the Act;
• Enteral nutrients, equipment, and
supplies described in section
1842(s)(2)(D) of the Act; and
• Certain DME and medical supplies,
which are covered items (as defined in
section 1834(a)(13) of the Act) for which
payment would otherwise be made
under section 1834(a) of the Act.
Section 1847(a) of the Act requires the
Secretary of the Department of Health
and Human Services (the Secretary) to
establish and implement CBPs in
competitive bidding areas (CBAs)
throughout the U.S. Section
1847(a)(1)(B)(i) of the Act mandates that
the programs be phased into 100 of the
largest metropolitan statistical areas
(MSA) by 2011 and additional areas
after 2011. Thus far, CBAs have been
either an MSA or a part of an MSA.
Under the Office of Management and
Budget (OMB) standards for delineating
MSAs, MSAs have at least one
urbanized area that has a population of
at least 50,000. The MSA comprises the
central county or counties containing
the core, plus adjacent outlying counties
having a high degree of social and
economic integration with the central
county or counties as measured through
commuting.1 OMB updates MSAs
regularly and the most recent update
can be found in OMB Bulletin No. 20–
01.2 The statute allows us to exempt
rural areas and areas with low
population density within urban areas
that are not competitive, unless there is
a significant national market through
mail order for a particular item or
service, from the CBP. We may also
exempt from the CBP items and services
for which competitive acquisition is
unlikely to result in significant savings.
We refer to areas in which the CBP is
not or has not been implemented as
non-competitive bidding areas (nonCBAs). We use the term ‘‘former CBAs’’
to refer to the areas that were formerly
CBAs prior to a gap in the CBP, to
distinguish those areas from ‘‘nonCBAs.’’ More information on why there
was a gap in the CBP from January 1,
2019 through December 31, 2020 can be
found in the November 14, 2018 final
rule titled ‘‘Medicare Program; EndStage Renal Disease Prospective
Payment System, Payment for Renal
1 OMB 2010 Standards for Delineating
Metropolitan and Micropolitan Statistical Areas;
Notice, June 28, 2010 (75 FR 37252).
2 https://www.whitehouse.gov/wp-content/
uploads/2020/03/Bulletin-20-01.pdf?#.
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Dialysis Services Furnished to
Individuals With Acute Kidney Injury,
End-Stage Renal Disease Quality
Incentive Program, Durable Medical
Equipment, Prosthetics, Orthotics, and
Supplies (DMEPOS) Competitive
Bidding Program (CBP) and Fee
Schedule Amounts, and Technical
Amendments To Correct Existing
Regulations Related to the CBP for
Certain DMEPOS,’’ (83 FR 56922)
(hereinafter ‘‘CY 2019 ESRD PPS
DMEPOS final rule’’).
Non-CBAs include rural areas, nonrural areas, and non-contiguous areas. A
rural area is defined in 42 CFR 414.202
as a geographic area represented by a
postal ZIP code, if at least 50 percent of
the total geographic area of the area
included in the ZIP code is estimated to
be outside any MSA. A rural area also
includes a geographic area represented
by a postal ZIP code that is a low
population density area excluded from
a CBA in accordance with section
1847(a)(3)(A) of the Act at the time the
rules in § 414.210(g) are applied. Noncontiguous areas refer to areas outside
the contiguous U.S.—that is, areas such
as Alaska, Guam, and Hawaii (81 FR
77936).
2. Payment Methodology for CBAs
In the DMEPOS CBP, suppliers bid for
contracts for furnishing multiple items
and services, identified by HCPCS
codes, under several different product
categories. In the CY 2019 ESRD PPS
DMEPOS final rule, we made significant
changes to how we calculate single
payment amounts (SPAs) under the
DMEPOS CBP. Prior to these changes,
for individual items within each
product category in each CBA, the
median of the winning bids for each
item was used to establish the SPA for
that item in each CBA. As a result of the
changes we made in the CY 2019 ESRD
PPS DMEPOS final rule, SPAs are
calculated for the lead item in each
product category (per § 414.402, the
item in a product category with multiple
items with the highest total nationwide
Medicare allowed charges of any item in
the product category prior to each
competition) based on the maximum
winning bid (the highest of bids
submitted by winning suppliers) in each
CBA.
Per § 414.416(b)(3), the SPA for each
non-lead item in a product category (all
items other than the lead item) is
calculated by multiplying the SPA for
the lead item by the ratio of the average
of the 2015 fee schedule amounts for all
areas for the non-lead item to the
average of the 2015 fee schedule
amounts for all areas for the lead item.
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For competitively bid items and
services furnished in a CBA, the SPAs
replace the Medicare allowed amounts
established using the lower of the
supplier’s actual charge or the fee
schedule payment amount recognized
under sections 1834(a)(2) through (7) of
the Act. Section 1847(b)(5) of the Act
provides that Medicare payment for
competitively bid items and services is
made on an assignment-related basis
and is equal to 80 percent of the
applicable SPA, less any unmet Part B
deductible described in section 1833(b)
of the Act.
3. Fee Schedule Adjustment
Methodology for Non-CBAs
Section 1834(a)(1)(F)(ii) of the Act
requires the Secretary to use
information on the payment determined
under the Medicare DMEPOS CBP to
adjust the fee schedule amounts for
DME items and services furnished in all
non-CBAs on or after January 1, 2016.
Section 1834(a)(1)(F)(iii) of the Act
requires the Secretary to continue to
make these adjustments as additional
covered items are phased in under the
CBP or information is updated as new
CBP contracts are awarded. Similarly,
sections 1842(s)(3)(B) and
1834(h)(1)(H)(ii) of the Act authorize the
Secretary to use payment information
from the DMEPOS CBP to adjust the fee
schedule amounts for enteral nutrition
and OTS orthotics, respectively,
furnished in all non-CBAs. Section
1834(a)(1)(G) of the Act requires the
Secretary to specify the methodology to
be used in making these fee schedule
adjustments by regulation, and to
consider, among other factors, the costs
of items and services in non-CBAs
(where the adjustments would be
applied) compared to the payment rates
for such items and services in the CBAs.
In accordance with the requirements
of section 1834(a)(1)(G) of the Act, we
conducted notice-and-comment
rulemaking in 2014 to specify
methodologies for adjusting the fee
schedule amounts for DME, enteral
nutrition, and OTS orthotics in nonCBAs in 42 CFR 414.210(g). We will
provide a summary of these
methodologies, but also refer readers to
the July 11, 2014 proposed rule titled
‘‘Medicare Program; End-Stage Renal
Disease Prospective Payment System,
Quality Incentive Program, and Durable
Medical Equipment, Prosthetics,
Orthotics, and Supplies,’’ (79 FR 40208)
(hereinafter ‘‘CY 2015 ESRD PPS
DMEPOS proposed rule’’), and the
November 6, 2014 final rule titled
‘‘Medicare Program; End-Stage Renal
Disease Prospective Payment System,
Quality Incentive Program, and Durable
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Medical Equipment, Prosthetics,
Orthotics, and Supplies,’’ (79 FR 66120)
(hereinafter ‘‘CY 2015 ESRD PPS
DMEPOS final rule’’) for additional
details.
The methodologies set forth in
§ 414.210(g) account for regional
variations in prices, including for rural
and non-contiguous areas of the U.S. In
accordance with § 414.210(g)(1), we
determine regional adjustments to fee
schedule amounts for each State in the
contiguous U.S. and the District of
Columbia, based on the definition of
region in § 414.202, which refers to
geographic areas defined by the Bureau
of Economic Analysis (BEA) in the
Department of Commerce for economic
analysis purposes (79 FR 66226). Under
§ 414.210(g)(1)(i) through (iv), adjusted
fee schedule amounts for areas within
the contiguous U.S. are determined
based on regional prices limited by a
national ceiling of 110 percent of the
regional average price and a floor of 90
percent of the regional average price (79
FR 66225). Under § 414.210(g)(1)(v),
adjusted fee schedule amounts for rural
areas are based on 110 percent of the
national average of regional prices.
Under § 414.210(g)(2), fee schedule
amounts for non-contiguous areas are
adjusted based on the higher of the
average of the SPAs for CBAs in noncontiguous areas in the U.S., or the
national ceiling amount.
For items and services that have been
included in no more than 10 CBPs,
§ 414.210(g)(3) specifies adjustments
based on 110 percent of the average of
the SPAs. In cases where the SPAs from
DMEPOS CBPs that are no longer in
effect are used to adjust fee schedule
amounts, § 414.210(g)(4) requires that
the SPAs be updated by an inflation
adjustment factor on an annual basis
based on the Consumer Price Index for
all Urban Consumers update factors
from the mid-point of the last year the
SPAs were in effect to the month ending
6 months prior to the date the initial
payment adjustments would go into
effect.
Under § 414.210(g)(5), in situations
where a HCPCS code that describes an
item used with different types of base
equipment is included in more than one
product category in a CBA, a weighted
average of the SPAs for the code is
computed for each CBA prior to
applying the other payment adjustment
methodologies in § 414.210(g). Under
§ 414.210(g)(6), we will adjust the SPAs
for certain items prior to using those
SPAs to adjust fee schedule amounts for
items and services if price inversions
have occurred under the DMEPOS CBP.
Price inversions occur when one item in
a grouping of items in a product
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category includes a feature that another
similar item in the product category
does not, and the average of the 2015 fee
schedule amounts for the item with the
feature is higher than the average of the
2015 schedule amounts for the item
without the feature, but following a CBP
competition, the SPA for the item with
the feature is lower than the SPA for the
item without the feature. For groupings
of similar items where price inversions
have occurred, the SPAs for the items in
the grouping are adjusted to equal the
weighted average of the SPAs for the
items in the grouping.3
In § 414.210(g)(8), the adjusted fee
schedule amounts are revised each time
a SPA for an item or service is updated
following one or more new DMEPOS
CBP competitions and as other items are
added to the DMEPOS CBP. The fee
schedule amounts that are adjusted
using SPAs are not subject to the annual
DMEPOS covered item update and are
only updated when SPAs from the
DMEPOS CBP are updated or, in
accordance with § 414.210(g)(10), when
there are temporary gaps in the
DMEPOS CBP. Updates to the SPAs may
occur as contracts are recompeted. In
the CY 2015 ESRD PPS DMEPOS final
rule, we established § 414.210(g)(9) to
provide for a transitional phase-in
period of the DMEPOS fee schedule
adjustments. We established a 6-month
transition period for blended rates from
January 1 through June 30, 2016 (79 FR
66228 through 66229). In establishing a
transition period, we agreed with
commenters that phasing in the
adjustments to the fee schedule amounts
would allow time for suppliers to adjust
to the new payment rates, and further
noted that we would monitor the impact
of the change in payment rates on access
to items and services and health
outcomes using real time claims data
and analysis (79 FR 66228). Under
§ 414.210(g)(9)(i), we specified that the
fee schedule adjustments for items and
services furnished between January 1,
2016 through June 30, 2016 would be
based on a blend of 50 percent of the
3 For further discussion regarding adjustments to
SPAs to address price inversions, we refer readers
to the CY 2017 ESRD PPS DMEPOS final rule, titled
Medicare Program; End-Stage Renal Disease
Prospective Payment System, Coverage and
Payment for Renal Dialysis Services Furnished to
Individuals With Acute Kidney Injury, End-Stage
Renal Disease Quality Incentive Program, Durable
Medical Equipment, Prosthetics, Orthotics, and
Supplies Competitive Bidding Program Bid Surety
Bonds, State Licensure and Appeals Process for
Breach of Contract Actions, Durable Medical
Equipment, Prosthetics, Orthotics, and Supplies
Competitive Bidding Program and Fee Schedule
Adjustments, Access to Care Issues for Durable
Medical Equipment; and the Comprehensive EndStage Renal Disease Care Model, 81 FR 77937
(November 4, 2016).
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73865
unadjusted fee schedule amount and 50
percent of the adjusted fee schedule
amount. Under § 414.210(g)(9)(ii), we
specified that for items and services
furnished with dates of service on or
after July 1, 2016, the fee schedule
amounts would be fully adjusted in
accordance with the rules specified in
§ 414.210(g)(1) through § 414.210(g)(8).
4. 21st Century Cures Act
Section 16007(a) of the Cures Act was
enacted on December 13, 2016, and
extended the transition period for the
phase-in of fee schedule adjustments at
§ 414.210(g)(9)(i) by an additional 6
months from July 1, 2016 through
December 31, 2016. In the May 2018
IFC, we amended § 414.210(g)(9)(i) to
implement the 6-month extension to the
initial transition period, as mandated by
section 16007(a) of the Cures Act.
Accordingly, the fee schedule amounts
were based on blended rates until
December 31, 2016, with full
implementation of the fee schedule
adjustments applying to items and
services furnished with dates of service
on or after January 1, 2017 (83 FR
21915). Section 16008 of the Cures Act
amended section 1834(a)(1)(G) of the
Act to require that the Secretary take
into account certain factors when
making any fee schedule adjustments
under sections 1834(a)(1)(F)(ii) or (iii),
1834(h)(i)(H)(ii), or 1842(s)(3)(B) of the
Act for items and services furnished on
or after January 1, 2019. Specifically, the
Secretary was required to take into
account: (1) Stakeholder input solicited
regarding adjustments to fee schedule
amounts using information from the
DMEPOS CBP; (2) the highest bid by a
winning supplier in a CBA; and (3) a
comparison of each of the following
factors with respect to non-CBAs and
CBAs: The average travel distance and
cost associated with furnishing items
and services in the area, the average
volume of items and services furnished
by suppliers in the area, and the number
of suppliers in the area.
5. Extension of DMEPOS Fee Schedule
Transition Period & Revised
Methodology
In the May 2018 IFC (83 FR 21918),
we expressed an immediate need to
resume the transitional, blended fee
schedule amounts in rural and noncontiguous areas, noting strong
stakeholder concerns about the
continued viability of many DMEPOS
suppliers, our finding of a decrease in
the number of suppliers furnishing
items and services subject to the fee
schedule adjustments, as well as the
Cures Act mandate to consider
additional information material to
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setting fee schedule adjustments based
on information from the DMEPOS CBP
for items and services furnished on or
after January 1, 2019. We explained that
resuming these transitional blended
rates would preserve beneficiary access
to needed DME items and services in a
contracting supplier marketplace, while
also allowing us time to address the
adequacy of the fee schedule adjustment
methodology, as required by section
16008 of the Cures Act. As a result, we
amended § 414.210(g)(9) by adding
§ 414.210(g)(9)(iii) to resume the fee
schedule adjustment transition rates for
items and services furnished in rural
and non-contiguous areas from June 1,
2018 through December 31, 2018. We
explained that resuming these
transitional blended rates would allow
additional time for suppliers serving
rural and non-contiguous areas to adjust
their businesses, prevent suppliers that
beneficiaries may rely on for access to
items and services in rural and noncontiguous areas from exiting the
business, and allow additional time for
us to monitor the impact of the blended
rates. We also amended
§ 414.210(g)(9)(ii) to reflect that for
items and services furnished with dates
of service from January 1, 2017 to May
31, 2018, fully adjusted fee schedule
amounts would apply (83 FR 21922). In
addition, we added § 414.210(g)(9)(iv) to
specify that fully adjusted fee schedule
amounts would apply for items
furnished in non-CBAs other than rural
and non-contiguous areas from June 1,
2018 through December 31, 2018 (83 FR
21920). We explained that we would
use the extended transition period to
further analyze our findings and
consider the information required by
section 16008 of the Cures Act in
determining whether changes to the
methodology for adjusting fee schedule
amounts for items furnished on or after
January 1, 2019 are necessary (83 FR
21918 through 21919).
In the CY 2019 ESRD PPS DMEPOS
final rule, we finalized changes to
bidding and pricing methodologies
under the DMEPOS CBP for future
competitions (83 FR 57020 through
57025). Specifically, we finalized lead
item pricing for all product categories
under the DMEPOS CBP, which would
use the bid for the lead item to establish
the SPAs for both the lead item and all
other items in the product category (the
non-lead items). We explained that this
change would reduce the burden on
suppliers since they would no longer
have to submit bids on numerous items
in a product category. We also finalized
changes to the methodology for
calculating SPAs under the DMEPOS
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CBP based on lead item pricing using
maximum winning bids for lead items
in each product category. We finalized
revisions to §§ 414.414 and 414.416 to
reflect our changes to the bidding and
pricing methodologies, and revised the
definitions of bid, composite bid, and
lead item in § 414.402. We expected that
these changes would have a minimal
effect on savings under the DMEPOS
CBP. However, during Round 2021 of
the DMEPOS CBP, we observed
numerous occurrences where capacity,
demand, and projected savings, in
concert with our policies, were
incomparable to previous rounds of
competition.
Also, in the CY 2019 ESRD PPS
DMEPOS final rule, we established fee
schedule adjustment transition rules for
items and services furnished from
January 1, 2019 through December 31,
2020. We decided to make these fee
schedule adjustment transition rules
effective for a 2-year period only, for
two reasons. First, we believed that we
must proceed cautiously when adjusting
fee schedules in the short term in an
effort to protect access to items, while
we continued to monitor health
outcomes, assignment rates, and other
information (83 FR 57029). Second, as
part of the final rule, we made
significant changes to the way bids are
submitted and SPAs are calculated
under the CBP. We stated in the final
rule these changes could warrant further
changes to the fee schedule adjustment
methodologies in the future (83 FR
57030).
Consistent with the requirements of
section 16008 of the Cures Act, we set
forth our analysis and consideration of
stakeholder input solicited on
adjustments to fee schedule amounts
using information from the DMEPOS
CBP, the highest bid by a winning
supplier in a CBA, and a comparison of
the various factors with respect to nonCBAs and CBAs. We noted stakeholder
concerns that the adjusted payment
amounts constrained suppliers from
furnishing items and services to rural
areas, and their request for an increase
to the adjusted payment amounts for
these areas (83 FR 57025). In reviewing
highest winning bids, we found no
pattern indicating that maximum bids
were higher for areas with lower volume
than for areas with higher volume (83
FR 57026). In our consideration of the
Cures Act factors with respect to nonCBAs and CBAs, we found higher costs
for non-contiguous areas, an increased
average travel distance in certain rural
areas, a significantly lower average
volume per supplier in non-CBAs,
especially in rural and non-contiguous
areas, and a decrease in the number of
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non-CBA supplier locations. Based on
our consideration of the foregoing, we
expressed our belief that the fee
schedule amounts for items and services
furnished from January 1, 2019 through
December 31, 2020, in all rural or noncontiguous areas should be based on a
blend of 50 percent of the adjusted fee
schedule amounts and 50 percent of the
unadjusted fee schedule amounts in
accordance with the current
methodologies under paragraphs (1)
through (8) of § 414.210(g) (83 FR
57029).
We also expressed our belief that the
fee schedule amounts for items and
services furnished from January 1, 2019
through December 31, 2020, in all areas
that are non-CBAs, but are not rural or
non-contiguous areas, should be based
on 100 percent of the adjusted fee
schedule amounts in accordance with
the current methodologies under
paragraphs (1) through (8) of
§ 414.210(g) (83 FR 57029). We finalized
amendments to the transition rules at
§ 414.210(g)(9) to reflect these fee
schedule adjustment methodologies for
items and services furnished from
January 1, 2019 through December 31,
2020 (83 FR 57039; 83 FR 57070
through 57071).
6. The Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and
Economic Security Act
The Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and
Economic Security (CARES) Act (Pub. L.
116–136) was enacted on March 27,
2020. Section 3712 of the CARES Act
specifies the payment rates for certain
DME and enteral nutrients, supplies,
and equipment furnished in non-CBAs
through the duration of the emergency
period described in section
1135(g)(1)(B) of the Act. Section 3712(a)
of the CARES Act continues our policy
of paying the 50/50 blended rates for
items furnished in rural and noncontiguous non-CBAs through
December 31, 2020, or through the
duration of the emergency period, if
longer. Section 3712(b) of the CARES
Act increased the payment rates for
DME and enteral nutrients, supplies,
and equipment furnished in areas other
than rural and non-contiguous nonCBAs through the duration of the
emergency period. Beginning March 6,
2020, the payment rates for DME and
enteral nutrients, supplies, and
equipment furnished in these areas are
based on 75 percent of the adjusted fee
schedule amount and 25 percent of the
historic, unadjusted fee schedule
amount, which results in higher
payment rates as compared to the full
fee schedule adjustments that were
previously required under
§ 414.210(g)(9)(iv). We made changes to
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the regulation text at § 414.210(g)(9),
consistent with section 3712 of the
CARES Act, in an IFC that we published
in the May 8, 2020 Federal Register
titled ‘‘Medicare and Medicaid
Programs; Additional Policy and
Regulatory Revisions in Response to the
COVID–19 Public Health Emergency.’’
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B. Current Issues
In the proposed rule (85 FR 70364),
we proposed to establish fee schedule
adjustment methodologies for items and
services furnished in non-CBAs on or
after April 1, 2021, or the date
immediately following the duration of
the emergency period described in
section 1135(g)(1)(B) of the Act (42
U.S.C. 1320b–5(g)(1)(B)), whichever is
later. In the proposed rule (85 FR
70364), we stated that though the
transition rules under 42 CFR
414.210(g)(9)(iii) and 414.210(g)(9)(v)
expired on December 31, 2020, we
believe that the rest of the current fee
schedule adjustment rules at
§ 414.210(g) would continue to be in
effect should the emergency period
described in section 1135(g)(1)(B) of the
Act (42 U.S.C. 1320b–5(g)(1)(B) (PHE)
expire after January 1, 2021, and before
April 1, 2021. At the time, we presumed
that the PHE would expire in early
2021, and that we would finalize the
proposed rule around that time. Now
that April 1, 2021 has passed, but the
PHE is still ongoing, and the proposed
rule has yet to be finalized, we are
making a technical edit to reflect the
new effective date for this final rule.
Consistent with our proposal, in the
event that the emergency period
described in section 1135(g)(1)(B) of the
Act (42 U.S.C. 1320b–5(g)(1)(B)) expires
before the effective date specified in the
DATES section of this final rule (rather
than April 1, 2021), the current fee
schedule adjustment rules at
§ 414.210(g)(1) through (8) would be
used to adjust fee schedule amounts for
items and services furnished in nonCBAs and the current fee schedule
adjustment rule at § 414.210(g)(10)
would be used to adjust fee schedule
amounts for items and services
furnished in CBAs or former CBAs until
the final rule takes effect on the effective
date specified in the DATES section of
this final rule.
1. Section 16008 of the Cures Act
Analysis
Section 1834(a)(1)(G) of the Act
requires CMS to specify by regulation
the methodology to be used in adjusting
DMEPOS fee schedule amounts based
on information from the DMEPOS CBP.
Section 16008 of the Cures Act amended
section 1834(a)(1)(G) to specifically
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require that CMS take into account a
number of factors in making any fee
schedule adjustments for items and
services furnished on or after January 1,
2019, including: (1) Stakeholder input
we have solicited on adjustments to fee
schedule amounts using information
from the DMEPOS CBP; (2) the highest
bid by a winning supplier in a CBA; and
(3) a comparison of the factors outlined
in section 16008 of the Cures Act with
respect to non-CBAs and CBAs. Our
analysis of the Cures Act factors focuses
on the effect we believe increased
payment levels have had in rural and
non-contiguous non-CBAs, and the
effect we believe fully adjusted fees
have had in non-rural contiguous nonCBAs. We also provide our analysis of
other metrics we believe are important
in measuring the impacts of our
payment policies.
a. Stakeholder Input Gathered in
Accordancew With Section 16008 of the
Cures Act
Section 16008 of the Cures Act
requires us to solicit and take into
account stakeholder input in making fee
schedule adjustments based on
information from the DMEPOS CBP for
items and services furnished on or after
January 1, 2019. On March 23, 2017, we
hosted a national provider call to solicit
stakeholder input regarding adjustments
to fee schedule amounts using DMEPOS
CBP information (83 FR 57025 through
57026). More than 330 participants
called in, with 23 participants providing
verbal comments during the call. We
also received 125 written comments
from stakeholders in response to our
request for written comments. Our
announcement of this call, a copy of our
presentation, the audio recording of the
call, and its transcript can be found at
the following link on the CMS website.4
In general, the commenters were
mostly suppliers located in MSAs, but
also included manufacturers, trade
organizations, and healthcare providers
such as physical and occupational
therapists. For additional details about
the national provider call and a
summary of oral and written comments
received, we refer readers to the CY
2019 ESRD PPS/DMEPOS proposed rule
(83 FR 57026). For a summary of public
comments received on the CY 2019
ESRD PPS DMEPOS proposed rule and
our responses, we refer readers to the
CY 2019 ESRD PPS DMEPOS final rule
(83 FR 57030 through 57036).
While the stakeholder input from
2017 did not quantify the degree to
4 https://www.cms.gov/Outreach-and-Education/
Outreach/NPC/National-Provider-Calls-and-EventsItems/2017-03-23-DMEPOS.
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73867
which costs of furnishing items in CBAs
versus rural areas or any other nonCBAs, the comments we received in
response to our 2014 proposed rule (79
FR 40208) indicated that the adjusted
fee schedule amounts for rural areas
should be equal to 120 to 150 percent
of the average of the regional single
payment amounts (RSPAs) rather than
110 percent of the average of the RSPAs.
In addition, a 2015 industry survey of
suppliers of respiratory equipment
indicated that the cost of furnishing
respiratory equipment in ‘‘super rural’’
areas is 17 percent higher than the cost
of furnishing respiratory equipment in
CBAs.5 The term ‘‘super rural’’ refers to
areas identified as ‘‘qualified rural
areas’’ under the ambulance fee
schedule statute at section
1834(l)(12)(B) of the Act (as
implemented at 42 CFR
414.610(c)(5)(ii)).
For the purposes of the fee schedule
for ambulance services, rural areas are
defined at 42 CFR 414.605 as areas
located outside an urban area (MSA), or
a rural census tract within an MSA as
determined under the most recent
version of the Goldsmith modification
as determined by the Federal Office of
Rural Health Policy at the Health
Resources and Services Administration
(HRSA). The most recent version of the
Goldsmith Modification are the RuralUrban Commuting Area (RUCA) codes,
which are a method of determining
rurality.6 Under 42 CFR
414.610(c)(5)(ii), for ground ambulance
services furnished during the period
July 1, 2004 through December 31, 2022,
the payment amount for the ground
ambulance base rate is increased by 22.6
percent where the point of pickup is in
a rural area determined to be in the
lowest 25 percent of rural population
arrayed by population density. We refer
to this as the ‘‘super rural’’ bonus, and
the areas that receive this super rural
bonus as ‘‘super rural’’ areas.7 For
purposes of payment under the
Medicare ambulance fee schedule, a
‘‘super rural’’ area is thus a rural area
determined to be in the lowest 25
percent of rural population arrayed by
population density. DMEPOS industry
stakeholders have recommended that
this differential in payment between
super rural areas and MSAs may be
adopted in the DMEPOS fee schedule
payment context as well.
5 https://www.cqrc.org/img/CQRCCost
SurveyWhitePaperMay2015Final.pdf.
6 https://www.hrsa.gov/rural-health/about-us/
definition/.
7 https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Feefor-Service-Payment/AmbulanceFeeSchedule/
afspuf.
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In general, we continue to receive
feedback from industry stakeholders
expressing their belief that the fully
adjusted fee schedule amounts are too
low and would have an adverse impact
on beneficiary access to items and
services furnished in rural areas if they
are resumed in these areas. Industry
stakeholders have also stated that the
fully adjusted fee schedule amounts are
insufficient to cover the supplier’s costs,
particularly for delivering items in rural
areas.
We indicated in the November 2020
proposed rule that we have been closely
monitoring beneficiary health outcomes
and access to DMEPOS items. We stated
that there has been no decline in
allowed services for items subject to the
fee schedule adjustments at any point in
time, including 2017 and the first half
of 2018 when payment in rural and noncontiguous areas was based on the fully
adjusted fee schedule amounts.
Traditional Medicare or fee-or-service
allowed services for items subject to the
fee schedule adjustments rose from
24,882,018 in 2015 to 25,604,836 in
2016, 26,065,601 in 2017, and
26,481,002 in 2018. This increase in
allowed services occurred even though
beneficiary fee-for-service enrollment
dropped by 0.6 percent from 33.7
million in 2016 to 33.5 million in 2018
while Medicare Advantage beneficiary
enrollment rose by 16.0 percent from
18.4 million in 2016 to 21.3 million in
2018. During this time, suppliers
accepted assignment (Medicare payment
in full) for most items and services
(99.79 percent in 2017 and 99.81
percent in 2018). This rate of
assignment remained extremely high
(99.68 percent in 2017 and 99.70
percent in 2018) even after removing
claims for Medicare participating
suppliers and suppliers furnishing items
to beneficiaries with dual (Medicare and
Medicaid) eligibility, where assignment
is mandatory. In addition, we stated that
we continue to monitor over one
thousand health metrics (emergency
room visits, physician office visits,
nursing home and hospital admissions,
length of need, deaths, etc.) and have
not detected any negative impact of the
fee schedule adjustments on health
outcomes. When analyzing the 2015
monthly average health outcome rates
for beneficiaries in non-CBAs, which
was the last year we did not make any
fee schedule adjustments in non-CBAs,
we noted reductions in both 2017 and
2018 in mortality rates, hospitalization
rates, physician visits, SNF admissions,
and monthly days in the hospital. The
percentage of beneficiaries with
emergency room visits increased from
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3.6 to 3.9 percent and monthly days in
nursing homes remained unchanged.
Finally, we noted that beneficiary
inquiries and complaints related to
DMEPOS items and services have
steadily declined since 2016 and have
not increased.
b. Highest Winning Bids in CBAs
Analysis
Section 16008 of the Cures Act
requires us to take into account the
highest amount bid by a winning
supplier in a CBA when making fee
schedule adjustments based on
information from the DMEPOS CBP for
items and services furnished on or after
January 1, 2019. As discussed earlier, in
the CY 2019 ESRD PPS DMEPOS final
rule (83 FR 57026), we found no pattern
indicating that maximum bids are
higher for areas with lower volume than
for areas with higher volume. For
additional details, we refer readers to
the CY 2019 ESRD PPS DMEPOS
proposed rule (83 FR 34360 through
34367). Additionally, for Round 2021 of
the DMEPOS CBP, SPAs were
calculated for the lead item in each
product category based on the
maximum winning bid, and therefore
the maximum winning bid is taken into
account when making fee schedule
adjustments based on information from
the CBP for items and services included
in Round 2021 and furnished on or after
January 1, 2019.
c. Travel Distance Analysis
Section 16008 of the Cures Act also
requires us to take into account a
comparison of the average travel
distance and costs associated with
furnishing items and services in CBAs
and non-CBAs. In the CY 2019 ESRD
PPS DMEPOS proposed rule (83 FR
34367 through 34371), we compared the
average size of different non-CBAs
nationally and found that the CBAs had
much larger service areas than the nonCBAs. We also compared the average
travel distances for suppliers in the
different areas using claims data for
items and services subject to the fee
schedule adjustments. From our
analysis, we found that the average
distance traveled in CBAs was generally
greater than in most non-CBAs.
However, in reviewing certain nonCBAs, such as Frontier and Remote
(FAR) areas,8 Outside Core Based
8 A Frontier and Remote (FAR) area is statistically
delineated by the Health Resources and Services
Administration (HRSA) based on remoteness and
population sparseness. HRSA Methodology for
Designation of Frontier and Remote Areas, 79 FR
25599 through 25603 (May 5, 2014).
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Statistical Areas (OCBSAs),9 and super
rural areas,10 we found that suppliers
generally must travel farther distances
to beneficiaries located in those areas
than for beneficiaries located in CBAs
and other non-CBAs. For additional
details on our previous travel distance
analysis, we refer readers to the CY 2019
ESRD PPS DMEPOS proposed rule (83
FR 34367 through 34371).
In the November 2020 proposed rule,
we updated some of the travel distance
data used in our previous travel
distance analysis with data from 2018,
which at the time was the most recent
full year of CBP data. As of January 1,
2021, Round 2021 of the CBP is
underway and there are currently
contract suppliers furnishing OTS back
and knee braces in CBAs. We did not
award competitive bidding contracts to
suppliers for any of the other product
categories that were bid during Round
2021 of the CBP because the SPAs
(calculated based on bids) did not
achieve expected savings.11
As we indicated in the CY 2019 ESRD
DMEPOS final rule (83 FR 57027), we
looked at hospital beds and oxygen and
oxygen equipment, as they are items
that are most likely to be delivered
locally by suppliers using company
vehicles, as well as all items subject to
the fee schedule adjustments. The last
time these items were included in the
CBP was in 2018, and so we believe this
2018 data is still relevant for the
purposes of this analysis.
In reviewing the data from 2018, we
found that the same trends we presented
in the CY 2019 ESRD PPS DMEPOS
proposed rule, which were based on
2016 data, apply. Similar to our
previous travel distance analysis, to
prevent the data from being skewed in
certain ways, we only included claims
where the supplier billing address is in
the same or adjoining State as the
beneficiary address, and we excluded
claims from suppliers with multiple
locations that always use the same
billing address. These data restrictions
left in place 96 percent of allowed
claims lines when looking at hospital
beds, 97 percent when looking at
9 Outside Core Based Statistical Areas are
delineated by OMB as counties that do not qualify
for inclusion in a Core Based Statistical Area. OMB
2010 Standards for Delineating Metropolitan and
Micropolitan Statistical Areas; Notice, 75 FR 37245
(June 28, 2010).
10 Under the Ambulance Fee schedule (AFS),
temporary add-on payments known as the ‘‘super
rural bonus’’ are available in relation to areas that
are within the lowest 25 percentile of all rural areas
arrayed by population density. 42 CFR
414.610(c)(5)(ii).
11 https://www.cms.gov/files/document/round2021-dmepos-cbp-single-payment-amts-factsheet.pdf.
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73869
oxygen, and 92 percent when looking at
all items.
TABLE 1—2018 AVERAGE NUMBER OF MILES BETWEEN SUPPLIER AND BENEFICIARY *
Beneficiary area
Hospital beds
CBAs ............................................................................................................................................
Non-CBA MSAs ...........................................................................................................................
Non-CBA Micro Areas .................................................................................................................
Non-CBA OCBSA ........................................................................................................................
Super Rural ..................................................................................................................................
FAR level 1 ..................................................................................................................................
FAR level 3 ..................................................................................................................................
28
24
22
28
37
27
40
Oxygen
All items
23
22
22
31
37
31
41
30
28
27
37
42
36
47
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* Includes claims where the supplier billing address is in the same or adjoining state as the beneficiary address, excluding claims from suppliers with multiple locations that always use the same billing address.
We also reviewed in the November
2020 proposed rule travel distance data
updated by partial 2019 data spanning
January through November 2019 (85 FR
70366). Average travel distances in
former CBAs decreased, while average
travel distances in rural and non-rural
non-CBAs increased. Section 16008 of
the Cures Act requires a comparison of
average travel distance with respect to
non-CBAs and CBAs. At the time of the
November 2020 proposed rule, there
were no CBAs due to the gap period in
the DMEPOS CBP, allowing any
Medicare-enrolled DMEPOS suppliers
to furnish DMEPOS items and services.
In the November 2020 proposed rule,
we still reviewed data from former
CBAs, as we believed the decrease in
average travel distance in the former
CBAs was additional confirmation that
travel distances are generally greater in
CBAs while a CBP is in effect, when
compared to non-CBAs. We stated that
average supplier travel distances in the
former CBAs decreased for a variety of
reasons. For one, CBP contract suppliers
must furnish items and services to any
beneficiary located in a CBA. During a
gap period in the CBP, any supplier may
furnish items and services to a
beneficiary located in a former CBA and
suppliers are no longer obligated to
service a beneficiary who may be farther
away from the supplier. Additionally,
more suppliers can now furnish items
and services to beneficiaries, so a
beneficiary could also receive items and
services furnished by a supplier located
closer to the beneficiary. Section 16008
of the Cures Act requires us to take into
account a comparison of the average
travel distance and costs associated with
furnishing items and services in CBAs
and non-CBAs. As a result, we believe
a payment methodology should account
for this factor, and the increased costs
suppliers may face in reaching certain
non-CBAs. When we say certain nonCBAs, we are referring to non-CBAs
classified as either super rural, FAR, or
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d. Cost Analysis
such increased costs in non-contiguous
areas.
We also noted in the November 2020
proposed rule that we consider
assignment rates as a source of cost data
and consider it a measure of the
sufficiency of payment to cover a
supplier’s costs for furnishing items and
services under the Medicare program
(85 FR 70366). Assignment rates for
items subject to the fee schedule
adjustments have not varied
significantly around the country, and
they have consistently remained over 99
percent in all areas. Thus, for the
overwhelming majority of claims for
items and services furnished in the nonCBAs that were subject to the fee
schedule adjustments, suppliers have
decided to accept the Medicare payment
amount in full, and have not needed to
charge the beneficiary for any additional
costs that the Medicare allowed
payment amount did not cover. Of note,
for the 17 months from January 2017
through May 2018 when Medicare paid
at the fully adjusted fee level in all
areas, or about 40 percent below the unadjusted fee schedule amounts on
average, the assignment rate did not dip
below 99 percent for the items and
services subject to the adjusted fee
schedule amounts.
We presented our analysis of different
sources of cost data in the CY 2019
ESRD PPS DMEPOS proposed rule (83
FR 34371 through 34377). Overall, in
comparing CBAs to non-CBAs, we
found that CBAs tended to have the
highest costs out of the cost data we
examined. For certain cost data, we also
found that Alaska and Hawaii—both
non-contiguous areas—tended to have
higher costs than many contiguous areas
of the U.S. We stated in the November
2020 proposed rule that we updated this
analysis with more recent data and did
not notice any significant differences in
these overall findings.
We believe these findings support a
payment methodology that considers
e. Average Volume of Items and
Services Furnished by Suppliers in the
Area Analysis
Section 16008 of the Cures Act
requires that we take into account a
comparison of the average volume of
items and services furnished by
suppliers in CBAs and non-CBAs. In the
CY 2019 ESRD PPS DMEPOS proposed
rule (83 FR 34377), we found that in
virtually all cases, the average volume of
items and services furnished by
suppliers is higher in CBAs than nonCBAs. In the November 2020 proposed
rule we reviewed updated data from
2018, and found that in most cases, the
average volume of items and services
furnished by suppliers was higher in
OCBSA. This is because although we
found that the average travel distance
for suppliers in non-CBAs is generally
lower than the average travel distance
and costs for suppliers in CBAs while
the CBP was in effect, we found that
suppliers generally must travel farther
distances to beneficiaries located in
non-CBAs that are super rural, FAR or
OCBSA than for beneficiaries located in
CBAs and other non-CBAs. Still,
industry stakeholders have expressed
their belief that the fully adjusted fee
schedule amounts are too low and have
an adverse impact on beneficiary access
to items and services furnished in rural
non-CBAs. We have not seen evidence
of this, but because stakeholder input is
another factor in section 16008 of the
Cures Act, we are also factoring
stakeholder input into our payment
methodology, and therefore believe a
payment methodology should result in
higher payments for DMEPOS suppliers
that furnish items and services to all
rural areas, instead of just those areas
with greater travel distance than CBAs.
We believe this errs on the side of
caution and may incentivize suppliers
to furnish items and services to all rural
areas.
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CBAs than in non-CBAs (85 FR 70367).
We reviewed the number of allowed
claim lines on a national level for 15
different product categories subject to
the fee schedule adjustments. In doing
so, we found that non-CBAs had more
allowed claim lines than CBAs for 4 of
the 15 product categories that we
reviewed (nebulizer, oxygen, seat lifts,
and transcutaneous electrical nerve
stimulation (TENS) devices). Rural nonCBAs had more allowed claim lines
than CBAs for 2 of the 15 product
categories that we reviewed (seat lifts
and TENS). Finally, non-rural non-CBAs
had more allowed claims lines than
CBAs for those same two product
categories (seat lifts and TENS).
Additionally, total services per
supplier continued to increase in 2018
and 2019 in all non-CBAs. Thus, we
found that the average volume per
supplier in non-CBAs continues to
increase while assignment rates are 99
percent or higher, and overall utilization
remains steady or is increasing. We
believe these findings support a
payment methodology that takes into
account and ensures beneficiary access
to items and services in non-CBAs with
relatively low volume.
f. Number of Suppliers Analysis
Section 16008 of the Cures Act
requires us to take into account a
comparison of the number of suppliers
in the area.
The number of suppliers billing
Medicare Fee-for-Service (FFS) for items
subject to fee schedule adjustments in
all non-CBAs declined from June 2018
through the end of 2019, which is the
time period in which we paid the fully
adjusted fees in non-rural, contiguous
non-CBAs and the blended rates in rural
and non-contiguous non-CBAs, in
accordance with 42 CFR
414.210(g)(9)(iii) and (iv). More
specifics about this decline can be
found in Table 2. We note that the
decline in the number of billing
suppliers is part of a long-term trend
that preceded the adjustment of the fee
schedule amounts beginning in 2016,
but we are still concerned about this
trend, particularly for rural and noncontiguous areas, because beneficiaries
could have trouble accessing items and
services in these lower population areas
if more suppliers decide to stop serving
these areas.
In the November 2020 proposed rule
we studied supplier numbers and found
that when looking at a sample of HCPCS
codes for high volume items subject to
fee schedule adjustments (E1390 for
oxygen concentrators, E0601 for CPAP
machines, E0260 for semi-electric
hospital beds, and B4035 for enteral
nutrition supplies), that the average
volume of items furnished by suppliers
before they stopped billing Medicare is
very small compared to the average
volume of items furnished by suppliers
who continued to bill (85 FR 70367).
Data showed that large national chain
suppliers were accepting a large
percentage of the beneficiaries who
were previously served by the smaller
suppliers that exited the Medicare
market. In addition, the average volume
per supplier continues to increase (as
the number of suppliers who bill
Medicare has declined in recent years,
the suppliers that still bill Medicare are
picking up more volume), while overall
services continue to grow, suggesting
industry consolidation rather than any
type of access issue for DME. Therefore,
the decline in the number of supplier
locations may be largely a result of the
same degree of consolidation of
suppliers furnishing items subject to the
fee schedule adjustments rather than a
decline in beneficiary access to items
subject to the fee schedule adjustments.
In addition, this trend in consolidation
is matched by an increase in the average
volume of items furnished per supplier,
increasing economies of scale for these
suppliers, although this does decrease
the number of overall suppliers’
beneficiaries can choose from to provide
DMEPOS items. We do note that the
number of enrolled DMEPOS suppliers
did increase by 2 percent from 86,061 in
2019 to 87,800 in 2020, the highest total
since 2016 when the total number of
enrolled DMEPOS suppliers was 88,786.
There are therefore still many DMEPOS
supplier locations throughout the
country furnishing DMEPOS items and
services.
However, to determine what effect, if
any, our payment amounts have had on
the number of billing suppliers, in the
November 2020 proposed rule, we also
examined supplier numbers during
defined timeframes in which we paid
suppliers the unadjusted and adjusted
fees, and the 50/50 blended rates (50
percent unadjusted and 50 percent
adjusted) (85 FR 70367). The declines in
the number of billing suppliers in both
rural and non-rural non-CBAs were very
similar, even when we increased
payment levels to the blended rates in
rural and non-contiguous non-CBAs,
and continued paying the fully adjusted
fees in non-rural/contiguous non-CBAs.
We did not see an appreciable
difference in supplier reductions
between the two areas. We noted that
non-contiguous non-CBAs exhibited a
slightly different trend than other nonCBAs, as the number of billing suppliers
in these areas increased from 2015 to
2016 when we paid the unadjusted fees,
and January 2017 to May 2018 when we
paid the fully adjusted fees, but
subsequently declined between June
2018 to November 2019 when we paid
the blended rates.
For this analysis, we reviewed the
following timeframes and noted the
payment policies in effect at that time:
• Period 1: January 2015–December
2015: Unadjusted fees in all non-CBAs.
• Period 2: January 2016–December
2016: Blended rates in all non-CBAs (as
noted previously, Congress passed
section 16007 of the Cures Act on
December 13, 2016, which made the
blended rates effective retroactively in
all non-CBAs from June 30 through
December 31, 2016).
• Period 3: January 2017–May 2018:
Fully adjusted fees in all non-CBAs.
• Period 4: June 2018–November
2019: Blended rates in rural and noncontiguous non-CBAs, fully adjusted
fees in non-rural non-CBAs in the
contiguous U.S.
TABLE 2—NUMBER OF SUPPLIERS WHO BILLED FOR DME SUBJECT TO THE FEE SCHEDULE ADJUSTMENTS
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Period
Jan 2015–Dec 2015 .........
Jan 2016–Dec 2016 .........
Jan 2017–May 2018 (fully
adjusted) .......................
Jun 2018–Nov 2019 .........
CBA
% Change
Non-CBA
non-rural
% Change
Non-CBA
rural
% Change
Non-CBA
non-contiguous
% Change
12,717
11,698
....................
¥8.0
10,694
10,103
....................
¥5.5
11,491
10,772
....................
¥6.3
1,150
1,229
....................
6.9
9,127
10,381
¥22.0
13.7
9,520
8,778
¥5.8
¥7.8
10,173
9,401
¥5.6
¥7.6
1,295
1,238
5.4
¥4.4
* Claims data through 2019/11/29 (2019 Week 48), Provider Enrollment, Chain, and Ownership System (PECOS) data through 2019/09/17.
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As we noted in our previous analysis
(83 FR 34380), we believe that oxygen
and oxygen equipment is one of the
most critical items subject to the fee
schedule adjustments in terms of
beneficiary access. If access to oxygen
and oxygen equipment is denied to a
beneficiary who needs oxygen, serious
health implications can result. Oxygen
and oxygen equipment are also items
that must be delivered to the
beneficiary, and set up and used
properly in the home for safety reasons.
Access to oxygen and oxygen equipment
in remote areas thus remains critical
and has been stressed by stakeholders.
To determine if there were pockets of
the country where access to oxygen and
oxygen equipment was in jeopardy, in
the November 2020 proposed rule, we
reviewed data depicting how many nonCBA counties are being served by only
one oxygen supplier (85 FR 70368).
From 2016 to 2018, there was a total of
2,691 non-CBA counties with
beneficiaries receiving Medicarecovered oxygen supplies. For each year,
there were approximately 38 to 39
counties being served by only one
oxygen supplier, serving approximately
68 to 78 beneficiaries receiving
approximately 736 to 896 services
(annually) in those areas. Among the
counties with only one oxygen supplier,
the majority had only one oxygen user
during that year. All counties with a
single oxygen supplier from 2016 to
2018 had 100 percent assignment rates
for oxygen services, and more than half
of the single-supplier counties were in
Puerto Rico.
We believe this shows that access to
oxygen and oxygen equipment is not in
jeopardy. If there are oxygen claims for
only one beneficiary in the area, then
only one billing supplier would show
up in the data. This does not mean that
the supplier submitting the claims for
this one beneficiary is the only supplier
available to furnish oxygen and oxygen
equipment in the area. There may be
other suppliers able to serve these areas
as well and this would show up in the
claims data if there were more
beneficiaries using oxygen in these areas
and these beneficiaries used more than
one supplier. This also shows how nonCBAs can have far less volume and
fewer billing suppliers than CBAs.
Thus, we believe paying more money to
suppliers serving rural and noncontiguous non-CBAs takes into account
those factors specified in section 16008
of the Cures Act (volume and number of
suppliers), and it errs on the side of
caution to prevent beneficiary access
issues.
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2. DMEPOS Fee Schedule Adjustment
Impact Monitoring Data
In addition to the various Cures Act
factors, we monitored other metrics we
believe are important in measuring the
impacts of our payment policies. We
stated in the November 2020 proposed
rule (85 FR 70368) that in reviewing
claims data processed through midNovember in 2018 and 2019, that
assignment rates for all claims for
DMEPOS items and services subject to
fee schedule adjustments went up
slightly from 2018 to 2019 in both nonrural non-CBAs (from 99.826 percent or
12,948,603 assigned services out of
12,971,110 to 99.833 percent or
11,594,547 assigned services out of
11,613,970) and rural non-CBAs (from
99.79 percent or 13,285,838 assigned
services out of 13,313,575 to 99.81
percent or 11,863,434 assigned services
out of 11,885,683). We stated to keep in
mind that the 2019 claims data was not
yet complete, so the number of allowed
services will be greater than what we
reported, but the final rate of assignment
will likely not change much if at all.
When looking at claims processed
through May 28, 2021, we found that
assignment rates for all claims for
DMEPOS items and services subject to
fee schedule adjustments went slightly
up in non-rural non-CBAs from 2019 to
2020 (99.82 percent to 99.85 percent)
and 2020 to 2021 (99.85 percent to 99.88
percent). Assignment rates also
increased in rural non-CBAs from 2019
to 2020 (99.80 to 99.84 percent) and
2020 to 2021 (99.84 to 99.85 percent).
Finally, assignment rates also increased
in non-contiguous non-CBAs from 2019
to 2020 (99.53 percent to 99.79 percent)
and 2020 to 2021 (99.79 percent to 99.89
percent). We have also been monitoring
other claims data from non-CBAs, and
we have not observed any trends
indicating an increase in adverse
beneficiary health outcomes associated
with the fee schedule adjustments. We
monitor mortality rates, hospitalization
rates, ER visit rates, SNF admission
rates, physician visit rates, monthly
days in hospital, and monthly days in
SNF. Except for death information,
which comes from the Medicare
Enrollment Database, all other outcomes
are derived from claims (inpatient,
outpatient, Part B carrier, and SNF). Our
monitoring materials cover historical
and regional trends in these health
outcome rates across a number of
populations, allowing us to observe
deviations that require further
drilldown analyses. We monitor health
outcomes in the enrolled Medicare
population (Medicare Parts A and B),
dual Medicare and Medicaid
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population, long-term institutionalized
population, as well as various DME
utilizers and access groups. This helps
paint a complete picture of whether an
increase in an outcome is across the
board (not linked to DME access), or is
unique to certain populations.
Specifically, we focus on any increases
that are unique to the DME access
groups, which include beneficiaries
who are likely to use certain DME based
on their diagnoses, and we would
conduct drilldown analyses and policy
research to pinpoint potential reasons
for such increases.
In addition, in the November 2020
proposed rule, we examined what effect,
if any, paying the blended rates in rural
and non-contiguous non-CBAs had on
utilization of DME (85 FR 70368). We
compared the utilization of oxygen
equipment between June 2017 through
December 2017, and June 2018 through
December 2018. We compared these two
time periods, because we paid the
blended rates in rural and noncontiguous non-CBAs from June 1, 2018
through December 31, 2018, in
accordance with the 2018 IFC (83 FR
21915). During the 2017 time period, we
paid the fully adjusted fees in all nonCBAs. During the 2018 time period, we
paid the blended rates in rural and noncontiguous non-CBAs and the fully
adjusted fees in the non-rural
contiguous non-CBAs from June 1, 2018
through December 31, 2018. We
specifically studied oxygen utilization
in rural areas without Micropolitan
Statistical Areas, that is OCBSAs, as
these counties have the least populated
urban areas, and as we stated in the CY
2019 ESRD PPS DMEPOS final rule, one
reason for paying higher rates was to
ensure beneficiary access in rural and
remote areas (83 FR 57029). We found
that the number of allowed units in
OCBSAs decreased comparably in all
areas. Payment at the blended rates
between June 1, 2018, and December 31,
2018, increased allowed charges in
OCBSAs by 42 percent, but this had no
apparent effect on increasing services in
OCBSAs. Additionally, the significant
reduction of liquid oxygen equipment
allowed services trend continued in
OCBSAs as well as in all areas. The
decline in the number of oxygen
concentrators that were furnished
declined at the same rate in OCBSAs as
in all areas. Access to oxygen equipment
in OCBSAs was unchanged, despite a 49
percent increase in unit prices.
In sum, we do not believe our
payment rates had a discernible impact
on any trends that were already
occurring before we paid the higher
fees, and we did not see any appreciable
differences between the areas in which
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we paid the higher 50/50 blended rates
in rural and non-contiguous non-CBAs
and the areas in which we pay the fully
adjusted fees in non-rural/contiguous
non-CBAs. In addition, assignments
rates are still high in all non-CBAs—
over 99 percent—which means over 99
percent of suppliers are accepting
Medicare payment as payment in full
and not balance billing beneficiaries for
the cost of the DME.
We sought comments on all of our
findings.
TABLE 3—SUMMARY OF OUR ANALYSIS OF THE SECTION 16008 CURES ACT FACTORS
Section 16008 Cures Act factors
Summary of our analysis
Stakeholder Input ............................
• Most of the input we have received has come from the DMEPOS industry, such as DMEPOS suppliers,
expressing that the fully adjusted fee schedule amounts are too low, and that CMS should increase how
much Medicare pays DMEPOS suppliers to furnish items and services to beneficiaries in non-CBAs.
These stakeholders expressed concerns that the level of the adjusted payment amounts constrains suppliers from furnishing items and services to rural areas.
• Stakeholder input that did not support such payment increases included input from the Medicare Payment Advisory Commission (MedPAC), which believed any adjustment for rural and non-contiguous
areas should be limited to only the amount needed to ensure access, targeted at areas and products for
which an adjustment is needed, and that CMS should consider taking steps to offset the cost of any adjustments. MedPAC supported setting fee schedule rates in urban, contiguous non-CBAs based 100 percent on information from the CBP.*
• In the CY 2019 ESRD PPS DMEPOS final rule (83 FR 57026), we found no pattern indicating that maximum bids are higher for areas with lower volume than for areas with higher volume.
• Average travel distance between the supplier and beneficiary is generally higher in CBAs than in nonCBAs, except for non-CBAs classified as FAR, super rural, or OCBSA.
• We examined four sources of cost data: (1) The Practice Expense Geographic Practice Cost Index (PE
GPCI), (2) delivery driver wages from the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS), (3) real estate taxes from the
U.S. Census Bureau’s American Community Survey (ACS), and (4) gas and utility prices from the Consumer Price Index (CPI).
• Overall, in comparing CBAs to non-CBAs, CBAs tended to have the highest costs out of the cost data
we examined. For certain cost data, we also found that Alaska and Hawaii—both non-contiguous
areas—tended to have higher costs than many contiguous areas of the U.S. Assignment rates, which
we consider to be a measure of the sufficiency of payment to cover a supplier’s costs for furnishing
items and services under the Medicare program, have consistently remained high at over 99 percent
(out of 100) in non-CBAs, meaning over 99 percent of suppliers furnishing items subject to fee schedule
adjustments in the non-CBAs are accepting the Medicare payment in full.
• CBAs generally have higher volume than non-CBAs.
• Total services per supplier continued to increase in 2018 and 2019 in non-CBAs.
• The number of suppliers billing Medicare for furnishing items and services subject to fee schedule adjustments in the non-CBAs has been declining for several years, and this downward trend started years
before CMS started adjusting fee schedule amounts in the non-CBAs in 2016.
• When looking at a sample of HCPCS codes for high volume items subject to fee schedule adjustments,
the average volume of items furnished by suppliers before they stopped billing Medicare is very small
compared to the average volume of items furnished by suppliers who continued to bill. Data shows that
large national chain suppliers are accepting a large percentage of the beneficiaries who were previously
served by the smaller suppliers that exited the Medicare market. In addition, the average volume per
supplier continues to increase (as the number of suppliers who bill Medicare decline, the suppliers that
still bill Medicare are picking up more volume), while overall services continue to grow, suggesting industry consolidation rather than any type of access issue for DME. Therefore, the decline in the number of
supplier locations is largely a result of the consolidation of suppliers furnishing items subject to the fee
schedule adjustments rather than a decline in beneficiary access to items subject to the fee schedule
adjustments.
• When looking at different timeframes over the last several years in which we paid different fee schedule
amounts (unadjusted fees, adjusted fees, and the 50/50 blended rates), we did not see an appreciable
effect that these payment changes had on stemming the reduction in the number of suppliers billing
Medicare.
• All counties with a single oxygen supplier from 2016 to 2018 had 100 percent assignment rates for oxygen services, and more than half of the single-supplier counties were in Puerto Rico.
Highest Winning Bid .......................
Travel Distance ...............................
Cost .................................................
Volume ............................................
Number of Suppliers .......................
* https://www.medpac.gov/wp-content/uploads/import_data/scrape_files/docs/default-source/comment-letters/08312018_esrd_cy2019_dme_
medpac_comment_v2_sec.pdf.
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C. Proposed Provisions
After reviewing updated information
that must be taken into consideration in
accordance with section 1834(a)(1)(G) of
the Act in determining adjustments to
DMEPOS fee schedule amounts, we
proposed to revise § 414.210(g) to
establish three different methodologies
for adjusting fee schedule amounts for
DMEPOS items and services included in
more than 10 competitive bidding
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programs furnished in non-CBAs on or
after April 1, 2021, or the date
immediately following the duration of
the emergency period described in
section 1135(g)(1)(B) of the Act (42
U.S.C. 1320b–5(g)(1)(B)), whichever is
later (85 FR 70370). We proposed three
different fee schedule adjustment
methodologies, based on the non-CBA
in which the items are furnished: (1)
One fee schedule adjustment
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methodology for items and services
furnished in non-contiguous non-CBAs;
(2) another adjustment methodology for
items and services furnished in nonCBAs within the contiguous United
States that are defined as rural areas at
§ 414.202; and (3) a third adjustment
methodology for items and services
furnished in all other non-CBAs (nonrural areas within the contiguous United
States) (85 FR 70370). With respect to
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items and services furnished in no more
than ten competitive bidding programs,
we proposed to continue using the
methodology in § 414.210(g)(3) to adjust
the fee schedule amounts for these items
furnished on or after April 1, 2021 (85
FR 70370). The rest of the discussion
that follows addresses the fee schedule
adjustments for items and services that
have been included in more than ten
competitive bidding programs.
First, we proposed to continue paying
the 50/50 blended rates in noncontiguous non-CBAs (85 FR 70370).
However, we proposed that the 50/50
blend will no longer be a transition rule
under § 414.210(g)(9), and will instead
be the fee schedule adjustment
methodology for items and services
furnished in these areas under
§ 414.210(g)(2) unless revised in future
rulemaking. We proposed that the fee
schedule amounts for items and services
furnished on or after April 1, 2021, or
the date immediately following the
duration of the emergency period
described in section 1135(g)(1)(B) of the
Act (42 U.S.C. 1320b–5(g)(1)(B)),
whichever is later, in non-contiguous
non-CBAs be adjusted so that they are
equal to a blend of 50 percent of the
greater of the average of the SPAs for the
item or service for CBAs located in noncontiguous areas or 110 percent of the
national average price for the item or
service determined under
§ 414.210(g)(1)(ii) and 50 percent of the
unadjusted fee schedule amount for the
area, which is the fee schedule amount
in effect on December 31, 2015,
increased for each subsequent year
beginning in 2016 by the annual update
factors specified in sections 1834(a)(14),
1834(h)(4), and 1842(s)(1)(B) of the Act,
respectively, for durable medical
equipment and supplies, off-the-shelf
orthotics, and enteral nutrients,
supplies, and equipment. We explained
our rationale for a methodology that
incorporates 110 percent of the national
average price in our CY 2015 ESRD PPS
DMEPOS final rule (79 FR 66225). We
stated that we believe that a variation in
payment amounts both above and below
the national average price should be
allowed, and we believe that allowing
for the same degree of variation (10
percent) above and below the national
average price is more equitable and less
arbitrary than allowing a higher degree
of variation (20 percent) above the
national average price than below (10
percent), as in the case of the national
ceiling and floor for the Prosthetic &
Orthotic fee schedule, or allowing for
only 15 percent variation below the
national average price, as in the case of
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the national ceiling and floor for the
DME fee schedule (79 FR 66225).
Second, we proposed to continue
paying the 50/50 blended rates in rural
contiguous areas; however, we proposed
that the 50/50 blend will no longer be
a transition rule under § 414.210(g)(9),
and will instead be the fee schedule
adjustment methodology for items and
services furnished in these areas under
§ 414.210(g)(2) unless revised in future
rulemaking (85 FR 70370). We proposed
that the fee schedule amounts for items
and services furnished in rural
contiguous areas on or after April 1,
2021 or the date immediately following
the duration of the emergency period
described in section 1135(g)(1)(B) of the
Act (42 U.S.C. 1320b–5(g)(1)(B)),
whichever is later, be adjusted so that
they are equal to a blend of 50 percent
of 110 percent of the national average
price for the item or service determined
under § 414.210(g)(1)(ii) and 50 percent
of the fee schedule amount for the area
in effect on December 31, 2015,
increased for each subsequent year
beginning in 2016 by the annual update
factors specified in sections 1834(a)(14),
1834(h)(4), and 1842(s)(1)(B) of the Act,
respectively, for durable medical
equipment and supplies, off-the-shelf
orthotics, and enteral nutrients,
supplies, and equipment. We also
proposed to revise § 414.210(g)(1)(v) to
address the period before April 1, 2021,
to say that for items and services
furnished before April 1, 2021, the fee
schedule amount for all areas within a
State that are defined as rural areas for
the purposes of this subpart is adjusted
to 110 percent of the national average
price determined under paragraph
(g)(1)(ii) of this section. We decided to
propose a policy of paying a 50/50
blend of adjusted and unadjusted rates
in non-contiguous non-CBAs and in
rural non-CBAs, as opposed to a
different ratio (such as a 75/25 blend,
which is an alternative we considered
and discuss further in this section),
because past stakeholder input from the
DME industry has expressed support for
this 50/50 blend. For instance, we
proposed paying the 50/50 blend for
rural and non-contiguous non-CBAs
from January 1, 2019 through December
31, 2020 in our CY 2019 ESRD PPS
DMEPOS proposed rule, and we
finalized this policy in our CY 2019
ESRD PPS DMEPOS final rule. Most of
the comments we received on the
proposed rule were from commenters in
the DME industry, such as homecare
associations, DME manufacturers, and
suppliers, and these commenters
generally supported the 50/50 blended
rates provisions.
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Third, for items and services
furnished on or after April 1, 2021 or
the date immediately following the
duration of the emergency period
described in section 1135(g)(1)(B) of the
Act (42 U.S.C. 1320b–5(g)(1)(B)),
whichever is later, in all other non-rural
non-CBAs within the contiguous United
States, we proposed that the fee
schedule amounts be equal to 100
percent of the adjusted payment amount
established under § 414.210(g)(1)(iv) (85
FR 70370).
Accordingly, we proposed to add
paragraph § 414.210(g)(9)(vi) to say that
for items and services furnished in all
areas with dates of service on or after
April 1, 2021, or the date immediately
following the duration of the emergency
period described in section
1135(g)(1)(B) of the Act, whichever is
later, based on the fee schedule amount
for the area is equal to the adjusted
payment amount established under
§ 414.210(g) (85 FR 70370).
Thus under our proposed provision,
we will continue paying suppliers
significantly higher rates for furnishing
items and services in rural and noncontiguous areas as compared to items
and services furnished in other areas
because of stakeholder input indicating
higher costs in these areas, greater travel
distances and costs in certain non-CBAs
compared to CBAs, the unique logistical
challenges and costs of furnishing items
to beneficiaries in the non-contiguous
areas, significantly lower volume of
items furnished in these areas versus
CBAs, and concerns about financial
incentives for suppliers in surrounding
urban areas to continue including
outlying rural areas in their service
areas. Previous feedback from industry
stakeholders expressed concern
regarding beneficiary access to items
and services furnished in rural and
remote areas.
Furthermore, in our analysis, we
found that suppliers must travel farther
distances to deliver items to
beneficiaries located in super rural areas
and areas outside both MSAs and
micropolitan statistical areas than the
distances they must travel to deliver
items to beneficiaries located in CBAs
(while the CBP was in effect). We also
found that certain non-contiguous areas
tended to have higher costs, and had
smaller numbers of oxygen suppliers
and beneficiaries. Rural and noncontiguous areas also have much lower
volume of DMEPOS items furnished by
suppliers than in CBAs, and we are also
concerned that national chain suppliers
or suppliers in higher populated urban
areas that are currently serving rural
areas may abandon these areas if they
are less profitable markets due to fee
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schedule adjustments and may instead
concentrate on the larger markets only.
We believe that this feedback as well as
these findings supports a payment
methodology that errs on the side of
caution and ensures adequate payment
for items and services furnished to
beneficiaries in all rural and noncontiguous non-CBAs. We also believed
that the proposed fee schedule
adjustment methodologies would create
an incentive for suppliers to continue
serving areas where fewer beneficiaries
reside and will therefore further ensure
beneficiary access to items and services
in these areas. We proposed to continue
paying the 50/50 blended rates in rural
and non-contiguous non-CBAs, and 100
percent of the adjusted payment amount
established under § 414.210(g)(1)(iv) in
non-rural non-CBAs in the contiguous
U.S., takes into account stakeholder
feedback as well as information from
our previous and updated analyses of
the Cures Act factors (85 FR 70371).
The proposed fee schedule
adjustment methodologies rely on SPAs
generated by the CBP. We only awarded
Round 2021 CBP contracts to bidders in
the OTS back braces and OTS knee
braces product categories.12 We did not
award Round 2021 CBP contracts to
bidders that bid in any other product
categories that were included in Round
2021 of the CBP, therefore, CMS does
not have any new SPAs for these items
and services. As a result, we stated in
the November 2020 proposed rule that
we were seriously considering whether
to simply extend application of the
current fee schedule adjustment
transition rules for all of the items and
services that were included in Round
2021 of the CBP but have essentially
been removed from Round 2021 of the
CBP (85 FR 70371). That is, for nonCBAs, the fee schedule adjustment
transition rules at § 414.210(g)(9) and,
for CBAs and former CBAs (CBAs where
no CBP contracts are in effect), the fee
schedule adjustment rules at
§ 414.210(g)(10), would be extended
until a future round of the CBP. More
specifically, for non-CBAs, we proposed
to extend the transition rules at
§ 414.210(g)(9)(iii) and (v) for items and
services included in product categories
other than the OTS back and knee brace
product categories, and, for these same
items and services furnished in CBAs or
former CBAs, we proposed to extend the
rules at § 414.210(g)(10), until such
product categories are competitively bid
again in a future round of the CBP (85
FR 70371). In this situation, we stated
12 The link to the announcement is https://
www.cms.gov/files/document/round-2021-dmeposcbp-single-payment-amts-fact-sheet.pdf.
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that the proposed fee schedule
adjustments discussed previously in the
November 2020 proposed rule and in
this final rule would only apply to OTS
back braces and OTS knee braces
furnished in non-CBAs on or after April
1, 2021 (85 FR 70371) . However, as we
discussed previously in this final rule,
now that April 1, 2021 has passed, but
the PHE is still ongoing, and this rule
has yet to be finalized, we are finalizing
the proposed language with a technical
edit to reference the effective date
specified in the DATES section of this
final rule to reflect the new effective
date.
In short, beginning on the effective
date specified in the DATES section of
this final rule or the date immediately
following the duration of the emergency
period described in section
1135(g)(1)(B) of the Act, whichever is
later, there would be several different
fee schedule adjustment methodologies
in effect, depending on where an item
or service is furnished, and whether
CMS has awarded Round 2021 CBP
contracts for that item or service. For
OTS back braces and OTS knee braces
included in Round 2021 of the CBP and
furnished in CBAs, payment would be
made in accordance with the
methodologies described in 42 CFR
414.408. For OTS back braces and OTS
knee braces included in Round 2021 of
the CBP and furnished in rural and noncontiguous non-CBA areas, payment
would be made in accordance with the
methodologies we have proposed in the
November 2020 proposed rule (85 FR
70371) and discuss in this final rule at
§ 414.210(g)(2). For OTS back braces
and OTS knee braces included in Round
2021 of the CBP furnished in non-rural
and contiguous non-CBA areas,
payment would be made using the
methodologies described in 42 CFR
414.210(g)(1)(iv).
For items and services included in the
product categories that have essentially
been removed from Round 2021 of the
CBP, payment would be based on the
methodologies described in 42 CFR
414.210(g)(10) when such items and
services are furnished in CBAs or former
CBAs. When such items and services are
furnished in rural and non-contiguous
non-CBAs, payment would be based on
the methodologies we proposed at 42
CFR 414.210(g)(2) and the methodology
at 42 CFR 414.210(g)(4). In non-rural
and contiguous non-CBA areas,
payment for these items and services
would be based on the methodologies
described in 42 CFR 414.210(g)(1)(iv)
and the methodology at (g)(4). CMS
welcomed comment on whether the
transition rules at § 414.210(g)(9) and
fee schedule adjustment rules at
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§ 414.210(g)(10) should continue for
these items and services that have
essentially been removed from Round
2021 of the CBP. Specifically, we
invited comment on whether we should
extend the transition rules at
§ 414.210(g)(9)(iii) and (v) for items and
services furnished in non-CBAs and
included in product categories other
than the OTS back and knee brace
product categories, and, for these same
items and services furnished in CBAs or
former CBAs, whether we should extend
the rules at § 414.210(g)(10), until such
product categories are competitively bid
again in a future round of the CBP.
Comment: Several commenters
supported paying the 50/50 blended
rates in rural and non-contiguous nonCBAs on a permanent basis. A few
commenters believed this methodology
will better ensure beneficiary access by
helping DMEPOS suppliers stay in
business and account for costs related to
the COVID–19 pandemic. A commenter
stated that there are costs related to the
pandemic that are unlikely to be
eliminated by the end of the COVID–19
public health emergency, and they thus
support a permanent extension of the
current rural non-CBA blended rates. A
commenter stated they appreciated that
the proposal would bring stability to
DMEPOS suppliers by eliminating the
transitional nature of these rates and
making them part of the fee schedule
adjustment methodology until revised
in future rulemaking. A commenter
supported higher payments in rural
areas, and stated they supported the
proposal that for DME items and
services furnished before April 1, 2021,
the fee schedule amount for all areas
within a State that are defined as rural
areas would be adjusted to 110 percent
of the national average price.
Response: We thank the commenters
for support of our proposal. In finalizing
this fee schedule adjustment
methodology, we aim to ensure that
suppliers are incentivized to serve
beneficiaries in rural and noncontiguous non-CBAs.
We agree that higher payments can
better ensure access to items and
services and maintain, if not increase, a
supplier’s willingness to furnish items
and services. We do point out however
that higher payments to suppliers
results in higher cost sharing for
beneficiaries, which could negatively
affect access to DMEPOS items and
services if beneficiaries decide to forego
such items and services due to higher
cost sharing.
Regarding comments supporting a
permanent adoption of the 50/50
blended rates in rural and noncontiguous non-CBAs, as well as the
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comment appreciating that this
methodology will no longer be a
transition rule under § 414.210(g)(9), we
note that although we are finalizing our
proposal to pay 50/50 blended rates in
the rural and non-contiguous non-CBAs,
as we further discuss in section ‘‘E.
Provisions of Final Rule’’ of this final
rule, we will likely be revisiting this
issue and the fee schedule adjustment
methodologies for all items in all areas
again in the future. Furthermore,
regarding commenter’s concerns about
the potential for lasting COVID–19
pandemic costs, and the permanence of
the 50/50 blended rate fee schedule
adjustment methodology, we are unsure
of the extent to which COVID–19 has
affected the costs of furnishing DMEPOS
and whether such costs will indeed be
permanent. For example, we have not
seen any significant changes in
assignment rates across the country, and
we consider assignment rates to be
indicative of the sufficiency of payment
to cover a supplier’s costs for furnishing
DMEPOS items and services to
Medicare beneficiaries. We will
continue to monitor payments in rural
and contiguous areas and all non-CBAs,
as well as health outcomes, assignment
rates, and other information in such
areas.
Regarding the comment supporting
our proposal that for DME items and
services furnished before April 1, 2021,
the fee schedule amount for all areas
within a State that are defined as rural
areas would be adjusted to 110 percent
of the national average price, we note
that the effective date for this final rule
will now be the effective date specified
in the DATES section of this final rule
rather than April 1, 2021. Additionally,
the COVID–19 PHE was renewed,
effective on October 18, 2021.
As a result, we are finalizing the
language as proposed with a technical
edit to now address the period before
the effective date specified in the DATES
section of this final rule, instead of
before April 1, 2021. Specifically, for
items and services furnished before the
effective date specified in the DATES
section of this final rule, the fee
schedule amount for all areas within a
State that are defined as rural areas for
the purposes of this subpart is adjusted
to 110 percent of the national average
price determined under paragraph
(g)(1)(ii) of this section. In the November
2020 proposed rule, we proposed to
reference April 1, 2021 in the revised
§ 414.210(g)(1)(v). However, as we
previously discussed in this final rule,
April 1, 2021 has passed and the PHE
is still ongoing. Because this rule has
not finalized yet, we are finalizing the
proposed regulation text with a
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technical edit to reference the effective
date specified in the DATES section of
this final rule rather than the April 1,
2021 effective date.
Comment: A commenter believed that
the closer the rates are to the 2015
unadjusted fee schedule, the more
innovation there would be from
providers.
Response: We thank the commenter
for their comment. The commenter did
not elaborate on why they believed the
closer the rates are to the 2015 fee
unadjusted fee schedule, the more
innovation there would be from
providers. Nevertheless, we are not
aware of, nor do we believe there is a
link between innovation and the 2015
fee schedule. In fact, the Government
Accountability Office (GAO) and the
HHS Office of Inspector General (OIG)
have published numerous reports
detailing how the unadjusted fee
schedule amounts were higher, often
significantly, than the amounts that
suppliers paid to purchase products
from manufacturers and wholesalers,
the list prices on suppliers’ websites,
and the amounts paid by private payers
and other government purchasers.13 We
do not think using the 2015 fee schedule
rates leads to innovation.
Comment: Some commenters, in
expressing their support of the proposed
50/50 blended rates in rural and noncontiguous non-CBAs, highlighted
differences between rural and urban
areas. A commenter stated that nonurban costs-to-serve is higher due to
labor/drive times, use of higher cost
third party distribution services, and
lower equipment return rates. A
commenter also discussed their hiring
practices and associated labor costs,
stating that employing individuals they
deemed to be qualified in areas outside
of the metropolitan areas is more
challenging and costlier because of a
limited pool of qualified individuals in
these areas. Another commenter stated
that Medicare beneficiaries in rural
areas are geographically dispersed, hard
to reach, and do not have the same
access to systems of care available in
more populated areas. The commenter
stated that tough terrain, long distances
between patients and providers/
suppliers, and fewer health care
resources mean that DME suppliers
must incur added costs to deliver the
appropriate medical equipment and
supplies to patients on a timely basis.
The commenter stated that this
translates into added costs for
13 https://www.medpac.gov/wp-content/uploads/
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transportation, delivery and clinical
staff, fuel, and other expenses. The
commenter stated that extension of the
blended rates promotes access for
beneficiaries in rural areas, making it
less likely suppliers will be forced to
close or stop providing DME to
Medicare beneficiaries, and that they
provide choices to beneficiaries to select
from among a greater number of DME
suppliers, as well as a greater variety of
brand-name items and services that may
meet their needs better than others.
Response: We have presented our
analysis of factors that affect the cost of
furnishing DMEPOS items and services
in rural areas (areas outside MSAs)
versus non-rural areas (MSAs) in past
rulemaking (83 FR 57025) and in the
preamble of the proposed rule and this
final rule. While the data shows that the
volume of items furnished in CBAs and
MSAs is higher than the volume of
items furnished in areas outside MSAs,
the data we analyzed indicates that
other factors such as: Labor rates/wages;
gasoline prices; rent, utilities and other
overhead costs; average travel time and
distances; etc., suggest that these costs
are higher in CBAs and MSAs than in
areas outside MSAs. We have not been
able to definitively conclude that the
overall costs of furnishing DMEPOS
items and services are higher or lower
in rural areas than in other areas.
However, for now, we believe it is
necessary to continue paying the higher
rates to suppliers for furnishing items in
rural and non-contiguous areas to
maintain access to DMEPOS items and
services in these more remote areas.
