Medicare Program; Calendar Year (CY) 2024 Home Health (HH) Prospective Payment System Rate Update; HH Quality Reporting Program Requirements; HH Value-Based Purchasing Expanded Model Requirements; Home Intravenous Immune Globulin Items and Services; Hospice Informal Dispute Resolution and Special Focus Program Requirements, Certain Requirements for Durable Medical Equipment Prosthetics and Orthotics Supplies; and Provider and Supplier Enrollment Requirements, 43654-43817 [2023-14044]
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43654
Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 130 / Monday, July 10, 2023 / Proposed Rules
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid
Services
42 CFR Parts 409, 410, 414, 424, 484,
488, and 489
[CMS–1780–P]
RIN 0938–AV03
Medicare Program; Calendar Year (CY)
2024 Home Health (HH) Prospective
Payment System Rate Update; HH
Quality Reporting Program
Requirements; HH Value-Based
Purchasing Expanded Model
Requirements; Home Intravenous
Immune Globulin Items and Services;
Hospice Informal Dispute Resolution
and Special Focus Program
Requirements, Certain Requirements
for Durable Medical Equipment
Prosthetics and Orthotics Supplies;
and Provider and Supplier Enrollment
Requirements
Centers for Medicare &
Medicaid Services (CMS), Department
of Health and Human Services (HHS).
ACTION: Proposed rule.
AGENCY:
This proposed rule would set
forth routine updates to the Medicare
home health payment rates for calendar
year (CY) 2024 in accordance with
existing statutory and regulatory
requirements. This rule would—provide
information on home health utilization
trends and solicits comments regarding
access to home health aide services;
implement home health paymentrelated changes; rebase and revise the
home health market basket and revise
the labor-related share; codify statutory
requirements for disposable negative
pressure wound therapy (dNPWT); and
implement the new items and services
payment for the home intravenous
immune globulin (IVIG) benefit. In
addition, it proposes—changes to the
Home Health Quality Reporting Program
(HH QRP) requirements and the
expanded Home Health Value-Based
Purchasing (HHVBP) Model; to
implement the new Part B benefit for
lymphedema compression treatment
items, codify the Medicare definition of
brace, and make other codification
changes based on recent legislation; to
add an informal dispute resolution (IDR)
and special focus program (SFP) for
hospice programs; to codify DMEPOS
refill policy; and to revise Medicare
provider and supplier enrollment
requirements.
DATES: To be assured consideration,
comments must be received at one of
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SUMMARY:
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the addresses provided in the
section, no later than 5 p.m.
EDT on August 29, 2023.
ADDRESSES: In commenting, please refer
to file code CMS–1780–P. Because of
staff and resource limitations, we cannot
accept comments by facsimile (FAX)
transmission.
Comments, including mass comment
submissions, must be submitted in one
of the following three ways (please
choose only one of the ways listed):
1. Electronically. You may (and we
encourage you to) submit electronic
comments on this regulation to https://
www.regulations.gov. Follow the
instructions under the ‘‘submit a
comment’’ tab.
2. By regular mail. You may mail
written comments to the following
address ONLY: Centers for Medicare &
Medicaid Services, Department of
Health and Human Services, Attention:
CMS–1780–P, P.O. Box 8013, Baltimore,
MD 21244–8013.
Please allow sufficient time for mailed
comments to be received before the
close of the comment period.
3. By express or overnight mail. You
may send written comments via express
or overnight mail to the following
address ONLY: Centers for Medicare &
Medicaid Services, Department of
Health and Human Services, Attention:
CMS–1780–P, Mail Stop C4–26–05,
7500 Security Boulevard, Baltimore, MD
21244–1850.
For information on viewing public
comments, we refer readers to the
beginning of the SUPPLEMENTARY
INFORMATION section.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Brian Slater, (410) 786–5229, for
home health and home IVIG payment
inquiries.
For general information about the
Home Health Prospective Payment
System (HH PPS), send your inquiry via
email to HomeHealthPolicy@
cms.hhs.gov.
For information about the Home
Health Quality Reporting Program (HH
QRP), send your inquiry via email to
HHQRPquestions@cms.hhs.gov.
Frank Whelan (410) 786–1302, for
Medicare provider and supplier
enrollment inquiries.
For more information about the
expanded Home Health Value-Based
Purchasing Model, please visit the
Expanded HHVBP Model web page at
https://innovation.cms.gov/innovationmodels/expanded-home-health-valuebased-purchasing-model.
For more information about the
hospice informal dispute resolution and
special focus program, send your
inquiry to QSOG_hospice@cms.hhs.gov.
ADDRESSES
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SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Inspection of Public Comments: All
comments received before the close of
the comment period are available for
viewing by the public, including any
personally identifiable or confidential
business information that is included in
a comment. We post all comments
received before the close of the
comment period on the following
website as soon as possible after they
have been received: https://
www.regulations.gov/. Follow the search
instructions on that website to view
public comments.
Table of Contents
I. Executive Summary
A. Purpose and Legal Authority
B. Summary of the Provisions of This
Proposed Rule
C. Summary of Costs, Transfers, and
Benefits
II. Home Health Prospective Payment System
A. Overview of the Home Health
Prospective Payment System
B. Monitoring the Effects of the
Implementation of PDGM
C. Proposed Provisions for CY 2024
Payment Under the HH PPS
III. Home Health Quality Reporting Program
(HH QRP)
A. Background and Statutory Authority
B. General Considerations Used for the
Selection of Quality Measures for the HH
QRP
C. Quality Measures Currently Adopted for
the CY 2024 HH QRP
D. HH QRP Quality Measure Proposals
Beginning With the CY 2025 HH QRP
E. Form, Manner, and Timing of Data
Submission Under the HH QRP
F. Policies Regarding Public Display of
Measure Data for the HH QRP
G. Health Equity Update
H. Proposal To Codify HH QRP Data
Completion Thresholds
I. Principles for Selecting and Prioritizing
HH QRP Quality Measures and Concepts
Under Consideration for Future Years:
Request for Information (RFI)
IV. Proposed Changes to the Expanded Home
Health Value-Based Purchasing (HHVBP)
Model
A. Background
B. Proposed Changes to the Applicable
Measure Set
C. Proposed Changes to the Appeals
Process
D. Public Reporting Reminder
E. Health Equity Update
V. Medicare Home Intravenous Immune
Globulin (IVIG) Items and Services
A. General Background
B. Proposed Scope of Expanded IVIG
Benefit
C. Proposed IVIG Administration Items and
Services Payment
D. Proposed Home IVIG Items and Services
Payment Rate
E. Billing Procedures for Home IVIG Items
and Services
VI. Hospice Informal Dispute Resolution and
Special Focus Program
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Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 130 / Monday, July 10, 2023 / Proposed Rules
A. Background and Statutory Authority
B. Proposed Regulatory Provisions
VII. Proposed Changes Regarding Durable
Medical Equipment, Prosthetics,
Orthotics, and Supplies (DMEPOS)
A. Medicare Durable Medical Equipment,
Prosthetics, Orthotics, and Supplies
(DMEPOS) Competitive Bidding Program
(CBP)
B. Scope of the Benefit and Payment for
Lymphedema Compression Treatment
Items
C. Definition of Brace
D. Documentation Requirements for
Durable Medical Equipment, Prosthetics,
Orthotics, and Supplies Products
Supplied as Refills to the Original Order
VIII. Proposed Changes to the Provider and
Supplier Enrollment Requirements
A. Background
B. Proposed Provisions
IX. Collection of Information Requirements
A. Statutory Requirement for Solicitation
of Comments
B. Information Collection Requirements
(ICRs)
C. Submission of PRA-Related Comments
X. Regulatory Impact Analysis
A. Statement of Need
B. Overall Impact
C. Detailed Economic Analysis
D. Regulatory Review Cost Estimation
E. Alternatives Considered
F. Accounting Statements and Tables
G. Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)
H. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
(UMRA)
I. Federalism
J. Conclusion
Regulations Text
I. Executive Summary
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A. Purpose and Legal Authority
1. Home Health Prospective Payment
System (HH PPS)
As required under section 1895(b) of
the Social Security Act (the Act), this
proposed rule would update the
payment rates for home health agencies
(HHAs) for CY 2024. In this proposed
rule we include analysis on home health
utilization and solicit comments related
to access to home health aide services.
This rule also provides analysis
determining the difference between
assumed versus actual behavior change
on estimated aggregate expenditures for
home health payments as result of the
change in the unit of payment to 30
days and the implementation of the
PDGM case-mix adjustment
methodology, and proposes a permanent
prospective adjustment to the CY 2024
home health payment rate. In addition,
this rule proposes to recalibrate the
PDGM case-mix weights and update the
LUPA thresholds, functional
impairment levels, and comorbidity
adjustment subgroups under section
1895(b)(4)(A)(i) and (b)(4)(B) of the Act
for 30-day periods of care in CY 2024.
This rule proposes to rebase and revise
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the home health market basket and
proposes to revise the labor-related
share. Additionally, this rule proposes
to codify statutory requirements for
dNPWT and updates the CY 2024 fixeddollar loss ratio (FDL) for outlier
payments (so that outlier payments as a
percentage of estimated total payments
are not to exceed 2.5 percent, as
required by section 1895(b)(5)(A) of the
Act).
2. Home Health (HH) Quality Reporting
Program (QRP)
In accordance with the statutory
authority at section 1895(b)(3)(B)(v) of
the Act, we are proposing updated
policies, the codification of the
previously finalized 90 percent
Outcome and Assessment Information
Set (OASIS) data completion threshold
policy in the Code of Federal
Regulations (CFR) and the public
reporting of four measures. We are also
including a request for information on
future HH QRP measure concepts and
an update on health equity in the HH
QRP.
3. Expanded Home Health Value-Based
Purchasing (HHVBP) Model
In accordance with the statutory
authority at section 1115A of the Act,
we are proposing updated policies,
including the codification of previously
finalized measure removal factors,
changes to the applicable measure set,
updating the Model baseline year, and
an amendment to the appeals process
for the expanded HHVBP Model. We are
also including updates on health equity
and public reporting.
4. Home Intravenous Immune Globulin
(IVIG) Items and Services
As required under Division FF,
section 4134 of the Consolidated
Appropriations Act, 2023 (CAA, 2023),
this proposed rule would implement
coverage and payment for items and
services related to the administration of
IVIG in the home of a patient with a
diagnosed primary immune deficiency
disease (PIDD).
5. Hospice Informal Dispute Resolution
and Special Focus Program
As required under Division CC,
section 407 of the Consolidated
Appropriations Act of 2021 (CAA 2021),
this proposed rule would implement a
special focus program (SFP) for poor
performing hospices that includes the
SFP algorithm (including data sources)
to identify indicators of hospice poor
performance, the criteria for selection
and completion of the SFP, hospice
termination from Medicare, and public
reporting of the SFP. We are also
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proposing regulations to implement an
informal dispute resolution (IDR)
process to provide hospice programs an
informal opportunity to resolve disputes
related to condition-level survey
findings for those hospice programs that
are seeking recertification for continued
participation in Medicare.
6. Durable Medical Equipment,
Prosthetics, Orthotics, and Supplies
Products and CAA 2023-Related
Changes
Section 3712 of the Coronavirus Aid,
Relief, and Economic Security Act
(CARES) Act (Pub. L. 116–136, March
27, 2020) https://www.govinfo.gov/link/
plaw/116/public/136 requires that
Medicare payment rates for durable
medical equipment (DME) in areas other
than rural and noncontiguous areas
during the coronavirus disease 2019
(COVID–19) public health emergency
(PHE) be equal to 75 percent of the
adjusted payment amounts (based on
the DME competitive bidding program
information), and 25 percent of the
unadjusted fee schedule amounts. The
regulations at § 414.210(g)(9)(v) codified
these payment rates for the duration of
the PHE. Section 4139 of the
Consolidated Appropriations Act
(CAA), 2023 (Pub. L. 117–328,
December 29, 2022) requires payment
based on these rates through the end of
the COVID–19 PHE or December 31,
2023, whichever is later. We are
proposing to make changes to the
regulations to codify these payment
rates through the end of the COVID–19
PHE or unless otherwise specified by
law.
The scope of the benefit and payment
for lymphedema compression treatment
items in section 4133 of the CAA, 2023
adds section 1861(s)(2)(JJ) to the Act,
adding the Medicare Part B benefit for
lymphedema compression treatment
items effective January 1, 2024. This
rule would address the scope of the new
benefit by defining what constitutes a
standard or custom fitted gradient
compression garment and determining
what other compression items may exist
that are used for the treatment of
lymphedema and would fall under the
new benefit.
This rule would also implement
section 1834(z) of the Act in
establishing payment amounts for items
covered under the new benefit and
frequency limitations for lymphedema
compression treatment items. CMS
expects to conduct outreach for
individuals with Medicare and issue
provider education regarding this
benefit.
The definition of brace in section
1861(s)(9) of the Act provides coverage
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under Part B for leg, arm, back, and neck
braces. This rule would codify the
existing definition of a brace found in
the Medicare Benefit Policy Manual
(CMS 100–02) and clarify that this
definition encompasses newer,
technology-powered devices.
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7. Documentation Requirements for
Durable Medical Equipment,
Prosthetics, Orthotics, and Supplies
Products Supplied as Refills to the
Original Order
Section 1893(b)(1) of the Act,
authorizes ‘‘[r]eview of activities of
providers of services or other
individuals and entities furnishing
items and services for which payment
may be made under this title . . .
including medical and utilization
review . . .’’. The requirement for
documentation to support DMEPOS
refills originally arose in response to
concerns related to auto-shipments and
delivery of DMEPOS products that may
no longer be needed or not needed at
the same level of frequency/volume. We
are proposing to codify our longstanding refill policy, with some
changes. We propose to require
documentation indicating that the
beneficiary confirmed the need for the
refill within the 30-day period prior to
the end of the current supply. We
propose to codify our requirement that
delivery of DMEPOS items (that is, date
of service) be no sooner than 10
calendar days before the expected end
of the current supply. We seek
comments for consideration in future
rulemaking on ways to balance
beneficiary burden with the potential
risks/burdens of not verifying the
beneficiary’s actual need for recurring
supplies for certain individuals with
permanent conditions.
8. Provider and Supplier Enrollment
Requirements
The purpose of our provider
enrollment provisions is to strengthen
and clarify certain aspects of the
provider enrollment process. This
includes, but is not limited to: (1)
subjecting a greater number of providers
and suppliers, such as hospices, to the
highest level of screening, which
includes fingerprinting all 5 percent or
greater owners of these providers and
suppliers; (2) applying the change in
majority ownership (CIMO) provisions
in 42 CFR 424.550(b) to hospices; and
(3) reducing the period of Medicare nonbilling for which a provider or supplier
can be deactivated under § 424.540(a)(1)
from 12 months to 6 months. These
changes are necessary to help ensure
that payments are made only to
qualified providers and suppliers and/or
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that owners of these entities are
carefully screened. We believe that
fulfilling both of these objectives would
assist in protecting the Trust Funds and
Medicare beneficiaries.
B. Summary of the Provisions of This
Proposed Rule
1. Home Health Prospective Payment
System (HH PPS)
In section II.B.1. of this proposed rule,
we provide monitoring and data
analysis on PDGM utilization for CYs
2020, 2021, and 2022. In this section we
also solicit comments related to access
to home health aide services. In section
II.C.1. of this rule, we provide analysis
determining the difference between
assumed versus actual behavior change
on estimated aggregate expenditures for
home health payments as result of the
change in the unit of payment to 30
days and the implementation of the
PDGM case-mix adjustment
methodology; and a proposal to apply a
permanent prospective adjustment of
¥5.653 percent to the CY 2024 home
health payment rate.
In section II.C.2. of this proposed rule,
we explain plans to recalibrate the
PDGM case-mix weights, LUPA
thresholds, functional levels, and
comorbidity adjustment subgroups for
CY 2024.
In section II.C.3. of this rule we set
out proposals to rebase and revise the
home health market basket to reflect a
2021 base year. We propose to use this
2021-based home health market basket
to calculate the home health payment
update percentage for CY 2024 as well
as to revise the labor-related share.
In section II.C.4. of this rule, we detail
proposals to update the home health
wage index, the CY 2024 national,
standardized 30-day period payment
rates, and the CY 2024 national per-visit
payment amounts by the home health
payment update percentage. The
proposed home health payment update
percentage for CY 2024 is 2.7 percent.
Additionally, this rule proposes the CY
2024 FDL ratio to ensure that aggregate
outlier payments do not exceed 2.5
percent of the total aggregate payments,
as required by section 1895(b)(5)(A) of
the Act.
In section II.C.5 of this rule, we
discuss our proposal to codify statutory
payment changes for negative pressure
wound therapy using a disposable
device (dNPWT).
2. Home Health Quality Reporting
Program (HH QRP)
In section III. of this proposed rule,
we are proposing the adoption of the
measure ‘‘COVID–19 Vaccine: Percent of
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Patients/Residents Who Are Up to Date’’
(Patient/Resident COVID–19 Vaccine) to
the HH QRP beginning with the CY
2025 HH QRP. CMS also proposes to
adopt the ‘‘Functional Discharge Score’’
(DC Function) measure to the HH QRP
beginning with the CY 2025 HH QRP.
With the addition of the Discharge
Function measure, we propose to
remove the measure ‘‘Application of
Percent of Long-Term Care Hospital
(LTCH) Patients with an Admission and
Discharge Functional Assessment and a
Care Plan That Addresses Function’’
(Application of Functional Assessment/
Care Plan) from the HH QRP beginning
with the CY 2025 HH QRP. CMS
additionally propose the removal of two
OASIS items no longer necessary for
collection, the M0110—Episode Timing
and M2220—Therapy Needs items. We
are also proposing technical changes to
§ 484.245(b) to codify our requirement
that HHAs must meet or exceed a data
submission threshold set at 90 percent
of all required OASIS and submit the
data through the CMS designated data
submission systems. Lastly, we seek
input on future HH QRP measure
concepts and provide updates on HH
QRP health equity initiatives.
3. Expanded Home Health Value Based
Purchasing (HHVBP) Model
In section IV. of this proposed rule,
we discuss our proposal to codify the
HHVBP measure removal factors at
§ 484.380. We are proposing to remove
five and add three quality measures to
the applicable measure set. Along with
the proposed revisions to the current
measure set, we propose to revise the
weights of the individual measures
within the OASIS-based measure
category and within the claims-based
measure category starting in the CY
2025 performance year. We are
proposing to update the Model baseline
year from CY 2022 to CY 2023 starting
in the CY 2025 performance year to
enable CMS to measure competing
HHAs performance on benchmarks and
achievement thresholds that are more
current for all applicable measures.
Additionally, we are amending the
appeals process such that
reconsideration decisions may be
reviewed by the Administrator. We are
including an update to the RFI, Future
Approaches to Health Equity in the
Expanded HHVBP Model, that was
published in the CY 2023 HH PPS rule.
We will also include an update that
reminds stakeholders that we will begin
public reporting of HHVBP performance
data on or after December 1, 2024.
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4. Home Intravenous Immune Globulin
(IVIG) Items and Services
As required under Division FF,
section 4134 of the Consolidated
Appropriations Act, 2023 (CAA, 2023),
section V. of this rule proposes
regulations to implement coverage and
payment of items and services related to
administration of IVIG in a patient’s
home for a patient with PIDD.
5. Hospice Informal Dispute Resolution
and Special Focus Program
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In section VI. of this proposed rule,
we discuss our proposal for a new
hospice informal dispute resolution
(IDR) process at § 488.1130 to align with
the process that is available for home
health agencies (HHAs). We are
proposing the hospice IDR to address
disputes related to condition-level
survey findings following a hospice
program’s receipt of the official survey
statement of deficiencies. The IDR will
provide hospice programs an informal
opportunity to resolve disputes in the
survey findings for those hospice
programs that are seeking recertification
from the State Survey Agency (SA) or
reaccreditation from an accrediting
organization (AO) for continued
participation in Medicare. Additionally,
the IDR may be initiated for those
hospice programs that are currently
under SA monitoring (either through a
complaint investigation or validation
survey) and those in the SFP. In section
VII we discuss our proposal to add the
hospice Special Focus Program (SFP) at
§ 488.1135. In the proposed rule, we
include the SFP algorithm (including
data sources) to identify indicators of
hospice poor performance, the criteria
for selection and completion of the SFP,
hospice termination from Medicare, and
public reporting of the SFP. In response
to previous comments urging CMS to
seek technical expert panel (TEP)
recommendations to better inform the
development of the SFP, a TEP was
convened to gain input from key
stakeholders on various aspects of the
SFP proposed in this rule. We propose
the hospice SFP will commence
beginning the effective date of the rule
with implementation during CY 2024.
We propose to periodically review the
effectiveness of the methodology and
the algorithm.
6. Durable Medical Equipment,
Prosthetics, Orthotics, and Supplies
Products and CAA 2023 Related
Changes
In section VII.A.3. of this rule, we
discuss our proposal to make
conforming changes to § 414.210(g)(9),
consistent with section 4139(a) and
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4139(b) of the CAA, 2023. First, section
4139 of the CAA, 2023 does not change
the current policy under
§ 414.210(g)(9)(iii) of paying for
DMEPOS items and services furnished
in rural and non-contiguous noncompetitive bidding areas (CBAs) based
on a 50/50 blend of adjusted and
unadjusted fee schedule amounts
through the duration of the PHE for
COVID–19.
As a result, we are proposing to revise
§ 414.210(g)(9)(iii), to state that for items
and services furnished in rural areas
and non-contiguous areas (Alaska,
Hawaii, and U.S. territories) with dates
of service from June 1, 2018 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)) or
December 31, 2023, whichever is later,
based on the fee schedule amount for
the area is equal to 50 percent of the
adjusted payment amount established
under this section and 50 percent of the
unadjusted fee schedule amount.
We are proposing to revise
§ 414.210(g)(9)(v) to state that for items
and services furnished in areas other
than rural or noncontiguous areas with
dates of service from March 6, 2020
through December 31, 2023 or 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)), whichever is later,
the fee schedule amount for the area is
equal to 75 percent of the adjusted
payment amount established under this
section and 25 percent of the unadjusted
fee schedule amount.
We are proposing to remove outdated
text from § 414.210(g)(9)(v) that states
‘‘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, the fee
schedule amount for the area is equal to
100 percent of the adjusted payment
amount established under this section.’’
We are proposing to revise
§ 414.210(g)(9)(vi) to state that for items
and services furnished in all areas with
dates of service on or after January 1,
2024, or the date immediately following
the duration of the emergency period
described in section 1135(g)(1)(B) of the
Act, whichever is later, the fee schedule
amount for the area is equal to the
adjusted payment amount established
under paragraph (g) of this section.
We are proposing to make conforming
changes to § 414.210(g)(2) for the rural
and non-contiguous areas in order to
specify the December 31, 2023 date
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43657
specified in section 4139 of the CAA,
2023.
In section VII.B.8. of this rule, we
discuss our proposal to amend 42 CFR
410.36(a) to add paragraph (4) and the
following new category of medical
supplies, appliances, and devices
covered under Medicare Part B;
Lymphedema compression items
including: standard and custom fitted
gradient compression garments; gradient
compression wraps with adjustable
straps; compression bandaging systems;
and other items determined to be
lymphedema compression treatment
items under the process established
under § 414.1670. Other covered items
would include accessories such as
zippers in garments, liners worn under
garments or wraps with adjustable
straps, and padding or fillers that are
necessary for the effective use of a
gradient compression garment or wrap
with adjustable straps.
We are proposing to modify and add
to the existing HCPCS codes for
lymphedema compression treatment
items.
We are proposing to add § 414.1670
under new subpart Q and use the same
process described in § 414.240 to obtain
public consultation on preliminary
benefit category determinations and
payment determinations for new
lymphedema compression treatment
items.
We are proposing to add a new
subpart Q under the regulations at 42
CFR part 414 titled, ‘‘Payment for
Lymphedema Compression Treatment
Items’’ to implement the provisions of
section 1834(z) of the Act.
We are proposing to add § 414.1600 to
explain the purpose and definitions
found in subpart Q.
We are also proposing to add
§ 414.1660 to address continuity of
pricing when HCPCS codes for
lymphedema compression treatment
items are divided or combined.
We are proposing to add § 414.1680
and the following frequency limitations
for lymphedema compression treatment
items
We are proposing to revise the
regulations for competitive bidding
under at 42 CFR part 414, subpart F to
include lymphedema compression
treatment items under the competitive
bidding program as mandated by section
1847(a)(2)(D) of the Act. We propose to
add lymphedema compression
treatment items to the definition of item
at § 414.402. We are proposing to revise
§ 414.408 to indicate that payment for
these items would be calculated on a
lump sum purchase basis and payment
under the program would be made in
accordance with any frequency
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limitations established under subpart Q
in accordance with section 1834(z)(2) of
the Act. We are also proposing to add
lymphedema compression treatment
items to § 414.412 to address limiting
bids submitted under the program using
the payment established under subpart
Q.
We are proposing to add § 414.1690
indicating that the payment amounts
established under § 414.1650(b) may be
adjusted using information on the
payment determined for lymphedema
compression treatment items as part of
implementation of the competitive
bidding programs under subpart F using
the methodologies set forth at
§ 414.210(g).
In section VII.C.3. of this rule, we
discuss our proposal to amend the
regulations at 42 CFR 410.2 to add the
definition of brace and to add
clarification at § 410.36(a)(3)(i) for the
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purpose of determining the Medicare
Part B benefit and scope for leg, arm,
back, and neck braces and making
benefit category determinations
regarding specific items in accordance
with the review process for benefit
category and payment determinations
under § 414.240.
7. Documentation Requirements for
Durable Medical Equipment,
Prosthetics, Orthotics, and Supplies
Products Supplied as Refills to the
Original Order
We propose updating the refill
documentation requirements such that a
beneficiary affirmation would need to
be documented by the supplier. We
propose to require documentation
indicating that the beneficiary
confirmed the need for the refill within
the 30-day period prior to the end of the
current supply. We propose to codify
our requirement that delivery of
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DMEPOS items (that is, date of service)
be no sooner than 10 calendar days
before the expected end of the current
supply. There is no associated
paperwork burden as the burden is
already accounted for and approved by
the Office of Management and Budget
under OMB control number 0938–0969
(CMS–10417).
8. Provider and Supplier Enrollment
Requirements
We are proposing a number of
changes to our Medicare provider and
supplier enrollment requirements.