Comment: Several commenters stated
that the fee schedule rates for non-rural
areas should be at a 75/25 blended rate.
Commenters stated that the 75/25
blended rates that are currently in effect
in non-rural contiguous non-CBAs, in
accordance with section 3712(b) of the
CARES Act, should continue even after
the public health emergency ends. A
commenter supported continuing the
75/25 blend, and to phase in the full fee
schedule adjustments in these areas
beginning January 1, 2024. A
commenter clarified that the 75 percent
portion should be based on the current
rates in former CBAs, and the 25 percent
portion of the blended payment formula
should be based on the unadjusted fee
schedule. A few commenters stated that
the current rates were developed via a
flawed auction bid methodology, and
they were based on pre-pandemic
demand and cost structure. A
commenter stated that this payment
should last not just through the end of
the public health emergency, but until
the product categories can be re-bid
under a program structured to reflect
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what they say are true market
conditions. Another commenter stated
the 75/25 blended rates will ensure
suppliers can continue to provide
critical DME to beneficiaries as
suppliers encounter increased costs and
a different market as a result of the
pandemic. A few commenters stated
that there are costs related to the
pandemic that are unlikely to be
eliminated by the end of the public
health emergency, and they thus
support a permanent extension of the
current non-rural non-CBA blended
rates.
A few commenters also stated
concerns regarding access to home
respiratory services, including oxygen.
For instance, commenters discussed
how the COVID–19 PHE has caused
more patients to receive home
respiratory therapy. Commenters were
unsure how many of these patients
would require home respiratory therapy
on a long-term basis, and that it was
therefore important that CMS establish
payment rates that will sustain DME
and home respiratory therapy suppliers
now and over the longer term.
Response: Section 3712 of the CARES
Act (Pub. L. 116–136) specifies the
payment rates for certain DME and
enteral nutrients, supplies, and
equipment furnished in non-CBAs
through the duration of the emergency
period described in section
1135(g)(1)(B) of the Act. Section 3712(a)
of the CARES Act continued our policy
of paying the 50/50 blended rates for
items furnished in rural and noncontiguous non-CBAs through
December 31, 2020, or through the
duration of the emergency period, if
longer. Section 3712(b) of the CARES
Act increased the payment rates to a 75/
25 blend for DME and enteral nutrients,
supplies, and equipment furnished in
areas other than rural and noncontiguous non-CBAs through the
duration of the COVID–19 public health
emergency period.
In the May 2020 COVID–19 IFC, we
stated we believed the purpose of
section 3712 of the CARES Act was to
aid suppliers in furnishing items under
very challenging situations during the
COVID–19 PHE (85 FR 27571).
Furthermore, we have long
maintained that the fully adjusted rates
in non-rural non-CBAs are sufficient.
For instance, we indicated in the CY
2019 ESRD PPS DMEPOS proposed rule
(83 FR 34382) that although the average
volume of items and services furnished
by suppliers in non-rural non-CBAs is
lower than the average volume of items
and services furnished by suppliers in
CBAs, the travel distances and costs for
these areas are lower than the travel
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distances and costs for CBAs. We stated
that because the travel distances and
costs for these areas are lower than the
travel distances and costs for CBAs, we
believe the fully adjusted fee schedule
amounts are sufficient.
Assignment rates were above 99
percent in non-rural contiguous nonCBAs when the fully adjusted rates were
implemented. With regards to oxygen,
in 2019 when we were paying the fully
adjusted rates in non-rural non-CBAs,
the assignment rate for oxygen was
99.95 percent. From 2020 to 2021,
assignment rates for oxygen in non-rural
non-CBAs were nearly identical—99.96
percent in 2020, and 99.95 percent in
2021. Additionally, when looking at
non-CBAs on a national level, we have
not seen evidence of a sustained
increase in oxygen use as a result of the
COVID–19 PHE. For all non-CBAs, the
total number of claim lines for oxygen
declined from 2019 to 2020 by 5.63
percent, and declined by 2.27 percent
from 2020 to 2021. This is from using
data through the same week in the
respective year (week 42), to understand
the impact of the fee schedule
adjustment while accounting for claim
delay.
We will continue to monitor
payments in all non-CBAs, as well as
health outcomes, assignment rates, and
other information.
Comment: A commenter stated the
rates for the non-rural non-CBAs should
increase at least to the clearing price (or
to the maximum winning bids) of the
‘‘old’’ SPA, or an additional 5–10
percent, to account for an increase in
costs of raw materials, production, and
supply chain. The commenter stated
that they expected SPAs to increase
under the new bidding methodologies
we finalized in the CY 2019 ESRD PPS
DMEPOS final rule, and that the nonrural non-CBA rates should reflect these
expected increases.
Another commenter stated CMS
should apply an adjustment to the
pricing methodology to offset the lack of
volume increase in the non-rural nonCBAs.
Response: We continue to believe that
the fully adjusted rates in non-rural
non-CBAs are sufficient and that paying
any additional amount once the PHE
ends would be unnecessary. We will
continue to monitor payments in these
and all non-CBAs, including health
outcomes, assignment rates, and other
information.
Comment: A commenter stated CMS
should extend the 50/50 blended rates
to non-rural, non-CBAs to ensure that
beneficiaries have appropriate access
and choice of quality DME items and
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services, including OTS orthoses subject
to competitive bidding for the first time.
Response: As noted previously, once
the PHE ends, we believe paying fee
schedule amounts equal to 100 percent
of the adjusted payment amount
established under § 414.210(g)(1)(iv) in
non-rural contiguous non-CBAs will be
sufficient. Assignment rates were above
99 percent in these areas when the fully
adjusted rates were implemented. We
will continue to monitor payments in
these and all non-CBAs, including
health outcomes, assignment rates, and
other information.
Comment: A few commenters
discussed how in a bidding program,
there is a guarantee that there will be
fewer competitors and larger volume of
business, but that does not exist in nonbid areas and therefore there is no
logical nexus between rates established
in CBAs and the costs to serve in nonCBAs. The commenters also cited
concern with the steady decreasing
number of DME suppliers across the
country, and stated it indicates a
dwindling number of suppliers and real
potential access issues.
Response: We believe there is a
logical nexus between rates established
in CBAs and the costs to furnish items
in non-CBAs. We believe the 99 percent
assignment rate in non-CBAs is a strong
indication that there is a logical nexus
between CBAs and the costs to furnish
items in non-CBAs. As we noted in the
November 2020 proposed rule, we
consider assignment rates as a source of
cost data and consider it a measure of
the sufficiency of payment to cover a
supplier’s costs for furnishing items and
services under the Medicare program
(85 FR 70366). Assignment rates for
items subject to the fee schedule
adjustments have not varied
significantly around the country, and
they have consistently remained over 99
percent in all areas. Thus, for the
overwhelming majority of claims for
items and services furnished in the nonCBAs that were subject to the fee
schedule adjustments, suppliers have
decided to accept the Medicare payment
amount in full, and have not needed to
charge the beneficiary for any additional
costs that the Medicare allowed
payment amount did not cover. We also
have not seen evidence of fee schedule
adjustments causing access issues, but
we will continue to monitor for any
such issues. Finally, we note that the
number of enrolled DMEPOS suppliers
increased by 2 percent from 86,061 in
2019 to 87,800 in 2020, the highest total
since 2016 when the total number of
enrolled DMEPOS suppliers was 88,786.
There are therefore still many DMEPOS
supplier locations throughout the
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country furnishing DMEPOS items and
services.
Comment: The commenters shared
the changes they have experienced as a
result of the COVID–19 pandemic, as
well as their recommendations for what
the payment rates should be in the
former CBAs. Several commenters
stated they oppose extending the
application of the current fee schedule
adjustment transition rules for all of the
items and services that were included in
Round 2021 of the CBP but were
effectively removed from Round 2021 of
the CBP. A few commenters cited the
COVID–19 pandemic as a reason for
opposing extending the transition
period and rates, saying that these rates
were based on pre-PHE demand, and
that fee schedule adjustments should
reflect a new environment suppliers and
manufacturers are facing as a result of
the COVID–19 pandemic. Commenters
stated additional costs from increased
freight and other supply chain costs,
shipping delays, hazard pay for direct
care employees, personal protective
equipment (PPE), and software and
hardware to enable employees to work
remotely. Commenters stated that these
additional costs will likely continue
throughout the pandemic, and may
continue post-pandemic. A few
commenters stated that SPAs were
developed via a flawed auction bid
methodology, and were outdated. A
commenter recommended that the rates
in former CBAs should reflect those
established for Round 2 and Round 1 recompete, updated by the CPI–U for each
year since then. The commenter stated
that setting the SPAs at these prior rates
will provide suppliers with an increase
that is necessary to reflect the 2020
change in the market.
Many commenters stated payment
rates in the former CBAs should be
based on a 90/10 blended payment
formula, with the 90 percent based on
the current payment rates in former
CBAs (including the CPI–U updates),
and the 10 percent based on the 2015
unadjusted fee schedules. Commenters
stated that setting the rates based upon
a 90–10 blended rate would provide for
a modest increase to compensate for
what they say is a flawed SPA setting
methodology, for rates they say are 6
years old in a market they say has
changed over those years, and for what
they say are increased costs caused by
the COVID–19 pandemic. A commenter
stated that rates in former CBAs should
at least be increased to the clearing price
of those former bid program amounts.
Response: Per § 414.210(g)(10), during
a temporary gap in the entire DMEPOS
CBP and National Mail Order CBP or
both, the fee schedule amounts for items
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and services that were competitively bid
and furnished in areas that were
competitive bidding areas at the time
the program(s) was in effect are adjusted
based on the SPAs in effect in the
competitive bidding areas on the last
day before the CBP contract period of
performance ended, increased by the
projected percentage change in the
Consumer Price Index for all Urban
Consumers (CPI–U) for the 12-month
period ending on the date after the
contract periods ended. If the gap in the
CBP lasts for more than 12 months, the
fee schedule amounts are increased
once every 12 months on the
anniversary date of the first day of the
gap period based on the projected
percentage change in the CPI–U for the
12-month period ending on the
anniversary date.
We do not agree that increasing the
adjusted fee schedule amounts for items
and services furnished in the former
CBAs based on a 90/10 blended
payment formula is necessary. The
assignment rate for the vast majority of
the items and services that were
included in Round 2021 of the CBP has
remained around 99 percent in the
former CBAs in 2020 and 2021. If the
costs to furnish DMEPOS items and
services in the former CBAs increased as
a result of COVID–19 or the DME market
has fundamentally changed as a result
of the COVID–19 pandemic to the point
where the current payment rates are
insufficient, we believe this would be
reflected in the assignment rates and
assignment rates would decrease across
a variety of former CBAs and product
categories in 2020 and 2021. However,
that has not happened. For instance,
when looking at the monthly
assignment rate for oxygen in 2020 (the
assignment rates of all former CBAs
aggregated, with claims data through
May 14, 2021), every month in 2020 had
an assignment rate of 99 percent.
Further, in 2021, the assignment rate
has remained the same except for the
months of March and April, in which
there was 100 percent assignment.
Finally, in response to comments saying
that setting the rates based upon a 90–
10 blended rate would provide for a
modest increase to compensate for a
flawed SPA calculation methodology,
and 6-year-old rates in a changed
market, we would like to note that it has
not been 6 years since the last CBP
contract performance period ended.
Until the next round of the CBP
commences, we believe the payment
rates set forth in § 414.210(g)(10) for the
former CBAs will be sufficient, but we
will continue to monitor for any issues.
Comment: A few commenters
supported the proposal for CBAs and
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former CBAs (CBAs where no CBP
contracts are in effect), in which the fee
schedule adjustment rules at
§ 414.210(g)(10) would be extended
until a future round of the CBP.
Response: We thank the commenters
for their support of our proposal.
Comment: A couple of commenters
requested that given concerns and
uncertainty caused by the COVID–19
pandemic, CMS should postpone the
implementation of the fee schedule
adjustment methodologies in non-CBAs
for the orthotics, back and knee braces
included in Round 2021 of the CBP. The
commenters stated that they should be
paid at the unadjusted fee schedule
amount for furnishing such items
outside of CBAs. The commenters stated
there are significant differences between
the provision of DME and O&P care in
urban/suburban areas and the rural or
non-contiguous areas that make up the
majority of non-CBAs. For instance, a
commenter discussed how Medicare
beneficiaries in rural areas are
geographically dispersed, hard to reach,
and do not have the same access to
systems of care available in more
populated areas. The commenter stated
that tough terrain, long distances
between patients and providers/
suppliers, and fewer health care
resources mean that DME suppliers
must incur added costs to deliver the
appropriate medical equipment and
supplies to patients on a timely basis.
The commenter stated this translates
into added costs for transportation,
delivery and clinical staff, fuel, and
other expenses.
Response: We have been closely
monitoring the implementation of
Round 2021 of the CBP, and have not
detected any issues with the fee
schedule adjustments for OTS back and
knee braces. In the non-CBAs, the
assignment rates for the back and knee
braces included in Round 2021 of the
CBP are over 99 percent. We also
believe that continuing to pay for those
orthotic codes at the unadjusted fee
schedule amount would be fiscally
imprudent as that would mean
continuing to pay at rates the HHS
Office of Inspector General has
previously found to be grossly
excessive.14 MedPAC noted in its
comments on the CY 2019 ESRD PPS
DMEPOS final rule (83 FR 57035) that,
‘‘Expanding CBP into new product
categories, such as orthotics, would
produce substantial savings and help
14 https://oig.hhs.gov/oas/reports/region5/
51700033.pdf.
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prevent fraud and abuse.’’ 15 MedPAC,
when discussing the history of DMEPOS
payment methods, has also noted that
excessively high payment rates
increased expenditures and likely
encouraged inappropriate utilization.16
This is of particular relevance because
of recent past instances of fraud
involving orthotic braces.17 18
We believe fee schedule adjustments
for these items and services are
appropriate, and we would like to note
that such adjustments are mandated by
section 1834(a)(1)(F) of the Act. We will
continue to monitor for any issues.
Comment: A commenter stated there
were flaws in the data CMS presented,
such as not having a control group to
see if data like ER admission rates are
relative to DMEPOS changes or other
trends like pressure on hospitals from
CMS to decrease readmissions or face
penalties.
Response: We believe our health
outcomes monitoring data are robust
and a valuable tool. We compare
historical health outcomes data between
CBAs, non-rural non-CBAs, and rural
CBAs in the same BEA region. Thus, we
do see if health outcomes changes are
unique to certain BEA regions or areas
within those regions, and if they track
with other BEA regions or other areas
within the same BEA region. We also
compare historical health outcomes data
for non-contiguous non-CBAs and noncontiguous CBAs.
As we indicated in the November
2020 proposed rule, we monitor
mortality rates, hospitalization rates, ER
visit rates, SNF admission rates,
physician visit rates, monthly days in
hospital, and monthly days in SNF (85
FR 70368). Except for death
information, which comes from the
Medicare Enrollment Database, all other
outcomes are derived from claims
(inpatient, outpatient, Part B carrier, and
SNF). Our monitoring materials cover
historical and regional trends in these
health outcome rates across a number of
populations, allowing us to observe
deviations that require further
drilldown analyses. We monitor health
outcomes in the enrolled Medicare
population (Medicare Parts A and B),
15 https://www.medpac.gov/wp-content/uploads/
import_data/scrape_files/docs/default-source/
comment-letters/08312018_esrd_cy2019_dme_
medpac_comment_v2_sec.pdf.
16 https://www.medpac.gov/wp-content/uploads/
import_data/scrape_files/docs/default-source/
reports/jun18_medpacreporttocongress_rev_
nov2019_note_sec.pdf.
17 https://www.justice.gov/opa/pr/federalindictments-and-law-enforcement-actions-onelargest-health-care-fraud-schemes.
18 https://www.justice.gov/opa/pr/fiveindividuals-charged-roles-65-million-nationwideconspiracy-defraud-federal-health-care.
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dual Medicare and Medicaid
population, long-term institutionalized
population, as well as various DME
utilizers and access groups. This helps
paint a complete picture of whether an
increase in an outcome is across the
board (not linked to DME access), or is
unique to certain populations.
Specifically, we focus on any increases
that are unique to the DME access
groups, which include beneficiaries
who are likely to use certain DME based
on their diagnoses, and we would
conduct drilldown analyses and policy
research to pinpoint potential reasons
for such increases.
Additionally, our health outcomes
monitoring data is but one piece of
multiple sources of data that we use to
analyze the effects of the fee schedule
adjustments. We also analyze
assignment rates, total services, total
services by supplier, travel distance,
and other data to provide a more
complete picture on the effects of the fee
schedule adjustments.
Comment: A commenter discussed
the assignment rate data that continues
to be above 99 percent in non-CBAs,
saying the increase in assignment rate
over time does not surprise them, as the
commenter, a DME supplier, says
customers choose to pay cash for
common affordable items, such as
walkers, instead of pursuing a
prescription or documentation as it is
not worth the time and hassle. The
commenter stated that if a beneficiary
sees a doctor for a walker, in order for
the beneficiary to get reimbursed for the
walker, the beneficiary will likely have
to schedule another visit for the more
major health issues they are
experiencing, as the commenter stated
most doctors now only address one
issue at a time, and that this will never
be measured in the CMS data.
Response: Although there could be a
situation in which a beneficiary elects to
pay cash for some DME items, we do not
believe this explains the consistently
high assignment rates across different
parts of the country for prolonged
periods of time. High assignment rates
preceded the fee schedule adjustments,
and high assignment rates have
continued even after the fee schedule
adjustments have been in effect for the
last several years. We believe the high
assignment rates are an indication that
the payment rates are sufficient and that
assignment rates are a valuable tool in
monitoring the effects of the fee
schedule adjustments.
Comment: Commenters shared their
concerns in regards to beneficiary
complaints and patient choice of
equipment. Specifically, a commenter
stated its hypothesis that beneficiary
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complaints to CMS have decreased
because beneficiaries have become
resigned to accept low quality products
because the commenter, a DME
supplier, has told beneficiaries they
cannot afford to buy the name brand
products at the rates Medicare pays. The
commenter also stated that spending an
hour navigating through call centers to
complain about the big national and
regional chains where they are being
consolidated is fruitless. Additionally,
the commenter stated that complaining
to CMS is fruitless if the beneficiary
does not like the one option offered by
a supplier accepting assignment, and
that beneficiaries accept what they can
get and if it does not work they come
back and buy the nice piece of
equipment out of pocket. The
commenter also stated that suppliers
will continue to consolidate, and that
beneficiaries will continue to have
fewer options not just in terms of
suppliers, but in DMEPOS products.
Another commenter expressed concern
that suppliers have stopped carrying
specific items for which Medicare
payments are too low, and stated that
they have seen many essential items
such as heavy-duty walkers are not well
reimbursed and thus it is harder to find
a DME supplier that carries one and will
sell to Medicare patients.
Response: We recognize the value of
and encourage beneficiaries to
communicate any complaints about
their DME to Medicare. More
information on filing a complaint about
DME can be found here: https://
www.medicare.gov/claims-appeals/filea-complaint-grievance/complaintsabout-durable-medical-equipment-dme.
With regard to patient choice and
suppliers supplying specific equipment,
we believe the situations the
commenters describe underscore one of
the many benefits of the DMEPOS CBP.
We also believe that expanding the CBP
into additional areas of the country
would provide these benefits to more
beneficiaries and could work towards
addressing some of the concerns the
commenters have expressed.
The Medicare Learning Network Fact
Sheet MLN900927 titled, ‘‘DMEPOS
Competitive Bidding Program Referral
Agents’’ discusses some of these
benefits that are relevant to those
situations the commenters describe.19
In particular, and as discussed in
MLN900927, the CBP includes a
beneficiary safeguard to ensure that
beneficiaries have access to specific
19 https://www.cms.gov/Outreach-and-Education/
Medicare-Learning-Network-MLN/MLNProducts/
downloads/DME_Ref_Agt_Factsheet_
ICN900927.pdf.
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brands when needed to avoid an
adverse medical outcome. This
safeguard, which is sometimes called
the Physician Authorization Process,
allows a physician (including a
podiatric physician) or treating
practitioner (that is, a physician
assistant, clinical nurse specialist, or
nurse practitioner) to prescribe a
specific brand or mode of delivery to
avoid an adverse medical outcome. The
physician or treating practitioner must
document in the beneficiary’s medical
record the reason why the specific
brand is necessary to avoid an adverse
medical outcome. This documentation,
which would be in the physician’s order
and notes, must include all of the
following:
• The product’s brand name.
• The features that this product has
versus other brand name products.
• An explanation of how these
features are necessary to avoid an
adverse medical outcome.
If a physician or treating practitioner
prescribes a particular brand for a
beneficiary to avoid an adverse medical
outcome, the contract supplier must, as
a term of its contract, ensure that the
beneficiary receives the needed item.
The contract supplier has three options:
• The contract supplier can furnish
the specific brand as prescribed.
• The contract supplier can consult
with the physician or treating
practitioner to find another appropriate
brand of item for the beneficiary and
obtain a revised written prescription.
• The contract supplier can assist the
beneficiary in locating a contract
supplier that will furnish the particular
brand of item prescribed by the
physician or treating practitioner.
If the contract supplier cannot furnish
the specific brand and cannot obtain a
revised prescription or locate another
contract supplier that will furnish the
needed item, the contract supplier must
furnish the item as prescribed. We
discuss this particular issue further in
the final rule we published in the
Federal Register on April 10, 2007 titled
‘‘Medicare Program; Competitive
Acquisition for Certain Durable Medical
Equipment, Prosthetics, Orthotics, and
Supplies (DMEPOS) and Other Issues’’
(72 FR 18064).
A contract supplier is prohibited from
submitting a claim to Medicare if it
provides an item other than that
specified in the written prescription.
Any change in the prescription requires
a revised written prescription. In
addition, contract suppliers are required
to accept assignment for items they
furnish to Medicare beneficiaries.
Comment: A commenter questioned
why the total number of DMEPOS
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services had been increasing from 2016
to 2018 despite a decline in enrolled
beneficiaries. The commenter posited
several theories for this increase,
including the notion that it is because
items supplied have decreased in
quality and require more frequent
replacement, the surviving regional and
national suppliers know that they can
only be profitable when ‘‘up-selling’’
customers to accept all eligible
accessories and supplies when
dispensing, that technology advances
have allowed for an increase in resupply
rates, and that there is rampant fraud
resulting in billions of dollars of claims.
Finally, the commenter questioned
whether the numbers would look
different if all the fraud-related items
and suppliers were not in this data.
Response: We have been monitoring
claims and health outcomes data such
as deaths, emergency room visits,
physician office visits, hospital and
nursing home admissions and lengths of
stay, etc., very closely since the fee
schedule adjustments were
implemented in 2016 and have not seen
any signs that health outcomes have
been negatively affected by the fee
schedule adjustments. Overall, health
outcomes have remained the same or
have improved since 2016, and this is
an indication that there has not been a
decrease in the quality of DMEPOS
items and services furnished. Although
we know that a certain percentage of
Medicare claims for DMEPOS items and
services are fraudulent, we do not
currently have data to determine
whether fee schedule adjustments have
had any impact on the number of
fraudulent claims furnished for
DMEPOS items and services.
In the CY 2019 ESRD PPS DMEPOS
proposed rule (83 FR 57032), we
discussed utilization trends in the nonCBAs for the 2016 to 2018 time period.
In particular, we noted that while
utilization of DME varied throughout
area and by particular item, the number
of total services increased from 2016 to
2017 (2.05 percent), and from 2017 to
2018 (3.08 percent) when looking at the
number of total services furnished
through week 34 of the respective year.
We noted that there had been a
persistent increase in total volume of
services furnished in non-CBAs from
2016 to 2018, and that this was driven
by an increase in CPAP/RADs. All other
products exhibited either a continuous
decline from 2016 through 2018, or at
least a decline from 2017 to 2018.
When looking at updated data from
2019 to 2020 and 2020 to 2021 (using
data through the same week in the
respective year—week 42—to
understand the impact of the fee
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schedule adjustment while accounting
for claim delay), the total number of
claim lines for all items and services
subject to fee schedule adjustments in
the non-CBAs slightly decreased, and
we believe COVID–19 likely played a
role in this decrease. For instance,
researchers have documented that in
2020 there was a decrease in health care
utilization as a result of the COVID–19
pandemic.20 21
From 2019 to 2020, the only product
categories that experienced an increase
in total number of claim lines were
CPAP device and supplies, infusion
pump and supplies, and insulin
infusion pump and supplies. For
example, for CPAP device and supplies,
the total number of claim lines
increased by 3.43 percent from 2019 to
2020 (when using data through week 42
of the respective year). From 2020 to
2021, only the transcutaneous electrical
nerve stimulation (TENS) product
category experienced an increase in
total number of claim lines with a 0.78
percent increase.
Comment: Commenters provided
insights into our travel distance
analysis. Specifically, a commenter
stated that the travel distance analysis
CMS presented in the November 2020
proposed rule, which presented the
average number of miles between
suppliers and beneficiaries, does not
accurately reflect their business
network, nor service and clinical
support infrastructure. For instance, the
commenter stated that while their
patients do receive services directly to
their home, the majority of services are
delivered to the hospital or outpatient
setting at the time of discharge. The
commenter stated they also maintain
distribution centers to allow shipment
of ongoing supplies as needed, and that
often their central distribution
warehouses are used to ship on behalf
of the service billing locations. Another
commenter stated that average travel
distance to furnish items and services to
beneficiaries in 2017 was far greater
outside of CBAs than in CBAs.
Response: We appreciate learning
about the nature of the commenter’s
business network and how it effects
their travel distance for furnishing
services to beneficiaries. Section 16008
of the Cures Act requires us to conduct
a comparison of several factors with
respect to non-CBAs and CBAs, and one
of those factors is the average travel
distance and cost associated with
20 https://www.healthsystemtracker.org/chartcollection/how-have-healthcare-utilization-andspending-changed-so-far-during-the-coronaviruspandemic/#item-covidcostsuse_marchupdate_4.
21 https://aspe.hhs.gov/pdf-report/Medicare-FFSSpending-Utilization.
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furnishing items and services in the
area. The kind of travel that the
commenter experiences may be true for
their particular company. However, past
stakeholder input from the DME
industry has often focused on the travel
distances DME suppliers travel to reach
beneficiaries’ homes, particularly in
rural areas. As such, that is why we
decided to focus on the travel distance
between the beneficiary’s residential
ZIP code and the supplier’s ZIP code.
With regard to the commenter saying
that the average travel distance to
furnish items and services to
beneficiaries in 2017 was far greater
outside of CBAs than in CBAs, our data
does not show that to be the case, unless
looking at specific types of areas. As we
found in the CY 2019 ESRD PPS
DMEPOS proposed rule (83 FR 34367
through 34371) and in the November
2020 proposed rule (85 FR 70366),
travel distances were only greater in
certain non-CBAs, which included
Frontier and Remote (FAR), OCBSAs,
and Super Rural areas.
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D. Alternatives Considered but Not
Proposed
We considered, but did not propose,
three alternatives to our provisions and
we sought comments on these
alternatives:
1. Adjust Fee Schedule Amounts for
Super Rural Areas and Non-Contiguous
Areas Based on 120 Percent of the Fee
Schedule Amounts for Non-Rural Areas
Under the first alternative, we
considered prior suggestions from
stakeholders to use the ambulance fee
schedule concept of a ‘‘super rural area’’
when determining fee schedule
adjustments for non-CBAs (85 FR
70371). Specifically, we considered the
provision to eliminate the definition of
rural area at § 414.202 and 42 CFR
414.210(g)(1)(v), which brings the
adjusted fee schedule amounts for rural
areas up to 110 percent of the national
average price determined under
§ 414.210(g)(1)(ii). In place of this
definition and rule, we considered the
provision for an adjustment to the fee
schedule amounts for DMEPOS items
and services furnished in super rural
non-CBAs within the contiguous U.S.
equal to 120 percent of the adjusted fee
schedule amounts determined for other,
non-rural non-CBAs within the same
State. For example, the adjusted fee
schedule amount for super rural, nonCBAs within Minnesota would be based
on 120 percent of the adjusted fee
schedule amount (in this case, the
regional price) for Minnesota
established in accordance with
§ 414.210(g)(1)(i) through (iv).
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Consistent with the ambulance fee
schedule rural adjustment factor at
§ 414.610(c)(5)(ii), we considered
defining ‘‘super rural’’ as a rural area
determined to be in the lowest 25
percent of rural population arrayed by
population density, where a rural area is
defined as an area located outside an
urban area (MSA), or a rural census tract
within an MSA as determined under the
most recent version of the Goldsmith
modification as determined by the
Federal Office of Rural Health Policy at
the Health Resources and Services
Administration. Per this definition and
under this alternative rule, certain areas
within MSAs would be considered
super rural areas whereas now they are
treated as non-rural areas because they
are located in counties that are included
in MSAs. For all other non-CBAs,
including areas within the contiguous
U.S. that are outside MSAs but do not
meet the definition of super rural area,
we considered adjusting the fee
schedule amounts using the current fee
schedule adjustment methodologies
under § 414.210(g)(1) and
§ 414.210(g)(3) through (8).
In addition to addressing past
stakeholder input, this alternative
approach would provide a payment
increase that is somewhat higher than,
but similar to the 17 percent payment
differential identified by stakeholders in
2015 based on a survey of respiratory
equipment suppliers.22 In addition, we
have received input from suppliers that
serve low population density areas
within MSAs that are not CBAs. These
stakeholders claim that they are serving
low population density areas that are
not near to or served by suppliers
located in the urban core areas of the
MSA and believe they must receive
higher payments than suppliers serving
the higher population density areas of
the MSA. Under the alternative fee
schedule adjustment methodology, if
these low population density areas were
to meet the definition of super rural
area, they would receive a 20 percent
higher payment than areas that are not
super rural areas. This alternative
payment rule would address these
concerns with how the current payment
rules and definition of rural area affect
these areas, and would target payments
for those rural areas that are low
population density areas, regardless of
whether they are located in an MSA or
not. This approach would also address
concerns raised from stakeholders on
the March 23, 2017 call regarding the
22 https://www.cqrc.org/img/
CQRCCostSurveyWhitePaperMay2015Final.pdf.
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cost of traveling long distances to serve
far away, remote areas.
Under this alternative, § 414.210(g)(2),
which addresses fee schedule
adjustments for DMEPOS items and
services furnished in non-contiguous
areas, would be replaced with a new
rule that adjusts the fee schedule
amounts for non-contiguous areas based
on the higher of 120 percent of the
average of the SPAs for the item or
service in CBAs outside the contiguous
U.S. (currently only Honolulu, Hawaii),
or the national average price determined
under § 414.210(g)(1)(ii).
Comment: A couple commenters
stated that while they did not support
the alternative of adjusting the fee
schedule amounts for super rural and
non-contiguous areas based on 120
percent of the fee schedule amounts for
non-rural areas, they recommend
eliminating the fee schedule amounts
for rural areas up to 110 percent of the
national average price determined under
§ 414.210(g)(1)(ii)) and maintaining the
50/50 blend, but replacing the current
rural definition (and corresponding ZIP
codes) by including the ‘‘super rural’’
ZIP codes within the current array of
rural ZIP codes. The commenters stated
that because certain areas within MSAs
are treated as non-rural areas, as they
are located in counties that are included
in MSAs, the commenters were
concerned that the current array of
suppliers in higher populated urban
areas that are currently serving these
rural areas within an MSA may abandon
these areas if they are less profitable.
Response: Although we are not
finalizing this particular alternative that
we considered, we acknowledge the
commenters’ recommendations
regarding this particular alternative and
we will keep these points in mind for
future consideration.
Comment: A commenter stated it
would not be appropriate to adjust the
fee schedule amounts relying on the
geographic designations used in the
Ambulance Fee Schedule, or suggested
rates based on industry data from 2015.
The commenter stated many things have
changed since 2015 that have affected
the costs of furnishing items and
services, including the COVID–19
pandemic and the increased costs of
personal protective equipment (PPE),
supply shortages, and personnel costs.
The commenter also stated that the
Census Bureau has shifted to a sampling
methodology that impacts the RUCAs,
which has changed the way the ZIP
code designations are calculated under
the Ambulance Fee Schedule, and that
they were concerned that these changes
have led super-rural areas and rural
areas being designated as urban. The
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commenter stated that before this
methodology is applied to any other
part of Medicare, CMS must work to
address the underlying problems these
changes have created.
Response: We are not finalizing this
particular alternative and will keep
these points in mind for future
consideration.
After consideration of the public
comments we received, we are not
finalizing this alternative considered.
2. Establish Additional Phase-in Period
for Fully Adjusted Fee Schedule
Amounts for Rural Areas and NonContiguous Areas
We considered proposing an
alternative fee schedule adjustment
methodology that would establish an
additional transition period to allow us
to determine the impact of the new
SPAs and monitor the impact of
adjusted fee schedule amounts (85
FR70372). Under this alternative, we
considered adjusting the fee schedule
amounts for items and services
furnished in rural areas and noncontiguous non-CBAs based on a 75/25
blend of adjusted and unadjusted rates
for the 3-year period from April 1, 2021,
or the date immediately following the
duration of the emergency period
described in section 1135(g)(1)(B) of the
Act (42 U.S.C. 1320b–5(g)(1)(B)),
whichever is later, through December
31, 2023. Such a phase-in would bring
the fee schedule payment amounts
down closer to the fully adjusted fee
levels and allow for a 3-year period to
monitor the impact of the lower rates on
access to items and services in these
areas before potentially phasing in the
fully adjusted rates in 2024.
Comment: A commenter stated they
favor the permanent extension of the
current rural and non-rural non-CBA
blended rates instead of the alternative
phase-in of the fully adjusted fee
schedule amounts discussed in the
November 2020 proposed rule, as it is
important for patients and suppliers to
have stable rates, in their view.
Response: We did not propose to
extend the 75/25 blended rates in the
non-rural contiguous non-CBAs once
the PHE ends. We did, however,
propose a fee schedule adjustment
methodology under § 414.210(g)(1) for
the non-rural contiguous non-CBAs that
is not time-limited, transitional, or
dependent upon the next round of the
CBP. We agree with the commenter that
it is important to provide patients and
suppliers with stable rates to the extent
feasible. Of note, the fully adjusted rates
had been in continuous effect in the
non-rural contiguous non-CBAs from
January 2017 through March 5, 2020.
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During that time period, the rate of
assignment for items and services
subject to fee schedule adjustments
furnished in those areas was over 99
percent. We believe that the fully
adjusted rates will be sufficient for
when the PHE ends.
After consideration of the public
comments we received, we are not
finalizing this alternative considered.
3. Extend Current Fee Schedule
Adjustments for Items and Services
Furnished in Non-CBAs, CBAs, and
Former CBAs That Were Included in
Product Categories Removed From
Round 2021 of the CBP
CMS only awarded Round 2021 CBP
contracts to bidders in the OTS back
braces and OTS knee braces product
categories. CMS did not award Round
2021 CBP contracts to bidders that bid
in any other product categories that
were included in Round 2021 of the
CBP, therefore, CMS does not have any
new SPAs for these items and services.
As a result, under this alternative, we
considered whether to simply extend
application of the current fee schedule
adjustment rules for all of the items and
services that were included in Round
2021 of the CBP but were essentially
removed from Round 2021 of the CBP
(85 FR 70372). Specifically, for items
and services included in product
categories that have essentially been
removed from Round 2021 of the CBP,
CMS considered extending the
transition rules at § 414.210(g)(9)(iii)
and (v) for items and services furnished
in non-CBAs and the fee schedule
adjustment rules at § 414.210(g)(10) for
items and services furnished in CBAs or
former CBAs until such product
categories are competitively bid again in
a future round of the CBP. Under this
alternative, we would adjust the fee
schedule amounts for items and services
furnished in areas other than rural areas
and non-contiguous non-CBAs in
accordance with § 414.210(g)(9)(v) based
on 100 percent of the adjusted rates
beginning on April 1, 2021 or the date
immediately following the duration of
the emergency period described in
section 1135(g)(1)(B) of the Act (42
U.S.C. 1320b–5(g)(1)(B)), whichever is
later, through the date immediately
preceding the effective date of the next
round of CBP contracts. As previously
discussed in this final rule, now that
April 1, 2021 has passed, but the public
health emergency is still ongoing, and
this rule has yet to be finalized, we are
making a technical edit to reflect the
new effective date for this final rule.
The fee schedule amounts for items and
services removed from the CBP and
furnished in rural and non-contiguous
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73881
non-CBAs would continue to be
adjusted based on a 50/50 blend in
accordance with § 414.210(g)(9)(iii)
through the date immediately preceding
the effective date of the next round of
CBP contracts. Under, this alternative,
the fee schedule adjustment transition
rules under § 414.210(g)(9) would
continue in effect through the date
immediately preceding the effective
date of the next round of CBP contracts.
This alternative differs from our
proposal and this final rule, as we
proposed and are finalizing a fee
schedule adjustment methodology for
non-CBAs under § 414.210(g)(1) and
(g)(2), that is not time-limited,
transitional, or dependent upon the next
round of the CBP.
For items and services included in
product categories that have effectively
been removed from Round 2021 of the
CBP, the fee schedule amounts for items
and services furnished in CBAs or
former CBAs would continue to be
adjusted in accordance with
§ 414.210(g)(10) through the date
immediately preceding the effective
date of the next round of CBP contracts.
In contrast, for items and services that
are included in Round 2021 of the CBP,
the fee schedule amounts for such items
and services would be adjusted in
accordance with the adjustment
methodologies outlined in this final
rule; we would pay the 50/50 blended
rates in rural and non-contiguous nonCBAs, and 100 percent of the adjusted
payment amount established under
§ 414.210(g)(1)(iv) in non-rural nonCBAs in the contiguous U.S.
Comment: Commenters opposed this
alternative for the reasons discussed in
previous comments in section III.C. of
this final rule. Most commenters
opposed continuation of the current
rates in the former CBAs, supported a
permanent extension of the 50/50
blended rates in rural and noncontiguous non-CBAs, and opposed
paying 100 percent of the adjusted
payment amount established under
§ 414.210(g)(1)(iv) in non-rural nonCBAs in the contiguous U.S.
Commenters opposed continuation of
the current rates in the former CBAs
saying they are based on SPAs
established by a flawed bid
methodology developed over 6 years
ago. Instead, and as previously
discussed, many commenters supported
a permanent extension of the 50/50
blended rates in rural and noncontiguous non-CBAs, a 75/25 blended
rate methodology in the non-rural nonCBAs in the contiguous U.S., and a 90/
10 blended rate methodology in the
former CBAs in which the 90 percent
must be based on the current payment
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rates in the former CBAs (including the
CPI–U updates) and the 10 percent must
be based on the 2015 unadjusted fee
schedule. Finally, as previously
discussed, a few commenters supported
the proposal for CBAs and former CBAs
(CBAs where no CBP contracts are in
effect), in which the fee schedule
adjustment rules at § 414.210(g)(10)
would be extended until a future round
of the CBP. However, these commenters
did not support the non-CBA policies in
this alternative considered, and instead
supported a permanent extension of the
50/50 blended rates in rural and noncontiguous non-CBAs, and a 75/25
blended rate methodology in the nonrural non-CBAs in the contiguous U.S.
Response: After consideration of the
public comments we received, we are
not finalizing this alternative
considered. As we discuss in section
III.E. of this final rule titled ‘‘Provisions
of Final Rule’’, we will be finalizing our
proposals discussed later in this section.
We expect to revisit fee schedule
adjustments in the future.
E. Provisions of Final Rule
We are finalizing our proposals, with
the modification of the effective date, in
this final rule. In the November 2020
proposed rule, we proposed the fee
schedule adjustment methodologies for
items and services furnished in nonCBAs on or after April 1, 2021, or the
date immediately following the duration
of the emergency period described in
section 1135(g)(1)(B) of the Act (42
U.S.C. 1320b–5(g)(1)(B)), whichever is
later (85 FR 70370). However, as we
previously discussed in this final rule,
now that April 1, 2021 has passed, and
given that the COVID–19 PHE is still
ongoing, we are making a technical edit
to change the April 1, 2021 date to the
effective date specified in the DATES
section of this final rule to reflect the
new effective date for these provisions.
Other than the modification of the April
1, 2021 effective date, we are finalizing
our proposals without modification.
First, we will continue paying the 50/
50 blended rates in non-contiguous nonCBAs, but the 50/50 blend will no
longer be a transition rule under
§ 414.210(g)(9), and will instead be the
fee schedule adjustment methodology
for items and services furnished in these
areas under § 414.210(g)(2) unless
revised in future rulemaking. For items
and services furnished in noncontiguous non-CBAs, the fee schedule
amounts for such items and services
furnished on or after the effective date
specified in the DATES section of this
final rule, or the date immediately
following the duration of the emergency
period described in section
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1135(g)(1)(B) of the Act (42 U.S.C.
1320b–5(g)(1)(B)), whichever is later,
will be adjusted so that they are equal
to a blend of 50 percent of the greater
of the average of the SPAs for the item
or service for CBAs located in noncontiguous areas or 110 percent of the
national average price for the item or
service determined under
§ 414.210(g)(1)(ii) and 50 percent of the
unadjusted fee schedule amount for the
area, which is the fee schedule amount
in effect on December 31, 2015,
increased for each subsequent year
beginning in 2016 by the annual update
factors specified in sections 1834(a)(14),
1834(h)(4), and 1842(s)(1)(B) of the Act,
respectively, for durable medical
equipment and supplies, off-the-shelf
orthotics, and enteral nutrients,
supplies, and equipment.
Second, we will continue paying the
50/50 blended rates in rural contiguous
areas, but the 50/50 blend will no longer
be a transition rule under
§ 414.210(g)(9), and will instead be the
fee schedule adjustment methodology
for items and services furnished in these
areas under § 414.210(g)(2) unless
revised in future rulemaking. For items
and services furnished in rural
contiguous areas on or after the effective
date specified in the DATES section of
this final rule or the date immediately
following the duration of the emergency
period described in section
1135(g)(1)(B) of the Act (42 U.S.C.
1320b–5(g)(1)(B)), whichever is later,
the fee schedule amounts will be
adjusted so that they are equal to a
blend of 50 percent of 110 percent of the
national average price for the item or
service determined under
§ 414.210(g)(1)(ii) and 50 percent of the
fee schedule amount for the area in
effect on December 31, 2015, increased
for each subsequent year beginning in
2016 by the annual update factors
specified in sections 1834(a)(14),
1834(h)(4), and 1842(s)(1)(B) of the Act,
respectively, for durable medical
equipment and supplies, off-the-shelf
orthotics, and enteral nutrients,
supplies, and equipment.
We note that the 50/50 blended rates
for DMEPOS items and services
furnished in rural and non-contiguous
areas that we are finalizing in this rule
are, on average, approximately 66
percent higher than the fully adjusted
fee schedule amounts. Previous
stakeholder input from MedPAC has
indicated that the 50/50 blended rates
are ‘‘costly’’ and create ‘‘. . . a financial
burden for the Medicare program and
beneficiaries’’. MedPAC has also
previously opined on the
appropriateness of the unadjusted fee
schedule, which comprises 50 percent
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of the 50/50 blended rates. MedPAC
stated, ‘‘products not included in the
CBP continue to largely be paid on the
basis of the historical fee schedule, and
the Commission has found many of
these rates are likely excessive.’’ 23 In
light of this previous stakeholder input
from MedPAC, we are concerned that
this fee schedule adjustment
methodology may result in payment
amounts that are excessive compared to
the fully adjusted fee schedule amounts.
However, as we discussed in the
November 2020 proposed rule, this fee
schedule adjustment methodology errs
on the side of caution, as we aim to
ensure beneficiary access to items and
services in rural and remote areas of the
country. For instance, we proposed
paying the 50/50 blend for rural and
non-contiguous non-CBAs from January
1, 2019, through December 31, 2020, in
our CY 2019 ESRD PPS DMEPOS
proposed rule, and we finalized this
policy in our CY 2019 ESRD PPS
DMEPOS final rule. Most of the
comments we received on this proposal
were from commenters in the DME
industry, such as homecare associations,
DME manufacturers, and suppliers, and
these commenters generally supported
the 50/50 blended rates proposal.
The 50/50 blended rates were initially
established for phase in purposes, so we
may consider alternative methodologies
for adjusting fee schedule amounts for
rural and non-contiguous areas in the
future. We will be undertaking analyses
to assess the extent to which these
payments are ‘‘excessive’’, as per
MedPAC’s comment. In addition, we
may decide it is necessary to propose
changes to the fee schedule adjustment
methodologies in the future depending
on potential changes to the CBP.
Therefore, we will likely be revisiting
this issue and the fee schedule
adjustment methodologies for all items
in all areas again in the future.
Third, we will revise
§ 414.210(g)(1)(v) to establish that for
items and services furnished before the
effective date specified in the DATES
section of this final rule, the fee
schedule amount for all areas within a
state that are defined as rural areas for
the purposes of this subpart is adjusted
to 110 percent of the national average
price determined under paragraph
(g)(1)(ii) of this section. In the November
2020 proposed rule, we proposed to
reference April 1, 2021 in the revised
§ 414.210(g)(1)(v). However, as we
previously discussed in this final rule,
23 https://www.medpac.gov/wp-content/uploads/
import_data/scrape_files/docs/default-source/
comment-letters/08312018_esrd_cy2019_dme_
medpac_comment_v2_sec.pdf.
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April 1, 2021, has passed and the
COVID–19 PHE is still ongoing. Because
this rule has yet to be finalized, the
regulation text will reference the
effective date specified in the DATES
section of this final rule effective date
rather than April 1, 2021.
Fourth, we are finalizing our proposal
so that for items and services furnished
on or after the effective date specified in
the DATES section of this document, or
the date immediately following the
termination of the emergency period
described in section 1135(g)(1)(B) of the
Act (42 U.S.C. 1320b–5(g)(1)(B)) (that is,
the COVID–19 PHE), whichever is later,
in all other non-rural, non-CBAs within
the contiguous United States, the fee
schedule amounts will be equal to 100
percent of the adjusted payment amount
established under § 414.210(g)(1)(iv).
Fifth and finally, we are finalizing our
proposal to add paragraph
§ 414.210(g)(9)(vi) to establish that for
items and services furnished in all areas
with dates of service on or after the
effective date specified in the DATES
section of this document, or the date
immediately following the duration of
the emergency period described in
section 1135(g)(1)(B) of the Act,
whichever is later, based on the fee
schedule amount for the area is equal to
the adjusted payment amount
established under § 414.210(g).
IV. DMEPOS Fee Schedule Adjustments
for Items and Services Furnished in
Rural Areas From June 2018 Through
December 2018 and Exclusion of
Infusion Drugs From the DMEPOS CBP
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A. Overview
On May 11, 2018 we published an IFC
(83 FR 21912) in the Federal Register
titled ‘‘Medicare Program; Durable
Medical Equipment Fee Schedule
Adjustments to Resume the Transitional
50/50 Blended Rates to Provide Relief in
Rural Areas and Non-Contiguous
Areas’’. In this section of this final rule,
we will present the provisions of the
May 2018 IFC followed by summation
of the comments received and our
responses.
Section 5004(b) of the Cures Act
amended section 1847(a)(2)(A) of Act to
exclude drugs and biologicals described
in section 1842(o)(1)(D) of the Act from
the DMEPOS CBP. In the May 2018 IFC,
we made conforming changes to the
regulation to reflect the exclusion of
infusion drugs, described in section
1842(o)(1)(D) of Act, from items subject
to the DMEPOS CBP.
As discussed in section II. of this rule,
in the May 2018 IFC, we also expressed
an immediate need to resume the
transitional, blended fee schedule
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amounts in rural and non-contiguous
areas, noting strong stakeholder
concerns about the continued viability
of many DMEPOS suppliers, our finding
of a decrease in the number of suppliers
furnishing items and services subject to
the fee schedule adjustments, as well as
the Cures Act mandate to consider
additional information material to
setting fee schedule adjustments based
on information from the DMEPOS CBP
for items and services furnished on or
after January 1, 2019 (83 FR 21918). We
amended § 414.210(g)(9) by adding
§ 414.210(g)(9)(iii) to resume the fee
schedule adjustment transition rates for
items and services furnished in rural
and non-contiguous areas from June 1,
2018 through December 31, 2018. We
also amended § 414.210(g)(9)(ii) to
reflect that for items and services
furnished with dates of service from
January 1, 2017 to May 31, 2018, fully
adjusted fee schedule amounts would
apply (83 FR 21922). We also added
§ 414.210(g)(9)(iv) to specify that fully
adjusted fee schedule amounts would
apply for certain items furnished in
non-CBAs other than rural and noncontiguous areas from June 1, 2018
through December 31, 2018 (83 FR
21920). We explained that we would
use the extended transition period to
further analyze our findings and
consider the information required by
section 16008 of the Cures Act in
determining whether changes to the
methodology for adjusting fee schedule
amounts for items furnished on or after
January 1, 2019 were necessary (83 FR
21918 through 21919). We respond to
the comments we received on these
issues later in this final rule.
B. Background
1. Background for Payment Revisions
for DMEPOS
For further background regarding the
DMEPOS CBP, payment methodology
for CBAs, and the fee schedule
adjustment methodology for non-CBAs,
we refer readers to section III.A. of this
final rule.
On February 26, 2014, we published
an Advance Notice of Proposed
Rulemaking (ANPRM) in the Federal
Register titled, ‘‘Medicare Program;
Methodology for Adjusting Payment
Amounts for Certain Durable Medical
Equipment, Prosthetics, Orthotics, and
Supplies (DMEPOS) Using Information
from Competitive Bidding Programs’’
(79 FR 10754). In that ANPRM, we
solicited stakeholder input on several
factors including whether the costs of
furnishing various DMEPOS items and
services vary based on the geographic
area in which they are furnished in
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relation to developing a payment
methodology to adjust DMEPOS fee
schedule amounts or other payment
amounts in non-CBAs based on
DMEPOS competitive bidding payment
information.
We received approximately 185
comments from suppliers,
manufacturers, professional, State and
national trade associations, physicians,
physical therapists, beneficiaries and
their caregivers, and State government
offices. Commenters generally stated
that costs vary by geographic region and
that costs in rural and non-contiguous
areas of the U.S. (Alaska, Hawaii, Puerto
Rico, etc.) are significantly higher than
costs in urban areas and contiguous
areas of the U.S. A commenter
representing many manufacturers and
suppliers listed several key variables or
factors that influence the cost of
furnishing items and services in
different areas that should be
considered. This commenter stated that
information on all bids submitted under
the CBP should be considered and not
just the bids of winning suppliers. Some
commenters expressed concern that the
SPAs assume a significant increase in
volume to offset lower payment
amounts. Commenters also
recommended phasing in the adjusted
fee schedule amounts, allowing for
adjustments in fees if access issues
arise, and annual inflation updates to
adjusted fee schedule amounts.
On July 11, 2014, we published the
CY 2015 ESRD PPS proposed rule in the
Federal Register titled ‘‘Medicare
Program; End-Stage Renal Disease
Prospective Payment System, Quality
Incentive Program, and Durable Medical
Equipment, Prosthetics, Orthotics, and
Supplies;’’ (79 FR 40208) as required by
section 1834(a)(1)(G) of the Act, to
establish methodologies for using
information from the CBP to adjust the
fee schedule amounts for items and
services furnished in non-CBAs in
accordance with sections
1834(a)(1)(F)(ii) and 1834(h)(1)(H)(ii) of
the Act. We also proposed making
adjustments to the payment amounts for
enteral nutrition as authorized by
section 1842(s)(3)(B) of the Act.
We received 89 public comments on
the proposed rule, including comments
from patient organizations, patients,
manufacturers, health care systems, and
DME suppliers. We made changes to the
proposed methodologies based on these
comments and finalized a method for
paying higher amounts for certain items
furnished in areas defined as rural areas.
In addition, we provided a 6-month fee
schedule adjustment phase in period
from January through June of 2016,
during which the fee schedule amounts
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would be based on 50 percent of the
unadjusted fees and 50 percent of the
adjusted fees to allow time for suppliers
to adjust to the new payment rates and
to monitor the impact of the change in
payment rates on access to items and
services. On November 6, 2014, we
published the CY 2015 ESRD PPS final
rule (79 FR 66223 through 66265) to
finalize the methodologies at
§ 414.210(g) based on public comments
received on the CY 2015 ESRD PPS
proposed rule (79 FR 40208). A
summary of the methodologies is
described in section III.A. of this final
rule.
To update the adjusted fee schedule
amounts based on new competitions
and provide for a transitional phase-in
period of the fee schedule adjustments,
we established § 414.210(g)(8) and (9) in
the CY 2015 ESRD PPS final rule (79 FR
66263). In § 414.210(g)(8), the adjusted
fee schedule amounts are updated when
a SPA for an item or service is updated
following one or more new DMEPOS
CBP competitions and as other items are
added to DMEPOS CBP. The fee
schedule amounts that are adjusted
using SPAs are not subject to the annual
DMEPOS covered item update and are
only updated when SPAs from the
DMEPOS CBP are updated. Updates to
the SPAs may occur as contracts are
recompeted. Section 414.210(g)(9)(i),
specifies that the fee schedule
adjustments were phased in for items
and services furnished with dates of
service from January 1, 2016, through
June 30, 2016, so that each fee schedule
amount was adjusted based on a blend
of 50 percent of the fee schedule amount
if not adjusted based on information
from the CBP, and 50 percent of the
adjusted fee schedule amount. Section
414.210(g)(9)(ii) specifies that for items
and services furnished with dates of
service on or after July 1, 2016, the fee
schedule amounts would be equal to
100 percent of the adjusted fee schedule
amounts. Commenters recommended
CMS phase in the fee schedule
adjustments to give suppliers time to
adjust to the change in payment
amounts (79 FR 66228). Some
commenters recommended a 4-year
phase-in of the adjusted fees. CMS
agreed that phasing in the adjustments
to the fee schedule amounts would
allow time for suppliers to adjust to the
new payment rates and would allow
time to monitor the impact of the
change in payment rates on access to
items and services. We decided 6
months was enough time to monitor
access and health outcomes to
determine if the fee schedule
adjustments created a negative impact
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on access to items and services.
Therefore, we finalized a 6-month
phase-in period of the blended rates (79
FR 66228 through 66229).
We finalized the 6-month transition
period from January 1 through June 30,
2016 in the CY 2015 ESRD PPS final
rule (79 FR 66223) that was published
in the Federal Register on November 6,
2014. The Cures Act was enacted on
December 13, 2016, and section
16007(a) of the Cures Act extended the
transition period for the phase-in of fee
schedule adjustments at
§ 414.210(g)(9)(i) by 6 additional months
so that fee schedule amounts were based
on a blend of 50 percent of the adjusted
fee schedule amount and 50 percent of
the unadjusted fee schedule amount
until December 31, 2016 (with full
implementation of the fee schedule
adjustments applying to items and
services furnished with dates of service
on or after January 1, 2017).
2. Transition Period for Phase-In of Fee
Schedule Adjustments
We determined that the transitional
period for the phase-in of adjustments to
fee schedule amounts should be
resumed in non-CBA rural and noncontiguous areas to ensure access to
necessary items and services in these
areas. The May 2018 IFC amended
§ 414.210(g)(9) to change the end date
for the initial transition period for the
phase-in of adjustments to fee schedule
amounts for certain items based on
information from the DMEPOS CBP
from June 30, 2016 to December 31,
2016, to reflect the extension that was
mandated by section 16007(a) of the
Cures Act. The May 2018 IFC also
amended § 414.210(g)(9) to resume the
transition period for the phase-in of
adjustments to fee schedule amounts for
certain items furnished in non-CBA
rural and non-contiguous areas from
June 1, 2018 through December 31,
2018, for the reasons discussed in this
final rule.
a. Statutory Mandate To Reconsider Fee
Schedule Adjustments
After we established the fee schedule
adjustment methodology under
§ 414.210(g), Congress amended section
1834(a)(1)(G) of the Act to require that
CMS take certain steps and factors into
consideration regarding the fee schedule
adjustments for items and services
furnished on or after January 1, 2019, to
ensure that the rates take into account
certain aspects of providing services in
non-CBAs. Specifically, section 16008
of the Cures Act amended section
1834(a)(1)(G) of the Act to require in the
case of items and services furnished on
or after January 1, 2019, that in making
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any adjustments to the fee schedule
amounts in accordance with sections
1834(a)(1)(F)(ii) and (iii) of the Act, the
Secretary must: (1) Solicit and take into
account stakeholder input; and (2) take
into account the highest bid by a
winning supplier in a CBA and a
comparison of each of the following
factors with respect to non-CBAs and
CBAs:
• The average travel distance and cost
associated with furnishing items and
services in the area.
• The average volume of items and
services furnished by suppliers in the
area.
• The number of suppliers in the
area.
On March 23, 2017, CMS hosted a
national provider call to solicit
stakeholder input regarding adjustments
to fee schedule amounts using
information from the DMEPOS CBP.24
The national provider call was
announced on March 3, 2017, and we
requested written comments by April 6,
2017. We received 125 written
comments from stakeholders. More than
330 participants called into our national
provider call, with 23 participants
providing oral comments during the
call. In general, the commenters were
mostly suppliers, but also included
manufacturers, trade organizations, and
healthcare providers such as physical
and occupational therapists. These
industry stakeholders expressed
concerns that the level of the adjusted
payment amounts constrained suppliers
from furnishing items and services to
rural areas. These stakeholders
requested an increase to the adjusted
payment amounts for these areas. The
written comments generally echoed the
oral comments from the call held on
March 23, 2017, whereby commenters
claimed that the adjusted fees were not
sufficient to cover the costs of
furnishing items and services in rural
and non-contiguous areas and that it
was having an impact on access to items
and services in these areas. For
additional details about the national
provider call and a summary of oral and
written comments received, we refer
readers to the CY 2019 ESRD PPS/
DMEPOS proposed rule (83 FR 57026).
In the May 2018 IFC, we stated that
one of the factors CMS must consider
when making fee schedule adjustments
for items and services furnished on or
after January 1, 2019, in accordance
with section 16008 of the Cures Act, is
the average volume of items and
24 https://www.cms.gov/Outreach-and-Education/
Outreach/NPC/National-Provider-Calls-and-EventsItems/2017-03-23-DMEPOS.html
?DLPage=1&DLEntries=10&DLSort=0&DLSortDir
=descending.
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services furnished by suppliers in an
area (83 FR 21917). We then noted that
data for items furnished in 2016 and
2017 showed that the average volume of
items furnished by suppliers in CBAs
exceeded the average volume of items
furnished by suppliers in rural and noncontiguous areas. We stated that this
supports stakeholder input that the
suppliers in rural and non-contiguous
areas have an average volume of
business less than that of their
counterparts in CBAs, and that this
difference may make it more difficult for
suppliers in rural and non-contiguous
areas to meet their expenses (83 FR
21917).
In addition, at the time of this May
2018 IFC, the adjusted fee schedule
amounts for stationary oxygen
equipment in non-contiguous, nonCBAs were lower than the SPA for
stationary oxygen equipment in the
Honolulu, Hawaii, CBA and the
adjusted fee schedule amounts for
stationary oxygen equipment in some
rural areas were lower than the SPAs in
CBAs within the same State. This was
due to the combination of the fee
schedule adjustments and the budget
neutrality offset that CMS applied to
stationary oxygen equipment and
contents due to the separate oxygen
class for oxygen generating portable
equipment (OGPE).
In 2006, CMS established a separate
payment class for OGPE (which are
portable concentrators with transfilling
equipment), through notice and
comment rulemaking (71 FR 65884).
The authority to add this payment class
is located at section 1834(a)(9)(D) of the
Act, and at the time of the May 2018
IFC, section 1834(a)(9)(D) of the Act
only allowed CMS to establish new
classes of oxygen and oxygen equipment
if such classes were budget neutral,
which meant that the establishment of
new oxygen payment classes did not
result in oxygen and oxygen equipment
expenditures for any year that were
more or less than the expenditures that
would have been made had the new
classes not been established. We also
stated that in the May 2018 IFC that
accordance with § 414.226(c)(6), CMS
reduced the fee schedule amounts for
stationary oxygen equipment in nonCBAs to make the payment classes for
oxygen and oxygen equipment budget
neutral as required by section
1834(a)(9)(D) of the Act (83 FR 21917).
Due to the combination of the fee
schedule adjustment and the budget
neutrality offset, the adjusted fee
schedule amounts for stationary oxygen
equipment in non-contiguous non-CBAs
and some rural areas were lower than
the SPAs in Honolulu, Hawaii, and
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CBAs within the same State,
respectively. We stated that this was
significant because the methodology at
42 CFR 414.210(g) attempted to ensure
that the adjusted fee schedule amounts
for items and services furnished in rural
areas within a State were no lower than
the adjusted fee schedule amounts for
non-rural areas within the same State.
We then noted that CBAs are areas
where payment for certain DME items
and services is based on SPAs
established under the CBP rather than
adjusted fee schedule amounts, and that
CBAs tend to have higher population
densities and typically correspond with
urban census tracts (83 FR 21917).
We explained that the budget
neutrality offset resulted in payment
amounts for stationary oxygen
equipment in CBAs being higher than
the adjusted fee schedule amounts in
some cases. We stated that restoring the
blended fee schedule rates paid in rural
and non-contiguous non-CBAs during
the transition period would result in fee
schedule amounts for oxygen and
oxygen equipment in these areas being
higher than the SPAs paid in all of the
CBAs. Therefore, we stated payment at
the blended rates would avoid
situations where payment for furnishing
oxygen in a rural or non-contiguous,
non-CBA was lower than payment for
furnishing oxygen in a CBA (83 FR
21917). The May 2018 IFC also
contained provisions related to
wheelchair payment. For further
discussion of the wheelchair payment
provisions that were included in the
May 2018 IFC, see the final rule titled:
Medicare Program; Inpatient
Rehabilitation Facility Prospective
Payment System for Federal Fiscal Year
2022 and Updates to the IRF Quality
Reporting Program; Payment for
Complex Rehabilitative Wheelchairs
and Related Accessories (Including
Seating Systems) and Seat and Back
Cushions Furnished in Connection With
Such Wheelchairs, published on August
4, 2021 (86 FR 42362).
Since the publication of the May 2018
IFC, the Consolidated Appropriations
Act of 2021 (Pub. L. 116–260) was
signed into law on December 27, 2020.
Effective April 1, 2021, section 121 of
this Act eliminated the budget
neutrality requirement set forth in
section 1834(a)(9)(D)(ii) of the Act for
separate classes and national limited
monthly payment rates established for
any item of oxygen and oxygen
equipment using the authority in
section 1834(a)(9)(D)(i) of the Act.
Effective for claims with dates of service
on or after April 1, 2021, the fee
schedule amounts for HCPCS codes
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E0441, E0442, E0443, E0444, E0447,
E1390, E1391, E1392, E1405, E1406, and
K0738 are adjusted to remove a
percentage reduction necessary to meet
the budget neutrality requirement
previously mandated by section
1834(a)(9)(D)(ii) of the Act.
b. Fee Schedule Adjustment Impact
Monitoring Data
We also discussed in the May 2018
IFC how we monitor claims data from
non-CBAs, some of which at the time
pre-dated the implementation of the
fully adjusted fee schedule amounts (83
FR 21917). The data did not show any
observable trends indicating an increase
in adverse health outcomes such as
mortality, hospital and nursing home
admission rates, monthly hospital and
nursing home days, physician visit
rates, or emergency room visits in 2016
or 2017 compared to 2015 in the nonCBAs, overall. We have continued to
monitor claims data from non-CBAs and
have not observed any trends indicating
an increase in adverse beneficiary
health outcomes associated with the fee
schedule adjustments.
In addition, we monitored and
continue to monitor data on the rate of
assignment in non-CBAs, which reflects
when suppliers are accepting Medicare
payment as payment in full and not
balance billing beneficiaries for the cost
of the DME. Before and after the
publication of the May 2018 IFC,
assignment rates for items subject to fee
schedule adjustments have continued to
remain around 99 percent. We also
solicited comments on ways to improve
our fee schedule adjustment impact
monitoring data in the May 2018 IFC.
c. Resuming Transitional Blended Fee
Schedule Rates in Rural and NonContiguous Areas
We stated that the monitoring data
described in section II.C.2. of the May
2018 IFC was retrospective claims data
for payment of items already furnished,
and that it was limited to a retrospective
view to address potential future
problems (83 FR 21918).
We also provided Medicare claims
data showing that the number of
supplier locations furnishing DME items
and services subject to the fee schedule
adjustments decreased by 22 percent
from 2013 to 2016 (83 FR 21918).
We stated there were additional
factors that section 16008 of the Cures
Act requires us to take into account in
making adjustments to the fee schedule
amounts for items and services
furnished beginning in 2019. For
instance, we stated that the average
volume of items and services furnished
per supplier in non-CBAs is
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significantly less than the average
volume of items and services furnished
per supplier in CBAs. Additionally, we
stated that the number of suppliers in
general has been steadily decreasing
over time, and as the number of
suppliers serving non-CBAs continues
to decline, the volume of items and
services furnished by the remaining
suppliers increases (83 FR 21918). At
the time of the publication of the May
2018 IFC, we did not know if the
suppliers that remained would have the
financial ability to continue expanding
their businesses to continue to satisfy
market demand. We also did not know
if large suppliers serving both urban and
rural areas would continue to serve the
rural areas representing a much smaller
percentage of their business than urban
areas (83 FR 21918).
Based on the stakeholder comments
and decrease in the number of supplier
locations, we stated there was an
immediate need to resume the
transitional, blended fee schedule
amounts in rural and non-contiguous
areas. We stated that resuming these
transitional blended rates would
preserve beneficiary access to needed
DME items and services in a contracting
supplier marketplace, while allowing
CMS to address the adequacy of the fee
schedule adjustment methodology, as
required by section 16008 of the Cures
Act (83 FR 21918).
We stated that suppliers have noted
that they have struggled under the fully
adjusted fee schedule and that they do
not believe they can continue to furnish
the items and services at the current
rates (83 FR 21918). Industry
stakeholders stated that the fully
adjusted fee schedule amounts were not
sufficient to cover supplier costs for
furnishing items and services in rural
and non-contiguous areas and the
number of suppliers furnishing items in
these areas continued to decline. We
stated that section 16008 of the Cures
Act mandates that we consider
stakeholder input and additional
information in making fee schedule
adjustments based on information from
the DMEPOS CBP for items and services
furnished beginning in 2019. The
information we collected at the time
included input from many stakeholders
in the DMEPOS industry indicating that
the fully adjusted fee schedule amounts
were too low and that this was having
an adverse impact on beneficiary access
to items and services, particularly in
rural and non-contiguous areas. Given
these concerns about the continued
viability of many DMEPOS suppliers,
coupled with the Cures Act mandate to
consider additional information
material to setting fee schedule
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adjustments, we stated it would be
unwise to continue with the fully
adjusted fee schedule rates in the rural
and non-contiguous areas for 7 months.
We stated that any adverse impacts on
beneficiary health outcomes, or on small
businesses exiting the market, could be
irreversible. We stated that it was in the
best interest of the beneficiaries living
in these areas to maintain a blend of the
historic unadjusted fee schedule
amounts and fee schedule amounts
adjusted using SPAs established under
the DMEPOS CBP to prevent suppliers
that might be on the verge of closing
from closing, as they may be the only
option for beneficiaries in these areas.
We stated that while our systematic
monitoring in these areas has not shown
problematic trends to this point, that
monitoring by its nature looks
backward. We stated that given the
rapid changes in health care delivery
that may disproportionately impact
rural and more isolated geographic
areas, there was concern that the
continued decline of the fees and the
number of suppliers in such areas may
impact beneficiary access to items and
services. We stated that these
adjustments would maintain a balance
between the higher historic rates and
rates adjusted based on bidding in larger
metropolitan areas where suppliers
furnish a much larger volume of
DMEPOS items and services and
support continued access to services.
Therefore, we revised § 414.210(g)(9) to
resume the fee schedule adjustment
transition rates for items and services
furnished in rural and non-contiguous
areas from June 1, 2018 through
December 31, 2018, while we further
analyzed this issue (83 FR 21918).
effective use of DME other than
inhalation and infusion drugs.’’
We also removed a reference to drugs
being included in the CBP by deleting
the phrase ‘‘or subpart I’’ in
§ 414.412(b)(2). The sentence reads as
follows: ‘‘The bids submitted for each
item in a product category cannot
exceed the payment amount that would
otherwise apply to the item under
subpart C of this part, without the
application of § 414.210(g), or subpart D
of this part, without the application of
§ 414.105. The bids submitted for items
in accordance with paragraph (d)(2) of
this section cannot exceed the weighted
average, weighted by total nationwide
allowed services, as defined in
§ 414.202, of the payment amounts that
would otherwise apply to the grouping
of similar items under subpart C of this
part, without the application of
§ 414.210(g), or subpart D of this part,
without the application of § 414.105.’’
Similarly, we made a conforming
technical change to § 414.414(f) in the
discussion of ‘‘expected savings’’ so that
infusion drugs are not taken into
account by deleting the words ‘‘or drug’’
and the phrase ‘‘or the same drug under
subpart I’’ from § 414.414(f). The
‘‘expected savings’’ text reads as
follows: ‘‘A contract is not awarded
under this subpart unless CMS
determines that the amounts to be paid
to contract suppliers for an item under
a competitive bidding program are
expected to be less than the amounts
that would otherwise be paid for the
same item under subpart C or subpart
D.’’
C. Technical Changes To Conform the
Regulations to Section 5004(b) of the
Cures Act: Exclusion of DME Infusion
Drugs Under the CBP
1. Transition Period for Phase-In of Fee
Schedule Adjustments
We amended § 414.210(g)(9)(i) to
change the end date for the initial
transition period for the phase in of
adjustments to fee schedule amounts for
certain items based on information from
the DMEPOS CBP from June 30, 2016,
to December 31, 2016, as mandated by
section 16007(a) of the Cures Act. We
also amended § 414.210(g)(9)(ii) to
reflect that fully adjusted fee schedule
amounts apply from January 1, 2017,
through May 31, 2018, and then on or
after January 1, 2019. We also added
§ 414.210(g)(9)(iii) to resume the
transition period for the phase in of
adjustments to fee schedule amounts for
certain items furnished in rural and
non-contiguous areas from June 1, 2018,
through December 31, 2018. Finally, we
added § 414.210(g)(9)(iv) to reflect that
fully adjusted fee schedule amounts
Another provision in the May 2018
IFC that we are finalizing in this final
rule relates to section 5004(b) of the
Cures Act, which amended section
1847(a)(2)(A) of the Act to exclude
drugs and biologicals described in
section 1842(o)(1)(D) of the Act from the
CBP. We made conforming technical
changes to the regulations text
consistent with statutory requirements
to exclude drugs and biologicals from
the CBP (83 FR 21920). We amended 42
CFR 414.402 to reflect that infusion
drugs are not included in the CBP by
revising the definition of ‘‘Item’’ in
paragraph (2) to add the words ‘‘and
infusion’’ after the words ‘‘other than
inhalation.’’ The sentence reads as
follows: ‘‘Supplies necessary for the
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D. Provisions of the May 11, 2018
Interim Final Rule With Comment
Period
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apply for certain items furnished in
non-CBA areas other than rural and
non-contiguous areas from June 1, 2018,
through December 31, 2018.
We discussed in section II.C.1. of the
May 2018 IFC that industry stakeholders
stated that the fully adjusted fee
schedule amounts were not sufficient to
cover supplier costs for furnishing items
and services in rural and noncontiguous areas and were impacting
beneficiary health outcomes (83 FR
21918). Section 16008 of the Cures Act
requires CMS to consider certain factors
in making fee schedule adjustments
using information from the CBP for
items and services furnished in nonCBAs on or after January 1, 2019. We
stated that we should immediately
resume the blended fee schedule rates
in rural and non-contiguous areas that
were in place during CY 2016, while we
further analyzed this issue to safeguard
beneficiaries’ access to necessary items
and services in rural and noncontiguous areas. We stated that
additional information and factors
would be considered when addressing
the fee schedule adjustments for items
and services furnished on or after
January 1, 2019, and that these factors
include differences in costs associated
with furnishing items in heavier
populated CBAs versus less populated
or remote rural and non-contiguous
areas (83 FR 21920). Even though
January 1, 2019 was just 7 months away
from the June 1, 2018, effective date of
this May 2018 IFC, we believed that it
would be unwise to continue with the
fully adjusted fee schedule rates in the
rural and non-contiguous areas for 7
months. Therefore, we concluded that
we should resume the transition
period’s blended fee schedule rates for
items furnished in rural areas and noncontiguous areas not subject to the CBP
from June 1, 2018, through December
31, 2018. We stated that the volume of
items furnished per supplier in rural
and non-contiguous areas was far less
than the volume of items furnished per
supplier in CBAs, indicating that the
cost per item in these areas may be
higher than the cost per item in CBAs
(83 FR 21920). We also expressed
concern that national chain suppliers
may close locations in more remote
areas if the rate they are paid for
furnishing items in a market where the
volume of services is low does not
justify the overhead expenses of
retaining the locations (83 FR 21920).
We received a total of 208 timely
pieces of correspondence in response to
the May 2018 IFC. Many of the
comments we received on the May 2018
IFC were similar to or the same as
comments we received on the CY 2019
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ESRD PPS DMEPOS proposed rule and
which we summarized and responded
to in the CY 2019 ESRD PPS DMEPOS
final rule (83 FR 56922). Most of the
commenters were DME suppliers.
Comment: Most commenters
supported extending the 50/50 blended
rates to the rural and non-contiguous
non-CBAs. Some reasons that
commenters gave for why they
supported this policy were that it would
help suppliers stay in business and
service rural patients. Commenters also
discussed how rural areas face unique
circumstances. For example, a
commenter stated many of their patients
are in islands in remote areas, and
another commenter discussed the
challenges they face when servicing
Native American reservations, such as
power failures, weather changes, longer
travel distances, poor cell phone
reception, and higher delivery charges.
Another commenter stated beneficiaries
in rural areas are geographically
dispersed, harder to reach, and do not
have the same access to systems of care
as those in more populated areas. Some
commenters who were DME suppliers
stated that they have reduced their
delivery service area due to not getting
paid enough, and that the cost of doing
business has increased, which
warranted higher payments. Some
commenters also stated that costs are
higher in rural areas, and travel
distances are larger than in urban areas.
A commenter stated this policy furthers
a goal of achieving rural health equity
with healthier, wealthier suburban and
urban areas.
Response: We acknowledge the
comments for this particular provision
in the May 2018 IFC.
Comment: Many commenters wanted
CMS to extend the blended rates to all
non-CBAs, and to do so for longer than
the 7-month period that was established
in the May 2018 IFC. Several
commenters stated we should extend
the blended rates to all non-CBAs in
2019. Some stated we should
permanently extend the blended rates to
all non-CBAs. As support for this some
commenters stated that non-CBAs do
not have the same level of volume as
CBAs, non-CBAs have a lower
population density, less suppliers, the
cost of doing business is higher in nonCBAs than it is in CBAs, and that
suppliers serving rural areas also serve
non-rural areas. A commenter stated
that providing the same services in
some non-CBAs requires more staff than
in CBAs, and that Bureau of Labor
Statistics (BLS) data show fuel and
health care expenditures are higher in
rural areas. Some commenters were
concerned that beneficiaries would not
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get the items or services they need and
their health outcomes would worsen as
a result.
Response: We continue to believe that
the fully adjusted rates in non-rural and
contiguous non-CBAs are sufficient.