These include, but are not limited to: (1)
provisions related to hospice enrollment
and ownership; and (2) deactivation of
providers and suppliers.
C. Summary of Costs, Transfers, and
Benefits
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II. Home Health Prospective Payment
System
A. Overview of the Home Health
Prospective Payment System
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1. Statutory Background
Section 1895(b)(1) of the Act requires
the Secretary to establish a Home Health
Prospective Payment System (HH PPS)
for all costs of home health services
paid under Medicare. Section 1895(b)(2)
of the Act requires that, in defining a
prospective payment amount, the
Secretary will consider an appropriate
unit of service and the number, type,
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and duration of visits provided within
that unit, potential changes in the mix
of services provided within that unit
and their cost, and a general system
design that provides for continued
access to quality services. In accordance
with the statute, as amended by the
Balanced Budget Act of 1997 (BBA),
(Pub. L. 105–33, enacted August 5,
1997) we published a final rule in the
July 3, 2000 Federal Register (65 FR
41128) to implement the HH PPS
legislation.
Section 5201(c) of the Deficit
Reduction Act of 2005 (DRA) (Pub. L.
109–171, enacted February 8, 2006)
added new section 1895(b)(3)(B)(v) to
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the Act, requiring home health agencies
(HHAs) to submit data for purposes of
measuring health care quality, and
linking the quality data submission to
the annual applicable home health
payment update percentage increase.
This data submission requirement is
applicable for CY 2007 and each
subsequent year. If an HHA does not
submit quality data, the home health
market basket percentage increase is
reduced by 2 percentage points. In the
November 9, 2006 Federal Register (71
FR 65935), we published a final rule to
implement the pay-for-reporting
requirement of the DRA, which was
codified at § 484.225(h) and (i) in
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accordance with the statute. The payfor-reporting requirement was
implemented on January 1, 2007.
Section 51001(a)(1)(B) of the
Bipartisan Budget Act of 2018 (BBA of
2018) (Pub. L. 115–123) amended
section 1895(b) of the Act to require a
change to the home health unit of
payment to 30-day periods beginning
January 1, 2020. Section 51001(a)(2)(A)
of the BBA of 2018 added a new
subclause (iv) under section
1895(b)(3)(A) of the Act, requiring the
Secretary to calculate a standard
prospective payment amount (or
amounts) for 30-day units of service
furnished that end during the 12-month
period beginning January 1, 2020, in a
budget neutral manner, such that
estimated aggregate expenditures under
the HH PPS during CY 2020 are equal
to the estimated aggregate expenditures
that otherwise would have been made
under the HH PPS during CY 2020 in
the absence of the change to a 30-day
unit of service. Section 1895(b)(3)(A)(iv)
of the Act requires that the calculation
of the standard prospective payment
amount (or amounts) for CY 2020 be
made before the application of the
annual update to the standard
prospective payment amount as
required by section 1895(b)(3)(B) of the
Act.
Additionally, section 1895(b)(3)(A)(iv)
of the Act requires that in calculating
the standard prospective payment
amount (or amounts), the Secretary
must make assumptions about behavior
changes that could occur as a result of
the implementation of the 30-day unit of
service under section 1895(b)(2)(B) of
the Act and case-mix adjustment factors
established under section 1895(b)(4)(B)
of the Act. Section 1895(b)(3)(A)(iv) of
the Act further requires the Secretary to
provide a description of the behavior
assumptions made in notice and
comment rulemaking. CMS finalized
these behavior assumptions in the CY
2019 HH PPS final rule with comment
period (83 FR 56461).
Section 51001(a)(2)(B) of the BBA of
2018 also added a new subparagraph (D)
to section 1895(b)(3) of the Act. Section
1895(b)(3)(D)(i) of the Act requires the
Secretary annually to determine the
impact of differences between assumed
behavior changes, as described in
section 1895(b)(3)(A)(iv) of the Act, and
actual behavior changes on estimated
aggregate expenditures under the HH
PPS with respect to years beginning
with 2020 and ending with 2026.
Section 1895(b)(3)(D)(ii) of the Act
requires the Secretary, at a time and in
a manner determined appropriate,
through notice and comment
rulemaking, to provide for one or more
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permanent increases or decreases to the
standard prospective payment amount
(or amounts) for applicable years, on a
prospective basis, to offset for such
increases or decreases in estimated
aggregate expenditures, as determined
under section 1895(b)(3)(D)(i) of the Act.
Additionally, section 1895(b)(3)(D)(iii)
of the Act requires the Secretary, at a
time and in a manner determined
appropriate, through notice and
comment rulemaking, to provide for one
or more temporary increases or
decreases to the payment amount for a
unit of home health services for
applicable years, on a prospective basis,
to offset for such increases or decreases
in estimated aggregate expenditures, as
determined under section
1895(b)(3)(D)(i) of the Act. Such a
temporary increase or decrease shall
apply only with respect to the year for
which such temporary increase or
decrease is made, and the Secretary
shall not take into account such a
temporary increase or decrease in
computing the payment amount for a
unit of home health services for a
subsequent year. Finally, section
51001(a)(3) of the BBA of 2018 amends
section 1895(b)(4)(B) of the Act by
adding a new clause (ii) to require the
Secretary to eliminate the use of therapy
thresholds in the case-mix system for
CY 2020 and subsequent years.
Division FF, section 4136 of the
Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2023
(CAA, 2023) amended section
1834(s)(3)(A) of the Act to require that,
beginning with 2024, the separate
payment for furnishing negative
pressure wound therapy (NPWT) be for
just the device and not for nursing and
therapy services. Payment for nursing
and therapy services are to be included
as part of payments under the HH PPS.
The separate payment for 2024 is to be
equal to the supply price used to
determine the relative value for the
service under the Medicare Physician
Fee Schedule (as of January 1, 2022) for
the applicable disposable device
updated by the percentage increase in
the Consumer Price Index for All Urban
Consumers (CPI–U). The separate
payment for 2025 and each subsequent
year is to be the payment amount for the
previous year updated by the percentage
increase in the CPI–U (United States
city average) for the 12-month period
ending in June of the previous year
minus the productivity adjustment as
described in section 1886(b)(3)(B)(xi)(II)
for such year. The CAA, 2023 also
added section 1834(s)(4) of the Act to
require that beginning with 2024, as part
of submitting claims for the separate
payment, the Secretary shall accept and
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process claims submitted using the type
of bill that is most commonly used by
home health agencies to bill services
under a home health plan of care.
2. Current System for Payment of Home
Health Services
For home health periods of care
beginning on or after January 1, 2020,
Medicare makes payment under the HH
PPS on the basis of a national,
standardized 30-day period payment
rate that is adjusted for case-mix and
area wage differences in accordance
with section 51001(a)(1)(B) of the BBA
of 2018. The national, standardized 30day period payment rate includes
payment for the six home health
disciplines (skilled nursing, home
health aide, physical therapy, speechlanguage pathology, occupational
therapy, and medical social services).
Payment for non-routine supplies (NRS)
is also part of the national, standardized
30-day period rate. Durable medical
equipment (DME) provided as a home
health service, as defined in section
1861(m) of the Act, is paid the fee
schedule amount or is paid through the
competitive bidding program and such
payment is not included in the national,
standardized 30-day period payment
amount. Additionally, the 30-day period
payment rate does not include payment
for certain injectable osteoporosis drugs
and negative pressure wound therapy
(NPWT) using a disposable device
(though this rule is proposing changes
to this provision pursuant to section
4136 of the CAA, 2023), but such drug
and services must be billed by the HHA
while a patient is under a home health
plan of care, as the law requires
consolidated billing of osteoporosis
drugs and NPWT using a disposable
device.
To better align payment with patient
care needs and to better ensure that
clinically complex and ill beneficiaries
have adequate access to home health
care, in the CY 2019 HH PPS final rule
with comment period (83 FR 56406), we
finalized case-mix methodology
refinements through the Patient-Driven
Groupings Model (PDGM) for home
health periods of care beginning on or
after January 1, 2020. The PDGM did not
change eligibility or coverage criteria for
Medicare home health services, and as
long as the individual meets the criteria
for home health services as described at
42 CFR 409.42, the individual can
receive Medicare home health services,
including therapy services. For more
information about the role of therapy
services under the PDGM, we refer
readers to the Medicare Learning
Network (MLN) Matters article SE20005
available at https://www.cms.gov/
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transmittals2020-transmittals/se20005.
To adjust for case-mix for 30-day
periods of care beginning on and after
January 1, 2020, the HH PPS uses a 432category case-mix classification system
to assign patients to a home health
resource group (HHRG) using patient
characteristics and other clinical
information from Medicare claims and
the Outcome and Assessment
Information Set (OASIS) assessment
instrument. These 432 HHRGs represent
the different payment groups based on
five main case-mix categories under the
PDGM, as shown in Figure B1. Each
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HHRG has an associated case-mix
weight that is used in calculating the
payment for a 30-day period of care. For
periods of care with visits less than the
low-utilization payment adjustment
(LUPA) threshold for the HHRG,
Medicare pays national per-visit rates
based on the discipline(s) providing the
services. Medicare also adjusts the
national standardized 30-day period
payment rate for certain intervening
events that are subject to a partial
payment adjustment. For certain cases
that exceed a specific cost threshold, an
outlier adjustment may also be
available.
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Under this case-mix methodology,
case-mix weights are generated for each
of the different PDGM payment groups
by regressing resource use for each of
the five categories (admission source,
timing, clinical grouping, functional
impairment level, and comorbidity
adjustment) using a fixed effects model.
A detailed description of each of the
case-mix variables under the PDGM
have been described previously, and we
refer readers to the CY 2021 HH PPS
final rule (85 FR 70303 through 70305).
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1. Routine PDGM Monitoring
CMS routinely analyzes Medicare
home health benefit utilization,
including but not limited to, overall
total 30-day periods of care and average
periods of care per HHA user;
distribution of the type of visits in a 30day period of care; the percentage of
periods that receive the LUPA;
estimated costs; the percentage of 30day periods of care by clinical group,
comorbidity adjustment, admission
source, timing, and functional
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impairment level; and the proportion of
30-day periods of care with and without
any therapy visits, nursing visits, and/
or aide/social worker visits. For the
monitoring included in this rule, we
examine simulated data for CYs 2018
and 2019 and actual data for CYs 2020,
2021, and 2022 for 30-day periods of
care. We refer readers to the CY 2022
HH PPS final rule (86 FR 35881) for
discussion about simulated data for CYs
2018 and 2019.
(a) Utilization
Table B1 shows the overall utilization
of home health services and Table B2
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shows the average utilization of visits
per 30-day period of care by home
health discipline. This data indicates
the average number of 30-day periods of
care per unique HHA user is similar
between CY 2021 and CY 2022. The
data also indicates that the number of
30-day periods of care decreased
between CY 2018 and CY 2022. Table
B3 shows the proportion of 30-day
periods of care that are LUPAs and the
average number of visits per discipline
of those LUPA 30-day periods of care
over time.
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B. Monitoring the Effects of the
Implementation of PDGM
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(b) Analysis of 2021 Cost Report Data for
30-Day Periods of Care
In the CY 2023 HH PPS proposed rule
(87 FR 37607), we provided a summary
of analysis on FY 2020 HHA Medicare
cost report data, as this was the most
recent and complete cost report data at
the time of rulemaking, and CY 2021
home health claims to estimate 30-day
period of care costs. Our analysis
showed that the CY 2021 national,
standardized 30-day period payment
rate of $1,901.12 was approximately 34
percent more than the estimated CY
2021 estimated 30-day period cost of
$1,420.35. In MedPAC’s March 2023
Report to Congress,1 their review of
home health payment adequacy found
that ‘‘access is more than adequate in
most areas and that Medicare payments
are substantially in excess of costs’’.
Using this same process in this
proposed rule to compare home health
payment to costs, we examined 2021
HHA Medicare cost reports (CMS Form
1728–20, OMB No. 0938–0222), as this
is the most recent and complete cost
report data at the time of rulemaking,
and CY 2022 home health claims, to
estimate 30-day period of care costs. We
excluded LUPAs and partial payment
adjustments in the average number of
visits. The 2021 average NRS costs per
visit is $6.71. To update the estimated
30-day period of care costs, we begin
with the 2021 average costs per visit
with NRS for each discipline and
multiply that amount by the CY 2022
home health payment update percentage
of 2.6 percent. That amount for each
discipline is then multiplied by the
2022 average number of visits by
discipline to determine the 2022
estimated 30-day period costs. Table B4
shows the estimated average costs for
30-day periods of care by discipline
with NRS and the total 30-day period of
care costs with NRS for CY 2022.
1 Report to Congress, Medicare Payment Policy.
Home Health Care Services, Chapter 8. MedPAC.
March 2023 https://www.medpac.gov/wp-content/
uploads/2023/03/Ch8_Mar23_MedPAC_Report_To_
Congress_SEC.pdf.
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The CY 2022 national, standardized
30-day period payment rate was
$2,031.64, which is approximately 45
percent more than the estimated CY
2022 estimated 30-day period cost of
$1,402.27. Note that in the CY 2023 HH
PPS proposed rule (87 FR 37608), the
average number of visits for non-LUPA,
non- partial payment adjustments 30day periods of care in 2021 was 8.81
visits. Using actual CY 2022 claims data,
the average number of visits for a nonLUPA, non-partial payment adjustments
30-day periods of care was 8.6 visits—
a decrease of approximately 2.4 percent.
Note that in the CY 2020 HH PPS final
rule with comment period (84 FR
60484), the average number of visits for
non-LUPA, non- partial payment
adjustments 30-day periods of care in
2017 was estimated to be 10.5 visits.
Therefore, the average number of visits
for non-LUPA, non- partial payment
adjustments, 30-day periods of care in
CY 2022 represents a decrease of 18
percent from the average number of
visits for non-LUPA, non- partial
payment adjustments 30-day periods of
care in CY 2017. In its March 2023
Report to Congress, MedPAC assumed a
cost growth of 4.1 percent for CY 2023.2
Furthermore, MedPAC noted that for
more than a decade, payments under the
HH PPS have significantly exceeded
HHAs’ costs primarily due to two
factors. First, agencies have reduced the
average number of visits per period to
reduce period costs. Second, cost
growth in recent years has been lower
than the annual home health payment
update percentages. As shown in Table
B4 in this proposed rule, HHAs have
reduced visits under the PDGM in CY
2022.
Thirty-day periods of care will receive
a comorbidity adjustment category
based on the presence of certain
secondary diagnoses reported on home
health claims. These diagnoses are
based on a home health specific list of
clinically and statistically significant
secondary diagnosis subgroups with
similar resource use. We refer readers to
section II.B.4.c. of this proposed rule
and the CY 2020 HH PPS final rule with
comment period (84 FR 60493) for
further information on the comorbidity
adjustment categories. Home health 30-
day periods of care can receive a low or
a high comorbidity adjustment, or no
comorbidity adjustment. Table B6
shows the distribution of 30-day periods
of care by comorbidity adjustment
category for all 30-day periods.
2 Report to Congress, Medicare Payment Policy.
Home Health Care Services, Chapter 8. MedPAC.
March 2023 https://www.medpac.gov/wp-content/
uploads/2023/03/Ch8_Mar23_MedPAC_Report_To_
Congress_SEC.pdf
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(c) Clinical Groupings and
Comorbidities
Each 30-day period of care is grouped
into one of 12 clinical groups, which
describe the primary reason for which a
patient is receiving home health
services under the Medicare home
health benefit. The clinical grouping is
based on the principal diagnosis
reported on the home health claim.
Table B5 shows the distribution of the
12 clinical groups over time.
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(d) Admission Source and Timing
Each 30-day period of care is
classified into one of two admission
source categories—community or
institutional—depending on what
healthcare setting was utilized in the 14
days prior to receiving home health
care. Thirty-day periods of care for
beneficiaries with any inpatient acute
care hospitalizations, inpatient
psychiatric facility (IPF) stays, skilled
nursing facility (SNF) stays, inpatient
rehabilitation facility (IRF) stays, or
long-term care hospital (LTCH) stays
within 14-days prior to a home health
admission will be designated as
institutional admissions. The
institutional admission source category
will also include patients that had an
acute care hospital stay during a
previous 30-day period of care and
within 14 days prior to the subsequent,
contiguous 30-day period of care and for
which the patient was not discharged
from home health and readmitted.
Thirty-day periods of care are
classified as ‘‘early’’ or ‘‘late’’ depending
on when they occur within a sequence
of 30-day periods of care. The first 30day period of care is classified as early
and all subsequent 30-day periods of
care in the sequence (second or later)
are classified as late. A subsequent 30day period of care would not be
considered early unless there is a gap of
more than 60 days between the end of
one previous period of care and the start
of another. Information regarding the
timing of a 30-day period of care comes
from Medicare home health claims data
and not the OASIS assessment to
determine if a 30-day period of care is
‘‘early’’ or ‘‘late’’. Table B7 shows the
distribution of 30-day periods of care by
admission source and period timing.
(e) Functional Impairment Level
The specific OASIS items that are used
for the functional impairment level are
found in Table B7 in the CY 2020 HH
PPS final rule with comment period (84
FR 60490).3 Responses to these OASIS
items are grouped together into response
categories with similar resource use and
each response category has associated
points. A more detailed description as
to how these response categories were
3 CMS continues to use the M1800–1860 items to
determine functional impairment level for case-mix
purposes while we continue to analyze the
relationship between the analogous GG items
(required as standardized patient assessment data)
and the M1800 items used for payment.
Each 30-day period of care is placed
into one of three functional impairment
levels (low, medium, or high) based on
responses to certain OASIS functional
items associated with grooming,
bathing, dressing, ambulating,
transferring, and risk for hospitalization.
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established can be found in the
technical report, ‘‘Overview of the
Home Health Groupings Model’’ posted
on the HHA webpage.4 The sum of these
points results in a functional
impairment score used to group 30-day
periods of care into a functional
impairment level with similar resource
use. The scores associated with the
functional impairment levels vary by
clinical group to account for differences
in resource utilization. A patient’s
functional impairment level will remain
the same for the first and second 30-day
periods of care unless there is a
significant change in condition that
warrants an ‘‘other follow-up’’
assessment prior to the second 30-day
period of care. For each 30-day period
of care, the Medicare claims processing
system will look for occurrence code 50
on the claim to correspond to the M0090
date of the applicable assessment. Table
B8 shows the distribution of 30-day
periods by functional impairment level.
(f) Therapy Visits
(that is, PT, OT, or SLP) or qualified
therapist assistant and must be
reasonable and necessary for the
treatment of the patient’s illness or
injury.5 As shown in Table B2, we
monitor the number of visits per 30-day
period of care by each home health
discipline. Any 30-day period of care
can include both therapy and nontherapy visits. If any 30-day period of
care consisted of only visits for PT, OT,
or SLP, then this 30-day period of care
is considered ‘‘therapy only’’. If any 30day period of care consisted of only
visits for skilled nursing, home health
aide, or social worker, then this 30-day
period of care is considered ‘‘no
therapy’’. If any 30-day period of care
consisted of at least one therapy visit
and one non-therapy, then this 30-day
period of care is considered ‘‘therapy +
non-therapy’’. Table B9 shows the
proportion of 30-day periods of care
with only therapy visits, at least one
therapy visit and one non-therapy visit,
and no therapy visits. Figure B2 shows
the proportion of 30-day periods of care
by the number of therapy visits
(excluding zero) provided during 30-day
periods of care.
4 https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Feefor-Service-Payment/HomeHealthPPS/HH-PDGM.
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5 Medicare Benefit Policy Manual, Chapter 7
Home Health Services, Section 40.2 Skilled
Therapy Services https://www.cms.gov/Regulations
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-and-Guidance/Guidance/Manuals/Downloads/
bp102c07.pdf.
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Beginning in CY 2020, section
1895(b)(4)(B)(ii) of the Act eliminated
the use of therapy thresholds in
calculating payments for CY 2020 and
subsequent years. Prior to
implementation of the PDGM, HHAs
could receive an adjustment to payment
based on the number of therapy visits
provided during a 60-day episode of
care. We examined the proportion of
actual 30-day periods of care with and
without therapy visits. To be covered as
skilled therapy, the services must
require the skills of a qualified therapist
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Both Table B9 and Figure B2, as
previously discussed, indicate there
have been changes in the distribution of
both therapy and non-therapy visits in
CY 2022 compared to CY 2021. For
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example, the percent of 30-day periods
with one through seven therapy visits
during a 30-day period increased in CY
2022 compared to CY 2021. Comparing
therapy utilization from before the
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PDGM (CYs 2018 and 2019) to after the
implementation of the PDGM (CYs
2020–2022), we have also seen a decline
in therapy visits across all clinical
groups, as shown in Figure B3.
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number of 30-day periods of care with
only skilled nursing visits, at least one
skilled nursing visit and one other visit
type (therapy or non-therapy), and no
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skilled nursing visits. Table B11 shows
the number of 30-day periods of care
with and without home health aide or
social worker visits.
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We also examined the proportion of
30-day periods of care with and without
skilled nursing, social work, or home
health aide visits. Table B10 shows the
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Finally, we looked at home health
aide utilization during CYs 2018–2022.
Figure B4 shows the total and average
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of home health aide visits by 30-day
periods of care.
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We will continue to monitor the
provision of home health services,
including any changes in the number
and duration of home health visits,
composition of the disciplines
providing such services, and overall
home health payments to determine if
refinements to the case-mix adjustment
methodology may be needed in the
future.
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2. Request for Information (RFI) for
Access to Home Health Aide Services
Medicare covers intermittent/parttime personal care services and
assistance with activities of daily living
(ADL) provided by home health aides if
a Medicare beneficiary is certified as
needing a skilled service 6 (§ 409.45). All
home health services, including aide
services, are to be furnished in
accordance with a physician-established
plan of care. For home health services
to be covered, the individualized plan of
care must specify the services necessary
to meet the patient-specific needs
6 Intermittent skilled nursing care, physical
therapy, speech language pathology, or a continuing
need for occupational therapy.
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identified in the comprehensive
assessment. In addition, the plan of care
must include the identification of the
responsible discipline(s) and the
frequency and duration of all visits as
well as those items listed in § 484.60(a)
that establish the need for such services.
As the population ages, the prevalence
of chronic disease increases and the
need for home-based dependent services
is on the rise.7 For eligible beneficiaries,
home health aides can provide a
necessary adjunct to medical care in
managing medical conditions; assisting
with ADLs (help with tasks such as
bathing, grooming, dressing and
toileting allows beneficiaries,
particularly those with physical
disabilities or chronic health conditions,
to maintain their independence);
assisting with medication management
and adherence (help with reminders for
beneficiaries to take their medications
as prescribed and monitoring for
adverse reactions or side effects); taking
P., Javanmardi, E., Barakovic, S. et al.
Consequences of chronic diseases and other
limitations associated with old age—a scoping
review. BMC Public Health 19, 1431 (2019).https://
doi.org/10.1186/s12889-019-7762-5
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vital signs (home health aides can take
vital signs such as blood pressure and
heart rate, and report changes to the
beneficiary’s health care provider); and
supplementing socialization (instances
of social interaction during prescribed
visits can help to improve the mental
health and well-being of beneficiaries).8
Anecdotally, CMS has heard that
beneficiaries have had difficulty
receiving home health aide visits under
the Medicare home health benefit.
Additionally, our monitoring has shown
that home health aide visits have
decreased, as exhibited in Table B2 and
Figure B4. CMS wants to ensure that all
Medicare beneficiaries receiving care
under the home health benefit are
afforded all covered services for which
they qualify. Therefore, in an effort to
better understand any challenges facing
Medicare beneficiaries in accessing
home health aide services, CMS solicits
public comment on the following:
8 Russell D, Rosati RJ, Peng TR, Barro
´ n Y,
Andreopoulos E. Continuity in the Provider of
Home Health Aide Services and the Likelihood of
Patient Improvement in Activities of Daily Living.
Home Health Care Management & Practice.
2013;25(1):6–12. doi:10.1177/1084822312453046
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• Why is utilization of home health
aides continuing to decline as shown in
Table B2 and Figure B4 if the need for
these services remains strong?
• To what extent are higher acuity
individuals eligible for Medicare (for
example, individuals with multiple comorbidities or impairments of multiple
activities of daily living) having more
difficulty accessing home health care
services, specifically home health aide
services?
• What are notable barriers or
obstacles that home health agencies
experience relating to recruiting and
retaining home health aides? What steps
could home health agencies take to
improve the recruitment and retention
of home health aides?
• Are HHAs paying home health
aides less than equivalent positions in
other care settings (for example, are
aides in the inpatient hospital setting or
nursing home setting paid more than in
home health)? What are the reasons for
the disparity in hourly wages or total
pay for equivalent services?
• In what ways could HHAs ensure
that home health aides are consistently
paid wages that are commensurate with
the impact they have on patient care
that they provide to Medicare
beneficiaries?
• How effective is the coordination
between Medicare and Medicaid to
ensure adequate access to home health
aide services? Please share insights on
the level of utilization of Medicaid
benefits by dually eligible beneficiaries
for additional home health aide services
that are not being provided by Medicare.
• Are physicians’ plans of care less
reliant on home health aide services in
the past, or are HHAs less willing/able
to provide these services? If so, what are
the primary reasons for why such
services are not provided?
• What are the consequences of
beneficiary difficulty in accessing home
health aide services?
C. Proposed Provisions for CY 2024
Payment Under the HH PPS
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1. Proposed Behavior Assumption
Adjustments Under the HH PPS
(a) Background
As discussed in section II.A.1. of this
rule, starting in CY 2020, the Secretary
was statutorily required by Section 1895
(b)(2)(B) of the Act, to change the unit
of payment under the HH PPS from a
60-day episode of care to a 30-day
period of care. CMS was also required
to make assumptions about behavior
changes that could occur as a result of
the implementation of the 30-day unit of
payment and the case-mix adjustment
factors that eliminated the use of
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therapy thresholds. In the CY 2019 HH
PPS final rule with comment period (83
FR 56455), we finalized three behavior
change assumptions which were also
described in the CY 2022 and 2023 HH
PPS rules (86 FR 35890, 87 FR 37614,
and 87 FR 66795 through 66796). In the
CY 2020 HH PPS final rule with
comment period (84 FR 60519), we
included these behavior change
assumptions in the calculation of the
30-day budget neutral payment amount
for CY 2020, finalizing a negative 4.36
percent behavior change assumption
adjustment (‘‘assumed behaviors’’). We
did not propose any changes for CYs
2021 and 2022 relating to the behavior
assumptions finalized in the CY 2019
HH PPS final rule with comment period,
or to the negative 4.36 percent behavior
change assumption adjustment,
finalized in the CY 2020 HH PPS final
rule with comment period.