Assignment rates continued to remain
above 99 percent after the publication of
the May 2018 IFC, and we have not
found evidence that these fee schedule
adjustments are causing beneficiary
access or health outcomes issues. As we
indicated in the CY 2019 ESRD PPS
DMEPOS final rule (83 FR 56922), we
agree that the average volume of items
and services furnished by suppliers in
non-rural non-CBAs is lower than the
average volume of items and services
furnished by suppliers in CBAs, and
that total population and population
density are both lower in non-rural nonCBAs than in CBAs. However, volume
of services furnished is only one factor
impacting the cost of furnishing
DMEPOS items and services. A number
of other factors affecting the costs of
furnishing DMEPOS items and services
such as wages, gasoline, rent, utilities,
travel distance and service area size
point to higher costs in CBAs than nonrural non-CBAs. Additionally, as we
found in the CY 2019 ESRD PPS
DMEPOS proposed rule (83 FR 34367
through 34371) and in the November
2020 proposed rule (85 FR 70366),
travel distances were only greater in
certain non-CBAs, which included
Frontier and Remote (FAR), OCBSAs,
and Super Rural areas.
Comment: Many commenters also
wanted us to retroactively apply the
blended rates to all the claims in 2017
and 2018 that we paid at the fully
adjusted rate. Commenters stated that if
we were concerned about the adequacy
of the fully adjusted fees, then we
should retroactively pay suppliers the
blended rates for the time we paid them
the fully adjusted rates. Commenters
explained that 7 months of blended
rates were not enough to stabilize an
industry with a declining number of
suppliers, and that paying the blended
rates retroactively would also help
ensure beneficiary access to DME.
Response: In the May 2018 IFC we
amended § 414.210(g)(9)(i) to reflect the
extension of the transition period to
December 31, 2016 for phasing in
adjustments to the fee schedule amounts
for certain items based on information
from the DMEPOS CBP, as required by
section 16007(a) of the Cures Act. In the
May 2018 IFC, we also continued the
50/50 blend for rural, non-contiguous
areas from June 1 through December 31,
2018. We did not believe it was
appropriate or necessary to retroactively
increase the rates paid for items and
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services subject to the fee schedule
adjustments that were furnished in
2017. Retroactively increasing payment
amounts for items and services that had
already been furnished to beneficiaries
would not result in an increase in access
to such items and services.
Comment: Some commenters stated
CMS should adopt add-on payments for
non-CBAs because of higher costs in
non-CBAs. For instance, a commenter
stated that CMS should establish two
percentage add-ons for the non-CBA
areas: One for the non-rural non-CBAs
and one for the rural non-CBAs. The
commenter stated that the costs of
providing respiratory services can be
higher than the costs for other products
and they recommended setting the nonrural non-CBAs at the regional standard
payment amount (SPA) + 16 percent,
and the rural non-CBAs at the regional
SPA + 22 percent. The commenter
stated that they based these amounts on
their own cost survey of oxygen and
sleep therapy providers and
manufacturing companies that showed
costs were 5 percent higher than the
SPAs in CBAs, that costs are 13 percent
higher in non-CBAs than in CBAs, and
17.5 percent higher in super-rural areas
than in CBAs. Some commenters used
the Ambulance Fee Schedule as an
example of an add-on policy CMS could
use, which includes super-rural add-on
payment. A commenter stated that CMS
should set the 50/50 blend rates in all
non-CBAs, and then pay an even higher
amount of 10 percent in rural and noncontiguous areas. The commenter also
stated that the most significant variables
that affect DME supplier costs are labor
rates, transportation, population
density, miles/time between points of
service, and regulatory costs. The
commenter stated specific costs that
CMS should take into account when
adjusting fees in non-CBAs include
geographic wage index factors, gas,
taxes, employee wages and benefits,
wear and tear of vehicles, average per
capita income, training, delivery, set up,
historical Medicare home placement
volume, proximity to nearby CBAs,
employing a respiratory therapist
(required by State law in several States),
electricity charges freight charges, 24/7
service availability, documentation
requirements, average per patient cost,
licensing, accreditation surety bonds,
audits, population density, miles and
time between points of service, local
and state regulatory costs, and vehicle
insurance and liability insurance.
Another commenter stated how CMS
uses a special rule for rural areas for
items included in more than 10 CBAs.
The commenter stated CMS could
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supplement this special rule by making
it more generous, and also applying the
national ceiling prices in areas with a
limited number of suppliers or low
average volume of Medicare business.
The commenter stated CMS could also
establish an add-on payment for low
volume or low supplier areas, based on
its general approach used for rural areas
in the ambulance fee schedule, which
would involve increasing the base
payment by a percentage amount. A
commenter stated the 50/50 blended
rates were not enough and that CMS
should return to paying the 2015
unadjusted fee schedule rates in all nonCBAs.
Response: We did not implement any
of the add-on payments described by the
commenters in the May 2018 IFC, and
did not discuss such policies in the
Alternatives Considered section of the
May 2018 IFC (83 FR 21924). In the CY
2019 ESRD PPS DMEPOS final rule (83
FR 57034), in response to similar
comments requesting such add-on
payments, we thanked the commenters
for their specific recommendations
regarding adopting add-on payments for
items and services furnished in nonCBAs. We also stated that we did not
propose any payments like those
described by commenters, but that we
would keep these recommendations in
mind for future rulemaking.
In the November 2020 proposed rule,
one of our Alternatives Considered (85
FR 70371) was proposing to eliminate
the definition of rural area at §§ 414.202
and 414.210(g)(1)(v), which brings the
adjusted fee schedule amounts for rural
areas up to 110 percent of the national
average price determined under
§ 414.210(g)(1)(ii). In place of this
definition and rule, we considered
proposing an adjustment to the fee
schedule amounts for DMEPOS items
and services furnished in super rural
non-CBAs within the contiguous U.S.
equal to 120 percent of the adjusted fee
schedule amounts determined for other,
non-rural non-CBAs within the same
State. For example, the adjusted fee
schedule amount for super rural, nonCBAs within Minnesota would be based
on 120 percent of the adjusted fee
schedule amount (in this case, the
regional price) for Minnesota
established in accordance with
§ 414.210(g)(1)(i) through (iv).
Consistent with the ambulance fee
schedule rural adjustment factor at
§ 414.610(c)(5)(ii), we considered
defining ‘‘super rural’’ as a rural area
determined to be in the lowest 25
percent of rural population arrayed by
population density, where a rural area is
defined as an area located outside an
urban area (MSA), or a rural census tract
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within an MSA as determined under the
most recent version of the Goldsmith
modification as determined by the
Federal Office of Rural Health Policy at
the Health Resources and Services
Administration. Per this definition and
under this alternative rule, certain areas
within MSAs would be considered
super rural areas whereas now they are
treated as non-rural areas because they
are located in counties that are included
in MSAs. For all other non-CBAs,
including areas within the contiguous
U.S. that are outside MSAs but do not
meet the definition of super rural area,
we considered adjusting the fee
schedule amounts using the current fee
schedule adjustment methodologies
under § 414.210(g)(1) and (g)(3) through
(8).
We did not receive comments
supporting finalizing this alternative,
and we did not finalize this alternative
considered in this final rule.
Finally, as we stated in the CY 2019
ESRD PPS DMEPOS final rule (83 FR
57034), we recognize that there are
certain supplier cost and volume
differences in rural and non-contiguous
non-CBAs, which is why this final rule
distinguishes rural and non-contiguous
non-CBAs from other non-CBAs and
results in higher payments to suppliers
furnishing items in the rural and noncontiguous non-CBAs. We also believe
that paying an amount in addition to the
blended 50/50 payment rates would be
excessive and unnecessary, and not in
line with what most commenters
requested, as most commenters
specifically requested the blended 50/50
payment rates in rural and noncontiguous non-CBAs. This indicates
that such payment rates are sufficient,
which is why we are also not
incorporating the ambulance fee
schedule’s concept of a super rural addon into our 50/50 blend. With regard to
taking into account certain costs when
adjusting fees in non-CBAs, we have
already analyzed and taken into account
several cost data variables as part of
section 16008 of the Cures Act in the CY
2019 ESRD PPS DMEPOS proposed rule
(83 FR 57027), and in the November
2020 proposed rule (85 FR 70367).
Comment: Some commenters
disagreed with our definition of rural at
§ 414.202. Some commenters that were
DME suppliers were dissatisfied that
some areas that they service did not
qualify as a rural area. A few
commenters stated CMS should define
all non-CBAs as rural. Another
commenter stated the CMS definition of
a rural area is extremely narrow, and
that CMS should adopt, what the
commenter referred to as OMB’s rural
definition, which the commenter stated
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were all counties that are not part of an
MSA. A commenter wondered why the
rural definition at § 414.202 did not
match the criteria for a critical access
hospital. A commenter stated all of West
Virginia should be considered rural, and
another commenter stated there were
remote areas in West Virginia that were
classified as non-rural per the rural
definition at § 414.202.
Response: As defined in § 414.202,
rural area means, for the purpose of
implementing § 414.210(g), a geographic
area represented by a postal zip code if
at least 50 percent of the total
geographic area of the area included in
the zip code is estimated to be outside
any metropolitan area (MSA). A rural
area also includes a geographic area
represented by a postal zip code that is
a low population density area excluded
from a competitive bidding area in
accordance with the authority provided
by section 1847(a)(3)(A) of the Act at the
time the rules at § 414.210(g) are
applied. We did not propose or
implement any changes to our rural
definition in the May 2018 IFC, but we
will keep these points in mind for future
rulemaking. For further background on
the origin of our rural definition, see our
CY 2015 ESRD PPS DMEPOS proposed
rule (79 FR 40284) and the CY 2015
ESRD PPS DMEPOS final rule (79 FR
66228).
Comment: MedPAC did not support
our proposal extending the 50/50
blended rates to rural non-CBAs.
MedPAC stated that if CMS determines
that payment rates in non-CBAs should
be increased to maintain access to
medically necessary DMEPOS products,
then increases should be limited and
targeted, and CMS should consider
taking steps to offset the cost of higher
payment rates. MedPAC stated that
returning to a 50/50 blend of historical
fee schedule rates and competitive
bidding program (CBP) derived rates
will result in large payment increases,
often of 50 percent or more. Further,
these large increases are in addition to
other payment rate adjustments CMS
has already made to protect access, such
as an increase of roughly 10 percent in
rural non-CBAs.
MedPAC stated that while they
understand CMS continues to study
supplier costs in non-CBAs in
accordance with its mandate under the
Cures Act, the interim final rule does
not present supplier cost data that could
be used to justify the magnitude of the
payment increase. MedPAC encouraged
CMS to use the best available data to
determine whether costs that suppliers
must necessarily incur are higher in
non-CBAs relative to CBAs and, if so,
whether an adjustment smaller than the
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one discussed in the interim final rule
would be sufficient to ensure access.
MedPAC stated any payment increase
in non-CBAs should be directed only to
products that exhibit signs of potential
access problems, and that the cost of
DMEPOS products themselves likely do
not vary substantially across geographic
areas, but other costs might (for
example, delivery or personnel costs).
Therefore, depending on the nature of
the product, MedPAC concluded that
the total cost associated with furnishing
a product may or may not vary
substantially across geographic areas,
and the magnitude of that variation
might also be different across products.
Additionally, MedPAC stated that any
payment increase in non-CBAs should
be directed only to areas that exhibit
signs of potential access problems. NonCBAs include a wide variety of areas,
ranging from moderate-size urban areas
to remote rural areas. An identified
potential access problem in a rural or
non-contiguous area should not be used
as a basis to increase payment rates
across all non-CBAs. MedPAC stated
issues faced by suppliers in rural and
non-contiguous areas are likely different
from those faced in urban non-CBAs,
many of which are metropolitan
statistical areas with populations of
250,000 or more. Furthermore, if CMS
has concerns about payment rates in
urban non-CBAs, CMS has better ways
to establish appropriate payment rates
than applying a large, across-the-board
payment increase. For example, CMS
could set payment rates in moderatesize urban non-CBAs by expanding the
CBP to include those areas and use the
information from those competitions to
help set payment rates in smaller nonCBAs. Finally, MedPAC stated CMS
should consider offsetting the increased
costs by further expanding the products
included in the CBP.
Response: We appreciate MedPAC’s
comments on the May 2018 IFC. We
agree that the 50/50 blended rates were
a significant payment increase, and that
they affected large parts of the country.
However, at the time of publication of
the May 2018 IFC, we were concerned
about the potential for beneficiary
access issues to occur based off of
feedback from industry stakeholders
and our data showing a reduction in the
number of suppliers billing Medicare
Fee-for-Service for items and services
subject to fee schedule adjustments. To
err on the side of caution, we decided
we should immediately resume the
transition period and pay 50/50 blended
rates in rural and non-contiguous nonCBAs for all items and services subject
to fee schedule adjustments.
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In looking back at the years since the
publication of the May 2018 IFC, we
still have not seen evidence of the
beneficiary access issues industry
stakeholders claimed were happening as
a result of the fee schedule adjustments.
We also note that in the ensuing months
in which we paid the fully adjusted
rates in the non-rural and contiguous
non-CBAs and the 50/50 blended rates
in the rural or non-contiguous nonCBAs, the assignment rates for both
areas remained around 99 percent. We
will certainly keep MedPAC’s points in
mind for future rulemaking, particularly
as we continue to evaluate the
appropriateness of such significant
payment increases for wide swaths of
the country, and as we contemplate
future changes to the CBP. Finally, we
also agree with expanding the products
included in the CBP, and we note that
we have included OTS back and knee
braces in Round 2021 of the CBP.
Comment: Several commenters
submitted comments on ways to
improve the DMEPOS fee schedule
adjustment impact monitoring data, in
response to us soliciting comments on
ways to improve our fee schedule
adjustment impact monitoring data in
the May 2018 IFC (83 FR 21917). Some
commenters left comments about the
Medicare complaint process. A
commenter stated that it is hard for
beneficiaries to navigate through the
Medicare complaint process and that
they have to get transferred to different
offices to complain about access. The
commenter was concerned complaints
were going unreported or given up on
due to the complexity of the reporting
process, and the commenter encouraged
CMS to develop one central, public
facing hotline where beneficiaries can
submit a complaint hotline without
being transferred to several offices.
Another commenter stated the CMS
patient complaint and access
monitoring is not capturing patient
complaints, and that many patients are
either paying out of pocket or are going
without the care. The commenter
recommended reaching out to hospital
case managers and social workers about
this issue. Another commenter stated
that CMS should get another process for
complaints that is easier to navigate.
The commenter stated CMS should
enhance beneficiary awareness of the
complaint process, and to publicly
report on the complaints we register,
and to not only report those that are
resolved by a supplier. The commenter
also stated that CMS should establish a
patient satisfaction survey/patientreported outcomes measure for
respiratory services that would capture
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issues like isolation, reduced services,
reduced delivery areas, and other
impacts the commenter stated cannot be
measured using claims data. The
commenter also stated CMS should
survey using statistically appropriate
method prescribers of respiratory
services to evaluate the difficulty of
discharging patients who require such
therapy, which would provide CMS
with information about the delays in
obtaining DME and respiratory services.
Another commenter stated that CMS
should create an ombudsman position
for non-CBAs to monitor and address
access, quality, supplier availability and
other issues in non-CBAs. A commenter
stated that CMS does not capture reports
from Medicare beneficiaries and their
caregivers going to other resources to get
their home medical equipment and
supplies (for example, garage/online
sales) to get the medical equipment
needed, and that this will never show
up in CMS’ reports unless they reach
out to those resources or survey
beneficiaries and healthcare providers.
The commenter stated CMS should
work with DME industry advocates on
a survey to healthcare professionals who
are responsible for ordering DME and
supplies for their patients to determine
any access to DME issues.
A commenter provided several
comments regarding impact monitoring
data for respiratory services, particularly
oxygen. They stated to compare the
number of Medicare beneficiaries
diagnosed with COPD, with the number
of beneficiaries receiving home oxygen
therapy. The commenter stated that
there should be a standard benchmark
to assess whether the percentage of
patients who require the therapy
because of their diagnosis actually
receive it. The commenter stated CMS
could compare the Medicare population
receiving respiratory services with the
expected incidence and prevalence of
the most common disease indications
for the therapy (for example, COPD) in
the Medicare population, to determine if
the percentage of Medicare patients
receiving home respiratory therapy is
aligned with the percentage of the
population receiving the therapy. The
commenter stated that this would help
CMS see if there are delays in receiving
the therapy, and if the therapy is being
utilized by the patients who are likely
to have a medical need for it. The
commenter stated that CMS should
determine whether hospital data
(including observation stays),
admissions, or readmissions are specific
enough to track admissions/
readmissions related to complications
associated with noncompliance with
respiratory services. The commenter
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stated the analysis should note that if
metrics of hospitalizations for other
chronic conditions are improving but
the metric for COPD patients is flat or
declining, there is a problem with
access to home therapies. Finally, the
commenter stated CMS should find out
if skilled nursing facilities (SNF)/long
term care (LTC) beneficiaries using
home respiratory services is increasing.
A commenter stated that the impact
monitoring data does not reflect the
companies closing their doors but who
are still trying to collect money owed to
them to help decrease the debt they owe
to vendors. The commenter stated that
the data falsely reflects a higher number
of providers than are actually available
to beneficiaries. Another commenter
stated CMS should understand why
utilization has decreased in non-CBAs.
The commenter stated they do not agree
with the conclusion that it is because of
CMS efforts to address fraud, abuse and
overutilization. The commenter stated it
is because beneficiaries are going
outside Medicare for DME and access
problems. A commenter stated CMS
should find out how access to Part B
services affect an increase in the use of
Part A services.
Response: In the 2019 ESRD PPS
DMEPOS proposed rule, we also sought
comments on ways to improve our fee
schedule adjustment impact monitoring
data (83 FR 34380). We summarized and
responded to these comments in our CY
2019 ESRD PPS DMEPOS final rule (83
FR 57036). Similarly, and as we
indicated in the CY 2019 ESRD PPS
DMEPOS final rule, these comments are
outside the scope of the proposals in the
May 2018 IFC. We will take these
comments into consideration going
forward.
Comment: Many commenters
reiterated their opposition to the budget
neutrality requirements discussed in the
May 2018 IFC (83 FR 21917), and
summarized in section IV.B.3.a. of this
final rule. Commenters were
disappointed that this requirement
resulted in non-CBA area fee schedules
for oxygen concentrators being below
the SPA in certain CBAs. Some stated
the reimbursement for oxygen is not
enough and that it makes it harder to
supply oxygen services to patients.
A commenter stated that CMS
incorrectly applied the oxygen budget
neutrality to non-CBAs. The commenter
stated that the regulation establishing
the offset for E1390 concentrators
applies to the unadjusted fee schedules
under the fee schedule methodology
mandated by Congress under section
1834 (a) of the Act. In contrast, the
commenter stated that the 2017 fee
schedules for concentrators in rural
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areas are based on information from
competitive bidding programs under the
methodology in 42 CFR 414.210 (g). The
commenter stated that, §§ 414.226 and
414.210(g), describe different
reimbursement methodologies that do
not overlap. The commenter noted that
while § 414.226 applies to fee schedules
based on suppliers’ reasonable charges
from 1986 to 1987, § 414.210 (g) applies
to fee schedules based on regional
average special payments amounts
(SPAs) from competitive bidding areas
(CBAs). Similarly, another commenter
stated that CMS has the authority to
eliminate the budget neutrality
requirement. The commenter stated that
in implementing the requirement to
adjust the DME Fee Schedule, CMS has
replaced the national limited monthly
payment amount at § 414.226(c) with
the regional price or 110 percent of the
national average price at § 414.210(g).
By adopting the regional price for nonrural non-CBAs and 110 percent of the
national average price for rural nonCBAs, the commenter stated that CMS
has eliminated the national limited
monthly payment amount, which was
prior to this change the methodology for
establishing rates under the fee
schedule. Since the budget neutrality
language applied only to the national
limited monthly payment amount, the
commenter stated it is not applicable to
the new regional price or national
average price. Finally, a commenter
stated that CMS should change oxygen
reimbursement to the 50/50 blended
rates at a minimum.
Response: Since the publication of the
May 2018 IFC, the Consolidated
Appropriations Act of 2021 (Pub. L.
116–260) was signed into law on
December 27, 2020. Effective April 1,
2021, section 121 of this Act eliminated
the budget neutrality requirement set
forth in section 1834(a)(9)(D)(ii) of the
Act for separate classes and national
limited monthly payment rates
established for any item of oxygen and
oxygen equipment using the authority
in section 1834(a)(9)(D)(i) of the Act.
Effective for claims with dates of service
on or after April 1, 2021, the fee
schedule amounts for HCPCS codes
E0424, E0431, E0433, E0434, E0439,
E0441, E0442, E0443, E0444, E0447,
E1390, E1391, E1392, E1405, E1406, and
K0738 are adjusted to remove a
percentage reduction necessary to meet
the budget neutrality requirement
previously mandated by section
1834(a)(9)(D)(ii) of the Act.
After consideration of the public
comments we received, we are
finalizing the May 2018 IFC provision
titled ‘‘Transition Period for Phase-In of
Fee Schedule Adjustments’’ without
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modification. Of note, we published in
the Federal Register on April 26, 2021
a continuation of effectiveness and
extension of timeline for publication for
the May 2018 IFC, titled ‘‘Medicare
Program; Durable Medical Equipment
Fee Schedule Adjustments To Resume
the Transitional 50/50 Blended Rates To
Provide Relief in Rural Areas and NonContiguous Areas; Extension of
Timeline for Final Rule Publication’’ (86
FR 21949). In accordance with sections
1871(a)(3)(B) and 1871(a)(3)(C) of the
Act, we provided a notification of
continuation for the May 2018 IFC,
announcing the different timeline on
which we intended to publish the final
rule, and explained why we were
unable to publish the final rule on the
regular, required 3-year timeline. As a
result of the publication of this
notification of continuation, the
timeline for publication of the final rule
was extended until May 11, 2022.
With regard to the May 2018 IFC
provision titled ‘‘Transition Period for
Phase-In of Fee Schedule Adjustments’’,
this provision:
• Changed the end date for the initial
transition period for the phase in of
adjustments to fee schedule amounts for
certain items based on information from
the DMEPOS CBP from June 30, 2016 to
December 31, 2016, as mandated by
section 16007(a) of the Cures Act.
• Amended § 414.210(g)(9)(ii) to
reflect that fully adjusted fee schedule
amounts applied from January 1, 2017
through May 31, 2018, and then on or
after January 1, 2019.
• Added § 414.210(g)(9)(iii) to resume
the transition period for the phase in of
adjustments to fee schedule amounts for
certain items furnished in rural and
non-contiguous areas from June 1, 2018
through December 31, 2018.
• Added § 414.210(g)(9)(iv) to reflect
that fully adjusted fee schedule amounts
apply for certain items furnished in
non-CBA areas other than rural and
noncontiguous areas from June 1, 2018
through December 31, 2018.
2. Technical Changes To Conform the
Regulations to Section 5004(b) of the
Cures Act: Exclusion of DME Infusion
Drugs Under CBPs
We made conforming technical
changes to the regulations text
consistent with statutory requirements
to exclude drugs and biologicals from
the CBP. Specifically, we amended
§ 414.402 to reflect that infusion drugs
are not included in the CBP by revising
the definition of ‘‘Item’’ in paragraph (2)
to add the words ‘‘and infusion’’ after
the words ‘‘other than inhalation’’. We
also removed a reference to drugs being
included in the CBP by deleting the
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phrase ‘‘or subpart I’’ in § 414.412(b)(2).
Similarly, we made a conforming
technical change to the regulations text
on ‘‘expected savings’’ so that infusion
drugs are not taken into account in
§ 414.414(f) by deleting the words ‘‘or
drug’’ and the phrase ‘‘or the same drug
under subpart I’’.
Comment: Commenters on the
technical changes we made in the May
2018 IFC to conform the regulations to
section 5004(b) of the Cures Act for the
exclusion of DME infusion drugs under
CBPs supported this change, saying
such changes were consistent with the
statute.
Response: After further consideration
of the public comments we received, we
are finalizing our conforming technical
changes to the regulations text
consistent with statutory requirements
to exclude drugs and biologicals from
the CBP. Specifically, we amended
§ 414.402 to reflect that infusion drugs
are not included in the CBP by revising
the definition of ‘‘Item’’ in paragraph (2)
to add the words ‘‘and infusion’’ after
the words ‘‘other than inhalation’’. We
also removed a reference to drugs being
included in the CBP by deleting the
phrase ‘‘or subpart I’’ in § 414.412(b)(2).
Similarly, we made a conforming
technical change to the regulations text
on ‘‘expected savings’’ so that infusion
drugs are not taken into account in
§ 414.414(f) by deleting the words ‘‘or
drug’’ and the phrase ‘‘or the same drug
under subpart I’’.
V. Benefit Category and Payment
Determinations for Durable Medical
Equipment, Prosthetic Devices,
Orthotics and Prosthetics, Therapeutic
Shoes and Inserts, Surgical Dressings,
Splints, Casts, and Other Devices Used
for Reductions of Fractures and
Dislocations
A. Background
1. Benefit Category Determinations
Medicare generally covers an item or
service that—(1) falls within a statutory
benefit category; (2) is not statutorily
excluded from coverage; and (3) is
reasonable and necessary for the
diagnosis or treatment of illness or
injury or to improve the functioning of
a malformed body member as described
in section 1862(a)(1)(A) of the Act. We
make benefit category determinations
(BCDs) based on the scope of Part B
benefits identified in section 1832 of the
Act, as well as certain statutory and
regulatory definitions for specific items
and services. Section 1832(a)(1) of the
Act defines the benefits under Part B to
include ‘‘medical and other health
services,’’ including items and services
described in section 1861(s) of the Act
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such as surgical dressings, and splints,
casts, and other devices used for
reduction of fractures and dislocations
under paragraph (5), prosthetic devices
under paragraph (8), leg, arm, back, and
neck braces, artificial legs, arms, and
eyes under paragraph (9), therapeutic
shoes under paragraph (12), and durable
medical equipment (DME) under
paragraph (6) and as defined in section
1861(n) of the Act. The words
‘‘orthotic(s)’’ or ‘‘orthosis(es)’’ are used
in various parts of the statute and
regulations instead of the word brace(s)
but have the same meaning as brace(s).
For example, section 1847(a)(2)(C) of the
Act refers to ‘‘orthotics described in
section 1861(s)(9)’’ of the Act. However,
section 1861(s)(9) of the Act describes
‘‘leg, arm, neck, and back braces’’ and
does not use the word ‘‘orthotics.’’
Likewise, section 1834(h)(4)(C) of the
Act specifies that ‘‘the term ‘orthotics
and prosthetics has the meaning given
such term in section 1861(s)(9)’’ of the
Act; however, section 1861(s)(9) of the
Act describes ‘‘leg, arm, neck, and back
braces’’ and does not use the word
‘‘orthotics.’’ Also, the word
‘‘prosthetic(s)’’ is used in various parts
of the statute and regulations to describe
artificial legs, arms, and eyes referenced
in section 1861(s)(9) of the Act, but it is
important to note that these items are
not the same items as the prosthetic
devices referenced in section 1861(s)(8)
of the Act.
While the statutory definition of DME
in section 1861(n) of this Act sets forth
some items with particularity, such as
iron lungs, oxygen tents, hospital beds,
wheelchairs, and blood glucose
monitors, whether other items and
services are covered under the Medicare
Part B DME benefit is based on our
interpretation of the statute, which does
not, for example, elaborate on the
meaning of the word ‘‘durable’’ within
the context of ‘‘durable medical
equipment.’’ Therefore, we further
defined DME in the regulation at 42 CFR
414.202 as equipment that: (1) Can
withstand repeated use; (2) effective
with respect to items classified as DME
after January 1, 2012, has an expected
life of at least 3 years; (3) is primarily
and customarily used to serve a medical
purpose; (4) generally is not useful to a
person in the absence of an illness or
injury; and (5) is appropriate for use in
the home. In conducting an analysis of
whether an item falls within the DME
benefit category, we review the
functions and features of the item, as
well as other supporting material, where
applicable. For example, research and
clinical studies may help to demonstrate
that the item meets the prongs of the
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definition of DME at § 414.202. For
items to be considered DME, all
requirements of the regulatory
definition must be met. Additional
details on the Medicare definition of
DME are located in section 110.1 of the
Medicare Benefit Policy Manual (CMS
100–02). The Medicare definitions for
surgical dressings, splints, casts, and
other devices used for reductions of
fractures and dislocations, prosthetic
devices, orthotics and prosthetics, and
therapeutic shoes and inserts are located
in sections 100, 120, 130, and 140,
respectively, of the Medicare Benefit
Policy Manual (CMS 100–02).
In situations where CMS has not
established a BCD for an item or service,
the BCD is made by the MACs on a caseby-case basis as they adjudicate claims.
The MACs may have also addressed the
benefit category status of an item or
service locally in a written policy
article. This final rule would apply to
BCDs for all items and services
described in section 1861(s) of the Act
such as surgical dressings, and splints,
casts, and other devices used for
reduction of fractures and dislocations
under paragraph (5), prosthetic devices
under paragraph (8), leg, arm, back, and
neck braces, artificial legs, arms, and
eyes under paragraph (9), therapeutic
shoes under paragraph (12), and DME
under paragraph (6) and as defined in
section 1861(n) of the Act.
2. Section 531(b) of the Medicare,
Medicaid, and SCHIP Benefits
Improvement and Protection Act of
2000 (BIPA) (Pub. L. 106–554)
Section 531(b) of BIPA required the
Secretary to establish procedures for
coding and payment determinations for
new DME under Medicare Part B of the
Act that permit public consultation in a
manner consistent with the procedures
established for implementing coding
modifications to ICD–9–CM.
Accordingly, we hosted public meetings
that provide a forum for interested
parties to make oral presentations and to
submit written comments in response to
preliminary HCPCS coding and
Medicare payment determinations for
new DME items and services. A
payment determination for DME items
and services would include a
determination regarding which of the
paragraphs (2) through (7) of subsection
(a) of section 1834 of the Act the items
and services are classified under as well
as how the fee schedule amounts for the
items and services are established so
that they are in compliance with the
exclusive payment rules under sections
1834(a) and 1847(a) and (b) of the Act.
The preliminary HCPCS coding and
Medicare payment determinations for
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new DME items and services are made
available to the public via our website
prior to the public meetings. In
addition, although this type of forum
and opportunity for obtaining public
consultation on preliminary HCPCS
coding and Medicare payment
determinations for items and services
other than new DME items is not
mandated by the statute, we expanded
this process for obtaining public
consultation on preliminary coding and
payment determinations to all HCPCS
code requests for items and services in
2005, and since January 2005, we have
been holding public meetings to obtain
public consultation on preliminary
coding and payment determinations for
non-drug, non-biological items and
services. As discussed in the November
2020 proposed rule (85 FR 70376), we
proposed to continue holding these
public meetings for non-drug, nonbiological items and services and, in
limited circumstances, for drug or
biological products (85 FR 70410)) that
are associated with external requests for
HCPCS codes. As indicated in the
proposed rule (85 FR 70397), external
requests for HCPCS codes are made by
submitting a HCPCS application (OMB
control number 0938–1042 titled
HCPCS Modification to Code Set Form
CMS–10224) available on the CMS.gov
website at the following address:
https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Coding/
MedHCPCSGenInfo/Application_Form_
and_Instructions.
HCPCS Level II codes are used by
Medicare, Medicaid, and other public
health insurance programs and private
insurers for the purpose of identifying
items and services on health insurance
claims. A code identifies and describes
a category of items and services and the
HCPCS Level II coding system and
process is not used to make coverage or
payment determinations on behalf of
any insurer. Once a code describing a
category of items and services is
established, separate processes and
procedures are used by insurers to
determine whether payments for the
item or service can be made, what
method of payment, for example,
purchase or rental, will be used to make
payment for the item or service, and
what amount(s) will be paid for the item
or service. Whether or not an item falls
under one of the Medicare benefit
categories such as DME is a decision
made by CMS or the MACs based on
statutory and regulatory definitions,
separate from the HCPCS Level II coding
system and process for identifying items
and services. Once a Medicare benefit
category is identified, the coverage and
payment indicators attached to any new
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HCPCS code(s) describing the item or
service for claims processing purposes
would reflect the benefit category and
payment determinations made pursuant
to the process established by this final
rule.
To make a Medicare payment
determination for an item or service,
that is, to determine the statutory and
regulatory payment rules that apply to
the item or service and how to establish
allowed payment amounts for the item
or service, CMS must first determine
whether the item or service falls under
a benefit category, for example DME,
and if so, which benefit category in
particular. Therefore, since 2001, the
procedures established by CMS to
obtain public consultation on national
payment determinations for new DME
items as mandated by section 531(b) of
BIPA have also in effect been
procedures for obtaining public
consultation on national DME BCDs, or
determinations about whether an item
or service meets the Medicare definition
of DME. Then in 2005, when these
procedures were expanded to include
requests for HCPCS codes for all items
and services, they became in effect
procedures for obtaining public
consultation on BCDs and payment
determinations for all items and
services.
B. Current Issues
To increase transparency and
structure around the process for
obtaining public consultation on benefit
category and payment determinations
for these items and services, we stated
in the November 2020 proposed rule (85
FR 70397) that it would be beneficial to
set forth in our regulations the process
and procedures that have been used
since 2001 for obtaining public
consultation on BCDs and payment
determinations for new DME and since
2005 for requests for HCPCS codes for
items and services other than DME. As
further discussed in section IV.A.2. of
the 2020 November proposed rule (85
FR 70374 through 70375), we recently
revised our coding cycle for requests for
HCPCS Level II codes to implement
shorter and more frequent coding
application cycles.25 Beginning January
2020, for non-drug, non-biological items
and services, we shortened the existing
annual coding cycle to conduct more
frequent coding cycles on a bi-annual
basis and include public meetings to
obtain consultation on preliminary
coding determinations twice a year
25 CMS, Announcement of Shorter Coding Cycle
Procedures, Applications, and Deadlines for 2020,
HCPCS—General Information. Available at: https://
www.cms.gov/Medicare/Coding/
MedHCPCSGenInfo.
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under these new bi-annual coding
cycles. We believe that continuing to
establish payment determinations,
which, include BCDs, for new DME
items and services and the other items
and services described previously at
these same bi-annual public meetings
would be an efficient and effective way
to address coding, benefit category, and
payment issues for these new items and
services and would prevent delays in
coverage of new items and services.
In addition, in the past, manufacturers
of new products would often ask CMS
for guidance on whether or not the
product(s) fall under a DMEPOS benefit
category. Our informal advice regarding
these products were sent directly to the
manufacturers, outside of the HCPCS
public meeting process. In the future, if
a manufacturer requests a BCD for their
product(s) outside of the process
established in this final rule, we will
instead issue a BCD and payment
determination for the manufacturer
through the BCD and payment
determination procedures established
by this rule. Such requests would be
added as soon as possible to the agenda
for an upcoming public meeting, which
will be posted on CMS.gov two weeks
prior to the meeting. Likewise, if CMS
decides to address the benefit category
for a new item or service that is not
identified through the HCPCS editorial
process, the benefit category
determination and payment
determination, if applicable, will be
subject to the procedures established by
this rule. Any manufacturer or other
entity requesting a benefit category
determination outside of the HCPCS
editorial process) would still need to
provide information on the product
such as intended use, FDA clearance
documents, any clinical studies, etc.,
that CMS will need to determine
whether the product falls under a
Medicare benefit category.
C. Proposed Provisions
We proposed in the November 2020
proposed rule (85 FR 70397 through
70398) to set forth in regulations BCD
and payment determination procedures
for new DME items and services
described in sections 1861(n) and (s)(6)
of the Act, as well as the items and
services described in sections
1861(s)(5), (8), (9), and (12) of the Act,
that permit public consultation at public
meetings. The payment rules for these
items and services are located in 42 CFR
part 414, subparts C and D, so we
proposed to include these procedures
under both subparts C and D. We
proposed that the public consultation
on BCDs and payment determinations
would be heard at the same public
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meetings where consultation is
provided on preliminary coding
determinations for new items and
services the requestor of the code
believes are: DME as described in
sections 1861(n) and (s)(6) of the Act;
surgical dressings, splints, casts, and
other devices as described in section
1861(s)(5) of the Act; prosthetic devices
as described in section 1861(s)(8) of the
Act; leg, arm, back, and neck braces
(orthotics), and artificial legs, arms, and
eyes (prosthetics) as described in
section 1861(s)(9) of the Act; or
therapeutic shoes and inserts as
described in section 1861(s)(12) of the
Act. The proposal generally reflected
the procedures that have been used by
CMS since 2005, however, we proposed
to specifically solicit or invite
consultation on preliminary BCDs for
each item or service in addition to the
consultation on preliminary payment
and coding determinations for new
items and services.
Accordingly, we proposed procedures
under new § 414.114 for determining
whether new items and services meet
the Medicare definition of items and
services subject to the payment rules at
42 CFR part 414 subpart C (85 FR
70397). This would include
determinations regarding whether the
items and services are parenteral and
enteral nutrition (PEN), which are
nutrients, equipment, and supplies that
are categorized under the prosthetic
device benefit, as defined at section
1861(s)(8) of the Act and covered in
accordance with section 180.2 of
Chapter 1, Part 3 of the Medicare
National Coverage Determinations
Manual (Pub 100–03). This would also
include determinations regarding
whether items and services are
intraocular lenses (IOLs) inserted in a
physician’s office, which are also
categorized under the prosthetic device
benefit at section 1861(s)(8) of the Act.
We stated we would also use the
proposed procedures to determine
whether items and services are splints,
casts, and other devices used for
reduction of fractures and dislocations
at section 1861(s)(5) of the Act. For
purposes of the proposed procedures
and § 414.114, we proposed to establish
the following definition:
Benefit category determination means
a national determination regarding
whether an item or service meets the
Medicare definition of a prosthetic
device at section 1861(s)(8) of the Act or
is a splint, cast, or device used for
reduction of fractures or dislocations
subject to section 1842(s) of the Act and
the rules of this subpart and is not
otherwise excluded from coverage by
statute.
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We proposed procedures under new
§ 414.240 for determining whether new
items and services meet the Medicare
definition of items and services subject
to the payment rules at 42 CFR part 414
subpart D (85 FR 70398). This would
include determinations regarding
whether the items and services are in
the DME benefit category as defined at
section 1861(n) of the Act and under 42
CFR 414.202. This would also include
determinations regarding whether the
items and services are in the benefit
category for prosthetic devices that fall
under section 1861(s)(8) of the Act other
than PEN nutrients, equipment and
supplies or IOLs inserted in a
physician’s office. This would also
include determinations regarding
whether the items and services are in
the benefit category for leg, arm, neck,
and back braces (orthotics), and
artificial legs, arms, and eyes
(prosthetics) under section 1861(s)(9) of
the Act. This would also include
determinations regarding whether the
items and services are in the benefit
category for surgical dressings under
section 1861(s)(5) of the Act or custom
molded shoes or extra-depth shoes with
inserts for an individual with diabetes
under section 1861(s)(12) of the Act. For
purposes of these proposed procedures
and new § 414.240, we proposed to
establish the following definition:
Benefit category determination means
a national determination regarding
whether an item or service meets the
Medicare definition of durable medical
equipment at section 1861(n) of the Act,
a prosthetic device at section 1861(s)(8)
of the Act, an orthotic or leg, arm, back
or neck brace, a prosthetic or artificial
leg, arm or eye at section 1861(s)(9) of
the Act, is a surgical dressing, or is a
therapeutic shoe or insert subject to
sections 1834(a), (h), or (i) of the Act
and the rules of this subpart and is not
otherwise excluded from coverage by
statute.
We proposed that if a preliminary
determination is made that a new item
or service falls under one of the benefit
categories for items and services paid in
accordance with subpart C or D of 42
CFR part 414, then CMS will make a
preliminary payment determination
regarding how the fee schedule amounts
for the item or services would be
established in accordance with these
subparts, and, for items and services
identified as DME, under which of the
payment classes under sections
1834(a)(2) through (7) of the Act the
item or service falls (85 FR 70398). We
proposed that the procedures for making
BCDs and payment determinations for
new items and services subject to the
payment rules under subpart C or D of
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42 CFR part 414 would be made by CMS
during each bi-annual coding cycle and
the proposed procedures under new
§§ 414.114 and 414.240 would include
the following steps.
First, at the start of the coding cycle,
CMS performs an analysis to determine
if the item or service is statutorily
excluded from Medicare coverage under
any of the provisions at section 1862 of
the Act, and, if not excluded by statute,
CMS determines if the item or service
falls under a Medicare benefit category
defined in the statute and regulations
for any of the items or services subject
to the payment rules under subparts C
or D of 42 CFR part 414. Information
such as the description of the item or
service in the HCPCS application,
HCPCS codes used to bill for the item
or service in the past, product brochures
and literature, information on the
manufacturer’s website, information
related to the FDA clearance or approval
of the item or service for marketing or
related to items that are exempted from
the 510(k) requirements or otherwise
approved or cleared by the FDA is
considered as part of this analysis. This
step could generally take anywhere from
1 week to 2 months. For more complex
items or services, the process may take
several months, in which case public
consultation on the benefit category and
payment determinations would slip to a
subsequent coding cycle.
Second, if a preliminary
determination is made by CMS that the
item or service is an item or service
falling under a benefit category for items
and services paid for in accordance with
subpart C or D of 42 CFR part 414, a
preliminary payment determination is
made by CMS regarding how the fee
schedule amounts will be established
for the item or service and what
payment class the item falls under if the
item meets the definition of DME. This
step could also generally take anywhere
from 1 week to 2 months. For more
complex items or services, the process
may take several months, in which case
public consultation on the benefit
category and payment determinations
would slip to a subsequent coding cycle.
Third, approximately 4 months into
the coding cycle, the preliminary benefit
category and payment determinations
are posted on CMS.gov 2 weeks prior to
the public meeting described under
proposed § 414.8(d) in which CMS
receives consultation from the public on
the preliminary benefit category and
payment determinations made for the
item or service. After consideration of
public consultation on any preliminary
benefit category and payment
determinations made for the item or
service, the benefit category and
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payment determinations are established
through program instructions issued to
the MACs.
We noted that even though a
determination may be made that an item
or service meets the Medicare definition
of a benefit category, and fee schedule
amounts may be established for the item
or service, this does not mean that the
item or service would be covered for a
particular beneficiary. After a BCD and
payment determination has been made
for an item or service, a determination
must still be made by CMS or the
relevant local MAC that the item or
service is reasonable and necessary for
the treatment of illness or injury or to
improve the functioning of a malformed
body member, as required by section
1862(a)(1)(A) of the Act.
We sought public comment on our
proposed process and procedures for
making BCDs and payment
determinations for new items and
services paid for in accordance with
subpart C or D of 42 CFR part 414. We
noted that our proposed approach does
not affect or change our existing process
for developing National Coverage
Determinations (NCDs), which we can
continue to use to develop NCDs both
in response to external requests and
internally-generated reviews. We further
noted that we are not limited to only
addressing benefit categories in
response to external HCPCS code
applications and could decide to use the
proposed process to address benefit
categories in response to internally
generated HCPCS coding changes as
well. As aforementioned, requests for
BCDs that are not associated with a
HCPCS code application will also be
addressed through the preliminary
benefit category and payment
determination process established in
this final rule.
Comment: A few commenters
supported the codification of formal
BCD procedures including stakeholder
input, noting this proposal is a step in
the right direction.
Response: For the reasons we
articulated previously as well as later in
this section, we intend to finalize these
procedures as proposed with a technical
modification. At proposed
§§ 414.114(b)(3) and (4), 414.240(b)(3)
and (4), we included the language ‘‘a
public meeting described under
§ 414.8(d)’’ to identify the existing biannual public meetings used to review
new DME items and services and the
other items and services. We intend to
keep using the same public meetings for
BCD purposes, but as discussed in
section X. of this final rule, we are not
finalizing the proposed HCPCS Level II
code application process, and we are
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not finalizing the proposed regulation
text for § 414.8(d). Therefore, we are
finalizing in the regulation text at
§§ 414.114(b)(3) and (4), as well as
414.240(b)(3) and (4), a reference to a
‘‘public meeting’’ without a crossreference to § 414.8(d). We emphasize
that this change is technical only, and
both the final regulation text and BCD
procedures are functionally the same as
what we proposed in the November
2020 proposed rule.
Comment: A few commenters from
associations and consultants
representing manufacturers and
suppliers of DMEPOS noted that there
was no mention of the minimum
qualifications for the individuals who
will be making the preliminary
determinations, claiming that this
differs from the Coverage and Analysis
Group (CAG) or by Medicare
Administrative Contractors processes
that affect both coverage and coding,
where the process is either supervised
or conducted by individuals with the
appropriate professional credentialing
and experience, such as licensed health
care professionals or individuals with
graduate-level training in related fields
such as epidemiology. Commenters
further stated that as many innovations
rely on more complex technology and
clinical factors, and rely on clinical trial
evidence and interpretation of that
evidence, it was incumbent on CMS to
ensure that the reviewers making the
preliminary determinations are familiar
with current developments and have the
technical skills necessary to conduct a
thorough evaluation of the item and the
related clinical information.
Commenters recommended either
having the applicant indicate the
minimum and preferred credentials of a
proposed reviewer or lengthening the
current 40-page limit to allow relevant
technical data and published papers
that describe the innovation, its
mechanism of action, and how it differs
from other items and services that are
described in existing HCPCS code.
Response: CMS has years of
experience making benefit category
determinations and our initial and final
determinations are formulated in
conjunction with experts such as
medical officers, certified orthotists and
prosthetists, nurses and other allied
health professionals, and biomedical
engineers. We are not adopting the
commenters’ suggestion that we adopt
specific qualifications for the specific
group of CMS reviewers that makes
initial benefit category determinations.
Moreover, we note our initial
determinations are preliminary, giving
the public an opportunity to provide
additional feedback at the public
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meeting. Accordingly, we find it is
unnecessary for the applicant to request
preferred or minimal credentials for the
group that makes initial benefit category
determinations.
We also find it is unnecessary to
adjust the HCPCS application because a
BCD is a separate process that is not
limited to the information in the HCPCS
application. For the BCD
recommendation, we conduct research,
as needed, and also may request
information from the manufacturer or
industry. We recognize that a HCPCS
application often triggers a BCD, but the
determination of a BCD can be a
separate and distinct process from the
HCPCS review.
Comment: Commenters suggested that
CMS allow applicants to request either
a BCD, a HCPCS code, or both. The
rationale being some applicants may
need a BCD alone at one stage of
commercialization and do not want or
need to invest in the costs of a complete
HCPCS application. The commenters
claimed that many applicants would not
invest in the resources needed to apply
for a new code if they knew they would
receive a determination that the item or
service did not fall under a Medicare
benefit category.
Response: We want to clarify that the
BCD process is separate and distinct
from the HCPCS application, and an
interested party can make a request for
a BCD independent from any associated
HCPCS code request. Any party can
request a BCD for an item or service
without requesting a change to the
HCPCS. Once the BCD request is
received, we would follow the same
process which includes discussing the
BCD at a public meeting. We also note
that interested parties can request a
national BCD through the NCD process
or in some cases we could make a BCD
through rulemaking; however, we
believe these procedures we are
finalizing under the regulations will
allow us to make BCDs for these new
items and services more quickly.
Comment: A few commenters
recommended that the BCD coverage
and the coding process should remain
separate.
Response: We did not propose to
integrate the two processes, but we
reiterate that a HCPCS code application
often triggers a BCD. We proposed to
discuss the BCD requests during the biannual public meetings for new items
and services, as this is an efficient and
effective way to address coding, benefit
category, and payment issues for these
new items and services and will prevent
delays in access to new items and
services.
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With regard to the use of the term
‘‘BCD coverage,’’ we want to clarify that
BCDs and coverage determinations are
two distinct processes with separate
statutory authorities. A BCD is a
determination regarding whether or not
an item or service falls under a
Medicare benefit category (for example,
DME as defined in section 1861(n) of
the Act). A coverage determination, on
the other hand, is a decision by a
Medicare contractor regarding whether
to cover a particular item or service in
accordance with section 1862(a)(1)(A) of
the Act (see 42 CFR 400.202). We note
that stakeholders can still request a BCD
through the NCD process, as an
alternative to these procedures.
Comment: A few commenters
expressed concern that the timeframe of
publishing the preliminary BCD
decisions 2 weeks prior to a public
meeting is too brief. The commenters
were concerned that this proposal
shortens the time necessary for an
applicant to bring forth an expert or
health care professional.
Response: We understand
commenters’ concern on the timing of
the preliminary decisions; however, we
must balance the time needed to assess
and make a preliminary decision and
issuing it within the specified
timeframes. We believe that giving 2
weeks’ notice of the meeting and
announcing the dates of the public
meetings in advance provides stability
to stakeholders on the expected meeting
times while also ensuring we have
sufficient time necessary to make
preliminary determinations for as many
new items and services as possible. The
HCPCS cycle was shortened from a 12month cycle to two 6-month cycles to
allow for more opportunities for the
public to request HCPCS codes, but one
tradeoff is that this can compress all
stages of the coding process, including
the time for developing preliminary
coding, benefit category, and payment
determinations, as well as the time
allowed for the public to react to these
preliminary determinations and prepare
for the public meetings.
Comment: Some commenters
expressed interest in expanding the
DME definition in 42 CFR 414.202 to
cover items such as software and vision
aids or to clarify the definition of
prosthetic device in 42 CFR 414.202.
Response: We did not propose to
expand the scope of the DME or
prosthetic device benefits in these BCD
provisions, and therefore these
comments fall outside the scope of this
section of the rule.
Comment: A commenter requested
that CMS allow the HCPCS process to
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serve as an appeal process for the BCD
and payment decisions.
Response: We do not believe a further
appeals process is necessary. There is
already an appeals process in the claims
appeals process under which a party
could challenge the amount of payment
if the party with standing was
dissatisfied with the amount of
payment. In light of the available appeal
process, there would seem to be no need
to establish a further appeals process.
Comment: A commenter
recommended that CMS provide details
regarding the basis and data used to
make any preliminary BCD and
payment decision, stating that this
information should be included in the
letters to the applicants as well as in the
information for the relevant public
meetings.
Response: We do not agree with the
commenter that details on preliminary
BCDs need to be included in a letter to
the requestor of the HCPCS code. The
HCPCS is a coding system for the public
in general and is not a coding system for
specific manufacturers or specific
products. We will provide enough
information so the public, which
includes the manufacturer, individual,
or entity that submitted the HCPCS
request, can meaningfully comment on
the preliminary BCD and payment
decisions and also understand our
underlying rationale for such decisions.
Comment: A commenter representing
manufacturers and beneficiaries stated
that they do not prefer that BCDs be
made through public notice and
comment rulemaking, which they
believe would dramatically reduce the
timeliness of approval of benefit
category determinations for new devices
and technologies, and consequently,
access to care.
Response: We agree with the
commenter that solely using notice and
comment rulemaking would
significantly extend the time it takes to
make a BCD and could negatively
impact beneficiaries’ access to new item
and services. The BCD procedures we
are finalizing allow for multiple
determinations within 1 year and build
on the statutory process outlined in
BIPA. We also note that stakeholders
can still request a BCD through the NCD
process, as an alternative to these
procedures.
Comment: A commenter expressed
their opinion that CMS has not been
following the BCD process and that
CMS did not make these determinations
for a number of DME items assigned
new HCPCS codes since 2019. The
commenter stated their opinion that the
lack of BCDs for new items assigned
HCPCS codes since 2019 continues to
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impede beneficiary access to these new,
clinically proven technologies.
Response: We acknowledge BCDs
reviews have been slowed down the
past few years because this process was
not formalized. We believe there is a
benefit to finalizing these procedures
and anticipate being able to make
decisions more quickly and on a
consistent timeframe outlined under the
final regulation. However, we note that
in situations where CMS has not
established a BCD for an item or service,
the BCD can be made by the MACs on
a case-by-case basis as they adjudicate
claims.
After consideration of the public
comments we received and for the
reasons we articulated, we are finalizing
at §§ 414.114 and 414.240 the
definitions related to and procedures for
making BCDs and payment
determinations for new items and
services subject to the payment rules
under subparts C or D of 42 CFR part
414 as proposed with a technical
modification to remove a cross-reference
to a HCPCS-related regulation we are
not finalizing.
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VI. Classification and Payment for
Continuous Glucose Monitors Under
Medicare Part B
This section addresses classification
and payment for CGMs under the
Medicare Part B benefit for DME. We
proposed to replace a CMS Ruling
issued in January 12, 2017 titled
Classification of Therapeutic
Continuous Glucose Monitors as
‘‘Durable Medical Equipment’’ under
Medicare Part B [Ruling] (CMS–1682–R)
with this new rule.
A. General Background
DME is a benefit category under
Medicare Part B. Section 1861(n) of the
Act defines ‘‘durable medical
equipment’’ as including ‘‘iron lungs,
oxygen tents, hospital beds, and
wheelchairs (which may include a
power-operated vehicle that may be
appropriately used as a wheelchair, but
only where the use of such a vehicle is
determined to be necessary on the basis
of the individual’s medical and physical
condition and the vehicle meets such
safety requirements as the Secretary
may prescribe) used in the patient’s
home (including an institution used as
his home other than an institution that
meets the requirements of subsection
(e)(1) of this section or section
1819(a)(1)) of the Act, whether
furnished on a rental basis or
purchased, and includes blood-testing
strips and blood glucose monitors for
individuals with diabetes without
regard to whether the individual has
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Type I or Type II diabetes or to the
individual’s use of insulin (as
determined under standards established
by the Secretary in consultation with
the appropriate organizations) and eye
tracking and gaze interaction accessories
for speech generating devices furnished
to individuals with a demonstrated
medical need for such accessories;
except that such term does not include
such equipment furnished by a supplier
who has used, for the demonstration
and use of specific equipment, an
individual who has not met such
minimum training standards as the
Secretary may establish with respect to
the demonstration and use of such
specific equipment. With respect to a
seat-lift chair, such term includes only
the seat-lift mechanism and does not
include the chair.’’
In addition to this provision, in most
cases, an item must also meet the
requirements of section 1862(a)(1)(A) of
the Act, which precludes payment for
an item or service that is not reasonable
and necessary for the diagnosis or
treatment of illness or injury or to
improve the functioning of a malformed
body member, and section 1862(a)(6) of
the Act, which precludes payment for
personal comfort items.
The Medicare program was created as
part of the Social Security Amendments
of 1965 (Pub. L. 89–97), and the Part B
benefit payments for DME were initially
limited to ‘‘rental of durable medical
equipment, including iron lungs,
oxygen tents, hospital beds, and
wheelchairs used in the patient’s home
(including an institution used as his
home)’’ in accordance with the
definition of DME at section 1861(s)(6)
of the Act. The Social Security
Amendments of 1967 (Pub. L. 90–248)
amended the statute to allow for
payment on a purchase basis for DME in
lieu of rental for items furnished on or
after January 1, 1968. Section 144(d) of
the Social Security Amendments of
1967 changed the language under
section 1861(s) of the Act to ‘‘durable
medical equipment, including iron
lungs, oxygen tents, hospital beds, and
wheelchairs used in the patient’s home
(including an institution used as his
home), whether furnished on a rental
basis or purchased.’’ Payments for
purchase of expensive items of DME
were limited to monthly installments
equivalent to what would have
otherwise been made on a rental basis,
limited to the period of medical need
and not to exceed the purchase price of
the equipment.
In 1975, Medicare program
instructions in section 2100 of chapter
2 of part 3 of the Medicare Carrier’s
Manual (HCFA Pub. 14–3) indicated
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that expenses incurred by a beneficiary
for the rental or purchase of DME are
reimbursable if the following three
requirements are met: The equipment
meets the definition of DME in this
section; and the equipment is necessary
and reasonable for the treatment of the
patient’s illness or injury or to improve
the functioning of his malformed body
member; and the equipment is used in
the patient’s home. The instructions
also indicated that payment may also be
made under the DME benefit category
for repairs and maintenance of
equipment owned by the beneficiary as
well as expendable and non-reusable
supplies and accessories essential to the
effective use of the equipment. DME
was defined under these program
instructions from 1975 as equipment
meeting four requirements (quoted later
in the section verbatim and with text
underscored as in the original
instructions):
Durable medical equipment is
equipment which (a) can withstand
repeated use, and (b) is primarily and
customarily used to serve a medical
purpose, and (c) generally is not useful
to a person in the absence of an illness
or injury; and (d) is appropriate for use
in the home.
All requirements of the definition
must be met before an item can be
considered to be durable medical
equipment.
Additional detailed instructions were
provided in 1975 describing the
underlying policies for determining
whether an item meets the definition of
DME and specifically addressed what
the terms ‘‘durable’’ and ‘‘medical
equipment’’ mean. The instructions
indicated that an item is considered
durable if it can withstand repeated use,
that is, it is the type of item that could
normally be rented, and that medical
supplies of an expendable nature are not
considered ‘‘durable’’ within the
meaning of the definition. To be
considered DME, the item must be able
to be rented out to multiple patients and
thus withstand repeated use. The
instructions indicated that medical
equipment is equipment primarily and
customarily used for medical purposes
and is not generally useful in the
absence of illness or injury. The
instructions indicated that in some
cases information from medical
specialists and the manufacturer or
supplier of products new to the market
may be necessary to determine whether
equipment is medical in nature.
Additional instructions provide
examples of equipment which
presumptively constitutes medical
equipment, such as canes, crutches, and
walkers, and equipment that is
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primarily and customarily used for a
nonmedical purpose and cannot be
considered DME even when the item
has some remote medically related use,
such as air conditioners. Equipment that
basically serves comfort or convenience
functions or is primarily for the
convenience of a person caring for the
patient, such as elevators, and posture
chairs, do not constitute medical
equipment. Similarly, physical fitness
equipment, first-aid or precautionarytype equipment, self-help equipment,
and training equipment are considered
nonmedical in nature. These program
instructions from 1975 are still in effect
and are now located in section 110 of
chapter 15 of the Medicare Benefits
Policy Manual (CMS Pub. 100–02).
The Social Security Amendments of
1977 (Pub. L. 95–142) amended the
statute to mandate a ‘‘rent/purchase’’
program or payment methodology for
DME; CMS would pay for each item
furnished to each beneficiary on either
a rental or purchase basis depending on
which method was considered more
economical. The decision regarding
whether payment for DME was made on
a rental or purchase basis was made by
the Medicare Part B carrier (Medicare
contractor) processing the claim. The
rent/purchase program was
implemented from February 1985
through December 1988.
Section 2321 of the Deficit Reduction
Act of 1984 (Pub. L. 98–369) moved the
definition of DME from section
1861(s)(6) of the Act to section 1861(n)
of the Act and included a more detailed
definition of DME.
Section 4062(b) of the Omnibus
Budget Reconciliation Act (OBRA) of
1987 (Pub. L. 100–203) amended the
statute to terminate the rent/purchase
program and add section 1834(a) to the
Act with special payment rules for DME
furnished on or after January 1, 1989.
DME items were to be classified into
different classes under paragraphs (2)
through (7) of section 1834(a) of the Act,
with specific payment rules for each
class of DME. Section 1834(a) of the Act
still governs payment for items and
services furnished in areas that are not
included in the competitive bidding
program mandated by section 1847(a) of
the Act. Section 1834(a)(2) of Act
indicates that payment is made on a
rental basis or in a lump sum amount
for the purchase of an item the purchase
price of which does not exceed $150
(inexpensive equipment) or which the
Secretary determines is acquired at least
75 percent of the time by purchase
(routinely purchased equipment) or
which is an item specified under
sections 1834(a)(2)(A)(iii) and (iv) of the
Act. The term ‘‘routinely purchased
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equipment’’ is defined in regulations at
42 CFR 414.220(a)(2) as equipment that
was acquired by purchase on a national
basis at least 75 percent of the time
during the period July 1986 through
June 1987.
Medicare began covering blood
glucose monitors under the DME benefit
in the early 1980s and the test strips and
other supplies essential for the effective
use of the glucose monitor were also
covered. Blood glucose monitors were
expensive equipment within the
meaning of section 1834(a)(2) of the Act
but were routinely purchased (more
than 75 percent of the time on a national
basis) during the period July 1986
through June 1987. Therefore, payment
was made on a fee schedule basis for
blood glucose monitors based on the
lower of the supplier’s actual charge for
the item or a statewide fee schedule
amount calculated for the item based on
the average rental or purchase payment
for the item in the State for the 12month period ending on June 30, 1987.
The rental and purchase fee schedule
amounts are increased on an annual
basis based on the provisions set forth
in section 1834(a)(14) of the Act.
The special payment rules for DME
mandated by section 1834(a) of the Act
were implemented via program
instructions for all DME items other
than oxygen and oxygen equipment on
January 1, 1989. CMS established and
implemented fee schedule amounts for
inexpensive or routinely purchased
items, for payment on a rental basis,
payment on a lump sum purchase basis
when the item is new, and payment on
a lump sum purchase basis when the
item is used. We also promulgated rules
implementing the special payment rules
for DME mandated by section 1834(a) of
the Act. For more information, see the
October 9, 1991 and December 7, 1992
Federal Registers (56 FR 50821 and 57
FR 57675, respectively), and a July 10,
1995, final rule (60 FR 35492).
We established a definition for DME
items and services during this time at 42
CFR 414.202, which simply mirrored
the general definition of DME
established in 1975 via program
instructions.
Section 1861(n) of the Act was revised
by section 4105(b)(1) of the Balanced
Budget Act of 1997 (Pub. L. 105–33) to
expand coverage of blood glucose
monitors and test strips to patients with
type II diabetes. As noted, these items
had already been covered as DME
(glucose monitoring equipment) and
disposable supplies (test strips) since
the early 1980s, but coverage was
limited to patients with type I diabetes.
We added to the definition of DME at
42 CFR 414.202 effective for items
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furnished after January 1, 2012, to
require that the item have a minimum
lifetime of 3 years to be considered
DME. This 3-year minimum lifetime
requirement was established in a final
rule published in the November 10,
2011 Federal Register titled ‘‘Medicare
Program; End-Stage Renal Disease
Prospective Payment System and
Quality Incentive Program; Ambulance
Fee Schedule; Durable Medical
Equipment; and Competitive
Acquisition of Certain Durable Medical
Equipment, Prosthetics, Orthotics, and
Supplies’’ (76 FR 70228 and 70314).
This final rule included a discussion of
how the 3-year minimum lifetime
requirement (MLR) is applied to
multicomponent devices or systems
consisting of durable and nondurable
components (76 FR 70291). In this rule,
we noted that a device may be a system
consisting of durable and nondurable
components that together serve a
medical purpose, and that we consider
a multicomponent device consisting of
durable and nondurable components
nondurable if the component that
performs the medically necessary
function of the device is nondurable,
even if other components of the device
are durable. In regards to the 3-year
MLR, the component(s) of a
multicomponent device that performs
the medically necessary function of the
device must meet the 3-year MLR (76 FR
70291).
In summary, DME is covered under
Medicare Part B. DME is defined under
section 1861(n) of the Act and Medicare
claims for DME are paid in accordance
with the special payment rules under
section 1834(a) of the Act or under the
competitive bidding program mandated
by sections 1847(a) and (b) of the Act.
Rules related to the scope and
conditions of the benefit are addressed
at 42 CFR 410.38. Under § 414.202,
durable medical equipment means
equipment which—
• Can withstand repeated use;
• Effective with respect to items
classified as DME after January 1, 2012,
has an expected life of at least 3years;
• Is primarily and customarily used
to serve a medical purpose;
• Generally is not useful to a person
in the absence of an illness or injury;
and
• Is appropriate for use in the home.
All requirements of the definition
must be met before an item can be
considered to be DME.
B. Continuous Glucose Monitors
On January 12, 2017, we issued a
CMS Ruling (CMS–1682–R) articulating
the CMS policy concerning the
classification of therapeutic continuous
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glucose monitoring systems as DME
under Part B of the Medicare program.
CMS–1682–R is available on the
CMS.gov website at: https://
www.cms.gov/Regulations-andGuidance/Guidance/Rulings/CMSRulings.
CMS–1682–R classified continuous
glucose monitoring systems as
‘‘therapeutic continuous glucose
monitors (CGMs)’’ that meet the
definition of DME if the equipment—
• Is approved [or cleared] by the FDA
for use in place of a blood glucose
monitor for making diabetes treatment
decisions (for example, changes in diet
and insulin dosage);
• Generally is not useful to the
individual in the absence of an illness
or injury;
• Is appropriate for use in the home;
and
• Includes a durable component (a
component that CMS determines can
withstand repeated use and has an
expected lifetime of at least 3 years) that
is capable of displaying the trending of
the continuous glucose measurements.
Under CMS–1682–R, in all other cases
in which a CGM does not replace a
blood glucose monitor for making
diabetes treatment decisions, a CGM is
not considered DME. We reasoned that
enabling a beneficiary to make diabetes
treatment decisions was the medical
purpose of a glucose monitor, that nontherapeutic CGMs did not serve that
medical purpose, and that nontherapeutic CGMs therefore were not
DME. CMS–1682–R also addressed the
calculation of the fee schedule amounts
for therapeutic CGMs in accordance
with the rules at section 1834(a) of the
Act and under regulations at 42 CFR
part 414, subpart D.
CGMs are systems that use disposable
glucose sensors attached to the patient
to monitor a patient’s interstitial fluid
glucose level on a continuous basis by
either automatically transmitting the
glucose readings from the sensor via a
transmitter to a device that displays the
readings (‘‘automatic’’ CGMs), or by
displaying the glucose readings from the
sensor on a device that the patient
manually holds over the sensor
(‘‘manual’’ CGMs). Some CGMs are class
III devices and require premarket
approval by the FDA, while some newer
CGM models are class II devices that do
not require premarket approval and may
go through FDA’s 510(k) premarket
process, whereby devices can obtain
clearance by demonstrating substantial
equivalence to a predicate device. The
glucose sensor continuously measures
glucose values in the interstitial fluid,
the fluid around the cells (in contrast to
blood glucose monitors which measure
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glucose values using fingertip blood
samples). The sensor is a small flexible
metal probe or wire that is inserted
under the skin and has a coating that
prevents the body’s immune system
from detecting and attacking the foreign
probe. Once the coating wears off,
which in current models takes place in
7 to 14 days, the sensor must be
replaced for safety reasons. The glucose
sensor generates small electrical signal
in response to the amount of sugar that
is present (interstitial glucose). This
electrical signal is converted into a
glucose reading that is received/
displayed on a dedicated continuous
glucose monitor (the CGM). Insulin
pumps covered as DME or a compatible
mobile device (smart phone, smart
watch, tablet, etc.) and app that are not
covered as DME may also perform the
function of a CGM, which receives and
displays the glucose measurements in
the form of a graph so that the patient
can visualize how their glucose
measurements are trending. CMS–1682–
R only addressed whether CGMs meet
the Medicare definition of DME and did
not address whether insulin pumps that
can also perform the function of a CGM
are DME since insulin pumps are
already classified as DME under an NCD
(section 280.14 of Chapter 1, Part 4 of
the Medicare National Coverage
Determinations Manual, Pub. 100–03).
CMS–1682–R classifies CGM display
devices as DME if they have been
approved [or cleared] by the FDA for
use in making diabetes treatment
decisions, such as changing one’s diet or
insulin dosage based solely on the
readings of the CGM, that is, without
verifying the CGM readings with
readings from a blood glucose monitor.
These CGMs are referred to as ‘‘nonadjunctive’’ or ‘‘therapeutic’’ CGMs in
CMS–1682–R. In contrast, CGMs that
patients use to check their glucose
levels and trends that must be verified
by use of a blood glucose monitor to
make diabetes treatment decisions are
not currently classified as DME. These
CGMs are referred to as ‘‘adjunctive’’ or
‘‘non-therapeutic’’ CGMs in CMS–1682–
R. It is important to note that there were
no ‘‘adjunctive’’ or ‘‘non-therapeutic’’
CGM receivers being manufactured and
sold on the market as of the time this
rule was drafted. This fact was brought
to light by comments submitted on the
proposed rule and discussed in more
detail later in this final rule.
C. Current Issues
As indicated previously, there are
currently no adjunctive CGM receivers
being manufactured and sold on the
market. However, beneficiaries are
currently using disposable continuous
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glucose sensors and transmitters that
have not been approved or cleared by
the FDA to replace a blood glucose
monitor for use in making diabetes
treatment decisions with insulin
infusion pumps that also function as
‘‘adjunctive’’ or ‘‘non-therapeutic’’ CGM
receivers. Beneficiaries are using the
readings from these disposable sensors
that are received and displayed by the
insulin pump to help manage their
diabetes. Claims submitted for CGM
sensors and transmitters used with
insulin pumps are being denied
inappropriately based on CMS–1682–R
even though this Ruling only addressed
the classification of CGM receivers as
DME and did not address coverage of
CGM sensors and transmitters used with
insulin pumps. This final rule addresses
whether adjunctive or ‘‘nontherapeutic’’ CGMs meet the five
requirements or prongs of the definition
of DME at 42 CFR 414.202 and how the
fee schedule amounts should be
calculated for CGM supplies and
accessories.
1. Requirements of DME Definition
(a) Ability To Withstand Repeated Use
This criterion under 42 CFR 414.202
addresses the issue of whether an item
of medical equipment can withstand
repeated use, which means it is an item
that can be rented and used by
successive patients. Equipment must be
able to withstand repeated use to fall
within the scope of the Medicare Part B
benefit for DME. The continuous
glucose monitor’s receiver component is
durable equipment that can be rented
and used by successive patients to
monitor the trending of glucose levels
that are either transmitted to the device
using disposable sensors or are read or
received by the device when the patient
holds the device near the sensor.
Therefore, we believe this equipment
meets the requirement to withstand
repeated use; that is, equipment that
could normally be rented and used by
successive patients.
(b) Expected Life of at Least 3 Years
This criterion under 42 CFR 414.202
further addresses the issue of
‘‘durability’’ and provides a clear
minimum timeframe for how long an
item must last to meet the definition of
DME. We believe the continuous
glucose monitor or receiver meets the 3year minimum lifetime requirement. In
the case of one manufacturer, reliability
analysis data from an engineering firm
that evaluated their CGM product
predicted a lifetime of greater than 3
years for the receiver. Because the CGM
sensors and transmitters only have a
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predicted life of days (for the sensors) or
several months (for the transmitters), the
receiver is the only durable component
of a CGM system.
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(c) Primarily and Customarily Used To
Serve a Medical Purpose
We proposed that CGMs that have not
been approved or cleared by the FDA for
use in making diabetes treatment
decisions without the use of a blood
glucose monitor but can be used to alert
the patient about potentially dangerous
glucose levels while they sleep, are
primarily and customarily used to serve
a medical purpose. Likewise, we believe
that disposable continuous glucose
sensors and transmitters that work in
conjunction with an insulin pump that
also operates as a continuous glucose
monitor’s receiver component to alert
the patient about potentially dangerous
glucose levels while they sleep are
primarily and customarily used to serve
a medical purpose. We now believe that
because adjunctive CGMs or adjunctive
continuous glucose sensors and
transmitters used with insulin pumps
can provide information about potential
changes in glucose levels while a
beneficiary is sleeping and is not using
a blood glucose monitor, these CGMs or
CGM functions on insulin pumps are
primarily and customarily used to serve
a medical purpose.
(d) Generally Not Useful to a Person in
the Absence of an Illness or Injury
CMS has determined that both
adjunctive and non-adjunctive/
therapeutic CGM systems are generally
not useful to a person in the absence of
an illness or injury because people who
do not have diabetes generally would
not find a monitor that tracks their
glucose levels to be useful. Thus far,
Medicare’s coverage policy for CGMs
has supported the use of therapeutic
CGMs in conjunction with a smartphone
(with the durable receiver as backup),
including the important data sharing
function they provide for patients and
their families.26 CMS previously
concluded that therapeutic CGMs, when
used in conjunction with a smartphone,
still satisfied the definition of DME
because the durable receiver, used as a
backup, was generally not useful to a
person in the absence of an illness or
injury, even if the smartphone might be.
We are not changing this policy. We
proposed that both therapeutic and nontherapeutic CGMs, when used in
conjunction with a smartphone, satisfy
the definition of DME because the
durable receiver, used as a backup, is
26 https://www.cms.gov/Center/Provider-Type/
Durable-Medical-Equipment-DME-Center.
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not generally useful to a person in the
absence of an illness or injury. Medicare
does not cover or provide payment for
smartphones under the DME benefit. In
order for Medicare to cover disposable
glucose sensors, transmitters and other
non-durable components of a CGM
system, these disposable items must be
used with durable CGM equipment that
meets the Medicare definition of DME,
which smartphones do not. If a
Medicare beneficiary is using durable
CGM equipment or an insulin pump
with a CGM feature that meets the
Medicare definition of DME as a
backup, but primarily uses a
smartphone or other non-DME device to
display their glucose readings in
conjunction with the covered DME item
as described previously, Medicare will
cover the disposable items since the
beneficiary is using their covered DME
item as a backup to display their glucose
readings. However, if the beneficiary is
exclusively using a non-DME item like
a smartphone to display glucose
readings from disposable sensors,
transmitters or other disposable CGM
supplies, these disposable supplies
cannot be covered since there is no
covered item of DME in this scenario,
even as a backup.
(e) Appropriate for Use in the Home
The FDA has cleared or approved
CGM systems as safe and effective for
use by the patient in their homes similar
to how blood glucose monitoring
systems have been used in the home for
many years. Both adjunctive and nonadjunctive CGMs are appropriate for use
in the home for the same purpose that
a blood glucose monitor is used in the
home.
Comment: With regard to the proposal
to expand classification of durable
medical equipment (DME) to all types of
CGMs (‘‘adjunctive’’ as well as ‘‘nonadjunctive’’), most commenters agreed
with the proposal but multiple
commenters pointed out that the only
adjunctive CGM system on the market
today does not include a dedicated
durable CGM receiver. Some
commenters recommended classifying
the software application (App) that
allows smart phones to function as CGM
receivers as DME.
Response: We have confirmed with
the FDA that the one adjunctive CGM
product on the market today, the
GuardianTM Connect System, consists of
disposable glucose sensors and
transmitters that work in conjunction
with the patient’s smart phone and App
or with certain MiniMed insulin
infusion pumps instead of a dedicated
durable receiver. Software applications
do not meet the definition of DME, nor
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do phones or computers. To cover the
software application under the Medicare
Part B benefit for DME, the equipment
that the software is added to, or some
part of the CGM system used with the
software, must meet the Medicare
definition of DME at 42 CFR 414.202,
including the requirement that the
equipment or system component not be
useful in the absence of illness or injury.
Smart phones are useful in the absence
of illness or injury and therefore do not
meet the definition of DME. Therefore,
a CGM system that consists of a software
application added to a smart phone and
disposable supplies is not covered
under the Medicare Part B benefit for
DME. However, smart devices (watch,
smartphone, tablet, laptop computer,
etc.) can be used in conjunction with a
continuous glucose monitor.
In contrast, durable insulin infusion
pumps have been classified and covered
as DME since the mid-1990s. Therefore,
in accordance with this final rule, an
insulin pump that also performs the
functions of an adjunctive CGM would
also be classified and covered as DME.
After consideration of the public
comments we received, we are
finalizing the proposed rule to expand
classification of DME to both adjunctive
and non-adjunctive CGMs as long as all
requirements of the definition of DME at
42 CFR 414.202 are met. There are
adjunctive continuous glucose
monitoring sensors and transmitters that
do not meet the durability requirement
and are used exclusively in conjunction
with devices such as smart phones,
which are not DME for the previously
stated reasons; neither the sensors and
transmitters nor the smart phones meet
the Medicare definition of DME. In
situations where these adjunctive
continuous glucose monitoring sensors
and transmitters are used in conjunction
with an insulin infusion pump that also
functions as a CGM receiver, the sensors
and transmitters can be covered under
the DME benefit, subject to other
requirements and criteria. We note that
if the beneficiary does not meet the
medical necessity criteria for an insulin
pump, then the insulin pump would not
be covered and therefore any supplies
used with the insulin pump would also
not be covered.
2. Fee Schedule Amounts for CGM
Receivers/Monitors and Related
Accessories
Medicare payment for DME was made
on a reasonable charge basis prior to
1989. The regulations related to
implementation of the reasonable charge
payment methodology are found at 42
CFR part 405, subpart E. The current
Medicare payment rules for glucose
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monitors and other DME are located at
section 1834(a) of the Act and mandate
payment on the basis of fee schedule
amounts beginning in 1989. Blood
glucose monitors are classified as
routinely purchased items subject to the
payment rules for inexpensive and
routinely purchased DME at section
1834(a)(2) of the Act, which mandate
payment for routinely purchased items
on a purchase or rental basis using fee
schedule amounts based on average
reasonable charges for the purchase or
rental of the item for the 12-month
period ending on June 30, 1987,
increased by the percentage increase in
the consumer price index for all urban
consumers (U.S. city average) for the 6month period ending with December
1987. These base fee schedule amounts
are increased on an annual basis based
on the update factors located in section
1834(a)(14) of the Act, which includes
specific update factors for 2004 through
2008 for class III devices described in
section 513(a)(1)(C) of the Federal Food,
Drug, and Cosmetic Act. Routinely
purchased equipment is defined in the
regulations at 42 CFR 414.220(a)(2) as
equipment that was acquired by
purchase on a national basis at least 75
percent of the time during the period
July 1986 through June 1987. Section
1834(a)(1)(C) of the Act states that
subject to subparagraph (F)(ii), this
subsection must constitute the exclusive
provision of this title [Title XVIII of the
Act] for payment for covered items
under this part [Medicare Part B] or
under Part A to a home health agency.
The fee schedule amounts for blood
glucose monitors were revised in 1995
using special payment limits established
in accordance with the ‘‘inherent
reasonableness’’ authority at section
1842(s)(8) of the Act. The final notice
(BPD–778–FN) establishing special
payment limits for blood glucose
monitors was published in the January
17, 1995 Federal Register (60 FR 3405),
with the payment limits updated on an
annual basis using the DME fee
schedule update factors in section
1834(a)(14) of the Act.
Because certain CGMs have been
approved or cleared by the FDA to
replace blood glucose monitors for use
in making diabetes treatment decisions,
we believe that CGMs represent a newer
technology version of glucose monitors
paid for by Medicare in 1986 and 1987.
In addition, the CGM systems function
similar to the blood glucose monitors in
using disposable supplies or
accessories, such as test strips or
sensors, to measure glucose levels in a
patient’s body, either from the patient’s
blood or interstitial fluid, and using
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durable equipment to convert these
glucose measurements in a way that
they can be displayed on a screen on the
equipment. Therefore, we believe that
the CGM receivers/monitors must be
classified as routinely purchased DME
since they are a technological
refinement of glucose monitors
routinely purchased from July 1986
through June 1987. The alternative
would be to classify CGM receivers/
monitors as other items of DME under
section 1834(a)(7) of the Act and pay for
the equipment on a capped rental basis.
We also believe the average reasonable
charge data for blood glucose monitors
from 1986 and 1987 can be used to
establish the fee schedule amounts for
CGM receivers/monitors in accordance
with our regulations 42 CFR 414.238(b)
since CGM receivers/monitors are
comparable to blood glucose monitors.
We do not believe that the special
payment limits established in 1995 for
blood glucose monitors must apply to
CGM receivers/monitors because these
special payment limits were based on
specific pricing information on the cost
of blood glucose monitors. We therefore
proposed to continue using the fee
schedule amounts established in CMS–
1682–R based on the updated 1986/87
average reasonable charges for blood
glucose monitors as the fee schedule
amounts for CGM receivers/monitors.
As noted, section 1834(a)(14) of the Act
provides different annual update factors
for class III DME versus other DME
items and so the fee schedule amounts
for class III CGM receivers are slightly
higher (from $231.77 to $272.63 in
2020) than the fee schedule amounts for
class II CGM receivers (from $208.76 to
$245.59 in 2020).
With regard to the fee schedule
amounts for supplies and accessories for
CGMs, we proposed to separate
payment for CGM supplies and
accessories into three separate
categories of supplies and accessories
with different fee schedule amounts for
each category. The current 2020
monthly fee schedule amounts of
$222.77 and $259.20 for supplies and
accessories for CGM systems apply to all
types of class II or class III therapeutic
CGMs, respectively, but were
established based on supplier price lists
for only one type of CGM system
approved by FDA for use in making
diabetes treatment decisions without the
need to use a blood glucose monitor to
verify the results (non-adjunctive
CGMs). The supplier prices used to
establish these fee schedule amounts
were for non-adjunctive CGM systems
that use a combination of sensors and
transmitters to automatically send
glucose measurements to the CGM
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receiver without manual intervention by
the patient. We refer to this type of CGM
system as a non-adjunctive system, or a
system that both replaces a blood
glucose monitor for use in making
diabetes treatment decisions, and can
alert the patient about dangerous
glucose levels while they sleep based on
the automatic transmission of the
glucose readings to the receiver on a 24hour basis. The fee schedule amounts of
$222.77 and $259.20 for supplies and
accessories for class II and class III
CGMs, respectively, increased by the fee
schedule update factor for 2021, would
continue to apply to the supplies and
accessories for automatic, nonadjunctive CGMs effective the effective
date specified in the DATES section of
this final rule.
If a beneficiary uses disposable
‘‘adjunctive’’ or ‘‘non-therapeutic’’
continuous glucose sensors and
transmitters with an insulin infusion
pump, the beneficiary and Medicare
program would still incur expenses
associated with use of blood glucose
monitors and supplies. To avoid a
situation where the beneficiary and
program would pay twice for glucose
monitoring supplies needed to
accurately assess glucose levels, we
proposed to establish the fee schedule
amounts for supplies and accessories for
adjunctive CGMs based on supplier
prices for the sensors and transmitters
minus the fee schedule amounts for the
average quantity and types of blood
glucose monitoring supplies used by
insulin-treated beneficiaries who would
be more likely to qualify for coverage of
a CGM system based on a need to more
closely monitor changes in their glucose
levels. The adjunctive CGM system is
not replacing the function of the blood
glucose monitor and related supplies
and therefore only provides an
adjunctive or added benefit of alerting
the beneficiary when their glucose
levels might be dangerously high or low.
Since the adjunctive CGM system
cannot function alone as a glucose
monitor for use in making diabetes
treatment decisions, we proposed to
reduce the payment for the adjunctive
CGM system by the amount that is paid
separately for the blood glucose monitor
and supplies that are needed in addition
to the adjunctive CGM system and are
not needed in addition to the nonadjunctive CGM systems. Currently,
Medicare is allowing coverage and
payment for 135 test strips and lancets
per month for insulin-treated
beneficiaries using blood glucose
monitors. Using the 2020 mail order fee
schedule amounts for 50 test strips,
divided by 50 and multiplied by 135,
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plus the 2020 mail order fee schedule
amounts for 100 lancets, divided by 100
and multiplied by 135, plus the 2020
mail order fee schedule amounts for a
monthly supply of batteries, calibration
solution, and lancet device, plus the
2020 fee schedule amount for the blood
glucose monitor divided by 60 months
(5-year lifetime) results in a 2020
monthly allowance of $34.35, which
reflects what Medicare currently pays
per month for an insulin-treated
diabetic beneficiary. Based on supplier
invoices and other prices, a 2020
monthly price for supplies and
accessories used with class II or class III
adjunctive CGMs would be calculated to
be $209.97 and $233.12 respectively.
Subtracting the monthly cost of the
blood glucose monitor and supplies of
$34.35 from the monthly cost of the
supplies and accessories for class II
adjunctive CGMs results in a net price
of $175.62 ($209.97¥$34.35 = $175.62)
for the monthly supplies and
accessories used with a class II
adjunctive CGM after backing out the
cost of the separately paid blood glucose
supplies. Subtracting the monthly cost
of the blood glucose monitor and
supplies of $34.35 from the monthly
cost of the supplies and accessories for
class III adjunctive CGMs results in a
net price of $198.77 ($233.12¥$34.35 =
$198.77) for the monthly supplies and
accessories used with a class III
adjunctive CGM after backing out the
cost of the separately paid blood glucose
supplies. Thus, we proposed 2020 fee
schedule amounts of $175.62 and
$198.77 (to be increased by the 2021 fee
schedule update factor yet to be
determined) for use in paying claims in
2021 for the monthly supplies and
accessories for use with class II and
class III adjunctive CGMs respectively.
Reducing the payment amount for
supplies and accessories used with
adjunctive CGMs by the average
monthly payment for the blood glucose
monitor and supplies that Medicare and
the beneficiary will still have to pay for
avoids a situation where the beneficiary
and the program pay twice for glucose
testing supplies and equipment.
Finally, a third type of CGM system
currently on the market is nonadjunctive but does not automatically
transmit glucose readings to the CGM
receiver and therefore does not alert the
patient about dangerous glucose levels
while they sleep. We refer to this as a
manual, non-adjunctive CGM system.
We proposed to establish 2020 fee
schedule amounts of $46.86 (for class II
devices) and $52.01 (for class III
devices) for the monthly supplies and
accessories for this third category,
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which only uses disposable batteries
and sensors, based on supplier prices
for the supplies and accessories for this
category of CGMs.
Comment: Many commenters did not
agree with the proposal to establish
separate codes and pricing for supplies
for three types of CGM systems on the
market today. They strongly believe that
linking coding and payment to the
specific types of CGMs on the market
today was not wise given the rapid pace
in changes in technology for CGMs and
diabetic equipment in general. Many
commenters specifically objected to
establishing separate codes and fee
schedule amounts for automatic versus
manual non-adjunctive CGMs. They
recommended that the continuity of
pricing regulations should be observed
and that the initial prices established
based on automatic non-adjunctive
CGMs alone should apply to manual
non-adjunctive CGMs as well. The
manufacturer of the manual nonadjunctive CGM pointed out that their
new product line for CGMs offers
continuous data transmission from
sensor to receiver, enabling
customizable, real-time alarms and
alerts that can automatically alert users
when their glucose is high or low,
including while they sleep, without any
patient intervention. Therefore, it
appears that the manual non-adjunctive
CGM systems and classification are
already becoming obsolete.
Response: We agree with the
commenters that glucose monitoring
technology is changing rapidly, and the
Medicare fee schedule amounts for this
equipment should not be limited solely
to the technology that is currently on
the market. We believe that the existing
fee schedule amounts for nonadjunctive CGMs and supplies and
accessories necessary for the effective
use of non-adjunctive CGMs should
continue to be used in paying claims for
these items. However, the utility offered
by adjunctive CGMs is not the same as
the utility offered by non-adjunctive
CGMs and so we do not believe that the
existing fee schedule amounts
established for the non-adjunctive
CGMs and supplies and accessories
necessary for the effective use of nonadjunctive CGMs should be used in
paying claims for adjunctive CGMs and
supplies and accessories necessary for
the effective use of adjunctive CGMs,
which clearly are different types of
CGMs because they cannot be used in
place of a blood glucose monitor. As
explained further later in this section,
we believe that separate fee schedule
amounts are needed for adjunctive
CGMs and supplies and related
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accessories versus non-adjunctive CGMs
and related supplies and accessories.
Comment: Many commenters stated
that more details were needed on how
the proposed fee schedule amounts
were established for the separate codes
for supplies used with the three types of
CGM systems on the market today.
Response: We are not finalizing the
proposed fee schedule amounts for the
monthly supplies and accessories
associated with three different types of
CGMs. Although we will continue using
existing fee schedule amounts
established for non-adjunctive CGMs,
these are not fee schedule amounts for
adjunctive CGMs and therefore do not
apply to adjunctive CGMs.
Comment: Many commenters believe
the proposed fee schedule amounts for
supplies for CGMs were not sufficient to
cover the cost of these items. A
commenter stated that the proposed fee
schedule amounts are below internet
retail prices while other commenters
simply stated that the proposed fee
schedule amounts are below the cost of
the products.
Response: The fee schedule amounts
for supplies necessary for the effective
use of CGMs is required to be
established in accordance with the rules
of the statute at section 1834(a) of the
Act. In establishing Medicare fee
schedule amounts for DME items,
section 1834(a) of the Act requires that
CMS base payment amounts on average
reasonable charges in 1986 and 1987.
After consideration of the public
comments we received, we are not
finalizing the proposed fee schedule
amounts for supplies and accessories
used in conjunction with three types of
CGMs. We believe the technology
associated with the manual, nonadjunctive category is already becoming
obsolete as more CGM products that
automatically transmit sensor readings
to the receiver and provide night time
alarms come on the market. As the
commenters pointed out, the technology
is evolving quickly and establishing
categories based on the different
variations of CGMs on the market at any
one time does not seem prudent or
necessary. However, we do note that
there is a substantial difference in the
utility and capabilities of adjunctive
CGMs versus non-adjunctive CGMs in
that while both are able to alert the
patient about dangerous or potentially
dangerous glucose levels while they
sleep, the non-adjunctive CGMs are also
able to replace the use of a blood
glucose monitor for accurate glucose
measuring/testing purposes, while the
adjunctive CGMs are not.
A blood glucose monitor and related
supplies are necessary for patients using
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adjunctive CGMs for accurate glucose
measuring/testing purposes, while
patients using a non-adjunctive CGM do
not also need a blood glucose monitor.
Existing fee schedule amounts for
therapeutic or non-adjunctive CGMs
and related supplies and accessories
were specifically established for those
types of CGMs and do not apply to
adjunctive CGMs and related supplies
and accessories. Therefore, fee schedule
amounts for adjunctive CGMs and
related supplies and accessories will be
established in accordance with existing
regulations for gap-filling under 42 CFR
414.238(b).
Summary of final provisions:
• We are finalizing our proposal to
expand the classification of DME to a
larger swath of CGMs, regardless of
whether they are non-adjunctive (can
alert patients when glucose levels are
approaching dangerous levels, including
while they sleep and also replace blood
glucose monitors) or adjunctive (can
alert patients when glucose levels are
approaching dangerous levels, including
while they sleep but do not replace
blood glucose monitors), as long as such
CGMs satisfy the regulatory definition of
DME. For example, to be classified
under the Medicare Part B benefit for
DME, a potential CGM would need to
have a durable component performing
the medically necessary function of the
device that can withstand repeated use
for at least 3 years, and is not useful in
the absence of illness or injury, in
accordance with 42 CFR 414.202.
• We are not finalizing the proposed
fee schedule amounts for CGMs and
related supplies and accessories.
• Therefore, the fee schedule amounts
for adjunctive CGM and related supplies
and accessories will be established in
accordance with existing regulations for
gap-filling under 42 CFR 414.238(b).
VII. DME Interim Pricing in the CARES
Act
In this final rule, we are finalizing the
DME provisions of an IFC (May 2020
COVID–19 IFC) which made conforming
changes to the DME payment
regulations to reflect the CARES Act.
The CARES Act (Pub. L. 116–136) was
enacted on March 27, 2020. Section
3712 of the CARES Act specifies the
payment rates for certain DME and
enteral nutrients, supplies, and
equipment furnished in non-CBAs
through the duration of the emergency
period described in section
1135(g)(1)(B) of the Act. Section 3712(a)
of the CARES Act continues our policy
of paying the 50/50 blended rates for
items furnished in rural and noncontiguous non-CBAs through
December 31, 2020, or through the
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duration of the emergency period, if
longer. Section 3712(b) of the CARES
Act increased the payment rates for
DME and enteral nutrients, supplies,
and equipment furnished in areas other
than rural and non-contiguous nonCBAs through the duration of the
emergency period. Beginning March 6,
2020, the payment rates for DME and
enteral nutrients, supplies, and
equipment furnished in these areas are
based on 75 percent of the adjusted fee
schedule amount and 25 percent of the
historic, unadjusted fee schedule
amount, which results in higher
payment rates as compared to the full
fee schedule adjustments that were
previously required under
§ 414.210(g)(9)(iv). We made changes to
the regulation text at § 414.210(g)(9),
consistent with section 3712 of the
CARES Act, in an IFC that we published
in the May 8, 2020 Federal Register
titled ‘‘Medicare and Medicaid
Programs; Additional Policy and
Regulatory Revisions in Response to the
COVID–19 Public Health Emergency.’’
We received six timely pieces of
correspondence in response to the May
2020 COVID–19 IFC provision titled
‘‘DME Interim Pricing in the CARES
Act’’.
Comment: Many of the commenters
appreciated that CMS modified the
regulations consistent with section 3712
of the CARES Act.
Response: We thank the commenters
for their support.
Comment: Many of the commenters
cited reasons why the increased
payments rates for DME are needed
during the PHE. A commenter stated
that ensuring access to personal
protective equipment (PPE) and other
DME for beneficiaries is essential to
preventing the spread of COVID–19.
Another commenter stated that this
provision is in the overall interest to
everyone—suppliers, health care
professionals and beneficiaries—as
suppliers will be able to maintain their
inventory and be paid for items when
there may be lags in care and
beneficiaries may not be able to meet
required visits due to the current PHE.
Another commenter stated that there
have been broad-based increases in the
acquisition costs of certain home
medical equipment (for example,
ventilators, oxygen concentrators) as
well as an increase in various overhead
expenses (for example, requisite
personal protective equipment and a
more labor-intensive delivery/
instruction methodology). The
commenter stated that this has created
financial hardships for many suppliers
servicing the PHE patients.
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Response: We believe that section
3712 of the CARES Act addresses these
concerns about the need for payment
increases during the PHE.
Comment: A commenter suggested
that the adjustment for the 75/25 blend
in the non-rural and contiguous nonCBAs should be maintained—at a
minimum—to the end of 2020. The
commenter also stated that if Round
2021 of the CBP is delayed, then the 75/
25 blended rates should be extended
from 2020 and subsequent years and
maintained until the program is
implemented. The commenter also
stated that if Round 2021 is delayed, the
75/25 blended rates should be extended
to all non-rural providers, including the
former CBAs, until the next CBP can be
implemented. The commenter then
stated that if there is a delay in Round
2021, the 50/50 blended rates for rural
areas should be extended until the next
Round of the CBP is implemented.
Response: This provision implements
section 3712 of the CARES Act. Section
3712(a) of the CARES Act continues our
policy of paying the 50/50 blended rates
for items furnished in rural and noncontiguous non-CBAs through
December 31, 2020, or through the
duration of the emergency period, if
longer. Section 3712(b) of the CARES
Act increased the payment rates for
DME and enteral nutrients, supplies,
and equipment furnished in areas other
than rural and non-contiguous nonCBAs through the duration of the
emergency period. As such, and because
the PHE has continued into 2021, the
50/50 blended rates in rural and noncontiguous non-CBAs and the 75/25
blended rates in the non-rural
contiguous non-CBAs have remained in
effect. This provision does not address
fee schedule adjustments after the PHE.
We proposed a fee schedule adjustment
rule for after the PHE in the November
2020 proposed rule.
After consideration of the public
comments received, we are finalizing
the following changes to § 414.210(g)(9):
• We are finalizing conforming
changes to § 414.210(g)(9) as proposed,
consistent with section 3712(a) and (b)
of the CARES Act, but we are omitting
the language in section 3712(b) of the
CARES Act that references an effective
date that is 30 days after the date of
enactment of the law.
• We are finalizing our proposed
revision to § 414.210(g)(9)(iii), which
describes the 50/50 fee schedule
adjustment blend for items and services
furnished in rural and non-contiguous
areas, to address dates of service from
June 1, 2018, through December 31,
2020, or through the duration of the
emergency period described in section
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1135(g)(1)(B) of the Act (42 U.S.C.
1320b–5(g)(1)(B)), whichever is later.
• We are finalizing our proposed
addition to § 414.210(g)(9)(v) which
states that, for items and services
furnished in areas other than rural or
noncontiguous areas with dates of
service from March 6, 2020, through the
remainder of the duration of the
emergency period described in section
1135(g)(1)(B) of the Act (42 U.S.C.
1320b–5(g)(1)(B)), based on the fee
schedule amount for the area is equal to
75 percent of the adjusted payment
amount established under ‘‘this section’’
(by which we mean § 414.210(g)(1)
through (8)), and 25 percent of the
unadjusted fee schedule amount. For
items and services furnished in areas
other than rural or noncontiguous areas
with dates of service from the expiration
date of the emergency period described
in section 1135(g)(1)(B) of the Act (42
U.S.C. 1320b–5(g)(1)(B)) through
December 31, 2020, based on the fee
schedule amount for the area is equal to
100 percent of the adjusted payment
amount established under
§ 414.210(g)(1) through (8) (referred to
as ‘‘this section’’ in the regulation text).
• Finally, we are finalizing our
revision of § 414.210(g)(9)(iv) to specify
for items and services furnished in areas
other than rural and noncontiguous
areas with dates of service from June 1,
2018 through March 5, 2020, based on
the fee schedule amount for the area is
equal to 100 percent of the adjusted
payment amount established under
§ 414.210(g)(1) through (8) (‘‘this
section’’ in the regulation text).
VIII. Collection of Information
Requirements
This document does not impose
information collection requirements for
reporting, recordkeeping or third-party
disclosure requirements. Consequently,
there is no need for review by OMB
under the authority of the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3501
et seq.).
IX. Regulatory Impact Analysis
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A. Statement of Need
We are finalizing provisions that were
included in the November 2020
proposed rule, as well as provisions that
were in two IFCs—the May 2018 IFC
and the May 2020 COVID–19 IFC.
The May 2018 IFC, finalized in this
rule, with the exception of the
wheelchair provisions, amended the
regulations to revise the date that the
initial fee schedule adjustment
transition period ended and resumed
the fee schedule adjustment transition
period for certain DME items and
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services and enteral nutrition furnished
in rural and non-contiguous areas not
subject to the DMEPOS CBP from June
1, 2018 through December 31, 2018 (83
FR 21912). The May 2018 IFC also made
technical amendments to existing
regulations for DMEPOS items and
services to note the exclusion of
infusion drugs used with DME from the
DMEPOS CBP and reflected the
extension of the transition period for
phasing in fee schedule adjustments for
certain durable medical equipment
(DME) and enteral nutrition paid in
areas not subject to the Durable Medical
Equipment, Prosthetics, Orthotics, and
Supplies (DMEPOS) Competitive
Bidding Program (CBP) through
December 31, 2016. Additionally, on
April 26, 2021, we announced the
continuation of effectiveness of the 2018
IFC and the extension of the timeline for
publication of the final rule (86 FR
21949).
Specifically, this IFC resumed the
blended adjusted Medicare fee schedule
amounts for certain items and services
that were furnished in rural and noncontiguous areas not subject to the CBP
beginning June 1, 2018 in response to
input from suppliers that the fully
adjusted fee schedule amounts were not
sufficient to cover the cost of furnishing
items and services in remote areas of the
country. Stakeholders and others
posited that the increased fee schedule
adjustments would ensure access to
items and services in these areas to
protect the health, safety, and well being
of beneficiaries who needed these items
and services. It was estimated that these
adjustments cost $290 million in
Medicare benefit payments and $70
million in Medicare beneficiary cost
sharing for the period beginning June 1,
2018 and ending December 31, 2018.
The goal of this IFC was to ensure
beneficiary access to DME items and
services in rural and non-contiguous
areas not subject to the CBP during the
transition period. CMS continued to
study the impact of these change in
payment rates on access to items and
services in these areas. We believed that
resuming the fee schedule adjustment
transition period in rural and noncontiguous areas will promote stability
in the DMEPOS market, and will enable
CMS to work with stakeholders to
preserve beneficiary access to DMEPOS.
The DMEPOS provisions included in
the May 2020 COVID–19 IFC amended
§ 414.210 to temporarily increase the
DME fee schedule amounts in certain
areas during the PHE, as required by
section 3712 of the CARES Act (85 FR
27569). The May 2020 IFC made several
changes to payment and coverage
policies, in an effort to allow health care
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73903
providers maximum flexibility to
minimize the spread of COVID–19
among Medicare and Medicaid
beneficiaries, health care personnel, and
the community at large, and increased
their capacity to address the needs of
their patients. The estimated Medicare
gross benefit costs against the FY 2021
President’s Budget baseline for the May
2020 IFC provision was $140 million
(85 FR 27614). We also estimated that
the May 2020 IFC provision also costs
$30 million in Medicare beneficiary cost
sharing at that time.
In addition, we are finalizing certain
provisions that were included in the
November 2020 proposed rule (85 FR
70358). This final rule establishes a fee
schedule adjustment methodology for
certain DMEPOS items and services
furnished in non-competitive bidding
areas (non-CBAs) on or after the
effective date specified in the DATES
section of this final rule, or the date
immediately following the duration of
the emergency period described in
section 1135(g)(1)(B) of the Act (42
U.S.C. 1320b–5(g)(1)(B)), whichever is
later. This policy continues higher fee
schedule amounts for certain items and
services furnished in rural and noncontiguous areas of the country. This fee
schedule adjustment methodology is
responsive to stakeholders such as
DMEPOS suppliers, who are of the view
that fully adjusted fee schedule amounts
are not sufficient to cover the costs of
furnishing DMEPOS items and services
in remote areas of the country.
Section 1834(a)(1)(G) of the Act
specifically mandates that we take into
account the average volume of items
and services furnished by suppliers in
CBAs compared to the average volume
of items and services furnished by
suppliers in non-CBAs when adjusting
fee schedule amounts for DMEPOS
items and services. As noted elsewhere
in this rule, the average volume of items
and services furnished by suppliers in
many non-CBAs that are rural and noncontiguous areas is lower than the
average volume of items and services
furnished by suppliers in many CBAs.
We believe that different payments are
necessary to ensure access to items and
services for beneficiaries in these rural
and non-contiguous areas to protect
their health, safety, and well-being.
This final rule also establishes
procedures for making benefit category
and payment determinations for new
items and services that are durable
medical equipment (DME), prosthetic
devices, orthotics and prosthetics,
therapeutic shoes and inserts, surgical
dressings, or splints, casts, and other
devices used for reductions of fractures
and dislocations under Medicare Part B.
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This policy would help to prevent
delays in making benefit category and
payment determinations for new and
innovative DMEPOS technologies that
could improve the health and safety of
Medicare beneficiaries. This final rule
also classifies continuous glucose
monitors (CGMs) as DME under
Medicare Part B. This policy increases
the number and types of CGMs
classified under the Medicare Part B
benefit for DME, so that beneficiaries
and their physicians have more
treatment options available.
B. Overall Impact
We have examined the impact of the
three provisions covered in this rule as
required by Executive Order 12866 on
Regulatory Planning and Review
(September 30, 1993), Executive Order
13563 on Improving Regulation and
Regulatory Review (January 18, 2011),
the Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)
(September 19, 1980, Pub. L. 96–354),
section 1102(b) of the Act, section 202
of the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
of 1995 (March 22, 1995; Pub. L. 104–
4), Executive Order 13132 on
Federalism (August 4, 1999), and the
Congressional Review Act (5 U.S.C.
801–808).
Executive Orders 12866 and 13563
direct agencies to assess all costs and
benefits of available regulatory
alternatives and, if regulation is
necessary, to select regulatory
approaches that maximize net benefits
(including potential economic,
environmental, public health and safety
effects, distributive impacts, and
equity). Section 3(f) of Executive Order
12866 defines a ‘‘significant regulatory
action’’ as an action that is likely to
result in a rule: (1) Having an annual
effect on the economy of $100 million
or more in any 1 year, or adversely and
materially affecting a sector of the
economy, productivity, competition,
jobs, the environment, public health or
safety, or state, local or tribal
governments or communities (also
referred to as ‘‘economically
significant’’); (2) creating a serious
inconsistency or otherwise interfering
with an action taken or planned by
another agency; (3) materially altering
the budgetary impacts of entitlement
grants, user fees, or loan programs or the
rights and obligations of recipients
thereof; or (4) raising novel legal or
policy issues arising out of legal
mandates, the President’s priorities, or
the principles set forth in the Executive
Order.
A regulatory impact analysis (RIA)
must be prepared for major rules with
significant regulatory action/s and/or
with economically significant effects
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($100 million or more in any 1 year).
This rule is economically significant.
The aggregated transfer costs are
estimated to be approximately $6.030
billion during the period CY 2022
through CY 2026. This aggregate transfer
cost is the sum of transfers from the
Federal Government, the beneficiaries,
and the State governments to the DME
suppliers. Based on our estimates,
OMB’s Office of Information and
Regulatory Affairs has determined this
rulemaking is ‘‘economically
significant’’ as measured by the $100
million threshold, and hence also a
major rule under Subtitle E of the Small
Business Regulatory Enforcement
Fairness Act of 1996 (also known as the
Congressional Review Act).
Accordingly, we have prepared a
Regulatory Impact Analysis that to the
best of our ability presents the costs and
benefits of the rulemaking. Therefore,
OMB has reviewed these proposed
regulations, and the Departments have
provided the following assessment of
their impact.
C. Detailed Economic Analysis
Our baseline assumption assumes that
in the absence of this final rule, the fee
schedule amounts for certain DMEPOS
items furnished in non-CBAs on the
effective date specified in the DATES
section of this final rule or after the end
of the PHE, whichever is later, would be
fully adjusted based on information
from the CBP. In addition, our baseline
assumption assumes that in the absence
of this final rule, benefit category
determinations would continue to only
be made through the NCD process,
notice and comment rulemaking, or by
the MACs on an individual, claim-byclaim basis. Also, the baseline
assumption assumes that in the absence
of this final rule, adjunctive CGMs
would continue to be considered items
that are not primarily and customarily
used to serve a medical purpose and
would not be classified as DME. Finally,
it assumes that in the absence of this
final rule, the DMEPOS provisions
included in the 2018 and 2020 IFCs
would not be finalized, and CMS would
need to finalize these provisions at some
other time. CMS has calculated a
baseline based on predicted Medicare
costs if CMS were to not finalize the
provisions of this final rule noted
previously.
For purposes of this detailed
economic analysis, CMS established a
baseline, as described previously, to
measure the impacts of certain
provisions of this final rule. CMS makes
certain assumptions as part of this
analysis. For example, this analysis
assumes that nothing would arise or
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occur (for example, new legislation) to
prevent CMS from fully adjusting the
fee schedule amounts for certain DME
items and services furnished in noncompetitive bidding areas on or after the
effective date of this final rule. Note that
for the economic analysis in the
November 2020 proposed rule, CMS
used the FY 2021 President’s budget as
a baseline, which resulted in a proposed
rule that was deemed primarily
designated as not economically
significant. However, as a result of the
new baseline described previously, we
have determined that this final rule is
economically significant. We have
determined the following impacts on
benefits, costs, and transfers for this
economically significant rule as follows:
1. Benefits
a. May 2018 IFC
This rule finalizes certain provisions
of the May 2018 IFC, thereby benefitting
DMEPOS suppliers. We assume that
certain suppliers might have chosen not
to furnish items and services in rural
and non-contiguous areas in the absence
of these higher payments.
b. May 2020 COVID–19 IFC
This rule finalizes certain provisions
of May 2020 COVID–19 IFC, thereby
benefitting DMEPOS suppliers that
furnish items in certain non-CBAs. Such
suppliers receive higher payments for
furnishing DMEPOS items and services.
c. November 2020 Proposed Rule
This rule finalizes certain provisions
of the November 2020 proposed rule. As
a result of this final rule, access to
DMEPOS items and services in rural
and non-contiguous areas will be
improved. In addition, this final rule
establishes a BCD and payment
determination process for DME,
prosthetic devices, orthotics and
prosthetics, therapeutic shoes and
inserts, surgical dressings, or splints,
casts, and other devices used for
reductions of fractures and dislocations
and classifies adjunctive CGMs as DME.
These provisions will benefit Medicare
beneficiaries and the DMEPOS industry
by providing a clear, predictable process
for benefit category and payment
determinations, and will make more
CGMs eligible for coverage and payment
under the Medicare Part B benefit for
DME.
2. Costs
The only cost that will be incurred is
a one-time cost to private entities for
reviewing and reading this final rule.
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3. Transfers
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a. May 2018 IFC
As a result of the provisions of this
IFC, DME suppliers received increased
payments for furnishing items in remote
rural and non-contiguous areas in 2018.
Medicare beneficiaries, on the other
hand, incurred higher copayments,
which resulted in higher transfer costs
from the Federal Government and
Medicare beneficiaries to DMEPOS
suppliers. The provisions of the May
2018 IFC that CMS is finalizing in this
final rule affected payment rates for
DMEPOS items and services furnished
from June through December of 2018.
Therefore, finalizing these provisions of
this IFC in this rule has no economic
impact on payment or cost sharing for
these items.
The May 2018 IFC resumed the
transitional adjusted Medicare fee
schedule amounts for certain items and
services that were furnished in rural and
non-contiguous non-competitive
bidding areas beginning June 1, 2018
through December 31, 2018. The May
2018 IFC also made technical
amendments to the regulation to reflect
the extension of the fee schedule
adjustment transition period from June
30, 2016 to December 31, 2016 that was
mandated by the CURES Act. In
addition, the May 2018 IFC also made
technical amendments to existing
regulations for DMEPOS items and
services to reflect the exclusion of
infusion drugs used with DME from the
DMEPOS CBP. The May 2018 IFC also
contained provisions related to
wheelchair payment, which we further
discuss in the FY 2022 IRF final rule (86
FR 42362).
In the May 2018 IFC, CMS estimated
that the transitional adjusted Medicare
fee schedule amounts for certain items
and services that were furnished in rural
and non-contiguous areas beginning
June 1, 2018 through December 31,
2018, cost over $290 million in
Medicare Part B benefit payments and
$70 million in Medicare beneficiary cost
sharing (83 FR 21923). These fee
schedule adjustment costs—both to the
Medicare program and to beneficiaries—
were incurred during 2018 and will
have no further financial impact at this
time. Similarly, for dually eligible
beneficiaries, the Medicaid Federal and
States’ costs for this May 2018 IFC were
$10 million and $10 million,
respectively. The portions of the May
2018 IFC that CMS is finalizing in this
final rule are estimated to have no
impact after the effective date of the
final rule because all of the costs and
financial impacts of the IFC happened
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in the past, and this IFC will not have
an impact going forward.
Comment: A few commenters did not
agree with CMS using the cost of the
rule to determine how extensive the
payment increases should have been.
The commenters stated CMS used the
budget implications as a primary
determinant in choosing to extend
payment increases only to the rural and
non-contiguous non-CBAs. The
commenters recommended that CMS
instead base its policy decision
primarily on ensuring appropriate
beneficiary access, and that any
budgetary impacts should be secondary
to CMS establishing a policy that
ensures that beneficiaries have
appropriate access to medically
necessary DMEPOS items. Another
commenter stated that the cost of the
rule is far less than costs to other health
care entities and Medicare beneficiaries
due to the lack of access to DME.
Finally, a commenter stated the rule
will increase costs for certain Medicare
beneficiaries, potentially impacting
those on the margin, but they believe
increased access to quality DME and
supplier/brand name choice is a
reasonable trade-off. The commenter
claimed that the true impact of the
forecasted cost-sharing is unclear due to
secondary insurance. The commenter
also stated that for beneficiaries who are
dually eligible for both Medicare and
Medicaid, Medicaid will typically pay
the cost sharing, offsetting this total
amount. The commenter stated that
many beneficiaries who do not qualify
for Medicaid but cannot afford
secondary insurance do not end up
paying for DME cost sharing out of
pocket, and that it is common for DME
suppliers to write off co-payments when
beneficiaries cannot afford to pay after
the supplier has made reasonable
attempts to collect the balance. The
commenter encouraged CMS to monitor
how this cost increase impacts
beneficiaries.
Response: We believe that we
considered beneficiary access to
DMEPOS items in our analysis and that
the policy was implemented, to a large
degree, based on improved access.
In the May 2018 IFC, we summarized
the feedback we received from the
March 23, 2017 stakeholder call and
related written comments (83 FR
21916). The majority of these comments
were from the DMEPOS industry and
focused on rural and non-contiguous
areas of the country. For instance,
commenters stressed that rural and noncontiguous areas of the country face
unique costs, that the average volume of
allowed services for suppliers serving
CBAs is significantly higher than the
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73905
average volume of allowed services for
suppliers serving non-CBAs,
particularly in rural and non-contiguous
areas, and that the adjusted fees are not
sufficient to cover the costs of
furnishing items and services in rural
and non-contiguous areas and that this
is having an impact on access to items
and services in these areas. These
comments factored into our decision to
only apply the 50/50 blended rates to
rural and non-contiguous non-CBAs. We
also further explain in our CY 2019
ESRD PPS DMEPOS final rule our
reasons for only applying the 50/50
blended rates to rural and noncontiguous areas (83 FR 57030).
b. May 2020 COVID–19 IFC
As a result of the provisions of this
finalized May 2020 COVID–19 IFC, even
though DME suppliers received
increased payments for furnishing items
in remote rural and non-contiguous
areas, Medicare beneficiaries, on the
other hand, incurred higher costsharing, which resulted in higher
transfer costs from the Federal
Government and Medicare beneficiaries
to the DMEPOS suppliers. The
provisions of the May 2020 COVID–19
IFC that CMS is finalizing in this final
rule affect payment rates for DMEPOS
items and services furnished from
March 6, 2020 through the end of the
PHE, which is assumed to end after the
effective date of this rule in April 2022.
Finalizing these provisions of this IFC
in this rule has a negligible economic
impact on payment or cost sharing for
these items.
CMS’s Office of the Actuary
determined that this provision against
the FY 2021 President’s Budget baseline
increased payments in the estimated
amount of $140 million from the
Federal Government to DMEPOS
suppliers (85 FR 27614). Additionally,
the Medicare beneficiary transfer was
$30 million to DME suppliers. This
provision also impacts the federal
portion of the Medicaid increased
payments: The federal cost is $5 million
for dually eligible beneficiaries, while
the State portion of the Medicaid
increased payments is $5 million.
This section finalizes a temporary
increase to certain DME payment rates,
as required by section 3712 of the
CARES Act. Section 3712 of the CARES
Act increases Medicare expenditures, as
well as beneficiary cost-sharing by
increasing Medicare payment rates for
certain DMEPOS items furnished in
non-rural and contiguous noncompetitively bid areas. The increase is
a result of paying a blend of 75 percent
of the fully adjusted payment rates and
25 percent of the unadjusted payment
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rates for items and services furnished in
non-rural and contiguous non-CBAs
throughout the United States and is
estimated to increase affected rates,
averaging 33 percent.
Comment: A commenter referenced
the impact of this provision, which
states that ‘‘this change may also affect
the federal financial participation limit
for DMEPOS items and services
furnished to Medicaid beneficiaries, but
we are unable to quantify the effect.’’
The commenter stated that despite the
potential effects this provision may have
on the federal financial participation
limit, they strongly believe that these
DMEPOS items and services remain
critical for beneficiaries. Therefore, they
expressed their support for this
provision.
Response: We agree Medicaid rates
are affected due to the interaction
between the federal financial
participation limit and Medicare rate
changes, although the amount of the
change is currently not quantifiable.
c. November 2020 Proposed Rule
The fee schedule adjustment
methodology that CMS is finalizing in
this final rule involves three transfers of
monies: (1) Federal Government to
DMEPOS suppliers; (2) beneficiaries to
DME suppliers; and (3) State
governments to DME suppliers. The
amounts of these transfers are explained
later in this section. CMS’s Office of the
Actuary has determined that the fee
schedule adjustment methodology will
increase Medicare gross benefit
payments in the estimated amount of
$4.55 billion from CY 2022 to CY 2026
as compared to the baseline discussed
previously. During the years CY 2022 to
CY 2026, the estimated gross payments
will be as follows: $200 million, $770
million, $1.110 billion, $1.190 billion
and $1.280 billion, respectively.
TABLE 3—IMPACT OF CHANGING THE ADJUSTED FEE METHODOLOGY
CY
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2022
2023
2024
2025
2026
Impact on benefit
gross payments
(in dollars to the
nearest 10 million)
Impact on
beneficiary cost
sharing
(in dollars to the
nearest 10 million)
200
770
1,110
1.190
1,280
50
190
280
300
320
.............................................................................................................................................................
.............................................................................................................................................................
.............................................................................................................................................................
.............................................................................................................................................................
.............................................................................................................................................................
Payments increase each year as a
result of annual fee schedule updates
and increases in utilization of items and
services. As stated before, the increased
payments result from paying a 50/50
blended rate for certain DME items
furnished in rural and non-contiguous
non-competitive bidding areas. This
will increase the beneficiary
copayments by $1.14 billion from CY
2022 to CY 2026. In addition, the federal
portion of the Medicaid increased
payments during this period is $195
million for the dually eligible
beneficiaries, and the State portion of
the Medicaid increased payments is
$145 million during CY 2022 to CY
2026 ($10 million, $25 million, $35
million, $40 million, and $40 million,
respectively, during CY 2022 through
CY 2026). Note, the federal financial
participation limit for DME in Medicaid,
as discussed in section 1903(i)(27) of the
Act, adds an indeterminable cost to the
federal share of the Medicaid payments
to States.
Comment: A commenter stated that a
blind spot is the impact of the trickle
down of rates to Medicaid, Medicare
Advantage, and private insurances who
base their rates on Medicare rates.
Response: We thank the commenter
for commenting on the impact of this
particular provision. Impact analyses
consider the impact of policies on the
MA rates and on private insurances (as
they provide supplemental insurance
that pays copayments on behalf of
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Medicare beneficiaries). So,
supplemental insurers pay more or less
depending on whether fees increase or
decrease. Regarding Medicaid, we note
that we provided details regarding the
impact this particular provision has on
Medicaid in the November 2020
proposed rule (85 FR 70406) and this
final rule.
d. Benefit Category and Payment
Determinations for DME, Prosthetic
Devices, Orthotics and Prosthetics,
Therapeutic Shoes and Inserts, Surgical
Dressings, Splints, Casts, and Other
Devices Used for Reductions of
Fractures and Dislocations
We are finalizing the procedures for
BCDs and payment determinations for
new items and services that are DME,
prosthetic devices, orthotics and
prosthetics, therapeutic shoes and
inserts, surgical dressings, or splints,
casts, and other devices used for
reductions of fractures and dislocations
with no additional administrative costs
to CMS and no fiscal impact when
measured against the baseline. We do
not expect that the BCD and payment
determination procedures that CMS is
finalizing in this rule will affect the
ability of manufacturers to make new
items and services. We note that this
final rule continues our use of an
already established process (public
meetings) to make BCD and payment
determinations for new items and
services that are durable medical
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equipment (DME), prosthetic devices,
orthotics and prosthetics, therapeutic
shoes and inserts, surgical dressings, or
splints, casts, and other devices used for
reductions of fractures and dislocations.
e. Classification and Payment for
Continuous Glucose Monitors Under
Medicare Part B
This final rule classifies certain CGMs
as DME. This will result in an increase
in the number of CGM products
beneficiaries and physicians can choose
that would be classified as DME. We do
not anticipate that this change will
impact overall utilization of CGMs
covered under the DME benefit and
Medicare payment because beneficiaries
have had access to some types of CGMs
since 2017. Because we do not
anticipate changes in CGM utilization or
payments for glucose monitoring
equipment as a result of this final rule,
this final rule will not result in any
transfers.
4. Regulatory Review Cost Estimation
If regulations impose administrative
costs on private entities, such as the
time needed to read and interpret this
final rule, we should estimate the cost
associated with regulatory review. Thus,
using the 2020 wage information from
the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS)
https://www.bls.gov/oes/current/
oes119111.htm for medical and health
service managers (Code 11–9111), we
estimate that the cost of reviewing this
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rule is $114.24 per hour, including
overhead and fringe benefits. For
manufacturers of DMEPOS products,
DMEPOS suppliers, and other DMEPOS
industry representatives, we assume the
same cost for reviewing this rule.
Assuming an average reading speed for
those very familiar with the topic
matter, we estimate that it would take
approximately 5 hours for the medical
and health service managers or industry
representatives to review this final rule.
For each entity that reviews this final
rule, the estimated cost is $571.20 (5
hours x $114.24 per hour). Therefore,
we estimate that the total cost of closely
reviewing this final rule is a one-time
cost of $1,005,312 ($571.20 × 1,760
reviewers). Note the 1,760 reviewers
represent about 2 percent of the current
number of DME suppliers. Two percent
was chosen based on the assumption
that most entities would use trade
industry summaries to inform
themselves on the contents of the rule.
D. Alternatives Considered
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
This section addresses the alternatives
considered only for the fee schedule
adjustment methodology provisions
from the November 2020 proposed rule.
This section does not consider
alternatives to the BCD provisions, CGM
provisions, May 2020 COVID–19 IFC
DMEPOS provisions (no alternatives
were contained in the IFC) or the May
2018 IFC (the effects of which were
limited to 2018). In the case of the CGM
provisions, we are not finalizing the
proposed fee schedule amounts for
CGMs and related accessories and
supplies. We do not believe that the
decision not to finalize the proposed fee
schedule amounts results in any costs or
savings for the program or beneficiaries
since one of the proposed categories of
CGM supplies and accessories is being
phased out and the fee schedule
amounts for another category of
adjunctive CGMs and supplies and
accessories will be established in
accordance with 42 CFR 414.238, which
reflects our longstanding policies and
procedures for gap-filling fee schedule
amounts in accordance with the rules of
the statute. Therefore, the impacts of all
three alternatives for the November
2020 proposed rule discussed later in
this section, are considered against the
previously discussed baseline (that is,
the baseline calculations assume that
CMS would fully adjust the fee schedule
amounts for DME items and services
furnished all non-CBAs, including rural
and non-contiguous non-CBAs).
Therefore, in regards to the November
2020 proposed rule, the first alternative
was to pay fully adjusted fee schedule
rates in all areas except super rural areas
or non-contiguous areas and pay 120
percent of national average of the single
payment amounts in super rural areas
and non-contiguous areas. The Office of
the Actuary estimated that this
alternative would increase Medicare
gross payments from CY 2022 to CY
2026 by $380 million. This would
increase beneficiary copayments by $80
million from CY 2022 to CY 2026. In
addition, the federal portion of the
Medicaid would increase payments
during this period to $20 million for the
dually eligible beneficiaries, and the
State portion of the Medicaid would
also increase payments to $20 million.
The second alternative was to adjust
fee schedule amounts for items and
services furnished in non-CBAs between
2022 and 2023 based on a 75/25 blend
of adjusted and unadjusted rates and
phase in the full fee schedule
adjustments beginning January 1, 2024.
The Office of the Actuary estimates that
this alternative would increase
Medicare gross payments by $1.13
billion and increase beneficiary
copayments by $280 million from CY
2022 to CY 2026. In addition, the federal
portion of the Medicaid would increase
payments during this period to $50
million for the dually eligible
beneficiaries, and the State portion of
the Medicaid would increase payments
to $35 million.
Finally, the third alternative was to
extend the transition period for phasing
in fully adjusted fee schedule rates at 42
CFR 414.210(g)(9), which would result
in the same payment amounts as the
proposed rule for just a 2-year period.
The Office of the Actuary estimated that
this alternative would increase
Medicare gross payments from CY 2022
to CY 2026 by $1.41 billion for items
and services furnished in non-CBAs
between 2022 and 2023. As a result, this
would increase beneficiary copayments
by $350 million from CY 2022 to CY
73907
2026. In addition, the federal portion of
Medicaid payments would increase
during this period from CY 2022 to CY
2026 by $60 million for dually eligible
beneficiaries, and the State portion of
Medicaid payments would increase by
$45 million.
The three alternatives, which were
estimated to cost less than the policy
that CMS is finalizing in this rule, were
not considered primarily due to the
assumption that maintaining the current
fee schedule adjustment methodology
would provide for better access to
DMEPOS items and services in rural
and non-contiguous areas than two of
the alternatives, and would provide
such access for a longer period of time
than the three alternatives.
E. Accounting Statement
As required by OMB Circular A–4
(available at https://
www.whitehouse.gov/omb/circulars_
a004_a-4), we have prepared an
accounting statement in Table 4,
showing the classification of the
impacts associated with the fee
schedule adjustment methodologies
included in the November 2020
proposed rule in this final rule. The
November 2020 proposed rule, which is
being finalized in this rule, is estimated
to increase payments ($912 million
annualized at 7 percent) from the
Federal Government to DMEPOS
suppliers by $4.550 billion from CY
2022 to CY 2026, as compared to a
baseline that assumes that as of the
effective date, CMS would pay fully
adjusted fee schedule amounts in all
non-competitive bidding areas for
DMEPOS items subject to competitive
bidding. In addition, the accounting
statement considers the transfer
amounts from beneficiaries to DME
suppliers of $1.14 billion ($219 million
annualized at 7 percent) from CY 2022
to CY 2026. Finally, the accounting
statement accounts for the cost of the
States’ portion of the Medicaid
payments for dually eligible
beneficiaries, costing approximately
$150 million from CY 2022 to CY 2026
($28 million annualized at 7 percent.
The annual costs increase over time
because of annual updates to adjusted
fee schedule amounts and Medicare
enrollment increases.
TABLE 4—ACCOUNTING STATEMENT: CLASSIFICATION OF ESTIMATED TRANSFERS AND COSTS
Units
Category
Estimates
Year dollar
Costs:
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28DER2
Discount rate
(%)
Period
covered
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TABLE 4—ACCOUNTING STATEMENT: CLASSIFICATION OF ESTIMATED TRANSFERS AND COSTS—Continued
Units
Category
Estimates
Year dollar
Annualized Monetized ($million/year) .......................................................
Discount rate
(%)
Period
covered
0.20
0.20
2021
2021
7
3
2022–2026
2022–2026
912
933
2021
2021
7
3
2022–2026
2022–2026
Regulatory Review Costs
Transfers:
Annualized Monetized ($million/year) .......................................................
From Whom to Whom .....................................................................................
Annualized Monetized($million/year) ........................................................
From Whom to Whom .....................................................................................
Transfers from Federal Government to DME Suppliers
219
224
F. Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)
The Regulatory Flexibility Act (5
U.S.C. 601 et seq.) imposes certain
requirements with respect to federal
rules that are (1) required to be
published as a notice of proposed
rulemaking subject to the notice and
comment requirements of the
Administrative Procedure Act (5 U.S.C.
553(b)); and (2) likely to have a
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities.
Note that the finalized provisions of
the May 2018 IFC and the finalized May
2020 COVID–19 IFC impose no burden
on a substantial number of small
entities. However, the provisions of this
final rule that were proposed in the
November 2020 proposed rule will have
a positive impact on DMEPOS
7
3
2022–2026
2022–2026
Transfers from Medicare Beneficiaries to DME Suppliers
Annualized Monetized ($million/year) .......................................................
From Whom to Whom .....................................................................................
2021
2021
28
28
2021
2021
7
3
2022–2026
2022–2026
Transfers from State Government to Beneficiaries
suppliers. This rule will increase
DMEPOS supplier revenues for
furnishing DMEPOS items and services
subject to the fee schedule adjustments
in rural and non-contiguous areas. As
compared to the baseline, the revenues
for DMEPOS suppliers will be higher
due to the 50/50 blended fee schedule
adjustments in rural and noncontiguous areas.
The RFA requires agencies to analyze
options for regulatory relief of small
entities, if a rule has a significant impact
on a substantial number of small
entities. For purposes of the RFA, we
estimate that almost all DMEPOS
suppliers are small entities, as that term
is used in the RFA (including small
businesses, nonprofit organizations, and
small governmental jurisdictions). The
great majority of hospitals and most
other health care providers and
suppliers are small entities, either by
being nonprofit organizations or by
meeting the Small Business
Administration (SBA) definition of a
small business (having revenues of less
than $8.0 million to $41.5 million in
any 1 year).
According to the SBA’s website at
https://www.sba.gov/content/smallbusiness-size-standards, DME suppliers
may fall into either the North American
Industrial Classification System
(NAICS) code 532291 and Home Health
Equipment Rental code 44610,
Pharmacies and Drug Stores. The SBA
defines Pharmacies and Drug Stores as
businesses having less than $30 million
and Home Health Equipment Rental as
businesses having less than $35 million
in annual receipts.
TABLE 5—DMEPOS SUPPLIERS SIZE STANDARDS
SBA size standard/small
entity threshold
(million)
NAICS
(6-digit)
Industry subsector description
446110 ...
532291 ...
Pharmacies and Drug Stores ..............................................................................
Home Health Equipment Rental .........................................................................
Total small businesses
$30
35
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Source: 2012 Economic Census.
Since we are uncertain of the
DMEPOS suppliers’ composition, we
sought comments from the public to aid
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in understanding the various industries
that supply DMEPOS products. So far,
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we have identified only the two
industries in Table 5.
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18,503
673
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73909
TABLE 6—DMEPOS SUPPLIERS CONCENTRATION RATIOS
[(NAICS 532292) home health equipment rental]
Firm size
(by receipts)
% of small
firms
(%)
Firm count
SMALL FIRMS .................................................................................................
<100,000 ...................................................................................................
100,000–499,999 ......................................................................................
500,000–999,999 ......................................................................................
1,000,000–2,499,999 ................................................................................
2,500,000–4,999,999 ................................................................................
5,000,000–7,499,999 ................................................................................
7,500,000–9,999,999 ................................................................................
10,000,000–14,999,999 ............................................................................
15,000,000–19,999,999 ............................................................................
20,000,000–24,999,999 ............................................................................
25,000,000–29,999,999 ............................................................................
30,000,000–34,999,999 ............................................................................
LARGE FIRMS:
Receipts >$35 Million ...............................................................................
Total average
revenue
Average
revenue per
firm to total
average
revenue
(%)
673
57
207
137
148
64
16
15
12
10
3
2
2
100.0
8.47
30.76
20.36
21.99
9.51
2.38
2.23
1.78
1.49
0.45
0.30
0.30
$42,468,578
$45,912
$287,647
$722,080
$1,599,811
$3,430,781
$5,599,563
$8,909,267
$10,715,917
$11,157,600
NA
NA
NA
100
0.11
0.68
1.70
3.77
8.08
13.19
20.98
25.23
26.27
NA
NA
NA
46
NA
NA
NA
Source: 2012 County Business Patterns and 2012 Economic Census.
Average revenue data are not included for the Home Health Equipment Rentals (NAICS 532291) for firms greater than 20,000,000 in receipts.
Moreover, no revenue data are available for large firms in Home Heath Equipment Rentals Industry.
TABLE 7—DMEPOS SUPPLIERS CONCENTRATION RATIOS
[NAICS 446110 pharmacies and drug stores]
Firm size
(by receipts)
% of small firms
(%)
Firm count
SMALL FIRMS .................................................
<100,000 ...................................................
100,000–499,999 ......................................
500,000–999,999 ......................................
1,000,000–2,499,999 ................................
2,500,000–4,999,999 ................................
5,000,000–7,499,999 ................................
7,500,000–9,999,999 ................................
10,000,000–14,999,999 ............................
15,000,000–19,999,999 ............................
20,000,000–24,999,999 ............................
25,000,000–29,999,999 ............................
LARGE FIRMS:
Receipts >$30 Million ...............................
Average revenue per
firm to total average
revenue
(%)
Total average
revenue
18,503
751
2,060
1,919
5,767
5,094
1,638
583
432
147
68
44
100.0
0.04
0.11
0.10
0.31
0.27
0.09
0.03
0.02
0.01
0.00
0.00
$89,692,509.68
$48,023.97
$283,085.44
$740,942.68
$1,742,084.10
$3,556,077.54
$6,068,161.78
$8,544,548.89
$11,705,081.02
$16,415,476.19
$20,211,073.53
$20,377,954.55
100
0.05
0.32
0.83
1.94
3.96
6.77
9.53
13.05
18.30
22.53
22.72
349
NA
NA
NA
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Source: 2012 County Business Patterns and 2012 Economic Census.
Tables 6 and 7 show that the
economic impacts are disproportionate
for small firms. Moreover, these tables
show the revenues for each of the size
categories, and the revenue impact per
small entity. For example, in table 6, 57
of the smallest firms earn only 0.11
percent of the revenue in its industry;
while, in table 7, 751 of the smallest
firm earn only 0.05 percent of the
revenue in its industry.
Therefore, as can be seen in Tables 6
and 7, almost all DMEPOS suppliers are
small entities as that term is used in the
RFA.27 Additionally, Tables 6 and 7
27 Note, the entire population of DMEPOS
suppliers is not known at this time. However, based
on our experience, the majority of DMEPOS
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show the disproportionate impacts
among firms, and between small and
large firms. In Table 6 and 7, each
industry, Pharmacies and Drug Stores
and Home Health Equipment, Rental
firm size (by receipts), firm count,
percentage of small firms, total average
revenue, and percentage of average
revenue to total revenue of small firms
were estimated separately to determine
the DMEPOS concentration ratios. Note,
there are missing data. See footnotes in
Table 6.
For purposes of the RFA,
approximately 98.15 percent of
pharmacies and drugs stores (18,503/
suppliers are covered in the two industries
identified.
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18,852) and 93.60 percent of home
health equipment rental (673/719) firms
are considered small businesses
according to the SBA’s size standards
with total revenues of $30 and $35
million or less respectively in any 1
year. Individuals and states are not
included in the definition of a small
entity.
This rule does not affect health care
enterprises operated by small
government entities such as counties or
towns with populations 50,000 or less.
The Department of Health and Human
Services generally uses a revenue
impact of 3 to 5 percent as a significance
threshold under the RFA. The RFA
threshold analysis, therefore, indicates
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khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
that there is not a significant economic
impact on a substantial number of small
entities. As shown in Table 6, the
average total revenue earned by the
DMEPOS Home Health Equipment
Rental industry is approximately
$42,468,578 million and the total
transfer costs amount to approximately
$6.261 billion, which is only 0.67
percent. Additionally, as shown in
Table 7, the average total revenue
earned by DMEPOS Pharmacies and
Drugs Stores is approximately
$89,692,509.68 million and the total
transfer costs amount to approximately
$6.030 billion, which is 1.49 percent. As
a result, we believe that this 3 percent
threshold (the threshold used by the
Department of Health and Human
Services to determine a significance
threshold under the RFA) will not be
reached for both the Home Health
Equipment Rental industry and the
Pharmacies and Drugs Stores industry
mentioned in this rule. Furthermore, the
regulation review costs mentioned
previously, is de minimis and will not
impose any additional burden on these
small businesses.
Even though a substantial number of
small suppliers will benefit from the 50/
50 blended fee schedule amounts in
rural and non-contiguous non-CBAs, we
do not believe that this regulation will
result in a significant economic impact
on a substantial number of small
entities. Therefore, the Secretary
certifies that this final rule will not have
a significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities.
In addition, section 1102(b) of the Act
requires us to prepare 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 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. We are not preparing an analysis
for section 1102(b) of the Act because
we have determined, and the Secretary
certifies, that this rule will not have a
significant impact on the operations of
a substantial number of small rural
hospitals.
G. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
(UMRA)
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,
updated annually for inflation. In 2021,
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23:04 Dec 27, 2021
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that threshold is approximately $158
million. This final rule imposes
mandates that will result in anticipated
costs to state, local and Tribal
governments or private sector, but the
transfer costs will be less than the
threshold. As a result, this final rule
would not impose a mandate that will
result in the expenditure by State, local,
and Tribal Governments, in the
aggregate, or by the private sector, of
more than $158 million in any one year.
H. Federalism
Executive Order 13132 establishes
certain requirements that an agency
must meet when it issues a final rule
that imposes substantial direct
requirement costs on state and local
governments, preempts state law, or
otherwise has federalism implications.
Since this regulation does impose costs
on state or local governments, the
requirements of Executive Order 13132
are applicable.
The State governments’ Medicaid
payments in aggregate for dual eligible
beneficiaries will increase by an
estimated $150 million from CY 2022 to
CY 2026.
I. Congressional Review Act
This final rule is subject to the
Congressional Review Act provisions of
the Small Business Regulatory
Enforcement Fairness Act of 1996 (5
U.S.C. 801 et seq.) and has been
transmitted to the Congress and the
Comptroller General for review.
Chiquita Brooks-LaSure,
Administrator of the Centers for
Medicare & Medicaid Services,
approved this document on November
22, 2021.
List of Subjects in 42 CFR Part 414
Administrative practice and
procedure, Biologics, Diseases, Drugs,
Health facilities, Health professions,
Medicare, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.
For the reasons set forth in the
preamble, the Centers for Medicare &
Medicaid Services amends 42 CFR part
414 as set forth below:
PART 414—PAYMENT FOR PART B
MEDICAL AND OTHER SERVICES
1. The authority citation for part 414
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 1302, 1395hh, and
1395rr(b)(l).
2. Section 414.114 is added to subpart
C to read as follows:
■
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§ 414.114 Procedures for making benefit
category determinations and payment
determinations for new PEN items and
services covered under the prosthetic
device benefit; splints and casts; and IOLs
inserted in a physician’s office covered
under the prosthetic device benefit.
(a) Definitions. For the purpose of this
subpart:
Benefit category determination means
a national determination regarding
whether an item or service meets the
Medicare definition of a prosthetic
device at section 1861(s)(8) of the Act or
is a splint, cast, or device used for
reduction of fractures or dislocations
subject to section 1842(s) of the Act and
the rules of this subpart and is not
otherwise excluded from coverage by
statute.
(b) General rule. The procedures for
determining whether new items and
services addressed in a request for a
HCPCS Level II code(s) or by other
means meet the definition of items and
services that may be covered and paid
for in accordance with this subpart are
as follows:
(1) At the start of a HCPCS coding
cycle, CMS performs an analysis to
determine if the item or service is
statutorily excluded from coverage
under Medicare under section 1862 of
the Act, and, if not excluded by statute,
whether the item or service is parenteral
or enteral nutrients, supplies, and
equipment covered under the prosthetic
device benefit, splints and casts or other
devices used for reductions of fractures
or dislocations, or IOLs inserted in a
physician’s office covered under the
prosthetic device benefit.
(2) If a preliminary determination is
made that the item or service is
parenteral or enteral nutrients, supplies,
and equipment covered under the
prosthetic device benefit, splints and
casts or other devices used for
reductions of fractures or dislocations,
or IOLs inserted in a physician’s office
covered under the prosthetic device
benefit, CMS makes a preliminary
payment determination for the item or
service.
(3) CMS posts preliminary benefit
category determinations and payment
determinations on CMS.gov
approximately 2 weeks prior to a public
meeting.
(4) After consideration of public
consultation provided at a public
meeting on preliminary benefit category
determinations and payment
determinations for items and services,
CMS establishes the benefit category
determinations and payment
determinations for items and services
through program instructions.
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3. Section 414.210 is amended by
revising paragraphs (g)(1)(v) and (g)(2)
and adding paragraph (g)(9)(vi) to read
as follows:
■
§ 414.210
General payment rules.
*
*
*
*
(g) * * *
(1) * * *
(v) For items and services furnished
before February 28, 2022, the fee
schedule amount for all areas within a
state that are defined as rural areas for
the purposes of this subpart is adjusted
to 110 percent of the national average
price determined under paragraph
(g)(1)(ii) of this section.
(2) Payment adjustments for areas
outside the contiguous United States
and for items furnished on or after
February 28, 2022 in rural areas within
the contiguous United States using
information from competitive bidding
programs.
(i) For an item or service subject to the
programs under subpart F, the fee
schedule amounts for areas outside the
contiguous United States (Alaska,
Hawaii, and U.S. territories) for items
and services furnished from January 1,
2016, through December 31, 2020 are
reduced to the greater of—
(A) The average of the single payment
amounts for the item or service for CBAs
outside the contiguous United States.
(B) 110 percent of the national average
price for the item or service determined
under paragraph (g)(1)(ii) of this section.
(ii) For an item or service subject to
the programs under subpart F of this
part, the fee schedule amounts for areas
outside the contiguous United States for
items and services furnished on or after
February 28, 2022, or the date
immediately following the duration of
the emergency period described in
section 1135(g)(1)(B) of the Act (42
U.S.C. 1320b–5(g)(1)(B)), whichever is
later, is adjusted to equal the sum of—
(A) Fifty percent of the greater of the
average of the single payment amounts
for the item or service for CBAs outside
the contiguous United States or 110
percent of the national average price for
the item or service determined under
paragraph (g)(1)(ii) of this section; and
(B) Fifty percent of the fee schedule
amount for the area in effect on
December 31, 2015, increased for each
subsequent year beginning in 2016 by
the annual update factors specified in
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
*
VerDate Sep<11>2014
23:04 Dec 27, 2021
Jkt 256001
sections 1834(a)(14), 1834(h)(4), and
1842(s)(1)(B) of the Act, respectively, for
durable medical equipment and
supplies, off-the-shelf orthotics, and
enteral nutrients, supplies, and
equipment.
(iii) For an item or service subject to
the programs under subpart F of this
part, the fee schedule amounts for rural
areas within the contiguous United
States for items and services furnished
on or after , or the date
immediately following the duration of
the emergency period described in
section 1135(g)(1)(B) of the Act (42
U.S.C. 1320b–5(g)(1)(B)), whichever is
later, is adjusted to equal the sum of—
(A) Fifty percent of 110 percent of the
national average price for the item or
service determined under paragraph
(g)(1)(ii) of this section; and
(B) Fifty percent of the fee schedule
amount for the area in effect on
December 31, 2015, increased for each
subsequent year beginning in 2016 by
the annual update factors specified in
sections 1834(a)(14), 1834(h)(4), and
1842(s)(1)(B) of the Act, respectively, for
durable medical equipment and
supplies, off-the-shelf orthotics, and
enteral nutrients, supplies, and
equipment.
*
*
*
*
*
(9) * * *
(vi) For items and services furnished
in all areas with dates of service on or
after February 28, 2022, or the date
immediately following the duration of
the emergency period described in
section 1135(g)(1)(B) of the Act,
whichever is later, based on the fee
schedule amount for the area is equal to
the adjusted payment amount
established under paragraph (g) of this
section.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 4. Section 414.240 is added to subpart
D to read as follows:
§ 414.240 Procedures for making benefit
category determinations and payment
determinations for new durable medical
equipment, prosthetic devices, orthotics
and prosthetics, surgical dressings, and
therapeutic shoes and inserts.
(a) Definitions. For the purpose of this
subpart—
Benefit category determination means
a national determination regarding
whether an item or service meets the
Medicare definition of durable medical
PO 00000
Frm 00053
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 9990
73911
equipment at section 1861(n) of the Act,
a prosthetic device at section 1861(s)(8)
of the Act and further defined under
section 1834(h)(4) of the Act, an orthotic
or leg, arm, back or neck brace, a
prosthetic or artificial leg, arm or eye at
section 1861(s)(9) of the Act, is a
surgical dressing, or is a therapeutic
shoe or insert subject to sections
1834(a), (h), or (i) of the Act and the
rules of this subpart and is not
otherwise excluded from coverage by
statute.
(b) General rule. The procedures for
determining whether new items and
services addressed in a request for a
HCPCS Level II code(s) or by other
means meet the definition of items and
services paid for in accordance with this
subpart are as follows:
(1) At the start of a HCPCS coding
cycle, CMS performs an analysis to
determine if the item or service is
statutorily excluded from coverage
under Medicare under section 1862 of
the Act, and, if not excluded by statute,
whether the item or service is durable
medical equipment, a prosthetic device
as further defined under section
1834(h)(4) of the Act, an orthotic or
prosthetic, a surgical dressing, or a
therapeutic shoe or insert.
(2) If a preliminary determination is
made that the item or service is durable
medical equipment, a prosthetic device,
an orthotic or prosthetic, a surgical
dressing, or a therapeutic shoe or insert,
CMS makes a preliminary payment
determination for the item or service.
(3) CMS posts preliminary benefit
category determinations and payment
determinations on CMS.gov
approximately 2 weeks prior to a public
meeting.
(4) After consideration of public
consultation provided at a public
meeting on preliminary benefit category
determinations and payment
determinations for items and services,
CMS establishes the benefit category
determinations and payment
determinations for items and services
through program instructions.
Xavier Becerra,
Secretary, Department of Health and Human
Services.
[FR Doc. 2021–27763 Filed 12–21–21; 4:15 pm]
BILLING CODE 4120–01–P
E:\FR\FM\28DER2.SGM
28DER2
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 86, Number 246 (Tuesday, December 28, 2021)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 73860-73911]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2021-27763]
[[Page 73859]]
Vol. 86
Tuesday,
No. 246
December 28, 2021
Part II
Department of Health and Human Services
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Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services
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42 CFR Part 414
Medicare Program; Durable Medical Equipment, Prosthetics, Orthotics,
and Supplies Policy Issues, and Level II of the Healthcare Common
Procedure Coding System; DME Interim Pricing in the CARES Act; Durable
Medical Equipment Fee Schedule Adjustments To Resume the Transitional
50/50 Blended Rates To Provide Relief in Rural Areas and Non-Contiguous
Areas; Final Rule
Federal Register / Vol. 86 , No. 246 / Tuesday, December 28, 2021 /
Rules and Regulations
[[Page 73860]]
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DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services
42 CFR Part 414
[CMS-1738-F, CMS-1687-F, and CMS-5531-F]
RINs 0938-AU17, 0938-AT21, and 0938-AU32
Medicare Program; Durable Medical Equipment, Prosthetics,
Orthotics, and Supplies (DMEPOS) Policy Issues, and Level II of the
Healthcare Common Procedure Coding System (HCPCS); DME Interim Pricing
in the CARES Act; Durable Medical Equipment Fee Schedule Adjustments To
Resume the Transitional 50/50 Blended Rates To Provide Relief in Rural
Areas and Non-Contiguous Areas
AGENCY: Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS), Health and
Human Services (HHS).
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: This final rule establishes methodologies for adjusting the
Medicare durable medical equipment, prosthetics, orthotics, and
supplies (DMEPOS) fee schedule amounts using information from the
Medicare DMEPOS competitive bidding program (CBP) for items furnished
on or after the effective date specified in the DATES section of this
final rule, or the date immediately following the duration of the
emergency period described in the Social Security Act (the Act),
whichever is later. This final rule also establishes procedures for
making benefit category and payment determinations for new items and
services that are durable medical equipment (DME), prosthetic devices,
orthotics and prosthetics, therapeutic shoes and inserts, surgical
dressings, or splints, casts, and other devices used for reductions of
fractures and dislocations under Medicare Part B. In addition, this
rule classifies continuous glucose monitors (CGMs) as DME under
Medicare Part B. Lastly, this final rule finalizes certain DME fee
schedule-related provisions that were included in two interim final
rules with comment period (IFC) that CMS issued on May 11, 2018, and
May 8, 2020.
DATES: These regulations are effective on February 28, 2022.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Alexander Ullman, 410-786-9671 or
[email protected].
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Executive Summary
A. Purpose
This final rule makes changes related to: The Durable Medical
Equipment, Prosthetics, Orthotics, and Supplies (DMEPOS) fee schedule
amounts to ensure access to items and services in rural areas;
procedures for making benefit category and payment determinations for
new items and services that are DME, prosthetic devices, orthotics and
prosthetics, therapeutic shoes and inserts, surgical dressings, or
splints, casts, and other devices used for reductions of fractures and
dislocations to prevent delays in coverage of new items and services;
and classification of CGMs under the Part B benefit for DME to
establish the benefit category for these items. Finally, we are
finalizing provisions included in two interim final rules with comment
period (IFC) that CMS issued on May 11, 2018, and May 8, 2020.
1. Durable Medical Equipment, Prosthetics, Orthotics, and Supplies
(DMEPOS) Fee Schedule Adjustments
The purpose of this provision is to establish the methodologies for
adjusting the fee schedule payment amounts for DMEPOS items and
services furnished in non-competitive bidding areas (non-CBAs) on or
after the effective date specified in the DATES section of this final
rule, or the date immediately following the duration of the emergency
period described in section 1135(g)(1)(B) of the Act (42 U.S.C. 1320b-
5(g)(1)(B)), whichever is later. The emergency period we are referring
to is the Public Health Emergency (PHE) for coronavirus disease 2019
(COVID-19). We refer readers to section III.A.6. of this rule for
details regarding the DMEPOS fee schedule changes CMS has already made
as a result of the PHE for COVID-19.
2. DMEPOS Fee Schedule Adjustments for Items and Services Furnished in
Rural Areas From June 2018 Through December 2018 and Exclusion of
Infusion Drugs From the DMEPOS CBP
The purpose of this section is to finalize and address comments
received on the May 11, 2018 IFC (83 FR 21912) titled ``Medicare
Program; Durable Medical Equipment Fee Schedule Adjustments to Resume
the Transitional 50/50 Blended Rates to Provide Relief in Rural Areas
and Non-Contiguous Areas'' (hereinafter referred to as the ``May 2018
IFC'').
3. Benefit Category and Payment Determinations for DME, Prosthetic
Devices, Orthotics and Prosthetics, Therapeutic Shoes and Inserts,
Surgical Dressings, or Splints, Casts, and Other Devices Used for
Reductions of Fractures and Dislocations
The purpose of this section of the final rule is to establish
procedures for making benefit category and payment determinations for
new items and services that are DME, prosthetic devices, orthotics and
prosthetics, therapeutic shoes and inserts, surgical dressings, or
splints, casts, and other devices used for reductions of fractures and
dislocations that permit public consultation through public meetings.
Section 531(b) of the Medicare, Medicaid, and SCHIP Benefits
Improvement and Protection Act of 2000 (BIPA) (Pub. L. 106-554)
requires the Secretary to establish procedures for coding and payment
determinations for new DME under Part B of title XVIII of the Act that
permit public consultation in a manner consistent with the procedures
established for implementing coding modifications for ICD-9-CM (which
has since been replaced with ICD-10-CM as of October 1, 2015). We
decided to expand these procedures to address all new external HCPCS
level II code requests in 2005. We are finalizing procedures for making
benefit category determinations and payment determinations for new
items and services that are DME, prosthetic devices, orthotics and
prosthetics, therapeutic shoes and inserts, surgical dressings, or
splints, casts, and other devices used for reductions of fractures and
dislocations. Consistent with our current practices, the procedures
will incorporate public consultation on these determinations.
The determination of whether or not an item or service falls under
a Medicare benefit category, such as the Medicare Part B benefit
category for DME, is a necessary step in determining whether an item
may be covered under the Medicare program and, if applicable, what
statutory and regulatory payment rules apply to the items and services.
If the item is excluded from coverage by the Act or does not fall
within the scope of a defined benefit category, the item cannot be
covered under Medicare. On the other hand, if the item is not excluded
from coverage by the Act and is found to fall within a benefit
category, we need to determine what payment rules would apply to the
item if other statutory criteria for coverage of the item are met, such
as the reasonable and necessary criteria under section 1862(a)(1)(A) of
the Act.
[[Page 73861]]
Therefore, the procedures that we are finalizing for use in
determining if items and services fall under the Medicare Part B
benefit categories for DME, prosthetic devices, orthotics, and
prosthetics, surgical dressings, splints, casts and other devices for
the reduction of fractures or dislocations, or therapeutic shoes and
inserts continue our longstanding practice of establishing coverage and
payment for new items and services soon after they are identified
through the HCPCS code application process, promote transparency, and
prevent delays in access to new technologies.
4. Classification and Payment for Continuous Glucose Monitors Under
Medicare Part B
The purpose of this section of this final rule is to address
classification and payment for CGMs under the Medicare Part B benefit
for DME.
5. DME Interim Pricing in the CARES Act
The purpose of this section is to finalize and address comments
received on the ``DME Interim Pricing in the CARES Act'' section of the
May 8, 2020 IFC (85 FR 27550) titled ``Medicare and Medicaid Programs,
Basic Health Program, and Exchanges; Additional Policy and Regulatory
Revisions in Response to the COVID-19 Public Health Emergency and Delay
of Certain Reporting Requirements for the Skilled Nursing Facility
Quality Reporting Program'' (hereinafter referred to as the ``May 2020
COVID-19 IFC''). This provision revised Sec. 414.210 to provide
temporarily increased DME fee schedule amounts in certain areas, as
required by section 3712 of the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic
Security Act (CARES Act) (Pub. L. 116-136, March 27, 2020).