In the CY 2023 HH PPS final rule (87
FR 66796), we stated, based on our
annual monitoring at that time, the three
assumed behavior changes did occur as
a result of the implementation of the
PDGM and that other behaviors, such as
changes in the provision of therapy and
changes in functional impairment levels
also occurred. We also reminded readers
that in the CY 2020 HH PPS final rule
with comment period (84 FR 60513) we
stated we interpret actual behavior
changes to encompass both behavior
changes that were previously outlined
as assumed by CMS, and other behavior
changes not identified at the time the
budget-neutral 30-day payment rate for
CY 2020 was established. In the CY
2023 HH PPS final rule (87 FR 66796)
we provided supporting evidence that
indicated the number of therapy visits
declined in CYs 2020 and 2021, as well
as a slight decline in therapy visits
beginning in CY 2019 after the
finalization of the removal of therapy
thresholds, but prior to implementation
of the PDGM. In section II.B.1. of this
rule, our analysis continues to show
overall the actual 30-day periods are
similar to the simulated 30-day periods
and there continues to be a decline in
therapy visits, indicating that HHAs
changed their behavior to reduce
therapy visits. Although the analysis
demonstrates evidence of individual
behavior changes (for example, in the
volume of visits for LUPAs, therapy
sessions, etc.), we use the entirety of the
behaviors in order to calculate estimated
aggregate expenditures. The law
instructs us to ensure that estimated
aggregate expenditures under the PDGM
are equal to the estimated aggregate
expenditures that otherwise would have
been made under the prior system.
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Section 4142(a) of the CAA, 2023,
required CMS to present, to the extent
practicable, a description of the actual
behavior changes occurring under the
HH PPS from CYs 2020–2026. This
subsection of the CAA, 2023, also
required CMS to provide datasets
underlying the simulated 60-day
episodes, and discuss and provide time
for stakeholders to provide input and
ask questions on the payment rate
development for CY 2023. CMS
complied with these requirements by
posting online both the supplemental
LDS and descriptive files and the
description of actual behavior changes
that affected CY 2023 payment rate
development. Additionally, on March
29, 2023, CMS conducted a webinar
entitled Medicare Home Health
Prospective Payment System (HH PPS)
Calendar Year (CY) 2023 Behavior
Change Recap, 60-Day Episode
Construction Overview, and Payment
Rate Development. The webinar was
open to the public and discussed the
actual behavior changes that occurred
upon implementation of the PDGM, our
approach used to construct simulated
60-day episodes using 30-day periods,
payment rate development for CY 2023,
and information on the supplemental
data files containing information on the
simulated 60-day episodes and actual
30-day periods used in calculating the
permanent adjustment to the payment
rate. Materials from the webinar,
including the presentation and the CY
2023 descriptive statistics from the
supplemental LDS files, containing
information on the number of simulated
60-day episodes and actual 30-day
periods in CY 2021 that were used to
construct the permanent adjustment to
the payment rate, as well as information
such as the number of episodes and
periods by case-mix group, case-mix
weights, and simulated payments, can
be found on the Home Health PatientDriven Groupings Model web page at
https://www.cms.gov/medicare/
medicare-fee-for-service-payment/
homehealthpps/hh-pdgm.
(b) Method To Annually Determine the
Impact of Differences Between Assumed
Behavior Changes and Actual Behavior
Changes on Estimated Aggregate
Expenditures
In the CY 2023 HH PPS final rule (87
FR 66804), we finalized the
methodology to evaluate the impact of
the differences between assumed and
actual behavior changes on estimated
aggregate expenditures. For CYs 2020
through 2026, we will evaluate if the 30day budget neutral payment rate and
resulting aggregate expenditures are
equal under the PDGM to what they
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would have been under the 153-group
case-mix system and 60-day unit of
payment. An overview of the
methodology is listed in this section,
followed by detailed instructions on
each step.
• Create simulated 60-day episodes
from 30-day periods
• Price out the simulated 60-day
episodes and determine aggregate
expenditures
• Price out only the 30-day periods
which were used to create the
simulated 60-day episodes and
determine aggregate expenditures
• Compare aggregate expenditures
between the simulated 60-day
episodes and actual 30-day periods
• Determine what the 30-day payment
rate should have been to equal
aggregate expenditures
(1) Create Simulated 60-Day Episodes
From 30-Day Periods
The first step in our methodology is
to determine which PDGM 30-day
periods of care could be grouped
together to form simulated 60-day
episodes of care. To facilitate grouping,
we made some exclusions and
assumptions as described later in this
section prior to pricing out the
simulated 60-day episodes of care. We
note in the early months of CY 2020,
there were 60-day episodes which
started in 2019 and ended in 2020 and
therefore, some of these exclusions and
assumptions may be specific to the first
year of the PDGM. We identify, through
footnotes, if an exclusion or assumption
is specific to CY 2020 only.
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(a) Exclusions
• Claims where the claim occurrence
code 50 date (OASIS assessment date)
occurred on or after October 31 of that
year. This exclusion was applied to
ensure the simulated 60-day episodes
contained both 30-day periods from the
same year and would not overlap into
the following year (for example, 2021,
2022, 2023). This is done because any
30-day periods with an OASIS
assessment date in November or
December might be part of a simulated
60-day episode that would continue into
the following year and where payment
would have been made based on the
‘‘through’’ date. For CYs 2021 through
2026, we also excluded claims with an
OASIS assessment date before January 1
of that year.9 Again, this is to ensure a
simulated 60-day episode (simulated
9 There are no 30-day PDGM claims which started
in CY 2019 and ended in CY 2020, and therefore
this exclusion would not apply to the CY 2020
dataset.
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from two 30-day periods) does not
overlap years.
• Beneficiaries and all of their claims
if they have overlapping claims from the
same provider (as identified by CCN).10
• Beneficiaries and all of their claims
if three or more claims from the same
provider are linked to the same
occurrence code 50 date.11
(b) Assumptions
• If two 30-day periods of care from
the same provider reference the same
OASIS assessment date (using
occurrence code 50), then we assume
those two 30-day periods of care would
have been billed as a 60-day episode of
care under the 153-group system.
• If two 30 day-periods of care
reference different OASIS assessment
dates and each of those assessment
dates is referenced by a single 30-day
period of care, and those two 30-day
periods of care occur together close in
time (that is, the ‘‘from’’date of the later
30-day period of care is between 0 to 14
days after the ‘‘through’’date of the
earlier 30-day period of care), then we
assume those two 30-day periods of care
also would have been billed as a 60-day
episode of care under the 153-group
system.
• For all other 30-day periods of care,
we assume that they would not be
combined with another 30-day period of
care and would have been billed as a
single 30-day period.
(2) Price Out the Simulated 60-Day
Episodes and Determine Aggregate
Expenditures
After application of the exclusions
and assumptions described previously,
we have the simulated 60-day episodes
dataset for each year. We assign each
simulated 60-day episode of care as a
normal episode, PEP, LUPA, or outlier
based on the payment parameters
established in the CY 2020 HH PPS final
rule with comment period (84 FR
60478) for 60-day episodes of care. Next,
using the October 2019 3M Home
Health Grouper (v8219) 12 we assign a
HIPPS code to each simulated 60-day
episode of care using the 153-group
methodology. Finally, we price the
simulated 60-day episodes of care using
10 Claims are dropped from the same provider
that extend into the following calendar year to
ensure episode timing is accurate for simulated 60day episodes. All of a beneficiary’s claims are
dropped, rather then only a subset, so as not to
create a conflict in assigning episode timing.
11 This is done because if three or more claims
link to the same OASIS it would not be clear which
claims should be joined to simulate a 60-day
episode.
12 https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Feefor-Service-Payment/HomeHealthPPS/
CaseMixGrouperSoftware.
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the payment parameters described in
the CY 2020 final rule with comment
period (84 FR 60537) for 60-day
episodes of care.
For CYs 2021 through 2026, we adjust
the simulated 60-day base payment rate
to align with current payments for the
analysis year (that is, wage index budget
neutrality factor and home health
payment update). For example, to
calculate the CY 2021 simulated 60-day
episode base payment rate, we started
with the final CY 2020 60-day base
payment rate ($3,220.79) and multiplied
by the final CY 2021 wage index budget
neutrality factor (0.9999) and the CY
2021 home health payment update
(1.020) to get an adjusted 60-day base
payment rate ($3,284.88) for CY 2021.
We used that adjusted 60-day base
payment rate ($3,284.88) to price out the
CY 2021 simulated 60-day claims. Once
each claim is priced under the prePDGM HH PPS, that is each claim is
adjusted from the base payment rate by
case-mix, wage index, etc., we calculate
the estimated aggregate expenditures for
all simulated 60-day episodes in CY
2021. This method is then replicated to
price out the simulated 60-day episodes
for each year of claims data through CY
2026.
(3) Price Out the 30-Day Periods and
Determine Aggregate Expenditures
Next, we calculated the PDGM
aggregate expenditures for CY 2020
using those specific 30-day periods that
were used to create the simulated 60day episodes. Therefore, both the actual
PDGM expenditures and the simulated
pre-PDGM aggregate expenditures are
based on the exact same claims for the
permanent adjustment calculation.
(4) Compare Aggregate Expenditures
Between the Simulated 60-Day Episodes
and Actual 30-Day Periods
We determine if the total aggregate
expenditures under the PDGM were
higher or lower than under the 153-case
mix group system in each year
beginning with CY 2020 through CY
2026. If expenditures were higher under
the PDGM (that is, we paid more than
we would have if the 153-group
payment system was in place), then the
actual base payment rate we
implemented was too high. If the
expenditures were lower under the
PDGM (that is, we paid less than we
would have if the 153-group payment
system was in place), then the actual
base payment rate we implemented was
too low.
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(5) Determine What the 30-Day Payment
Rate Should Have Been
Using an iterative process, we
determine what the 30-day base
payment rate should have been, in order
to achieve the same estimated aggregate
expenditures as obtained from the
simulated 60-day episodes. This is our
recalculated (‘‘repriced’’) base payment
rate.
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(c) Calculating Permanent and
Temporary Payment Adjustments
To offset prospectively for such
increases or decreases in estimated
aggregate expenditures as a result of the
impact of differences between assumed
behavior changes and actual behavior
changes, in any given year, we calculate
a permanent prospective adjustment by
calculating the percent change between
the actual 30-day base payment rate and
the recalculated 30-day base payment
rate. This percent change is converted
into a behavior adjustment factor and
applied in the annual rate update
process.
To offset retrospectively for such
increases or decreases in estimated
aggregate expenditures as a result of the
impact of differences between assumed
behavior changes and actual behavior
changes in any given year, we calculate
a temporary prospective adjustment by
calculating the dollar amount difference
between the estimated aggregate
expenditures from all 30-day periods
using the recalculated 30-day base
payment rate, and the aggregate
expenditures for all 30-day periods
using the actual 30-day base payment
rate for the same year. In other words,
when determining the temporary
retrospective dollar amount, we use the
full dataset of actual 30-day periods
using both the actual and recalculated
30-day base payment rates to ensure that
the utilization and distribution of claims
are the same. In accordance with section
1895(b)(3)(D)(iii) of the Act, the
temporary adjustment is to be applied
on a prospective basis and shall apply
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only with respect to the year for which
such temporary increase or decrease is
made. Therefore, after we determine the
dollar amount to be reconciled in any
given year, we calculate a temporary
adjustment factor to be applied to the
base payment rate for that year. The
temporary adjustment factor is based on
an estimated number of 30-day periods
in the next year using historical data
trends, and as applicable, we control for
a permanent adjustment factor, case-mix
weight recalibration neutrality factor,
wage index budget neutrality factor, and
the home health payment update. The
temporary adjustment factor is applied
last.
(d) CY 2020 Results
This section discusses the final results
CMS determined from CY 2020 claims
data that was previously published in
the CY 2023 final rule (87 FR 66804
through 66805). CMS did not do any
recalculations for CY 2020 data and this
section simply reiterates what was done
previously for informative purposes
only. Using the methodology described
previously, we simulated 60-day
episodes using actual CY 2020 30-day
periods to determine what the CY 2020
permanent and temporary payment
adjustments should be to offset for such
increases or decreases in estimated
aggregate expenditures. For CY 2020, we
began with 8,423,688 30-day periods
and dropped 603,157 30-day periods
that had a claim occurrence code 50
date after October 31, 2020. We also
eliminated 79,328 30-day periods that
didn’t appear to group with another 30day period to form a 60-day episode if
the 30-day period had a ‘‘from date’’
before January 15, 2020 or a ‘‘through
date’’ after November 30, 2020. This was
done to ensure a 30-day period would
not have been part of a 60-day episode
that would have overlapped into CY
2021. Applying the additional
exclusions and assumptions as
described previously, an additional
14,062 30-day periods were excluded
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from this analysis. Additionally, we
excluded 66,469 simulated 60-day
episodes of care where no OASIS
information was available in the CCW
VRDC or could not be grouped to a
HIPPS due to a missing primary
diagnosis or other reason. Our simulated
60-day episodes of care produced a
distribution of two 30-day periods of
care (70.6 percent) and single 30-day
periods of care (29.4 percent). This
distribution is similar to what we found
when we simulated 30-day periods of
care for implementation of the PDGM.
After all exclusions and assumptions
were applied, the final dataset included
7,618,061 actual 30-day periods of care
and 4,463,549 simulated 60-day
episodes of care for CY 2020.
Using the final dataset for CY 2020
(7,618,061 actual 30-day periods which
made up the 4,463,549 simulated 60-day
episodes) we determined the estimated
aggregate expenditures under the prePDGM HH PPS were lower than the
actual estimated aggregate expenditures
under the PDGM HH PPS. This
indicates that aggregate expenditures
under the PDGM were higher than if the
153-group payment system was still in
place in CY 2020. As described
previously in the methodology, we
needed to calculate what the actual CY
2020 30-day base payment rate
($1,864.03) should have been to equal
the aggregate expenditures that we
calculated using the simulated CY 2020
60-day episodes. We determined the CY
2020 30-day base payment rate should
have been $1,742.52 based on actual
behavior rather than the $1,864.03 based
on assumed behaviors. The percent
change between the two payment rates
(actual and recalculated) would be the
permanent adjustment. Next, we
calculated the difference in aggregate
expenditures for all CY 2020 PDGM 30day claims using the actual and
recalculated payment rates. This
difference is the retrospective dollar
amount needed to offset payment. Our
results are shown in Table B12.
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(e) CY 2021 Results
This section discusses the final results
CMS determined from CY 2021 claims
data that was previously published in
the CY 2023 final rule (87 FR 66805
through 66806). CMS did not do any
recalculations for CY 2021 data and this
section simply reiterates what was done
previously for informative purposes
only. Using the methodology described
previously, we simulated 60-day
episodes using actual CY 2021 30-day
periods to determine what the
permanent and temporary payment
adjustments should be to offset for such
increases or decreases in estimated
aggregate expenditures as a result of the
impact of differences between assumed
behavior changes and actual behavior
changes. For CY 2021, we began with
9,269,971 30-day periods of care and
dropped 570,882 30-day periods of care
that had claim occurrence code 50 date
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after October 31, 2021. We also
excluded 968,434 30-day periods of care
that had claim occurrence code 50 date
before January 1, 2021 to ensure the 30day period would not be part of a
simulated 60-day episode that began in
CY 2020. Applying the additional
exclusions and assumptions as
described previously, an additional
5,868 30-day periods were excluded.
Additionally, we excluded 14,302
simulated 60-day episodes of care where
no OASIS information was available in
the CCW VRDC or could not be grouped
to a HIPPS due to a missing primary
diagnosis or other reason. Our simulated
60-day episodes of care produced a
distribution of two 30-day periods of
care (70.0 percent) and single 30-day
periods of care (30.0 percent) that was
similar to what we found when we
simulated two 30-day periods of care for
implementation of the PDGM. After all
exclusions and assumptions were
applied, the final dataset included
7,703,261 actual 30-day periods of care
and 4,529,498 simulated 60-day
episodes of care for CY 2021.
Using the final dataset for CY 2021
(7,703,261 actual 30-day periods which
made up the 4,529,498 simulated 60-day
episodes) we determined the estimated
aggregate expenditures under the prePDGM HH PPS were lower than the
actual estimated aggregate expenditures
under the PDGM HH PPS. This
indicates that aggregate expenditures
under the PDGM were higher than if the
153-group payment system was still in
place in CY 2021. As described
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previously in the methodology, we
needed to calculate what the actual CY
2021 30-day base payment rate
($1,901.12) should have been to equal
aggregate expenditures that we
calculated using the simulated CY 2021
60-day episodes. We determined the CY
2021 30-day base payment rate should
have been $1,751.90 based on actual
behavior rather than the $1,901.12 based
on assumed behaviors. The actual CY
2021 base payment rate of $1,901.12
does not account for any behavior
adjustments needed for CY 2020, and
therefore to evaluate changes for only
CY 2021 we would need to control for
the ¥6.52 percent prospective
adjustment that we determined for CY
2020. Therefore, using the recalculated
CY 2020 base payment rate of $1,742.52,
multiplied by the CY 2021 wage index
budget neutrality factor (0.9999) and the
CY 2021 home health payment update
(1.020), the CY 2021 base payment rate
for assumed behaviors would have been
$1,777.19. The percent change between
the two payment rates would be the
annual permanent adjustment for CY
2021 (assuming the ¥6.52 percent
adjustment was already taken). Next, we
calculated the difference in aggregate
expenditures for all CY 2021 PDGM 30day claims using the actual ($1,901.12,
as this was what CMS actually paid in
CY 2021) and recalculated ($1,751.90)
payment rates. This difference is the
retrospective dollar amount needed to
offset payment. Our results are shown in
Table B13.
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As shown in Table B12 and in the CY
2023 HH PPS final rule (87 FR 66805),
a permanent prospective adjustment of
¥6.52 percent to the CY 2023 30-day
payment rate would be required to offset
for such increases in estimated aggregate
expenditures in future years.
Additionally, we determined that our
initial estimate of base payment rates
required to achieve budget neutrality
resulted in excess expenditures of HHAs
of approximately $873 million in CY
2020. This would require a temporary
adjustment to offset for such increase in
estimated aggregate expenditures for CY
2020.
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As shown in Table B13 and in the CY
2023 HH PPS final rule (87 FR 66806),
a permanent prospective adjustment of
¥1.42 percent (assuming the ¥6.52
percent adjustment was already taken)
would be required to offset for such
increases in estimated aggregate
expenditures in future years.
Additionally, we determined that our
initial estimate of base payment rates
required to achieve budget neutrality
resulted in excess expenditures of
approximately $1.2 billion in CY 2021.
This would require a one-time
temporary adjustment factor to offset for
such increases in estimated aggregate
expenditures for CY 2021.
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(f) CY 2022 Preliminary Results
We will continue the practice of using
the most recent complete home health
claims data at the time of rulemaking.
The HH PPS limited data set (LDS) file
released with this proposed rule
includes two files: the actual CY 2022
30-day periods and the CY 2022
simulated 60-day episodes. We remind
readers a data use agreement (DUA) is
required to purchase the CY 2024
proposed HH PPS LDS file. Access will
be granted for both the 30-day periods
and the simulated 60-day episodes
under one DUA. Visit the HH PPS LDS
web page for more information.13 In
addition, the proposed CY 2024 Home
Health Descriptive Statistics from the
LDS Files spreadsheet is available on
the Home Health Prospective Payment
System Regulations and Notices web
13 https://www.cms.gov/research-statistics-data-
and-systems/files-for-order/limiteddatasets/home_
health_pps_lds.
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page,14 does not require a DUA, and is
available at no cost to interested parties.
The spreadsheet contains information
on the number of simulated 60-day
episodes and actual 30-day periods in
CY 2022 that were used to determine
the behavior adjustments. The
spreadsheet also provides information
such as the number of episodes and
periods by case-mix group, case-mix
weights, and simulated payments. The
CY 2022 analysis presented in this
proposed rule is considered preliminary
and, as more data become available from
the latter half of CY 2022, we will
update our results in the final rule. The
CY 2024 final rule will utilize the CY
2022 finalized data for determining any
behavior adjustment needed to the CY
2024 payment rate. However, while the
claims data and the permanent and
temporary behavior adjustment results
will be considered complete, any
adjustments to future payment rates
may be subject to additional
considerations such as permanent
adjustments taken in previous years.
Using the methodology described
previously, we simulated 60-day
episodes using actual CY 2022 30-day
periods to determine what the
permanent and temporary payment
adjustments should be to offset for such
increases or decreases in estimated
aggregate expenditures as a result of the
impact of differences between assumed
behavior changes and actual behavior
changes. For CY 2022, we began with
8,386,706 30-day periods of care and
dropped 476,889 30-day periods of care
14 https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Feefor-Service-Payment/HomeHealthPPS/HomeHealth-Prospective-Payment-System-Regulationsand-Notices.
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that had claim occurrence code 50 date
after October 31, 2022. We also
excluded 894,319 30-day periods of care
that had claim occurrence code 50 date
before January 1, 2022 to ensure the 30day period would not be part of a
simulated 60-day episode that began in
CY 2021. Applying the additional
exclusions and assumptions as
described previously, an additional
5,452 30-day periods were excluded.
Additionally, we excluded 17,054
simulated 60-day episodes of care where
no OASIS information was available in
the CCW VRDC or could not be grouped
to a HIPPS due to a missing primary
diagnosis or other reason. Our simulated
60-day episodes of care produced a
distribution of two 30-day periods of
care (69.1 percent) and single 30-day
periods of care (30.9 percent) that was
similar to what we found when we
simulated two 30-day periods of care for
implementation of the PDGM. After all
exclusions and assumptions were
applied, the final dataset for this
proposed rule included 6,982,837 actual
30-day periods of care and 4,127,754
simulated 60-day episodes of care for
CY 2022.
Using the final dataset for CY 2022
(6,982,837 actual 30-day periods which
made up the 4,127,754 simulated 60-day
episodes) we determined the estimated
aggregate expenditures under the prePDGM HH PPS were lower than the
actual estimated aggregate expenditures
under the PDGM HH PPS as shown in
Table B14. This indicates that aggregate
expenditures under the PDGM were
higher than if the 153-group payment
system was still in place in CY 2022. As
described previously in the
methodology, we needed to calculate
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what the actual CY 2022 30-day base
payment rate ($2,031.64) should have
been to equal aggregate expenditures
that we calculated using the simulated
CY 2022 60-day episodes. We
determined the CY 2022 30-day base
payment rate should have been
$1,841.55 based on actual behavior
rather than the $2,031.64 based on
assumed behaviors. We note, the actual
CY 2022 base payment rate of $2,031.64
does not account for any behavior
adjustments needed for CYs 2020 and
2021, and therefore to evaluate changes
for only CY 2022 we need to account for
the ¥7.85 percent prospective
adjustment that we determined for CYs
2020 and 2021. Therefore, using the
recalculated CY 2021 base payment rate
of $1,751.90 (shown in Table B13),
multiplied by the CY 2022 case-mix
weights recalibration neutrality factor
(1.0396), the CY 2022 wage index
budget neutrality factor (1.0019) and the
CY 2022 home health payment update
(1.026), the CY 2022 base payment rate
for assumed behavior would have been
$1,872.18. The percent change between
the two payment rates would be the
additional permanent adjustment
(assuming the ¥7.85 percent
adjustment was already taken). Next, we
calculated the difference in aggregate
expenditures for all CY 2022 PDGM 30day claims using the actual ($2,031.64)
and recalculated ($1,841.55) payment
rates. This difference is the retrospective
dollar amount needed to offset payment.
Our results are shown in Table B14.
As shown in Table B14, a permanent
prospective adjustment of ¥1.636
percent to the CY 2024 30-day payment
rate (assuming the ¥7.85 percent
adjustment was already taken) would be
required to offset for such increases in
estimated aggregate expenditures in
future years. Additionally, we
determined that our initial estimate of
base payment rates required to achieve
budget neutrality resulted in excess
expenditures of approximately $1.4
billion in CY 2022. This would require
a one-time temporary adjustment factor
to offset for such increases in estimated
aggregate expenditures for CY 2022.
We recognized that applying the full
permanent and temporary adjustment
immediately would result in a
significant negative adjustment in a
single year. However, if the PDGM 30day base payment rate remains higher
than it should be, then there would
likely be a compounding effect,
potentially creating the need for an even
larger reduction to adjust for behavioral
changes in future years. Therefore, we
proposed to apply only the permanent
adjustment to the CY 2023 base
payment rate. We believed this could
mitigate the need for a larger permanent
adjustment and could reduce the
amount of any additional temporary
adjustments in future years.
We also recognized the potential
hardship to some providers of
implementing the full ¥7.85 percent
permanent adjustment in a single year.
As we have the discretion to implement
any adjustment in a time and manner
determined appropriate, in accordance
with section 1895(b)(3)(D) of the Act, we
finalized only a ¥3.925 percent (half of
the ¥7.85 percent) permanent
adjustment for CY 2023. However, we
emphasized that the permanent
adjustment needed in CY 2023 to
account fully for actual behavior
changes in CYs 2020 and 2021 was
¥7.85 percent, and applying a ¥3.925
percent permanent adjustment to the CY
2023 30-day payment rate would not
fully account for differences in behavior
changes on estimated aggregate
expenditures during those years, as well
as CYs 2022 and 2023. We stated we
would need to account for that
difference in future rulemaking, and any
additional adjustments needed to the
base payment rate, to account for
behavior change based on more recent
data analysis.
The percent change between the
actual CY 2022 base payment rate of
$2,031.64 (based on assumed behaviors)
and the CY 2022 recalculated base
payment rate of $1,841.55 (based on
actual behaviors) (shown in Table B14)
is the total (cumulative) permanent
adjustment for CY 2022. The summation
of the dollar amount for CYs 2020, 2021,
and 2022 is the amount that represents
the temporary payment adjustment to
offset for increased aggregate
expenditures in CYs 2020, 2021, and
2022. Our results are shown in Table
B15 and B16.
(g) Proposed CY 2024 Permanent
Adjustment and Temporary Adjustment
Calculations
To offset the increase in estimated
aggregate expenditures for CYs 2020 and
2021 based on the impact of the
differences between assumed and actual
behavior changes, CMS needed to apply
a ¥7.85 percent permanent adjustment
to the CY 2023 base payment rate, as
well as implement a temporary
adjustment of approximately $2.1
billion to reconcile retrospective
overpayments in CYs 2020 and 2021.
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We remind readers adjustment factors
are multiplied in this payment system
and therefore individual numbers (that
is, percentages) do not sum precisely to
the permanent adjustment needed to
account for the total permanent
adjustment in that year. Additionally, as
we stated in the CY 2023 HH PPS final
rule (87 FR 66808), applying a ¥3.925
percent permanent adjustment to the CY
2023 30-day payment rate would not
adjust the rate fully to account for
differences in behavior changes on
estimated aggregate expenditures in CYs
2020 and 2021. Therefore, we cannot
determine the CY 2024 proposed
permanent adjustment by simply
subtracting ¥3.925 percent from the
total permanent adjustment of ¥9.356
percent.
Instead, we look at the total
permanent adjustment needed for the
current year of data and account for any
prior permanent adjustments through
multiplication and division of factors. In
other words, we determined the total
permanent adjustment based on CY
2022 data (which had no prior
adjustments) is ¥9.356 percent, which
is converted to a 0.90644 factor. We
recognize that in CY 2023 we
implemented a ¥3.925 percent
permanent behavior adjustment,
converted to a 0.96075 factor, and we
must account for it in the proposed CY
2024 permanent adjustment. Next, we
calculated the CY 2024 permanent
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adjustment factor by solving (1¥x) =
0.90644 (9.356 percent) divided by
0.96075 (3.925 percent). The resulting
factor (1¥x) is 0.94347, which is
converted to a 5.653 percent reduction
to the CY 2024 national, standardized
base payment rate. In other words, 1
minus the factor 0.94347 equals 0.05653
which is equal to 5.653 percent
reduction. Therefore, to offset the
increase in estimated aggregate
expenditures for CY 2022 based on the
impact of the differences between
assumed and actual behavior changes,
and to account for the permanent
adjustment of ¥3.925 percent taken in
CY 2023 rulemaking, CMS would need
to apply a ¥5.653 percent permanent
adjustment to the CY 2024 base
payment rate. We are proposing to apply
a ¥5.653 percent permanent adjustment
to the CY 2024 national, standardized
30-day payment rate.
We acknowledge that, as previously
discussed, we finalized, in the CY 2023
HH PPS final rule, half of the ¥7.85
percent permanent adjustment, noting
that the full permanent adjustment may
be burdensome for some providers.
However, we believe applying the full
permanent adjustment of ¥5.635 in CY
2024 would potentially reduce any
future permanent adjustments, stem the
accrual of the temporary payment
adjustment dollar amount, and would
help fulfill the statutory requirements at
section 1895(b)(3)(D) of the Act to offset
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any increases or decreases on the impact
of differences between assumed
behavior and actual behavior changes
on estimated aggregate expenditures.
We previously explained when reducing
the permanent adjustment in CY 2023
that we would need to implement a
greater rate reduction in future years,
therefore home health agencies have
had some time to consider this proposed
rate reduction.
In order to calculate the temporary
adjustment, we would add the CY 2022
temporary adjustment dollar amount of
$1,355,208,655 to the previously
finalized CYs 2020 and 2021 dollar
amounts for a total of $3,439,284,729.
We stated in the CY 2023 HH PPS final
rule (87 FR 66804) and in this proposed
rule, after we determine the dollar
amount to be reconciled we will
calculate a temporary adjustment factor
to be applied to the base payment rate
for that year. That is, the dollar amount
will be converted to a factor. However,
as we noted in the CY 2023 HH PPS
proposed rule (87 FR 37682), we
recognize that implementing both the
permanent and temporary adjustments
may adversely affect HHAs. Given that
the magnitude of both the temporary
and permanent adjustments for CY 2024
rate setting may result in a significant
reduction of the payment rate, we are
not proposing to take the temporary
adjustment in CY 2024. We will propose
a temporary adjustment factor to the
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national, standardized base payment
rate when we propose this temporary
payment adjustment in future
rulemaking. As noted previously, we
will update these permanent and
temporary adjustments in the final rule
to reflect more complete claims data for
CY 2022. We solicit comments on the
proposal to apply a ¥5.653 percent
permanent adjustment to the CY 2024
base payment rate.
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2. Proposed CY 2024 PDGM LUPA
Thresholds and PDGM Case-Mix
Weights
(a) Proposed CY 2024 PDGM LUPA
Thresholds
Under the HH PPS, LUPAs are paid
when a certain visit threshold for a
payment group during a 30-day period
of care is not met. In the CY 2019 HH
PPS final rule with comment period (83
FR 56492), we finalized that the LUPA
thresholds would be set at the 10th
percentile of visits or 2 visits, whichever
is higher, for each payment group. This
means the LUPA threshold for each 30day period of care varies depending on
the PDGM payment group to which it is
assigned. If the LUPA threshold for the
payment group is met under the PDGM,
the 30-day period of care will be paid
the full 30-day period case-mix adjusted
payment amount (subject to any partial
payment adjustment or outlier
adjustments). If a 30-day period of care
does not meet the PDGM LUPA visit
threshold, then payment will be made
using the CY 2024 per-visit payment
amounts as described in section
II.C.4.f.2 of this proposed rule. For
example, if the LUPA visit threshold is
four, and a 30-day period of care has
four or more visits, it is paid the full 30day period payment amount; if the
period of care has three or less visits,
payment is made using the per-visit
payment amounts.
In the CY 2019 HH PPS final rule with
comment period (83 FR 56492), we
finalized our policy that the LUPA
thresholds for each PDGM payment
group would be reevaluated every year
based on the most current utilization
data available at the time of rulemaking.
However, as CY 2020 was the first year
of the new case-mix adjustment
methodology, we stated in the CY 2021
HH PPS final rule (85 FR 70305, 70306)
that we would maintain the LUPA
thresholds that were finalized and
shown in Table 17 of the CY 2020 HH
PPS final rule with comment period (84
FR 60522) for CY 2021 payment
purposes. We stated that at that time, we
did not have sufficient CY 2020 data to
reevaluate the LUPA thresholds for CY
2021.
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In the CY 2022 HH PPS final rule with
comment period (86 FR 62249), we
finalized the proposal to recalibrate the
PDGM case-mix weights, functional
impairment levels, and comorbidity
subgroups while maintaining the LUPA
thresholds for CY 2022. We stated that
because there are several factors that
contribute to how the case-mix weight
is set for a particular case-mix group
(such as the number of visits, length of
visits, types of disciplines providing
visits, and non-routine supplies) and the
case-mix weight is derived by
comparing the average resource use for
the case-mix group relative to the
average resource use across all groups,
we believe the COVID–19 PHE would
have impacted utilization within all
case-mix groups similarly. Therefore,
the impact of any reduction in resource
use caused by the PHE on the
calculation of the case-mix weight
would be minimized since the impact
would be accounted for both in the
numerator and denominator of the
formula used to calculate the case-mix
weight. However, in contrast, the LUPA
thresholds are based on the number of
overall visits in a particular case-mix
group (the threshold is the 10th
percentile of visits or 2 visits, whichever
is greater) instead of a relative value
(like what is used to generate the casemix weight) that would control for the
impacts of the COVID–19 PHE. We
noted that visit patterns and some of the
decrease in overall visits in CY 2020
may not be representative of visit
patterns in CY 2022. Therefore, to
mitigate any potential future and
significant short-term variability in the
LUPA thresholds due to the COVID–19
PHE, we finalized the proposal to
maintain the LUPA thresholds finalized
and displayed in Table 17 in the CY
2020 HH PPS final rule with comment
period (84 FR 60522) for CY 2022
payment purposes.
For CY 2023, we proposed to update
the LUPA thresholds using CY 2021
Medicare home health claims (as of
March 21, 2022) linked to OASIS
assessment data. After reviewing the CY
2022 home health claims utilization
data we determined that visit patterns
have stabilized. Our data analysis
indicated that visits in 2022 were
similar to visits in 2020. We believed
that CY 2021 data will be more
indicative of visit patterns in CY 2023
rather than continuing to use the LUPA
thresholds derived from the CY 2018
data pre-PDGM. Therefore, we finalized
a policy to update the LUPA thresholds
for CY 2023 using data from CY 2021.
For CY 2024, we are proposing to
update the LUPA thresholds using CY
2022 home health claims utilization
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data (as of March 17, 2023), in
accordance with our policy to annually
recalibrate the case-mix weights and
update the LUPA thresholds, functional
impairment levels and comorbidity
subgroups. The proposed LUPA
thresholds for the CY 2024 PDGM
payment groups with the corresponding
Health Insurance Prospective Payment
System (HIPPS) codes and the case-mix
weights are listed in Table B22 We
solicit public comments on the
proposed updates to the LUPA
thresholds for CY 2024.
(b) CY 2024 Functional Impairment
Levels
Under the PDGM, the functional
impairment level is determined by
responses to certain OASIS items
associated with activities of daily living
and risk of hospitalization; that is,
responses to OASIS items M1800–
M1860 and M1033. A home health
period of care receives points based on
each of the responses associated with
these functional OASIS items, which are
then converted into a table of points
corresponding to increased resource
use. The sum of all of these points
results in a functional score which is
used to group home health periods into
a functional level with similar resource
use. That is, the higher the points, the
higher the response is associated with
increased resource use. The sum of all
of these points results in a functional
impairment score which is used to
group home health periods into one of
three functional impairment levels with
similar resource use. The three
functional impairment levels of low,
medium, and high were designed so that
approximately one-third of home health
periods from each of the clinical groups
fall within each level. This means home
health periods in the low impairment
level have responses for the functional
OASIS items that are associated with
the lowest resource use, on average.
Home health periods in the high
impairment level have responses for the
functional OASIS items that are
associated with the highest resource use
on average.
For CY 2024, we propose to use CY
2022 claims data to update the
functional points and functional
impairment levels by clinical group.
The CY 2018 HH PPS proposed rule (82
FR 35320) and the technical report from
December 2016, posted on the Home
Health PPS Archive web page located at:
https://www.cms.gov/medicare/homehealth-pps/home-health-pps-archive,
provides a more detailed explanation as
to the construction of these functional
impairment levels using the OASIS
items. We are proposing to use this
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same methodology previously finalized
to update the functional impairment
levels for CY 2024. The updated OASIS
functional points table and the table of
functional impairment levels by clinical
group for CY 2024 are listed in Tables
B17 and B18, respectively. We solicit
public comments on the updates to
functional points and the functional
impairment levels by clinical group.
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(c) CY 2024 Comorbidity Subgroups
Thirty-day periods of care receive a
comorbidity adjustment category based
on the presence of certain secondary
diagnoses reported on home health
claims. These diagnoses are based on a
home-health specific list of clinically
and statistically significant secondary
diagnosis subgroups with similar
resource use, meaning the diagnoses
have at least as high as the median
resource use and are reported in more
than 0.1 percent of 30-day periods of
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care. Home health 30-day periods of
care can receive a comorbidity
adjustment under the following
circumstances:
• Low comorbidity adjustment: There
is a reported secondary diagnosis on the
home health-specific comorbidity
subgroup list that is associated with
higher resource use.
• High comorbidity adjustment:
There are two or more secondary
diagnoses on the home health-specific
comorbidity subgroup interaction list
that are associated with higher resource
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use when both are reported together
compared to when they are reported
separately. That is, the two diagnoses
may interact with one another, resulting
in higher resource use.
• No comorbidity adjustment: A 30day period of care receives no
comorbidity adjustment if no secondary
diagnoses exist or do not meet the
criteria for a low or high comorbidity
adjustment.
In the CY 2019 HH PPS final rule with
comment period (83 FR 56406), we
stated that we would continue to
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examine the relationship of reported
comorbidities on resource utilization
and make the appropriate payment
refinements to help ensure that payment
is in alignment with the actual costs of
providing care. For CY 2024, we
propose to use the same methodology
used to establish the comorbidity
subgroups to update the comorbidity
subgroups using CY 2022 home health
data.
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For CY 2024, we propose to update
the comorbidity subgroups to include 21
low comorbidity adjustment subgroups
as identified in Table B19 and 101 high
comorbidity adjustment interaction
subgroups as identified in Table B20.
The proposed CY 2024 low comorbidity
adjustment subgroups and the high
comorbidity adjustment interaction
subgroups including those diagnoses
within each of these comorbidity
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adjustments will also be posted on the
HHA Center web page at https://
www.cms.gov/Center/Provider-Type/
Home-Health-Agency-HHA-Center.
We invite comments on the proposed
updates to the low comorbidity
adjustment subgroups and the high
comorbidity adjustment interactions for
CY 2024.
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(d) CY 2024 PDGM Case-Mix Weights
As finalized in the CY 2019 HH PPS
final rule with comment period (83 FR
56502), the PDGM places patients into
meaningful payment categories based on
patient and other characteristics, such
as timing, admission source, clinical
grouping using the reported principal
diagnosis, functional impairment level,
and comorbid conditions. The PDGM
case-mix methodology results in 432
unique case-mix groups called home
health resource groups (HHRGs). We
also finalized a policy in the CY 2019
HH PPS final rule with comment period
(83 FR 56515) to recalibrate annually
the PDGM case-mix weights using a
fixed effects model with the most recent
and complete utilization data available
at the time of annual rulemaking.
Annual recalibration of the PDGM casemix weights ensures that the case-mix
weights reflect, as accurately as
possible, current home health resource
use and changes in utilization patterns.
To generate the proposed recalibrated
CY 2024 case-mix weights, we used CY
2022 home health claims data with
linked OASIS data (as of March 17,
2023). These data are the most current
and complete data available at this time.
We believe that recalibrating the casemix weights using data from CY 2022
would be reflective of PDGM utilization
and patient resource use for CY 2024.
The proposed recalibrated case-mix
weights will be updated based on more
complete CY 2022 claims data for the
final rule.
The claims data provide visit-level
data and data on whether non-routine
supplies (NRS) were provided during
the period and the total charges of NRS.
We determine the case-mix weight for
each of the 432 different PDGM
payment groups by regressing resource
use on a series of indicator variables for
each of the categories using a fixed
effects model as described in the
following steps:
Step 1: Estimate a regression model to
assign a functional impairment level to
each 30-day period. The regression
model estimates the relationship
between a 30-day period’s resource use
and the functional status and risk of
hospitalization items included in the
PDGM, which are obtained from certain
OASIS items. We refer readers to Table
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B17 for further information on the
OASIS items used for the functional
impairment level under the PDGM. We
measure resource use with the cost-perminute + NRS approach that uses
information from 2021 home health cost
reports. We use 2021 home health cost
report data because it is the most
complete cost report data available at
the time of rulemaking. Other variables
in the regression model include the 30day period’s admission source, clinical
group, and 30-day period timing. We
also include home health agency level
fixed effects in the regression model.
After estimating the regression model
using 30-day periods, we divide the
coefficients that correspond to the
functional status and risk of
hospitalization items by 10 and round to
the nearest whole number. Those
rounded numbers are used to compute
a functional score for each 30-day
period by summing together the
rounded numbers for the functional
status and risk of hospitalization items
that are applicable to each 30-day
period. Next, each 30-day period is
assigned to a functional impairment
level (low, medium, or high) depending
on the 30-day period’s total functional
score. Each clinical group has a separate
set of functional thresholds used to
assign 30-day periods into a low,
medium or high functional impairment
level. We set those thresholds so that we
assign roughly a third of 30-day periods
within each clinical group to each
functional impairment level (low,
medium, or high).
Step 2: A second regression model
estimates the relationship between a 30day period’s resource use and indicator
variables for the presence of any of the
comorbidities and comorbidity
interactions that were originally
examined for inclusion in the PDGM.
Like the first regression model, this
model also includes home health agency
level fixed effects and includes control
variables for each 30-day period’s
admission source, clinical group,
timing, and functional impairment
level. After we estimate the model, we
assign comorbidities to the low
comorbidity adjustment if any
comorbidities have a coefficient that is
statistically significant (p-value of 0.05
or less) and which have a coefficient
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that is larger than the 50th percentile of
positive and statistically significant
comorbidity coefficients. If two
comorbidities in the model and their
interaction term have coefficients that
sum together to exceed $150 and the
interaction term is statistically
significant (p-value of 0.05 or less), we
assign the two comorbidities together to
the high comorbidity adjustment.
Step 3: After Step 2, each 30-day
period is assigned to a clinical group,
admission source category, episode
timing category, functional impairment
level, and comorbidity adjustment
category. For each combination of those
variables (which represent the 432
different payment groups that comprise
the PDGM), we then calculate the 10th
percentile of visits across all 30-day
periods within a particular payment
group. If a 30-day period’s number of
visits is less than the 10th percentile for
their payment group, the 30-day period
is classified as a Low Utilization
Payment Adjustment (LUPA). If a
payment group has a 10th percentile of
visits that is less than two, we set the
LUPA threshold for that payment group
to be equal to two. That means if a 30day period has one visit, it is classified
as a LUPA and if it has two or more
visits, it is not classified as a LUPA.
Step 4: Take all non-LUPA 30-day
periods and regress resource use on the
30-day period’s clinical group,
admission source category, episode
timing category, functional impairment
level, and comorbidity adjustment
category. The regression includes fixed
effects at the level of the home health
agency. After we estimate the model, the
model coefficients are used to predict
each 30-day period’s resource use. To
create the case-mix weight for each 30day period, the predicted resource use
is divided by the overall resource use of
the 30-day periods used to estimate the
regression.
The case-mix weight is then used to
adjust the base payment rate to
determine each 30-day period’s
payment. Table B21 shows the
coefficients of the payment regression
used to generate the weights, and the
coefficients divided by average resource
use.
BILLING CODE 4120–01–P
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The case-mix weights proposed for
CY 2024 are listed in Table B22 and will
also be posted on the HHA Center web
page 15 upon display of this proposed
rule.
15 HHA Center web page: https://www.cms.gov/
Center/Provider-Type/Home-Health-Agency-HHACenter.
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Changes to the PDGM case-mix
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neutral manner by multiplying the CY
2024 national standardized 30-day
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period payment rate by a case-mix
budget neutrality factor. Typically, the
case-mix weight budget neutrality factor
is also calculated using the most recent,
complete home health claims data
available. For CY 2024, we will
continue the practice of using the most
recent complete home health claims
data at the time of rulemaking, which is
CY 2022 data. The case-mix budget
neutrality factor is calculated as the
ratio of 30-day base payment rates such
that total payments when the CY 2024
PDGM case-mix weights (developed
using CY 2022 home health claims data)
are applied to CY 2022 utilization
(claims) data are equal to total payments
when CY 2023 PDGM case-mix weights
(developed using CY 2021 home health
claims data) are applied to CY 2022
utilization data. This produces a casemix budget neutrality factor for CY 2024
of 1.0121.
We invite public comments on the CY
2024 proposed case-mix weights and
proposed case-mix weight budget
neutrality factor.
3. Proposal To Rebase and Revise the
Home Health Market Basket and Revise
the Labor-Related Share
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(a) Background
Section 1895(b)(3)(B) of the Act
requires that the standard prospective
payment amounts for CY 2024 be
increased by a factor equal to the
applicable home health market basket
update for those HHAs that submit
quality data as required by the
Secretary. Effective for cost reporting
periods beginning on or after July 1,
1980, we developed and adopted an
HHA input price index (that is, the
home health ‘‘market basket’’). Although
‘‘market basket’’ technically describes
the mix of goods and services used to
produce home health care, this term is
also commonly used to denote the input
price index derived from that market
basket. Accordingly, the term ‘‘home
health market basket’’ used in this
document refers to the HHA input price
index.
The percentage change in the home
health market basket reflects the average
change in the price of goods and
services purchased by HHAs in
providing an efficient level of home
health care services. We first used the
home health market basket to adjust
HHA cost limits by an amount that
reflected the average increase in the
prices of the goods and services used to
furnish reasonable cost home health
care. This approach linked the increase
in the cost limits to the efficient
utilization of resources. For a greater
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basket, see the notice with comment
period published in the February 15,
1980 Federal Register (45 FR 10450,
10451), the notice with comment period
published in the February 14, 1995
Federal Register (60 FR 8389, 8392),
and the notice with comment period
published in the July 1, 1996 Federal
Register (61 FR 34344, 34347).
Beginning with the FY 2002 HH PPS
payments, we have used the growth in
a home health market basket to update
payments under the HH PPS.
We have rebased and revised the
home health market basket periodically
through the years since FY 2002. We
rebased the home health market basket
effective with the FY 2005 update (69
FR 31251–31255), with the CY 2008
update (72 FR 25435–25442), and with
the CY 2013 update (77 FR 67081). We
last rebased and revised the home
health market basket effective with the
CY 2019 update (83 FR 56425 through
56435) reflecting a 2016 base year.
Beginning with CY 2024, we are
proposing to rebase and revise the home
health market basket to reflect a 2021
base year. In the following discussion,
we provide an overview of the proposed
home health market basket and describe
the methodologies used to determine
the proposed 2021-based home health
market basket.
The home health market basket is a
fixed-weight, Laspeyres-type price
index. A Laspeyres-type price index
measures the change in price, over time,
of the same mix of goods and services
purchased in the base period. Any
changes in the quantity or mix of goods
and services (that is, intensity)
purchased over time relative to the base
period are not measured.
The index itself is constructed in
three steps. First, a base period is
selected (for the proposed home health
market basket, we are proposing to use
2021 as the base period) and total base
period costs are estimated for a set of
mutually exclusive and exhaustive cost
categories. Each category is calculated
as a proportion of total costs. These
proportions are called cost weights.
Second, each expenditure category is
matched to an appropriate price or wage
variable, referred to as a price proxy. In
almost every instance, these price
proxies are derived from publicly
available statistical series that are
published on a consistent schedule
(preferably at least on a quarterly basis).
Finally, the cost weight for each cost
category is multiplied by the level of its
respective price proxy. The sum of these
products (that is, the cost weights
multiplied by their price index levels)
for all cost categories yields the
composite index level of the market
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basket in a given period. Repeating this
step for other periods produces a series
of market basket levels over time.
Dividing an index level for a given
period by an index level for an earlier
period produces a rate of growth in the
input price index over that timeframe.
As noted previously, the market
basket is described as a fixed-weight
index because it represents the change
in price over time of a constant mix
(quantity and intensity) of goods and
services needed to provide HHA
services. The effects on total costs
resulting from changes in the mix of
goods and services purchased
subsequent to the base period are not
measured. For example, an HHA hiring
more nurses after the base period to
accommodate the needs of patients
would increase the volume of goods and
services purchased by the HHA, but
would not be factored into the price
change measured by a fixed-weight
home health market basket. Only when
the index is rebased would changes in
the quantity and intensity be captured,
with those changes being reflected in
the cost weights. Therefore, we rebase
the home health market basket
periodically so that the cost weights
reflect recent changes in the mix of
goods and services that HHAs purchase
to furnish inpatient care between base
periods.
(b) Proposed Rebasing and Revising of
the Home Health Market Basket
We believe that it is technically
appropriate to rebase the home health
market basket periodically so that the
cost category weights reflect changes in
the mix of goods and services that HHAs
purchase in furnishing home health
care. For the CY 2024 HH PPS proposed
rule, we propose to rebase and revise
the home health market basket to reflect
a 2021 base year using 2021 Medicare
cost report data for Medicareparticipating freestanding HHAs, the
latest available and most complete data
on the actual structure of HHA costs at
the time of this rulemaking. In prior
rulemaking, commenters have expressed
concern that recent cost pressures and
the impact of the COVID–19 PHE have
impacted input price inflation in
providing home health services. We are
proposing to use 2021 as the base year
because we believe that the Medicare
cost reports for this year represent the
most recent, complete set of Medicare
cost report data available for developing
the proposed home health market basket
that captures recent cost trends. Given
the potential impact of the COVID–19
PHE on the Medicare cost report data,
we will continue to monitor these data
going forward and any changes to the
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home health market basket will be
proposed in future rulemaking.
The terms ‘‘rebasing’’ and ‘‘revising,’’
while often used interchangeably,
denote different activities. The term
‘‘rebasing’’ means moving the base year
for the structure of costs of an input
price index (that is, in this exercise, we
are proposing to move the base year cost
structure from 2016 to 2021) without
making any other major changes to the
methodology. The term ‘‘revising’’
means changing data sources, cost
categories, and price proxies used in the
input price index. For the CY 2024 HH
PPS proposed rule, we propose to rebase
and revise the home health market
basket to reflect a 2021 base year.
(c) Derivation of the Proposed 2021Based Home Health Market Basket
Major Cost Weights
The major cost weights for the
proposed revised and rebased home
health market basket are derived from
the Medicare cost reports (CMS Form
1728–20, OMB No. 0938–0022) for
freestanding HHAs whose cost reporting
period began on or after October 1, 2020
and before October 1, 2021. Of the 2021
Medicare cost reports for freestanding
HHAs, approximately 84 percent of the
reports had a begin date on January 1,
2021, approximately 5 percent had a
begin date on July 1, 2021, and
approximately 3 percent had a begin
date on October 1, 2020. The remaining
8 percent had a begin date within the
specified range. Using this methodology
allowed our sample to include HHAs
with varying cost report years including,
but not limited to, the Federal fiscal or
calendar year.
We propose to maintain our policy of
using data from freestanding HHAs,
which account for about 93 percent of
HHAs (87 FR 66882), as our analysis has
determined that they better reflect
HHAs’ actual cost structure. Cost data
for hospital-based HHAs can be affected
by the allocation of overhead costs over
the entire institution.
We are proposing to derive seven
major cost categories (Wages and
Salaries, Benefits, Transportation,
Professional Liability Insurance (PLI),
Fixed Capital, Movable Capital, and
Medical Supplies) from the 2021 HHA
Medicare cost reports. The residual cost
category, ‘‘All Other’’, reflects all
remaining costs not captured in the
seven major cost categories. These costs
are based on those cost centers that are
reimbursable under the HH PPS,
specifically cost centers 16 through 25
(Skilled Nursing Care—RN, Skilled
Nursing Care—LPN, Physical Therapy,
Physical Therapy Assistant,
Occupational Therapy, Certified
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Occupational Therapy Assistant,
Speech-Language Pathology, Medical
Social Services, Home Health Aide, and
Medical Supplies Charged to Patients).