B. Summary of the Major Provisions
1. Durable Medical Equipment, Prosthetics, Orthotics, and Supplies
(DMEPOS) Fee Schedule Adjustments
This rule revises Sec. 414.210(g)(2) and (9) to establish the fee
schedule adjustment methodologies for items and services furnished on
or after the effective date specified in the DATES section of this
final rule, or the date immediately following the duration of the
emergency period described in section 1135(g)(1)(B) of the Act (42
U.S.C. 1320b-5(g)(1)(B)), whichever is later, in non-CBAs.
2. DMEPOS Fee Schedule Adjustments for Items and Services Furnished in
Rural Areas From June 2018 Through December 2018 and Exclusion of
Infusion Drugs From the DMEPOS CBP
This rule finalizes the following provisions of the May 2018 IFC
(83 FR 21912):
Transition Period for Phase in of Adjustments to Fee
Schedule Amounts: We are finalizing the amendments to Sec.
414.210(g)(9)(i) to reflect the extension of the transition period to
December 31, 2016 for phasing in adjustments to the fee schedule
amounts for certain DME and enteral nutrition, as required by section
16007(a) of the 21st Century Cures Act (Cures Act). In addition, we are
finalizing the changes to Sec. 414.210(g)(9)(iii), which resumed the
fee schedule adjustment transition period in rural areas and non-
contiguous areas effective June 1, 2018 so that the fee schedule
amounts for certain items and services furnished in rural and non-
contiguous areas from June 1, 2018 through December 31, 2018 were based
on a 50/50 blend of adjusted and unadjusted rates. We are also
finalizing changes to Sec. 414.210(g)(9)(ii): For items and services
furnished with dates of service from January 1, 2017 to May 31, 2018,
and on or after January 1, 2019, the fee schedule amount for the area
is equal to 100 percent of the adjusted payment amount. We solicited
comments on the resumption of the transition period for the phase in of
fee schedule adjustments.
Technical Change Excluding DME Infusion Drugs from the
DMEPOS CBP: Section 5004(b) of the Cures Act amends section
1847(a)(2)(A) of the Act to exclude drugs and biologicals described in
section 1842(o)(1)(D) of the Act from the DMEPOS CBP. We are finalizing
changes to 42 CFR 414.402 to reflect the exclusion of infusion drugs
from the DMEPOS CBP.
3. Benefit Category and Payment Determinations for DME, Prosthetic
Devices, Orthotics and Prosthetics, Therapeutic Shoes and Inserts,
Surgical Dressings, or Splints, Casts, and Other Devices Used for
Reductions of Fractures and Dislocations
These provisions establish procedures for making benefit category
and payment determinations for items and services that are DME,
prosthetic devices, orthotics and prosthetics, therapeutic shoes and
inserts, surgical dressings, or splints, casts, and other devices used
for reductions of fractures and dislocations for which a HCPCS Level II
code has been requested. Specifically, the purpose of the procedure
would be to determine whether the product for which a HCPCS code has
been requested meets the Medicare definition of DME, a prosthetic
device, an orthotic or prosthetic, a surgical dressing, splint, cast,
or other device used for reducing fractures or dislocations, or a
therapeutic shoe or insert and is not otherwise excluded under Title
XVIII of the Act, to determine how payment for the item of service
would be made, and to obtain public consultation on these
determinations.
4. Classification and Payment for Continuous Glucose Monitors Under
Medicare Part B
This provision classifies adjunctive CGMs as DME, and addresses
comments received in response to the proposed rule. Additional
determinations regarding whether a CGM is covered in accordance with
section 1862(a)(1)(A) of the Act will be made by DME MACs using the
local coverage determination (LCD) process or during the Medicare
claim-by-claim review process.
5. DME Interim Pricing in the CARES Act
This section finalizes and addresses comments received on the May
2020 COVID-19 IFC section titled ``DME Interim Pricing in the CARES
Act''. Specifically, this section finalizes the following policies that
were included in the May 2020 COVID-19 IFC:
We made conforming changes to Sec. 414.210(g)(9),
consistent with section 3712(a) and (b) of the CARES Act, omitting the
language in section 3712(b) of the CARES Act that references an
effective date that is 30 days after the date of enactment of the law.
We revised Sec. 414.210(g)(9)(iii), which describes the
50/50 fee schedule adjustment blend for items and services furnished in
rural and non-contiguous areas, to address dates of service from June
1, 2018 through December 31, 2020 or through the duration of the
emergency period described in section 1135(g)(1)(B) of the Act (42
U.S.C. 1320b-5(g)(1)(B)), whichever is later.
We added Sec. 414.210(g)(9)(v) which states that, for
items and services furnished in areas other than rural or noncontiguous
areas with dates of service from March 6, 2020, through the remainder
of the duration of the emergency period described in section
1135(g)(1)(B) of the Act (42 U.S.C. 1320b-5(g)(1)(B)), based on the fee
schedule amount for the area is equal to 75 percent of the adjusted
payment amount established under ``this section'' (by which we mean
Sec. 414.210(g)(1) through (8)), and 25 percent of the
[[Page 73862]]
unadjusted fee schedule amount. For items and services furnished in
areas other than rural or noncontiguous areas with dates of service
from the expiration date of the emergency period described in section
1135(g)(1)(B) of the Act (42 U.S.C. 1320b-5(g)(1)(B)) through December
31, 2020, based on the fee schedule amount for the area is equal to 100
percent of the adjusted payment amount established under Sec.
414.210(g)(1) through (8) (referred to as ``this section'' in the
regulation text).
In addition, we revised Sec. 414.210(g)(9)(iv) to specify
for items and services furnished in areas other than rural and
noncontiguous areas with dates of service from June 1, 2018 through
March 5, 2020, based on the fee schedule amount for the area is equal
to 100 percent of the adjusted payment amount established under Sec.
414.210(g)(1) through (8) (``this section'' in the regulation text).
C. Summary of Cost and Benefits
1. Durable Medical Equipment, Prosthetics, Orthotics, and Supplies
(DMEPOS) Fee Schedule Adjustments
We estimate that the DMEPOS fee schedule adjustment methodologies
established in this final rule will increase payments an estimated $4.6
billion from the Federal Government to DMEPOS suppliers from CY 2022 to
CY 2026 (for the purposes of this estimate, it is assumed the PHE ends
on April 16, 2022, which is a necessary assumption for accounting
purposes and is not intended to signal when the PHE will end). In CY
2022, we estimate that Medicare payments will increase about $200
million due to this provision of the final rule. Note, the Medicaid
impact of this policy is explained later in this final rule.
2. DMEPOS Fee Schedule Adjustments for Items and Services Furnished in
Rural Areas From June 2018 Through December 2018 and Exclusion of
Infusion Drugs From the DMEPOS CBP
This provision resumed the blended adjusted fee schedule amounts
during the transition period for certain DMEPOS items and services that
were furnished in rural and non-contiguous areas not subject to the CBP
beginning June 1, 2018 and ending December 31, 2018. There is no impact
assumed against the baseline, which is explained in the regulatory
impact analysis section (RIA) later in this final rule, as the period
during which these fee schedule adjustments were in effect has passed.
The goal of the May 2018 IFC was to preserve beneficiary access to
DME items and services in rural and non-contiguous areas not subject to
the CBP during a transition period in which we would continue to study
the impact of the change in payment rates on access to items and
services in these areas. We believe that resuming the fee schedule
adjustment transition period in rural and non-contiguous areas promoted
stability in the DMEPOS market in these areas, and enabled us to work
with stakeholders to preserve beneficiary access to DMEPOS.
3. Benefit Category and Payment Determinations for DME, Prosthetic
Devices, Orthotics and Prosthetics, Therapeutic Shoes and Inserts,
Surgical Dressings, or Splints, Casts, and Other Devices Used for
Reductions of Fractures and Dislocations
We are finalizing a process for making benefit category and payment
determinations for items and services that are DME, prosthetic devices,
orthotics and prosthetics, therapeutic shoes and inserts, surgical
dressings, or splints, casts, and other devices used for reductions of
fractures and dislocations. This policy is assumed to have an
indeterminable fiscal impact due to the unique considerations given to
establishing payment for specific items.
4. Classification and Payment for Continuous Glucose Monitors Under
Medicare Part B
We are finalizing a policy that classifies adjunctive CGMs as DME.
In addition, we are addressing comments on the proposed rule. This
classification is assumed to have no fiscal impact when considered
against the baseline, which is further explained in the regulatory
impact analysis (RIA) section of this final rule.
5. DME Interim Pricing in the CARES Act
This section finalizes the temporary increase to certain DME
payment rates from March 6, 2020 through the remainder of the duration
of the emergency period (PHE) for COVID-19, in accordance with section
3712 of the CARES Act. Section 3712 of the CARES Act increases Medicare
expenditures and beneficiary cost-sharing by increasing Medicare
payment rates for certain DMEPOS items furnished in non-rural and
contiguous non-competitively bid areas.
The increase is a result of paying a blend of 75 percent of the
fully adjusted payment rates and 25 percent of the unadjusted payment
rates and is estimated to increase affected DME fee schedule amounts by
33 percent, on average. This provision will have a negligible fiscal
impact if the emergency period for COVID-19 ends by April 2022.
II. Rulemaking Overview
In the May 11, 2018 Federal Register (83 FR 21912), we published an
interim final rule with comment period (IFC) titled ``Medicare Program;
Durable Medical Equipment Fee Schedule Adjustments to Resume the
Transitional 50/50 Blended Rates to Provide Relief in Rural Areas and
Non-Contiguous Areas''. In the May 8, 2020 Federal Register (85 FR
27550), we published an IFC titled ``Medicare and Medicaid Programs,
Basic Health Program, and Exchanges; Additional Policy and Regulatory
Revisions in Response to the COVID-19 Public Health Emergency and Delay
of Certain Reporting Requirements for the Skilled Nursing Facility
Quality Reporting Program'' (hereinafter referred to as the May 2020
COVID-19 IFC). Subsequently in the November 4, 2020 Federal Register
(85 FR 70358), we published a proposed rule titled ``Medicare Program;
Durable Medical Equipment, Prosthetics, Orthotics, and Supplies
(DMEPOS) Policy Issues and Level II of the Healthcare Common Procedure
Coding System (HCPCS)'' (hereinafter referred to as the November 2020
proposed rule).
We received 331 (208 on the May 2018 IFC, 6 on the May 2020 COVID-
19 IFC, and 117 on the November 2020 proposed rule) timely pieces of
correspondence containing multiple comments on the provisions of the
previously mentioned IFCs and proposed rule. Comments were submitted by
DMEPOS suppliers, manufacturers, trade associations, beneficiaries, the
Medicare Payment Advisory Commission (MedPAC), law firms, and
healthcare providers.
The provisions that we are finalizing in this final rule range from
minor clarifications to more significant modifications based on the
comments received. Summaries of the public comments received and our
responses to those public comments are set forth in the various
sections of this final rule under the appropriate headings. We also
note that some of the public comments received for the provisions
addressed in this final rule were outside of the scope of the
previously mentioned IFCs and proposed rule and as such, those out-of-
scope public comments are not addressed in this final rule.
Additionally, we will not be finalizing three provisions of the
November 2020 proposed rule in this final rule. The provision titled
``Exclusion of Complex Rehabilitative Manual Wheelchairs and Certain
Other Manual Wheelchairs From the CBP'' was finalized in the FY
[[Page 73863]]
2022 Inpatient Rehabilitation Facility (IRF) final rule published on
August 4, 2021 (86 FR 42362). Secondly, after further consideration, we
will not be finalizing the proposed provisions titled ``Healthcare
Common Procedure Coding System (HCPCS) Level II Code Application
Process'' and ``Expanded Classification of External Infusion Pumps as
DME.''
We are not finalizing any of the ``Healthcare Common Procedure
Coding System (HCPCS) Level II Code Application Process'' proposals. We
intend to continue to evaluate our processes, particularly as CMS and
stakeholders continue to gain experience with the more frequent coding
cycles.
We received 34 public comments on the HCPCS proposals. The public
comments raised concerns about the HCPCS proposals. With regard to our
proposed HCPCS Level II code application cycles, application
resubmission, and reevaluation policies, commenters opposed the
proposal for CMS to potentially delay a preliminary or final decision
without placing a limit on the number of cycles a decision could be
delayed.
Commenters also opposed our proposal to allow only two
resubmissions of a code application for reevaluation for the same item
or service particularly if new information is provided with the
resubmission. While commenters mostly supported the proposals to codify
more frequent coding cycles, a number of commenters requested
additional process changes and increased transparency that in many
cases may be infeasible within the proposed timelines for a coding
cycle. Overwhelmingly, commenters responded negatively to our
explanation of the term ``claims processing need'' and how it would
apply throughout the HCPCS Level II code application evaluation
process. Commenters also did not support CMS assessing whether a given
item or service is ``primarily medical in nature'' as a threshold HCPCS
Level II code application evaluation factor.
In addition, we are not finalizing the ``Expanded Classification of
External Infusion Pumps as DME'' proposal because many commenters
believed that the proposed rule was unclear, needed more development,
raised concerns about cost-sharing and cost-shifting to the
beneficiary, and raised safety concerns related to decisions regarding
what drug therapies could safely be administered in a home/non-facility
setting. Several commenters noted the proposed rule could increase
beneficiary costs, and a commenter noted the policy would result in the
use of an infusion pump as the choice of drug administration for
payment purposes even if it was the less optimal method of
administration. A commenter believed that the proposal would result in
the beneficiary paying more for less, in light of the higher out-of-
pocket costs for home administration of infusion drugs, and the home
not being the highest-quality setting for infusion drug administration.
We proposed that an external infusion pump would be considered
``appropriate for use in the home'' if: (1) The Food and Drug
Administration (FDA)-required labeling requires the associated home
infusion drug to be prepared immediately prior to administration or
administered by a health care professional or both; (2) a qualified
home infusion therapy supplier (as defined at Sec. 486.505)
administers the drug or biological in a safe and effective manner in
the patient's home (as defined at Sec. 486.505); and (3) the FDA-
required labeling specifies infusion via an external infusion pump as a
route of administration, at least once per month, for the drug. We
received 31 comments on this proposal from DME and infusion suppliers,
beneficiaries, manufacturers, insurance companies, and trade
associations. Many commenters supported the proposed interpretation of
``appropriate for use in the home'' and the three proposed criteria for
determining when an infusion pump was ``appropriate for use in the
home,'' as well as the fact that if finalized, this proposal would
necessitate updates to the LCD for external infusion pumps to include
additional drugs and biologicals. However serious concerns were raised
about other aspects of the proposed rule. Some commenters stated that
the proposal would be a very narrow policy change that would offer
little in the way of expanded benefits for patients and would create
administrative complexity and uncertainty regarding Medicare coverage.
Some commenters supported the first criterion in our proposed standard
for determining whether an external infusion pump and associated
supplies could be covered under the Medicare Part B benefit for DME.
However, those commenters advocated that CMS remove the requirement
that the FDA-required labeling require the associated home infusion
drug be ``prepared immediately prior to administration.'' They noted
that this requirement is unclear, as most drugs have storage
information which permits use of a drug after mixing. Some commenters
supported the second criterion in our proposed standard, which required
that a qualified home infusion therapy services supplier administer the
drug or biological in a safe and effective manner in the patient's
home.
Commenters opposed the third criterion in our proposed standard,
and recommended that CMS remove the requirement that the FDA-required
labeling specify an external infusion pump as a possible route of
administration. Commenters stated that this requirement was too
restrictive and could limit access to therapies that would otherwise be
clinically appropriate for use in the home. Several commenters pointed
out that not all drugs included in the LCDs for Intravenous Immune
Globulin (policy number L33610) currently have labels that specify
using an external infusion pump as a possible route of administration,
though prescribers most often require these pumps to control the rate
of infusion. Several commenters believed that the proposed rule needed
more development, was unclear about which drugs could be covered under
the Medicare Part B benefit for DME as supplies, and could pose safety
concerns. A commenter noted the home setting is not the ideal
environment for prepping sterile medications for injection or infusion.
This commenter also stressed that the beneficiary may not be aware when
selecting an administration site (home or outpatient) of the large
difference in cost-sharing. Another commenter indicated that CMS should
not be the agency to decide if home infusion was safe and appropriate.
This commenter urged CMS to delay the expansion of the definition of
DME to include additional external infusion pumps until CMS can gather
an exact list of the drugs and biologicals that would be affected by
this policy and determine whether such drugs and biologicals can be
administered in the home safely and effectively under the parameters
CMS proposed. We thank the commenters for their input on the HCPCS and
infusion pump proposals.
III. Durable Medical Equipment, Prosthetics, Orthotics, and Supplies
(DMEPOS) Fee Schedule Adjustments
A. Background
1. DMEPOS Competitive Bidding Program
Section 1847(a) of the Act, as amended by section 302(b)(1) of the
Medicare Prescription Drug, Improvement, and Modernization Act of 2003
(Pub. L. 108-173), mandates the Medicare DMEPOS CBP for contract
[[Page 73864]]
award purposes to furnish certain competitively priced DMEPOS items and
services subject to the CBP:
Off-the-shelf (OTS) orthotics, for which payment would
otherwise be made under section 1834(h) of the Act;
Enteral nutrients, equipment, and supplies described in
section 1842(s)(2)(D) of the Act; and
Certain DME and medical supplies, which are covered items
(as defined in section 1834(a)(13) of the Act) for which payment would
otherwise be made under section 1834(a) of the Act.
Section 1847(a) of the Act requires the Secretary of the Department
of Health and Human Services (the Secretary) to establish and implement
CBPs in competitive bidding areas (CBAs) throughout the U.S. Section
1847(a)(1)(B)(i) of the Act mandates that the programs be phased into
100 of the largest metropolitan statistical areas (MSA) by 2011 and
additional areas after 2011. Thus far, CBAs have been either an MSA or
a part of an MSA. Under the Office of Management and Budget (OMB)
standards for delineating MSAs, MSAs have at least one urbanized area
that has a population of at least 50,000. The MSA comprises the central
county or counties containing the core, plus adjacent outlying counties
having a high degree of social and economic integration with the
central county or counties as measured through commuting.\1\ OMB
updates MSAs regularly and the most recent update can be found in OMB
Bulletin No. 20-01.\2\ The statute allows us to exempt rural areas and
areas with low population density within urban areas that are not
competitive, unless there is a significant national market through mail
order for a particular item or service, from the CBP. We may also
exempt from the CBP items and services for which competitive
acquisition is unlikely to result in significant savings.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ OMB 2010 Standards for Delineating Metropolitan and
Micropolitan Statistical Areas; Notice, June 28, 2010 (75 FR 37252).
\2\ https://www.whitehouse.gov/wp-content/uploads/2020/03/Bulletin-20-01.pdf?#.
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We refer to areas in which the CBP is not or has not been
implemented as non-competitive bidding areas (non-CBAs). We use the
term ``former CBAs'' to refer to the areas that were formerly CBAs
prior to a gap in the CBP, to distinguish those areas from ``non-
CBAs.'' More information on why there was a gap in the CBP from January
1, 2019 through December 31, 2020 can be found in the November 14, 2018
final rule titled ``Medicare Program; End-Stage Renal Disease
Prospective Payment System, Payment for Renal Dialysis Services
Furnished to Individuals With Acute Kidney Injury, End-Stage Renal
Disease Quality Incentive Program, Durable Medical Equipment,
Prosthetics, Orthotics, and Supplies (DMEPOS) Competitive Bidding
Program (CBP) and Fee Schedule Amounts, and Technical Amendments To
Correct Existing Regulations Related to the CBP for Certain DMEPOS,''
(83 FR 56922) (hereinafter ``CY 2019 ESRD PPS DMEPOS final rule'').
Non-CBAs include rural areas, non-rural areas, and non-contiguous
areas. A rural area is defined in 42 CFR 414.202 as a geographic area
represented by a postal ZIP code, if at least 50 percent of the total
geographic area of the area included in the ZIP code is estimated to be
outside any MSA. A rural area also includes a geographic area
represented by a postal ZIP code that is a low population density area
excluded from a CBA in accordance with section 1847(a)(3)(A) of the Act
at the time the rules in Sec. 414.210(g) are applied. Non-contiguous
areas refer to areas outside the contiguous U.S.--that is, areas such
as Alaska, Guam, and Hawaii (81 FR 77936).
2. Payment Methodology for CBAs
In the DMEPOS CBP, suppliers bid for contracts for furnishing
multiple items and services, identified by HCPCS codes, under several
different product categories. In the CY 2019 ESRD PPS DMEPOS final
rule, we made significant changes to how we calculate single payment
amounts (SPAs) under the DMEPOS CBP. Prior to these changes, for
individual items within each product category in each CBA, the median
of the winning bids for each item was used to establish the SPA for
that item in each CBA. As a result of the changes we made in the CY
2019 ESRD PPS DMEPOS final rule, SPAs are calculated for the lead item
in each product category (per Sec. 414.402, the item in a product
category with multiple items with the highest total nationwide Medicare
allowed charges of any item in the product category prior to each
competition) based on the maximum winning bid (the highest of bids
submitted by winning suppliers) in each CBA.
Per Sec. 414.416(b)(3), the SPA for each non-lead item in a
product category (all items other than the lead item) is calculated by
multiplying the SPA for the lead item by the ratio of the average of
the 2015 fee schedule amounts for all areas for the non-lead item to
the average of the 2015 fee schedule amounts for all areas for the lead
item.
For competitively bid items and services furnished in a CBA, the
SPAs replace the Medicare allowed amounts established using the lower
of the supplier's actual charge or the fee schedule payment amount
recognized under sections 1834(a)(2) through (7) of the Act. Section
1847(b)(5) of the Act provides that Medicare payment for competitively
bid items and services is made on an assignment-related basis and is
equal to 80 percent of the applicable SPA, less any unmet Part B
deductible described in section 1833(b) of the Act.
3. Fee Schedule Adjustment Methodology for Non-CBAs
Section 1834(a)(1)(F)(ii) of the Act requires the Secretary to use
information on the payment determined under the Medicare DMEPOS CBP to
adjust the fee schedule amounts for DME items and services furnished in
all non-CBAs on or after January 1, 2016. Section 1834(a)(1)(F)(iii) of
the Act requires the Secretary to continue to make these adjustments as
additional covered items are phased in under the CBP or information is
updated as new CBP contracts are awarded. Similarly, sections
1842(s)(3)(B) and 1834(h)(1)(H)(ii) of the Act authorize the Secretary
to use payment information from the DMEPOS CBP to adjust the fee
schedule amounts for enteral nutrition and OTS orthotics, respectively,
furnished in all non-CBAs. Section 1834(a)(1)(G) of the Act requires
the Secretary to specify the methodology to be used in making these fee
schedule adjustments by regulation, and to consider, among other
factors, the costs of items and services in non-CBAs (where the
adjustments would be applied) compared to the payment rates for such
items and services in the CBAs.
In accordance with the requirements of section 1834(a)(1)(G) of the
Act, we conducted notice-and-comment rulemaking in 2014 to specify
methodologies for adjusting the fee schedule amounts for DME, enteral
nutrition, and OTS orthotics in non-CBAs in 42 CFR 414.210(g). We will
provide a summary of these methodologies, but also refer readers to the
July 11, 2014 proposed rule titled ``Medicare Program; End-Stage Renal
Disease Prospective Payment System, Quality Incentive Program, and
Durable Medical Equipment, Prosthetics, Orthotics, and Supplies,'' (79
FR 40208) (hereinafter ``CY 2015 ESRD PPS DMEPOS proposed rule''), and
the November 6, 2014 final rule titled ``Medicare Program; End-Stage
Renal Disease Prospective Payment System, Quality Incentive Program,
and Durable
[[Page 73865]]
Medical Equipment, Prosthetics, Orthotics, and Supplies,'' (79 FR
66120) (hereinafter ``CY 2015 ESRD PPS DMEPOS final rule'') for
additional details.
The methodologies set forth in Sec. 414.210(g) account for
regional variations in prices, including for rural and non-contiguous
areas of the U.S. In accordance with Sec. 414.210(g)(1), we determine
regional adjustments to fee schedule amounts for each State in the
contiguous U.S. and the District of Columbia, based on the definition
of region in Sec. 414.202, which refers to geographic areas defined by
the Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) in the Department of Commerce for
economic analysis purposes (79 FR 66226). Under Sec. 414.210(g)(1)(i)
through (iv), adjusted fee schedule amounts for areas within the
contiguous U.S. are determined based on regional prices limited by a
national ceiling of 110 percent of the regional average price and a
floor of 90 percent of the regional average price (79 FR 66225). Under
Sec. 414.210(g)(1)(v), adjusted fee schedule amounts for rural areas
are based on 110 percent of the national average of regional prices.
Under Sec. 414.210(g)(2), fee schedule amounts for non-contiguous
areas are adjusted based on the higher of the average of the SPAs for
CBAs in non-contiguous areas in the U.S., or the national ceiling
amount.
For items and services that have been included in no more than 10
CBPs, Sec. 414.210(g)(3) specifies adjustments based on 110 percent of
the average of the SPAs. In cases where the SPAs from DMEPOS CBPs that
are no longer in effect are used to adjust fee schedule amounts, Sec.
414.210(g)(4) requires that the SPAs be updated by an inflation
adjustment factor on an annual basis based on the Consumer Price Index
for all Urban Consumers update factors from the mid-point of the last
year the SPAs were in effect to the month ending 6 months prior to the
date the initial payment adjustments would go into effect.
Under Sec. 414.210(g)(5), in situations where a HCPCS code that
describes an item used with different types of base equipment is
included in more than one product category in a CBA, a weighted average
of the SPAs for the code is computed for each CBA prior to applying the
other payment adjustment methodologies in Sec. 414.210(g). Under Sec.
414.210(g)(6), we will adjust the SPAs for certain items prior to using
those SPAs to adjust fee schedule amounts for items and services if
price inversions have occurred under the DMEPOS CBP. Price inversions
occur when one item in a grouping of items in a product category
includes a feature that another similar item in the product category
does not, and the average of the 2015 fee schedule amounts for the item
with the feature is higher than the average of the 2015 schedule
amounts for the item without the feature, but following a CBP
competition, the SPA for the item with the feature is lower than the
SPA for the item without the feature. For groupings of similar items
where price inversions have occurred, the SPAs for the items in the
grouping are adjusted to equal the weighted average of the SPAs for the
items in the grouping.\3\
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\3\ For further discussion regarding adjustments to SPAs to
address price inversions, we refer readers to the CY 2017 ESRD PPS
DMEPOS final rule, titled Medicare Program; End-Stage Renal Disease
Prospective Payment System, Coverage and Payment for Renal Dialysis
Services Furnished to Individuals With Acute Kidney Injury, End-
Stage Renal Disease Quality Incentive Program, Durable Medical
Equipment, Prosthetics, Orthotics, and Supplies Competitive Bidding
Program Bid Surety Bonds, State Licensure and Appeals Process for
Breach of Contract Actions, Durable Medical Equipment, Prosthetics,
Orthotics, and Supplies Competitive Bidding Program and Fee Schedule
Adjustments, Access to Care Issues for Durable Medical Equipment;
and the Comprehensive End-Stage Renal Disease Care Model, 81 FR
77937 (November 4, 2016).
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In Sec. 414.210(g)(8), the adjusted fee schedule amounts are
revised each time a SPA for an item or service is updated following one
or more new DMEPOS CBP competitions and as other items are added to the
DMEPOS CBP. The fee schedule amounts that are adjusted using SPAs are
not subject to the annual DMEPOS covered item update and are only
updated when SPAs from the DMEPOS CBP are updated or, in accordance
with Sec. 414.210(g)(10), when there are temporary gaps in the DMEPOS
CBP. Updates to the SPAs may occur as contracts are recompeted. In the
CY 2015 ESRD PPS DMEPOS final rule, we established Sec. 414.210(g)(9)
to provide for a transitional phase-in period of the DMEPOS fee
schedule adjustments. We established a 6-month transition period for
blended rates from January 1 through June 30, 2016 (79 FR 66228 through
66229). In establishing a transition period, we agreed with commenters
that phasing in the adjustments to the fee schedule amounts would allow
time for suppliers to adjust to the new payment rates, and further
noted that we would monitor the impact of the change in payment rates
on access to items and services and health outcomes using real time
claims data and analysis (79 FR 66228). Under Sec. 414.210(g)(9)(i),
we specified that the fee schedule adjustments for items and services
furnished between January 1, 2016 through June 30, 2016 would be based
on a blend of 50 percent of the unadjusted fee schedule amount and 50
percent of the adjusted fee schedule amount. Under Sec.
414.210(g)(9)(ii), we specified that for items and services furnished
with dates of service on or after July 1, 2016, the fee schedule
amounts would be fully adjusted in accordance with the rules specified
in Sec. 414.210(g)(1) through Sec. 414.210(g)(8).
4. 21st Century Cures Act
Section 16007(a) of the Cures Act was enacted on December 13, 2016,
and extended the transition period for the phase-in of fee schedule
adjustments at Sec. 414.210(g)(9)(i) by an additional 6 months from
July 1, 2016 through December 31, 2016. In the May 2018 IFC, we amended
Sec. 414.210(g)(9)(i) to implement the 6-month extension to the
initial transition period, as mandated by section 16007(a) of the Cures
Act. Accordingly, the fee schedule amounts were based on blended rates
until December 31, 2016, with full implementation of the fee schedule
adjustments applying to items and services furnished with dates of
service on or after January 1, 2017 (83 FR 21915). Section 16008 of the
Cures Act amended section 1834(a)(1)(G) of the Act to require that the
Secretary take into account certain factors when making any fee
schedule adjustments under sections 1834(a)(1)(F)(ii) or (iii),
1834(h)(i)(H)(ii), or 1842(s)(3)(B) of the Act for items and services
furnished on or after January 1, 2019. Specifically, the Secretary was
required to take into account: (1) Stakeholder input solicited
regarding adjustments to fee schedule amounts using information from
the DMEPOS CBP; (2) the highest bid by a winning supplier in a CBA; and
(3) a comparison of each of the following factors with respect to non-
CBAs and CBAs: The average travel distance and cost associated with
furnishing items and services in the area, the average volume of items
and services furnished by suppliers in the area, and the number of
suppliers in the area.
5. Extension of DMEPOS Fee Schedule Transition Period & Revised
Methodology
In the May 2018 IFC (83 FR 21918), we expressed an immediate need
to resume the transitional, blended fee schedule amounts in rural and
non-contiguous areas, noting strong stakeholder concerns about the
continued viability of many DMEPOS suppliers, our finding of a decrease
in the number of suppliers furnishing items and services subject to the
fee schedule adjustments, as well as the Cures Act mandate to consider
additional information material to
[[Page 73866]]
setting fee schedule adjustments based on information from the DMEPOS
CBP for items and services furnished on or after January 1, 2019. We
explained that resuming these transitional blended rates would preserve
beneficiary access to needed DME items and services in a contracting
supplier marketplace, while also allowing us time to address the
adequacy of the fee schedule adjustment methodology, as required by
section 16008 of the Cures Act. As a result, we amended Sec.
414.210(g)(9) by adding Sec. 414.210(g)(9)(iii) to resume the fee
schedule adjustment transition rates for items and services furnished
in rural and non-contiguous areas from June 1, 2018 through December
31, 2018. We explained that resuming these transitional blended rates
would allow additional time for suppliers serving rural and non-
contiguous areas to adjust their businesses, prevent suppliers that
beneficiaries may rely on for access to items and services in rural and
non-contiguous areas from exiting the business, and allow additional
time for us to monitor the impact of the blended rates. We also amended
Sec. 414.210(g)(9)(ii) to reflect that for items and services
furnished with dates of service from January 1, 2017 to May 31, 2018,
fully adjusted fee schedule amounts would apply (83 FR 21922). In
addition, we added Sec. 414.210(g)(9)(iv) to specify that fully
adjusted fee schedule amounts would apply for items furnished in non-
CBAs other than rural and non-contiguous areas from June 1, 2018
through December 31, 2018 (83 FR 21920). We explained that we would use
the extended transition period to further analyze our findings and
consider the information required by section 16008 of the Cures Act in
determining whether changes to the methodology for adjusting fee
schedule amounts for items furnished on or after January 1, 2019 are
necessary (83 FR 21918 through 21919).
In the CY 2019 ESRD PPS DMEPOS final rule, we finalized changes to
bidding and pricing methodologies under the DMEPOS CBP for future
competitions (83 FR 57020 through 57025). Specifically, we finalized
lead item pricing for all product categories under the DMEPOS CBP,
which would use the bid for the lead item to establish the SPAs for
both the lead item and all other items in the product category (the
non-lead items). We explained that this change would reduce the burden
on suppliers since they would no longer have to submit bids on numerous
items in a product category. We also finalized changes to the
methodology for calculating SPAs under the DMEPOS CBP based on lead
item pricing using maximum winning bids for lead items in each product
category. We finalized revisions to Sec. Sec. 414.414 and 414.416 to
reflect our changes to the bidding and pricing methodologies, and
revised the definitions of bid, composite bid, and lead item in Sec.
414.402. We expected that these changes would have a minimal effect on
savings under the DMEPOS CBP. However, during Round 2021 of the DMEPOS
CBP, we observed numerous occurrences where capacity, demand, and
projected savings, in concert with our policies, were incomparable to
previous rounds of competition.
Also, in the CY 2019 ESRD PPS DMEPOS final rule, we established fee
schedule adjustment transition rules for items and services furnished
from January 1, 2019 through December 31, 2020. We decided to make
these fee schedule adjustment transition rules effective for a 2-year
period only, for two reasons. First, we believed that we must proceed
cautiously when adjusting fee schedules in the short term in an effort
to protect access to items, while we continued to monitor health
outcomes, assignment rates, and other information (83 FR 57029).
Second, as part of the final rule, we made significant changes to the
way bids are submitted and SPAs are calculated under the CBP. We stated
in the final rule these changes could warrant further changes to the
fee schedule adjustment methodologies in the future (83 FR 57030).
Consistent with the requirements of section 16008 of the Cures Act,
we set forth our analysis and consideration of stakeholder input
solicited on adjustments to fee schedule amounts using information from
the DMEPOS CBP, the highest bid by a winning supplier in a CBA, and a
comparison of the various factors with respect to non-CBAs and CBAs. We
noted stakeholder concerns that the adjusted payment amounts
constrained suppliers from furnishing items and services to rural
areas, and their request for an increase to the adjusted payment
amounts for these areas (83 FR 57025). In reviewing highest winning
bids, we found no pattern indicating that maximum bids were higher for
areas with lower volume than for areas with higher volume (83 FR
57026). In our consideration of the Cures Act factors with respect to
non-CBAs and CBAs, we found higher costs for non-contiguous areas, an
increased average travel distance in certain rural areas, a
significantly lower average volume per supplier in non-CBAs, especially
in rural and non-contiguous areas, and a decrease in the number of non-
CBA supplier locations. Based on our consideration of the foregoing, we
expressed our belief that the fee schedule amounts for items and
services furnished from January 1, 2019 through December 31, 2020, in
all rural or non-contiguous areas should be based on a blend of 50
percent of the adjusted fee schedule amounts and 50 percent of the
unadjusted fee schedule amounts in accordance with the current
methodologies under paragraphs (1) through (8) of Sec. 414.210(g) (83
FR 57029).
We also expressed our belief that the fee schedule amounts for
items and services furnished from January 1, 2019 through December 31,
2020, in all areas that are non-CBAs, but are not rural or non-
contiguous areas, should be based on 100 percent of the adjusted fee
schedule amounts in accordance with the current methodologies under
paragraphs (1) through (8) of Sec. 414.210(g) (83 FR 57029). We
finalized amendments to the transition rules at Sec. 414.210(g)(9) to
reflect these fee schedule adjustment methodologies for items and
services furnished from January 1, 2019 through December 31, 2020 (83
FR 57039; 83 FR 57070 through 57071).
6. The Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act
The Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security (CARES) Act
(Pub. L. 116-136) was enacted on March 27, 2020. Section 3712 of the
CARES Act specifies the payment rates for certain DME and enteral
nutrients, supplies, and equipment furnished in non-CBAs through the
duration of the emergency period described in section 1135(g)(1)(B) of
the Act. Section 3712(a) of the CARES Act continues our policy of
paying the 50/50 blended rates for items furnished in rural and non-
contiguous non-CBAs through December 31, 2020, or through the duration
of the emergency period, if longer. Section 3712(b) of the CARES Act
increased the payment rates for DME and enteral nutrients, supplies,
and equipment furnished in areas other than rural and non-contiguous
non-CBAs through the duration of the emergency period. Beginning March
6, 2020, the payment rates for DME and enteral nutrients, supplies, and
equipment furnished in these areas are based on 75 percent of the
adjusted fee schedule amount and 25 percent of the historic, unadjusted
fee schedule amount, which results in higher payment rates as compared
to the full fee schedule adjustments that were previously required
under Sec. 414.210(g)(9)(iv). We made changes to
[[Page 73867]]
the regulation text at Sec. 414.210(g)(9), consistent with section
3712 of the CARES Act, in an IFC that we published in the May 8, 2020
Federal Register titled ``Medicare and Medicaid Programs; Additional
Policy and Regulatory Revisions in Response to the COVID-19 Public
Health Emergency.''
B. Current Issues
In the proposed rule (85 FR 70364), we proposed to establish fee
schedule adjustment methodologies for items and services furnished in
non-CBAs on or after April 1, 2021, or the date immediately following
the duration of the emergency period described in section 1135(g)(1)(B)
of the Act (42 U.S.C. 1320b-5(g)(1)(B)), whichever is later. In the
proposed rule (85 FR 70364), we stated that though the transition rules
under 42 CFR 414.210(g)(9)(iii) and 414.210(g)(9)(v) expired on
December 31, 2020, we believe that the rest of the current fee schedule
adjustment rules at Sec. 414.210(g) would continue to be in effect
should the emergency period described in section 1135(g)(1)(B) of the
Act (42 U.S.C. 1320b-5(g)(1)(B) (PHE) expire after January 1, 2021, and
before April 1, 2021. At the time, we presumed that the PHE would
expire in early 2021, and that we would finalize the proposed rule
around that time. Now that April 1, 2021 has passed, but the PHE is
still ongoing, and the proposed rule has yet to be finalized, we are
making a technical edit to reflect the new effective date for this
final rule. Consistent with our proposal, in the event that the
emergency period described in section 1135(g)(1)(B) of the Act (42
U.S.C. 1320b-5(g)(1)(B)) expires before the effective date specified in
the DATES section of this final rule (rather than April 1, 2021), the
current fee schedule adjustment rules at Sec. 414.210(g)(1) through
(8) would be used to adjust fee schedule amounts for items and services
furnished in non-CBAs and the current fee schedule adjustment rule at
Sec. 414.210(g)(10) would be used to adjust fee schedule amounts for
items and services furnished in CBAs or former CBAs until the final
rule takes effect on the effective date specified in the DATES section
of this final rule.
1. Section 16008 of the Cures Act Analysis
Section 1834(a)(1)(G) of the Act requires CMS to specify by
regulation the methodology to be used in adjusting DMEPOS fee schedule
amounts based on information from the DMEPOS CBP. Section 16008 of the
Cures Act amended section 1834(a)(1)(G) to specifically require that
CMS take into account a number of factors in making any fee schedule
adjustments for items and services furnished on or after January 1,
2019, including: (1) Stakeholder input we have solicited on adjustments
to fee schedule amounts using information from the DMEPOS CBP; (2) the
highest bid by a winning supplier in a CBA; and (3) a comparison of the
factors outlined in section 16008 of the Cures Act with respect to non-
CBAs and CBAs. Our analysis of the Cures Act factors focuses on the
effect we believe increased payment levels have had in rural and non-
contiguous non-CBAs, and the effect we believe fully adjusted fees have
had in non-rural contiguous non-CBAs. We also provide our analysis of
other metrics we believe are important in measuring the impacts of our
payment policies.
a. Stakeholder Input Gathered in Accordancew With Section 16008 of the
Cures Act
Section 16008 of the Cures Act requires us to solicit and take into
account stakeholder input in making fee schedule adjustments based on
information from the DMEPOS CBP for items and services furnished on or
after January 1, 2019. On March 23, 2017, we hosted a national provider
call to solicit stakeholder input regarding adjustments to fee schedule
amounts using DMEPOS CBP information (83 FR 57025 through 57026). More
than 330 participants called in, with 23 participants providing verbal
comments during the call. We also received 125 written comments from
stakeholders in response to our request for written comments. Our
announcement of this call, a copy of our presentation, the audio
recording of the call, and its transcript can be found at the following
link on the CMS website.\4\
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\4\ https://www.cms.gov/Outreach-and-Education/Outreach/NPC/National-Provider-Calls-and-Events-Items/2017-03-23-DMEPOS.
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In general, the commenters were mostly suppliers located in MSAs,
but also included manufacturers, trade organizations, and healthcare
providers such as physical and occupational therapists. For additional
details about the national provider call and a summary of oral and
written comments received, we refer readers to the CY 2019 ESRD PPS/
DMEPOS proposed rule (83 FR 57026). For a summary of public comments
received on the CY 2019 ESRD PPS DMEPOS proposed rule and our
responses, we refer readers to the CY 2019 ESRD PPS DMEPOS final rule
(83 FR 57030 through 57036).
While the stakeholder input from 2017 did not quantify the degree
to which costs of furnishing items in CBAs versus rural areas or any
other non-CBAs, the comments we received in response to our 2014
proposed rule (79 FR 40208) indicated that the adjusted fee schedule
amounts for rural areas should be equal to 120 to 150 percent of the
average of the regional single payment amounts (RSPAs) rather than 110
percent of the average of the RSPAs. In addition, a 2015 industry
survey of suppliers of respiratory equipment indicated that the cost of
furnishing respiratory equipment in ``super rural'' areas is 17 percent
higher than the cost of furnishing respiratory equipment in CBAs.\5\
The term ``super rural'' refers to areas identified as ``qualified
rural areas'' under the ambulance fee schedule statute at section
1834(l)(12)(B) of the Act (as implemented at 42 CFR 414.610(c)(5)(ii)).
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\5\ https://www.cqrc.org/img/CQRCCostSurveyWhitePaperMay2015Final.pdf.
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For the purposes of the fee schedule for ambulance services, rural
areas are defined at 42 CFR 414.605 as areas located outside an urban
area (MSA), or a rural census tract within an MSA as determined under
the most recent version of the Goldsmith modification as determined by
the Federal Office of Rural Health Policy at the Health Resources and
Services Administration (HRSA). The most recent version of the
Goldsmith Modification are the Rural-Urban Commuting Area (RUCA) codes,
which are a method of determining rurality.\6\ Under 42 CFR
414.610(c)(5)(ii), for ground ambulance services furnished during the
period July 1, 2004 through December 31, 2022, the payment amount for
the ground ambulance base rate is increased by 22.6 percent where the
point of pickup is in a rural area determined to be in the lowest 25
percent of rural population arrayed by population density. We refer to
this as the ``super rural'' bonus, and the areas that receive this
super rural bonus as ``super rural'' areas.\7\ For purposes of payment
under the Medicare ambulance fee schedule, a ``super rural'' area is
thus a rural area determined to be in the lowest 25 percent of rural
population arrayed by population density. DMEPOS industry stakeholders
have recommended that this differential in payment between super rural
areas and MSAs may be adopted in the DMEPOS fee schedule payment
context as well.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\6\ https://www.hrsa.gov/rural-health/about-us/definition/.
\7\ https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/AmbulanceFeeSchedule/afspuf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 73868]]
In general, we continue to receive feedback from industry
stakeholders expressing their belief that the fully adjusted fee
schedule amounts are too low and would have an adverse impact on
beneficiary access to items and services furnished in rural areas if
they are resumed in these areas. Industry stakeholders have also stated
that the fully adjusted fee schedule amounts are insufficient to cover
the supplier's costs, particularly for delivering items in rural areas.
We indicated in the November 2020 proposed rule that we have been
closely monitoring beneficiary health outcomes and access to DMEPOS
items. We stated that there has been no decline in allowed services for
items subject to the fee schedule adjustments at any point in time,
including 2017 and the first half of 2018 when payment in rural and
non-contiguous areas was based on the fully adjusted fee schedule
amounts. Traditional Medicare or fee-or-service allowed services for
items subject to the fee schedule adjustments rose from 24,882,018 in
2015 to 25,604,836 in 2016, 26,065,601 in 2017, and 26,481,002 in 2018.
This increase in allowed services occurred even though beneficiary fee-
for-service enrollment dropped by 0.6 percent from 33.7 million in 2016
to 33.5 million in 2018 while Medicare Advantage beneficiary enrollment
rose by 16.0 percent from 18.4 million in 2016 to 21.3 million in 2018.
During this time, suppliers accepted assignment (Medicare payment in
full) for most items and services (99.79 percent in 2017 and 99.81
percent in 2018). This rate of assignment remained extremely high
(99.68 percent in 2017 and 99.70 percent in 2018) even after removing
claims for Medicare participating suppliers and suppliers furnishing
items to beneficiaries with dual (Medicare and Medicaid) eligibility,
where assignment is mandatory. In addition, we stated that we continue
to monitor over one thousand health metrics (emergency room visits,
physician office visits, nursing home and hospital admissions, length
of need, deaths, etc.) and have not detected any negative impact of the
fee schedule adjustments on health outcomes. When analyzing the 2015
monthly average health outcome rates for beneficiaries in non-CBAs,
which was the last year we did not make any fee schedule adjustments in
non-CBAs, we noted reductions in both 2017 and 2018 in mortality rates,
hospitalization rates, physician visits, SNF admissions, and monthly
days in the hospital. The percentage of beneficiaries with emergency
room visits increased from 3.6 to 3.9 percent and monthly days in
nursing homes remained unchanged. Finally, we noted that beneficiary
inquiries and complaints related to DMEPOS items and services have
steadily declined since 2016 and have not increased.
b. Highest Winning Bids in CBAs Analysis
Section 16008 of the Cures Act requires us to take into account the
highest amount bid by a winning supplier in a CBA when making fee
schedule adjustments based on information from the DMEPOS CBP for items
and services furnished on or after January 1, 2019. As discussed
earlier, in the CY 2019 ESRD PPS DMEPOS final rule (83 FR 57026), we
found no pattern indicating that maximum bids are higher for areas with
lower volume than for areas with higher volume. For additional details,
we refer readers to the CY 2019 ESRD PPS DMEPOS proposed rule (83 FR
34360 through 34367). Additionally, for Round 2021 of the DMEPOS CBP,
SPAs were calculated for the lead item in each product category based
on the maximum winning bid, and therefore the maximum winning bid is
taken into account when making fee schedule adjustments based on
information from the CBP for items and services included in Round 2021
and furnished on or after January 1, 2019.
c. Travel Distance Analysis
Section 16008 of the Cures Act also requires us to take into
account a comparison of the average travel distance and costs
associated with furnishing items and services in CBAs and non-CBAs. In
the CY 2019 ESRD PPS DMEPOS proposed rule (83 FR 34367 through 34371),
we compared the average size of different non-CBAs nationally and found
that the CBAs had much larger service areas than the non-CBAs. We also
compared the average travel distances for suppliers in the different
areas using claims data for items and services subject to the fee
schedule adjustments. From our analysis, we found that the average
distance traveled in CBAs was generally greater than in most non-CBAs.
However, in reviewing certain non-CBAs, such as Frontier and Remote
(FAR) areas,\8\ Outside Core Based Statistical Areas (OCBSAs),\9\ and
super rural areas,\10\ we found that suppliers generally must travel
farther distances to beneficiaries located in those areas than for
beneficiaries located in CBAs and other non-CBAs. For additional
details on our previous travel distance analysis, we refer readers to
the CY 2019 ESRD PPS DMEPOS proposed rule (83 FR 34367 through 34371).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\8\ A Frontier and Remote (FAR) area is statistically delineated
by the Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA) based on
remoteness and population sparseness. HRSA Methodology for
Designation of Frontier and Remote Areas, 79 FR 25599 through 25603
(May 5, 2014).
\9\ Outside Core Based Statistical Areas are delineated by OMB
as counties that do not qualify for inclusion in a Core Based
Statistical Area. OMB 2010 Standards for Delineating Metropolitan
and Micropolitan Statistical Areas; Notice, 75 FR 37245 (June 28,
2010).
\10\ Under the Ambulance Fee schedule (AFS), temporary add-on
payments known as the ``super rural bonus'' are available in
relation to areas that are within the lowest 25 percentile of all
rural areas arrayed by population density. 42 CFR 414.610(c)(5)(ii).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In the November 2020 proposed rule, we updated some of the travel
distance data used in our previous travel distance analysis with data
from 2018, which at the time was the most recent full year of CBP data.
As of January 1, 2021, Round 2021 of the CBP is underway and there are
currently contract suppliers furnishing OTS back and knee braces in
CBAs. We did not award competitive bidding contracts to suppliers for
any of the other product categories that were bid during Round 2021 of
the CBP because the SPAs (calculated based on bids) did not achieve
expected savings.\11\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\11\ https://www.cms.gov/files/document/round-2021-dmepos-cbp-single-payment-amts-fact-sheet.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As we indicated in the CY 2019 ESRD DMEPOS final rule (83 FR
57027), we looked at hospital beds and oxygen and oxygen equipment, as
they are items that are most likely to be delivered locally by
suppliers using company vehicles, as well as all items subject to the
fee schedule adjustments. The last time these items were included in
the CBP was in 2018, and so we believe this 2018 data is still relevant
for the purposes of this analysis.
In reviewing the data from 2018, we found that the same trends we
presented in the CY 2019 ESRD PPS DMEPOS proposed rule, which were
based on 2016 data, apply. Similar to our previous travel distance
analysis, to prevent the data from being skewed in certain ways, we
only included claims where the supplier billing address is in the same
or adjoining State as the beneficiary address, and we excluded claims
from suppliers with multiple locations that always use the same billing
address. These data restrictions left in place 96 percent of allowed
claims lines when looking at hospital beds, 97 percent when looking at
[[Page 73869]]
oxygen, and 92 percent when looking at all items.
Table 1--2018 Average Number of Miles Between Supplier and Beneficiary *
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Beneficiary area Hospital beds Oxygen All items
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
CBAs............................................................ 28 23 30
Non-CBA MSAs.................................................... 24 22 28
Non-CBA Micro Areas............................................. 22 22 27
Non-CBA OCBSA................................................... 28 31 37
Super Rural..................................................... 37 37 42
FAR level 1..................................................... 27 31 36
FAR level 3..................................................... 40 41 47
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
* Includes claims where the supplier billing address is in the same or adjoining state as the beneficiary
address, excluding claims from suppliers with multiple locations that always use the same billing address.
We also reviewed in the November 2020 proposed rule travel distance
data updated by partial 2019 data spanning January through November
2019 (85 FR 70366). Average travel distances in former CBAs decreased,
while average travel distances in rural and non-rural non-CBAs
increased. Section 16008 of the Cures Act requires a comparison of
average travel distance with respect to non-CBAs and CBAs. At the time
of the November 2020 proposed rule, there were no CBAs due to the gap
period in the DMEPOS CBP, allowing any Medicare-enrolled DMEPOS
suppliers to furnish DMEPOS items and services. In the November 2020
proposed rule, we still reviewed data from former CBAs, as we believed
the decrease in average travel distance in the former CBAs was
additional confirmation that travel distances are generally greater in
CBAs while a CBP is in effect, when compared to non-CBAs. We stated
that average supplier travel distances in the former CBAs decreased for
a variety of reasons. For one, CBP contract suppliers must furnish
items and services to any beneficiary located in a CBA. During a gap
period in the CBP, any supplier may furnish items and services to a
beneficiary located in a former CBA and suppliers are no longer
obligated to service a beneficiary who may be farther away from the
supplier. Additionally, more suppliers can now furnish items and
services to beneficiaries, so a beneficiary could also receive items
and services furnished by a supplier located closer to the beneficiary.
Section 16008 of the Cures Act requires us to take into account a
comparison of the average travel distance and costs associated with
furnishing items and services in CBAs and non-CBAs. As a result, we
believe a payment methodology should account for this factor, and the
increased costs suppliers may face in reaching certain non-CBAs. When
we say certain non-CBAs, we are referring to non-CBAs classified as
either super rural, FAR, or OCBSA. This is because although we found
that the average travel distance for suppliers in non-CBAs is generally
lower than the average travel distance and costs for suppliers in CBAs
while the CBP was in effect, we found that suppliers generally must
travel farther distances to beneficiaries located in non-CBAs that are
super rural, FAR or OCBSA than for beneficiaries located in CBAs and
other non-CBAs. Still, industry stakeholders have expressed their
belief that the fully adjusted fee schedule amounts are too low and
have an adverse impact on beneficiary access to items and services
furnished in rural non-CBAs. We have not seen evidence of this, but
because stakeholder input is another factor in section 16008 of the
Cures Act, we are also factoring stakeholder input into our payment
methodology, and therefore believe a payment methodology should result
in higher payments for DMEPOS suppliers that furnish items and services
to all rural areas, instead of just those areas with greater travel
distance than CBAs. We believe this errs on the side of caution and may
incentivize suppliers to furnish items and services to all rural areas.
d. Cost Analysis
We presented our analysis of different sources of cost data in the
CY 2019 ESRD PPS DMEPOS proposed rule (83 FR 34371 through 34377).
Overall, in comparing CBAs to non-CBAs, we found that CBAs tended to
have the highest costs out of the cost data we examined. For certain
cost data, we also found that Alaska and Hawaii--both non-contiguous
areas--tended to have higher costs than many contiguous areas of the
U.S. We stated in the November 2020 proposed rule that we updated this
analysis with more recent data and did not notice any significant
differences in these overall findings.
We believe these findings support a payment methodology that
considers such increased costs in non-contiguous areas.
We also noted in the November 2020 proposed rule that we consider
assignment rates as a source of cost data and consider it a measure of
the sufficiency of payment to cover a supplier's costs for furnishing
items and services under the Medicare program (85 FR 70366). Assignment
rates for items subject to the fee schedule adjustments have not varied
significantly around the country, and they have consistently remained
over 99 percent in all areas. Thus, for the overwhelming majority of
claims for items and services furnished in the non-CBAs that were
subject to the fee schedule adjustments, suppliers have decided to
accept the Medicare payment amount in full, and have not needed to
charge the beneficiary for any additional costs that the Medicare
allowed payment amount did not cover. Of note, for the 17 months from
January 2017 through May 2018 when Medicare paid at the fully adjusted
fee level in all areas, or about 40 percent below the un-adjusted fee
schedule amounts on average, the assignment rate did not dip below 99
percent for the items and services subject to the adjusted fee schedule
amounts.
e. Average Volume of Items and Services Furnished by Suppliers in the
Area Analysis
Section 16008 of the Cures Act requires that we take into account a
comparison of the average volume of items and services furnished by
suppliers in CBAs and non-CBAs. In the CY 2019 ESRD PPS DMEPOS proposed
rule (83 FR 34377), we found that in virtually all cases, the average
volume of items and services furnished by suppliers is higher in CBAs
than non-CBAs. In the November 2020 proposed rule we reviewed updated
data from 2018, and found that in most cases, the average volume of
items and services furnished by suppliers was higher in
[[Page 73870]]
CBAs than in non-CBAs (85 FR 70367). We reviewed the number of allowed
claim lines on a national level for 15 different product categories
subject to the fee schedule adjustments. In doing so, we found that
non-CBAs had more allowed claim lines than CBAs for 4 of the 15 product
categories that we reviewed (nebulizer, oxygen, seat lifts, and
transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation (TENS) devices). Rural non-
CBAs had more allowed claim lines than CBAs for 2 of the 15 product
categories that we reviewed (seat lifts and TENS). Finally, non-rural
non-CBAs had more allowed claims lines than CBAs for those same two
product categories (seat lifts and TENS).
Additionally, total services per supplier continued to increase in
2018 and 2019 in all non-CBAs. Thus, we found that the average volume
per supplier in non-CBAs continues to increase while assignment rates
are 99 percent or higher, and overall utilization remains steady or is
increasing. We believe these findings support a payment methodology
that takes into account and ensures beneficiary access to items and
services in non-CBAs with relatively low volume.
f. Number of Suppliers Analysis
Section 16008 of the Cures Act requires us to take into account a
comparison of the number of suppliers in the area.
The number of suppliers billing Medicare Fee-for-Service (FFS) for
items subject to fee schedule adjustments in all non-CBAs declined from
June 2018 through the end of 2019, which is the time period in which we
paid the fully adjusted fees in non-rural, contiguous non-CBAs and the
blended rates in rural and non-contiguous non-CBAs, in accordance with
42 CFR 414.210(g)(9)(iii) and (iv). More specifics about this decline
can be found in Table 2. We note that the decline in the number of
billing suppliers is part of a long-term trend that preceded the
adjustment of the fee schedule amounts beginning in 2016, but we are
still concerned about this trend, particularly for rural and non-
contiguous areas, because beneficiaries could have trouble accessing
items and services in these lower population areas if more suppliers
decide to stop serving these areas.
In the November 2020 proposed rule we studied supplier numbers and
found that when looking at a sample of HCPCS codes for high volume
items subject to fee schedule adjustments (E1390 for oxygen
concentrators, E0601 for CPAP machines, E0260 for semi-electric
hospital beds, and B4035 for enteral nutrition supplies), that the
average volume of items furnished by suppliers before they stopped
billing Medicare is very small compared to the average volume of items
furnished by suppliers who continued to bill (85 FR 70367). Data showed
that large national chain suppliers were accepting a large percentage
of the beneficiaries who were previously served by the smaller
suppliers that exited the Medicare market. In addition, the average
volume per supplier continues to increase (as the number of suppliers
who bill Medicare has declined in recent years, the suppliers that
still bill Medicare are picking up more volume), while overall services
continue to grow, suggesting industry consolidation rather than any
type of access issue for DME. Therefore, the decline in the number of
supplier locations may be largely a result of the same degree of
consolidation of suppliers furnishing items subject to the fee schedule
adjustments rather than a decline in beneficiary access to items
subject to the fee schedule adjustments. In addition, this trend in
consolidation is matched by an increase in the average volume of items
furnished per supplier, increasing economies of scale for these
suppliers, although this does decrease the number of overall suppliers'
beneficiaries can choose from to provide DMEPOS items. We do note that
the number of enrolled DMEPOS suppliers did increase by 2 percent from
86,061 in 2019 to 87,800 in 2020, the highest total since 2016 when the
total number of enrolled DMEPOS suppliers was 88,786. There are
therefore still many DMEPOS supplier locations throughout the country
furnishing DMEPOS items and services.
However, to determine what effect, if any, our payment amounts have
had on the number of billing suppliers, in the November 2020 proposed
rule, we also examined supplier numbers during defined timeframes in
which we paid suppliers the unadjusted and adjusted fees, and the 50/50
blended rates (50 percent unadjusted and 50 percent adjusted) (85 FR
70367). The declines in the number of billing suppliers in both rural
and non-rural non-CBAs were very similar, even when we increased
payment levels to the blended rates in rural and non-contiguous non-
CBAs, and continued paying the fully adjusted fees in non-rural/
contiguous non-CBAs. We did not see an appreciable difference in
supplier reductions between the two areas. We noted that non-contiguous
non-CBAs exhibited a slightly different trend than other non-CBAs, as
the number of billing suppliers in these areas increased from 2015 to
2016 when we paid the unadjusted fees, and January 2017 to May 2018
when we paid the fully adjusted fees, but subsequently declined between
June 2018 to November 2019 when we paid the blended rates.
For this analysis, we reviewed the following timeframes and noted
the payment policies in effect at that time:
Period 1: January 2015-December 2015: Unadjusted fees in
all non-CBAs.
Period 2: January 2016-December 2016: Blended rates in all
non-CBAs (as noted previously, Congress passed section 16007 of the
Cures Act on December 13, 2016, which made the blended rates effective
retroactively in all non-CBAs from June 30 through December 31, 2016).
Period 3: January 2017-May 2018: Fully adjusted fees in
all non-CBAs.
Period 4: June 2018-November 2019: Blended rates in rural
and non-contiguous non-CBAs, fully adjusted fees in non-rural non-CBAs
in the contiguous U.S.
Table 2--Number of Suppliers Who Billed for DME Subject to the Fee Schedule Adjustments
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Non-CBA non- Non-CBA Non-CBA non-
Period CBA % Change rural % Change rural % Change contiguous % Change
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Jan 2015-Dec 2015............................... 12,717 ........... 10,694 ........... 11,491 ........... 1,150 ...........
Jan 2016-Dec 2016............................... 11,698 -8.0 10,103 -5.5 10,772 -6.3 1,229 6.9
Jan 2017-May 2018 (fully adjusted).............. 9,127 -22.0 9,520 -5.8 10,173 -5.6 1,295 5.4
Jun 2018-Nov 2019............................... 10,381 13.7 8,778 -7.8 9,401 -7.6 1,238 -4.4
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
* Claims data through 2019/11/29 (2019 Week 48), Provider Enrollment, Chain, and Ownership System (PECOS) data through 2019/09/17.
[[Page 73871]]
As we noted in our previous analysis (83 FR 34380), we believe that
oxygen and oxygen equipment is one of the most critical items subject
to the fee schedule adjustments in terms of beneficiary access. If
access to oxygen and oxygen equipment is denied to a beneficiary who
needs oxygen, serious health implications can result. Oxygen and oxygen
equipment are also items that must be delivered to the beneficiary, and
set up and used properly in the home for safety reasons. Access to
oxygen and oxygen equipment in remote areas thus remains critical and
has been stressed by stakeholders. To determine if there were pockets
of the country where access to oxygen and oxygen equipment was in
jeopardy, in the November 2020 proposed rule, we reviewed data
depicting how many non-CBA counties are being served by only one oxygen
supplier (85 FR 70368). From 2016 to 2018, there was a total of 2,691
non-CBA counties with beneficiaries receiving Medicare-covered oxygen
supplies. For each year, there were approximately 38 to 39 counties
being served by only one oxygen supplier, serving approximately 68 to
78 beneficiaries receiving approximately 736 to 896 services (annually)
in those areas. Among the counties with only one oxygen supplier, the
majority had only one oxygen user during that year. All counties with a
single oxygen supplier from 2016 to 2018 had 100 percent assignment
rates for oxygen services, and more than half of the single-supplier
counties were in Puerto Rico.
We believe this shows that access to oxygen and oxygen equipment is
not in jeopardy. If there are oxygen claims for only one beneficiary in
the area, then only one billing supplier would show up in the data.
This does not mean that the supplier submitting the claims for this one
beneficiary is the only supplier available to furnish oxygen and oxygen
equipment in the area. There may be other suppliers able to serve these
areas as well and this would show up in the claims data if there were
more beneficiaries using oxygen in these areas and these beneficiaries
used more than one supplier. This also shows how non-CBAs can have far
less volume and fewer billing suppliers than CBAs. Thus, we believe
paying more money to suppliers serving rural and non-contiguous non-
CBAs takes into account those factors specified in section 16008 of the
Cures Act (volume and number of suppliers), and it errs on the side of
caution to prevent beneficiary access issues.
2. DMEPOS Fee Schedule Adjustment Impact Monitoring Data
In addition to the various Cures Act factors, we monitored other
metrics we believe are important in measuring the impacts of our
payment policies. We stated in the November 2020 proposed rule (85 FR
70368) that in reviewing claims data processed through mid-November in
2018 and 2019, that assignment rates for all claims for DMEPOS items
and services subject to fee schedule adjustments went up slightly from
2018 to 2019 in both non-rural non-CBAs (from 99.826 percent or
12,948,603 assigned services out of 12,971,110 to 99.833 percent or
11,594,547 assigned services out of 11,613,970) and rural non-CBAs
(from 99.79 percent or 13,285,838 assigned services out of 13,313,575
to 99.81 percent or 11,863,434 assigned services out of 11,885,683). We
stated to keep in mind that the 2019 claims data was not yet complete,
so the number of allowed services will be greater than what we
reported, but the final rate of assignment will likely not change much
if at all.
When looking at claims processed through May 28, 2021, we found
that assignment rates for all claims for DMEPOS items and services
subject to fee schedule adjustments went slightly up in non-rural non-
CBAs from 2019 to 2020 (99.82 percent to 99.85 percent) and 2020 to
2021 (99.85 percent to 99.88 percent). Assignment rates also increased
in rural non-CBAs from 2019 to 2020 (99.80 to 99.84 percent) and 2020
to 2021 (99.84 to 99.85 percent). Finally, assignment rates also
increased in non-contiguous non-CBAs from 2019 to 2020 (99.53 percent
to 99.79 percent) and 2020 to 2021 (99.79 percent to 99.89 percent). We
have also been monitoring other claims data from non-CBAs, and we have
not observed any trends indicating an increase in adverse beneficiary
health outcomes associated with the fee schedule adjustments. We
monitor mortality rates, hospitalization rates, ER visit rates, SNF
admission rates, physician visit rates, monthly days in hospital, and
monthly days in SNF. Except for death information, which comes from the
Medicare Enrollment Database, all other outcomes are derived from
claims (inpatient, outpatient, Part B carrier, and SNF). Our monitoring
materials cover historical and regional trends in these health outcome
rates across a number of populations, allowing us to observe deviations
that require further drilldown analyses. We monitor health outcomes in
the enrolled Medicare population (Medicare Parts A and B), dual
Medicare and Medicaid population, long-term institutionalized
population, as well as various DME utilizers and access groups. This
helps paint a complete picture of whether an increase in an outcome is
across the board (not linked to DME access), or is unique to certain
populations. Specifically, we focus on any increases that are unique to
the DME access groups, which include beneficiaries who are likely to
use certain DME based on their diagnoses, and we would conduct
drilldown analyses and policy research to pinpoint potential reasons
for such increases.
In addition, in the November 2020 proposed rule, we examined what
effect, if any, paying the blended rates in rural and non-contiguous
non-CBAs had on utilization of DME (85 FR 70368). We compared the
utilization of oxygen equipment between June 2017 through December
2017, and June 2018 through December 2018. We compared these two time
periods, because we paid the blended rates in rural and non-contiguous
non-CBAs from June 1, 2018 through December 31, 2018, in accordance
with the 2018 IFC (83 FR 21915). During the 2017 time period, we paid
the fully adjusted fees in all non-CBAs. During the 2018 time period,
we paid the blended rates in rural and non-contiguous non-CBAs and the
fully adjusted fees in the non-rural contiguous non-CBAs from June 1,
2018 through December 31, 2018. We specifically studied oxygen
utilization in rural areas without Micropolitan Statistical Areas, that
is OCBSAs, as these counties have the least populated urban areas, and
as we stated in the CY 2019 ESRD PPS DMEPOS final rule, one reason for
paying higher rates was to ensure beneficiary access in rural and
remote areas (83 FR 57029). We found that the number of allowed units
in OCBSAs decreased comparably in all areas. Payment at the blended
rates between June 1, 2018, and December 31, 2018, increased allowed
charges in OCBSAs by 42 percent, but this had no apparent effect on
increasing services in OCBSAs. Additionally, the significant reduction
of liquid oxygen equipment allowed services trend continued in OCBSAs
as well as in all areas. The decline in the number of oxygen
concentrators that were furnished declined at the same rate in OCBSAs
as in all areas. Access to oxygen equipment in OCBSAs was unchanged,
despite a 49 percent increase in unit prices.
In sum, we do not believe our payment rates had a discernible
impact on any trends that were already occurring before we paid the
higher fees, and we did not see any appreciable differences between the
areas in which
[[Page 73872]]
we paid the higher 50/50 blended rates in rural and non-contiguous non-
CBAs and the areas in which we pay the fully adjusted fees in non-
rural/contiguous non-CBAs. In addition, assignments rates are still
high in all non-CBAs--over 99 percent--which means over 99 percent of
suppliers are accepting Medicare payment as payment in full and not
balance billing beneficiaries for the cost of the DME.
We sought comments on all of our findings.
Table 3--Summary of Our Analysis of the Section 16008 Cures Act Factors
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Section 16008 Cures Act factors Summary of our analysis
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Stakeholder Input................. Most of the input we have
received has come from the DMEPOS
industry, such as DMEPOS suppliers,
expressing that the fully adjusted
fee schedule amounts are too low,
and that CMS should increase how
much Medicare pays DMEPOS suppliers
to furnish items and services to
beneficiaries in non-CBAs. These
stakeholders expressed concerns
that the level of the adjusted
payment amounts constrains
suppliers from furnishing items and
services to rural areas.
Stakeholder input that did
not support such payment increases
included input from the Medicare
Payment Advisory Commission
(MedPAC), which believed any
adjustment for rural and non-
contiguous areas should be limited
to only the amount needed to ensure
access, targeted at areas and
products for which an adjustment is
needed, and that CMS should
consider taking steps to offset the
cost of any adjustments. MedPAC
supported setting fee schedule
rates in urban, contiguous non-CBAs
based 100 percent on information
from the CBP.*
Highest Winning Bid............... In the CY 2019 ESRD PPS
DMEPOS final rule (83 FR 57026), we
found no pattern indicating that
maximum bids are higher for areas
with lower volume than for areas
with higher volume.
Travel Distance................... Average travel distance
between the supplier and
beneficiary is generally higher in
CBAs than in non-CBAs, except for
non-CBAs classified as FAR, super
rural, or OCBSA.
Cost.............................. We examined four sources of
cost data: (1) The Practice Expense
Geographic Practice Cost Index (PE
GPCI), (2) delivery driver wages
from the Bureau of Labor Statistics
(BLS), (3) real estate taxes from
the U.S. Census Bureau's American
Community Survey (ACS), and (4) gas
and utility prices from the
Consumer Price Index (CPI).
Overall, in comparing CBAs
to non-CBAs, CBAs tended to have
the highest costs out of the cost
data we examined. For certain cost
data, we also found that Alaska and
Hawaii--both non-contiguous areas--
tended to have higher costs than
many contiguous areas of the U.S.
Assignment rates, which we consider
to be a measure of the sufficiency
of payment to cover a supplier's
costs for furnishing items and
services under the Medicare
program, have consistently remained
high at over 99 percent (out of
100) in non-CBAs, meaning over 99
percent of suppliers furnishing
items subject to fee schedule
adjustments in the non-CBAs are
accepting the Medicare payment in
full.
Volume............................ CBAs generally have higher
volume than non-CBAs.
Total services per supplier
continued to increase in 2018 and
2019 in non-CBAs.
Number of Suppliers............... The number of suppliers
billing Medicare for furnishing
items and services subject to fee
schedule adjustments in the non-
CBAs has been declining for several
years, and this downward trend
started years before CMS started
adjusting fee schedule amounts in
the non-CBAs in 2016.
When looking at a sample of
HCPCS codes for high volume items
subject to fee schedule
adjustments, the average volume of
items furnished by suppliers before
they stopped billing Medicare is
very small compared to the average
volume of items furnished by
suppliers who continued to bill.
Data shows that large national
chain suppliers are accepting a
large percentage of the
beneficiaries who were previously
served by the smaller suppliers
that exited the Medicare market. In
addition, the average volume per
supplier continues to increase (as
the number of suppliers who bill
Medicare decline, the suppliers
that still bill Medicare are
picking up more volume), while
overall services continue to grow,
suggesting industry consolidation
rather than any type of access
issue for DME. Therefore, the
decline in the number of supplier
locations is largely a result of
the consolidation of suppliers
furnishing items subject to the fee
schedule adjustments rather than a
decline in beneficiary access to
items subject to the fee schedule
adjustments.
When looking at different
timeframes over the last several
years in which we paid different
fee schedule amounts (unadjusted
fees, adjusted fees, and the 50/50
blended rates), we did not see an
appreciable effect that these
payment changes had on stemming the
reduction in the number of
suppliers billing Medicare.
All counties with a single
oxygen supplier from 2016 to 2018
had 100 percent assignment rates
for oxygen services, and more than
half of the single-supplier
counties were in Puerto Rico.
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* https://www.medpac.gov/wp-content/uploads/import_data/scrape_files/docs/default-source/comment-letters/08312018_esrd_cy2019_dme_medpac_comment_v2_sec.pdf.
C. Proposed Provisions
After reviewing updated information that must be taken into
consideration in accordance with section 1834(a)(1)(G) of the Act in
determining adjustments to DMEPOS fee schedule amounts, we proposed to
revise Sec. 414.210(g) to establish three different methodologies for
adjusting fee schedule amounts for DMEPOS items and services included
in more than 10 competitive bidding programs furnished in non-CBAs on
or after April 1, 2021, or the date immediately following the duration
of the emergency period described in section 1135(g)(1)(B) of the Act
(42 U.S.C. 1320b-5(g)(1)(B)), whichever is later (85 FR 70370). We
proposed three different fee schedule adjustment methodologies, based
on the non-CBA in which the items are furnished: (1) One fee schedule
adjustment methodology for items and services furnished in non-
contiguous non-CBAs; (2) another adjustment methodology for items and
services furnished in non-CBAs within the contiguous United States that
are defined as rural areas at Sec. 414.202; and (3) a third adjustment
methodology for items and services furnished in all other non-CBAs
(non-rural areas within the contiguous United States) (85 FR 70370).
With respect to
[[Page 73873]]
items and services furnished in no more than ten competitive bidding
programs, we proposed to continue using the methodology in Sec.
414.210(g)(3) to adjust the fee schedule amounts for these items
furnished on or after April 1, 2021 (85 FR 70370). The rest of the
discussion that follows addresses the fee schedule adjustments for
items and services that have been included in more than ten competitive
bidding programs.
First, we proposed to continue paying the 50/50 blended rates in
non-contiguous non-CBAs (85 FR 70370). However, we proposed that the
50/50 blend will no longer be a transition rule under Sec.
414.210(g)(9), and will instead be the fee schedule adjustment
methodology for items and services furnished in these areas under Sec.
414.210(g)(2) unless revised in future rulemaking. We proposed that the
fee schedule amounts for items and services furnished on or after April
1, 2021, or the date immediately following the duration of the
emergency period described in section 1135(g)(1)(B) of the Act (42
U.S.C. 1320b-5(g)(1)(B)), whichever is later, in non-contiguous non-
CBAs be adjusted so that they are equal to a blend of 50 percent of the
greater of the average of the SPAs for the item or service for CBAs
located in non-contiguous areas or 110 percent of the national average
price for the item or service determined under Sec. 414.210(g)(1)(ii)
and 50 percent of the unadjusted fee schedule amount for the area,
which is the fee schedule amount in effect on December 31, 2015,
increased for each subsequent year beginning in 2016 by the annual
update factors specified in sections 1834(a)(14), 1834(h)(4), and
1842(s)(1)(B) of the Act, respectively, for durable medical equipment
and supplies, off-the-shelf orthotics, and enteral nutrients, supplies,
and equipment. We explained our rationale for a methodology that
incorporates 110 percent of the national average price in our CY 2015
ESRD PPS DMEPOS final rule (79 FR 66225). We stated that we believe
that a variation in payment amounts both above and below the national
average price should be allowed, and we believe that allowing for the
same degree of variation (10 percent) above and below the national
average price is more equitable and less arbitrary than allowing a
higher degree of variation (20 percent) above the national average
price than below (10 percent), as in the case of the national ceiling
and floor for the Prosthetic & Orthotic fee schedule, or allowing for
only 15 percent variation below the national average price, as in the
case of the national ceiling and floor for the DME fee schedule (79 FR
66225).
Second, we proposed to continue paying the 50/50 blended rates in
rural contiguous areas; however, we proposed that the 50/50 blend will
no longer be a transition rule under Sec. 414.210(g)(9), and will
instead be the fee schedule adjustment methodology for items and
services furnished in these areas under Sec. 414.210(g)(2) unless
revised in future rulemaking (85 FR 70370). We proposed that the fee
schedule amounts for items and services furnished in rural contiguous
areas on or after April 1, 2021 or the date immediately following the
duration of the emergency period described in section 1135(g)(1)(B) of
the Act (42 U.S.C. 1320b-5(g)(1)(B)), whichever is later, be adjusted
so that they are equal to a blend of 50 percent of 110 percent of the
national average price for the item or service determined under Sec.
414.210(g)(1)(ii) and 50 percent of the fee schedule amount for the
area in effect on December 31, 2015, increased for each subsequent year
beginning in 2016 by the annual update factors specified in sections
1834(a)(14), 1834(h)(4), and 1842(s)(1)(B) of the Act, respectively,
for durable medical equipment and supplies, off-the-shelf orthotics,
and enteral nutrients, supplies, and equipment. We also proposed to
revise Sec. 414.210(g)(1)(v) to address the period before April 1,
2021, to say that for items and services furnished before April 1,
2021, the fee schedule amount for all areas within a State that are
defined as rural areas for the purposes of this subpart is adjusted to
110 percent of the national average price determined under paragraph
(g)(1)(ii) of this section. We decided to propose a policy of paying a
50/50 blend of adjusted and unadjusted rates in non-contiguous non-CBAs
and in rural non-CBAs, as opposed to a different ratio (such as a 75/25
blend, which is an alternative we considered and discuss further in
this section), because past stakeholder input from the DME industry has
expressed support for this 50/50 blend. For instance, we proposed
paying the 50/50 blend for rural and non-contiguous non-CBAs from
January 1, 2019 through December 31, 2020 in our CY 2019 ESRD PPS
DMEPOS proposed rule, and we finalized this policy in our CY 2019 ESRD
PPS DMEPOS final rule. Most of the comments we received on the proposed
rule were from commenters in the DME industry, such as homecare
associations, DME manufacturers, and suppliers, and these commenters
generally supported the 50/50 blended rates provisions.
Third, for items and services furnished on or after April 1, 2021
or the date immediately following the duration of the emergency period
described in section 1135(g)(1)(B) of the Act (42 U.S.C. 1320b-
5(g)(1)(B)), whichever is later, in all other non-rural non-CBAs within
the contiguous United States, we proposed that the fee schedule amounts
be equal to 100 percent of the adjusted payment amount established
under Sec. 414.210(g)(1)(iv) (85 FR 70370).
Accordingly, we proposed to add paragraph Sec. 414.210(g)(9)(vi)
to say that for items and services furnished in all areas with dates of
service on or after April 1, 2021, or the date immediately following
the duration of the emergency period described in section 1135(g)(1)(B)
of the Act, whichever is later, based on the fee schedule amount for
the area is equal to the adjusted payment amount established under
Sec. 414.210(g) (85 FR 70370).
Thus under our proposed provision, we will continue paying
suppliers significantly higher rates for furnishing items and services
in rural and non-contiguous areas as compared to items and services
furnished in other areas because of stakeholder input indicating higher
costs in these areas, greater travel distances and costs in certain
non-CBAs compared to CBAs, the unique logistical challenges and costs
of furnishing items to beneficiaries in the non-contiguous areas,
significantly lower volume of items furnished in these areas versus
CBAs, and concerns about financial incentives for suppliers in
surrounding urban areas to continue including outlying rural areas in
their service areas. Previous feedback from industry stakeholders
expressed concern regarding beneficiary access to items and services
furnished in rural and remote areas.
Furthermore, in our analysis, we found that suppliers must travel
farther distances to deliver items to beneficiaries located in super
rural areas and areas outside both MSAs and micropolitan statistical
areas than the distances they must travel to deliver items to
beneficiaries located in CBAs (while the CBP was in effect). We also
found that certain non-contiguous areas tended to have higher costs,
and had smaller numbers of oxygen suppliers and beneficiaries. Rural
and non-contiguous areas also have much lower volume of DMEPOS items
furnished by suppliers than in CBAs, and we are also concerned that
national chain suppliers or suppliers in higher populated urban areas
that are currently serving rural areas may abandon these areas if they
are less profitable markets due to fee
[[Page 73874]]
schedule adjustments and may instead concentrate on the larger markets
only. We believe that this feedback as well as these findings supports
a payment methodology that errs on the side of caution and ensures
adequate payment for items and services furnished to beneficiaries in
all rural and non-contiguous non-CBAs. We also believed that the
proposed fee schedule adjustment methodologies would create an
incentive for suppliers to continue serving areas where fewer
beneficiaries reside and will therefore further ensure beneficiary
access to items and services in these areas. We proposed to continue
paying the 50/50 blended rates in rural and non-contiguous non-CBAs,
and 100 percent of the adjusted payment amount established under Sec.
414.210(g)(1)(iv) in non-rural non-CBAs in the contiguous U.S., takes
into account stakeholder feedback as well as information from our
previous and updated analyses of the Cures Act factors (85 FR 70371).
The proposed fee schedule adjustment methodologies rely on SPAs
generated by the CBP. We only awarded Round 2021 CBP contracts to
bidders in the OTS back braces and OTS knee braces product
categories.\12\ We did not award Round 2021 CBP contracts to bidders
that bid in any other product categories that were included in Round
2021 of the CBP, therefore, CMS does not have any new SPAs for these
items and services. As a result, we stated in the November 2020
proposed rule that we were seriously considering whether to simply
extend application of the current fee schedule adjustment transition
rules for all of the items and services that were included in Round
2021 of the CBP but have essentially been removed from Round 2021 of
the CBP (85 FR 70371). That is, for non-CBAs, the fee schedule
adjustment transition rules at Sec. 414.210(g)(9) and, for CBAs and
former CBAs (CBAs where no CBP contracts are in effect), the fee
schedule adjustment rules at Sec. 414.210(g)(10), would be extended
until a future round of the CBP. More specifically, for non-CBAs, we
proposed to extend the transition rules at Sec. 414.210(g)(9)(iii) and
(v) for items and services included in product categories other than
the OTS back and knee brace product categories, and, for these same
items and services furnished in CBAs or former CBAs, we proposed to
extend the rules at Sec. 414.210(g)(10), until such product categories
are competitively bid again in a future round of the CBP (85 FR 70371).
In this situation, we stated that the proposed fee schedule adjustments
discussed previously in the November 2020 proposed rule and in this
final rule would only apply to OTS back braces and OTS knee braces
furnished in non-CBAs on or after April 1, 2021 (85 FR 70371) .
However, as we discussed previously in this final rule, now that April
1, 2021 has passed, but the PHE is still ongoing, and this rule has yet
to be finalized, we are finalizing the proposed language with a
technical edit to reference the effective date specified in the DATES
section of this final rule to reflect the new effective date.
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\12\ The link to the announcement is https://www.cms.gov/files/document/round-2021-dmepos-cbp-single-payment-amts-fact-sheet.pdf.
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In short, beginning on the effective date specified in the DATES
section of this final rule or the date immediately following the
duration of the emergency period described in section 1135(g)(1)(B) of
the Act, whichever is later, there would be several different fee
schedule adjustment methodologies in effect, depending on where an item
or service is furnished, and whether CMS has awarded Round 2021 CBP
contracts for that item or service. For OTS back braces and OTS knee
braces included in Round 2021 of the CBP and furnished in CBAs, payment
would be made in accordance with the methodologies described in 42 CFR
414.408. For OTS back braces and OTS knee braces included in Round 2021
of the CBP and furnished in rural and non-contiguous non-CBA areas,
payment would be made in accordance with the methodologies we have
proposed in the November 2020 proposed rule (85 FR 70371) and discuss
in this final rule at Sec. 414.210(g)(2). For OTS back braces and OTS
knee braces included in Round 2021 of the CBP furnished in non-rural
and contiguous non-CBA areas, payment would be made using the
methodologies described in 42 CFR 414.210(g)(1)(iv).
For items and services included in the product categories that have
essentially been removed from Round 2021 of the CBP, payment would be
based on the methodologies described in 42 CFR 414.210(g)(10) when such
items and services are furnished in CBAs or former CBAs. When such
items and services are furnished in rural and non-contiguous non-CBAs,
payment would be based on the methodologies we proposed at 42 CFR
414.210(g)(2) and the methodology at 42 CFR 414.210(g)(4). In non-rural
and contiguous non-CBA areas, payment for these items and services
would be based on the methodologies described in 42 CFR
414.210(g)(1)(iv) and the methodology at (g)(4). CMS welcomed comment
on whether the transition rules at Sec. 414.210(g)(9) and fee schedule
adjustment rules at Sec. 414.210(g)(10) should continue for these
items and services that have essentially been removed from Round 2021
of the CBP. Specifically, we invited comment on whether we should
extend the transition rules at Sec. 414.210(g)(9)(iii) and (v) for
items and services furnished in non-CBAs and included in product
categories other than the OTS back and knee brace product categories,
and, for these same items and services furnished in CBAs or former
CBAs, whether we should extend the rules at Sec. 414.210(g)(10), until
such product categories are competitively bid again in a future round
of the CBP.
Comment: Several commenters supported paying the 50/50 blended
rates in rural and non-contiguous non-CBAs on a permanent basis. A few
commenters believed this methodology will better ensure beneficiary
access by helping DMEPOS suppliers stay in business and account for
costs related to the COVID-19 pandemic. A commenter stated that there
are costs related to the pandemic that are unlikely to be eliminated by
the end of the COVID-19 public health emergency, and they thus support
a permanent extension of the current rural non-CBA blended rates. A
commenter stated they appreciated that the proposal would bring
stability to DMEPOS suppliers by eliminating the transitional nature of
these rates and making them part of the fee schedule adjustment
methodology until revised in future rulemaking. A commenter supported
higher payments in rural areas, and stated they supported the proposal
that for DME items and services furnished before April 1, 2021, the fee
schedule amount for all areas within a State that are defined as rural
areas would be adjusted to 110 percent of the national average price.
Response: We thank the commenters for support of our proposal. In
finalizing this fee schedule adjustment methodology, we aim to ensure
that suppliers are incentivized to serve beneficiaries in rural and
non-contiguous non-CBAs.
We agree that higher payments can better ensure access to items and
services and maintain, if not increase, a supplier's willingness to
furnish items and services. We do point out however that higher
payments to suppliers results in higher cost sharing for beneficiaries,
which could negatively affect access to DMEPOS items and services if
beneficiaries decide to forego such items and services due to higher
cost sharing.
Regarding comments supporting a permanent adoption of the 50/50
blended rates in rural and non-contiguous non-CBAs, as well as the
[[Page 73875]]
comment appreciating that this methodology will no longer be a
transition rule under Sec. 414.210(g)(9), we note that although we are
finalizing our proposal to pay 50/50 blended rates in the rural and
non-contiguous non-CBAs, as we further discuss in section ``E.
Provisions of Final Rule'' of this final rule, we will likely be
revisiting this issue and the fee schedule adjustment methodologies for
all items in all areas again in the future. Furthermore, regarding
commenter's concerns about the potential for lasting COVID-19 pandemic
costs, and the permanence of the 50/50 blended rate fee schedule
adjustment methodology, we are unsure of the extent to which COVID-19
has affected the costs of furnishing DMEPOS and whether such costs will
indeed be permanent. For example, we have not seen any significant
changes in assignment rates across the country, and we consider
assignment rates to be indicative of the sufficiency of payment to
cover a supplier's costs for furnishing DMEPOS items and services to
Medicare beneficiaries. We will continue to monitor payments in rural
and contiguous areas and all non-CBAs, as well as health outcomes,
assignment rates, and other information in such areas.
Regarding the comment supporting our proposal that for DME items
and services furnished before April 1, 2021, the fee schedule amount
for all areas within a State that are defined as rural areas would be
adjusted to 110 percent of the national average price, we note that the
effective date for this final rule will now be the effective date
specified in the DATES section of this final rule rather than April 1,
2021. Additionally, the COVID-19 PHE was renewed, effective on October
18, 2021.
As a result, we are finalizing the language as proposed with a
technical edit to now address the period before the effective date
specified in the DATES section of this final rule, instead of before
April 1, 2021. Specifically, for items and services furnished before
the effective date specified in the DATES section of this final rule,
the fee schedule amount for all areas within a State that are defined
as rural areas for the purposes of this subpart is adjusted to 110
percent of the national average price determined under paragraph
(g)(1)(ii) of this section. In the November 2020 proposed rule, we
proposed to reference April 1, 2021 in the revised Sec.
414.210(g)(1)(v). However, as we previously discussed in this final
rule, April 1, 2021 has passed and the PHE is still ongoing. Because
this rule has not finalized yet, we are finalizing the proposed
regulation text with a technical edit to reference the effective date
specified in the DATES section of this final rule rather than the April
1, 2021 effective date.
Comment: A commenter believed that the closer the rates are to the
2015 unadjusted fee schedule, the more innovation there would be from
providers.
Response: We thank the commenter for their comment. The commenter
did not elaborate on why they believed the closer the rates are to the
2015 fee unadjusted fee schedule, the more innovation there would be
from providers. Nevertheless, we are not aware of, nor do we believe
there is a link between innovation and the 2015 fee schedule. In fact,
the Government Accountability Office (GAO) and the HHS Office of
Inspector General (OIG) have published numerous reports detailing how
the unadjusted fee schedule amounts were higher, often significantly,
than the amounts that suppliers paid to purchase products from
manufacturers and wholesalers, the list prices on suppliers' websites,
and the amounts paid by private payers and other government
purchasers.\13\ We do not think using the 2015 fee schedule rates leads
to innovation.
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\13\ https://www.medpac.gov/wp-content/uploads/import_data/scrape_files/docs/default-source/reports/jun18_medpacreporttocongress_rev_nov2019_note_sec.pdf.
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Comment: Some commenters, in expressing their support of the
proposed 50/50 blended rates in rural and non-contiguous non-CBAs,
highlighted differences between rural and urban areas. A commenter
stated that non-urban costs-to-serve is higher due to labor/drive
times, use of higher cost third party distribution services, and lower
equipment return rates. A commenter also discussed their hiring
practices and associated labor costs, stating that employing
individuals they deemed to be qualified in areas outside of the
metropolitan areas is more challenging and costlier because of a
limited pool of qualified individuals in these areas. Another commenter
stated that Medicare beneficiaries in rural areas are geographically
dispersed, hard to reach, and do not have the same access to systems of
care available in more populated areas. The commenter stated that tough
terrain, long distances between patients and providers/suppliers, and
fewer health care resources mean that DME suppliers must incur added
costs to deliver the appropriate medical equipment and supplies to
patients on a timely basis. The commenter stated that this translates
into added costs for transportation, delivery and clinical staff, fuel,
and other expenses. The commenter stated that extension of the blended
rates promotes access for beneficiaries in rural areas, making it less
likely suppliers will be forced to close or stop providing DME to
Medicare beneficiaries, and that they provide choices to beneficiaries
to select from among a greater number of DME suppliers, as well as a
greater variety of brand-name items and services that may meet their
needs better than others.
Response: We have presented our analysis of factors that affect the
cost of furnishing DMEPOS items and services in rural areas (areas
outside MSAs) versus non-rural areas (MSAs) in past rulemaking (83 FR
57025) and in the preamble of the proposed rule and this final rule.
While the data shows that the volume of items furnished in CBAs and
MSAs is higher than the volume of items furnished in areas outside
MSAs, the data we analyzed indicates that other factors such as: Labor
rates/wages; gasoline prices; rent, utilities and other overhead costs;
average travel time and distances; etc., suggest that these costs are
higher in CBAs and MSAs than in areas outside MSAs. We have not been
able to definitively conclude that the overall costs of furnishing
DMEPOS items and services are higher or lower in rural areas than in
other areas. However, for now, we believe it is necessary to continue
paying the higher rates to suppliers for furnishing items in rural and
non-contiguous areas to maintain access to DMEPOS items and services in
these more remote areas.
Comment: Several commenters stated that the fee schedule rates for
non-rural areas should be at a 75/25 blended rate. Commenters stated
that the 75/25 blended rates that are currently in effect in non-rural
contiguous non-CBAs, in accordance with section 3712(b) of the CARES
Act, should continue even after the public health emergency ends. A
commenter supported continuing the 75/25 blend, and to phase in the
full fee schedule adjustments in these areas beginning January 1, 2024.
A commenter clarified that the 75 percent portion should be based on
the current rates in former CBAs, and the 25 percent portion of the
blended payment formula should be based on the unadjusted fee schedule.
A few commenters stated that the current rates were developed via a
flawed auction bid methodology, and they were based on pre-pandemic
demand and cost structure. A commenter stated that this payment should
last not just through the end of the public health emergency, but until
the product categories can be re-bid under a program structured to
reflect
[[Page 73876]]
what they say are true market conditions. Another commenter stated the
75/25 blended rates will ensure suppliers can continue to provide
critical DME to beneficiaries as suppliers encounter increased costs
and a different market as a result of the pandemic. A few commenters
stated that there are costs related to the pandemic that are unlikely
to be eliminated by the end of the public health emergency, and they
thus support a permanent extension of the current non-rural non-CBA
blended rates.
A few commenters also stated concerns regarding access to home
respiratory services, including oxygen. For instance, commenters
discussed how the COVID-19 PHE has caused more patients to receive home
respiratory therapy. Commenters were unsure how many of these patients
would require home respiratory therapy on a long-term basis, and that
it was therefore important that CMS establish payment rates that will
sustain DME and home respiratory therapy suppliers now and over the
longer term.
Response: Section 3712 of the CARES Act (Pub. L. 116-136) specifies
the payment rates for certain DME and enteral nutrients, supplies, and
equipment furnished in non-CBAs through the duration of the emergency
period described in section 1135(g)(1)(B) of the Act. Section 3712(a)
of the CARES Act continued our policy of paying the 50/50 blended rates
for items furnished in rural and non-contiguous non-CBAs through
December 31, 2020, or through the duration of the emergency period, if
longer. Section 3712(b) of the CARES Act increased the payment rates to
a 75/25 blend for DME and enteral nutrients, supplies, and equipment
furnished in areas other than rural and non-contiguous non-CBAs through
the duration of the COVID-19 public health emergency period.
In the May 2020 COVID-19 IFC, we stated we believed the purpose of
section 3712 of the CARES Act was to aid suppliers in furnishing items
under very challenging situations during the COVID-19 PHE (85 FR
27571).
Furthermore, we have long maintained that the fully adjusted rates
in non-rural non-CBAs are sufficient. For instance, we indicated in the
CY 2019 ESRD PPS DMEPOS proposed rule (83 FR 34382) that although the
average volume of items and services furnished by suppliers in non-
rural non-CBAs is lower than the average volume of items and services
furnished by suppliers in CBAs, the travel distances and costs for
these areas are lower than the travel distances and costs for CBAs. We
stated that because the travel distances and costs for these areas are
lower than the travel distances and costs for CBAs, we believe the
fully adjusted fee schedule amounts are sufficient.
Assignment rates were above 99 percent in non-rural contiguous non-
CBAs when the fully adjusted rates were implemented. With regards to
oxygen, in 2019 when we were paying the fully adjusted rates in non-
rural non-CBAs, the assignment rate for oxygen was 99.95 percent. From
2020 to 2021, assignment rates for oxygen in non-rural non-CBAs were
nearly identical--99.96 percent in 2020, and 99.95 percent in 2021.
Additionally, when looking at non-CBAs on a national level, we have not
seen evidence of a sustained increase in oxygen use as a result of the
COVID-19 PHE. For all non-CBAs, the total number of claim lines for
oxygen declined from 2019 to 2020 by 5.63 percent, and declined by 2.27
percent from 2020 to 2021. This is from using data through the same
week in the respective year (week 42), to understand the impact of the
fee schedule adjustment while accounting for claim delay.
We will continue to monitor payments in all non-CBAs, as well as
health outcomes, assignment rates, and other information.
Comment: A commenter stated the rates for the non-rural non-CBAs
should increase at least to the clearing price (or to the maximum
winning bids) of the ``old'' SPA, or an additional 5-10 percent, to
account for an increase in costs of raw materials, production, and
supply chain. The commenter stated that they expected SPAs to increase
under the new bidding methodologies we finalized in the CY 2019 ESRD
PPS DMEPOS final rule, and that the non-rural non-CBA rates should
reflect these expected increases.
Another commenter stated CMS should apply an adjustment to the
pricing methodology to offset the lack of volume increase in the non-
rural non-CBAs.
Response: We continue to believe that the fully adjusted rates in
non-rural non-CBAs are sufficient and that paying any additional amount
once the PHE ends would be unnecessary. We will continue to monitor
payments in these and all non-CBAs, including health outcomes,
assignment rates, and other information.
Comment: A commenter stated CMS should extend the 50/50 blended
rates to non-rural, non-CBAs to ensure that beneficiaries have
appropriate access and choice of quality DME items and services,
including OTS orthoses subject to competitive bidding for the first
time.
Response: As noted previously, once the PHE ends, we believe paying
fee schedule amounts equal to 100 percent of the adjusted payment
amount established under Sec. 414.210(g)(1)(iv) in non-rural
contiguous non-CBAs will be sufficient. Assignment rates were above 99
percent in these areas when the fully adjusted rates were implemented.
We will continue to monitor payments in these and all non-CBAs,
including health outcomes, assignment rates, and other information.
Comment: A few commenters discussed how in a bidding program, there
is a guarantee that there will be fewer competitors and larger volume
of business, but that does not exist in non-bid areas and therefore
there is no logical nexus between rates established in CBAs and the
costs to serve in non-CBAs. The commenters also cited concern with the
steady decreasing number of DME suppliers across the country, and
stated it indicates a dwindling number of suppliers and real potential
access issues.
Response: We believe there is a logical nexus between rates
established in CBAs and the costs to furnish items in non-CBAs. We
believe the 99 percent assignment rate in non-CBAs is a strong
indication that there is a logical nexus between CBAs and the costs to
furnish items in non-CBAs. As we noted in the November 2020 proposed
rule, we consider assignment rates as a source of cost data and
consider it a measure of the sufficiency of payment to cover a
supplier's costs for furnishing items and services under the Medicare
program (85 FR 70366). Assignment rates for items subject to the fee
schedule adjustments have not varied significantly around the country,
and they have consistently remained over 99 percent in all areas. Thus,
for the overwhelming majority of claims for items and services
furnished in the non-CBAs that were subject to the fee schedule
adjustments, suppliers have decided to accept the Medicare payment
amount in full, and have not needed to charge the beneficiary for any
additional costs that the Medicare allowed payment amount did not
cover. We also have not seen evidence of fee schedule adjustments
causing access issues, but we will continue to monitor for any such
issues. Finally, we note that the number of enrolled DMEPOS suppliers
increased by 2 percent from 86,061 in 2019 to 87,800 in 2020, the
highest total since 2016 when the total number of enrolled DMEPOS
suppliers was 88,786. There are therefore still many DMEPOS supplier
locations throughout the
[[Page 73877]]
country furnishing DMEPOS items and services.
Comment: The commenters shared the changes they have experienced as
a result of the COVID-19 pandemic, as well as their recommendations for
what the payment rates should be in the former CBAs. Several commenters
stated they oppose extending the application of the current fee
schedule adjustment transition rules for all of the items and services
that were included in Round 2021 of the CBP but were effectively
removed from Round 2021 of the CBP. A few commenters cited the COVID-19
pandemic as a reason for opposing extending the transition period and
rates, saying that these rates were based on pre-PHE demand, and that
fee schedule adjustments should reflect a new environment suppliers and
manufacturers are facing as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic.
Commenters stated additional costs from increased freight and other
supply chain costs, shipping delays, hazard pay for direct care
employees, personal protective equipment (PPE), and software and
hardware to enable employees to work remotely. Commenters stated that
these additional costs will likely continue throughout the pandemic,
and may continue post-pandemic. A few commenters stated that SPAs were
developed via a flawed auction bid methodology, and were outdated. A
commenter recommended that the rates in former CBAs should reflect
those established for Round 2 and Round 1 re-compete, updated by the
CPI-U for each year since then. The commenter stated that setting the
SPAs at these prior rates will provide suppliers with an increase that
is necessary to reflect the 2020 change in the market.
Many commenters stated payment rates in the former CBAs should be
based on a 90/10 blended payment formula, with the 90 percent based on
the current payment rates in former CBAs (including the CPI-U updates),
and the 10 percent based on the 2015 unadjusted fee schedules.
Commenters stated that setting the rates based upon a 90-10 blended
rate would provide for a modest increase to compensate for what they
say is a flawed SPA setting methodology, for rates they say are 6 years
old in a market they say has changed over those years, and for what
they say are increased costs caused by the COVID-19 pandemic. A
commenter stated that rates in former CBAs should at least be increased
to the clearing price of those former bid program amounts.
Response: Per Sec. 414.210(g)(10), during a temporary gap in the
entire DMEPOS CBP and National Mail Order CBP or both, the fee schedule
amounts for items and services that were competitively bid and
furnished in areas that were competitive bidding areas at the time the
program(s) was in effect are adjusted based on the SPAs in effect in
the competitive bidding areas on the last day before the CBP contract
period of performance ended, increased by the projected percentage
change in the Consumer Price Index for all Urban Consumers (CPI-U) for
the 12-month period ending on the date after the contract periods
ended. If the gap in the CBP lasts for more than 12 months, the fee
schedule amounts are increased once every 12 months on the anniversary
date of the first day of the gap period based on the projected
percentage change in the CPI-U for the 12-month period ending on the
anniversary date.
We do not agree that increasing the adjusted fee schedule amounts
for items and services furnished in the former CBAs based on a 90/10
blended payment formula is necessary. The assignment rate for the vast
majority of the items and services that were included in Round 2021 of
the CBP has remained around 99 percent in the former CBAs in 2020 and
2021. If the costs to furnish DMEPOS items and services in the former
CBAs increased as a result of COVID-19 or the DME market has
fundamentally changed as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic to the point
where the current payment rates are insufficient, we believe this would
be reflected in the assignment rates and assignment rates would
decrease across a variety of former CBAs and product categories in 2020
and 2021. However, that has not happened. For instance, when looking at
the monthly assignment rate for oxygen in 2020 (the assignment rates of
all former CBAs aggregated, with claims data through May 14, 2021),
every month in 2020 had an assignment rate of 99 percent.
Further, in 2021, the assignment rate has remained the same except
for the months of March and April, in which there was 100 percent
assignment. Finally, in response to comments saying that setting the
rates based upon a 90-10 blended rate would provide for a modest
increase to compensate for a flawed SPA calculation methodology, and 6-
year-old rates in a changed market, we would like to note that it has
not been 6 years since the last CBP contract performance period ended.
Until the next round of the CBP commences, we believe the payment
rates set forth in Sec. 414.210(g)(10) for the former CBAs will be
sufficient, but we will continue to monitor for any issues.
Comment: A few commenters supported the proposal for CBAs and
former CBAs (CBAs where no CBP contracts are in effect), in which the
fee schedule adjustment rules at Sec. 414.210(g)(10) would be extended
until a future round of the CBP.
Response: We thank the commenters for their support of our
proposal.
Comment: A couple of commenters requested that given concerns and
uncertainty caused by the COVID-19 pandemic, CMS should postpone the
implementation of the fee schedule adjustment methodologies in non-CBAs
for the orthotics, back and knee braces included in Round 2021 of the
CBP. The commenters stated that they should be paid at the unadjusted
fee schedule amount for furnishing such items outside of CBAs. The
commenters stated there are significant differences between the
provision of DME and O&P care in urban/suburban areas and the rural or
non-contiguous areas that make up the majority of non-CBAs. For
instance, a commenter discussed how Medicare beneficiaries in rural
areas are geographically dispersed, hard to reach, and do not have the
same access to systems of care available in more populated areas. The
commenter stated that tough terrain, long distances between patients
and providers/suppliers, and fewer health care resources mean that DME
suppliers must incur added costs to deliver the appropriate medical
equipment and supplies to patients on a timely basis. The commenter
stated this translates into added costs for transportation, delivery
and clinical staff, fuel, and other expenses.
Response: We have been closely monitoring the implementation of
Round 2021 of the CBP, and have not detected any issues with the fee
schedule adjustments for OTS back and knee braces. In the non-CBAs, the
assignment rates for the back and knee braces included in Round 2021 of
the CBP are over 99 percent. We also believe that continuing to pay for
those orthotic codes at the unadjusted fee schedule amount would be
fiscally imprudent as that would mean continuing to pay at rates the
HHS Office of Inspector General has previously found to be grossly
excessive.\14\ MedPAC noted in its comments on the CY 2019 ESRD PPS
DMEPOS final rule (83 FR 57035) that, ``Expanding CBP into new product
categories, such as orthotics, would produce substantial savings and
help
[[Page 73878]]
prevent fraud and abuse.'' \15\ MedPAC, when discussing the history of
DMEPOS payment methods, has also noted that excessively high payment
rates increased expenditures and likely encouraged inappropriate
utilization.\16\ This is of particular relevance because of recent past
instances of fraud involving orthotic braces.\17\ \18\
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\14\ https://oig.hhs.gov/oas/reports/region5/51700033.pdf.
\15\ https://www.medpac.gov/wp-content/uploads/import_data/scrape_files/docs/default-source/comment-letters/08312018_esrd_cy2019_dme_medpac_comment_v2_sec.pdf.
\16\ https://www.medpac.gov/wp-content/uploads/import_data/scrape_files/docs/default-source/reports/jun18_medpacreporttocongress_rev_nov2019_note_sec.pdf.
\17\ https://www.justice.gov/opa/pr/federal-indictments-and-law-enforcement-actions-one-largest-health-care-fraud-schemes.
\18\ https://www.justice.gov/opa/pr/five-individuals-charged-roles-65-million-nationwide-conspiracy-defraud-federal-health-care.
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We believe fee schedule adjustments for these items and services
are appropriate, and we would like to note that such adjustments are
mandated by section 1834(a)(1)(F) of the Act. We will continue to
monitor for any issues.
Comment: A commenter stated there were flaws in the data CMS
presented, such as not having a control group to see if data like ER
admission rates are relative to DMEPOS changes or other trends like
pressure on hospitals from CMS to decrease readmissions or face
penalties.
Response: We believe our health outcomes monitoring data are robust
and a valuable tool. We compare historical health outcomes data between
CBAs, non-rural non-CBAs, and rural CBAs in the same BEA region. Thus,
we do see if health outcomes changes are unique to certain BEA regions
or areas within those regions, and if they track with other BEA regions
or other areas within the same BEA region. We also compare historical
health outcomes data for non-contiguous non-CBAs and non-contiguous
CBAs.
As we indicated in the November 2020 proposed rule, we monitor
mortality rates, hospitalization rates, ER visit rates, SNF admission
rates, physician visit rates, monthly days in hospital, and monthly
days in SNF (85 FR 70368). Except for death information, which comes
from the Medicare Enrollment Database, all other outcomes are derived
from claims (inpatient, outpatient, Part B carrier, and SNF). Our
monitoring materials cover historical and regional trends in these
health outcome rates across a number of populations, allowing us to
observe deviations that require further drilldown analyses. We monitor
health outcomes in the enrolled Medicare population (Medicare Parts A
and B), dual Medicare and Medicaid population, long-term
institutionalized population, as well as various DME utilizers and
access groups. This helps paint a complete picture of whether an
increase in an outcome is across the board (not linked to DME access),
or is unique to certain populations. Specifically, we focus on any
increases that are unique to the DME access groups, which include
beneficiaries who are likely to use certain DME based on their
diagnoses, and we would conduct drilldown analyses and policy research
to pinpoint potential reasons for such increases.
Additionally, our health outcomes monitoring data is but one piece
of multiple sources of data that we use to analyze the effects of the
fee schedule adjustments. We also analyze assignment rates, total
services, total services by supplier, travel distance, and other data
to provide a more complete picture on the effects of the fee schedule
adjustments.
Comment: A commenter discussed the assignment rate data that
continues to be above 99 percent in non-CBAs, saying the increase in
assignment rate over time does not surprise them, as the commenter, a
DME supplier, says customers choose to pay cash for common affordable
items, such as walkers, instead of pursuing a prescription or
documentation as it is not worth the time and hassle. The commenter
stated that if a beneficiary sees a doctor for a walker, in order for
the beneficiary to get reimbursed for the walker, the beneficiary will
likely have to schedule another visit for the more major health issues
they are experiencing, as the commenter stated most doctors now only
address one issue at a time, and that this will never be measured in
the CMS data.
Response: Although there could be a situation in which a
beneficiary elects to pay cash for some DME items, we do not believe
this explains the consistently high assignment rates across different
parts of the country for prolonged periods of time. High assignment
rates preceded the fee schedule adjustments, and high assignment rates
have continued even after the fee schedule adjustments have been in
effect for the last several years. We believe the high assignment rates
are an indication that the payment rates are sufficient and that
assignment rates are a valuable tool in monitoring the effects of the
fee schedule adjustments.
Comment: Commenters shared their concerns in regards to beneficiary
complaints and patient choice of equipment. Specifically, a commenter
stated its hypothesis that beneficiary complaints to CMS have decreased
because beneficiaries have become resigned to accept low quality
products because the commenter, a DME supplier, has told beneficiaries
they cannot afford to buy the name brand products at the rates Medicare
pays. The commenter also stated that spending an hour navigating
through call centers to complain about the big national and regional
chains where they are being consolidated is fruitless. Additionally,
the commenter stated that complaining to CMS is fruitless if the
beneficiary does not like the one option offered by a supplier
accepting assignment, and that beneficiaries accept what they can get
and if it does not work they come back and buy the nice piece of
equipment out of pocket. The commenter also stated that suppliers will
continue to consolidate, and that beneficiaries will continue to have
fewer options not just in terms of suppliers, but in DMEPOS products.
Another commenter expressed concern that suppliers have stopped
carrying specific items for which Medicare payments are too low, and
stated that they have seen many essential items such as heavy-duty
walkers are not well reimbursed and thus it is harder to find a DME
supplier that carries one and will sell to Medicare patients.
Response: We recognize the value of and encourage beneficiaries to
communicate any complaints about their DME to Medicare. More
information on filing a complaint about DME can be found here: https://www.medicare.gov/claims-appeals/file-a-complaint-grievance/complaints-about-durable-medical-equipment-dme.
With regard to patient choice and suppliers supplying specific
equipment, we believe the situations the commenters describe underscore
one of the many benefits of the DMEPOS CBP. We also believe that
expanding the CBP into additional areas of the country would provide
these benefits to more beneficiaries and could work towards addressing
some of the concerns the commenters have expressed.
The Medicare Learning Network Fact Sheet MLN900927 titled, ``DMEPOS
Competitive Bidding Program Referral Agents'' discusses some of these
benefits that are relevant to those situations the commenters
describe.\19\
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\19\ https://www.cms.gov/Outreach-and-Education/Medicare-Learning-Network-MLN/MLNProducts/downloads/DME_Ref_Agt_Factsheet_ICN900927.pdf.
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In particular, and as discussed in MLN900927, the CBP includes a
beneficiary safeguard to ensure that beneficiaries have access to
specific
[[Page 73879]]
brands when needed to avoid an adverse medical outcome. This safeguard,
which is sometimes called the Physician Authorization Process, allows a
physician (including a podiatric physician) or treating practitioner
(that is, a physician assistant, clinical nurse specialist, or nurse
practitioner) to prescribe a specific brand or mode of delivery to
avoid an adverse medical outcome. The physician or treating
practitioner must document in the beneficiary's medical record the
reason why the specific brand is necessary to avoid an adverse medical
outcome. This documentation, which would be in the physician's order
and notes, must include all of the following:
The product's brand name.
The features that this product has versus other brand name
products.
An explanation of how these features are necessary to
avoid an adverse medical outcome.
If a physician or treating practitioner prescribes a particular
brand for a beneficiary to avoid an adverse medical outcome, the
contract supplier must, as a term of its contract, ensure that the
beneficiary receives the needed item. The contract supplier has three
options:
The contract supplier can furnish the specific brand as
prescribed.
The contract supplier can consult with the physician or
treating practitioner to find another appropriate brand of item for the
beneficiary and obtain a revised written prescription.
The contract supplier can assist the beneficiary in
locating a contract supplier that will furnish the particular brand of
item prescribed by the physician or treating practitioner.
If the contract supplier cannot furnish the specific brand and
cannot obtain a revised prescription or locate another contract
supplier that will furnish the needed item, the contract supplier must
furnish the item as prescribed. We discuss this particular issue
further in the final rule we published in the Federal Register on April
10, 2007 titled ``Medicare Program; Competitive Acquisition for Certain
Durable Medical Equipment, Prosthetics, Orthotics, and Supplies
(DMEPOS) and Other Issues'' (72 FR 18064).
A contract supplier is prohibited from submitting a claim to
Medicare if it provides an item other than that specified in the
written prescription. Any change in the prescription requires a revised
written prescription. In addition, contract suppliers are required to
accept assignment for items they furnish to Medicare beneficiaries.
Comment: A commenter questioned why the total number of DMEPOS
services had been increasing from 2016 to 2018 despite a decline in
enrolled beneficiaries. The commenter posited several theories for this
increase, including the notion that it is because items supplied have
decreased in quality and require more frequent replacement, the
surviving regional and national suppliers know that they can only be
profitable when ``up-selling'' customers to accept all eligible
accessories and supplies when dispensing, that technology advances have
allowed for an increase in resupply rates, and that there is rampant
fraud resulting in billions of dollars of claims. Finally, the
commenter questioned whether the numbers would look different if all
the fraud-related items and suppliers were not in this data.
Response: We have been monitoring claims and health outcomes data
such as deaths, emergency room visits, physician office visits,
hospital and nursing home admissions and lengths of stay, etc., very
closely since the fee schedule adjustments were implemented in 2016 and
have not seen any signs that health outcomes have been negatively
affected by the fee schedule adjustments. Overall, health outcomes have
remained the same or have improved since 2016, and this is an
indication that there has not been a decrease in the quality of DMEPOS
items and services furnished. Although we know that a certain
percentage of Medicare claims for DMEPOS items and services are
fraudulent, we do not currently have data to determine whether fee
schedule adjustments have had any impact on the number of fraudulent
claims furnished for DMEPOS items and services.
In the CY 2019 ESRD PPS DMEPOS proposed rule (83 FR 57032), we
discussed utilization trends in the non-CBAs for the 2016 to 2018 time
period. In particular, we noted that while utilization of DME varied
throughout area and by particular item, the number of total services
increased from 2016 to 2017 (2.05 percent), and from 2017 to 2018 (3.08
percent) when looking at the number of total services furnished through
week 34 of the respective year. We noted that there had been a
persistent increase in total volume of services furnished in non-CBAs
from 2016 to 2018, and that this was driven by an increase in CPAP/
RADs. All other products exhibited either a continuous decline from
2016 through 2018, or at least a decline from 2017 to 2018.
When looking at updated data from 2019 to 2020 and 2020 to 2021
(using data through the same week in the respective year--week 42--to
understand the impact of the fee schedule adjustment while accounting
for claim delay), the total number of claim lines for all items and
services subject to fee schedule adjustments in the non-CBAs slightly
decreased, and we believe COVID-19 likely played a role in this
decrease. For instance, researchers have documented that in 2020 there
was a decrease in health care utilization as a result of the COVID-19
pandemic.20 21
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\20\ https://www.healthsystemtracker.org/chart-collection/how-have-healthcare-utilization-and-spending-changed-so-far-during-the-coronavirus-pandemic/#item-covidcostsuse_marchupdate_4.
\21\ https://aspe.hhs.gov/pdf-report/Medicare-FFS-Spending-Utilization.
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From 2019 to 2020, the only product categories that experienced an
increase in total number of claim lines were CPAP device and supplies,
infusion pump and supplies, and insulin infusion pump and supplies. For
example, for CPAP device and supplies, the total number of claim lines
increased by 3.43 percent from 2019 to 2020 (when using data through
week 42 of the respective year). From 2020 to 2021, only the
transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation (TENS) product category
experienced an increase in total number of claim lines with a 0.78
percent increase.
Comment: Commenters provided insights into our travel distance
analysis. Specifically, a commenter stated that the travel distance
analysis CMS presented in the November 2020 proposed rule, which
presented the average number of miles between suppliers and
beneficiaries, does not accurately reflect their business network, nor
service and clinical support infrastructure. For instance, the
commenter stated that while their patients do receive services directly
to their home, the majority of services are delivered to the hospital
or outpatient setting at the time of discharge. The commenter stated
they also maintain distribution centers to allow shipment of ongoing
supplies as needed, and that often their central distribution
warehouses are used to ship on behalf of the service billing locations.
Another commenter stated that average travel distance to furnish items
and services to beneficiaries in 2017 was far greater outside of CBAs
than in CBAs.
Response: We appreciate learning about the nature of the
commenter's business network and how it effects their travel distance
for furnishing services to beneficiaries. Section 16008 of the Cures
Act requires us to conduct a comparison of several factors with respect
to non-CBAs and CBAs, and one of those factors is the average travel
distance and cost associated with
[[Page 73880]]
furnishing items and services in the area. The kind of travel that the
commenter experiences may be true for their particular company.
However, past stakeholder input from the DME industry has often focused
on the travel distances DME suppliers travel to reach beneficiaries'
homes, particularly in rural areas. As such, that is why we decided to
focus on the travel distance between the beneficiary's residential ZIP
code and the supplier's ZIP code. With regard to the commenter saying
that the average travel distance to furnish items and services to
beneficiaries in 2017 was far greater outside of CBAs than in CBAs, our
data does not show that to be the case, unless looking at specific
types of areas. As we found in the CY 2019 ESRD PPS DMEPOS proposed
rule (83 FR 34367 through 34371) and in the November 2020 proposed rule
(85 FR 70366), travel distances were only greater in certain non-CBAs,
which included Frontier and Remote (FAR), OCBSAs, and Super Rural
areas.
D. Alternatives Considered but Not Proposed
We considered, but did not propose, three alternatives to our
provisions and we sought comments on these alternatives:
1. Adjust Fee Schedule Amounts for Super Rural Areas and Non-Contiguous
Areas Based on 120 Percent of the Fee Schedule Amounts for Non-Rural
Areas
Under the first alternative, we considered prior suggestions from
stakeholders to use the ambulance fee schedule concept of a ``super
rural area'' when determining fee schedule adjustments for non-CBAs (85
FR 70371). Specifically, we considered the provision to eliminate the
definition of rural area at Sec. 414.202 and 42 CFR 414.210(g)(1)(v),
which brings the adjusted fee schedule amounts for rural areas up to
110 percent of the national average price determined under Sec.
414.210(g)(1)(ii). In place of this definition and rule, we considered
the provision for an adjustment to the fee schedule amounts for DMEPOS
items and services furnished in super rural non-CBAs within the
contiguous U.S. equal to 120 percent of the adjusted fee schedule
amounts determined for other, non-rural non-CBAs within the same State.
For example, the adjusted fee schedule amount for super rural, non-CBAs
within Minnesota would be based on 120 percent of the adjusted fee
schedule amount (in this case, the regional price) for Minnesota
established in accordance with Sec. 414.210(g)(1)(i) through (iv).
Consistent with the ambulance fee schedule rural adjustment factor at
Sec. 414.610(c)(5)(ii), we considered defining ``super rural'' as a
rural area determined to be in the lowest 25 percent of rural
population arrayed by population density, where a rural area is defined
as an area located outside an urban area (MSA), or a rural census tract
within an MSA as determined under the most recent version of the
Goldsmith modification as determined by the Federal Office of Rural
Health Policy at the Health Resources and Services Administration. Per
this definition and under this alternative rule, certain areas within
MSAs would be considered super rural areas whereas now they are treated
as non-rural areas because they are located in counties that are
included in MSAs. For all other non-CBAs, including areas within the
contiguous U.S. that are outside MSAs but do not meet the definition of
super rural area, we considered adjusting the fee schedule amounts
using the current fee schedule adjustment methodologies under Sec.
414.210(g)(1) and Sec. 414.210(g)(3) through (8).
In addition to addressing past stakeholder input, this alternative
approach would provide a payment increase that is somewhat higher than,
but similar to the 17 percent payment differential identified by
stakeholders in 2015 based on a survey of respiratory equipment
suppliers.\22\ In addition, we have received input from suppliers that
serve low population density areas within MSAs that are not CBAs. These
stakeholders claim that they are serving low population density areas
that are not near to or served by suppliers located in the urban core
areas of the MSA and believe they must receive higher payments than
suppliers serving the higher population density areas of the MSA. Under
the alternative fee schedule adjustment methodology, if these low
population density areas were to meet the definition of super rural
area, they would receive a 20 percent higher payment than areas that
are not super rural areas. This alternative payment rule would address
these concerns with how the current payment rules and definition of
rural area affect these areas, and would target payments for those
rural areas that are low population density areas, regardless of
whether they are located in an MSA or not. This approach would also
address concerns raised from stakeholders on the March 23, 2017 call
regarding the cost of traveling long distances to serve far away,
remote areas.
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\22\ https://www.cqrc.org/img/CQRCCostSurveyWhitePaperMay2015Final.pdf.
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Under this alternative, Sec. 414.210(g)(2), which addresses fee
schedule adjustments for DMEPOS items and services furnished in non-
contiguous areas, would be replaced with a new rule that adjusts the
fee schedule amounts for non-contiguous areas based on the higher of
120 percent of the average of the SPAs for the item or service in CBAs
outside the contiguous U.S. (currently only Honolulu, Hawaii), or the
national average price determined under Sec. 414.210(g)(1)(ii).
Comment: A couple commenters stated that while they did not support
the alternative of adjusting the fee schedule amounts for super rural
and non-contiguous areas based on 120 percent of the fee schedule
amounts for non-rural areas, they recommend eliminating the fee
schedule amounts for rural areas up to 110 percent of the national
average price determined under Sec. 414.210(g)(1)(ii)) and maintaining
the 50/50 blend, but replacing the current rural definition (and
corresponding ZIP codes) by including the ``super rural'' ZIP codes
within the current array of rural ZIP codes. The commenters stated that
because certain areas within MSAs are treated as non-rural areas, as
they are located in counties that are included in MSAs, the commenters
were concerned that the current array of suppliers in higher populated
urban areas that are currently serving these rural areas within an MSA
may abandon these areas if they are less profitable.
Response: Although we are not finalizing this particular
alternative that we considered, we acknowledge the commenters'
recommendations regarding this particular alternative and we will keep
these points in mind for future consideration.
Comment: A commenter stated it would not be appropriate to adjust
the fee schedule amounts relying on the geographic designations used in
the Ambulance Fee Schedule, or suggested rates based on industry data
from 2015. The commenter stated many things have changed since 2015
that have affected the costs of furnishing items and services,
including the COVID-19 pandemic and the increased costs of personal
protective equipment (PPE), supply shortages, and personnel costs. The
commenter also stated that the Census Bureau has shifted to a sampling
methodology that impacts the RUCAs, which has changed the way the ZIP
code designations are calculated under the Ambulance Fee Schedule, and
that they were concerned that these changes have led super-rural areas
and rural areas being designated as urban. The
[[Page 73881]]
commenter stated that before this methodology is applied to any other
part of Medicare, CMS must work to address the underlying problems
these changes have created.
Response: We are not finalizing this particular alternative and
will keep these points in mind for future consideration.
After consideration of the public comments we received, we are not
finalizing this alternative considered.
2. Establish Additional Phase-in Period for Fully Adjusted Fee Schedule
Amounts for Rural Areas and Non-Contiguous Areas
We considered proposing an alternative fee schedule adjustment
methodology that would establish an additional transition period to
allow us to determine the impact of the new SPAs and monitor the impact
of adjusted fee schedule amounts (85 FR70372). Under this alternative,
we considered adjusting the fee schedule amounts for items and services
furnished in rural areas and non-contiguous non-CBAs based on a 75/25
blend of adjusted and unadjusted rates for the 3-year period from April
1, 2021, or the date immediately following the duration of the
emergency period described in section 1135(g)(1)(B) of the Act (42
U.S.C. 1320b-5(g)(1)(B)), whichever is later, through December 31,
2023. Such a phase-in would bring the fee schedule payment amounts down
closer to the fully adjusted fee levels and allow for a 3-year period
to monitor the impact of the lower rates on access to items and
services in these areas before potentially phasing in the fully
adjusted rates in 2024.
Comment: A commenter stated they favor the permanent extension of
the current rural and non-rural non-CBA blended rates instead of the
alternative phase-in of the fully adjusted fee schedule amounts
discussed in the November 2020 proposed rule, as it is important for
patients and suppliers to have stable rates, in their view.
Response: We did not propose to extend the 75/25 blended rates in
the non-rural contiguous non-CBAs once the PHE ends. We did, however,
propose a fee schedule adjustment methodology under Sec. 414.210(g)(1)
for the non-rural contiguous non-CBAs that is not time-limited,
transitional, or dependent upon the next round of the CBP. We agree
with the commenter that it is important to provide patients and
suppliers with stable rates to the extent feasible. Of note, the fully
adjusted rates had been in continuous effect in the non-rural
contiguous non-CBAs from January 2017 through March 5, 2020. During
that time period, the rate of assignment for items and services subject
to fee schedule adjustments furnished in those areas was over 99
percent. We believe that the fully adjusted rates will be sufficient
for when the PHE ends.
After consideration of the public comments we received, we are not
finalizing this alternative considered.
3. Extend Current Fee Schedule Adjustments for Items and Services
Furnished in Non-CBAs, CBAs, and Former CBAs That Were Included in
Product Categories Removed From Round 2021 of the CBP
CMS only awarded Round 2021 CBP contracts to bidders in the OTS
back braces and OTS knee braces product categories. CMS did not award
Round 2021 CBP contracts to bidders that bid in any other product
categories that were included in Round 2021 of the CBP, therefore, CMS
does not have any new SPAs for these items and services. As a result,
under this alternative, we considered whether to simply extend
application of the current fee schedule adjustment rules for all of the
items and services that were included in Round 2021 of the CBP but were
essentially removed from Round 2021 of the CBP (85 FR 70372).
Specifically, for items and services included in product categories
that have essentially been removed from Round 2021 of the CBP, CMS
considered extending the transition rules at Sec. 414.210(g)(9)(iii)
and (v) for items and services furnished in non-CBAs and the fee
schedule adjustment rules at Sec. 414.210(g)(10) for items and
services furnished in CBAs or former CBAs until such product categories
are competitively bid again in a future round of the CBP. Under this
alternative, we would adjust the fee schedule amounts for items and
services furnished in areas other than rural areas and non-contiguous
non-CBAs in accordance with Sec. 414.210(g)(9)(v) based on 100 percent
of the adjusted rates beginning on April 1, 2021 or the date
immediately following the duration of the emergency period described in
section 1135(g)(1)(B) of the Act (42 U.S.C. 1320b-5(g)(1)(B)),
whichever is later, through the date immediately preceding the
effective date of the next round of CBP contracts. As previously
discussed in this final rule, now that April 1, 2021 has passed, but
the public health emergency is still ongoing, and this rule has yet to
be finalized, we are making a technical edit to reflect the new
effective date for this final rule. The fee schedule amounts for items
and services removed from the CBP and furnished in rural and non-
contiguous non-CBAs would continue to be adjusted based on a 50/50
blend in accordance with Sec. 414.210(g)(9)(iii) through the date
immediately preceding the effective date of the next round of CBP
contracts. Under, this alternative, the fee schedule adjustment
transition rules under Sec. 414.210(g)(9) would continue in effect
through the date immediately preceding the effective date of the next
round of CBP contracts. This alternative differs from our proposal and
this final rule, as we proposed and are finalizing a fee schedule
adjustment methodology for non-CBAs under Sec. 414.210(g)(1) and
(g)(2), that is not time-limited, transitional, or dependent upon the
next round of the CBP.
For items and services included in product categories that have
effectively been removed from Round 2021 of the CBP, the fee schedule
amounts for items and services furnished in CBAs or former CBAs would
continue to be adjusted in accordance with Sec. 414.210(g)(10) through
the date immediately preceding the effective date of the next round of
CBP contracts. In contrast, for items and services that are included in
Round 2021 of the CBP, the fee schedule amounts for such items and
services would be adjusted in accordance with the adjustment
methodologies outlined in this final rule; we would pay the 50/50
blended rates in rural and non-contiguous non-CBAs, and 100 percent of
the adjusted payment amount established under Sec. 414.210(g)(1)(iv)
in non-rural non-CBAs in the contiguous U.S.
Comment: Commenters opposed this alternative for the reasons
discussed in previous comments in section III.C. of this final rule.
Most commenters opposed continuation of the current rates in the former
CBAs, supported a permanent extension of the 50/50 blended rates in
rural and non-contiguous non-CBAs, and opposed paying 100 percent of
the adjusted payment amount established under Sec. 414.210(g)(1)(iv)
in non-rural non-CBAs in the contiguous U.S. Commenters opposed
continuation of the current rates in the former CBAs saying they are
based on SPAs established by a flawed bid methodology developed over 6
years ago. Instead, and as previously discussed, many commenters
supported a permanent extension of the 50/50 blended rates in rural and
non-contiguous non-CBAs, a 75/25 blended rate methodology in the non-
rural non-CBAs in the contiguous U.S., and a 90/10 blended rate
methodology in the former CBAs in which the 90 percent must be based on
the current payment
[[Page 73882]]
rates in the former CBAs (including the CPI-U updates) and the 10
percent must be based on the 2015 unadjusted fee schedule. Finally, as
previously discussed, a few commenters supported the proposal for CBAs
and former CBAs (CBAs where no CBP contracts are in effect), in which
the fee schedule adjustment rules at Sec. 414.210(g)(10) would be
extended until a future round of the CBP. However, these commenters did
not support the non-CBA policies in this alternative considered, and
instead supported a permanent extension of the 50/50 blended rates in
rural and non-contiguous non-CBAs, and a 75/25 blended rate methodology
in the non-rural non-CBAs in the contiguous U.S.
Response: After consideration of the public comments we received,
we are not finalizing this alternative considered. As we discuss in
section III.E. of this final rule titled ``Provisions of Final Rule'',
we will be finalizing our proposals discussed later in this section. We
expect to revisit fee schedule adjustments in the future.
E. Provisions of Final Rule
We are finalizing our proposals, with the modification of the
effective date, in this final rule. In the November 2020 proposed rule,
we proposed the fee schedule adjustment methodologies for items and
services furnished in non-CBAs on or after April 1, 2021, or the date
immediately following the duration of the emergency period described in
section 1135(g)(1)(B) of the Act (42 U.S.C. 1320b-5(g)(1)(B)),
whichever is later (85 FR 70370). However, as we previously discussed
in this final rule, now that April 1, 2021 has passed, and given that
the COVID-19 PHE is still ongoing, we are making a technical edit to
change the April 1, 2021 date to the effective date specified in the
DATES section of this final rule to reflect the new effective date for
these provisions. Other than the modification of the April 1, 2021
effective date, we are finalizing our proposals without modification.
First, we will continue paying the 50/50 blended rates in non-
contiguous non-CBAs, but the 50/50 blend will no longer be a transition
rule under Sec. 414.210(g)(9), and will instead be the fee schedule
adjustment methodology for items and services furnished in these areas
under Sec. 414.210(g)(2) unless revised in future rulemaking. For
items and services furnished in non-contiguous non-CBAs, the fee
schedule amounts for such items and services furnished on or after the
effective date specified in the DATES section of this final rule, or
the date immediately following the duration of the emergency period
described in section 1135(g)(1)(B) of the Act (42 U.S.C. 1320b-
5(g)(1)(B)), whichever is later, will be adjusted so that they are
equal to a blend of 50 percent of the greater of the average of the
SPAs for the item or service for CBAs located in non-contiguous areas
or 110 percent of the national average price for the item or service
determined under Sec. 414.210(g)(1)(ii) and 50 percent of the
unadjusted fee schedule amount for the area, which is the fee schedule
amount in effect on December 31, 2015, increased for each subsequent
year beginning in 2016 by the annual update factors specified in
sections 1834(a)(14), 1834(h)(4), and 1842(s)(1)(B) of the Act,
respectively, for durable medical equipment and supplies, off-the-shelf
orthotics, and enteral nutrients, supplies, and equipment.
Second, we will continue paying the 50/50 blended rates in rural
contiguous areas, but the 50/50 blend will no longer be a transition
rule under Sec. 414.210(g)(9), and will instead be the fee schedule
adjustment methodology for items and services furnished in these areas
under Sec. 414.210(g)(2) unless revised in future rulemaking. For
items and services furnished in rural contiguous areas on or after the
effective date specified in the DATES section of this final rule or the
date immediately following the duration of the emergency period
described in section 1135(g)(1)(B) of the Act (42 U.S.C. 1320b-
5(g)(1)(B)), whichever is later, the fee schedule amounts will be
adjusted so that they are equal to a blend of 50 percent of 110 percent
of the national average price for the item or service determined under
Sec. 414.210(g)(1)(ii) and 50 percent of the fee schedule amount for
the area in effect on December 31, 2015, increased for each subsequent
year beginning in 2016 by the annual update factors specified in
sections 1834(a)(14), 1834(h)(4), and 1842(s)(1)(B) of the Act,
respectively, for durable medical equipment and supplies, off-the-shelf
orthotics, and enteral nutrients, supplies, and equipment.
We note that the 50/50 blended rates for DMEPOS items and services
furnished in rural and non-contiguous areas that we are finalizing in
this rule are, on average, approximately 66 percent higher than the
fully adjusted fee schedule amounts. Previous stakeholder input from
MedPAC has indicated that the 50/50 blended rates are ``costly'' and
create ``. . . a financial burden for the Medicare program and
beneficiaries''. MedPAC has also previously opined on the
appropriateness of the unadjusted fee schedule, which comprises 50
percent of the 50/50 blended rates. MedPAC stated, ``products not
included in the CBP continue to largely be paid on the basis of the
historical fee schedule, and the Commission has found many of these
rates are likely excessive.'' \23\ In light of this previous
stakeholder input from MedPAC, we are concerned that this fee schedule
adjustment methodology may result in payment amounts that are excessive
compared to the fully adjusted fee schedule amounts. However, as we
discussed in the November 2020 proposed rule, this fee schedule
adjustment methodology errs on the side of caution, as we aim to ensure
beneficiary access to items and services in rural and remote areas of
the country. For instance, we proposed paying the 50/50 blend for rural
and non-contiguous non-CBAs from January 1, 2019, through December 31,
2020, in our CY 2019 ESRD PPS DMEPOS proposed rule, and we finalized
this policy in our CY 2019 ESRD PPS DMEPOS final rule. Most of the
comments we received on this proposal were from commenters in the DME
industry, such as homecare associations, DME manufacturers, and
suppliers, and these commenters generally supported the 50/50 blended
rates proposal.
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The 50/50 blended rates were initially established for phase in
purposes, so we may consider alternative methodologies for adjusting
fee schedule amounts for rural and non-contiguous areas in the future.
We will be undertaking analyses to assess the extent to which these
payments are ``excessive'', as per MedPAC's comment. In addition, we
may decide it is necessary to propose changes to the fee schedule
adjustment methodologies in the future depending on potential changes
to the CBP. Therefore, we will likely be revisiting this issue and the
fee schedule adjustment methodologies for all items in all areas again
in the future.
Third, we will revise Sec. 414.210(g)(1)(v) to establish that for
items and services furnished before the effective date specified in the
DATES section of this final rule, the fee schedule amount for all areas
within a state that are defined as rural areas for the purposes of this
subpart is adjusted to 110 percent of the national average price
determined under paragraph (g)(1)(ii) of this section. In the November
2020 proposed rule, we proposed to reference April 1, 2021 in the
revised Sec. 414.210(g)(1)(v). However, as we previously discussed in
this final rule,
[[Page 73883]]
April 1, 2021, has passed and the COVID-19 PHE is still ongoing.
Because this rule has yet to be finalized, the regulation text will
reference the effective date specified in the DATES section of this
final rule effective date rather than April 1, 2021.
Fourth, we are finalizing our proposal so that for items and
services furnished on or after the effective date specified in the
DATES section of this document, or the date immediately following the
termination of the emergency period described in section 1135(g)(1)(B)
of the Act (42 U.S.C. 1320b-5(g)(1)(B)) (that is, the COVID-19 PHE),
whichever is later, in all other non-rural, non-CBAs within the
contiguous United States, the fee schedule amounts will be equal to 100
percent of the adjusted payment amount established under Sec.
414.210(g)(1)(iv).
Fifth and finally, we are finalizing our proposal to add paragraph
Sec. 414.210(g)(9)(vi) to establish that for items and services
furnished in all areas with dates of service on or after the effective
date specified in the DATES section of this document, or the date
immediately following the duration of the emergency period described in
section 1135(g)(1)(B) of the Act, whichever is later, based on the fee
schedule amount for the area is equal to the adjusted payment amount
established under Sec. 414.210(g).
IV. DMEPOS Fee Schedule Adjustments for Items and Services Furnished in
Rural Areas From June 2018 Through December 2018 and Exclusion of
Infusion Drugs From the DMEPOS CBP
A. Overview
On May 11, 2018 we published an IFC (83 FR 21912) in the Federal
Register titled ``Medicare Program; Durable Medical Equipment Fee
Schedule Adjustments to Resume the Transitional 50/50 Blended Rates to
Provide Relief in Rural Areas and Non-Contiguous Areas''. In this
section of this final rule, we will present the provisions of the May
2018 IFC followed by summation of the comments received and our
responses.
Section 5004(b) of the Cures Act amended section 1847(a)(2)(A) of
Act to exclude drugs and biologicals described in section 1842(o)(1)(D)
of the Act from the DMEPOS CBP. In the May 2018 IFC, we made conforming
changes to the regulation to reflect the exclusion of infusion drugs,
described in section 1842(o)(1)(D) of Act, from items subject to the
DMEPOS CBP.
As discussed in section II. of this rule, in the May 2018 IFC, we
also expressed an immediate need to resume the transitional, blended
fee schedule amounts in rural and non-contiguous areas, noting strong
stakeholder concerns about the continued viability of many DMEPOS
suppliers, our finding of a decrease in the number of suppliers
furnishing items and services subject to the fee schedule adjustments,
as well as the Cures Act mandate to consider additional information
material to setting fee schedule adjustments based on information from
the DMEPOS CBP for items and services furnished on or after January 1,
2019 (83 FR 21918). We amended Sec. 414.210(g)(9) by adding Sec.
414.210(g)(9)(iii) to resume the fee schedule adjustment transition
rates for items and services furnished in rural and non-contiguous
areas from June 1, 2018 through December 31, 2018. We also amended
Sec. 414.210(g)(9)(ii) to reflect that for items and services
furnished with dates of service from January 1, 2017 to May 31, 2018,
fully adjusted fee schedule amounts would apply (83 FR 21922). We also
added Sec. 414.210(g)(9)(iv) to specify that fully adjusted fee
schedule amounts would apply for certain items furnished in non-CBAs
other than rural and non-contiguous areas from June 1, 2018 through
December 31, 2018 (83 FR 21920). We explained that we would use the
extended transition period to further analyze our findings and consider
the information required by section 16008 of the Cures Act in
determining whether changes to the methodology for adjusting fee
schedule amounts for items furnished on or after January 1, 2019 were
necessary (83 FR 21918 through 21919). We respond to the comments we
received on these issues later in this final rule.
B. Background
1. Background for Payment Revisions for DMEPOS
For further background regarding the DMEPOS CBP, payment
methodology for CBAs, and the fee schedule adjustment methodology for
non-CBAs, we refer readers to section III.A. of this final rule.
On February 26, 2014, we published an Advance Notice of Proposed
Rulemaking (ANPRM) in the Federal Register titled, ``Medicare Program;
Methodology for Adjusting Payment Amounts for Certain Durable Medical
Equipment, Prosthetics, Orthotics, and Supplies (DMEPOS) Using
Information from Competitive Bidding Programs'' (79 FR 10754). In that
ANPRM, we solicited stakeholder input on several factors including
whether the costs of furnishing various DMEPOS items and services vary
based on the geographic area in which they are furnished in relation to
developing a payment methodology to adjust DMEPOS fee schedule amounts
or other payment amounts in non-CBAs based on DMEPOS competitive
bidding payment information.
We received approximately 185 comments from suppliers,
manufacturers, professional, State and national trade associations,
physicians, physical therapists, beneficiaries and their caregivers,
and State government offices. Commenters generally stated that costs
vary by geographic region and that costs in rural and non-contiguous
areas of the U.S. (Alaska, Hawaii, Puerto Rico, etc.) are significantly
higher than costs in urban areas and contiguous areas of the U.S. A
commenter representing many manufacturers and suppliers listed several
key variables or factors that influence the cost of furnishing items
and services in different areas that should be considered. This
commenter stated that information on all bids submitted under the CBP
should be considered and not just the bids of winning suppliers. Some
commenters expressed concern that the SPAs assume a significant
increase in volume to offset lower payment amounts. Commenters also
recommended phasing in the adjusted fee schedule amounts, allowing for
adjustments in fees if access issues arise, and annual inflation
updates to adjusted fee schedule amounts.
On July 11, 2014, we published the CY 2015 ESRD PPS proposed rule
in the Federal Register titled ``Medicare Program; End-Stage Renal
Disease Prospective Payment System, Quality Incentive Program, and
Durable Medical Equipment, Prosthetics, Orthotics, and Supplies;'' (79
FR 40208) as required by section 1834(a)(1)(G) of the Act, to establish
methodologies for using information from the CBP to adjust the fee
schedule amounts for items and services furnished in non-CBAs in
accordance with sections 1834(a)(1)(F)(ii) and 1834(h)(1)(H)(ii) of the
Act. We also proposed making adjustments to the payment amounts for
enteral nutrition as authorized by section 1842(s)(3)(B) of the Act.
We received 89 public comments on the proposed rule, including
comments from patient organizations, patients, manufacturers, health
care systems, and DME suppliers. We made changes to the proposed
methodologies based on these comments and finalized a method for paying
higher amounts for certain items furnished in areas defined as rural
areas. In addition, we provided a 6-month fee schedule adjustment phase
in period from January through June of 2016, during which the fee
schedule amounts
[[Page 73884]]
would be based on 50 percent of the unadjusted fees and 50 percent of
the adjusted fees to allow time for suppliers to adjust to the new
payment rates and to monitor the impact of the change in payment rates
on access to items and services. On November 6, 2014, we published the
CY 2015 ESRD PPS final rule (79 FR 66223 through 66265) to finalize the
methodologies at Sec. 414.210(g) based on public comments received on
the CY 2015 ESRD PPS proposed rule (79 FR 40208). A summary of the
methodologies is described in section III.A. of this final rule.
To update the adjusted fee schedule amounts based on new
competitions and provide for a transitional phase-in period of the fee
schedule adjustments, we established Sec. 414.210(g)(8) and (9) in the
CY 2015 ESRD PPS final rule (79 FR 66263). In Sec. 414.210(g)(8), the
adjusted fee schedule amounts are updated when a SPA for an item or
service is updated following one or more new DMEPOS CBP competitions
and as other items are added to DMEPOS CBP. The fee schedule amounts
that are adjusted using SPAs are not subject to the annual DMEPOS
covered item update and are only updated when SPAs from the DMEPOS CBP
are updated. Updates to the SPAs may occur as contracts are recompeted.
Section 414.210(g)(9)(i), specifies that the fee schedule adjustments
were phased in for items and services furnished with dates of service
from January 1, 2016, through June 30, 2016, so that each fee schedule
amount was adjusted based on a blend of 50 percent of the fee schedule
amount if not adjusted based on information from the CBP, and 50
percent of the adjusted fee schedule amount. Section 414.210(g)(9)(ii)
specifies that for items and services furnished with dates of service
on or after July 1, 2016, the fee schedule amounts would be equal to
100 percent of the adjusted fee schedule amounts. Commenters
recommended CMS phase in the fee schedule adjustments to give suppliers
time to adjust to the change in payment amounts (79 FR 66228). Some
commenters recommended a 4-year phase-in of the adjusted fees. CMS
agreed that phasing in the adjustments to the fee schedule amounts
would allow time for suppliers to adjust to the new payment rates and
would allow time to monitor the impact of the change in payment rates
on access to items and services. We decided 6 months was enough time to
monitor access and health outcomes to determine if the fee schedule
adjustments created a negative impact on access to items and services.
Therefore, we finalized a 6-month phase-in period of the blended rates
(79 FR 66228 through 66229).
We finalized the 6-month transition period from January 1 through
June 30, 2016 in the CY 2015 ESRD PPS final rule (79 FR 66223) that was
published in the Federal Register on November 6, 2014. The Cures Act
was enacted on December 13, 2016, and section 16007(a) of the Cures Act
extended the transition period for the phase-in of fee schedule
adjustments at Sec. 414.210(g)(9)(i) by 6 additional months so that
fee schedule amounts were based on a blend of 50 percent of the
adjusted fee schedule amount and 50 percent of the unadjusted fee
schedule amount until December 31, 2016 (with full implementation of
the fee schedule adjustments applying to items and services furnished
with dates of service on or after January 1, 2017).
2. Transition Period for Phase-In of Fee Schedule Adjustments
We determined that the transitional period for the phase-in of
adjustments to fee schedule amounts should be resumed in non-CBA rural
and non-contiguous areas to ensure access to necessary items and
services in these areas. The May 2018 IFC amended Sec. 414.210(g)(9)
to change the end date for the initial transition period for the phase-
in of adjustments to fee schedule amounts for certain items based on
information from the DMEPOS CBP from June 30, 2016 to December 31,
2016, to reflect the extension that was mandated by section 16007(a) of
the Cures Act. The May 2018 IFC also amended Sec. 414.210(g)(9) to
resume the transition period for the phase-in of adjustments to fee
schedule amounts for certain items furnished in non-CBA rural and non-
contiguous areas from June 1, 2018 through December 31, 2018, for the
reasons discussed in this final rule.
a. Statutory Mandate To Reconsider Fee Schedule Adjustments
After we established the fee schedule adjustment methodology under
Sec. 414.210(g), Congress amended section 1834(a)(1)(G) of the Act to
require that CMS take certain steps and factors into consideration
regarding the fee schedule adjustments for items and services furnished
on or after January 1, 2019, to ensure that the rates take into account
certain aspects of providing services in non-CBAs. Specifically,
section 16008 of the Cures Act amended section 1834(a)(1)(G) of the Act
to require in the case of items and services furnished on or after
January 1, 2019, that in making any adjustments to the fee schedule
amounts in accordance with sections 1834(a)(1)(F)(ii) and (iii) of the
Act, the Secretary must: (1) Solicit and take into account stakeholder
input; and (2) take into account the highest bid by a winning supplier
in a CBA and a comparison of each of the following factors with respect
to non-CBAs and CBAs:
The average travel distance and cost associated with
furnishing items and services in the area.
The average volume of items and services furnished by
suppliers in the area.
The number of suppliers in the area.
On March 23, 2017, CMS hosted a national provider call to solicit
stakeholder input regarding adjustments to fee schedule amounts using
information from the DMEPOS CBP.\24\ The national provider call was
announced on March 3, 2017, and we requested written comments by April
6, 2017. We received 125 written comments from stakeholders. More than
330 participants called into our national provider call, with 23
participants providing oral comments during the call. In general, the
commenters were mostly suppliers, but also included manufacturers,
trade organizations, and healthcare providers such as physical and
occupational therapists. These industry stakeholders expressed concerns
that the level of the adjusted payment amounts constrained suppliers
from furnishing items and services to rural areas. These stakeholders
requested an increase to the adjusted payment amounts for these areas.
The written comments generally echoed the oral comments from the call
held on March 23, 2017, whereby commenters claimed that the adjusted
fees were not sufficient to cover the costs of furnishing items and
services in rural and non-contiguous areas and that it was having an
impact on access to items and services in these areas. For additional
details about the national provider call and a summary of oral and
written comments received, we refer readers to the CY 2019 ESRD PPS/
DMEPOS proposed rule (83 FR 57026).
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In the May 2018 IFC, we stated that one of the factors CMS must
consider when making fee schedule adjustments for items and services
furnished on or after January 1, 2019, in accordance with section 16008
of the Cures Act, is the average volume of items and
[[Page 73885]]
services furnished by suppliers in an area (83 FR 21917). We then noted
that data for items furnished in 2016 and 2017 showed that the average
volume of items furnished by suppliers in CBAs exceeded the average
volume of items furnished by suppliers in rural and non-contiguous
areas. We stated that this supports stakeholder input that the
suppliers in rural and non-contiguous areas have an average volume of
business less than that of their counterparts in CBAs, and that this
difference may make it more difficult for suppliers in rural and non-
contiguous areas to meet their expenses (83 FR 21917).
In addition, at the time of this May 2018 IFC, the adjusted fee
schedule amounts for stationary oxygen equipment in non-contiguous,
non-CBAs were lower than the SPA for stationary oxygen equipment in the
Honolulu, Hawaii, CBA and the adjusted fee schedule amounts for
stationary oxygen equipment in some rural areas were lower than the
SPAs in CBAs within the same State. This was due to the combination of
the fee schedule adjustments and the budget neutrality offset that CMS
applied to stationary oxygen equipment and contents due to the separate
oxygen class for oxygen generating portable equipment (OGPE).
In 2006, CMS established a separate payment class for OGPE (which
are portable concentrators with transfilling equipment), through notice
and comment rulemaking (71 FR 65884). The authority to add this payment
class is located at section 1834(a)(9)(D) of the Act, and at the time
of the May 2018 IFC, section 1834(a)(9)(D) of the Act only allowed CMS
to establish new classes of oxygen and oxygen equipment if such classes
were budget neutral, which meant that the establishment of new oxygen
payment classes did not result in oxygen and oxygen equipment
expenditures for any year that were more or less than the expenditures
that would have been made had the new classes not been established. We
also stated that in the May 2018 IFC that accordance with Sec.
414.226(c)(6), CMS reduced the fee schedule amounts for stationary
oxygen equipment in non-CBAs to make the payment classes for oxygen and
oxygen equipment budget neutral as required by section 1834(a)(9)(D) of
the Act (83 FR 21917). Due to the combination of the fee schedule
adjustment and the budget neutrality offset, the adjusted fee schedule
amounts for stationary oxygen equipment in non-contiguous non-CBAs and
some rural areas were lower than the SPAs in Honolulu, Hawaii, and CBAs
within the same State, respectively. We stated that this was
significant because the methodology at 42 CFR 414.210(g) attempted to
ensure that the adjusted fee schedule amounts for items and services
furnished in rural areas within a State were no lower than the adjusted
fee schedule amounts for non-rural areas within the same State. We then
noted that CBAs are areas where payment for certain DME items and
services is based on SPAs established under the CBP rather than
adjusted fee schedule amounts, and that CBAs tend to have higher
population densities and typically correspond with urban census tracts
(83 FR 21917).
We explained that the budget neutrality offset resulted in payment
amounts for stationary oxygen equipment in CBAs being higher than the
adjusted fee schedule amounts in some cases. We stated that restoring
the blended fee schedule rates paid in rural and non-contiguous non-
CBAs during the transition period would result in fee schedule amounts
for oxygen and oxygen equipment in these areas being higher than the
SPAs paid in all of the CBAs. Therefore, we stated payment at the
blended rates would avoid situations where payment for furnishing
oxygen in a rural or non-contiguous, non-CBA was lower than payment for
furnishing oxygen in a CBA (83 FR 21917). The May 2018 IFC also
contained provisions related to wheelchair payment. For further
discussion of the wheelchair payment provisions that were included in
the May 2018 IFC, see the final rule titled: Medicare Program;
Inpatient Rehabilitation Facility Prospective Payment System for
Federal Fiscal Year 2022 and Updates to the IRF Quality Reporting
Program; Payment for Complex Rehabilitative Wheelchairs and Related
Accessories (Including Seating Systems) and Seat and Back Cushions
Furnished in Connection With Such Wheelchairs, published on August 4,
2021 (86 FR 42362).