While the cost centers have changed in
CMS Form 1728–20, these generally
coincide with those cost centers from
CMS Form 1728–94 that were used to
derive the 2016-based home health
market basket (83 FR 56425). The cost
centers used from CMS Form 1728–94
were cost centers 6 through 12 (Skilled
Nursing Care, Physical Therapy,
Occupational Therapy, Speech
Pathology, Medical Social Services,
Home Health Aide, and Supplies). Total
costs for the HH PPS reimbursable
services reflect overhead allocation. We
note that Medical Supplies was not
considered to be a major cost category
in the 2016-based home health market
basket because it was not derived
directly from Medicare cost report data,
and was instead derived from the
residual ‘‘All Other’’ category using
Benchmark Input-Output (I–O) data
published by the Bureau of Economic
Analysis (BEA). Next, we provide
details on the proposed calculations for
the total Medicare allowable costs and
each of the proposed seven major cost
categories derived from the Medicare
cost report data. Unless otherwise
specified, proposed calculations are
consistent with 2016 methodology.
(1) Total Medicare Allowable Costs
We propose that total Medicare
allowable costs for HHAs would be
equal to the sum of total costs for the
Medicare allowable cost centers as
reported on Worksheet B, column 10,
lines 16 through 25. We propose that
these total Medicare allowable costs for
the HHA will be the denominator for the
cost weight calculations for the Wages
and Salaries, Benefits, Transportation,
Professional Liability Insurance, Fixed
Capital, Movable Capital, and Medical
Supplies cost weights. With this work
complete, we then set about deriving
cost levels for the seven major cost
categories.
(2) Costs for the Seven Major Cost
Categories Derived From the Medicare
Cost Report Data
(a) Wages and Salaries
We propose that wages and salaries
costs reflect direct patient care wage and
salary costs, overhead wage and salary
costs (associated with the following
overhead cost centers: Plant Operations
and Maintenance, Transportation,
Telecommunications Technology,
Administrative and General, Nursing
Administration, Medical Records, and
Other General Service cost centers), and
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a portion of direct patient care contract
labor costs. The estimation of the wage
and salary costs is derived using a
similar methodology to that which was
implemented for the 2016-based home
health market basket, with the primary
difference being the specific cost report
line items now available on the HHA
cost report form.
(i) Direct Patient Care
We are proposing to calculate direct
patient care wages and salaries by
summing costs from Worksheet A,
column 1, lines 16 through 25.
(ii) Overhead
We are proposing to calculate
overhead wages and salaries by
summing costs from Worksheet B,
columns 3 through 9, lines 16 through
25 multiplied by the percentage of costs
in the overhead cost centers that were
reported as salaries. This ratio is
calculated as the sum of costs on
Worksheet A, column 1, lines 3 through
9, divided by the sum of costs on
Worksheet A, columns 1 through 5,
lines 3 through 9.
(iii) Wages and Salaries Portion of Direct
Patient Care Contract Labor
Contract labor costs allocated to
wages and salaries costs reflect a portion
of the direct patient care contract labor
costs. Specifically, we are proposing to
calculate direct patient care contract
labor costs by first summing costs from
Worksheet A, column 4, lines 16
through 25. These contract labor costs
are then multiplied by each provider’s
ratio of direct patient care wages and
salaries costs to total direct patient care
wages and salaries and benefits costs.
This ratio is calculated as the sum of
costs on Worksheet A, column 1, lines
16 through 25, divided by the sum of
costs on Worksheet A, columns 1 and 2,
lines 16 through 25. Similarly, the 2016
method for deriving the wages and
salaries costs multiplied the combined
salaries and benefits (both Direct Patient
Care (DPC) and non-DPC) and DPC
contract labor, by the ratio of combined
DPC and non-DPC salaries to total DPC
and non-DPC salaries and benefits.
(b) Benefits
Benefits costs reflect direct patient
care benefit costs, overhead benefit costs
(associated with the following overhead
cost centers: Plant Operations and
Maintenance, Transportation,
Telecommunications Technology,
Administrative and General, Nursing
Administration, Medical Records, and
Other General Service) and a portion of
direct patient care contract labor costs.
Similarly, the 2016 method for deriving
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the benefits costs multiplied the
combined salaries and benefits (both
DPC and non-DPC) and DPC contract
labor, by the ratio of combined DPC and
non-DPC benefits to total DPC and nonDPC salaries and benefits.
(i) Direct Patient Care
We are proposing to calculate the cost
of the direct patient care benefit costs by
summing costs from Worksheet A,
column 2, lines 16 through 25.
(ii) Overhead
We are proposing to calculate
overhead benefit costs by summing
costs from Worksheet B, columns 3
through 9, lines 16 through 25
multiplied by the percentage of costs in
the overhead cost centers that were
reported as benefits. This percentage is
calculated as the sum of costs on
Worksheet A, column 2, lines 3 through
9, divided by the sum of costs on
Worksheet A, columns 1 through 5,
lines 3 through 9.
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(iii) Benefits Portion of Direct Patient
Care Contract Labor
Contract labor costs allocated to
Benefits costs reflect a portion of the
direct patient care contract labor costs.
Specifically, we are proposing to first
calculate direct patient care contract
labor costs by summing costs from
Worksheet A, column 4, lines 16
through 25. These contract labor costs
are then multiplied by each provider’s
ratio of direct patient care benefits costs
to total direct patient care wages and
salaries and benefits costs. This ratio is
calculated as the sum of costs on
Worksheet A, column 2, lines 16
through 25, divided by the sum of costs
on Worksheet A, columns 1 and 2, lines
16 through 25.
(c) Transportation
Transportation costs reflect direct
patient care costs as well as
transportation costs associated with
Capital Expenses, Plant Operations and
Maintenance, and Administrative and
General cost centers. Specifically, we
are proposing to calculate transportation
costs by summing costs from Worksheet
A, column 3, lines 16 through 25;
Worksheet A, column 3, lines 1 through
3; and costs on Worksheet B, column 4,
lines 16 through 25 multiplied by a ratio
that reflects the non-salary and benefits
portion of these costs. Specifically, this
ratio was calculated as 1 minus the sum
of costs on Worksheet A, columns 1 and
2, line 4, divided by the sum of costs on
Worksheet A, columns 1 through 5, line
4.
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(d) Professional Liability Insurance
Professional Liability Insurance
reflects premiums, paid losses, and selfinsurance costs. Specifically, we are
proposing to calculate Professional
Liability Insurance by summing costs
from Worksheet S–2 Part I, line 14,
columns 1 through 3.
(e) Fixed Capital
Fixed Capital-related costs reflect the
portion of Medicare-allowable costs
reported in Capital Related Buildings
and Fixtures (Worksheet A, column 5,
line 1). We are proposing to calculate
this Medicare allowable portion by first
calculating a ratio for each provider that
reflects fixed capital costs as a
percentage of HHA reimbursable
services. Specifically, this ratio was
calculated as the sum of costs from
Worksheet B, column 1, lines 16
through 25 divided by the sum of costs
from Worksheet B, column 1, line 1
minus lines 3 through 9. This
percentage is then applied to the costs
from Worksheet A, column 5, line 1.
(f) Movable Capital
Movable Capital-related costs reflect
the portion of Medicare-allowable costs
reported in Capital Related Movable
Equipment (Worksheet A, column 5,
line 2). We are proposing to calculate
this Medicare allowable portion by first
calculating a ratio for each provider that
reflects movable capital costs as a
percentage of HHA reimbursable
services. Specifically, this ratio was
calculated as the sum of costs from
Worksheet B, column 2, lines 16
through 25 divided by the sum of costs
from Worksheet B, column 2, line 2
minus lines 3 through 9. This
percentage is then applied to the costs
from Worksheet A, column 5, line 2.
(g) Medical Supplies
Medical Supplies costs reflect the cost
of supplies furnished to individual
patients and for which a separate charge
is made, as well as minor medical and
surgical supplies not expected to be
specifically identified in the plan of
treatment or for which a separate charge
is not made. Specifically, we propose to
calculate Medical Supplies as the sum
of Worksheet A, column 5, line 25; and
Worksheet B, column 6, line 25
multiplied by a ratio that reflects the
non-salary and benefits portion of these
costs. Specifically, this ratio was
calculated as 1 minus the sum of costs
on Worksheet A, columns 1 and 2, line
6, divided by the sum of costs on
Worksheet A, columns 1 through 5, line
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6. We note that in the 2016-based home
health market basket, the Medical
Supplies cost weight was derived from
the ‘‘All Other’’ residual cost weight.
(3) Derivation of the Major Cost Weights
After we derive costs for each of the
seven major cost categories and total
Medicare allowable costs for each
provider using the Medicare cost report
data, we propose to address data
outliers using the following steps. First,
for each of the seven major cost
categories, we divide the costs in that
category by total Medicare allowable
costs calculated for the provider to
obtain cost weights for the universe of
HHA providers. We propose to trim the
data to remove outliers (a standard
statistical process) by: (1) requiring that
major costs (such as wages and salaries
costs) and total Medicare allowable
costs be greater than zero and requiring
that category costs are less than the total
Medicare allowable costs; and (2)
excluding the top and bottom five
percent of the major cost weight (for
example, wages and salaries costs as a
percent of total Medicare allowable
costs). We note that missing values are
assumed to be zero consistent with the
methodology for how missing values
were treated in the 2016-based home
health market basket. After these
outliers have been excluded, we sum
the costs for each category across all
remaining providers. We then divide
this by the sum of total Medicare
allowable costs across all remaining
providers to obtain a cost weight for the
proposed 2021-based home health
market basket for the given category.
Finally, we propose to calculate the
residual ‘‘All Other’’ cost weight that
reflects all remaining costs that are not
captured in the other categories listed
by subtracting the major cost weight
percentages (Wages and Salaries,
Benefits, Transportation, Professional
Liability Insurance, Fixed Capital,
Movable Capital, and Medical Supplies)
from 1. We note that non-direct patient
care contract labor costs (such as
contract labor costs reported in the
Administrative and General cost center
of the Medicare cost report) are captured
in the ‘‘All Other’’ residual cost weight
and later disaggregated into more detail
as described later in this section.
Table B23 shows the major cost
categories and their respective cost
weights as derived from the Medicare
cost reports for this proposed rule.
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The decrease in the proposed wages
and salaries cost weight of 0.9
percentage point and the decrease in the
proposed benefits cost weight of 0.2
percentage point is primarily
attributable to direct patient care
contract labor costs as reported on the
Medicare cost report data, as shown in
Table B24. Our analysis of the Medicare
cost report data shows that a decrease in
the compensation cost weight from 2016
to 2021 occurred, in aggregate, among
for-profit, nonprofit, and government
providers and among providers serving
only rural beneficiaries, only urban
beneficiaries, or both rural and urban
beneficiaries.
Our analysis of the Medicare cost
report data shows that decreased
contract labor utilization has occurred
over most occupational categories,
including higher-paid specialties in
particular, and that utilization of direct
patient care contract labor has been
trending downward since 2010. We also
note that over the 2016 to 2021 time
period, the average number of full-time
equivalents per provider decreased
considerably.
this cost weight, we are proposing to use
the 2012 Benchmark I–O ‘‘Use Tables/
Before Redefinitions/Purchaser Value’’
for North American Industrial
Classification System (NAICS) 621600,
Home Health Agencies, published by
the BEA. These data are publicly
available at https://www.bea.gov/
industry/io_annual.htm. For the 2016based home health market basket, we
used the 2007 Benchmark I–O data, the
most recent data available at the time
(83 FR 56427).
The BEA Benchmark I–O data are
generally scheduled for publication
every five years with the most recent
data available for 2012. The 2012
Benchmark I–O data are derived from
the 2012 Economic Census and are the
building blocks for BEA’s economic
accounts. Therefore, they represent the
most comprehensive and complete set
of data on the economic processes or
mechanisms by which output is
produced and distributed.16 Besides
Benchmark I–O estimates, BEA also
produces Annual I–O estimates. While
based on a similar methodology, the
Annual I–O estimates reflect less
comprehensive and less detailed data
sources and are subject to revision when
benchmark data become available.
Instead of using the less detailed
Annual I–O data, we are proposing to
inflate the detailed 2012 Benchmark
(4) Derivation of the Detailed Cost
Weights
We propose to divide the ‘‘All Other’’
residual cost weight estimated from the
2021 Medicare cost report data into
more detailed cost categories. To divide
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16 https://www.bea.gov/papers/pdf/IOmanual_
092906.pdf.
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2021-based home health market basket’s
‘‘All Other’’ cost category (18.6 percent),
yielding a Utilities proposed cost weight
of 2.0 percent in the proposed 2021based home health market basket (0.110
× 18.6 percent = 2.0 percent). For the
2016-based home health market basket,
we used the same methodology utilizing
the 2007 Benchmark I–O data (aged to
2016).
Using this methodology, we propose
to derive eight detailed cost categories
from the proposed 2021-based home
health market basket ‘‘All Other’’
residual cost weight (18.6 percent).
These categories are: (1) Utilities; (2)
Administrative Support; (3) Financial
Services; (4) Rubber and Plastics; (5)
Telephone; (6) Professional Fees; (7)
Other Products; and (8) Other Services.
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We note that the proposed Utilities cost
category is currently referred to as
Operations & Maintenance in the 2016based home health market basket;
however, the methodology and data
sources underlying this cost category
remain the same.
Table B25 compares the cost
categories and weights for the proposed
2021-based home health market basket
compared to the 2016-based home
health market basket. In cases where a
cost category has been recategorized in
the proposed 2021-based home health
market basket, we have entered ‘‘n/a’’ to
maintain correct totals as they appear in
the CY 2019 HH PPS final rule with
comment period (83 FR 56428).
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I–O data forward to 2021 by applying
the annual price changes from the
respective price proxies to the
appropriate market basket cost
categories that are obtained from the
2012 Benchmark I–O data. We repeated
this practice for each year. Then, we
calculated the cost shares that each cost
category represents of the 2012 I–O data
inflated to 2021. These resulting 2021
cost shares were applied to the ‘‘All
Other’’ residual cost weight to obtain
the detailed cost weights for the
proposed 2021-based home health
market basket. For example, the cost for
Utilities represents 11.0 percent of the
sum of the ‘‘All Other’’ 2012 Benchmark
I–O HHA costs inflated to 2021.
Therefore, the Utilities cost weight
represents 11.0 percent of the proposed
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(d) Selection of Price Proxies
After developing the cost weights for
the proposed 2021-based home health
market basket, we select the most
appropriate wage and price proxies
currently available to represent the rate
of price change for each cost category.
With the exception of the price index
for Professional Liability Insurance
costs, the proposed price proxies are
based on Bureau of Labor Statistics
(BLS) data and are grouped into one of
the following BLS categories:
• Employment Cost Indexes.
Employment Cost Indexes (ECIs)
measure the rate of change in
employment wage rates and employer
costs for employee benefits per hour
worked. These indexes are fixed-weight
indexes and strictly measure the change
in wage rates and employee benefits per
hour. ECIs are superior to Average
Hourly Earnings (AHE) as price proxies
for input price indexes because they are
not affected by shifts in occupation or
industry mix, and because they measure
pure price change and are available by
both occupational group and by
industry. The industry ECIs are based
on the NAICS and the occupational ECIs
are based on the Standard Occupational
Classification System (SOC).
• Producer Price Indexes. Producer
Price Indexes (PPIs) measure the average
change over time in the selling prices
received by domestic producers for their
output. The prices included in the PPI
are from the first commercial
transaction for many products and some
services (https://www.bls.gov/ppi/).
• Consumer Price Indexes. Consumer
Price Indexes (CPIs) measure the
average change over time in the prices
paid by urban consumers for a market
basket of consumer goods and services
(https://www.bls.gov/cpi/). CPIs are only
used when the purchases are similar to
those of retail consumers rather than
purchases at the producer level, or if no
appropriate PPIs are available.
We evaluate the price proxies using
the criteria of reliability, timeliness,
availability, and relevance:
• Reliability. Reliability indicates that
the index is based on valid statistical
methods and has low sampling
variability. Widely accepted statistical
methods ensure that the data were
collected and aggregated in a way that
can be replicated. Low sampling
variability is desirable because it
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indicates that the sample reflects the
typical members of the population.
(Sampling variability is variation that
occurs by chance because only a sample
was surveyed rather than the entire
population.)
• Timeliness. Timeliness implies that
the proxy is published regularly,
preferably at least once a quarter. The
market baskets are updated quarterly,
and therefore, it is important for the
underlying price proxies to be up-todate, reflecting the most recent data
available. We believe that using proxies
that are published regularly (at least
quarterly, whenever possible) helps to
ensure that we are using the most recent
data available to update the market
basket. We strive to use publications
that are disseminated frequently,
because we believe that this is an
optimal way to stay abreast of the most
current data available.
• Availability. Availability means that
the proxy is publicly available. We
prefer that our proxies are publicly
available because this will help ensure
that our market basket updates are as
transparent to the public as possible. In
addition, this enables the public to be
able to obtain the price proxy data on
a regular basis.
• Relevance. Relevance means that
the proxy is applicable and
representative of the cost category
weight to which it is applied. The CPIs,
PPIs, and ECIs that we have selected to
propose in this regulation meet these
criteria. Therefore, we believe that they
continue to be the best measure of price
changes for the cost categories to which
they would be applied.
The following is a detailed
explanation of the price proxies we are
proposing for each cost category weight.
(e) Proposed 2021-Based Home Health
Market Basket Price Proxies
As part of the revising and rebasing of
the home health market basket, we are
proposing to rebase and revise the home
health blended Wages and Salaries
index and the home health blended
Benefits index. We propose to use these
blended indexes as price proxies for the
Wages and Salaries and the Benefits
categories of the proposed 2021-based
home health market basket, as we did in
the 2016-based home health market
basket. The following is a more detailed
discussion.
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(1) Wages and Salaries
For measuring price growth in the
2021-based home health market basket,
we are proposing to apply six price
proxies to six occupational
subcategories within the Wages and
Salaries cost weight, which would
reflect the 2021 occupational mix in
HHAs. This is a similar approach that
was used for the 2016-based market
basket. We propose to use a blended
wage proxy because there is not a
published wage proxy specific to the
home health industry.
We are proposing to continue to use
the National Industry-Specific
Occupational Employment and Wage
estimates for NAICS 621600, Home
Health Care Services, published by the
BLS Office of Occupational
Employment and Wage Statistics
(OEWS) as the data source for the cost
shares of the home health blended wage
and benefits proxy. We note that in the
spring of 2021, the Occupational
Employment Statistics (OES) program
began using the name Occupational
Employment and Wage Statistics
(OEWS) to better reflect the range of
data available from the program. Data
released on or after March 31, 2021
reflect the new program name. This is
the same data source that was used for
the 2016-based HHA blended wage and
benefit proxies; however, we are
proposing to use the May 2021 estimates
in place of the May 2016 estimates.
Detailed information on the
methodology for the national industryspecific occupational employment and
wage estimates survey can be found at
https://www.bls.gov/oes/current/oes_
tec.htm.
The six occupational subcategories
(Health-Related Professional and
Technical, Non-Health-Related
Professional and Technical,
Management, Administrative, Health
and Social Assistance Service, and
Other Service Occupations) for the
Wages and Salaries cost weight were
tabulated from the May 2021 OEWS
data for NAICS 621600, Home Health
Care Services. Table B26 compares the
proposed 2021 occupational
assignments to the 2016 occupational
assignments of the six CMS designated
subcategories. Data that are unavailable
in the OEWS occupational classification
for 2016 or 2021 are shown in Table B26
as ‘‘n/a.’’
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Total costs by occupation were
calculated by taking the OEWS number
of employees multiplied by the OEWS
annual average salary for each
subcategory, and then calculating the
proportion of total wage costs that each
subcategory represents of the total
industry wage costs. The proportions
listed in Table B27 represent the
proposed 2021 wages and salaries blend
weights, and the proposed ECIs for each
occupational category within the Wages
and Salaries price proxy blend. We note
that the ECIs reflect the 2021
occupational mix of workers. We also
note that 2018 updates to the Standard
Occupational Classification (SOC)
system included a reclassification of
Personal Care Aides from SOC code 39–
9021 to 31–1122, which is reflected in
the updated weights and represents the
major reason for the higher weight for
health care and social assistance
services and lower weight for other
service occupations.17
A comparison of the yearly changes
from CY 2021 to CY 2024 for the 2016based home health Wages and Salaries
proxy blend and the proposed 2021based home health Wages and Salaries
proxy blend is shown in Table B28. The
annual increases in the wages and
salaries proposed price proxy is 0.3
percentage point lower in 2021 and
2022 relative to the 2016-based price
proxy, and 0.1 to 0.2 percentage point
higher in 2023 and 2024. These
differences are primarily driven by the
aforementioned reclassification of
Personal Care Aides, which caused a
shift in the relative share from the Other
Service Occupations to Health and
Social Assistance Services as illustrated
previously in Table B27.
17 https://www.bls.gov/soc/2018/soc_2018_whats_
new.pdf.
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(2) Benefits
For measuring Benefits price growth
in the proposed 2021-based home health
market basket, we are proposing to
apply applicable price proxies to the six
occupational subcategories that are used
for the proposed Wages and Salaries
price proxy blend. The proposed six
categories in Table B29 are the same as
those in the 2016-based home health
market basket and include the same
occupational mix as listed in Table B27.
There is no available data source that
exists for benefit costs by occupation for
the home health industry. Thus, to
construct weights for the home health
benefits blend we calculated the ratio of
benefits to wages and salaries for 2021
for the six ECI series we are proposing
to use in the blended ‘wages and
salaries’ and ‘benefits’ indexes. To
derive the relevant benefits weight, we
applied the benefit-to-wage ratios to the
2021 OEWS wage and salary weights for
each of the six occupational
subcategories, and normalized. For
example, the 2021 ECI data shows a
ratio of benefits to wages for the healthrelated professional & technical category
of 1.010. We applied this ratio to the
2021 OEWS weight for wages and
salaries for health-related professional &
technical (9.7 percent) to get an
unnormalized weight of 30.0 (29.7 times
1.010), and then normalized those
weights relative to the other five benefit
occupational categories to obtain a final
benefit weight for health-related
professional & technical (30.1 percent).
A comparison of the yearly changes
from CY 2021 to CY 2024 for the 2016based home health Benefits proxy blend
and the proposed 2021-based home
health Benefits proxy blend is shown in
Table B30. With the exception of a 0.2
percentage point difference in 2022, the
annual increases in the two price
proxies are the same when rounded to
one decimal place.
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(3) Medical Supplies
We are proposing to use a 75/25 blend
of the PPI Commodity data for Surgical
and Medical Instruments (BLS series
code #WPU1562) and the PPI
Commodity data for Personal Safety
Equipment and Clothing (BLS series
code #WPU1571), which would replace
the current price proxy of the PPI for
Medical, Surgical, and Personal Aid
Devices (BLS series code #WPU156).
The PPI Commodity data for Personal
Safety Equipment and Clothing would
reflect personal protective equipment
(PPE) including but not limited to face
shields and protective clothing. The
2012 Benchmark I–O data does not
provide specific costs for the two
categories we are proposing to blend. In
absence of such data, we have based the
weights of this blend on the change in
the medical supplies weight as reported
in the Medicare cost reports in the years
prior to and after the COVID–19 PHE.
Specifically, analysis of Medicare cost
report data found that the average
weight for medical supplies for the
2016–2019 period (stable around 1.5
percent) was about 75 percent of the
weight observed for the 2020–2021
period (roughly 2.0 percent). Thus, we
believe that it was likely that the
increase in the cost weight was mainly
attributable to costs such as those
associated with personal safety
equipment and clothing, and are basing
the proposed 75/25 blend on that
analysis. We believe this change will
more closely proxy the rate of change of
the underlying costs, including
increased utilization of personal
protective equipment.
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(4) Professional Liability Insurance
We are proposing to use the CMS
Physician Professional Liability
Insurance price index to measure price
growth of this cost category. To generate
this index, we collect commercial
insurance premiums for a fixed level of
coverage while holding non-price
factors constant (such as a change in the
level of coverage). The same proxy was
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used for the 2016-based home health
market basket.
The same proxy was used for the 2016based home health market basket.
(5) Transportation
We are proposing to use the CPI U.S.
city average for Transportation (BLS
series code #CUUR0000SAT) to measure
price growth of this category. The same
proxy was used for the 2016-based
home health market basket.
(11) Utilities
(6) Administrative and Support
We are proposing to use the ECI for
Total compensation for Private industry
workers in Office and administrative
support (BLS series code
#CIU2010000220000I) to measure price
growth of this cost category. The same
proxy was used for the 2016-based
home health market basket.
We are proposing to use CPI–U U.S.
city average for Fuel and utilities (BLS
series code #CUUR0000SAH2) to
measure price growth of this cost
category. The same proxy was used for
the 2016-based home health market
basket.
(12) Other Products
We are proposing to use the PPI
Commodity data for Final demandFinished goods less foods and energy
(BLS series code #WPUFD4131) to
measure price growth of this category.
The same proxy was used for the 2016based home health market basket.
(7) Financial Services
We are proposing to use the ECI for
Total compensation for Private industry
workers in Financial activities (BLS
series code #CIU201520A000000I) to
measure price growth of this cost
category. The same proxy was used for
the 2016-based home health market
basket.
(13) Other Services
(8) Rubber and Plastics
We are proposing to use the PPI
Commodity data for Rubber and plastic
products (BLS series code #WPU07) to
measure price growth of this cost
category. The same proxy was used for
the 2016-based home health market
basket.
(14) Fixed Capital
(9) Telephone
We are proposing to use CPI U.S. city
average for Telephone services (BLS
series code #CUUR0000SEED) to
measure price growth of this cost
category. The same proxy was used for
the 2016-based home health market
basket.
(15) Movable Capital
(10) Professional Fees
We are proposing to use the ECI for
Total compensation for Private industry
workers in Professional and related
(BLS series code #CIS2010000120000I)
to measure price growth of this category.
(f) Summary of Price Proxies of the
Proposed 2021-Based Home Health
Market Basket
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We are proposing to use the ECI for
Total compensation for Private industry
workers in Service occupations (BLS
series code #CIU2010000300000I) to
measure price growth of this category.
The same proxy was used for the 2016based home health market basket.
We are proposing to use the CPI U.S.
city average for Owners’ equivalent rent
of residences (BLS series code
#CUUS0000SEHC) to measure price
growth of this cost category. The same
proxy was used for the 2016-based
home health market basket.