Since the publication of the May 2018 IFC, the Consolidated
Appropriations Act of 2021 (Pub. L. 116-260) was signed into law on
December 27, 2020. Effective April 1, 2021, section 121 of this Act
eliminated the budget neutrality requirement set forth in section
1834(a)(9)(D)(ii) of the Act for separate classes and national limited
monthly payment rates established for any item of oxygen and oxygen
equipment using the authority in section 1834(a)(9)(D)(i) of the Act.
Effective for claims with dates of service on or after April 1, 2021,
the fee schedule amounts for HCPCS codes E0424, E0431, E0433, E0434,
E0439, E0441, E0442, E0443, E0444, E0447, E1390, E1391, E1392, E1405,
E1406, and K0738 are adjusted to remove a percentage reduction
necessary to meet the budget neutrality requirement previously mandated
by section 1834(a)(9)(D)(ii) of the Act.
b. Fee Schedule Adjustment Impact Monitoring Data
We also discussed in the May 2018 IFC how we monitor claims data
from non-CBAs, some of which at the time pre-dated the implementation
of the fully adjusted fee schedule amounts (83 FR 21917). The data did
not show any observable trends indicating an increase in adverse health
outcomes such as mortality, hospital and nursing home admission rates,
monthly hospital and nursing home days, physician visit rates, or
emergency room visits in 2016 or 2017 compared to 2015 in the non-CBAs,
overall. We have continued to monitor claims data from non-CBAs and
have not observed any trends indicating an increase in adverse
beneficiary health outcomes associated with the fee schedule
adjustments.
In addition, we monitored and continue to monitor data on the rate
of assignment in non-CBAs, which reflects when suppliers are accepting
Medicare payment as payment in full and not balance billing
beneficiaries for the cost of the DME. Before and after the publication
of the May 2018 IFC, assignment rates for items subject to fee schedule
adjustments have continued to remain around 99 percent. We also
solicited comments on ways to improve our fee schedule adjustment
impact monitoring data in the May 2018 IFC.
c. Resuming Transitional Blended Fee Schedule Rates in Rural and Non-
Contiguous Areas
We stated that the monitoring data described in section II.C.2. of
the May 2018 IFC was retrospective claims data for payment of items
already furnished, and that it was limited to a retrospective view to
address potential future problems (83 FR 21918).
We also provided Medicare claims data showing that the number of
supplier locations furnishing DME items and services subject to the fee
schedule adjustments decreased by 22 percent from 2013 to 2016 (83 FR
21918).
We stated there were additional factors that section 16008 of the
Cures Act requires us to take into account in making adjustments to the
fee schedule amounts for items and services furnished beginning in
2019. For instance, we stated that the average volume of items and
services furnished per supplier in non-CBAs is
[[Page 73886]]
significantly less than the average volume of items and services
furnished per supplier in CBAs. Additionally, we stated that the number
of suppliers in general has been steadily decreasing over time, and as
the number of suppliers serving non-CBAs continues to decline, the
volume of items and services furnished by the remaining suppliers
increases (83 FR 21918). At the time of the publication of the May 2018
IFC, we did not know if the suppliers that remained would have the
financial ability to continue expanding their businesses to continue to
satisfy market demand. We also did not know if large suppliers serving
both urban and rural areas would continue to serve the rural areas
representing a much smaller percentage of their business than urban
areas (83 FR 21918).
Based on the stakeholder comments and decrease in the number of
supplier locations, we stated there was an immediate need to resume the
transitional, blended fee schedule amounts in rural and non-contiguous
areas. We stated that resuming these transitional blended rates would
preserve beneficiary access to needed DME items and services in a
contracting supplier marketplace, while allowing CMS to address the
adequacy of the fee schedule adjustment methodology, as required by
section 16008 of the Cures Act (83 FR 21918).
We stated that suppliers have noted that they have struggled under
the fully adjusted fee schedule and that they do not believe they can
continue to furnish the items and services at the current rates (83 FR
21918). Industry stakeholders stated that the fully adjusted fee
schedule amounts were not sufficient to cover supplier costs for
furnishing items and services in rural and non-contiguous areas and the
number of suppliers furnishing items in these areas continued to
decline. We stated that section 16008 of the Cures Act mandates that we
consider stakeholder input and additional information in making fee
schedule adjustments based on information from the DMEPOS CBP for items
and services furnished beginning in 2019. The information we collected
at the time included input from many stakeholders in the DMEPOS
industry indicating that the fully adjusted fee schedule amounts were
too low and that this was having an adverse impact on beneficiary
access to items and services, particularly in rural and non-contiguous
areas. Given these concerns about the continued viability of many
DMEPOS suppliers, coupled with the Cures Act mandate to consider
additional information material to setting fee schedule adjustments, we
stated it would be unwise to continue with the fully adjusted fee
schedule rates in the rural and non-contiguous areas for 7 months. We
stated that any adverse impacts on beneficiary health outcomes, or on
small businesses exiting the market, could be irreversible. We stated
that it was in the best interest of the beneficiaries living in these
areas to maintain a blend of the historic unadjusted fee schedule
amounts and fee schedule amounts adjusted using SPAs established under
the DMEPOS CBP to prevent suppliers that might be on the verge of
closing from closing, as they may be the only option for beneficiaries
in these areas. We stated that while our systematic monitoring in these
areas has not shown problematic trends to this point, that monitoring
by its nature looks backward. We stated that given the rapid changes in
health care delivery that may disproportionately impact rural and more
isolated geographic areas, there was concern that the continued decline
of the fees and the number of suppliers in such areas may impact
beneficiary access to items and services. We stated that these
adjustments would maintain a balance between the higher historic rates
and rates adjusted based on bidding in larger metropolitan areas where
suppliers furnish a much larger volume of DMEPOS items and services and
support continued access to services. Therefore, we revised Sec.
414.210(g)(9) to resume the fee schedule adjustment transition rates
for items and services furnished in rural and non-contiguous areas from
June 1, 2018 through December 31, 2018, while we further analyzed this
issue (83 FR 21918).
C. Technical Changes To Conform the Regulations to Section 5004(b) of
the Cures Act: Exclusion of DME Infusion Drugs Under the CBP
Another provision in the May 2018 IFC that we are finalizing in
this final rule relates to section 5004(b) of the Cures Act, which
amended section 1847(a)(2)(A) of the Act to exclude drugs and
biologicals described in section 1842(o)(1)(D) of the Act from the CBP.
We made conforming technical changes to the regulations text consistent
with statutory requirements to exclude drugs and biologicals from the
CBP (83 FR 21920). We amended 42 CFR 414.402 to reflect that infusion
drugs are not included in the CBP by revising the definition of
``Item'' in paragraph (2) to add the words ``and infusion'' after the
words ``other than inhalation.'' The sentence reads as follows:
``Supplies necessary for the effective use of DME other than inhalation
and infusion drugs.''
We also removed a reference to drugs being included in the CBP by
deleting the phrase ``or subpart I'' in Sec. 414.412(b)(2). The
sentence reads as follows: ``The bids submitted for each item in a
product category cannot exceed the payment amount that would otherwise
apply to the item under subpart C of this part, without the application
of Sec. 414.210(g), or subpart D of this part, without the application
of Sec. 414.105. The bids submitted for items in accordance with
paragraph (d)(2) of this section cannot exceed the weighted average,
weighted by total nationwide allowed services, as defined in Sec.
414.202, of the payment amounts that would otherwise apply to the
grouping of similar items under subpart C of this part, without the
application of Sec. 414.210(g), or subpart D of this part, without the
application of Sec. 414.105.'' Similarly, we made a conforming
technical change to Sec. 414.414(f) in the discussion of ``expected
savings'' so that infusion drugs are not taken into account by deleting
the words ``or drug'' and the phrase ``or the same drug under subpart
I'' from Sec. 414.414(f). The ``expected savings'' text reads as
follows: ``A contract is not awarded under this subpart unless CMS
determines that the amounts to be paid to contract suppliers for an
item under a competitive bidding program are expected to be less than
the amounts that would otherwise be paid for the same item under
subpart C or subpart D.''
D. Provisions of the May 11, 2018 Interim Final Rule With Comment
Period
1. Transition Period for Phase-In of Fee Schedule Adjustments
We amended Sec. 414.210(g)(9)(i) to change the end date for the
initial transition period for the phase in of adjustments to fee
schedule amounts for certain items based on information from the DMEPOS
CBP from June 30, 2016, to December 31, 2016, as mandated by section
16007(a) of the Cures Act. We also amended Sec. 414.210(g)(9)(ii) to
reflect that fully adjusted fee schedule amounts apply from January 1,
2017, through May 31, 2018, and then on or after January 1, 2019. We
also added Sec. 414.210(g)(9)(iii) to resume the transition period for
the phase in of adjustments to fee schedule amounts for certain items
furnished in rural and non-contiguous areas from June 1, 2018, through
December 31, 2018. Finally, we added Sec. 414.210(g)(9)(iv) to reflect
that fully adjusted fee schedule amounts
[[Page 73887]]
apply for certain items furnished in non-CBA areas other than rural and
non-contiguous areas from June 1, 2018, through December 31, 2018.
We discussed in section II.C.1. of the May 2018 IFC that industry
stakeholders stated that the fully adjusted fee schedule amounts were
not sufficient to cover supplier costs for furnishing items and
services in rural and non-contiguous areas and were impacting
beneficiary health outcomes (83 FR 21918). Section 16008 of the Cures
Act requires CMS to consider certain factors in making fee schedule
adjustments using information from the CBP for items and services
furnished in non-CBAs on or after January 1, 2019. We stated that we
should immediately resume the blended fee schedule rates in rural and
non-contiguous areas that were in place during CY 2016, while we
further analyzed this issue to safeguard beneficiaries' access to
necessary items and services in rural and non-contiguous areas. We
stated that additional information and factors would be considered when
addressing the fee schedule adjustments for items and services
furnished on or after January 1, 2019, and that these factors include
differences in costs associated with furnishing items in heavier
populated CBAs versus less populated or remote rural and non-contiguous
areas (83 FR 21920). Even though January 1, 2019 was just 7 months away
from the June 1, 2018, effective date of this May 2018 IFC, we believed
that it would be unwise to continue with the fully adjusted fee
schedule rates in the rural and non-contiguous areas for 7 months.
Therefore, we concluded that we should resume the transition period's
blended fee schedule rates for items furnished in rural areas and non-
contiguous areas not subject to the CBP from June 1, 2018, through
December 31, 2018. We stated that the volume of items furnished per
supplier in rural and non-contiguous areas was far less than the volume
of items furnished per supplier in CBAs, indicating that the cost per
item in these areas may be higher than the cost per item in CBAs (83 FR
21920). We also expressed concern that national chain suppliers may
close locations in more remote areas if the rate they are paid for
furnishing items in a market where the volume of services is low does
not justify the overhead expenses of retaining the locations (83 FR
21920).
We received a total of 208 timely pieces of correspondence in
response to the May 2018 IFC. Many of the comments we received on the
May 2018 IFC were similar to or the same as comments we received on the
CY 2019 ESRD PPS DMEPOS proposed rule and which we summarized and
responded to in the CY 2019 ESRD PPS DMEPOS final rule (83 FR 56922).
Most of the commenters were DME suppliers.
Comment: Most commenters supported extending the 50/50 blended
rates to the rural and non-contiguous non-CBAs. Some reasons that
commenters gave for why they supported this policy were that it would
help suppliers stay in business and service rural patients. Commenters
also discussed how rural areas face unique circumstances. For example,
a commenter stated many of their patients are in islands in remote
areas, and another commenter discussed the challenges they face when
servicing Native American reservations, such as power failures, weather
changes, longer travel distances, poor cell phone reception, and higher
delivery charges. Another commenter stated beneficiaries in rural areas
are geographically dispersed, harder to reach, and do not have the same
access to systems of care as those in more populated areas. Some
commenters who were DME suppliers stated that they have reduced their
delivery service area due to not getting paid enough, and that the cost
of doing business has increased, which warranted higher payments. Some
commenters also stated that costs are higher in rural areas, and travel
distances are larger than in urban areas. A commenter stated this
policy furthers a goal of achieving rural health equity with healthier,
wealthier suburban and urban areas.
Response: We acknowledge the comments for this particular provision
in the May 2018 IFC.
Comment: Many commenters wanted CMS to extend the blended rates to
all non-CBAs, and to do so for longer than the 7-month period that was
established in the May 2018 IFC. Several commenters stated we should
extend the blended rates to all non-CBAs in 2019. Some stated we should
permanently extend the blended rates to all non-CBAs. As support for
this some commenters stated that non-CBAs do not have the same level of
volume as CBAs, non-CBAs have a lower population density, less
suppliers, the cost of doing business is higher in non-CBAs than it is
in CBAs, and that suppliers serving rural areas also serve non-rural
areas. A commenter stated that providing the same services in some non-
CBAs requires more staff than in CBAs, and that Bureau of Labor
Statistics (BLS) data show fuel and health care expenditures are higher
in rural areas. Some commenters were concerned that beneficiaries would
not get the items or services they need and their health outcomes would
worsen as a result.
Response: We continue to believe that the fully adjusted rates in
non-rural and contiguous non-CBAs are sufficient. Assignment rates
continued to remain above 99 percent after the publication of the May
2018 IFC, and we have not found evidence that these fee schedule
adjustments are causing beneficiary access or health outcomes issues.
As we indicated in the CY 2019 ESRD PPS DMEPOS final rule (83 FR
56922), we agree that the average volume of items and services
furnished by suppliers in non-rural non-CBAs is lower than the average
volume of items and services furnished by suppliers in CBAs, and that
total population and population density are both lower in non-rural
non-CBAs than in CBAs. However, volume of services furnished is only
one factor impacting the cost of furnishing DMEPOS items and services.
A number of other factors affecting the costs of furnishing DMEPOS
items and services such as wages, gasoline, rent, utilities, travel
distance and service area size point to higher costs in CBAs than non-
rural non-CBAs. Additionally, as we found in the CY 2019 ESRD PPS
DMEPOS proposed rule (83 FR 34367 through 34371) and in the November
2020 proposed rule (85 FR 70366), travel distances were only greater in
certain non-CBAs, which included Frontier and Remote (FAR), OCBSAs, and
Super Rural areas.
Comment: Many commenters also wanted us to retroactively apply the
blended rates to all the claims in 2017 and 2018 that we paid at the
fully adjusted rate. Commenters stated that if we were concerned about
the adequacy of the fully adjusted fees, then we should retroactively
pay suppliers the blended rates for the time we paid them the fully
adjusted rates. Commenters explained that 7 months of blended rates
were not enough to stabilize an industry with a declining number of
suppliers, and that paying the blended rates retroactively would also
help ensure beneficiary access to DME.
Response: In the May 2018 IFC we amended Sec. 414.210(g)(9)(i) to
reflect the extension of the transition period to December 31, 2016 for
phasing in adjustments to the fee schedule amounts for certain items
based on information from the DMEPOS CBP, as required by section
16007(a) of the Cures Act. In the May 2018 IFC, we also continued the
50/50 blend for rural, non-contiguous areas from June 1 through
December 31, 2018. We did not believe it was appropriate or necessary
to retroactively increase the rates paid for items and
[[Page 73888]]
services subject to the fee schedule adjustments that were furnished in
2017. Retroactively increasing payment amounts for items and services
that had already been furnished to beneficiaries would not result in an
increase in access to such items and services.
Comment: Some commenters stated CMS should adopt add-on payments
for non-CBAs because of higher costs in non-CBAs. For instance, a
commenter stated that CMS should establish two percentage add-ons for
the non-CBA areas: One for the non-rural non-CBAs and one for the rural
non-CBAs. The commenter stated that the costs of providing respiratory
services can be higher than the costs for other products and they
recommended setting the non-rural non-CBAs at the regional standard
payment amount (SPA) + 16 percent, and the rural non-CBAs at the
regional SPA + 22 percent. The commenter stated that they based these
amounts on their own cost survey of oxygen and sleep therapy providers
and manufacturing companies that showed costs were 5 percent higher
than the SPAs in CBAs, that costs are 13 percent higher in non-CBAs
than in CBAs, and 17.5 percent higher in super-rural areas than in
CBAs. Some commenters used the Ambulance Fee Schedule as an example of
an add-on policy CMS could use, which includes super-rural add-on
payment. A commenter stated that CMS should set the 50/50 blend rates
in all non-CBAs, and then pay an even higher amount of 10 percent in
rural and non-contiguous areas. The commenter also stated that the most
significant variables that affect DME supplier costs are labor rates,
transportation, population density, miles/time between points of
service, and regulatory costs. The commenter stated specific costs that
CMS should take into account when adjusting fees in non-CBAs include
geographic wage index factors, gas, taxes, employee wages and benefits,
wear and tear of vehicles, average per capita income, training,
delivery, set up, historical Medicare home placement volume, proximity
to nearby CBAs, employing a respiratory therapist (required by State
law in several States), electricity charges freight charges, 24/7
service availability, documentation requirements, average per patient
cost, licensing, accreditation surety bonds, audits, population
density, miles and time between points of service, local and state
regulatory costs, and vehicle insurance and liability insurance.
Another commenter stated how CMS uses a special rule for rural areas
for items included in more than 10 CBAs. The commenter stated CMS could
supplement this special rule by making it more generous, and also
applying the national ceiling prices in areas with a limited number of
suppliers or low average volume of Medicare business. The commenter
stated CMS could also establish an add-on payment for low volume or low
supplier areas, based on its general approach used for rural areas in
the ambulance fee schedule, which would involve increasing the base
payment by a percentage amount. A commenter stated the 50/50 blended
rates were not enough and that CMS should return to paying the 2015
unadjusted fee schedule rates in all non-CBAs.
Response: We did not implement any of the add-on payments described
by the commenters in the May 2018 IFC, and did not discuss such
policies in the Alternatives Considered section of the May 2018 IFC (83
FR 21924). In the CY 2019 ESRD PPS DMEPOS final rule (83 FR 57034), in
response to similar comments requesting such add-on payments, we
thanked the commenters for their specific recommendations regarding
adopting add-on payments for items and services furnished in non-CBAs.
We also stated that we did not propose any payments like those
described by commenters, but that we would keep these recommendations
in mind for future rulemaking.
In the November 2020 proposed rule, one of our Alternatives
Considered (85 FR 70371) was proposing to eliminate the definition of
rural area at Sec. Sec. 414.202 and 414.210(g)(1)(v), which brings the
adjusted fee schedule amounts for rural areas up to 110 percent of the
national average price determined under Sec. 414.210(g)(1)(ii). In
place of this definition and rule, we considered proposing an
adjustment to the fee schedule amounts for DMEPOS items and services
furnished in super rural non-CBAs within the contiguous U.S. equal to
120 percent of the adjusted fee schedule amounts determined for other,
non-rural non-CBAs within the same State. For example, the adjusted fee
schedule amount for super rural, non-CBAs within Minnesota would be
based on 120 percent of the adjusted fee schedule amount (in this case,
the regional price) for Minnesota established in accordance with Sec.
414.210(g)(1)(i) through (iv).
Consistent with the ambulance fee schedule rural adjustment factor
at Sec. 414.610(c)(5)(ii), we considered defining ``super rural'' as a
rural area determined to be in the lowest 25 percent of rural
population arrayed by population density, where a rural area is defined
as an area located outside an urban area (MSA), or a rural census tract
within an MSA as determined under the most recent version of the
Goldsmith modification as determined by the Federal Office of Rural
Health Policy at the Health Resources and Services Administration. Per
this definition and under this alternative rule, certain areas within
MSAs would be considered super rural areas whereas now they are treated
as non-rural areas because they are located in counties that are
included in MSAs. For all other non-CBAs, including areas within the
contiguous U.S. that are outside MSAs but do not meet the definition of
super rural area, we considered adjusting the fee schedule amounts
using the current fee schedule adjustment methodologies under Sec.
414.210(g)(1) and (g)(3) through (8).
We did not receive comments supporting finalizing this alternative,
and we did not finalize this alternative considered in this final rule.
Finally, as we stated in the CY 2019 ESRD PPS DMEPOS final rule (83
FR 57034), we recognize that there are certain supplier cost and volume
differences in rural and non-contiguous non-CBAs, which is why this
final rule distinguishes rural and non-contiguous non-CBAs from other
non-CBAs and results in higher payments to suppliers furnishing items
in the rural and non-contiguous non-CBAs. We also believe that paying
an amount in addition to the blended 50/50 payment rates would be
excessive and unnecessary, and not in line with what most commenters
requested, as most commenters specifically requested the blended 50/50
payment rates in rural and non-contiguous non-CBAs. This indicates that
such payment rates are sufficient, which is why we are also not
incorporating the ambulance fee schedule's concept of a super rural
add-on into our 50/50 blend. With regard to taking into account certain
costs when adjusting fees in non-CBAs, we have already analyzed and
taken into account several cost data variables as part of section 16008
of the Cures Act in the CY 2019 ESRD PPS DMEPOS proposed rule (83 FR
57027), and in the November 2020 proposed rule (85 FR 70367).
Comment: Some commenters disagreed with our definition of rural at
Sec. 414.202. Some commenters that were DME suppliers were
dissatisfied that some areas that they service did not qualify as a
rural area. A few commenters stated CMS should define all non-CBAs as
rural. Another commenter stated the CMS definition of a rural area is
extremely narrow, and that CMS should adopt, what the commenter
referred to as OMB's rural definition, which the commenter stated
[[Page 73889]]
were all counties that are not part of an MSA. A commenter wondered why
the rural definition at Sec. 414.202 did not match the criteria for a
critical access hospital. A commenter stated all of West Virginia
should be considered rural, and another commenter stated there were
remote areas in West Virginia that were classified as non-rural per the
rural definition at Sec. 414.202.
Response: As defined in Sec. 414.202, rural area means, for the
purpose of implementing Sec. 414.210(g), a geographic area represented
by a postal zip code if at least 50 percent of the total geographic
area of the area included in the zip code is estimated to be outside
any metropolitan area (MSA). A rural area also includes a geographic
area represented by a postal zip code that is a low population density
area excluded from a competitive bidding area in accordance with the
authority provided by section 1847(a)(3)(A) of the Act at the time the
rules at Sec. 414.210(g) are applied. We did not propose or implement
any changes to our rural definition in the May 2018 IFC, but we will
keep these points in mind for future rulemaking. For further background
on the origin of our rural definition, see our CY 2015 ESRD PPS DMEPOS
proposed rule (79 FR 40284) and the CY 2015 ESRD PPS DMEPOS final rule
(79 FR 66228).
Comment: MedPAC did not support our proposal extending the 50/50
blended rates to rural non-CBAs. MedPAC stated that if CMS determines
that payment rates in non-CBAs should be increased to maintain access
to medically necessary DMEPOS products, then increases should be
limited and targeted, and CMS should consider taking steps to offset
the cost of higher payment rates. MedPAC stated that returning to a 50/
50 blend of historical fee schedule rates and competitive bidding
program (CBP) derived rates will result in large payment increases,
often of 50 percent or more. Further, these large increases are in
addition to other payment rate adjustments CMS has already made to
protect access, such as an increase of roughly 10 percent in rural non-
CBAs.
MedPAC stated that while they understand CMS continues to study
supplier costs in non-CBAs in accordance with its mandate under the
Cures Act, the interim final rule does not present supplier cost data
that could be used to justify the magnitude of the payment increase.
MedPAC encouraged CMS to use the best available data to determine
whether costs that suppliers must necessarily incur are higher in non-
CBAs relative to CBAs and, if so, whether an adjustment smaller than
the one discussed in the interim final rule would be sufficient to
ensure access.
MedPAC stated any payment increase in non-CBAs should be directed
only to products that exhibit signs of potential access problems, and
that the cost of DMEPOS products themselves likely do not vary
substantially across geographic areas, but other costs might (for
example, delivery or personnel costs). Therefore, depending on the
nature of the product, MedPAC concluded that the total cost associated
with furnishing a product may or may not vary substantially across
geographic areas, and the magnitude of that variation might also be
different across products.
Additionally, MedPAC stated that any payment increase in non-CBAs
should be directed only to areas that exhibit signs of potential access
problems. Non-CBAs include a wide variety of areas, ranging from
moderate-size urban areas to remote rural areas. An identified
potential access problem in a rural or non-contiguous area should not
be used as a basis to increase payment rates across all non-CBAs.
MedPAC stated issues faced by suppliers in rural and non-contiguous
areas are likely different from those faced in urban non-CBAs, many of
which are metropolitan statistical areas with populations of 250,000 or
more. Furthermore, if CMS has concerns about payment rates in urban
non-CBAs, CMS has better ways to establish appropriate payment rates
than applying a large, across-the-board payment increase. For example,
CMS could set payment rates in moderate-size urban non-CBAs by
expanding the CBP to include those areas and use the information from
those competitions to help set payment rates in smaller non-CBAs.
Finally, MedPAC stated CMS should consider offsetting the increased
costs by further expanding the products included in the CBP.
Response: We appreciate MedPAC's comments on the May 2018 IFC. We
agree that the 50/50 blended rates were a significant payment increase,
and that they affected large parts of the country. However, at the time
of publication of the May 2018 IFC, we were concerned about the
potential for beneficiary access issues to occur based off of feedback
from industry stakeholders and our data showing a reduction in the
number of suppliers billing Medicare Fee-for-Service for items and
services subject to fee schedule adjustments. To err on the side of
caution, we decided we should immediately resume the transition period
and pay 50/50 blended rates in rural and non-contiguous non-CBAs for
all items and services subject to fee schedule adjustments.
In looking back at the years since the publication of the May 2018
IFC, we still have not seen evidence of the beneficiary access issues
industry stakeholders claimed were happening as a result of the fee
schedule adjustments. We also note that in the ensuing months in which
we paid the fully adjusted rates in the non-rural and contiguous non-
CBAs and the 50/50 blended rates in the rural or non-contiguous non-
CBAs, the assignment rates for both areas remained around 99 percent.
We will certainly keep MedPAC's points in mind for future rulemaking,
particularly as we continue to evaluate the appropriateness of such
significant payment increases for wide swaths of the country, and as we
contemplate future changes to the CBP. Finally, we also agree with
expanding the products included in the CBP, and we note that we have
included OTS back and knee braces in Round 2021 of the CBP.
Comment: Several commenters submitted comments on ways to improve
the DMEPOS fee schedule adjustment impact monitoring data, in response
to us soliciting comments on ways to improve our fee schedule
adjustment impact monitoring data in the May 2018 IFC (83 FR 21917).
Some commenters left comments about the Medicare complaint process. A
commenter stated that it is hard for beneficiaries to navigate through
the Medicare complaint process and that they have to get transferred to
different offices to complain about access. The commenter was concerned
complaints were going unreported or given up on due to the complexity
of the reporting process, and the commenter encouraged CMS to develop
one central, public facing hotline where beneficiaries can submit a
complaint hotline without being transferred to several offices. Another
commenter stated the CMS patient complaint and access monitoring is not
capturing patient complaints, and that many patients are either paying
out of pocket or are going without the care. The commenter recommended
reaching out to hospital case managers and social workers about this
issue. Another commenter stated that CMS should get another process for
complaints that is easier to navigate. The commenter stated CMS should
enhance beneficiary awareness of the complaint process, and to publicly
report on the complaints we register, and to not only report those that
are resolved by a supplier. The commenter also stated that CMS should
establish a patient satisfaction survey/patient-reported outcomes
measure for respiratory services that would capture
[[Page 73890]]
issues like isolation, reduced services, reduced delivery areas, and
other impacts the commenter stated cannot be measured using claims
data. The commenter also stated CMS should survey using statistically
appropriate method prescribers of respiratory services to evaluate the
difficulty of discharging patients who require such therapy, which
would provide CMS with information about the delays in obtaining DME
and respiratory services.
Another commenter stated that CMS should create an ombudsman
position for non-CBAs to monitor and address access, quality, supplier
availability and other issues in non-CBAs. A commenter stated that CMS
does not capture reports from Medicare beneficiaries and their
caregivers going to other resources to get their home medical equipment
and supplies (for example, garage/online sales) to get the medical
equipment needed, and that this will never show up in CMS' reports
unless they reach out to those resources or survey beneficiaries and
healthcare providers. The commenter stated CMS should work with DME
industry advocates on a survey to healthcare professionals who are
responsible for ordering DME and supplies for their patients to
determine any access to DME issues.
A commenter provided several comments regarding impact monitoring
data for respiratory services, particularly oxygen. They stated to
compare the number of Medicare beneficiaries diagnosed with COPD, with
the number of beneficiaries receiving home oxygen therapy. The
commenter stated that there should be a standard benchmark to assess
whether the percentage of patients who require the therapy because of
their diagnosis actually receive it. The commenter stated CMS could
compare the Medicare population receiving respiratory services with the
expected incidence and prevalence of the most common disease
indications for the therapy (for example, COPD) in the Medicare
population, to determine if the percentage of Medicare patients
receiving home respiratory therapy is aligned with the percentage of
the population receiving the therapy. The commenter stated that this
would help CMS see if there are delays in receiving the therapy, and if
the therapy is being utilized by the patients who are likely to have a
medical need for it. The commenter stated that CMS should determine
whether hospital data (including observation stays), admissions, or
readmissions are specific enough to track admissions/readmissions
related to complications associated with noncompliance with respiratory
services. The commenter stated the analysis should note that if metrics
of hospitalizations for other chronic conditions are improving but the
metric for COPD patients is flat or declining, there is a problem with
access to home therapies. Finally, the commenter stated CMS should find
out if skilled nursing facilities (SNF)/long term care (LTC)
beneficiaries using home respiratory services is increasing.
A commenter stated that the impact monitoring data does not reflect
the companies closing their doors but who are still trying to collect
money owed to them to help decrease the debt they owe to vendors. The
commenter stated that the data falsely reflects a higher number of
providers than are actually available to beneficiaries. Another
commenter stated CMS should understand why utilization has decreased in
non-CBAs. The commenter stated they do not agree with the conclusion
that it is because of CMS efforts to address fraud, abuse and
overutilization. The commenter stated it is because beneficiaries are
going outside Medicare for DME and access problems. A commenter stated
CMS should find out how access to Part B services affect an increase in
the use of Part A services.
Response: In the 2019 ESRD PPS DMEPOS proposed rule, we also sought
comments on ways to improve our fee schedule adjustment impact
monitoring data (83 FR 34380). We summarized and responded to these
comments in our CY 2019 ESRD PPS DMEPOS final rule (83 FR 57036).
Similarly, and as we indicated in the CY 2019 ESRD PPS DMEPOS final
rule, these comments are outside the scope of the proposals in the May
2018 IFC. We will take these comments into consideration going forward.
Comment: Many commenters reiterated their opposition to the budget
neutrality requirements discussed in the May 2018 IFC (83 FR 21917),
and summarized in section IV.B.3.a. of this final rule. Commenters were
disappointed that this requirement resulted in non-CBA area fee
schedules for oxygen concentrators being below the SPA in certain CBAs.
Some stated the reimbursement for oxygen is not enough and that it
makes it harder to supply oxygen services to patients.
A commenter stated that CMS incorrectly applied the oxygen budget
neutrality to non-CBAs. The commenter stated that the regulation
establishing the offset for E1390 concentrators applies to the
unadjusted fee schedules under the fee schedule methodology mandated by
Congress under section 1834 (a) of the Act. In contrast, the commenter
stated that the 2017 fee schedules for concentrators in rural areas are
based on information from competitive bidding programs under the
methodology in 42 CFR 414.210 (g). The commenter stated that,
Sec. Sec. 414.226 and 414.210(g), describe different reimbursement
methodologies that do not overlap. The commenter noted that while Sec.
414.226 applies to fee schedules based on suppliers' reasonable charges
from 1986 to 1987, Sec. 414.210 (g) applies to fee schedules based on
regional average special payments amounts (SPAs) from competitive
bidding areas (CBAs). Similarly, another commenter stated that CMS has
the authority to eliminate the budget neutrality requirement. The
commenter stated that in implementing the requirement to adjust the DME
Fee Schedule, CMS has replaced the national limited monthly payment
amount at Sec. 414.226(c) with the regional price or 110 percent of
the national average price at Sec. 414.210(g). By adopting the
regional price for non-rural non-CBAs and 110 percent of the national
average price for rural non-CBAs, the commenter stated that CMS has
eliminated the national limited monthly payment amount, which was prior
to this change the methodology for establishing rates under the fee
schedule. Since the budget neutrality language applied only to the
national limited monthly payment amount, the commenter stated it is not
applicable to the new regional price or national average price.
Finally, a commenter stated that CMS should change oxygen reimbursement
to the 50/50 blended rates at a minimum.
Response: Since the publication of the May 2018 IFC, the
Consolidated Appropriations Act of 2021 (Pub. L. 116-260) was signed
into law on December 27, 2020. Effective April 1, 2021, section 121 of
this Act eliminated the budget neutrality requirement set forth in
section 1834(a)(9)(D)(ii) of the Act for separate classes and national
limited monthly payment rates established for any item of oxygen and
oxygen equipment using the authority in section 1834(a)(9)(D)(i) of the
Act. Effective for claims with dates of service on or after April 1,
2021, the fee schedule amounts for HCPCS codes E0424, E0431, E0433,
E0434, E0439, E0441, E0442, E0443, E0444, E0447, E1390, E1391, E1392,
E1405, E1406, and K0738 are adjusted to remove a percentage reduction
necessary to meet the budget neutrality requirement previously mandated
by section 1834(a)(9)(D)(ii) of the Act.
After consideration of the public comments we received, we are
finalizing the May 2018 IFC provision titled ``Transition Period for
Phase-In of Fee Schedule Adjustments'' without
[[Page 73891]]
modification. Of note, we published in the Federal Register on April
26, 2021 a continuation of effectiveness and extension of timeline for
publication for the May 2018 IFC, titled ``Medicare Program; Durable
Medical Equipment Fee Schedule Adjustments To Resume the Transitional
50/50 Blended Rates To Provide Relief in Rural Areas and Non-Contiguous
Areas; Extension of Timeline for Final Rule Publication'' (86 FR
21949). In accordance with sections 1871(a)(3)(B) and 1871(a)(3)(C) of
the Act, we provided a notification of continuation for the May 2018
IFC, announcing the different timeline on which we intended to publish
the final rule, and explained why we were unable to publish the final
rule on the regular, required 3-year timeline. As a result of the
publication of this notification of continuation, the timeline for
publication of the final rule was extended until May 11, 2022.
With regard to the May 2018 IFC provision titled ``Transition
Period for Phase-In of Fee Schedule Adjustments'', this provision:
Changed the end date for the initial transition period for
the phase in of adjustments to fee schedule amounts for certain items
based on information from the DMEPOS CBP from June 30, 2016 to December
31, 2016, as mandated by section 16007(a) of the Cures Act.
Amended Sec. 414.210(g)(9)(ii) to reflect that fully
adjusted fee schedule amounts applied from January 1, 2017 through May
31, 2018, and then on or after January 1, 2019.
Added Sec. 414.210(g)(9)(iii) to resume the transition
period for the phase in of adjustments to fee schedule amounts for
certain items furnished in rural and non-contiguous areas from June 1,
2018 through December 31, 2018.
Added Sec. 414.210(g)(9)(iv) to reflect that fully
adjusted fee schedule amounts apply for certain items furnished in non-
CBA areas other than rural and noncontiguous areas from June 1, 2018
through December 31, 2018.
2. Technical Changes To Conform the Regulations to Section 5004(b) of
the Cures Act: Exclusion of DME Infusion Drugs Under CBPs
We made conforming technical changes to the regulations text
consistent with statutory requirements to exclude drugs and biologicals
from the CBP. Specifically, we amended Sec. 414.402 to reflect that
infusion drugs are not included in the CBP by revising the definition
of ``Item'' in paragraph (2) to add the words ``and infusion'' after
the words ``other than inhalation''. We also removed a reference to
drugs being included in the CBP by deleting the phrase ``or subpart I''
in Sec. 414.412(b)(2). Similarly, we made a conforming technical
change to the regulations text on ``expected savings'' so that infusion
drugs are not taken into account in Sec. 414.414(f) by deleting the
words ``or drug'' and the phrase ``or the same drug under subpart I''.
Comment: Commenters on the technical changes we made in the May
2018 IFC to conform the regulations to section 5004(b) of the Cures Act
for the exclusion of DME infusion drugs under CBPs supported this
change, saying such changes were consistent with the statute.
Response: After further consideration of the public comments we
received, we are finalizing our conforming technical changes to the
regulations text consistent with statutory requirements to exclude
drugs and biologicals from the CBP. Specifically, we amended Sec.
414.402 to reflect that infusion drugs are not included in the CBP by
revising the definition of ``Item'' in paragraph (2) to add the words
``and infusion'' after the words ``other than inhalation''. We also
removed a reference to drugs being included in the CBP by deleting the
phrase ``or subpart I'' in Sec. 414.412(b)(2). Similarly, we made a
conforming technical change to the regulations text on ``expected
savings'' so that infusion drugs are not taken into account in Sec.
414.414(f) by deleting the words ``or drug'' and the phrase ``or the
same drug under subpart I''.
V. Benefit Category and Payment Determinations for Durable Medical
Equipment, Prosthetic Devices, Orthotics and Prosthetics, Therapeutic
Shoes and Inserts, Surgical Dressings, Splints, Casts, and Other
Devices Used for Reductions of Fractures and Dislocations
A. Background
1. Benefit Category Determinations
Medicare generally covers an item or service that--(1) falls within
a statutory benefit category; (2) is not statutorily excluded from
coverage; and (3) is reasonable and necessary for the diagnosis or
treatment of illness or injury or to improve the functioning of a
malformed body member as described in section 1862(a)(1)(A) of the Act.
We make benefit category determinations (BCDs) based on the scope of
Part B benefits identified in section 1832 of the Act, as well as
certain statutory and regulatory definitions for specific items and
services. Section 1832(a)(1) of the Act defines the benefits under Part
B to include ``medical and other health services,'' including items and
services described in section 1861(s) of the Act such as surgical
dressings, and splints, casts, and other devices used for reduction of
fractures and dislocations under paragraph (5), prosthetic devices
under paragraph (8), leg, arm, back, and neck braces, artificial legs,
arms, and eyes under paragraph (9), therapeutic shoes under paragraph
(12), and durable medical equipment (DME) under paragraph (6) and as
defined in section 1861(n) of the Act. The words ``orthotic(s)'' or
``orthosis(es)'' are used in various parts of the statute and
regulations instead of the word brace(s) but have the same meaning as
brace(s). For example, section 1847(a)(2)(C) of the Act refers to
``orthotics described in section 1861(s)(9)'' of the Act. However,
section 1861(s)(9) of the Act describes ``leg, arm, neck, and back
braces'' and does not use the word ``orthotics.'' Likewise, section
1834(h)(4)(C) of the Act specifies that ``the term `orthotics and
prosthetics has the meaning given such term in section 1861(s)(9)'' of
the Act; however, section 1861(s)(9) of the Act describes ``leg, arm,
neck, and back braces'' and does not use the word ``orthotics.'' Also,
the word ``prosthetic(s)'' is used in various parts of the statute and
regulations to describe artificial legs, arms, and eyes referenced in
section 1861(s)(9) of the Act, but it is important to note that these
items are not the same items as the prosthetic devices referenced in
section 1861(s)(8) of the Act.
While the statutory definition of DME in section 1861(n) of this
Act sets forth some items with particularity, such as iron lungs,
oxygen tents, hospital beds, wheelchairs, and blood glucose monitors,
whether other items and services are covered under the Medicare Part B
DME benefit is based on our interpretation of the statute, which does
not, for example, elaborate on the meaning of the word ``durable''
within the context of ``durable medical equipment.'' Therefore, we
further defined DME in the regulation at 42 CFR 414.202 as equipment
that: (1) Can withstand repeated use; (2) effective with respect to
items classified as DME after January 1, 2012, has an expected life of
at least 3 years; (3) is primarily and customarily used to serve a
medical purpose; (4) generally is not useful to a person in the absence
of an illness or injury; and (5) is appropriate for use in the home. In
conducting an analysis of whether an item falls within the DME benefit
category, we review the functions and features of the item, as well as
other supporting material, where applicable. For example, research and
clinical studies may help to demonstrate that the item meets the prongs
of the
[[Page 73892]]
definition of DME at Sec. 414.202. For items to be considered DME, all
requirements of the regulatory definition must be met. Additional
details on the Medicare definition of DME are located in section 110.1
of the Medicare Benefit Policy Manual (CMS 100-02). The Medicare
definitions for surgical dressings, splints, casts, and other devices
used for reductions of fractures and dislocations, prosthetic devices,
orthotics and prosthetics, and therapeutic shoes and inserts are
located in sections 100, 120, 130, and 140, respectively, of the
Medicare Benefit Policy Manual (CMS 100-02).
In situations where CMS has not established a BCD for an item or
service, the BCD is made by the MACs on a case-by-case basis as they
adjudicate claims. The MACs may have also addressed the benefit
category status of an item or service locally in a written policy
article. This final rule would apply to BCDs for all items and services
described in section 1861(s) of the Act such as surgical dressings, and
splints, casts, and other devices used for reduction of fractures and
dislocations under paragraph (5), prosthetic devices under paragraph
(8), leg, arm, back, and neck braces, artificial legs, arms, and eyes
under paragraph (9), therapeutic shoes under paragraph (12), and DME
under paragraph (6) and as defined in section 1861(n) of the Act.
2. Section 531(b) of the Medicare, Medicaid, and SCHIP Benefits
Improvement and Protection Act of 2000 (BIPA) (Pub. L. 106-554)
Section 531(b) of BIPA required the Secretary to establish
procedures for coding and payment determinations for new DME under
Medicare Part B of the Act that permit public consultation in a manner
consistent with the procedures established for implementing coding
modifications to ICD-9-CM. Accordingly, we hosted public meetings that
provide a forum for interested parties to make oral presentations and
to submit written comments in response to preliminary HCPCS coding and
Medicare payment determinations for new DME items and services. A
payment determination for DME items and services would include a
determination regarding which of the paragraphs (2) through (7) of
subsection (a) of section 1834 of the Act the items and services are
classified under as well as how the fee schedule amounts for the items
and services are established so that they are in compliance with the
exclusive payment rules under sections 1834(a) and 1847(a) and (b) of
the Act. The preliminary HCPCS coding and Medicare payment
determinations for new DME items and services are made available to the
public via our website prior to the public meetings. In addition,
although this type of forum and opportunity for obtaining public
consultation on preliminary HCPCS coding and Medicare payment
determinations for items and services other than new DME items is not
mandated by the statute, we expanded this process for obtaining public
consultation on preliminary coding and payment determinations to all
HCPCS code requests for items and services in 2005, and since January
2005, we have been holding public meetings to obtain public
consultation on preliminary coding and payment determinations for non-
drug, non-biological items and services. As discussed in the November
2020 proposed rule (85 FR 70376), we proposed to continue holding these
public meetings for non-drug, non-biological items and services and, in
limited circumstances, for drug or biological products (85 FR 70410))
that are associated with external requests for HCPCS codes. As
indicated in the proposed rule (85 FR 70397), external requests for
HCPCS codes are made by submitting a HCPCS application (OMB control
number 0938-1042 titled HCPCS Modification to Code Set Form CMS-10224)
available on the CMS.gov website at the following address: https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Coding/MedHCPCSGenInfo/Application_Form_and_Instructions.
HCPCS Level II codes are used by Medicare, Medicaid, and other
public health insurance programs and private insurers for the purpose
of identifying items and services on health insurance claims. A code
identifies and describes a category of items and services and the HCPCS
Level II coding system and process is not used to make coverage or
payment determinations on behalf of any insurer. Once a code describing
a category of items and services is established, separate processes and
procedures are used by insurers to determine whether payments for the
item or service can be made, what method of payment, for example,
purchase or rental, will be used to make payment for the item or
service, and what amount(s) will be paid for the item or service.
Whether or not an item falls under one of the Medicare benefit
categories such as DME is a decision made by CMS or the MACs based on
statutory and regulatory definitions, separate from the HCPCS Level II
coding system and process for identifying items and services. Once a
Medicare benefit category is identified, the coverage and payment
indicators attached to any new HCPCS code(s) describing the item or
service for claims processing purposes would reflect the benefit
category and payment determinations made pursuant to the process
established by this final rule.
To make a Medicare payment determination for an item or service,
that is, to determine the statutory and regulatory payment rules that
apply to the item or service and how to establish allowed payment
amounts for the item or service, CMS must first determine whether the
item or service falls under a benefit category, for example DME, and if
so, which benefit category in particular. Therefore, since 2001, the
procedures established by CMS to obtain public consultation on national
payment determinations for new DME items as mandated by section 531(b)
of BIPA have also in effect been procedures for obtaining public
consultation on national DME BCDs, or determinations about whether an
item or service meets the Medicare definition of DME. Then in 2005,
when these procedures were expanded to include requests for HCPCS codes
for all items and services, they became in effect procedures for
obtaining public consultation on BCDs and payment determinations for
all items and services.
B. Current Issues
To increase transparency and structure around the process for
obtaining public consultation on benefit category and payment
determinations for these items and services, we stated in the November
2020 proposed rule (85 FR 70397) that it would be beneficial to set
forth in our regulations the process and procedures that have been used
since 2001 for obtaining public consultation on BCDs and payment
determinations for new DME and since 2005 for requests for HCPCS codes
for items and services other than DME. As further discussed in section
IV.A.2. of the 2020 November proposed rule (85 FR 70374 through 70375),
we recently revised our coding cycle for requests for HCPCS Level II
codes to implement shorter and more frequent coding application
cycles.\25\ Beginning January 2020, for non-drug, non-biological items
and services, we shortened the existing annual coding cycle to conduct
more frequent coding cycles on a bi-annual basis and include public
meetings to obtain consultation on preliminary coding determinations
twice a year
[[Page 73893]]
under these new bi-annual coding cycles. We believe that continuing to
establish payment determinations, which, include BCDs, for new DME
items and services and the other items and services described
previously at these same bi-annual public meetings would be an
efficient and effective way to address coding, benefit category, and
payment issues for these new items and services and would prevent
delays in coverage of new items and services.
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\25\ CMS, Announcement of Shorter Coding Cycle Procedures,
Applications, and Deadlines for 2020, HCPCS--General Information.
Available at: https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Coding/MedHCPCSGenInfo.
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In addition, in the past, manufacturers of new products would often
ask CMS for guidance on whether or not the product(s) fall under a
DMEPOS benefit category. Our informal advice regarding these products
were sent directly to the manufacturers, outside of the HCPCS public
meeting process. In the future, if a manufacturer requests a BCD for
their product(s) outside of the process established in this final rule,
we will instead issue a BCD and payment determination for the
manufacturer through the BCD and payment determination procedures
established by this rule. Such requests would be added as soon as
possible to the agenda for an upcoming public meeting, which will be
posted on CMS.gov two weeks prior to the meeting. Likewise, if CMS
decides to address the benefit category for a new item or service that
is not identified through the HCPCS editorial process, the benefit
category determination and payment determination, if applicable, will
be subject to the procedures established by this rule. Any manufacturer
or other entity requesting a benefit category determination outside of
the HCPCS editorial process) would still need to provide information on
the product such as intended use, FDA clearance documents, any clinical
studies, etc., that CMS will need to determine whether the product
falls under a Medicare benefit category.
C. Proposed Provisions
We proposed in the November 2020 proposed rule (85 FR 70397 through
70398) to set forth in regulations BCD and payment determination
procedures for new DME items and services described in sections 1861(n)
and (s)(6) of the Act, as well as the items and services described in
sections 1861(s)(5), (8), (9), and (12) of the Act, that permit public
consultation at public meetings. The payment rules for these items and
services are located in 42 CFR part 414, subparts C and D, so we
proposed to include these procedures under both subparts C and D. We
proposed that the public consultation on BCDs and payment
determinations would be heard at the same public meetings where
consultation is provided on preliminary coding determinations for new
items and services the requestor of the code believes are: DME as
described in sections 1861(n) and (s)(6) of the Act; surgical
dressings, splints, casts, and other devices as described in section
1861(s)(5) of the Act; prosthetic devices as described in section
1861(s)(8) of the Act; leg, arm, back, and neck braces (orthotics), and
artificial legs, arms, and eyes (prosthetics) as described in section
1861(s)(9) of the Act; or therapeutic shoes and inserts as described in
section 1861(s)(12) of the Act. The proposal generally reflected the
procedures that have been used by CMS since 2005, however, we proposed
to specifically solicit or invite consultation on preliminary BCDs for
each item or service in addition to the consultation on preliminary
payment and coding determinations for new items and services.
Accordingly, we proposed procedures under new Sec. 414.114 for
determining whether new items and services meet the Medicare definition
of items and services subject to the payment rules at 42 CFR part 414
subpart C (85 FR 70397). This would include determinations regarding
whether the items and services are parenteral and enteral nutrition
(PEN), which are nutrients, equipment, and supplies that are
categorized under the prosthetic device benefit, as defined at section
1861(s)(8) of the Act and covered in accordance with section 180.2 of
Chapter 1, Part 3 of the Medicare National Coverage Determinations
Manual (Pub 100-03). This would also include determinations regarding
whether items and services are intraocular lenses (IOLs) inserted in a
physician's office, which are also categorized under the prosthetic
device benefit at section 1861(s)(8) of the Act. We stated we would
also use the proposed procedures to determine whether items and
services are splints, casts, and other devices used for reduction of
fractures and dislocations at section 1861(s)(5) of the Act. For
purposes of the proposed procedures and Sec. 414.114, we proposed to
establish the following definition:
Benefit category determination means a national determination
regarding whether an item or service meets the Medicare definition of a
prosthetic device at section 1861(s)(8) of the Act or is a splint,
cast, or device used for reduction of fractures or dislocations subject
to section 1842(s) of the Act and the rules of this subpart and is not
otherwise excluded from coverage by statute.
We proposed procedures under new Sec. 414.240 for determining
whether new items and services meet the Medicare definition of items
and services subject to the payment rules at 42 CFR part 414 subpart D
(85 FR 70398). This would include determinations regarding whether the
items and services are in the DME benefit category as defined at
section 1861(n) of the Act and under 42 CFR 414.202. This would also
include determinations regarding whether the items and services are in
the benefit category for prosthetic devices that fall under section
1861(s)(8) of the Act other than PEN nutrients, equipment and supplies
or IOLs inserted in a physician's office. This would also include
determinations regarding whether the items and services are in the
benefit category for leg, arm, neck, and back braces (orthotics), and
artificial legs, arms, and eyes (prosthetics) under section 1861(s)(9)
of the Act. This would also include determinations regarding whether
the items and services are in the benefit category for surgical
dressings under section 1861(s)(5) of the Act or custom molded shoes or
extra-depth shoes with inserts for an individual with diabetes under
section 1861(s)(12) of the Act. For purposes of these proposed
procedures and new Sec. 414.240, we proposed to establish the
following definition:
Benefit category determination means a national determination
regarding whether an item or service meets the Medicare definition of
durable medical equipment at section 1861(n) of the Act, a prosthetic
device at section 1861(s)(8) of the Act, an orthotic or leg, arm, back
or neck brace, a prosthetic or artificial leg, arm or eye at section
1861(s)(9) of the Act, is a surgical dressing, or is a therapeutic shoe
or insert subject to sections 1834(a), (h), or (i) of the Act and the
rules of this subpart and is not otherwise excluded from coverage by
statute.
We proposed that if a preliminary determination is made that a new
item or service falls under one of the benefit categories for items and
services paid in accordance with subpart C or D of 42 CFR part 414,
then CMS will make a preliminary payment determination regarding how
the fee schedule amounts for the item or services would be established
in accordance with these subparts, and, for items and services
identified as DME, under which of the payment classes under sections
1834(a)(2) through (7) of the Act the item or service falls (85 FR
70398). We proposed that the procedures for making BCDs and payment
determinations for new items and services subject to the payment rules
under subpart C or D of
[[Page 73894]]
42 CFR part 414 would be made by CMS during each bi-annual coding cycle
and the proposed procedures under new Sec. Sec. 414.114 and 414.240
would include the following steps.
First, at the start of the coding cycle, CMS performs an analysis
to determine if the item or service is statutorily excluded from
Medicare coverage under any of the provisions at section 1862 of the
Act, and, if not excluded by statute, CMS determines if the item or
service falls under a Medicare benefit category defined in the statute
and regulations for any of the items or services subject to the payment
rules under subparts C or D of 42 CFR part 414. Information such as the
description of the item or service in the HCPCS application, HCPCS
codes used to bill for the item or service in the past, product
brochures and literature, information on the manufacturer's website,
information related to the FDA clearance or approval of the item or
service for marketing or related to items that are exempted from the
510(k) requirements or otherwise approved or cleared by the FDA is
considered as part of this analysis. This step could generally take
anywhere from 1 week to 2 months. For more complex items or services,
the process may take several months, in which case public consultation
on the benefit category and payment determinations would slip to a
subsequent coding cycle.
Second, if a preliminary determination is made by CMS that the item
or service is an item or service falling under a benefit category for
items and services paid for in accordance with subpart C or D of 42 CFR
part 414, a preliminary payment determination is made by CMS regarding
how the fee schedule amounts will be established for the item or
service and what payment class the item falls under if the item meets
the definition of DME. This step could also generally take anywhere
from 1 week to 2 months. For more complex items or services, the
process may take several months, in which case public consultation on
the benefit category and payment determinations would slip to a
subsequent coding cycle.
Third, approximately 4 months into the coding cycle, the
preliminary benefit category and payment determinations are posted on
CMS.gov 2 weeks prior to the public meeting described under proposed
Sec. 414.8(d) in which CMS receives consultation from the public on
the preliminary benefit category and payment determinations made for
the item or service. After consideration of public consultation on any
preliminary benefit category and payment determinations made for the
item or service, the benefit category and payment determinations are
established through program instructions issued to the MACs.
We noted that even though a determination may be made that an item
or service meets the Medicare definition of a benefit category, and fee
schedule amounts may be established for the item or service, this does
not mean that the item or service would be covered for a particular
beneficiary. After a BCD and payment determination has been made for an
item or service, a determination must still be made by CMS or the
relevant local MAC that the item or service is reasonable and necessary
for the treatment of illness or injury or to improve the functioning of
a malformed body member, as required by section 1862(a)(1)(A) of the
Act.
We sought public comment on our proposed process and procedures for
making BCDs and payment determinations for new items and services paid
for in accordance with subpart C or D of 42 CFR part 414. We noted that
our proposed approach does not affect or change our existing process
for developing National Coverage Determinations (NCDs), which we can
continue to use to develop NCDs both in response to external requests
and internally-generated reviews. We further noted that we are not
limited to only addressing benefit categories in response to external
HCPCS code applications and could decide to use the proposed process to
address benefit categories in response to internally generated HCPCS
coding changes as well. As aforementioned, requests for BCDs that are
not associated with a HCPCS code application will also be addressed
through the preliminary benefit category and payment determination
process established in this final rule.
Comment: A few commenters supported the codification of formal BCD
procedures including stakeholder input, noting this proposal is a step
in the right direction.
Response: For the reasons we articulated previously as well as
later in this section, we intend to finalize these procedures as
proposed with a technical modification. At proposed Sec. Sec.
414.114(b)(3) and (4), 414.240(b)(3) and (4), we included the language
``a public meeting described under Sec. 414.8(d)'' to identify the
existing bi-annual public meetings used to review new DME items and
services and the other items and services. We intend to keep using the
same public meetings for BCD purposes, but as discussed in section X.
of this final rule, we are not finalizing the proposed HCPCS Level II
code application process, and we are not finalizing the proposed
regulation text for Sec. 414.8(d). Therefore, we are finalizing in the
regulation text at Sec. Sec. 414.114(b)(3) and (4), as well as
414.240(b)(3) and (4), a reference to a ``public meeting'' without a
cross-reference to Sec. 414.8(d). We emphasize that this change is
technical only, and both the final regulation text and BCD procedures
are functionally the same as what we proposed in the November 2020
proposed rule.
Comment: A few commenters from associations and consultants
representing manufacturers and suppliers of DMEPOS noted that there was
no mention of the minimum qualifications for the individuals who will
be making the preliminary determinations, claiming that this differs
from the Coverage and Analysis Group (CAG) or by Medicare
Administrative Contractors processes that affect both coverage and
coding, where the process is either supervised or conducted by
individuals with the appropriate professional credentialing and
experience, such as licensed health care professionals or individuals
with graduate-level training in related fields such as epidemiology.
Commenters further stated that as many innovations rely on more complex
technology and clinical factors, and rely on clinical trial evidence
and interpretation of that evidence, it was incumbent on CMS to ensure
that the reviewers making the preliminary determinations are familiar
with current developments and have the technical skills necessary to
conduct a thorough evaluation of the item and the related clinical
information. Commenters recommended either having the applicant
indicate the minimum and preferred credentials of a proposed reviewer
or lengthening the current 40-page limit to allow relevant technical
data and published papers that describe the innovation, its mechanism
of action, and how it differs from other items and services that are
described in existing HCPCS code.
Response: CMS has years of experience making benefit category
determinations and our initial and final determinations are formulated
in conjunction with experts such as medical officers, certified
orthotists and prosthetists, nurses and other allied health
professionals, and biomedical engineers. We are not adopting the
commenters' suggestion that we adopt specific qualifications for the
specific group of CMS reviewers that makes initial benefit category
determinations. Moreover, we note our initial determinations are
preliminary, giving the public an opportunity to provide additional
feedback at the public
[[Page 73895]]
meeting. Accordingly, we find it is unnecessary for the applicant to
request preferred or minimal credentials for the group that makes
initial benefit category determinations.
We also find it is unnecessary to adjust the HCPCS application
because a BCD is a separate process that is not limited to the
information in the HCPCS application. For the BCD recommendation, we
conduct research, as needed, and also may request information from the
manufacturer or industry. We recognize that a HCPCS application often
triggers a BCD, but the determination of a BCD can be a separate and
distinct process from the HCPCS review.
Comment: Commenters suggested that CMS allow applicants to request
either a BCD, a HCPCS code, or both. The rationale being some
applicants may need a BCD alone at one stage of commercialization and
do not want or need to invest in the costs of a complete HCPCS
application. The commenters claimed that many applicants would not
invest in the resources needed to apply for a new code if they knew
they would receive a determination that the item or service did not
fall under a Medicare benefit category.
Response: We want to clarify that the BCD process is separate and
distinct from the HCPCS application, and an interested party can make a
request for a BCD independent from any associated HCPCS code request.
Any party can request a BCD for an item or service without requesting a
change to the HCPCS. Once the BCD request is received, we would follow
the same process which includes discussing the BCD at a public meeting.
We also note that interested parties can request a national BCD through
the NCD process or in some cases we could make a BCD through
rulemaking; however, we believe these procedures we are finalizing
under the regulations will allow us to make BCDs for these new items
and services more quickly.
Comment: A few commenters recommended that the BCD coverage and the
coding process should remain separate.
Response: We did not propose to integrate the two processes, but we
reiterate that a HCPCS code application often triggers a BCD. We
proposed to discuss the BCD requests during the bi-annual public
meetings for new items and services, as this is an efficient and
effective way to address coding, benefit category, and payment issues
for these new items and services and will prevent delays in access to
new items and services.
With regard to the use of the term ``BCD coverage,'' we want to
clarify that BCDs and coverage determinations are two distinct
processes with separate statutory authorities. A BCD is a determination
regarding whether or not an item or service falls under a Medicare
benefit category (for example, DME as defined in section 1861(n) of the
Act). A coverage determination, on the other hand, is a decision by a
Medicare contractor regarding whether to cover a particular item or
service in accordance with section 1862(a)(1)(A) of the Act (see 42 CFR
400.202). We note that stakeholders can still request a BCD through the
NCD process, as an alternative to these procedures.
Comment: A few commenters expressed concern that the timeframe of
publishing the preliminary BCD decisions 2 weeks prior to a public
meeting is too brief. The commenters were concerned that this proposal
shortens the time necessary for an applicant to bring forth an expert
or health care professional.
Response: We understand commenters' concern on the timing of the
preliminary decisions; however, we must balance the time needed to
assess and make a preliminary decision and issuing it within the
specified timeframes. We believe that giving 2 weeks' notice of the
meeting and announcing the dates of the public meetings in advance
provides stability to stakeholders on the expected meeting times while
also ensuring we have sufficient time necessary to make preliminary
determinations for as many new items and services as possible. The
HCPCS cycle was shortened from a 12-month cycle to two 6-month cycles
to allow for more opportunities for the public to request HCPCS codes,
but one tradeoff is that this can compress all stages of the coding
process, including the time for developing preliminary coding, benefit
category, and payment determinations, as well as the time allowed for
the public to react to these preliminary determinations and prepare for
the public meetings.
Comment: Some commenters expressed interest in expanding the DME
definition in 42 CFR 414.202 to cover items such as software and vision
aids or to clarify the definition of prosthetic device in 42 CFR
414.202.
Response: We did not propose to expand the scope of the DME or
prosthetic device benefits in these BCD provisions, and therefore these
comments fall outside the scope of this section of the rule.
Comment: A commenter requested that CMS allow the HCPCS process to
serve as an appeal process for the BCD and payment decisions.
Response: We do not believe a further appeals process is necessary.
There is already an appeals process in the claims appeals process under
which a party could challenge the amount of payment if the party with
standing was dissatisfied with the amount of payment. In light of the
available appeal process, there would seem to be no need to establish a
further appeals process.
Comment: A commenter recommended that CMS provide details regarding
the basis and data used to make any preliminary BCD and payment
decision, stating that this information should be included in the
letters to the applicants as well as in the information for the
relevant public meetings.
Response: We do not agree with the commenter that details on
preliminary BCDs need to be included in a letter to the requestor of
the HCPCS code. The HCPCS is a coding system for the public in general
and is not a coding system for specific manufacturers or specific
products. We will provide enough information so the public, which
includes the manufacturer, individual, or entity that submitted the
HCPCS request, can meaningfully comment on the preliminary BCD and
payment decisions and also understand our underlying rationale for such
decisions.
Comment: A commenter representing manufacturers and beneficiaries
stated that they do not prefer that BCDs be made through public notice
and comment rulemaking, which they believe would dramatically reduce
the timeliness of approval of benefit category determinations for new
devices and technologies, and consequently, access to care.
Response: We agree with the commenter that solely using notice and
comment rulemaking would significantly extend the time it takes to make
a BCD and could negatively impact beneficiaries' access to new item and
services. The BCD procedures we are finalizing allow for multiple
determinations within 1 year and build on the statutory process
outlined in BIPA. We also note that stakeholders can still request a
BCD through the NCD process, as an alternative to these procedures.
Comment: A commenter expressed their opinion that CMS has not been
following the BCD process and that CMS did not make these
determinations for a number of DME items assigned new HCPCS codes since
2019. The commenter stated their opinion that the lack of BCDs for new
items assigned HCPCS codes since 2019 continues to
[[Page 73896]]
impede beneficiary access to these new, clinically proven technologies.
Response: We acknowledge BCDs reviews have been slowed down the
past few years because this process was not formalized. We believe
there is a benefit to finalizing these procedures and anticipate being
able to make decisions more quickly and on a consistent timeframe
outlined under the final regulation. However, we note that in
situations where CMS has not established a BCD for an item or service,
the BCD can be made by the MACs on a case-by-case basis as they
adjudicate claims.
After consideration of the public comments we received and for the
reasons we articulated, we are finalizing at Sec. Sec. 414.114 and
414.240 the definitions related to and procedures for making BCDs and
payment determinations for new items and services subject to the
payment rules under subparts C or D of 42 CFR part 414 as proposed with
a technical modification to remove a cross-reference to a HCPCS-related
regulation we are not finalizing.
VI. Classification and Payment for Continuous Glucose Monitors Under
Medicare Part B
This section addresses classification and payment for CGMs under
the Medicare Part B benefit for DME. We proposed to replace a CMS
Ruling issued in January 12, 2017 titled Classification of Therapeutic
Continuous Glucose Monitors as ``Durable Medical Equipment'' under
Medicare Part B [Ruling] (CMS-1682-R) with this new rule.
A. General Background
DME is a benefit category under Medicare Part B. Section 1861(n) of
the Act defines ``durable medical equipment'' as including ``iron
lungs, oxygen tents, hospital beds, and wheelchairs (which may include
a power-operated vehicle that may be appropriately used as a
wheelchair, but only where the use of such a vehicle is determined to
be necessary on the basis of the individual's medical and physical
condition and the vehicle meets such safety requirements as the
Secretary may prescribe) used in the patient's home (including an
institution used as his home other than an institution that meets the
requirements of subsection (e)(1) of this section or section
1819(a)(1)) of the Act, whether furnished on a rental basis or
purchased, and includes blood-testing strips and blood glucose monitors
for individuals with diabetes without regard to whether the individual
has Type I or Type II diabetes or to the individual's use of insulin
(as determined under standards established by the Secretary in
consultation with the appropriate organizations) and eye tracking and
gaze interaction accessories for speech generating devices furnished to
individuals with a demonstrated medical need for such accessories;
except that such term does not include such equipment furnished by a
supplier who has used, for the demonstration and use of specific
equipment, an individual who has not met such minimum training
standards as the Secretary may establish with respect to the
demonstration and use of such specific equipment. With respect to a
seat-lift chair, such term includes only the seat-lift mechanism and
does not include the chair.''
In addition to this provision, in most cases, an item must also
meet the requirements of section 1862(a)(1)(A) of the Act, which
precludes payment for an item or service that is not reasonable and
necessary for the diagnosis or treatment of illness or injury or to
improve the functioning of a malformed body member, and section
1862(a)(6) of the Act, which precludes payment for personal comfort
items.
The Medicare program was created as part of the Social Security
Amendments of 1965 (Pub. L. 89-97), and the Part B benefit payments for
DME were initially limited to ``rental of durable medical equipment,
including iron lungs, oxygen tents, hospital beds, and wheelchairs used
in the patient's home (including an institution used as his home)'' in
accordance with the definition of DME at section 1861(s)(6) of the Act.
The Social Security Amendments of 1967 (Pub. L. 90-248) amended the
statute to allow for payment on a purchase basis for DME in lieu of
rental for items furnished on or after January 1, 1968. Section 144(d)
of the Social Security Amendments of 1967 changed the language under
section 1861(s) of the Act to ``durable medical equipment, including
iron lungs, oxygen tents, hospital beds, and wheelchairs used in the
patient's home (including an institution used as his home), whether
furnished on a rental basis or purchased.'' Payments for purchase of
expensive items of DME were limited to monthly installments equivalent
to what would have otherwise been made on a rental basis, limited to
the period of medical need and not to exceed the purchase price of the
equipment.
In 1975, Medicare program instructions in section 2100 of chapter 2
of part 3 of the Medicare Carrier's Manual (HCFA Pub. 14-3) indicated
that expenses incurred by a beneficiary for the rental or purchase of
DME are reimbursable if the following three requirements are met: The
equipment meets the definition of DME in this section; and the
equipment is necessary and reasonable for the treatment of the
patient's illness or injury or to improve the functioning of his
malformed body member; and the equipment is used in the patient's home.
The instructions also indicated that payment may also be made under the
DME benefit category for repairs and maintenance of equipment owned by
the beneficiary as well as expendable and non-reusable supplies and
accessories essential to the effective use of the equipment. DME was
defined under these program instructions from 1975 as equipment meeting
four requirements (quoted later in the section verbatim and with text
underscored as in the original instructions):
Durable medical equipment is equipment which (a) can withstand
repeated use, and (b) is primarily and customarily used to serve a
medical purpose, and (c) generally is not useful to a person in the
absence of an illness or injury; and (d) is appropriate for use in the
home.
All requirements of the definition must be met before an item can
be considered to be durable medical equipment.
Additional detailed instructions were provided in 1975 describing
the underlying policies for determining whether an item meets the
definition of DME and specifically addressed what the terms ``durable''
and ``medical equipment'' mean. The instructions indicated that an item
is considered durable if it can withstand repeated use, that is, it is
the type of item that could normally be rented, and that medical
supplies of an expendable nature are not considered ``durable'' within
the meaning of the definition. To be considered DME, the item must be
able to be rented out to multiple patients and thus withstand repeated
use. The instructions indicated that medical equipment is equipment
primarily and customarily used for medical purposes and is not
generally useful in the absence of illness or injury. The instructions
indicated that in some cases information from medical specialists and
the manufacturer or supplier of products new to the market may be
necessary to determine whether equipment is medical in nature.
Additional instructions provide examples of equipment which
presumptively constitutes medical equipment, such as canes, crutches,
and walkers, and equipment that is
[[Page 73897]]
primarily and customarily used for a nonmedical purpose and cannot be
considered DME even when the item has some remote medically related
use, such as air conditioners. Equipment that basically serves comfort
or convenience functions or is primarily for the convenience of a
person caring for the patient, such as elevators, and posture chairs,
do not constitute medical equipment. Similarly, physical fitness
equipment, first-aid or precautionary-type equipment, self-help
equipment, and training equipment are considered nonmedical in nature.
These program instructions from 1975 are still in effect and are now
located in section 110 of chapter 15 of the Medicare Benefits Policy
Manual (CMS Pub. 100-02).
The Social Security Amendments of 1977 (Pub. L. 95-142) amended the
statute to mandate a ``rent/purchase'' program or payment methodology
for DME; CMS would pay for each item furnished to each beneficiary on
either a rental or purchase basis depending on which method was
considered more economical. The decision regarding whether payment for
DME was made on a rental or purchase basis was made by the Medicare
Part B carrier (Medicare contractor) processing the claim. The rent/
purchase program was implemented from February 1985 through December
1988.
Section 2321 of the Deficit Reduction Act of 1984 (Pub. L. 98-369)
moved the definition of DME from section 1861(s)(6) of the Act to
section 1861(n) of the Act and included a more detailed definition of
DME.
Section 4062(b) of the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act (OBRA) of
1987 (Pub. L. 100-203) amended the statute to terminate the rent/
purchase program and add section 1834(a) to the Act with special
payment rules for DME furnished on or after January 1, 1989. DME items
were to be classified into different classes under paragraphs (2)
through (7) of section 1834(a) of the Act, with specific payment rules
for each class of DME. Section 1834(a) of the Act still governs payment
for items and services furnished in areas that are not included in the
competitive bidding program mandated by section 1847(a) of the Act.
Section 1834(a)(2) of Act indicates that payment is made on a rental
basis or in a lump sum amount for the purchase of an item the purchase
price of which does not exceed $150 (inexpensive equipment) or which
the Secretary determines is acquired at least 75 percent of the time by
purchase (routinely purchased equipment) or which is an item specified
under sections 1834(a)(2)(A)(iii) and (iv) of the Act. The term
``routinely purchased equipment'' is defined in regulations at 42 CFR
414.220(a)(2) as equipment that was acquired by purchase on a national
basis at least 75 percent of the time during the period July 1986
through June 1987.
Medicare began covering blood glucose monitors under the DME
benefit in the early 1980s and the test strips and other supplies
essential for the effective use of the glucose monitor were also
covered. Blood glucose monitors were expensive equipment within the
meaning of section 1834(a)(2) of the Act but were routinely purchased
(more than 75 percent of the time on a national basis) during the
period July 1986 through June 1987. Therefore, payment was made on a
fee schedule basis for blood glucose monitors based on the lower of the
supplier's actual charge for the item or a statewide fee schedule
amount calculated for the item based on the average rental or purchase
payment for the item in the State for the 12-month period ending on
June 30, 1987. The rental and purchase fee schedule amounts are
increased on an annual basis based on the provisions set forth in
section 1834(a)(14) of the Act.
The special payment rules for DME mandated by section 1834(a) of
the Act were implemented via program instructions for all DME items
other than oxygen and oxygen equipment on January 1, 1989. CMS
established and implemented fee schedule amounts for inexpensive or
routinely purchased items, for payment on a rental basis, payment on a
lump sum purchase basis when the item is new, and payment on a lump sum
purchase basis when the item is used. We also promulgated rules
implementing the special payment rules for DME mandated by section
1834(a) of the Act. For more information, see the October 9, 1991 and
December 7, 1992 Federal Registers (56 FR 50821 and 57 FR 57675,
respectively), and a July 10, 1995, final rule (60 FR 35492).
We established a definition for DME items and services during this
time at 42 CFR 414.202, which simply mirrored the general definition of
DME established in 1975 via program instructions.
Section 1861(n) of the Act was revised by section 4105(b)(1) of the
Balanced Budget Act of 1997 (Pub. L. 105-33) to expand coverage of
blood glucose monitors and test strips to patients with type II
diabetes. As noted, these items had already been covered as DME
(glucose monitoring equipment) and disposable supplies (test strips)
since the early 1980s, but coverage was limited to patients with type I
diabetes.
We added to the definition of DME at 42 CFR 414.202 effective for
items furnished after January 1, 2012, to require that the item have a
minimum lifetime of 3 years to be considered DME. This 3-year minimum
lifetime requirement was established in a final rule published in the
November 10, 2011 Federal Register titled ``Medicare Program; End-Stage
Renal Disease Prospective Payment System and Quality Incentive Program;
Ambulance Fee Schedule; Durable Medical Equipment; and Competitive
Acquisition of Certain Durable Medical Equipment, Prosthetics,
Orthotics, and Supplies'' (76 FR 70228 and 70314). This final rule
included a discussion of how the 3-year minimum lifetime requirement
(MLR) is applied to multicomponent devices or systems consisting of
durable and nondurable components (76 FR 70291). In this rule, we noted
that a device may be a system consisting of durable and nondurable
components that together serve a medical purpose, and that we consider
a multicomponent device consisting of durable and nondurable components
nondurable if the component that performs the medically necessary
function of the device is nondurable, even if other components of the
device are durable. In regards to the 3-year MLR, the component(s) of a
multicomponent device that performs the medically necessary function of
the device must meet the 3-year MLR (76 FR 70291).
In summary, DME is covered under Medicare Part B. DME is defined
under section 1861(n) of the Act and Medicare claims for DME are paid
in accordance with the special payment rules under section 1834(a) of
the Act or under the competitive bidding program mandated by sections
1847(a) and (b) of the Act. Rules related to the scope and conditions
of the benefit are addressed at 42 CFR 410.38. Under Sec. 414.202,
durable medical equipment means equipment which--
Can withstand repeated use;
Effective with respect to items classified as DME after
January 1, 2012, has an expected life of at least 3years;
Is primarily and customarily used to serve a medical
purpose;
Generally is not useful to a person in the absence of an
illness or injury; and
Is appropriate for use in the home.
All requirements of the definition must be met before an item can
be considered to be DME.
B. Continuous Glucose Monitors
On January 12, 2017, we issued a CMS Ruling (CMS-1682-R)
articulating the CMS policy concerning the classification of
therapeutic continuous
[[Page 73898]]
glucose monitoring systems as DME under Part B of the Medicare program.
CMS-1682-R is available on the CMS.gov website at: https://www.cms.gov/Regulations-and-Guidance/Guidance/Rulings/CMS-Rulings.
CMS-1682-R classified continuous glucose monitoring systems as
``therapeutic continuous glucose monitors (CGMs)'' that meet the
definition of DME if the equipment--
Is approved [or cleared] by the FDA for use in place of a
blood glucose monitor for making diabetes treatment decisions (for
example, changes in diet and insulin dosage);
Generally is not useful to the individual in the absence
of an illness or injury;
Is appropriate for use in the home; and
Includes a durable component (a component that CMS
determines can withstand repeated use and has an expected lifetime of
at least 3 years) that is capable of displaying the trending of the
continuous glucose measurements.
Under CMS-1682-R, in all other cases in which a CGM does not
replace a blood glucose monitor for making diabetes treatment
decisions, a CGM is not considered DME. We reasoned that enabling a
beneficiary to make diabetes treatment decisions was the medical
purpose of a glucose monitor, that non-therapeutic CGMs did not serve
that medical purpose, and that non-therapeutic CGMs therefore were not
DME. CMS-1682-R also addressed the calculation of the fee schedule
amounts for therapeutic CGMs in accordance with the rules at section
1834(a) of the Act and under regulations at 42 CFR part 414, subpart D.
CGMs are systems that use disposable glucose sensors attached to
the patient to monitor a patient's interstitial fluid glucose level on
a continuous basis by either automatically transmitting the glucose
readings from the sensor via a transmitter to a device that displays
the readings (``automatic'' CGMs), or by displaying the glucose
readings from the sensor on a device that the patient manually holds
over the sensor (``manual'' CGMs). Some CGMs are class III devices and
require premarket approval by the FDA, while some newer CGM models are
class II devices that do not require premarket approval and may go
through FDA's 510(k) premarket process, whereby devices can obtain
clearance by demonstrating substantial equivalence to a predicate
device. The glucose sensor continuously measures glucose values in the
interstitial fluid, the fluid around the cells (in contrast to blood
glucose monitors which measure glucose values using fingertip blood
samples). The sensor is a small flexible metal probe or wire that is
inserted under the skin and has a coating that prevents the body's
immune system from detecting and attacking the foreign probe. Once the
coating wears off, which in current models takes place in 7 to 14 days,
the sensor must be replaced for safety reasons. The glucose sensor
generates small electrical signal in response to the amount of sugar
that is present (interstitial glucose). This electrical signal is
converted into a glucose reading that is received/displayed on a
dedicated continuous glucose monitor (the CGM). Insulin pumps covered
as DME or a compatible mobile device (smart phone, smart watch, tablet,
etc.) and app that are not covered as DME may also perform the function
of a CGM, which receives and displays the glucose measurements in the
form of a graph so that the patient can visualize how their glucose
measurements are trending. CMS-1682-R only addressed whether CGMs meet
the Medicare definition of DME and did not address whether insulin
pumps that can also perform the function of a CGM are DME since insulin
pumps are already classified as DME under an NCD (section 280.14 of
Chapter 1, Part 4 of the Medicare National Coverage Determinations
Manual, Pub. 100-03).
CMS-1682-R classifies CGM display devices as DME if they have been
approved [or cleared] by the FDA for use in making diabetes treatment
decisions, such as changing one's diet or insulin dosage based solely
on the readings of the CGM, that is, without verifying the CGM readings
with readings from a blood glucose monitor. These CGMs are referred to
as ``non-adjunctive'' or ``therapeutic'' CGMs in CMS-1682-R. In
contrast, CGMs that patients use to check their glucose levels and
trends that must be verified by use of a blood glucose monitor to make
diabetes treatment decisions are not currently classified as DME. These
CGMs are referred to as ``adjunctive'' or ``non-therapeutic'' CGMs in
CMS-1682-R. It is important to note that there were no ``adjunctive''
or ``non-therapeutic'' CGM receivers being manufactured and sold on the
market as of the time this rule was drafted. This fact was brought to
light by comments submitted on the proposed rule and discussed in more
detail later in this final rule.
C. Current Issues
As indicated previously, there are currently no adjunctive CGM
receivers being manufactured and sold on the market. However,
beneficiaries are currently using disposable continuous glucose sensors
and transmitters that have not been approved or cleared by the FDA to
replace a blood glucose monitor for use in making diabetes treatment
decisions with insulin infusion pumps that also function as
``adjunctive'' or ``non-therapeutic'' CGM receivers. Beneficiaries are
using the readings from these disposable sensors that are received and
displayed by the insulin pump to help manage their diabetes. Claims
submitted for CGM sensors and transmitters used with insulin pumps are
being denied inappropriately based on CMS-1682-R even though this
Ruling only addressed the classification of CGM receivers as DME and
did not address coverage of CGM sensors and transmitters used with
insulin pumps. This final rule addresses whether adjunctive or ``non-
therapeutic'' CGMs meet the five requirements or prongs of the
definition of DME at 42 CFR 414.202 and how the fee schedule amounts
should be calculated for CGM supplies and accessories.
1. Requirements of DME Definition
(a) Ability To Withstand Repeated Use
This criterion under 42 CFR 414.202 addresses the issue of whether
an item of medical equipment can withstand repeated use, which means it
is an item that can be rented and used by successive patients.
Equipment must be able to withstand repeated use to fall within the
scope of the Medicare Part B benefit for DME. The continuous glucose
monitor's receiver component is durable equipment that can be rented
and used by successive patients to monitor the trending of glucose
levels that are either transmitted to the device using disposable
sensors or are read or received by the device when the patient holds
the device near the sensor. Therefore, we believe this equipment meets
the requirement to withstand repeated use; that is, equipment that
could normally be rented and used by successive patients.
(b) Expected Life of at Least 3 Years
This criterion under 42 CFR 414.202 further addresses the issue of
``durability'' and provides a clear minimum timeframe for how long an
item must last to meet the definition of DME. We believe the continuous
glucose monitor or receiver meets the 3-year minimum lifetime
requirement. In the case of one manufacturer, reliability analysis data
from an engineering firm that evaluated their CGM product predicted a
lifetime of greater than 3 years for the receiver. Because the CGM
sensors and transmitters only have a
[[Page 73899]]
predicted life of days (for the sensors) or several months (for the
transmitters), the receiver is the only durable component of a CGM
system.
(c) Primarily and Customarily Used To Serve a Medical Purpose
We proposed that CGMs that have not been approved or cleared by the
FDA for use in making diabetes treatment decisions without the use of a
blood glucose monitor but can be used to alert the patient about
potentially dangerous glucose levels while they sleep, are primarily
and customarily used to serve a medical purpose. Likewise, we believe
that disposable continuous glucose sensors and transmitters that work
in conjunction with an insulin pump that also operates as a continuous
glucose monitor's receiver component to alert the patient about
potentially dangerous glucose levels while they sleep are primarily and
customarily used to serve a medical purpose. We now believe that
because adjunctive CGMs or adjunctive continuous glucose sensors and
transmitters used with insulin pumps can provide information about
potential changes in glucose levels while a beneficiary is sleeping and
is not using a blood glucose monitor, these CGMs or CGM functions on
insulin pumps are primarily and customarily used to serve a medical
purpose.
(d) Generally Not Useful to a Person in the Absence of an Illness or
Injury
CMS has determined that both adjunctive and non-adjunctive/
therapeutic CGM systems are generally not useful to a person in the
absence of an illness or injury because people who do not have diabetes
generally would not find a monitor that tracks their glucose levels to
be useful. Thus far, Medicare's coverage policy for CGMs has supported
the use of therapeutic CGMs in conjunction with a smartphone (with the
durable receiver as backup), including the important data sharing
function they provide for patients and their families.\26\ CMS
previously concluded that therapeutic CGMs, when used in conjunction
with a smartphone, still satisfied the definition of DME because the
durable receiver, used as a backup, was generally not useful to a
person in the absence of an illness or injury, even if the smartphone
might be. We are not changing this policy. We proposed that both
therapeutic and non-therapeutic CGMs, when used in conjunction with a
smartphone, satisfy the definition of DME because the durable receiver,
used as a backup, is not generally useful to a person in the absence of
an illness or injury. Medicare does not cover or provide payment for
smartphones under the DME benefit. In order for Medicare to cover
disposable glucose sensors, transmitters and other non-durable
components of a CGM system, these disposable items must be used with
durable CGM equipment that meets the Medicare definition of DME, which
smartphones do not. If a Medicare beneficiary is using durable CGM
equipment or an insulin pump with a CGM feature that meets the Medicare
definition of DME as a backup, but primarily uses a smartphone or other
non-DME device to display their glucose readings in conjunction with
the covered DME item as described previously, Medicare will cover the
disposable items since the beneficiary is using their covered DME item
as a backup to display their glucose readings. However, if the
beneficiary is exclusively using a non-DME item like a smartphone to
display glucose readings from disposable sensors, transmitters or other
disposable CGM supplies, these disposable supplies cannot be covered
since there is no covered item of DME in this scenario, even as a
backup.
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\26\ https://www.cms.gov/Center/Provider-Type/Durable-Medical-Equipment-DME-Center.
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(e) Appropriate for Use in the Home
The FDA has cleared or approved CGM systems as safe and effective
for use by the patient in their homes similar to how blood glucose
monitoring systems have been used in the home for many years. Both
adjunctive and non-adjunctive CGMs are appropriate for use in the home
for the same purpose that a blood glucose monitor is used in the home.
Comment: With regard to the proposal to expand classification of
durable medical equipment (DME) to all types of CGMs (``adjunctive'' as
well as ``non-adjunctive''), most commenters agreed with the proposal
but multiple commenters pointed out that the only adjunctive CGM system
on the market today does not include a dedicated durable CGM receiver.
Some commenters recommended classifying the software application (App)
that allows smart phones to function as CGM receivers as DME.
Response: We have confirmed with the FDA that the one adjunctive
CGM product on the market today, the Guardian\TM\ Connect System,
consists of disposable glucose sensors and transmitters that work in
conjunction with the patient's smart phone and App or with certain
MiniMed insulin infusion pumps instead of a dedicated durable receiver.
Software applications do not meet the definition of DME, nor do phones
or computers. To cover the software application under the Medicare Part
B benefit for DME, the equipment that the software is added to, or some
part of the CGM system used with the software, must meet the Medicare
definition of DME at 42 CFR 414.202, including the requirement that the
equipment or system component not be useful in the absence of illness
or injury. Smart phones are useful in the absence of illness or injury
and therefore do not meet the definition of DME. Therefore, a CGM
system that consists of a software application added to a smart phone
and disposable supplies is not covered under the Medicare Part B
benefit for DME. However, smart devices (watch, smartphone, tablet,
laptop computer, etc.) can be used in conjunction with a continuous
glucose monitor.
In contrast, durable insulin infusion pumps have been classified
and covered as DME since the mid-1990s. Therefore, in accordance with
this final rule, an insulin pump that also performs the functions of an
adjunctive CGM would also be classified and covered as DME.
After consideration of the public comments we received, we are
finalizing the proposed rule to expand classification of DME to both
adjunctive and non-adjunctive CGMs as long as all requirements of the
definition of DME at 42 CFR 414.202 are met. There are adjunctive
continuous glucose monitoring sensors and transmitters that do not meet
the durability requirement and are used exclusively in conjunction with
devices such as smart phones, which are not DME for the previously
stated reasons; neither the sensors and transmitters nor the smart
phones meet the Medicare definition of DME. In situations where these
adjunctive continuous glucose monitoring sensors and transmitters are
used in conjunction with an insulin infusion pump that also functions
as a CGM receiver, the sensors and transmitters can be covered under
the DME benefit, subject to other requirements and criteria. We note
that if the beneficiary does not meet the medical necessity criteria
for an insulin pump, then the insulin pump would not be covered and
therefore any supplies used with the insulin pump would also not be
covered.
2. Fee Schedule Amounts for CGM Receivers/Monitors and Related
Accessories
Medicare payment for DME was made on a reasonable charge basis
prior to 1989. The regulations related to implementation of the
reasonable charge payment methodology are found at 42 CFR part 405,
subpart E. The current Medicare payment rules for glucose
[[Page 73900]]
monitors and other DME are located at section 1834(a) of the Act and
mandate payment on the basis of fee schedule amounts beginning in 1989.
Blood glucose monitors are classified as routinely purchased items
subject to the payment rules for inexpensive and routinely purchased
DME at section 1834(a)(2) of the Act, which mandate payment for
routinely purchased items on a purchase or rental basis using fee
schedule amounts based on average reasonable charges for the purchase
or rental of the item for the 12-month period ending on June 30, 1987,
increased by the percentage increase in the consumer price index for
all urban consumers (U.S. city average) for the 6-month period ending
with December 1987. These base fee schedule amounts are increased on an
annual basis based on the update factors located in section 1834(a)(14)
of the Act, which includes specific update factors for 2004 through
2008 for class III devices described in section 513(a)(1)(C) of the
Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act. Routinely purchased equipment is
defined in the regulations at 42 CFR 414.220(a)(2) as equipment that
was acquired by purchase on a national basis at least 75 percent of the
time during the period July 1986 through June 1987. Section
1834(a)(1)(C) of the Act states that subject to subparagraph (F)(ii),
this subsection must constitute the exclusive provision of this title
[Title XVIII of the Act] for payment for covered items under this part
[Medicare Part B] or under Part A to a home health agency. The fee
schedule amounts for blood glucose monitors were revised in 1995 using
special payment limits established in accordance with the ``inherent
reasonableness'' authority at section 1842(s)(8) of the Act. The final
notice (BPD-778-FN) establishing special payment limits for blood
glucose monitors was published in the January 17, 1995 Federal Register
(60 FR 3405), with the payment limits updated on an annual basis using
the DME fee schedule update factors in section 1834(a)(14) of the Act.
Because certain CGMs have been approved or cleared by the FDA to
replace blood glucose monitors for use in making diabetes treatment
decisions, we believe that CGMs represent a newer technology version of
glucose monitors paid for by Medicare in 1986 and 1987. In addition,
the CGM systems function similar to the blood glucose monitors in using
disposable supplies or accessories, such as test strips or sensors, to
measure glucose levels in a patient's body, either from the patient's
blood or interstitial fluid, and using durable equipment to convert
these glucose measurements in a way that they can be displayed on a
screen on the equipment. Therefore, we believe that the CGM receivers/
monitors must be classified as routinely purchased DME since they are a
technological refinement of glucose monitors routinely purchased from
July 1986 through June 1987. The alternative would be to classify CGM
receivers/monitors as other items of DME under section 1834(a)(7) of
the Act and pay for the equipment on a capped rental basis. We also
believe the average reasonable charge data for blood glucose monitors
from 1986 and 1987 can be used to establish the fee schedule amounts
for CGM receivers/monitors in accordance with our regulations 42 CFR
414.238(b) since CGM receivers/monitors are comparable to blood glucose
monitors.
We do not believe that the special payment limits established in
1995 for blood glucose monitors must apply to CGM receivers/monitors
because these special payment limits were based on specific pricing
information on the cost of blood glucose monitors. We therefore
proposed to continue using the fee schedule amounts established in CMS-
1682-R based on the updated 1986/87 average reasonable charges for
blood glucose monitors as the fee schedule amounts for CGM receivers/
monitors. As noted, section 1834(a)(14) of the Act provides different
annual update factors for class III DME versus other DME items and so
the fee schedule amounts for class III CGM receivers are slightly
higher (from $231.77 to $272.63 in 2020) than the fee schedule amounts
for class II CGM receivers (from $208.76 to $245.59 in 2020).
With regard to the fee schedule amounts for supplies and
accessories for CGMs, we proposed to separate payment for CGM supplies
and accessories into three separate categories of supplies and
accessories with different fee schedule amounts for each category. The
current 2020 monthly fee schedule amounts of $222.77 and $259.20 for
supplies and accessories for CGM systems apply to all types of class II
or class III therapeutic CGMs, respectively, but were established based
on supplier price lists for only one type of CGM system approved by FDA
for use in making diabetes treatment decisions without the need to use
a blood glucose monitor to verify the results (non-adjunctive CGMs).
The supplier prices used to establish these fee schedule amounts were
for non-adjunctive CGM systems that use a combination of sensors and
transmitters to automatically send glucose measurements to the CGM
receiver without manual intervention by the patient. We refer to this
type of CGM system as a non-adjunctive system, or a system that both
replaces a blood glucose monitor for use in making diabetes treatment
decisions, and can alert the patient about dangerous glucose levels
while they sleep based on the automatic transmission of the glucose
readings to the receiver on a 24-hour basis. The fee schedule amounts
of $222.77 and $259.20 for supplies and accessories for class II and
class III CGMs, respectively, increased by the fee schedule update
factor for 2021, would continue to apply to the supplies and
accessories for automatic, non-adjunctive CGMs effective the effective
date specified in the DATES section of this final rule.
If a beneficiary uses disposable ``adjunctive'' or ``non-
therapeutic'' continuous glucose sensors and transmitters with an
insulin infusion pump, the beneficiary and Medicare program would still
incur expenses associated with use of blood glucose monitors and
supplies. To avoid a situation where the beneficiary and program would
pay twice for glucose monitoring supplies needed to accurately assess
glucose levels, we proposed to establish the fee schedule amounts for
supplies and accessories for adjunctive CGMs based on supplier prices
for the sensors and transmitters minus the fee schedule amounts for the
average quantity and types of blood glucose monitoring supplies used by
insulin-treated beneficiaries who would be more likely to qualify for
coverage of a CGM system based on a need to more closely monitor
changes in their glucose levels. The adjunctive CGM system is not
replacing the function of the blood glucose monitor and related
supplies and therefore only provides an adjunctive or added benefit of
alerting the beneficiary when their glucose levels might be dangerously
high or low. Since the adjunctive CGM system cannot function alone as a
glucose monitor for use in making diabetes treatment decisions, we
proposed to reduce the payment for the adjunctive CGM system by the
amount that is paid separately for the blood glucose monitor and
supplies that are needed in addition to the adjunctive CGM system and
are not needed in addition to the non-adjunctive CGM systems.
Currently, Medicare is allowing coverage and payment for 135 test
strips and lancets per month for insulin-treated beneficiaries using
blood glucose monitors. Using the 2020 mail order fee schedule amounts
for 50 test strips, divided by 50 and multiplied by 135,
[[Page 73901]]
plus the 2020 mail order fee schedule amounts for 100 lancets, divided
by 100 and multiplied by 135, plus the 2020 mail order fee schedule
amounts for a monthly supply of batteries, calibration solution, and
lancet device, plus the 2020 fee schedule amount for the blood glucose
monitor divided by 60 months (5-year lifetime) results in a 2020
monthly allowance of $34.35, which reflects what Medicare currently
pays per month for an insulin-treated diabetic beneficiary. Based on
supplier invoices and other prices, a 2020 monthly price for supplies
and accessories used with class II or class III adjunctive CGMs would
be calculated to be $209.97 and $233.12 respectively. Subtracting the
monthly cost of the blood glucose monitor and supplies of $34.35 from
the monthly cost of the supplies and accessories for class II
adjunctive CGMs results in a net price of $175.62 ($209.97-$34.35 =
$175.62) for the monthly supplies and accessories used with a class II
adjunctive CGM after backing out the cost of the separately paid blood
glucose supplies. Subtracting the monthly cost of the blood glucose
monitor and supplies of $34.35 from the monthly cost of the supplies
and accessories for class III adjunctive CGMs results in a net price of
$198.77 ($233.12-$34.35 = $198.77) for the monthly supplies and
accessories used with a class III adjunctive CGM after backing out the
cost of the separately paid blood glucose supplies. Thus, we proposed
2020 fee schedule amounts of $175.62 and $198.77 (to be increased by
the 2021 fee schedule update factor yet to be determined) for use in
paying claims in 2021 for the monthly supplies and accessories for use
with class II and class III adjunctive CGMs respectively. Reducing the
payment amount for supplies and accessories used with adjunctive CGMs
by the average monthly payment for the blood glucose monitor and
supplies that Medicare and the beneficiary will still have to pay for
avoids a situation where the beneficiary and the program pay twice for
glucose testing supplies and equipment.
Finally, a third type of CGM system currently on the market is non-
adjunctive but does not automatically transmit glucose readings to the
CGM receiver and therefore does not alert the patient about dangerous
glucose levels while they sleep. We refer to this as a manual, non-
adjunctive CGM system. We proposed to establish 2020 fee schedule
amounts of $46.86 (for class II devices) and $52.01 (for class III
devices) for the monthly supplies and accessories for this third
category, which only uses disposable batteries and sensors, based on
supplier prices for the supplies and accessories for this category of
CGMs.
Comment: Many commenters did not agree with the proposal to
establish separate codes and pricing for supplies for three types of
CGM systems on the market today. They strongly believe that linking
coding and payment to the specific types of CGMs on the market today
was not wise given the rapid pace in changes in technology for CGMs and
diabetic equipment in general. Many commenters specifically objected to
establishing separate codes and fee schedule amounts for automatic
versus manual non-adjunctive CGMs. They recommended that the continuity
of pricing regulations should be observed and that the initial prices
established based on automatic non-adjunctive CGMs alone should apply
to manual non-adjunctive CGMs as well. The manufacturer of the manual
non-adjunctive CGM pointed out that their new product line for CGMs
offers continuous data transmission from sensor to receiver, enabling
customizable, real-time alarms and alerts that can automatically alert
users when their glucose is high or low, including while they sleep,
without any patient intervention. Therefore, it appears that the manual
non-adjunctive CGM systems and classification are already becoming
obsolete.
Response: We agree with the commenters that glucose monitoring
technology is changing rapidly, and the Medicare fee schedule amounts
for this equipment should not be limited solely to the technology that
is currently on the market. We believe that the existing fee schedule
amounts for non-adjunctive CGMs and supplies and accessories necessary
for the effective use of non-adjunctive CGMs should continue to be used
in paying claims for these items. However, the utility offered by
adjunctive CGMs is not the same as the utility offered by non-
adjunctive CGMs and so we do not believe that the existing fee schedule
amounts established for the non-adjunctive CGMs and supplies and
accessories necessary for the effective use of non-adjunctive CGMs
should be used in paying claims for adjunctive CGMs and supplies and
accessories necessary for the effective use of adjunctive CGMs, which
clearly are different types of CGMs because they cannot be used in
place of a blood glucose monitor. As explained further later in this
section, we believe that separate fee schedule amounts are needed for
adjunctive CGMs and supplies and related accessories versus non-
adjunctive CGMs and related supplies and accessories.
Comment: Many commenters stated that more details were needed on
how the proposed fee schedule amounts were established for the separate
codes for supplies used with the three types of CGM systems on the
market today.
Response: We are not finalizing the proposed fee schedule amounts
for the monthly supplies and accessories associated with three
different types of CGMs. Although we will continue using existing fee
schedule amounts established for non-adjunctive CGMs, these are not fee
schedule amounts for adjunctive CGMs and therefore do not apply to
adjunctive CGMs.
Comment: Many commenters believe the proposed fee schedule amounts
for supplies for CGMs were not sufficient to cover the cost of these
items. A commenter stated that the proposed fee schedule amounts are
below internet retail prices while other commenters simply stated that
the proposed fee schedule amounts are below the cost of the products.
Response: The fee schedule amounts for supplies necessary for the
effective use of CGMs is required to be established in accordance with
the rules of the statute at section 1834(a) of the Act. In establishing
Medicare fee schedule amounts for DME items, section 1834(a) of the Act
requires that CMS base payment amounts on average reasonable charges in
1986 and 1987.
After consideration of the public comments we received, we are not
finalizing the proposed fee schedule amounts for supplies and
accessories used in conjunction with three types of CGMs. We believe
the technology associated with the manual, non-adjunctive category is
already becoming obsolete as more CGM products that automatically
transmit sensor readings to the receiver and provide night time alarms
come on the market. As the commenters pointed out, the technology is
evolving quickly and establishing categories based on the different
variations of CGMs on the market at any one time does not seem prudent
or necessary. However, we do note that there is a substantial
difference in the utility and capabilities of adjunctive CGMs versus
non-adjunctive CGMs in that while both are able to alert the patient
about dangerous or potentially dangerous glucose levels while they
sleep, the non-adjunctive CGMs are also able to replace the use of a
blood glucose monitor for accurate glucose measuring/testing purposes,
while the adjunctive CGMs are not.
A blood glucose monitor and related supplies are necessary for
patients using
[[Page 73902]]
adjunctive CGMs for accurate glucose measuring/testing purposes, while
patients using a non-adjunctive CGM do not also need a blood glucose
monitor. Existing fee schedule amounts for therapeutic or non-
adjunctive CGMs and related supplies and accessories were specifically
established for those types of CGMs and do not apply to adjunctive CGMs
and related supplies and accessories. Therefore, fee schedule amounts
for adjunctive CGMs and related supplies and accessories will be
established in accordance with existing regulations for gap-filling
under 42 CFR 414.238(b).
Summary of final provisions:
We are finalizing our proposal to expand the
classification of DME to a larger swath of CGMs, regardless of whether
they are non-adjunctive (can alert patients when glucose levels are
approaching dangerous levels, including while they sleep and also
replace blood glucose monitors) or adjunctive (can alert patients when
glucose levels are approaching dangerous levels, including while they
sleep but do not replace blood glucose monitors), as long as such CGMs
satisfy the regulatory definition of DME. For example, to be classified
under the Medicare Part B benefit for DME, a potential CGM would need
to have a durable component performing the medically necessary function
of the device that can withstand repeated use for at least 3 years, and
is not useful in the absence of illness or injury, in accordance with
42 CFR 414.202.
We are not finalizing the proposed fee schedule amounts
for CGMs and related supplies and accessories.
Therefore, the fee schedule amounts for adjunctive CGM and
related supplies and accessories will be established in accordance with
existing regulations for gap-filling under 42 CFR 414.238(b).
VII. DME Interim Pricing in the CARES Act
In this final rule, we are finalizing the DME provisions of an IFC
(May 2020 COVID-19 IFC) which made conforming changes to the DME
payment regulations to reflect the CARES Act. The CARES Act (Pub. L.
116-136) was enacted on March 27, 2020. Section 3712 of the CARES Act
specifies the payment rates for certain DME and enteral nutrients,
supplies, and equipment furnished in non-CBAs through the duration of
the emergency period described in section 1135(g)(1)(B) of the Act.
Section 3712(a) of the CARES Act continues our policy of paying the 50/
50 blended rates for items furnished in rural and non-contiguous non-
CBAs through December 31, 2020, or through the duration of the
emergency period, if longer. Section 3712(b) of the CARES Act increased
the payment rates for DME and enteral nutrients, supplies, and
equipment furnished in areas other than rural and non-contiguous non-
CBAs through the duration of the emergency period. Beginning March 6,
2020, the payment rates for DME and enteral nutrients, supplies, and
equipment furnished in these areas are based on 75 percent of the
adjusted fee schedule amount and 25 percent of the historic, unadjusted
fee schedule amount, which results in higher payment rates as compared
to the full fee schedule adjustments that were previously required
under Sec. 414.210(g)(9)(iv). We made changes to the regulation text
at Sec. 414.210(g)(9), consistent with section 3712 of the CARES Act,
in an IFC that we published in the May 8, 2020 Federal Register titled
``Medicare and Medicaid Programs; Additional Policy and Regulatory
Revisions in Response to the COVID-19 Public Health Emergency.''
We received six timely pieces of correspondence in response to the
May 2020 COVID-19 IFC provision titled ``DME Interim Pricing in the
CARES Act''.
Comment: Many of the commenters appreciated that CMS modified the
regulations consistent with section 3712 of the CARES Act.
Response: We thank the commenters for their support.
Comment: Many of the commenters cited reasons why the increased
payments rates for DME are needed during the PHE. A commenter stated
that ensuring access to personal protective equipment (PPE) and other
DME for beneficiaries is essential to preventing the spread of COVID-
19. Another commenter stated that this provision is in the overall
interest to everyone--suppliers, health care professionals and
beneficiaries--as suppliers will be able to maintain their inventory
and be paid for items when there may be lags in care and beneficiaries
may not be able to meet required visits due to the current PHE. Another
commenter stated that there have been broad-based increases in the
acquisition costs of certain home medical equipment (for example,
ventilators, oxygen concentrators) as well as an increase in various
overhead expenses (for example, requisite personal protective equipment
and a more labor-intensive delivery/instruction methodology). The
commenter stated that this has created financial hardships for many
suppliers servicing the PHE patients.
Response: We believe that section 3712 of the CARES Act addresses
these concerns about the need for payment increases during the PHE.
Comment: A commenter suggested that the adjustment for the 75/25
blend in the non-rural and contiguous non-CBAs should be maintained--at
a minimum--to the end of 2020. The commenter also stated that if Round
2021 of the CBP is delayed, then the 75/25 blended rates should be
extended from 2020 and subsequent years and maintained until the
program is implemented. The commenter also stated that if Round 2021 is
delayed, the 75/25 blended rates should be extended to all non-rural
providers, including the former CBAs, until the next CBP can be
implemented. The commenter then stated that if there is a delay in
Round 2021, the 50/50 blended rates for rural areas should be extended
until the next Round of the CBP is implemented.
Response: This provision implements section 3712 of the CARES Act.
Section 3712(a) of the CARES Act continues our policy of paying the 50/
50 blended rates for items furnished in rural and non-contiguous non-
CBAs through December 31, 2020, or through the duration of the
emergency period, if longer. Section 3712(b) of the CARES Act increased
the payment rates for DME and enteral nutrients, supplies, and
equipment furnished in areas other than rural and non-contiguous non-
CBAs through the duration of the emergency period. As such, and because
the PHE has continued into 2021, the 50/50 blended rates in rural and
non-contiguous non-CBAs and the 75/25 blended rates in the non-rural
contiguous non-CBAs have remained in effect. This provision does not
address fee schedule adjustments after the PHE. We proposed a fee
schedule adjustment rule for after the PHE in the November 2020
proposed rule.
After consideration of the public comments received, we are
finalizing the following changes to Sec. 414.210(g)(9):
We are finalizing conforming changes to Sec.
414.210(g)(9) as proposed, consistent with section 3712(a) and (b) of
the CARES Act, but we are omitting the language in section 3712(b) of
the CARES Act that references an effective date that is 30 days after
the date of enactment of the law.
We are finalizing our proposed revision to Sec.
414.210(g)(9)(iii), which describes the 50/50 fee schedule adjustment
blend for items and services furnished in rural and non-contiguous
areas, to address dates of service from June 1, 2018, through December
31, 2020, or through the duration of the emergency period described in
section
[[Page 73903]]
1135(g)(1)(B) of the Act (42 U.S.C. 1320b-5(g)(1)(B)), whichever is
later.
We are finalizing our proposed addition to Sec.
414.210(g)(9)(v) which states that, for items and services furnished in
areas other than rural or noncontiguous areas with dates of service
from March 6, 2020, through the remainder of the duration of the
emergency period described in section 1135(g)(1)(B) of the Act (42
U.S.C. 1320b-5(g)(1)(B)), based on the fee schedule amount for the area
is equal to 75 percent of the adjusted payment amount established under
``this section'' (by which we mean Sec. 414.210(g)(1) through (8)),
and 25 percent of the unadjusted fee schedule amount. For items and
services furnished in areas other than rural or noncontiguous areas
with dates of service from the expiration date of the emergency period
described in section 1135(g)(1)(B) of the Act (42 U.S.C. 1320b-
5(g)(1)(B)) through December 31, 2020, based on the fee schedule amount
for the area is equal to 100 percent of the adjusted payment amount
established under Sec. 414.210(g)(1) through (8) (referred to as
``this section'' in the regulation text).
Finally, we are finalizing our revision of Sec.
414.210(g)(9)(iv) to specify for items and services furnished in areas
other than rural and noncontiguous areas with dates of service from
June 1, 2018 through March 5, 2020, based on the fee schedule amount
for the area is equal to 100 percent of the adjusted payment amount
established under Sec. 414.210(g)(1) through (8) (``this section'' in
the regulation text).
VIII. Collection of Information Requirements
This document does not impose information collection requirements
for reporting, recordkeeping or third-party disclosure requirements.
Consequently, there is no need for review by OMB under the authority of
the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.).
IX. Regulatory Impact Analysis
A. Statement of Need
We are finalizing provisions that were included in the November
2020 proposed rule, as well as provisions that were in two IFCs--the
May 2018 IFC and the May 2020 COVID-19 IFC.
The May 2018 IFC, finalized in this rule, with the exception of the
wheelchair provisions, amended the regulations to revise the date that
the initial fee schedule adjustment transition period ended and resumed
the fee schedule adjustment transition period for certain DME items and
services and enteral nutrition furnished in rural and non-contiguous
areas not subject to the DMEPOS CBP from June 1, 2018 through December
31, 2018 (83 FR 21912). The May 2018 IFC also made technical amendments
to existing regulations for DMEPOS items and services to note the
exclusion of infusion drugs used with DME from the DMEPOS CBP and
reflected the extension of the transition period for phasing in fee
schedule adjustments for certain durable medical equipment (DME) and
enteral nutrition paid in areas not subject to the Durable Medical
Equipment, Prosthetics, Orthotics, and Supplies (DMEPOS) Competitive
Bidding Program (CBP) through December 31, 2016. Additionally, on April
26, 2021, we announced the continuation of effectiveness of the 2018
IFC and the extension of the timeline for publication of the final rule
(86 FR 21949).
Specifically, this IFC resumed the blended adjusted Medicare fee
schedule amounts for certain items and services that were furnished in
rural and non-contiguous areas not subject to the CBP beginning June 1,
2018 in response to input from suppliers that the fully adjusted fee
schedule amounts were not sufficient to cover the cost of furnishing
items and services in remote areas of the country. Stakeholders and
others posited that the increased fee schedule adjustments would ensure
access to items and services in these areas to protect the health,
safety, and well being of beneficiaries who needed these items and
services. It was estimated that these adjustments cost $290 million in
Medicare benefit payments and $70 million in Medicare beneficiary cost
sharing for the period beginning June 1, 2018 and ending December 31,
2018. The goal of this IFC was to ensure beneficiary access to DME
items and services in rural and non-contiguous areas not subject to the
CBP during the transition period. CMS continued to study the impact of
these change in payment rates on access to items and services in these
areas. We believed that resuming the fee schedule adjustment transition
period in rural and non-contiguous areas will promote stability in the
DMEPOS market, and will enable CMS to work with stakeholders to
preserve beneficiary access to DMEPOS.
The DMEPOS provisions included in the May 2020 COVID-19 IFC amended
Sec. 414.210 to temporarily increase the DME fee schedule amounts in
certain areas during the PHE, as required by section 3712 of the CARES
Act (85 FR 27569). The May 2020 IFC made several changes to payment and
coverage policies, in an effort to allow health care providers maximum
flexibility to minimize the spread of COVID-19 among Medicare and
Medicaid beneficiaries, health care personnel, and the community at
large, and increased their capacity to address the needs of their
patients. The estimated Medicare gross benefit costs against the FY
2021 President's Budget baseline for the May 2020 IFC provision was
$140 million (85 FR 27614). We also estimated that the May 2020 IFC
provision also costs $30 million in Medicare beneficiary cost sharing
at that time.
In addition, we are finalizing certain provisions that were
included in the November 2020 proposed rule (85 FR 70358). This final
rule establishes a fee schedule adjustment methodology for certain
DMEPOS items and services furnished in non-competitive bidding areas
(non-CBAs) on or after the effective date specified in the DATES
section of this final rule, or the date immediately following the
duration of the emergency period described in section 1135(g)(1)(B) of
the Act (42 U.S.C. 1320b-5(g)(1)(B)), whichever is later. This policy
continues higher fee schedule amounts for certain items and services
furnished in rural and non-contiguous areas of the country. This fee
schedule adjustment methodology is responsive to stakeholders such as
DMEPOS suppliers, who are of the view that fully adjusted fee schedule
amounts are not sufficient to cover the costs of furnishing DMEPOS
items and services in remote areas of the country.
Section 1834(a)(1)(G) of the Act specifically mandates that we take
into account the average volume of items and services furnished by
suppliers in CBAs compared to the average volume of items and services
furnished by suppliers in non-CBAs when adjusting fee schedule amounts
for DMEPOS items and services. As noted elsewhere in this rule, the
average volume of items and services furnished by suppliers in many
non-CBAs that are rural and non-contiguous areas is lower than the
average volume of items and services furnished by suppliers in many
CBAs. We believe that different payments are necessary to ensure access
to items and services for beneficiaries in these rural and non-
contiguous areas to protect their health, safety, and well-being.
This final rule also establishes procedures for making benefit
category and payment determinations for new items and services that are
durable medical equipment (DME), prosthetic devices, orthotics and
prosthetics, therapeutic shoes and inserts, surgical dressings, or
splints, casts, and other devices used for reductions of fractures and
dislocations under Medicare Part B.
[[Page 73904]]
This policy would help to prevent delays in making benefit category and
payment determinations for new and innovative DMEPOS technologies that
could improve the health and safety of Medicare beneficiaries. This
final rule also classifies continuous glucose monitors (CGMs) as DME
under Medicare Part B. This policy increases the number and types of
CGMs classified under the Medicare Part B benefit for DME, so that
beneficiaries and their physicians have more treatment options
available.
B. Overall Impact
We have examined the impact of the three provisions covered in this
rule as required by Executive Order 12866 on Regulatory Planning and
Review (September 30, 1993), Executive Order 13563 on Improving
Regulation and Regulatory Review (January 18, 2011), the Regulatory
Flexibility Act (RFA) (September 19, 1980, Pub. L. 96-354), section
1102(b) of the Act, section 202 of the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of
1995 (March 22, 1995; Pub. L. 104-4), Executive Order 13132 on
Federalism (August 4, 1999), and the Congressional Review Act (5 U.S.C.
801-808).
Executive Orders 12866 and 13563 direct agencies to assess all
costs and benefits of available regulatory alternatives and, if
regulation is necessary, to select regulatory approaches that maximize
net benefits (including potential economic, environmental, public
health and safety effects, distributive impacts, and equity). Section
3(f) of Executive Order 12866 defines a ``significant regulatory
action'' as an action that is likely to result in a rule: (1) Having an
annual effect on the economy of $100 million or more in any 1 year, or
adversely and materially affecting a sector of the economy,
productivity, competition, jobs, the environment, public health or
safety, or state, local or tribal governments or communities (also
referred to as ``economically significant''); (2) creating a serious
inconsistency or otherwise interfering with an action taken or planned
by another agency; (3) materially altering the budgetary impacts of
entitlement grants, user fees, or loan programs or the rights and
obligations of recipients thereof; or (4) raising novel legal or policy
issues arising out of legal mandates, the President's priorities, or
the principles set forth in the Executive Order.
A regulatory impact analysis (RIA) must be prepared for major rules
with significant regulatory action/s and/or with economically
significant effects ($100 million or more in any 1 year). This rule is
economically significant. The aggregated transfer costs are estimated
to be approximately $6.030 billion during the period CY 2022 through CY
2026. This aggregate transfer cost is the sum of transfers from the
Federal Government, the beneficiaries, and the State governments to the
DME suppliers. Based on our estimates, OMB's Office of Information and
Regulatory Affairs has determined this rulemaking is ``economically
significant'' as measured by the $100 million threshold, and hence also
a major rule under Subtitle E of the Small Business Regulatory
Enforcement Fairness Act of 1996 (also known as the Congressional
Review Act). Accordingly, we have prepared a Regulatory Impact Analysis
that to the best of our ability presents the costs and benefits of the
rulemaking. Therefore, OMB has reviewed these proposed regulations, and
the Departments have provided the following assessment of their impact.
C. Detailed Economic Analysis
Our baseline assumption assumes that in the absence of this final
rule, the fee schedule amounts for certain DMEPOS items furnished in
non-CBAs on the effective date specified in the DATES section of this
final rule or after the end of the PHE, whichever is later, would be
fully adjusted based on information from the CBP. In addition, our
baseline assumption assumes that in the absence of this final rule,
benefit category determinations would continue to only be made through
the NCD process, notice and comment rulemaking, or by the MACs on an
individual, claim-by-claim basis. Also, the baseline assumption assumes
that in the absence of this final rule, adjunctive CGMs would continue
to be considered items that are not primarily and customarily used to
serve a medical purpose and would not be classified as DME. Finally, it
assumes that in the absence of this final rule, the DMEPOS provisions
included in the 2018 and 2020 IFCs would not be finalized, and CMS
would need to finalize these provisions at some other time. CMS has
calculated a baseline based on predicted Medicare costs if CMS were to
not finalize the provisions of this final rule noted previously.
For purposes of this detailed economic analysis, CMS established a
baseline, as described previously, to measure the impacts of certain
provisions of this final rule. CMS makes certain assumptions as part of
this analysis. For example, this analysis assumes that nothing would
arise or occur (for example, new legislation) to prevent CMS from fully
adjusting the fee schedule amounts for certain DME items and services
furnished in non-competitive bidding areas on or after the effective
date of this final rule. Note that for the economic analysis in the
November 2020 proposed rule, CMS used the FY 2021 President's budget as
a baseline, which resulted in a proposed rule that was deemed primarily
designated as not economically significant. However, as a result of the
new baseline described previously, we have determined that this final
rule is economically significant. We have determined the following
impacts on benefits, costs, and transfers for this economically
significant rule as follows:
1. Benefits
a. May 2018 IFC
This rule finalizes certain provisions of the May 2018 IFC, thereby
benefitting DMEPOS suppliers. We assume that certain suppliers might
have chosen not to furnish items and services in rural and non-
contiguous areas in the absence of these higher payments.
b. May 2020 COVID-19 IFC
This rule finalizes certain provisions of May 2020 COVID-19 IFC,
thereby benefitting DMEPOS suppliers that furnish items in certain non-
CBAs. Such suppliers receive higher payments for furnishing DMEPOS
items and services.
c. November 2020 Proposed Rule
This rule finalizes certain provisions of the November 2020
proposed rule. As a result of this final rule, access to DMEPOS items
and services in rural and non-contiguous areas will be improved. In
addition, this final rule establishes a BCD and payment determination
process for DME, prosthetic devices, orthotics and prosthetics,
therapeutic shoes and inserts, surgical dressings, or splints, casts,
and other devices used for reductions of fractures and dislocations and
classifies adjunctive CGMs as DME. These provisions will benefit
Medicare beneficiaries and the DMEPOS industry by providing a clear,
predictable process for benefit category and payment determinations,
and will make more CGMs eligible for coverage and payment under the
Medicare Part B benefit for DME.
2. Costs
The only cost that will be incurred is a one-time cost to private
entities for reviewing and reading this final rule.
[[Page 73905]]
3. Transfers
a. May 2018 IFC
As a result of the provisions of this IFC, DME suppliers received
increased payments for furnishing items in remote rural and non-
contiguous areas in 2018. Medicare beneficiaries, on the other hand,
incurred higher copayments, which resulted in higher transfer costs
from the Federal Government and Medicare beneficiaries to DMEPOS
suppliers. The provisions of the May 2018 IFC that CMS is finalizing in
this final rule affected payment rates for DMEPOS items and services
furnished from June through December of 2018. Therefore, finalizing
these provisions of this IFC in this rule has no economic impact on
payment or cost sharing for these items.
The May 2018 IFC resumed the transitional adjusted Medicare fee
schedule amounts for certain items and services that were furnished in
rural and non-contiguous non-competitive bidding areas beginning June
1, 2018 through December 31, 2018. The May 2018 IFC also made technical
amendments to the regulation to reflect the extension of the fee
schedule adjustment transition period from June 30, 2016 to December
31, 2016 that was mandated by the CURES Act. In addition, the May 2018
IFC also made technical amendments to existing regulations for DMEPOS
items and services to reflect the exclusion of infusion drugs used with
DME from the DMEPOS CBP. The May 2018 IFC also contained provisions
related to wheelchair payment, which we further discuss in the FY 2022
IRF final rule (86 FR 42362).
In the May 2018 IFC, CMS estimated that the transitional adjusted
Medicare fee schedule amounts for certain items and services that were
furnished in rural and non-contiguous areas beginning June 1, 2018
through December 31, 2018, cost over $290 million in Medicare Part B
benefit payments and $70 million in Medicare beneficiary cost sharing
(83 FR 21923). These fee schedule adjustment costs--both to the
Medicare program and to beneficiaries--were incurred during 2018 and
will have no further financial impact at this time. Similarly, for
dually eligible beneficiaries, the Medicaid Federal and States' costs
for this May 2018 IFC were $10 million and $10 million, respectively.
The portions of the May 2018 IFC that CMS is finalizing in this final
rule are estimated to have no impact after the effective date of the
final rule because all of the costs and financial impacts of the IFC
happened in the past, and this IFC will not have an impact going
forward.
Comment: A few commenters did not agree with CMS using the cost of
the rule to determine how extensive the payment increases should have
been. The commenters stated CMS used the budget implications as a
primary determinant in choosing to extend payment increases only to the
rural and non-contiguous non-CBAs. The commenters recommended that CMS
instead base its policy decision primarily on ensuring appropriate
beneficiary access, and that any budgetary impacts should be secondary
to CMS establishing a policy that ensures that beneficiaries have
appropriate access to medically necessary DMEPOS items. Another
commenter stated that the cost of the rule is far less than costs to
other health care entities and Medicare beneficiaries due to the lack
of access to DME. Finally, a commenter stated the rule will increase
costs for certain Medicare beneficiaries, potentially impacting those
on the margin, but they believe increased access to quality DME and
supplier/brand name choice is a reasonable trade-off. The commenter
claimed that the true impact of the forecasted cost-sharing is unclear
due to secondary insurance. The commenter also stated that for
beneficiaries who are dually eligible for both Medicare and Medicaid,
Medicaid will typically pay the cost sharing, offsetting this total
amount. The commenter stated that many beneficiaries who do not qualify
for Medicaid but cannot afford secondary insurance do not end up paying
for DME cost sharing out of pocket, and that it is common for DME
suppliers to write off co-payments when beneficiaries cannot afford to
pay after the supplier has made reasonable attempts to collect the
balance. The commenter encouraged CMS to monitor how this cost increase
impacts beneficiaries.
Response: We believe that we considered beneficiary access to
DMEPOS items in our analysis and that the policy was implemented, to a
large degree, based on improved access.
In the May 2018 IFC, we summarized the feedback we received from
the March 23, 2017 stakeholder call and related written comments (83 FR
21916). The majority of these comments were from the DMEPOS industry
and focused on rural and non-contiguous areas of the country. For
instance, commenters stressed that rural and non-contiguous areas of
the country face unique costs, that the average volume of allowed
services for suppliers serving CBAs is significantly higher than the
average volume of allowed services for suppliers serving non-CBAs,
particularly in rural and non-contiguous areas, and that the adjusted
fees are not sufficient to cover the costs of furnishing items and
services in rural and non-contiguous areas and that this is having an
impact on access to items and services in these areas. These comments
factored into our decision to only apply the 50/50 blended rates to
rural and non-contiguous non-CBAs. We also further explain in our CY
2019 ESRD PPS DMEPOS final rule our reasons for only applying the 50/50
blended rates to rural and non-contiguous areas (83 FR 57030).
b. May 2020 COVID-19 IFC
As a result of the provisions of this finalized May 2020 COVID-19
IFC, even though DME suppliers received increased payments for
furnishing items in remote rural and non-contiguous areas, Medicare
beneficiaries, on the other hand, incurred higher cost-sharing, which
resulted in higher transfer costs from the Federal Government and
Medicare beneficiaries to the DMEPOS suppliers. The provisions of the
May 2020 COVID-19 IFC that CMS is finalizing in this final rule affect
payment rates for DMEPOS items and services furnished from March 6,
2020 through the end of the PHE, which is assumed to end after the
effective date of this rule in April 2022. Finalizing these provisions
of this IFC in this rule has a negligible economic impact on payment or
cost sharing for these items.
CMS's Office of the Actuary determined that this provision against
the FY 2021 President's Budget baseline increased payments in the
estimated amount of $140 million from the Federal Government to DMEPOS
suppliers (85 FR 27614). Additionally, the Medicare beneficiary
transfer was $30 million to DME suppliers. This provision also impacts
the federal portion of the Medicaid increased payments: The federal
cost is $5 million for dually eligible beneficiaries, while the State
portion of the Medicaid increased payments is $5 million.
This section finalizes a temporary increase to certain DME payment
rates, as required by section 3712 of the CARES Act. Section 3712 of
the CARES Act increases Medicare expenditures, as well as beneficiary
cost-sharing by increasing Medicare payment rates for certain DMEPOS
items furnished in non-rural and contiguous non-competitively bid
areas. The increase is a result of paying a blend of 75 percent of the
fully adjusted payment rates and 25 percent of the unadjusted payment
[[Page 73906]]
rates for items and services furnished in non-rural and contiguous non-
CBAs throughout the United States and is estimated to increase affected
rates, averaging 33 percent.
Comment: A commenter referenced the impact of this provision, which
states that ``this change may also affect the federal financial
participation limit for DMEPOS items and services furnished to Medicaid
beneficiaries, but we are unable to quantify the effect.'' The
commenter stated that despite the potential effects this provision may
have on the federal financial participation limit, they strongly
believe that these DMEPOS items and services remain critical for
beneficiaries. Therefore, they expressed their support for this
provision.
Response: We agree Medicaid rates are affected due to the
interaction between the federal financial participation limit and
Medicare rate changes, although the amount of the change is currently
not quantifiable.
c. November 2020 Proposed Rule
The fee schedule adjustment methodology that CMS is finalizing in
this final rule involves three transfers of monies: (1) Federal
Government to DMEPOS suppliers; (2) beneficiaries to DME suppliers; and
(3) State governments to DME suppliers. The amounts of these transfers
are explained later in this section. CMS's Office of the Actuary has
determined that the fee schedule adjustment methodology will increase
Medicare gross benefit payments in the estimated amount of $4.55
billion from CY 2022 to CY 2026 as compared to the baseline discussed
previously. During the years CY 2022 to CY 2026, the estimated gross
payments will be as follows: $200 million, $770 million, $1.110
billion, $1.190 billion and $1.280 billion, respectively.
Table 3--Impact of Changing the Adjusted Fee Methodology
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Impact on
Impact on benefit beneficiary cost
gross payments sharing (in
CY (in dollars to dollars to the
the nearest 10 nearest 10
million) million)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
2022.............................. 200 50
2023.............................. 770 190
2024.............................. 1,110 280
2025.............................. 1.190 300
2026.............................. 1,280 320
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Payments increase each year as a result of annual fee schedule
updates and increases in utilization of items and services. As stated
before, the increased payments result from paying a 50/50 blended rate
for certain DME items furnished in rural and non-contiguous non-
competitive bidding areas. This will increase the beneficiary
copayments by $1.14 billion from CY 2022 to CY 2026. In addition, the
federal portion of the Medicaid increased payments during this period
is $195 million for the dually eligible beneficiaries, and the State
portion of the Medicaid increased payments is $145 million during CY
2022 to CY 2026 ($10 million, $25 million, $35 million, $40 million,
and $40 million, respectively, during CY 2022 through CY 2026). Note,
the federal financial participation limit for DME in Medicaid, as
discussed in section 1903(i)(27) of the Act, adds an indeterminable
cost to the federal share of the Medicaid payments to States.
Comment: A commenter stated that a blind spot is the impact of the
trickle down of rates to Medicaid, Medicare Advantage, and private
insurances who base their rates on Medicare rates.
Response: We thank the commenter for commenting on the impact of
this particular provision. Impact analyses consider the impact of
policies on the MA rates and on private insurances (as they provide
supplemental insurance that pays copayments on behalf of Medicare
beneficiaries). So, supplemental insurers pay more or less depending on
whether fees increase or decrease. Regarding Medicaid, we note that we
provided details regarding the impact this particular provision has on
Medicaid in the November 2020 proposed rule (85 FR 70406) and this
final rule.
d. Benefit Category and Payment Determinations for DME, Prosthetic
Devices, Orthotics and Prosthetics, Therapeutic Shoes and Inserts,
Surgical Dressings, Splints, Casts, and Other Devices Used for
Reductions of Fractures and Dislocations
We are finalizing the procedures for BCDs and payment
determinations for new items and services that are DME, prosthetic
devices, orthotics and prosthetics, therapeutic shoes and inserts,
surgical dressings, or splints, casts, and other devices used for
reductions of fractures and dislocations with no additional
administrative costs to CMS and no fiscal impact when measured against
the baseline. We do not expect that the BCD and payment determination
procedures that CMS is finalizing in this rule will affect the ability
of manufacturers to make new items and services. We note that this
final rule continues our use of an already established process (public
meetings) to make BCD and payment determinations for new items and
services that are durable medical equipment (DME), prosthetic devices,
orthotics and prosthetics, therapeutic shoes and inserts, surgical
dressings, or splints, casts, and other devices used for reductions of
fractures and dislocations.
e. Classification and Payment for Continuous Glucose Monitors Under
Medicare Part B
This final rule classifies certain CGMs as DME. This will result in
an increase in the number of CGM products beneficiaries and physicians
can choose that would be classified as DME. We do not anticipate that
this change will impact overall utilization of CGMs covered under the
DME benefit and Medicare payment because beneficiaries have had access
to some types of CGMs since 2017. Because we do not anticipate changes
in CGM utilization or payments for glucose monitoring equipment as a
result of this final rule, this final rule will not result in any
transfers.
4. Regulatory Review Cost Estimation
If regulations impose administrative costs on private entities,
such as the time needed to read and interpret this final rule, we
should estimate the cost associated with regulatory review. Thus, using
the 2020 wage information from the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS)
https://www.bls.gov/oes/current/oes119111.htm for medical and health
service managers (Code 11-9111), we estimate that the cost of reviewing
this
[[Page 73907]]
rule is $114.24 per hour, including overhead and fringe benefits. For
manufacturers of DMEPOS products, DMEPOS suppliers, and other DMEPOS
industry representatives, we assume the same cost for reviewing this
rule. Assuming an average reading speed for those very familiar with
the topic matter, we estimate that it would take approximately 5 hours
for the medical and health service managers or industry representatives
to review this final rule. For each entity that reviews this final
rule, the estimated cost is $571.20 (5 hours x $114.24 per hour).
Therefore, we estimate that the total cost of closely reviewing this
final rule is a one-time cost of $1,005,312 ($571.20 x 1,760
reviewers). Note the 1,760 reviewers represent about 2 percent of the
current number of DME suppliers. Two percent was chosen based on the
assumption that most entities would use trade industry summaries to
inform themselves on the contents of the rule.
D. Alternatives Considered
This section addresses the alternatives considered only for the fee
schedule adjustment methodology provisions from the November 2020
proposed rule. This section does not consider alternatives to the BCD
provisions, CGM provisions, May 2020 COVID-19 IFC DMEPOS provisions (no
alternatives were contained in the IFC) or the May 2018 IFC (the
effects of which were limited to 2018). In the case of the CGM
provisions, we are not finalizing the proposed fee schedule amounts for
CGMs and related accessories and supplies. We do not believe that the
decision not to finalize the proposed fee schedule amounts results in
any costs or savings for the program or beneficiaries since one of the
proposed categories of CGM supplies and accessories is being phased out
and the fee schedule amounts for another category of adjunctive CGMs
and supplies and accessories will be established in accordance with 42
CFR 414.238, which reflects our longstanding policies and procedures
for gap-filling fee schedule amounts in accordance with the rules of
the statute. Therefore, the impacts of all three alternatives for the
November 2020 proposed rule discussed later in this section, are
considered against the previously discussed baseline (that is, the
baseline calculations assume that CMS would fully adjust the fee
schedule amounts for DME items and services furnished all non-CBAs,
including rural and non-contiguous non-CBAs).
Therefore, in regards to the November 2020 proposed rule, the first
alternative was to pay fully adjusted fee schedule rates in all areas
except super rural areas or non-contiguous areas and pay 120 percent of
national average of the single payment amounts in super rural areas and
non-contiguous areas. The Office of the Actuary estimated that this
alternative would increase Medicare gross payments from CY 2022 to CY
2026 by $380 million. This would increase beneficiary copayments by $80
million from CY 2022 to CY 2026. In addition, the federal portion of
the Medicaid would increase payments during this period to $20 million
for the dually eligible beneficiaries, and the State portion of the
Medicaid would also increase payments to $20 million.
The second alternative was to adjust fee schedule amounts for items
and services furnished in non-CBAs between 2022 and 2023 based on a 75/
25 blend of adjusted and unadjusted rates and phase in the full fee
schedule adjustments beginning January 1, 2024. The Office of the
Actuary estimates that this alternative would increase Medicare gross
payments by $1.13 billion and increase beneficiary copayments by $280
million from CY 2022 to CY 2026. In addition, the federal portion of
the Medicaid would increase payments during this period to $50 million
for the dually eligible beneficiaries, and the State portion of the
Medicaid would increase payments to $35 million.
Finally, the third alternative was to extend the transition period
for phasing in fully adjusted fee schedule rates at 42 CFR
414.210(g)(9), which would result in the same payment amounts as the
proposed rule for just a 2-year period. The Office of the Actuary
estimated that this alternative would increase Medicare gross payments
from CY 2022 to CY 2026 by $1.41 billion for items and services
furnished in non-CBAs between 2022 and 2023. As a result, this would
increase beneficiary copayments by $350 million from CY 2022 to CY
2026. In addition, the federal portion of Medicaid payments would
increase during this period from CY 2022 to CY 2026 by $60 million for
dually eligible beneficiaries, and the State portion of Medicaid
payments would increase by $45 million.
The three alternatives, which were estimated to cost less than the
policy that CMS is finalizing in this rule, were not considered
primarily due to the assumption that maintaining the current fee
schedule adjustment methodology would provide for better access to
DMEPOS items and services in rural and non-contiguous areas than two of
the alternatives, and would provide such access for a longer period of
time than the three alternatives.
E. Accounting Statement
As required by OMB Circular A-4 (available at https://www.whitehouse.gov/omb/circulars_a004_a-4), we have prepared an
accounting statement in Table 4, showing the classification of the
impacts associated with the fee schedule adjustment methodologies
included in the November 2020 proposed rule in this final rule. The
November 2020 proposed rule, which is being finalized in this rule, is
estimated to increase payments ($912 million annualized at 7 percent)
from the Federal Government to DMEPOS suppliers by $4.550 billion from
CY 2022 to CY 2026, as compared to a baseline that assumes that as of
the effective date, CMS would pay fully adjusted fee schedule amounts
in all non-competitive bidding areas for DMEPOS items subject to
competitive bidding. In addition, the accounting statement considers
the transfer amounts from beneficiaries to DME suppliers of $1.14
billion ($219 million annualized at 7 percent) from CY 2022 to CY 2026.
Finally, the accounting statement accounts for the cost of the States'
portion of the Medicaid payments for dually eligible beneficiaries,
costing approximately $150 million from CY 2022 to CY 2026 ($28 million
annualized at 7 percent. The annual costs increase over time because of
annual updates to adjusted fee schedule amounts and Medicare enrollment
increases.
Table 4--Accounting Statement: Classification of Estimated Transfers and Costs
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Units
-----------------------------------------------
Category Estimates Discount rate
Year dollar (%) Period covered
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Costs:
[[Page 73908]]
Annualized Monetized ($million/year)........ 0.20 2021 7 2022-2026
0.20 2021 3 2022-2026
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Regulatory Review Costs
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Transfers:
Annualized Monetized ($million/year)........ 912 2021 7 2022-2026
933 2021 3 2022-2026
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
From Whom to Whom............................... Transfers from Federal Government to DME Suppliers
---------------------------------------------------------------
Annualized Monetized($million/year)......... 219 2021 7 2022-2026
224 2021 3 2022-2026
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
From Whom to Whom............................... Transfers from Medicare Beneficiaries to DME Suppliers
---------------------------------------------------------------
Annualized Monetized ($million/year)........ 28 2021 7 2022-2026
28 2021 3 2022-2026
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
From Whom to Whom............................... Transfers from State Government to Beneficiaries
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
F. Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)
The Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.) imposes
certain requirements with respect to federal rules that are (1)
required to be published as a notice of proposed rulemaking subject to
the notice and comment requirements of the Administrative Procedure Act
(5 U.S.C. 553(b)); and (2) likely to have a significant economic impact
on a substantial number of small entities.
Note that the finalized provisions of the May 2018 IFC and the
finalized May 2020 COVID-19 IFC impose no burden on a substantial
number of small entities. However, the provisions of this final rule
that were proposed in the November 2020 proposed rule will have a
positive impact on DMEPOS suppliers. This rule will increase DMEPOS
supplier revenues for furnishing DMEPOS items and services subject to
the fee schedule adjustments in rural and non-contiguous areas. As
compared to the baseline, the revenues for DMEPOS suppliers will be
higher due to the 50/50 blended fee schedule adjustments in rural and
non-contiguous areas.
The RFA requires agencies to analyze options for regulatory relief
of small entities, if a rule has a significant impact on a substantial
number of small entities. For purposes of the RFA, we estimate that
almost all DMEPOS suppliers are small entities, as that term is used in
the RFA (including small businesses, nonprofit organizations, and small
governmental jurisdictions). The great majority of hospitals and most
other health care providers and suppliers are small entities, either by
being nonprofit organizations or by meeting the Small Business
Administration (SBA) definition of a small business (having revenues of
less than $8.0 million to $41.5 million in any 1 year).
According to the SBA's website at https://www.sba.gov/content/small-business-size-standards, DME suppliers may fall into either the North
American Industrial Classification System (NAICS) code 532291 and Home
Health Equipment Rental code 44610, Pharmacies and Drug Stores. The SBA
defines Pharmacies and Drug Stores as businesses having less than $30
million and Home Health Equipment Rental as businesses having less than
$35 million in annual receipts.
Table 5--DMEPOS Suppliers Size Standards
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
SBA size standard/small
NAICS (6-digit) Industry subsector description entity threshold Total small businesses
(million)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
446110....................... Pharmacies and Drug Stores..... $30 18,503
532291....................... Home Health Equipment Rental... 35 673
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Source: 2012 Economic Census.
Since we are uncertain of the DMEPOS suppliers' composition, we
sought comments from the public to aid in understanding the various
industries that supply DMEPOS products. So far, we have identified only
the two industries in Table 5.
[[Page 73909]]
Table 6--DMEPOS Suppliers Concentration Ratios
[(NAICS 532292) home health equipment rental]
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Average
revenue per
Firm size (by receipts) Firm count % of small Total average firm to total
firms (%) revenue average
revenue (%)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
SMALL FIRMS..................................... 673 100.0 $42,468,578 100
<100,000.................................... 57 8.47 $45,912 0.11
100,000-499,999............................. 207 30.76 $287,647 0.68
500,000-999,999............................. 137 20.36 $722,080 1.70
1,000,000-2,499,999......................... 148 21.99 $1,599,811 3.77
2,500,000-4,999,999......................... 64 9.51 $3,430,781 8.08
5,000,000-7,499,999......................... 16 2.38 $5,599,563 13.19
7,500,000-9,999,999......................... 15 2.23 $8,909,267 20.98
10,000,000-14,999,999....................... 12 1.78 $10,715,917 25.23
15,000,000-19,999,999....................... 10 1.49 $11,157,600 26.27
20,000,000-24,999,999....................... 3 0.45 NA NA
25,000,000-29,999,999....................... 2 0.30 NA NA
30,000,000-34,999,999....................... 2 0.30 NA NA
LARGE FIRMS:
Receipts >$35 Million....................... 46 NA NA NA
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Source: 2012 County Business Patterns and 2012 Economic Census.
Average revenue data are not included for the Home Health Equipment Rentals (NAICS 532291) for firms greater
than 20,000,000 in receipts. Moreover, no revenue data are available for large firms in Home Heath Equipment
Rentals Industry.
Table 7--DMEPOS Suppliers Concentration Ratios
[NAICS 446110 pharmacies and drug stores]
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Average revenue per
Firm size (by receipts) Firm count % of small firms (%) Total average firm to total
revenue average revenue (%)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
SMALL FIRMS..................................................... 18,503 100.0 $89,692,509.68 100
<100,000.................................................... 751 0.04 $48,023.97 0.05
100,000-499,999............................................. 2,060 0.11 $283,085.44 0.32
500,000-999,999............................................. 1,919 0.10 $740,942.68 0.83
1,000,000-2,499,999......................................... 5,767 0.31 $1,742,084.10 1.94
2,500,000-4,999,999......................................... 5,094 0.27 $3,556,077.54 3.96
5,000,000-7,499,999......................................... 1,638 0.09 $6,068,161.78 6.77
7,500,000-9,999,999......................................... 583 0.03 $8,544,548.89 9.53
10,000,000-14,999,999....................................... 432 0.02 $11,705,081.02 13.05
15,000,000-19,999,999....................................... 147 0.01 $16,415,476.19 18.30
20,000,000-24,999,999....................................... 68 0.00 $20,211,073.53 22.53
25,000,000-29,999,999....................................... 44 0.00 $20,377,954.55 22.72
LARGE FIRMS:
Receipts >$30 Million....................................... 349 NA NA NA
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Source: 2012 County Business Patterns and 2012 Economic Census.
Tables 6 and 7 show that the economic impacts are disproportionate
for small firms. Moreover, these tables show the revenues for each of
the size categories, and the revenue impact per small entity. For
example, in table 6, 57 of the smallest firms earn only 0.11 percent of
the revenue in its industry; while, in table 7, 751 of the smallest
firm earn only 0.05 percent of the revenue in its industry.
Therefore, as can be seen in Tables 6 and 7, almost all DMEPOS
suppliers are small entities as that term is used in the RFA.\27\
Additionally, Tables 6 and 7 show the disproportionate impacts among
firms, and between small and large firms. In Table 6 and 7, each
industry, Pharmacies and Drug Stores and Home Health Equipment, Rental
firm size (by receipts), firm count, percentage of small firms, total
average revenue, and percentage of average revenue to total revenue of
small firms were estimated separately to determine the DMEPOS
concentration ratios. Note, there are missing data. See footnotes in
Table 6.
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\27\ Note, the entire population of DMEPOS suppliers is not
known at this time. However, based on our experience, the majority
of DMEPOS suppliers are covered in the two industries identified.
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For purposes of the RFA, approximately 98.15 percent of pharmacies
and drugs stores (18,503/18,852) and 93.60 percent of home health
equipment rental (673/719) firms are considered small businesses
according to the SBA's size standards with total revenues of $30 and
$35 million or less respectively in any 1 year. Individuals and states
are not included in the definition of a small entity.
This rule does not affect health care enterprises operated by small
government entities such as counties or towns with populations 50,000
or less. The Department of Health and Human Services generally uses a
revenue impact of 3 to 5 percent as a significance threshold under the
RFA. The RFA threshold analysis, therefore, indicates
[[Page 73910]]
that there is not a significant economic impact on a substantial number
of small entities. As shown in Table 6, the average total revenue
earned by the DMEPOS Home Health Equipment Rental industry is
approximately $42,468,578 million and the total transfer costs amount
to approximately $6.261 billion, which is only 0.67 percent.
Additionally, as shown in Table 7, the average total revenue earned by
DMEPOS Pharmacies and Drugs Stores is approximately $89,692,509.68
million and the total transfer costs amount to approximately $6.030
billion, which is 1.49 percent. As a result, we believe that this 3
percent threshold (the threshold used by the Department of Health and
Human Services to determine a significance threshold under the RFA)
will not be reached for both the Home Health Equipment Rental industry
and the Pharmacies and Drugs Stores industry mentioned in this rule.
Furthermore, the regulation review costs mentioned previously, is de
minimis and will not impose any additional burden on these small
businesses.
Even though a substantial number of small suppliers will benefit
from the 50/50 blended fee schedule amounts in rural and non-contiguous
non-CBAs, we do not believe that this regulation will result in a
significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities.
Therefore, the Secretary certifies that this final rule will not have a
significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities.
In addition, section 1102(b) of the Act requires us to prepare 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 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. We are not preparing
an analysis for section 1102(b) of the Act because we have determined,
and the Secretary certifies, that this rule will not have a significant
impact on the operations of a substantial number of small rural
hospitals.
G. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act (UMRA)
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, updated annually for inflation. In 2021, that
threshold is approximately $158 million. This final rule imposes
mandates that will result in anticipated costs to state, local and
Tribal governments or private sector, but the transfer costs will be
less than the threshold. As a result, this final rule would not impose
a mandate that will result in the expenditure by State, local, and
Tribal Governments, in the aggregate, or by the private sector, of more
than $158 million in any one year.
H. Federalism
Executive Order 13132 establishes certain requirements that an
agency must meet when it issues a final rule that imposes substantial
direct requirement costs on state and local governments, preempts state
law, or otherwise has federalism implications. Since this regulation
does impose costs on state or local governments, the requirements of
Executive Order 13132 are applicable.
The State governments' Medicaid payments in aggregate for dual
eligible beneficiaries will increase by an estimated $150 million from
CY 2022 to CY 2026.
I. Congressional Review Act
This final rule is subject to the Congressional Review Act
provisions of the Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act of
1996 (5 U.S.C. 801 et seq.) and has been transmitted to the Congress
and the Comptroller General for review.
Chiquita Brooks-LaSure, Administrator of the Centers for Medicare &
Medicaid Services, approved this document on November 22, 2021.
List of Subjects in 42 CFR Part 414
Administrative practice and procedure, Biologics, Diseases, Drugs,
Health facilities, Health professions, Medicare, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
For the reasons set forth in the preamble, the Centers for Medicare
& Medicaid Services amends 42 CFR part 414 as set forth below:
PART 414--PAYMENT FOR PART B MEDICAL AND OTHER SERVICES
0
1. The authority citation for part 414 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 1302, 1395hh, and 1395rr(b)(l).
0
2. Section 414.114 is added to subpart C to read as follows:
Sec. 414.114 Procedures for making benefit category determinations
and payment determinations for new PEN items and services covered under
the prosthetic device benefit; splints and casts; and IOLs inserted in
a physician's office covered under the prosthetic device benefit.
(a) Definitions. For the purpose of this subpart:
Benefit category determination means a national determination
regarding whether an item or service meets the Medicare definition of a
prosthetic device at section 1861(s)(8) of the Act or is a splint,
cast, or device used for reduction of fractures or dislocations subject
to section 1842(s) of the Act and the rules of this subpart and is not
otherwise excluded from coverage by statute.
(b) General rule. The procedures for determining whether new items
and services addressed in a request for a HCPCS Level II code(s) or by
other means meet the definition of items and services that may be
covered and paid for in accordance with this subpart are as follows:
(1) At the start of a HCPCS coding cycle, CMS performs an analysis
to determine if the item or service is statutorily excluded from
coverage under Medicare under section 1862 of the Act, and, if not
excluded by statute, whether the item or service is parenteral or
enteral nutrients, supplies, and equipment covered under the prosthetic
device benefit, splints and casts or other devices used for reductions
of fractures or dislocations, or IOLs inserted in a physician's office
covered under the prosthetic device benefit.
(2) If a preliminary determination is made that the item or service
is parenteral or enteral nutrients, supplies, and equipment covered
under the prosthetic device benefit, splints and casts or other devices
used for reductions of fractures or dislocations, or IOLs inserted in a
physician's office covered under the prosthetic device benefit, CMS
makes a preliminary payment determination for the item or service.
(3) CMS posts preliminary benefit category determinations and
payment determinations on CMS.gov approximately 2 weeks prior to a
public meeting.
(4) After consideration of public consultation provided at a public
meeting on preliminary benefit category determinations and payment
determinations for items and services, CMS establishes the benefit
category determinations and payment determinations for items and
services through program instructions.
[[Page 73911]]
0
3. Section 414.210 is amended by revising paragraphs (g)(1)(v) and
(g)(2) and adding paragraph (g)(9)(vi) to read as follows:
Sec. 414.210 General payment rules.
* * * * *
(g) * * *
(1) * * *
(v) For items and services furnished before February 28, 2022, the
fee schedule amount for all areas within a state that are defined as
rural areas for the purposes of this subpart is adjusted to 110 percent
of the national average price determined under paragraph (g)(1)(ii) of
this section.
(2) Payment adjustments for areas outside the contiguous United
States and for items furnished on or after February 28, 2022 in rural
areas within the contiguous United States using information from
competitive bidding programs.
(i) For an item or service subject to the programs under subpart F,
the fee schedule amounts for areas outside the contiguous United States
(Alaska, Hawaii, and U.S. territories) for items and services furnished
from January 1, 2016, through December 31, 2020 are reduced to the
greater of--
(A) The average of the single payment amounts for the item or
service for CBAs outside the contiguous United States.
(B) 110 percent of the national average price for the item or
service determined under paragraph (g)(1)(ii) of this section.
(ii) For an item or service subject to the programs under subpart F
of this part, the fee schedule amounts for areas outside the contiguous
United States for items and services furnished on or after February 28,
2022, or the date immediately following the duration of the emergency
period described in section 1135(g)(1)(B) of the Act (42 U.S.C. 1320b-
5(g)(1)(B)), whichever is later, is adjusted to equal the sum of--
(A) Fifty percent of the greater of the average of the single
payment amounts for the item or service for CBAs outside the contiguous
United States or 110 percent of the national average price for the item
or service determined under paragraph (g)(1)(ii) of this section; and
(B) Fifty percent of the fee schedule amount for the area in effect
on December 31, 2015, increased for each subsequent year beginning in
2016 by the annual update factors specified in sections 1834(a)(14),
1834(h)(4), and 1842(s)(1)(B) of the Act, respectively, for durable
medical equipment and supplies, off-the-shelf orthotics, and enteral
nutrients, supplies, and equipment.
(iii) For an item or service subject to the programs under subpart
F of this part, the fee schedule amounts for rural areas within the
contiguous United States for items and services furnished on or after
, or the date immediately following the duration of the
emergency period described in section 1135(g)(1)(B) of the Act (42
U.S.C. 1320b-5(g)(1)(B)), whichever is later, is adjusted to equal the
sum of--
(A) Fifty percent of 110 percent of the national average price for
the item or service determined under paragraph (g)(1)(ii) of this
section; and
(B) Fifty percent of the fee schedule amount for the area in effect
on December 31, 2015, increased for each subsequent year beginning in
2016 by the annual update factors specified in sections 1834(a)(14),
1834(h)(4), and 1842(s)(1)(B) of the Act, respectively, for durable
medical equipment and supplies, off-the-shelf orthotics, and enteral
nutrients, supplies, and equipment.
* * * * *
(9) * * *
(vi) For items and services furnished in all areas with dates of
service on or after February 28, 2022, or the date immediately
following the duration of the emergency period described in section
1135(g)(1)(B) of the Act, whichever is later, based on the fee schedule
amount for the area is equal to the adjusted payment amount established
under paragraph (g) of this section.
* * * * *
0
4. Section 414.240 is added to subpart D to read as follows:
Sec. 414.240 Procedures for making benefit category determinations
and payment determinations for new durable medical equipment,
prosthetic devices, orthotics and prosthetics, surgical dressings, and
therapeutic shoes and inserts.
(a) Definitions. For the purpose of this subpart--
Benefit category determination means a national determination
regarding whether an item or service meets the Medicare definition of
durable medical equipment at section 1861(n) of the Act, a prosthetic
device at section 1861(s)(8) of the Act and further defined under
section 1834(h)(4) of the Act, an orthotic or leg, arm, back or neck
brace, a prosthetic or artificial leg, arm or eye at section 1861(s)(9)
of the Act, is a surgical dressing, or is a therapeutic shoe or insert
subject to sections 1834(a), (h), or (i) of the Act and the rules of
this subpart and is not otherwise excluded from coverage by statute.
(b) General rule. The procedures for determining whether new items
and services addressed in a request for a HCPCS Level II code(s) or by
other means meet the definition of items and services paid for in
accordance with this subpart are as follows:
(1) At the start of a HCPCS coding cycle, CMS performs an analysis
to determine if the item or service is statutorily excluded from
coverage under Medicare under section 1862 of the Act, and, if not
excluded by statute, whether the item or service is durable medical
equipment, a prosthetic device as further defined under section
1834(h)(4) of the Act, an orthotic or prosthetic, a surgical dressing,
or a therapeutic shoe or insert.
(2) If a preliminary determination is made that the item or service
is durable medical equipment, a prosthetic device, an orthotic or
prosthetic, a surgical dressing, or a therapeutic shoe or insert, CMS
makes a preliminary payment determination for the item or service.
(3) CMS posts preliminary benefit category determinations and
payment determinations on CMS.gov approximately 2 weeks prior to a
public meeting.
(4) After consideration of public consultation provided at a public
meeting on preliminary benefit category determinations and payment
determinations for items and services, CMS establishes the benefit
category determinations and payment determinations for items and
services through program instructions.
Xavier Becerra,
Secretary, Department of Health and Human Services.
[FR Doc. 2021-27763 Filed 12-21-21; 4:15 pm]
BILLING CODE 4120-01-P