We are proposing to use the PPI
Commodity data for Machinery and
equipment (BLS series code #WPU11) to
measure price growth of this cost
category. The same proxy was used for
the 2016-based home health market
basket.
Table B31 shows the price proxies for
the proposed 2021-based home health
market basket.
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4. Proposed CY 2024 Home Health
Payment Rate Updates
(a) Proposed CY 2024 Home Health
Market Basket Percentage Increase
A comparison of the yearly percent
changes from CY 2019 to CY 2026 for
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Table B32 shows that the forecasted
percentage increase for CY 2024 of the
proposed 2021-based home health
market basket is 3.0 percent; 0.1
percentage point lower growth as
estimated using the 2016-based home
health market basket. The average
historical estimates of the growth in the
proposed 2021-based and 2016-based
home health market baskets over CY
2019 through CY 2022 differ by an
average of 0.1 percentage point. As
discussed previously, this is primarily
driven by a reclassification of Personal
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the 2016-based home health market
basket and the proposed 2021-based
home health market basket based on IHS
Global Inc.’s (IGI’s) first quarter 2023
forecast, with historical data through the
fourth quarter of 2022, is shown in
Table B32. IGI is a nationally recognized
economic and financial forecasting firm
with which CMS contracts to forecast
the components of the market baskets.
Based on IGI’s first quarter 2023
forecast, the proposed CY 2024 home
health market basket percentage
increase is 3.0 percent based on the
proposed 2021-based home health
market basket. We propose that if more
recent data subsequently become
available (for example, a more recent
estimate of the market basket), we
would use such data, if appropriate, to
determine the market basket percentage
increase in the final rule.
Care Aides, which caused a shift in the
relative weight of the Wages and
Salaries and Benefits blended price
proxies from Other Service Occupations
to Health and Social Assistance
Services, which over this period grew
relatively slower. Forecasted updates
from CY 2023 through CY 2026 are the
same on average; however, there is year
to year variation of ±0.1 percentage
point for any given year.
(b) Proposed CY 2024 Productivity
Adjustment
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In the CY 2015 HH PPS final rule (79
FR 38384), we finalized our
methodology for calculating and
applying the multifactor productivity
adjustment. As we explained in that
rule, section 1895(b)(3)(B)(vi) of the Act,
requires that, in CY 2015 (and in
subsequent calendar years, except CY
2018 (under section 411(c) of the
Medicare Access and CHIP
Reauthorization Act of 2015 (MACRA)
(Pub. L. 114–10, enacted April 16,
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We invite public comment on our
proposal to rebase and revise the home
health market basket to reflect a 2021
base year.
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2015)), the market basket percentage
under the HH PPS as described in
section 1895(b)(3)(B) of the Act be
annually adjusted by changes in
economy-wide productivity. Section
1886(b)(3)(B)(xi)(II) of the Act defines
the productivity adjustment to be equal
to the 10-year moving average of change
in annual economy-wide private
nonfarm business multifactor
productivity (as projected by the
Secretary for the 10-year period ending
with the applicable fiscal year, calendar
year, cost reporting period, or other
annual period). The BLS publishes the
official measures of productivity for the
United States economy. We note that
previously the productivity measure
referenced in section
1886(b)(3)(B)(xi)(II) of the Act was
published by BLS as private nonfarm
business multifactor productivity.
Beginning with the November 18, 2021
release of productivity data, BLS
replaced the term ‘‘multifactor
productivity’’ with ‘‘total factor
productivity’’ (TFP). BLS noted that this
is a change in terminology only and will
not affect the data or methodology. As
a result of the BLS name change, the
productivity measure referenced in
section 1886(b)(3)(B)(xi)(II) of the Act is
now published by BLS as ‘‘private
nonfarm business total factor
productivity’’. We refer readers to
https://www.bls.gov for the BLS
historical published TFP data. A
complete description of IGI’s TFP
projection methodology is available on
the CMS website at https://
www.cms.gov/Research-Statistics-Dataand-Systems/Statistics-Trends-andReports/MedicareProgramRatesStats/
MarketBasketResearch. Based on IGI’s
first quarter 2023 forecast, the proposed
productivity adjustment (the 10-year
moving average of TFP for the period
ending December 31, 2024) for CY 2024
is 0.3 percent. We also propose that if
more recent data subsequently become
available (for example, a more recent
estimate of the productivity
adjustment), we would use such data, if
appropriate, to determine the
productivity adjustment in the CY 2024
HH PPS final rule.
The revised labor-related share will be
implemented in a budget neutral
manner through the use of labor-related
share budget neutrality factor (as
described in section II.C.4.f.(2) below)
so that the aggregate payments do not
increase or decrease due to changes in
the labor-related share values. We invite
public comments on the proposed laborrelated share and the use of a laborrelated share budget neutrality factor.
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(c) Proposed CY 2024 Annual Update
for HHAs
In accordance with section
1895(b)(3)(B)(iii) of the Act, we propose
to base the CY 2024 market basket
percentage increase, which is used to
determine the applicable percentage
increase for HHA payments, on the most
recent estimate of the proposed 2021based home health market basket
percentage increase. Based on IGI’s first
quarter 2023 forecast with history
through the fourth quarter of 2022, the
projected increase of the proposed 2021based home health market basket for CY
2024 is 3.0 percent. We propose to then
reduce this percentage increase by the
current estimate of the productivity
adjustment for CY 2024 of 0.3
percentage point in accordance with
section 1895(b)(3)(B)(vi) of the Act.
Therefore, the proposed CY 2024 home
health payment update percentage is 2.7
percent (3.0 percent market basket
percentage increase, reduced by 0.3
percentage point productivity
adjustment). Furthermore, we propose
that if more recent data subsequently
become available (for example, a more
recent estimate of the market basket and
productivity adjustment), we would use
such data, if appropriate, to determine
the CY 2024 market basket percentage
increase and productivity adjustment in
the final rule.
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Section 1895(b)(3)(B)(v) of the Act
requires that the home health
percentage update be decreased by 2
percentage points for those HHAs that
do not submit quality data as required
by the Secretary. For HHAs that do not
submit the required quality data for CY
2024, the proposed home health
payment update percentage is 0.7
percent (2.7 percent minus 2 percentage
points).
We invite public comment on our
proposals for the CY 2024 home health
market basket percentage increase and
productivity adjustment.
(d) Labor-Related Share
Effective for CY 2024, we are
proposing to update the labor-related
share to reflect the proposed 2021-based
home health market basket
Compensation (Wages and Salaries plus
Benefits, which include direct patient
care contract labor costs) cost weight.
The current labor-related share is based
on the Compensation cost weight of the
2016-based home health market basket.
Based on the proposed 2021-based
home health market basket, the
proposed labor-related share is 74.9
percent and the proposed non-laborrelated share is 25.1 percent. The laborrelated share for the 2016-based home
health market basket was 76.1 percent
and the non-labor-related share was 23.9
percent. As explained earlier, the
decrease in the compensation cost
weight of 1.2 percentage points is
primarily attributable to a lower cost
weight of direct patient care contract
labor costs as reported in the Medicare
cost report data. Table B33 details the
components of the labor-related share
for the 2016-based and proposed 2021based home health market baskets.
(e) Proposed CY 2024 Home Health
Wage Index
Sections 1895(b)(4)(A)(ii) and (b)(4)(C)
of the Act require the Secretary to
provide appropriate adjustments to the
proportion of the payment amount
under the HH PPS that account for area
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wage differences, using adjustment
factors that reflect the relative level of
wages and wage-related costs applicable
to the furnishing of home health
services. Since the inception of the HH
PPS, we have used inpatient hospital
wage data in developing a wage index
to be applied to home health payments.
We propose to continue this practice for
CY 2024, as it is our belief that, in the
absence of home health-specific wage
data that accounts for area differences,
using inpatient hospital wage data is
appropriate and reasonable for the HH
PPS.
In the CY 2021 HH PPS final rule (85
FR 70298), we finalized our proposal to
adopt the revised OMB delineations
with a 5-percent cap on wage index
decreases, where the estimated
reduction in a geographic area’s wage
index would be capped at 5-percent in
CY 2021 only, meaning no cap would be
applied to wage index decreases for the
second year (CY 2022). Therefore, we
proposed and finalized the use of the FY
2022 pre-floor, pre-reclassified hospital
wage index with no 5-percent cap on
decreases as the CY 2022 wage
adjustment to the labor portion of the
HH PPS rates (86 FR 62285). However,
as described in the CY 2023 HH PPS
final rule (87 FR 66851 through 66853),
for CY 2023 and each subsequent year,
we finalized that the CY HH PPS wage
index would include a 5-percent cap on
wage index decreases. Specifically, we
finalized for CY 2023 and subsequent
years, the application of a permanent 5percent cap on any decrease to a
geographic area’s wage index from its
wage index in the prior year, regardless
of the circumstances causing the
decline. That is, we finalized that a
geographic area’s wage index for CY
2023 would not be less than 95 percent
of its final wage index for CY 2022,
regardless of whether the geographic
area is part of an updated CBSA, and
that for subsequent years, a geographic
area’s wage index would not be less
than 95 percent of its wage index
calculated in the prior CY. For CY 2024,
we propose to base the HH PPS wage
index on the FY 2024 hospital pre-floor,
pre-reclassified wage index for hospital
cost reporting periods beginning on or
after October 1, 2019 and before October
1, 2020 (FY 2020 cost report data). The
proposed CY 2024 HH PPS wage index
would not take into account any
geographic reclassification of hospitals,
including those in accordance with
section 1886(d)(8)(B) or 1886(d)(10) of
the Act but would include the 5-percent
cap on wage index decreases. We will
apply the appropriate wage index value
to the revised labor portion of the HH
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PPS rates based on the site of service for
the beneficiary (defined by section
1861(m) of the Act as the beneficiary’s
place of residence).
To address those geographic areas in
which there are no inpatient hospitals,
and thus, no hospital wage data on
which to base the calculation of the CY
2024 HH PPS wage index, we propose
to continue to use the same
methodology discussed in the CY 2007
HH PPS final rule (71 FR 65884) to
address those geographic areas in which
there are no inpatient hospitals. For
rural areas that do not have inpatient
hospitals, we propose to use the average
wage index from all contiguous Core
Based Statistical Areas (CBSAs) as a
reasonable proxy. Currently, the only
rural area without a hospital from which
hospital wage data could be derived is
Puerto Rico. However, for rural Puerto
Rico, we do not apply this methodology
due to the distinct economic
circumstances that exist there (for
example, due to the close proximity to
one another of almost all of Puerto
Rico’s various urban and non-urban
areas, this methodology would produce
a wage index for rural Puerto Rico that
is higher than that in half of its urban
areas). Instead, we propose to continue
to use the most recent wage index
previously available for that area. The
most recent wage index previously
available for rural Puerto Rico is 0.4047,
which is what we propose to use. For
urban areas without inpatient hospitals,
we use the average wage index of all
urban areas within the State as a
reasonable proxy for the wage index for
that CBSA. For CY 2024, the only urban
area without inpatient hospital wage
data is Hinesville, GA (CBSA 25980).
Using the average wage index of all
urban areas in Georgia as proxy, we
propose the CY 2024 wage index value
for Hinesville, GA to be 0.8601.
On February 28, 2013, OMB issued
Bulletin No. 13–01, announcing
revisions to the delineations of MSAs,
Micropolitan Statistical Areas, and
CBSAs, and guidance on uses of the
delineation of these areas. In the CY
2015 HH PPS final rule (79 FR 66085
through 66087), we adopted OMB’s area
delineations using a 1-year transition.
On August 15, 2017, OMB issued
Bulletin No. 17–01 in which it
announced that one Micropolitan
Statistical Area, Twin Falls, Idaho, now
qualifies as a Metropolitan Statistical
Area. The new CBSA (46300) comprises
the principal city of Twin Falls, Idaho
in Jerome County, Idaho and Twin Falls
County, Idaho. The CY 2022 HH PPS
wage index value for CBSA 46300, Twin
Falls, Idaho, will be 0.8707. Bulletin No.
17–01 is available at https://
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uploads/legacy_drupal_files/omb/
bulletins/2017/b-17-01.pdf.
On April 10, 2018 OMB issued OMB
Bulletin No. 18–03, which superseded
the August 15, 2017 OMB Bulletin No.
17–01. On September 14, 2018, OMB
issued OMB Bulletin No. 18–04 which
superseded the April 10, 2018 OMB
Bulletin No. 18–03. These bulletins
established revised delineations for
Metropolitan Statistical Areas,
Micropolitan Statistical Areas, and
Combined Statistical Areas, and
provided guidance on the use of the
delineations of these statistical areas. A
copy of OMB Bulletin No. 18–04 may be
obtained at: https://www.bls.gov/bls/
omb-bulletin-18-04-reviseddelineations-of-metropolitan-statisticalareas.pdf.
On March 6, 2020, OMB issued
Bulletin No. 20–01, which provided
updates to and superseded OMB
Bulletin No. 18–04 that was issued on
September 14, 2018. The attachments to
OMB Bulletin No. 20–01 provided
detailed information on the update to
statistical areas since September 14,
2018, and were based on the application
of the 2010 Standards for Delineating
Metropolitan and Micropolitan
Statistical Areas to Census Bureau
population estimates for July 1, 2017
and July 1, 2018. (For a copy of this
bulletin, we refer readers to https://
www.whitehouse.gov/wp-content/
uploads/2020/03/Bulletin-20-01.pdf). In
OMB Bulletin No. 20–01, OMB
announced one new Micropolitan
Statistical Area, one new component of
an existing Combined Statistical Area
and changes to New England City and
Town Area (NECTA) delineations. In
the CY 2021 HH PPS final rule (85 FR
70298), we stated that if appropriate, we
would propose any updates from OMB
Bulletin No. 20–01 in future
rulemaking. After reviewing OMB
Bulletin No. 20–01, we have determined
that the changes in Bulletin 20–01
encompassed delineation changes that
would not affect the Medicare home
health wage index for CY 2022.
Specifically, the updates consisted of
changes to NECTA delineations and the
re-designation of a single rural county
into a newly created Micropolitan
Statistical Area. The Medicare home
health wage index does not utilize
NECTA definitions, and, as most
recently discussed in the CY 2021 HH
PPS final rule (85 FR 70298) we include
hospitals located in Micropolitan
Statistical areas in each State’s rural
wage index. In other words, these OMB
updates did not affect any geographic
areas for purposes of the HH PPS wage
index calculation.
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The proposed CY 2024 wage index is
available on the CMS website at: https://
www.cms.gov/Center/Provider-Type/
Home-Health-Agency-HHA-Center.
(f) Proposed CY 2024 Home Health
Payment Update
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(1) Background
The HH PPS has been in effect since
October 1, 2000. As set forth in the July
3, 2000 final rule (65 FR 41128), the
base unit of payment under the HH PPS
was a national, standardized 60-day
episode payment rate. As finalized in
the CY 2019 HH PPS final rule with
comment period (83 FR 56406), and as
described in the CY 2020 HH PPS final
rule with comment period (84 FR
60478), the unit of home health
payment changed from a 60-day episode
to a 30-day period effective for those 30day periods beginning on or after
January 1, 2020.
As set forth in § 484.220, we adjust
the national, standardized prospective
payment rates by a case-mix relative
weight and a wage index value based on
the site of service for the beneficiary. To
provide appropriate adjustments to the
proportion of the payment amount
under the HH PPS to account for area
wage differences, we apply the
appropriate wage index value to the
labor portion of the HH PPS rates. In the
CY 2019 HH PPS final rule with
comment period (83 FR 56435), we
finalized rebasing the home health
market basket to reflect 2016 Medicare
cost report data. We also finalized a
revision to the labor-related share to
reflect the 2016-based home health
market basket Compensation (Wages
and Salaries plus Benefits) cost weight.
We finalized that for CY 2019 and
subsequent years, the labor-related share
would be 76.1 percent and the non-labor
related share would be 23.9 percent. As
discussed earlier in section II.C.3, for
CY 2024 we are proposing to rebase the
home health market basket using 2021
Medicare cost report data. We are also
proposing that the labor-related share
based on the proposed 2021-based home
health market basket would be 74.9
percent and the non-labor-related share
would be 25.1 percent. The following
are the steps we take to compute the
case-mix and wage-adjusted 30-day
period payment amount for CY 2024:
• Multiply the national, standardized
30-day period rate by the patient’s
applicable case-mix weight.
• Divide the case-mix adjusted
amount into a labor (74.9 percent) and
a non-labor portion (25.1 percent).
• Multiply the labor portion by the
applicable wage index based on the site
of service of the beneficiary.
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• Add the wage-adjusted portion to
the non-labor portion, yielding the casemix and wage adjusted 30-day period
payment amount, subject to any
additional applicable adjustments.
We provide annual updates of the HH
PPS rate in accordance with section
1895(b)(3)(B) of the Act. Section 484.225
sets forth the specific annual percentage
update methodology. In accordance
with section 1895(b)(3)(B)(v) of the Act
and § 484.225(i), for an HHA that does
not submit home health quality data, as
specified by the Secretary, the
unadjusted national prospective 30-day
period rate is equal to the rate for the
previous calendar year increased by the
applicable home health payment update
percentage, minus 2 percentage points.
Any reduction of the percentage change
would apply only to the calendar year
involved and would not be considered
in computing the prospective payment
amount for a subsequent calendar year.
The final claim that the HHA submits
for payment determines the total
payment amount for the period and
whether we make an applicable
adjustment to the 30-day case-mix and
wage-adjusted payment amount. The
end date of the 30-day period, as
reported on the claim, determines
which calendar year rates Medicare will
use to pay the claim.
We may adjust a 30-day case-mix and
wage-adjusted payment based on the
information submitted on the claim to
reflect the following:
• A LUPA is provided on a per-visit
basis as set forth in §§ 484.205(d)(1) and
484.230.
• A partial payment adjustment as set
forth in §§ 484.205(d)(2) and 484.235.
• An outlier payment as set forth in
§§ 484.205(d)(3) and 484.240.
(2) CY 2024 National, Standardized 30Day Period Payment Amount
Section 1895(b)(3)(A)(i) of the Act
requires that the standard prospective
payment rate and other applicable
amounts be standardized in a manner
that eliminates the effects of variations
in relative case-mix and area wage
adjustments among different home
health agencies in a budget-neutral
manner. To determine the CY 2024
national, standardized 30-day period
payment rate, we will continue our
practice of using the most recent,
complete utilization data at the time of
rulemaking; that is, we are using CY
2022 claims data for CY 2024 payment
rate updates. We apply a permanent
behavioral adjustment factor, a case-mix
weights recalibration budget neutrality
factor, a wage index budget neutrality
factor, a labor-related share budget
neutrality factor and the home health
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payment update percentage to update
the CY 2024 payment rate. As discussed
in section II.C.1 of this proposed rule,
we are proposing to implement a
permanent behavior adjustment of
–5.653 percent to ensure that payments
under the PDGM do not exceed what
payments would have been under the
153-group payment system as required
by law. The proposed permanent
behavior adjustment factor is 0.94347.
As discussed previously, to ensure the
changes to the PDGM case-mix weights
are implemented in a budget neutral
manner, we apply a case-mix weight
budget neutrality factor to the CY 2024
national, standardized 30-day period
payment rate. The proposed case-mix
weight budget neutrality factor for CY
2024 is 1.0121.
Additionally, we apply a wage index
budget neutrality factor to ensure that
wage index updates and revisions are
implemented in a budget neutral
manner. To calculate the wage index
budget neutrality factor, we first
determine the payment rate needed for
non-LUPA 30-day periods using the CY
2024 wage index so those total
payments are equivalent to the total
payments for non-LUPA 30-day periods
using the CY 2023 wage index and the
CY 2023 national standardized 30-day
period payment rate adjusted by the
case-mix weights recalibration
neutrality factor. Then, by dividing the
payment rate for non-LUPA 30-day
periods using the CY 2024 wage index
with a 5-percent cap on wage index
decreases by the payment rate for nonLUPA 30-day periods using the CY 2023
wage index with a 5-percent cap on
wage index decreases, we obtain a wage
index budget neutrality factor of 1.0015.
We then apply the wage index budget
neutrality factor of 1.0015 to the 30-day
period payment rate. After we apply the
wage index budget neutrality factor, we
will also apply a labor-related share
budget neutrality factor so that aggregate
payments do not increase or decrease
due to changes in the labor-related share
values. In order to calculate the laborrelated share budget neutrality factor,
we simulate total payments using CY
2022 home health utilization claims
data with the CY 2024 HH PPS wage
index and the proposed labor-related
share (labor-related share of 74.9
percent and non-labor-related share of
25.1 percent) and compare it to our
simulation of total payments using the
CY 2024 HH PPS wage index with the
current labor-related share (labor-related
share of 76.1 percent and non-laborrelated share of 23.9 percent). By
dividing the base payment amount
using the proposed labor-related share
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and CY 2024 wage index and payment
rate by the base payment amount using
the current labor-related share and CY
2024 wage index and payment rate, we
obtain a labor-related share budget
neutrality factor of 0.9998.
Next, we propose to update the 30day period payment rate by the
proposed CY 2024 home health
payment update percentage of 2.7
percent. The CY 2024 national,
standardized 30-day period payment
rate is calculated in Table B34.
The CY 2024 national, standardized
30-day period payment rate for an HHA
that does not submit the required
quality data is updated by the proposed
CY 2024 home health payment update
percentage of 0.7 percent (2.7 percent
minus 2 percentage points) and is
shown in Table B35.
(3) CY 2024 National Per-Visit Rates for
30-Day Periods of Care
payments for LUPA 30-day periods of
care using the CY 2024 wage index with
a 5-percent cap on wage index decreases
and comparing it to simulated total
payments for LUPA 30-day periods of
care using the CY 2023 wage index with
5-percent cap. By dividing the total
payments for LUPA 30-day periods of
care using the CY 2024 wage index by
the total payments for LUPA 30-day
periods of care using the CY 2023 wage
index, we obtained a wage index budget
neutrality factor of 1.0015. We apply the
wage index budget neutrality factor in
order to calculate the CY 2024 national
per-visit rates. In order to calculate the
labor-related share budget neutrality
factor for the national per visit amounts,
we simulate total payments for LUPA
30-day periods using CY 2022 home
health utilization claims data with the
CY 2024 HH PPS wage index and the
proposed labor-related share (labor-
related share of 74.9 percent and nonlabor-related share of 25.1 percent) and
compare it to our simulation of total
payments for LUPA 30-day periods
using the CY 2024 HH PPS wage index
with the current labor-related share
(labor-related share of 76.1 percent and
non-labor-related share of 23.9 percent).
By dividing the payment amounts for
LUPA 30-day periods using the
proposed labor-related share and CY
2024 wage index and payment rate by
the payment amounts for LUPA 30-day
periods using the current labor-related
share and CY 2024 wage index and
payment rate, we obtain a labor-related
share budget neutrality factor of 0.9999.
The LUPA per-visit rates are not
calculated using case-mix weights.
Therefore, no case-mix weight budget
neutrality factor is needed to ensure
budget neutrality for LUPA payments.
Additionally, we are not applying the
The national per-visit rates are used to
pay LUPAs and are also used to
compute imputed costs in outlier
calculations. The per-visit rates are paid
by type of visit or home health
discipline. The six home health
disciplines are as follows:
• Home health aide (HH aide).
• Medical Social Services (MSS).
• Occupational therapy (OT).
• Physical therapy (PT).
• Skilled nursing (SN).
• Speech-language pathology (SLP).
To calculate the proposed CY 2024
national per-visit rates, we started with
the CY 2023 national per-visit rates.
Then we applied a wage index budget
neutrality factor to ensure budget
neutrality for LUPA per-visit payments.
We calculated the wage index budget
neutrality factor by simulating total
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permanent adjustment to the per visit
payment rates but only to the case-mix
adjusted 30-day payment rate. Lastly,
the per-visit rates for each discipline are
updated by the proposed CY 2024 home
health payment update percentage of 2.7
percent. The national per-visit rates are
adjusted by the wage index based on the
site of service of the beneficiary. The
per-visit payments for LUPAs are
separate from the LUPA add-on
payment amount, which is paid for
episodes that occur as the only episode
or initial episode in a sequence of
adjacent episodes. The CY 2024 national
per-visit rates for HHAs that submit the
required quality data are updated by the
proposed CY 2024 home health
payment update percentage of 2.7
percent and are shown in Table B36.
The CY 2024 per-visit payment rates
for HHAs that do not submit the
required quality data are updated by the
proposed CY 2024 home health
payment update percentage of 2.7
percent minus 2 percentage points and
are shown in Table B37.
(4) LUPA Add-On Factors
(72 FR 49848). LUPA episodes that
occur as the only episode or as an initial
episode in a sequence of adjacent
episodes are adjusted by applying an
additional amount to the LUPA
payment before adjusting for area wage
differences. In the CY 2014 HH PPS
final rule (78 FR 72305), we changed the
methodology for calculating the LUPA
add-on amount by finalizing the use of
three LUPA add-on factors: 1.8451 for
SN; 1.6700 for PT; and 1.6266 for SLP.
We multiply the per-visit payment
amount for the first SN, PT, or SLP visit
in LUPA episodes that occur as the only
episode or an initial episode in a
sequence of adjacent episodes by the
appropriate factor to determine the
LUPA add-on payment amount.
In the CY 2019 HH PPS final rule with
comment period (83 FR 56440), in
addition to finalizing a 30-day unit of
payment, we finalized our policy of
continuing to multiply the per-visit
Prior to the implementation of the 30day unit of payment, LUPA episodes
were eligible for a LUPA add-on
payment if the episode of care was the
first or only episode in a sequence of
adjacent episodes. As stated in the CY
2008 HH PPS final rule, the average visit
lengths in these initial LUPAs are 16 to
18 percent higher than the average visit
lengths in initial non-LUPA episodes
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payment amount for the first skilled
nursing, physical therapy, or speechlanguage pathology visit in LUPA
periods that occur as the only period of
care or the initial 30-day period of care
in a sequence of adjacent 30-day periods
of care by the appropriate add-on factor
(1.8451 for SN, 1.6700 for PT, and
1.6266 for SLP) to determine the LUPA
add-on payment amount for 30-day
periods of care under the PDGM. For
example, using the proposed CY 2024
per-visit payment rates for HHAs that
submit the required quality data, for
LUPA periods that occur as the only
period or an initial period in a sequence
of adjacent periods, if the first skilled
visit is SN, the payment for that visit
would be $309.85 (1.8451 multiplied by
$167.93), subject to area wage
adjustment.
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(5) Occupational Therapy LUPA AddOn Factor
In order to implement Division CC,
section 115, of CAA, 2021, CMS
finalized changes to regulations at
§ 484.55(a)(2) and (b)(3) that allowed
occupational therapists to conduct
initial and comprehensive assessments
for all Medicare beneficiaries under the
home health benefit when the plan of
care does not initially include skilled
nursing care, but either PT or SLP (86
FR 62351). This change, led to us
establishing a LUPA add-on factor for
calculating the LUPA add-on payment
amount for the first skilled occupational
therapy (OT) visit in LUPA periods that
occurs as the only period of care or the
initial 30-day period of care in a
sequence of adjacent 30-day periods of
care.
As stated in the CY 2022 HH PPS final
rule with comment period (86 FR
62289) since there was not sufficient
data regarding the average excess of
minutes for the first visit in LUPA
periods when the initial and
comprehensive assessments are
conducted by occupational therapists
we finalized the use of the PT LUPA
add-on factor of 1.6700 as a proxy. We
also stated that we would use the PT
LUPA add-on factor as a proxy until we
have CY 2022 data to establish a more
accurate OT add-on factor for the LUPA
add-on payment amounts (86 FR 62289).
At this time, we are analyzing the CY
2022 data and will continue to use the
PT LUPA add-on factor for OT LUPAs
and plan to propose a LUPA add-on
factor specific to OT in future
rulemaking.
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(6) Payments for High-Cost Outliers
Under the HH PPS
(a) Background
Section 1895(b)(5) of the Act allows
for the provision of an addition or
adjustment to the home health payment
amount otherwise made in the case of
outliers because of unusual variations in
the type or amount of medically
necessary care. Under the HH PPS and
the previous unit of payment (that is,
60-day episodes), outlier payments were
made for 60-day episodes whose
estimated costs exceed a threshold
amount for each HHRG. The episode’s
estimated cost was established as the
sum of the national wage-adjusted per
visit payment amounts delivered during
the episode. The outlier threshold for
each case-mix group or PEP adjustment
defined as the 60-day episode payment
or PEP adjustment for that group plus a
fixed-dollar loss (FDL) amount. For the
purposes of the HH PPS, the FDL
amount is calculated by multiplying the
home health FDL ratio by a case’s wageadjusted national, standardized 60-day
episode payment rate, which yields an
FDL dollar amount for the case. The
outlier threshold amount is the sum of
the wage and case-mix adjusted PPS
episode amount and wage-adjusted FDL
amount. The outlier payment is defined
to be a proportion of the wage-adjusted
estimated cost that surpasses the wageadjusted threshold. The proportion of
additional costs over the outlier
threshold amount paid as outlier
payments is referred to as the losssharing ratio.
As we noted in the CY 2011 HH PPS
final rule (75 FR 70397 through 70399),
section 3131(b)(1) of the Affordable Care
Act amended section 1895(b)(3)(C) of
the Act to require that the Secretary
reduce the HH PPS payment rates such
that aggregate HH PPS payments were
reduced by 5 percent. In addition,
section 3131(b)(2) of the Affordable Care
Act amended section 1895(b)(5) of the
Act by redesignating the existing
language as section 1895(b)(5)(A) of the
Act and revised the language to state
that the total amount of the additional
payments or payment adjustments for
outlier episodes could not exceed 2.5
percent of the estimated total HH PPS
payments for that year. Section
3131(b)(2)(C) of the Affordable Care Act
also added section 1895(b)(5)(B) of the
Act, which capped outlier payments as
a percent of total payments for each
HHA for each year at 10 percent.
As such, beginning in CY 2011, we
reduced payment rates by 5 percent and
targeted up to 2.5 percent of total
estimated HH PPS payments to be paid
as outliers. To do so, we first returned
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the 2.5 percent held for the target CY
2010 outlier pool to the national,
standardized 60-day episode rates, the
national per visit rates, the LUPA addon payment amount, and the NRS
conversion factor for CY 2010. We then
reduced the rates by 5 percent as
required by section 1895(b)(3)(C) of the
Act, as amended by section 3131(b)(1) of
the Affordable Care Act. For CY 2011
and subsequent calendar years we
targeted up to 2.5 percent of estimated
total payments to be paid as outlier
payments, and apply a 10-percent
agency-level outlier cap.
In the CY 2017 HH PPS proposed and
final rules (81 FR 43737 through 43742
and 81 FR 76702), we described our
concerns regarding patterns observed in
home health outlier episodes.
Specifically, we noted the methodology
for calculating home health outlier
payments may have created a financial
incentive for providers to increase the
number of visits during an episode of
care in order to surpass the outlier
threshold; and simultaneously created a
disincentive for providers to treat
medically complex beneficiaries who
require fewer but longer visits. Given
these concerns, in the CY 2017 HH PPS
final rule (81 FR 76702), we finalized
changes to the methodology used to
calculate outlier payments, using a costper-unit approach rather than a cost-pervisit approach. This change in
methodology allows for more accurate
payment for outlier episodes,
accounting for both the number of visits
during an episode of care and the length
of the visits provided. Using this
approach, we now convert the national
per-visit rates into per 15-minute unit
rates. These per 15-minute unit rates are
used to calculate the estimated cost of
an episode to determine whether the
claim will receive an outlier payment
and the amount of payment for an
episode of care. In conjunction with our
finalized policy to change to a cost-perunit approach to estimate episode costs
and determine whether an outlier
episode should receive outlier
payments, in the CY 2017 HH PPS final
rule we also finalized the
implementation of a cap on the amount
of time per day that would be counted
toward the estimation of an episode’s
costs for outlier calculation purposes
(81 FR 76725). Specifically, we limit the
amount of time per day (summed across
the six disciplines of care) to 8 hours (32
units) per day when estimating the cost
of an episode for outlier calculation
purposes.
In the CY 2017 HH PPS final rule (81
FR 76724), we stated that we did not
plan to re-estimate the average minutes
per visit by discipline every year.
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Additionally, the per unit rates used to
estimate an episode’s cost were updated
by the home health update percentage
each year, meaning we would start with
the national per visit amounts for the
same calendar year when calculating the
cost-per-unit used to determine the cost
of an episode of care (81 FR 76727). We
will continue to monitor the visit length
by discipline as more recent data
becomes available, and may propose to
update the rates as needed in the future.
In the CY 2019 HH PPS final rule with
comment period (83 FR 56521), we
finalized a policy to maintain the
current methodology for payment of
high-cost outliers upon implementation
of PDGM beginning in CY 2020 and
calculated payment for high-cost
outliers based upon 30-day period of
care. Upon implementation of the
PDGM and 30-day unit of payment, we
finalized the FDL ratio of 0.56 for 30day periods of care in CY 2020. Given
that CY 2020 was the first year of the
PDGM and the change to a 30-day unit
of payment, we finalized maintaining
the same FDL ratio of 0.56 in CY 2021
as we did not have sufficient CY 2020
data at the time of CY 2021 rulemaking
to propose a change to the FDL ratio for
CY 2021. In the CY 2022 HH PPS final
rule with comment period (86 FR
62292), we estimated that outlier
payments would be approximately 1.8
percent of total HH PPS final rule
payments if we maintained an FDL of
0.56 in CY 2022. Therefore, in order to
pay up to, but no more than, 2.5 percent
of total payments as outlier payments
we finalized an FDL of 0.40 for CY 2022.
In the CY 2023 HH PPS final rule (87
FR 66875), using CY 2021 claims
utilization data, we finalized an FDL of
0.35 in order to pay up to, but no more
than, 2.5 percent of the total payment as
outlier payments in CY 2023.
(b) Proposed FDL Ratio for CY 2024
For a given level of outlier payments,
there is a trade-off between the values
selected for the FDL ratio and the losssharing ratio. A high FDL ratio reduces
the number of periods that can receive
outlier payments, but makes it possible
to select a higher loss-sharing ratio, and
therefore, increase outlier payments for
qualifying outlier periods. Alternatively,
a lower FDL ratio means that more
periods can qualify for outlier
payments, but outlier payments per
period must be lower.
The FDL ratio and the loss-sharing
ratio are selected so that the estimated
total outlier payments do not exceed the
2.5 percent aggregate level (as required
by section 1895(b)(5)(A) of the Act).
Historically, we have used a value of
0.80 for the loss-sharing ratio, which,
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we believe, preserves incentives for
agencies to attempt to provide care
efficiently for outlier cases. With a losssharing ratio of 0.80, Medicare pays 80
percent of the additional estimated costs
that exceed the outlier threshold
amount. Using CY 2022 claims data (as
of March 17, 2023) and given the
statutory requirement that total outlier
payments do not exceed 2.5 percent of
the total payments estimated to be made
under the HH PPS, we are proposing an
FDL ratio of 0.31 for CY 2024. CMS will
update the FDL, if needed, once we
have more complete CY 2022 claims
data.
5. Proposal for Disposable Negative
Pressure Wound Therapy
(1) Background
Negative pressure wound therapy
(NPWT) is a medical procedure in
which a vacuum dressing is used to
enhance and promote healing in acute,
chronic, and burn wounds. The therapy
involves using a sealed wound dressing
attached to a pump to create a negative
pressure environment in the wound.
Applying continued or intermittent
vacuum pressure helps to increase
blood flow to the area and draw out
excess fluid from the wound. Moreover,
the therapy promotes wound healing by
preparing the wound bed for closure,
reducing edema, promoting granulation
tissue formation and perfusion, and
removing exudate and infectious
material. The wound type and the
location of the wound determine
whether the vacuum can either be
applied continuously or intermittently.
NPWT can be utilized for varying
lengths of time, as indicated by the
severity of the wound, from a few days
of use up to a span of several months.
The therapy can be administered
using the conventional NPWT system,
classified as durable medical equipment
(DME), or can be administered using a
disposable device. A disposable NPWT
(dNPWT) device is a single-use
integrated system that consists of a nonmanual vacuum pump, a receptacle for
collecting exudate, and wound
dressings. Unlike conventional NPWT
systems classified as DME, dNPWT
devices have preset continuous negative
pressure, no intermittent setting, are
pocket-sized and easily transportable,
and are generally battery-operated with
disposable batteries.
In order for a beneficiary to receive
dNPWT under the home health benefit,
the beneficiary must qualify for the
home health benefit in accordance with
existing eligibility requirements. To be
eligible for Medicare home health
services, as set out in sections 1814(a)
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and 1835(a) of the Act, a physician must
certify that the Medicare beneficiary
(patient) meets the following criteria:
• Is confined to the home.
• Needs skilled nursing care on an
intermittent basis or physical therapy or
speech-language pathology; or have a
continuing need for occupational
therapy.
• Is under the care of a physician.
• Receive services under a plan of
care established and reviewed by a
physician.
• Has had a face-to-face encounter
related to the primary reason for home
health care with a physician or allowed
Non-Physician Practitioner (NPP)
within a required timeframe.
Coverage for dNPWT is determined
based upon a doctor’s order as well as
patient preference. Treatment decisions
as to whether to use a dNPWT system
versus a conventional NPWT DME
system are determined by the
characteristics of the wound, as well as
patient goals and preferences discussed
with the ordering physician to best
achieve wound healing.
(2) Current Payment for Negative
Pressure Wound Therapy Using a
Disposable Device
Prior to CY 2017, a dNPWT system
was considered a non-routine supply
and thus payment for the disposable
device was included in the episode
payment amount under the previous
home health payment system. However,
section 504 of the CAA, 2016 (Pub. L.
114–113) amended both section 1834 of
the Act (42 U.S.C. 1395m) and section
1861(m)(5) of the Act (42 U.S.C.
1395x(m)(5)), and required a separate
payment for an applicable disposable
device when furnished on or after
January 1, 2017, to an individual who
receives home health services for which
payment is made under the Medicare
home health benefit. Therefore, in the
CY 2017 HH PPS final rule (81 FR
76736), we finalized the implementation
of several changes in payment for
furnishing dNPWT for a patient under a
home health plan of care beginning in
CY 2017, and each subsequent year.
These payment changes included the
implementation of a separate payment
amount for dNPWT that was set equal
to the amount of the payment that
would be made under the Medicare
Hospital Outpatient Prospective
Payment System (OPPS) using the CPT
codes 97607 and 97608. This separate
payment amount included furnishing
the service as well as the dNPWT
device. As a reminder, codes 97607 and
97608 are defined as follows:
• HCPCS 97607—Negative pressure
wound therapy, (for example, vacuum
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assisted drainage collection), utilizing
disposable, non-durable medical
equipment including provision of
exudate management collection system,
topical application(s), wound
assessment, and instructions for ongoing
care, per session; total wound(s) surface
area less than or equal to 50 square
centimeters.
• HCPCS 97608—Negative pressure
wound therapy, (for example, vacuum
assisted drainage collection), utilizing
disposable, non-durable medical
equipment including provision of
exudate management collection system,
topical application(s), wound
assessment, and instructions for ongoing
care, per session; total wound(s) surface
area greater than 50 square centimeters.
We also finalized that for instances
where the sole purpose of a home health
visit is to furnish dNPWT, Medicare
does not pay for the visit under the HH
PPS. Visits performed solely for the
purposes of furnishing a new dNPWT
device are not reported on the HH PPS
claim (TOB 32x). Where a home health
visit is exclusively for the purpose of
furnishing dNPWT, the HHA submits
only a TOB 34x. However, if the home
health visit includes the provision of
other home health services in addition
to, and separate from, furnishing
dNPWT, the HHA submits both a TOB
32x and TOB 34x—the TOB 32x for
other home health services and the TOB
34x for furnishing NPWT using a
disposable device. Payment for home
health visits related to wound care, but
not requiring the furnishing of an
entirely new dNPWT device, are
covered by the HH PPS 30-day period
payment and must be billed using the
home health claim.
(3) CAA, 2023
Division FF, section 4136 of the CAA,
2023 (Pub. L.117–328) amends section
1834 of the Act (42 U.S.C. 1395m(s)),
and mandates several amendments to
the Medicare separate payment for
dNPWT devices beginning in CY 2024.
Section 4136(a) of the CAA, 2023
amends 1834(s)(3) of the Act by adding
subparagraph (A) which outlines the
calculation of the payment amounts for
(i) years prior to CY 2024, (ii) CY 2024,
(iii) CY 2025; and each subsequent year.
As discussed previously, for a year prior
to CY 2024, the amount of the separate
payment was set equal to the amount of
the payment that would be made under
the Medicare Hospital OPPS using the
CPT codes 97607 and 97608 and
included the professional service as
well as the furnishing of the device. For
CY 2024, the CAA, 2023 requires that
the separate payment amount for an
applicable dNPWT device would be set
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equal to the supply price used to
determine the relative value for the
service under the Physician Fee
Schedule (PFS) under section 1848 as of
January 1, 2022 (CY 2022) updated by
the specified adjustment described in
subparagraph (B) for such year. For 2025
and each subsequent year, the CAA,
2023 requires that the separate payment
amount will be set equal to the payment
amount established for the device in the
previous year, updated by the specified
adjustment described in subparagraph
(B) for such year.
Division FF section 4136 of the CAA,
2023 also adds a new subparagraph
1834(s)(3)(B), which requires that the
separate payment amount to be adjusted
by the percent increase in the CPI–U for
the 12-month period ending with June
of the preceding year minus the
productivity adjustment described in
section 1886(b)(3)(B)(xi)(II) for such
year. Accordingly, this may result in a
percentage being less than 0.0 for a year,
and may result in payment being less
than such payment rates for the
preceding year.
Section 1834(s)(3)(C) of the Act, as
added by Division FF, section 4136 of
the CAA, 2023, specifies that the
separate payment amount for applicable
devices furnished on or after January 1,
2024, would no longer include payment
for nursing or therapy services
described in section 1861(m) of the Act.
Payment for such nursing or therapy
services would now be made under the
prospective payment system established
under section 1895 of the Act, the HH
PPS, and is no longer separately
billable.
Division FF, section 4136 of the CAA,
2023 also added a new paragraph
1834(s)(4) of the Act that mandates a
change in claims processing for the
separate payment amount for an
applicable disposable device. Beginning
in CY 2024 and each subsequent year,
claims for the separate payment amount
of an applicable dNPWT device would
now be accepted and processed on
claims submitted using the type of bill
that is most commonly used by home
health agencies to bill services under a
home health plan of care (TOB 32X).
That is, claims with a date of service on
or after January 1, 2024 for an applicable
dNPWT device will no longer be
submitted on TOB 34X.
(4) Proposed Payment Policies for
dNPWT Devices
For the purposes of paying for a
dNPWT device for a patient under a
Medicare home health plan of care,
CMS is proposing that the payment
amount for CY 2024 would be equal to
the supply price of the applicable
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disposable device under the Medicare
PFS (as of January 1, 2022) updated by
the specified adjustment as mandated
by the CAA, 2023. The supply price of
an applicable disposable device under
the Medicare PFS for January 1, 2022 is
$263.25. Therefore, the payment amount
for CY 2024 would be set equal to the
amount of $263.25 updated by the
percent increase in the CPI–U for the 12month period ending in June of 2023
minus the productivity adjustment. We
note that the CPI–U for the 12-month
period ending with June of 2023 is not
available at the time of this proposed
rulemaking. The CPI–U for the 12month period ending in June of 2023
and the corresponding productivity
adjustment will be updated in the final
rule. We are also proposing that the
separate payment for CY 2025 and each
subsequent year would be based on the
established payment amount for the
previous calendar year updated by the
percentage increase in the CPI–U minus
the productivity adjustment for the 12month period ending in June of the
previous year. The application of
productivity adjustment may result in a
net update that may be less than 0.0 for
a year, and may result in the separate
payment amount under this subsection
for an applicable device for a year being
less than such separate payment amount
for such device for the preceding year.
In accordance with the changes made
by the CAA, 2023, we are also proposing
that claims reported for a dNPWT
device would no longer be reported on
TOB 34x. Instead, for dates of service
beginning on or after January 1, 2024,
the HHA would report the Healthcare
Common Procedure Coding System
(HCPCS) code A9272 (for the device
only) on the home health type of bill
TOB 32. The code HCPCS A9272 is
defined as a wound suction, disposable,
includes dressing, all accessories and
components, any type, each. We will
provide education and develop
materials outlining the new billing
procedures for dNPWT under the home
health benefit including MLN Matters®
articles and manual guidance after
publication of the CY 2024 HH PPS final
rule.
We are also proposing that the
services related to the application of the
device would be included in the HH
PPS and would be excluded from the
separate payment amount for the device.
In addition, only the home health
services for the administration of the
device would be geographically
adjusted and the payment amount for
HCPCS A9272 would not be subject to
geographic adjustment.
We are soliciting public comment on
all aspects of the proposed payment
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policies for furnishing a dNPWT device
as articulated in this section as well as
the corresponding proposed regulations
text changes at § 409.50 and § 484.202.
III. Home Health Quality Reporting
Program (HH QRP)
A. Background and Statutory Authority
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The HH QRP is authorized by section
1895(b)(3)(B)(v) of the Act. Section
1895(b)(3)(B)(v)(II) of the Act requires
that, for 2007 and subsequent years,
each home health agency (HHA) submit
to the Secretary in a form and manner,
and at a time, specified by the Secretary,
such data that the Secretary determines
are appropriate for the measurement of
health care quality. To the extent that an
HHA does not submit data in
accordance with this clause, the
Secretary shall reduce the home health
market basket percentage increase
applicable to the HHA for such year by
2 percentage points. As provided at
section 1895(b)(3)(B)(vi) of the Act,
depending on the market basket
percentage increase applicable for a
particular year, as further reduced by
the productivity adjustment (except in
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2018 and 2020) described in section
1886(b)(3)(B)(xi)(II) of the Act, the
reduction of that increase by 2
percentage points for failure to comply
with the requirements of the HH QRP
may result in the home health market
basket percentage increase being less
than 0.0 percent for a year, and may
result in payment rates under the Home
Health PPS for a year being less than
payment rates for the preceding year.
Section 1890A of the Act requires that
the Secretary establish and follow a prerulemaking process, in coordination
with the consensus-based entity (CBE)
with a contract under section 1890 of
the Act, to solicit input from certain
groups regarding the selection of quality
and efficiency measures for the HH
QRP. The HH QRP regulations can be
found at 42 CFR 484.245 and 484.250.
In this proposed rule, we are
proposing to adopt two new measures
and remove one existing measure.
Second, we propose the removal of two
OASIS items. Third, we are proposing to
begin public reporting of four measures
in the HH QRP. Fourth, we are
providing an update on our efforts to
close the health equity gap. Fifth, we
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propose codifying of our 90 percent data
submission threshold policy in the Code
of Federal Regulations. Lastly, we are
seeking information on principles we
could use to select and prioritize HH
QRP quality measures in future years.
These proposals are further specified in
the following sections.
B. General Considerations Used for the
Selection of Quality Measures for the
HH QRP
For a detailed discussion of the
considerations we historically use for
measure selection for the HH QRP
quality, resource use, and other
measures, we refer readers to the CY
2016 HH PPS final rule (80 FR 68695
through 68696). In the CY 2019 HH PPS
final rule with comment period (83 FR
56548 through 56550) we finalized the
factors we consider for removing
previously adopted HH QRP measures.
C. Quality Measures Currently Adopted
for the CY 2024 HH QRP
The HH QRP currently includes 20
measures for the CY 2023 program year,
as described in Table C1.
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D. HH QRP Quality Measure Proposals
Beginning With the CY 2025 HH QRP
1. Discharge Function Score Measure
Beginning With the CY 2025 HH QRP
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a. Background
Eligibility for Medicare’s home health
benefit stipulates that beneficiaries must
need part-time (fewer than eight hours
per day) or intermittent skilled care for
their medical conditions and be unable
to leave their homes without
considerable effort. Unlike skilled
nursing facilities, a proceeding hospital
stay is not required for beneficiaries to
access the Medicare home health
benefit.18 HH patients frequently have
complex medical issues, including
cardiac, circulatory and respiratory
conditions, and between 30–40 percent
of HH patients begin their episode of
care with a high level of functional
debility.19 Measuring functional status
of HH patients can provide valuable
information about an HHA’s quality of
care. A patient’s functional status is
associated with institutionalization,20
higher risk of falls and falls-related hip
fracture and death,21 22 greater risk of
undernutrition,23 higher emergency
department admissions,24 higher risk of
readmissions following home care 25 26
18 Medicare Payment Advisory Commission.
(2022). March 2022 report to the congress: Medicare
payment policy. Washington, DC: Medicare
Payment Advisory Commission.
19 Medicare Payment Advisory Commission.
(2022). March 2022 report to the congress: Medicare
payment policy. Washington, DC: Medicare
Payment Advisory Commission.
20 Hajek, A., Brettschneider, C., Lange, C., Posselt,
T., Wiese, B., Steinmann, S., Weyerer, S., Werle, J.,
Pentzek, M., Fuchs, A., Stein, J., Luck, T., Bickel,
H., Mo¨sch, E., Wagner, M., Jessen, F., Maier, W.,
Scherer, M., Riedel-Heller, S.G., Ko¨nig, H.H., &
AgeCoDe Study Group. (2015). Longitudinal
Predictors of Institutionalization in Old Age. PLoS
One, 10(12):e0144203.
21 Akahane, M., Maeyashiki, A., Yoshihara, S.,
Tanaka, Y., & Imamura, T. (2016). Relationship
between difficulties in daily activities and falling:
loco-check as a self-assessment of fall risk.
Interactive Journal of Medical Research, 5(2), e20.
22 Zaslavsky, O., Zelber-Sagi, S., Gray, S.L.,
LaCroix, A.Z., Brunner, R.L., Wallace, R.B., . . .
Woods, N.F. (2016). Comparison of Frailty
Phenotypes for Prediction of Mortality, Incident
Falls, and Hip Fracture in Older Women. Journal of
the American Geriatrics Society, 64(9), 1858–1862.
23 van der Pols-Vijlbrief, R., Wijnhoven, H.A.H.,
Bosmans, J.E., Twisk, J.W.R., & Visser, M. (2016).
Targeting the underlying causes of undernutrition.
Cost-effectiveness of a multifactorial personalized
intervention in community-dwelling older adults: A
randomized controlled trial. Clinical Nutrition
(Edinburgh, Scotland).
24 Hominick, K., McLeod, V., & Rockwood, K.
(2016). Characteristics of older adults admitted to
hospital versus those discharged home, in
emergency department patients referred to internal
medicine. Canadian Geriatrics Journal: CGJ, 19(1),
9–14.
25 Knox, S., Downer, B., Haas, A., Middleton, A.,
& Ottenbacher, K.J. (2020). Function and caregiver
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and higher prevalence of hypertension
and diabetes.27 Predictors of poorer
recovery in function include greater age,
complications after hospital discharge,
and residence in a nursing home.28
Understanding factors associated with
poorer functional recovery facilitates the
ability to estimate expected functional
outcome recovery for patients, based on
their personal characteristics.
Home health care can positively
impact functional outcomes. There is
evidence the provision of home care
services can lead to statistically
significant improvements in function
and successful discharge into the
community.29 In stroke patients, homebased rehabilitation programs
administered by home health clinicians
significantly improved function.30
Home health services, delivered by a
registered nurse positively impacted
patient Quality of Life (QOL) and
clinical outcomes, including significant
improvement in dressing lower body
and bathing activities of daily living,
meal preparation, shopping, and
housekeeping instrumental activities of
daily living.31 In addition, a
retrospective study, using data
abstracted from the Minimum Data Set
and OASIS, reported that nursing home
admissions were delayed in the study
population receiving home health
services by an average of eight months 32
support associated with readmissions during home
health for individuals with dementia. Archives of
physical medicine and rehabilitation, 101(6), 1009–
1016.
26 Middleton, A. Downer, B., Haas, A., Knox, S.,
& Ottenbacher, K.J. (2019) Functional status ss
associated with 30-day potentially preventable
readmissions following home health Care. Medical
Care, 57(2):145–151.
27 Halaweh, H., Willen, C., Grimby-Ekman, A., &
Svantesson, U. (2015). Physical activity and healthrelated quality of life among community dwelling
elderly. J Clin Med Res, 7(11), 845–52.
28 Co
´ rcoles-Jime´nez, M.P., Villada-Munera, A.,
Del Egido-Fernandez, M.A., Candel-Parra, E.,
Moreno-Moreno, M., Jimenez-Sanchez, M.D., &
Pina-Martinez, A. (2015). Recovery of activities of
daily living among older people one year after hip
fracture. Clinical Nursing Research, 24(6), 604–623.
29 Bowles, K.H., McDonald, M., Barron, Y.,
Kennedy, E., O’Connor, M., & Mikkelsen, M. (2021).
Surviving COVID–19 after hospital discharge:
symptom, functional, and adverse outcomes of
home health recipients. Annals of internal
medicine, 174(3), 316–325.
30 Asiri, F.Y., Marchetti, G.F., Ellis, J.L., Otis, L.,
Sparto, P.J., Watzlaf, V., & Whitney, S.L. (2014).
Predictors of functional and gait outcomes for
persons poststroke undergoing home-based
rehabilitation. Journal of Stroke and
Cerebrovascular Diseases: The Official Journal of
National Stroke Association, 23(7), 1856–1864.
31 Co
´ rcoles-Jime´nez, M.P., Villada-Munera, A.,
Del Egido-Fernandez, M.A., Candel-Parra, E.,
Moreno-Moreno, M., Jimenez-Sanchez, M.D., &
Pina-Martinez, A. (2015). Recovery of activities of
daily living among older people one year after hip
fracture. Clinical Nursing Research, 24(6), 604–623.
32 Asiri, F.Y., Marchetti, G.F., Ellis, J.L., Otis, L.,
Sparto, P.J., Watzlaf, V., & Whitney, S.L. (2014).
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and for a similar population,
community dwelling adults receiving
community-based services supporting
aging in place, health and functional
outcomes were enhanced, and improved
cognition and lower rates of depression,
function assistance, and incontinence
were noted.33
To satisfy the requirement of the
Improving Medicare Post-Acute Care
Transformation (IMPACT) Act of 2014
(Pub. L. 113–185) to develop and
implement standardized quality
measures from five quality measure
domains, including the domain of
functional status, cognitive function,
and changes in function and cognitive
function, across the post-acute care
(PAC) settings, CMS adopted the
‘‘Application of Percent of Long-Term
Care Hospital Patients with an
Admission and Discharge Functional
Assessment and a Care Plan That
Addresses Function’’ (Application of
Functional Assessment/Care Plan)
measure in the CY 2018 HH PPS final
rule (82 FR 51722 through 51725). This
cross-setting process measure allowed
for the standardization of functional
assessments across assessment
instruments and facilitated cross-setting
data collection, quality measurement,
and interoperable data exchange.
However, performance on this
measure across the PAC settings,
including the range of HHAs, is so high
and unvarying across most HH
providers that the measure no longer
offers meaningful distinctions in
performance. Several measures
addressing functional status are
currently part of the PAC QRPs. None of
the existing functional outcome
measures are cross-setting in nature, in
that they are either (a) not implemented
in all four settings (for instance, the
‘‘Discharge Mobility and Self-Care
Score’’ measures are reported for SNFs
and IRFs but not for LTCHs and HHAs);
or (b) rely on functional status items not
collected in all settings (for instance, the
‘‘Discharge Mobility and Self-Care
Score’’ measures rely on items not
collected in LTCHs). In contrast, a crosssetting functional outcome measure
would include the HH setting.
Moreover, the measure specifications
would be aligned across settings,
including the use of a common set of
standardized functional assessment data
Predictors of functional and gait outcomes for
persons poststroke undergoing home-based
rehabilitation. Journal of Stroke and
Cerebrovascular Diseases: The Official Journal of
National Stroke Association, 23(7), 1856–1864.
33 Han, S.J., Kim, H.K., Storfjell, J., & Kim, M.J.
(2013). Clinical outcomes and quality of life of
home health care patients. Asian Nursing Research,
7(2), 53–60.
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elements, thereby satisfying the
requirements of the IMPACT Act.
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(1) Measure Importance
Maintenance or improvement of
physical function among older adults is
increasingly an important focus of
healthcare. Worldwide, close to 20
percent of older adults living at home
report needing some form of assistance
with their ADLs, and in the US 29
percent of older adults report
difficulties completing their activities of
daily living (ADLs).34 Adults aged 65
years and older constitute the most
rapidly growing population in the
United States, and functional capacity
in physical (non-psychological)
domains has been shown to decline
with age.35 Moreover, impaired
functional capacity is associated with
poorer quality of life and an increased
risk of all-cause mortality, postoperative
complications, and cognition, the latter
of which can complicate the return of a
patient to the community from postacute care if the patient exhibits
cognitive deficits.36 37 38 Nonetheless,
evidence suggests that physical
functional abilities, including mobility
and self-care, are modifiable predictors
of patient outcomes across PAC settings,
including functional recovery or decline
after post-acute care,39 40 41 42 43
34 Chen, S., Jones, L.A., Jiang, S., Jin, H., Dong,
D., Chen, X., . . . Zhu, A. (2022). Difficulty and
help with activities of daily living among older
adults living alone during the COVID–19 pandemic:
a multi-country population-based study. BMC
geriatrics, 22(1), 1–14.
35 High KP, Zieman S, Gurwitz J, Hill C, Lai J,
Robinson T, Schonberg M, Whitson H. Use of
Functional Assessment to Define Therapeutic Goals
and Treatment. J Am Geriatr Soc. 2019
Sep;67(9):1782–1790. doi: 10.1111/jgs.15975. Epub
2019 May 13. PMID: 31081938; PMCID:
PMC6955596.
36 Clouston SA, Brewster P, Kuh D, Richards M,
Cooper R, Hardy R, Rubin MS, Hofer SM. The
dynamic relationship between physical function
and cognition in longitudinal aging cohorts.
Epidemiol Rev. 2013;35(1):33–50. doi: 10.1093/
epirev/mxs004. Epub 2013 Jan 24. PMID: 23349427;
PMCID: PMC3578448.
37 Michael YL, Colditz GA, Coakley E, Kawachi I.
Health Behaviors, Social Networks, and Healthy
Aging: Cross-Sectional Evidence from the Nurses’
Health Study. Qual Life Res. 1999 Dec;8(8):711–22.
doi: 10.1023/a:1008949428041. PMID: 10855345.
38 High KP, Zieman S, Gurwitz J, Hill C, Lai J,
Robinson T, Schonberg M, Whitson H. Use of
Functional Assessment to Define Therapeutic Goals
and Treatment. J Am Geriatr Soc. 2019
Sep;67(9):1782–1790. doi: 10.1111/jgs.15975. Epub
2019 May 13. PMID: 31081938; PMCID:
PMC6955596.
39 Deutsch A, Palmer L, Vaughan M, Schwartz C,
McMullen T. Inpatient Rehabilitation Facility
Patients’ Functional Abilities and Validity
Evaluation of the Standardized Self-Care and
Mobility Data Elements. Arch Phys Med Rehabil.
2022 Feb 11:S0003–9993(22)00205–2. doi: 10.1016/
j.apmr.2022.01.147. Epub ahead of print. PMID:
35157893.
40 Hong I, Goodwin JS, Reistetter TA, Kuo YF,
Mallinson T, Karmarkar A, Lin YL, Ottenbacher KJ.
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rehospitalization rates,44 45 46 discharge
to community,47 48 and falls.49
The implementation of interventions
that improve patients’ functional
outcomes and reduce the risks of
associated undesirable outcomes as a
part of a patient-centered care plan is
essential to maximizing functional
improvement. For many people, the
overall goals of HH care may include
optimizing functional improvement,
returning to a previous level of
Comparison of Functional Status Improvements
Among Patients With Stroke Receiving Postacute
Care in Inpatient Rehabilitation vs Skilled Nursing
Facilities. JAMA Netw Open. 2019 Dec
2;2(12):e1916646. doi: 10.1001/
jamanetworkopen.2019.16646. PMID: 31800069;
PMCID: PMC6902754.
41 Alcusky M, Ulbricht CM, Lapane KL. Postacute
Care Setting, Facility Characteristics, and Poststroke
Outcomes: A Systematic Review. Arch Phys Med
Rehabil. 2018;99(6):1124–1140.e9. doi: 10.1016/
j.apmr.2017.09.005. PMID: 28965738; PMCID:
PMC5874162.
42 Chu CH, Quan AML, McGilton KS. Depression
and Functional Mobility Decline in Long Term Care
Home Residents with Dementia: a Prospective
Cohort Study. Can Geriatr J. 2021;24(4):325–331.
doi:10.5770/cgj.24.511. PMID: 34912487; PMCID:
PMC8629506.
43 Lane NE, Stukel TA, Boyd CM, Wodchis WP.
Long-Term Care Residents’ Geriatric Syndromes at
Admission and Disablement Over Time: An
Observational Cohort Study. J Gerontol A Biol Sci
Med Sci. 2019;74(6):917–923. doi: 10.1093/gerona/
gly151. PMID: 29955879; PMCID: PMC6521919.
44 Li CY, Haas A, Pritchard KT, Karmarkar A, Kuo
YF, Hreha K, Ottenbacher KJ. Functional Status
Across Post-Acute Settings is Associated With 30Day and 90-Day Hospital Readmissions. J Am Med
Dir Assoc. 2021 Dec;22(12):2447–2453.e5. doi:
10.1016/j.jamda.2021.07.039. Epub 2021 Aug 30.
PMID: 34473961; PMCID: PMC8627458.
45 Middleton A, Graham JE, Lin YL, Goodwin JS,
Bettger JP, Deutsch A, Ottenbacher KJ. Motor and
Cognitive Functional Status Are Associated with
30-day Unplanned Rehospitalization Following
Post-Acute Care in Medicare Fee-for-Service
Beneficiaries. J Gen Intern Med. 2016
Dec;31(12):1427–1434. doi: 10.1007/s11606–016–
3704–4. Epub 2016 Jul 20. PMID: 27439979; PMCID:
PMC5130938.
46 Gustavson AM, Malone DJ, Boxer RS, Forster
JE, Stevens-Lapsley JE. Application of HighIntensity Functional Resistance Training in a
Skilled Nursing Facility: An Implementation Study.
Phys Ther. 2020;100(10):1746–1758. doi: 10.1093/
ptj/pzaa126. PMID: 32750132; PMCID:
PMC7530575.
47 Minor M, Jaywant A, Toglia J, Campo M, O’Dell
MW. Discharge Rehabilitation Measures Predict
Activity Limitations in Patients with Stroke Six
Months after Inpatient Rehabilitation. Am J Phys
Med Rehabil. 2021 Oct 20. doi: 10.1097/
PHM.0000000000001908. Epub ahead of print.
PMID: 34686630.
48 Dubin R, Veith JM, Grippi MA, McPeake J,
Harhay MO, Mikkelsen ME. Functional Outcomes,
Goals, and Goal Attainment among Chronically
Critically Ill Long-Term Acute Care Hospital
Patients. Ann Am Thorac Soc. 2021;18(12):2041–
2048. doi: 10.1513/AnnalsATS.202011–1412OC.
PMID: 33984248; PMCID: PMC8641806.
49 Hoffman GJ, Liu H, Alexander NB, Tinetti M,
Braun TM, Min LC. Posthospital Fall Injuries and
30-Day Readmissions in Adults 65 Years and Older.
JAMA Netw Open. 2019 May 3;2(5):e194276. doi:
10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2019.4276. PMID:
31125100; PMCID: PMC6632136.
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independence, maintaining functional
abilities, or avoiding
institutionalization. Studies have
suggested that HH care has the potential
to improve patients’ functional abilities
including the performance of ADLs at
discharge through the provision of
physical and occupational therapy
services for community dwelling older
adult patients with various diagnoses,
including dementia.50 51 52 53 54 55
Assessing functional status as a health
outcome in HH can thus provide
valuable information in determining
treatment decisions throughout the care
continuum, the need for therapy service,
and discharge planning,56 57 58 as well as
provide information to consumers about
the effectiveness of the care delivered.
Because evidence shows that older
adults experience aging heterogeneously
and require individualized and
comprehensive health care, functional
status can serve as a vital component in
informing the provision of health care
50 Knox, S., Downer, B., Haas, A., & Ottenbacher,
K.J. (2022). Home health utilization association
with discharge to community for people with
dementia. Alzheimer’s & Dementia: Translational
Research & Clinical Interventions, 8(1), e12341.
51 Prvu Bettger, J., McCoy, L., Smith, E.E.,
Fonarow, G.C., Schwamm, L.H., & Peterson, E.D.
(2015). Contemporary trends and predictors of
postacute service use and routine discharge home
after stroke. Journal of the American Heart
Association, 4(2), e001038.
52 Golding-Day M, Whitehead P, Radford K,
Walker M. Interventions to reduce dependency in
bathing in community dwelling older adults: a
systematic review. Syst Rev. 2017 Oct 11;6(1):198.
doi: 10.1186/s13643–017–0586–4. PMID: 29020974;
PMCID: PMC5637353.
53 Foster, E.R., Carson, L. G., Archer, J., & Hunter,
E.G. (2021). Occupational therapy interventions for
instrumental activities of daily living for adults
with Parkinson’s disease: A systematic review. The
American Journal of Occupational Therapy, 75(3).
54 Anderson, W.L., & Wiener, J.M. (2015). The
impact of assistive technologies on formal and
informal home care. The Gerontologist, 55(3), 422–
433.
55 Knox, S., Downer, B., Haas, A., Middleton, A.,
& Ottenbacher, K.J. (2020). Function and caregiver
support associated with readmissions during home
health for individuals with dementia. Archives of
physical medicine and rehabilitation, 101(6), 1009–
1016.
56 Dubin R, Veith JM, Grippi MA, McPeake J,
Harhay MO, Mikkelsen ME. Functional Outcomes,
Goals, and Goal Attainment among Chronically
Critically Ill Long-Term Acute Care Hospital
Patients. Ann Am Thorac Soc. 2021;18(12):2041–
2048. doi:10.1513/AnnalsATS.202011–1412OC.
PMID: 33984248; PMCID: PMC8641806.
57 Warren M, Knecht J, Verheijde J, Tompkins J.
Association of AM–PAC ‘‘6-Clicks’’ Basic Mobility
and Daily Activity Scores With Discharge
Destination. Phys Ther. 2021 Apr 4;101(4): pzab043.
doi: 10.1093/ptj/pzab043. PMID: 33517463.
58 Cogan AM, Weaver JA, McHarg M, Leland NE,
Davidson L, Mallinson T. Association of Length of
Stay, Recovery Rate, and Therapy Time per Day
With Functional Outcomes After Hip Fracture
Surgery. JAMA Netw Open. 2020 Jan
3;3(1):e1919672. doi: 10.1001/
jamanetworkopen.2019.19672. PMID: 31977059;
PMCID: PMC6991278.
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and thus indicate HH quality of
care.59 60 61 62
We are proposing to adopt the
Discharge Function Score (DC Function)
measure 63 in the HH QRP beginning
with the CY 2025 HHQRP. This
assessment-based outcome measure
evaluates functional status by
calculating the percentage of HH
patients who meet or exceed an
expected discharge function score. We
are proposing that this measure would
replace the topped-out, cross-setting
Application of Functional Assessment/
Care Plan process measure. Like the
cross-setting process measure it is
replacing, the proposed measure is
calculated using standardized patient
assessment data from the current HH
assessment tool.
In addition to meeting the
requirements of the Act, the DC
Function measure supports current CMS
priorities. Specifically, the measure
aligns with the Streamline Quality
Measurement domain in CMS’s
Meaningful Measures 2.0 framework 64
in two ways. First, the proposed
outcome measure would further CMS’s
objective to increase the proportion of
outcome measures in the HH QRP by
replacing the Application of Functional
Assessment/Care Plan cross-setting
process measure with an outcome
measure (see Section III.2 of this
proposed rule). Second, this measure
adds no additional provider burden
since it would be calculated using data
from the OASIS that are already
reported to the Medicare program for
payment and quality reporting
purposes.
The proposed DC Function measure
would also follow a calculation
approach similar to the existing
functional outcome measures.
Specifically, the measure (1) considers
two dimensions of function (that is, selfcare and mobility activities) and (2)
accounts for missing data by using
statistical imputation to improve the
validity of measure performance. The
statistical imputation recodes missing
functional status data to a likely value
had the status been assessed, whereas
the current imputation approach
implemented in existing function
outcome measures recodes missing data
to the lowest functional status.
Validity testing of the risk adjustment
model showed good model
discrimination, as the measure model
has the predictive ability to distinguish
patients with low expected functional
capabilities from those with high
expected functional capabilities.65 The
ratios of observed-to-predicted
discharge function score across eligible
episodes, by deciles of expected
functional capabilities, ranged from 0.98
to 1.01. Both the Cross-Setting Discharge
Function TEPs and patient-family
feedback showed strong support for the
face validity and importance of the
proposed measure as an indicator of
quality of care. Lastly, validity testing of
the measure’s statistical imputation
models indicated that the models
demonstrate good discrimination and
produce more precise and accurate
estimates of function scores for items
with missing scores when compared to
adopting the current imputation
approach implemented in the SNF QRP
functional outcome measures,
specifically Change in Self-Care Score
measure, Change in Mobility Score
measure, Application of IRF Functional
Outcome Measure: Discharge Self-Care
Score for Medical Rehabilitation
Patients (CBE ID #2635) (Discharge SelfCare Score) measure, and Application of
IRF Functional Outcome Measure:
Discharge Mobility Score for Medical
Rehabilitation Patients (CBE ID #2636)
(Discharge Mobility Score) measure. The
current imputation approach involves
recoding ‘‘Activity Not Attempted’’
(ANA) codes to ‘‘1’’ or ‘‘most
dependent.’’
59 Chase, J.-A. D., Huang, L., Russell, D., Hanlon,
A., O’Connor, M., Robinson, K.M., & Bowles, K.H.
(2018). Racial/ethnic disparities in disability
outcomes among post-acute home care patients.
Journal of aging and health, 30(9), 1406–1426.
60 Fashaw-Walters, S.A., Rahman, M., Gee, G.,
Mor, V., White, M., & Thomas, K.S. (2022). Out Of
Reach: Inequities In The Use Of High-Quality Home
Health Agencies: Study examines inequities in the
use of high-quality home health agencies. Health
Affairs, 41(2), 247–255.
61 Criss MG, Wingood M, Staples WH, Southard
V, Miller KL, Norris TL, Avers D, Ciolek CH, Lewis
CB, Strunk ER. APTA Geriatrics’ Guiding Principles
for Best Practices in Geriatric Physical Therapy: An
Executive Summary. J Geriatr Phys Ther. 2022 AprJune;45(2):70–75. doi: 10.1519/
JPT.0000000000000342. PMID: 35384940.
62 Cogan AM, Weaver JA, McHarg M, Leland NE,
Davidson L, Mallinson T. Association of Length of
Stay, Recovery Rate, and Therapy Time per Day
With Functional Outcomes After Hip Fracture
Surgery. JAMA Netw Open. 2020 Jan
3;3(1):e1919672. doi: 10.1001/
jamanetworkopen.2019.19672. PMID: 31977059;
PMCID: PMC6991278.
63 Discharge Function Score for Home Health
Agencies (HHAs) Technical Report, which is
available at https://www.cms.gov/files/document/
hh-discharge-function-score-measure-technicalreport.pdf.
64 https://www.cms.gov/medicare/meaningfulmeasures-framework/meaningful-measures-20moving-measure-reduction-modernization, accessed
February 1, 2023.
65 ‘‘Expected functional capabilities’’ is defined as
the predicted discharge function score.
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(b) Measure Testing
Measure testing was conducted on the
DC Function measure to assess validity,
reliability, and reportability, all of
which informed stakeholder feedback
and Technical Expert Panel (TEP) input
(See the Stakeholder and Technical
Expert Panel (TEP) Input section of this
proposed rule). Validity was assessed
for the measure performance, the risk
adjustment model, face validity, and
statistical imputation models. Validity
testing of measure performance entailed
determining Spearman’s rank
correlations between the proposed
measure’s performance and the
performance of other publicly reported
HH quality measures. Results indicated
that the measure captures the most
probable determination of actual
outcomes based on the directionalities
and strengths of correlation coefficients
and are further detailed in Table C2.
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Reliability and reportability testing
also yielded results that support the
measure’s scientific acceptability. Splithalf testing revealed the proposed
measure’s excellent reliability,
indicating an intraclass correlation
coefficient value of 0.94. Reportability
testing indicated good reportability (79
percent) of providers meeting the public
reporting threshold of 20 eligible
episodes. For additional measure testing
details, we refer readers to the
document titled Discharge Function
Score for Home Health Agencies (HHAs)
Technical Report, which is available at
https://www.cms.gov/files/document/
hh-discharge-function-score-measuretechnical-report.pdf.
b. Competing and Related Measures
Section 1899B(e)(2)(A) of the Act
requires that, absent an exception under
section 1899B(e)(2)(B) of the Act,
measures specified under section 1899B
of the Act be endorsed by the entity
with a contract under section 1890(a). In
the case of a specified area or medical
topic determined appropriate by the
Secretary for which a feasible and
practical measure has not been
endorsed, section 1899B(e)(2)(B)
permits the Secretary to specify a
measure that is not so endorsed, as long
as due consideration is given to
measures that have been endorsed or
adopted by a consensus organization
identified by the Secretary.
The proposed DC Function measure is
not CBE-endorsed, so we considered
whether there are other available
measures that (1) assess both functional
domains of self-care and mobility in
HHs and (2) satisfy the requirement of
the Act to develop and implement
standardized quality measures from the
quality measure domain of functional
status, cognitive function, and changes
in function and cognitive function
across the PAC settings. While the
Application of Functional Assessment/
Care Plan measure assesses both
functional domains and satisfies the
Act’s requirement, this cross-setting
process measure is not CBE-endorsed
and the performance on this measure
among HHs is so high and unvarying
across most providers that the measure
does not offer meaningful distinctions
in performance. Additionally, after
review of the CBE’s consensus-endorsed
measures, we were unable to identify
any CBE-endorsed measures for HHs
that meet the aforementioned
requirements.
Therefore, after consideration of other
available measures, we find that the
exception under section 1899B(e)(2)(B)
of the Act applies and are proposing to
adopt the DC Function measure
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beginning with the CY 2025 HH QRP.
We intend to submit the proposed
measure to the CBE for consideration of
endorsement when feasible.
c. Interested Parties and Technical
Expert Panel (TEP) Input
In our development and specification
of this measure, we employed a
transparent process in which we sought
input from stakeholders and national
experts and engaged in a process that
allowed for pre-rulemaking input, in
accordance with section 1890A of the
Act. To meet this requirement, we
provided the following opportunities for
stakeholder input: a Patient and Family
Engagement Listening Session, two
TEPs, and public comments through a
request for information (RFI).
First, the measure development
contractor convened a Patient and
Family Engagement Listening Session,
during which patients and caregivers
provided views on the proposed
measure concept. Participants expressed
support and emphasized the importance
of measuring functional outcomes and
found self-care and mobility to be
critical aspects of care. Additionally,
they expressed a strong interest in
metrics assessing the number of patients
discharged from particular agencies or
facilities with improvements in self-care
and mobility, and their views of selfcare and mobility aligned with the
functional domains captured by the
proposed measure. All feedback was
used to inform measure development
efforts.
The measure development contractor
subsequently convened TEPs on July
14–15, 2021 and January 26–27, 2022 to
obtain expert input on the development
of DC Function measure for use in the
HH QRP. The TEPs consisted of
stakeholders with a diverse range of
expertise, including HH and PAC
subject matter knowledge, clinical
expertise, patient and family
perspectives, and measure development
experience. The TEPs supported the
proposed measure concept and
provided substantive feedback regarding
the measure’s specifications and
measure testing data. First, the TEP was
asked whether they prefer a crosssetting measure that is modeled after the
Inpatient Rehabilitation Facility (IRF)
Functional Outcome Measure: Discharge
Mobility Score for Medical
Rehabilitation Patients (CBE ID #2636)
(Discharge Mobility Score) and IRF
Functional Outcome Measure: Discharge
Self-Care Score for Medical
Rehabilitation Patients (CBE ID #2635)
(Discharge Self-Care Score) measures, or
one that is modeled after the IRF
Functional Outcome Measure: Change
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in Mobility for Medical Rehabilitation
Patients (CBE ID #2634) (Change in
Mobility Score) and IRF Functional
Outcome Measure: Change in Self-Care
Score for Medical Rehabilitation
Patients (CBE ID #2633) (Change in SelfCare Score). With the Discharge
Mobility Score and Change in Mobility
Score measures and the Discharge SelfCare Score and Change in Self-Care
Score measures being both highly
correlated and not appearing to measure
unique concepts, the TEP favored the
Discharge Mobility Score and Discharge
Self-Care Score measures over the
Change in Mobility Score and Change in
Self-Care Score measures and
recommended moving forward with the
Discharge Mobility Score and Discharge
Self-Care Score measures for the crosssetting measure. Second, in deciding on
the standardized functional assessment
data elements to include in the crosssetting measure, the TEP recommended
removing redundant data elements.
Strong correlations between scores of
functional items within the same
functional domain suggested that
certain items may be redundant in
eliciting information about patient
function and inclusion of these items
could lead to overrepresentation of a
particular functional area.
Subsequently, our measure
development contractor focused on the
Discharge Mobility Score measure as a
starting point for cross-setting
development due to the greater number
of cross-setting standardized functional
assessment data elements for mobility
while also identifying redundant
functional items that could be removed
from a cross-setting functional measure.
Additionally, the TEP supported
including the cross-setting self-care
items such that the cross-setting
function measure captures both self-care
and mobility. Panelists agreed that selfcare items added value to the measure
and are clinically important to function.
Lastly, the TEP provided refinements to
imputation strategies to more accurately
represent function performance across
all PAC settings, including the support
of using statistical imputation over the
current imputation approach
implemented in existing functional
outcome measures in the PAC QRPs. We
considered all the TEP’s
recommendations for developing a
cross-setting function measure and
applied those recommendations where
technically feasible and appropriate.
Summaries of the TEP proceedings
titled Technical Expert Panel (TEP) for
the Refinement of Long-Term Care
Hospital (LTCH), Inpatient
Rehabilitation Facility (IRF), Skilled
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Nursing Facility (SNF)/Nursing Facility
(NF), and Home Health (HH) Function
Measures Summary Report (July 2021
TEP) available at https://mmstest.battelle.org/sites/default/files/TEPSummary-Report-PAC-Function.pdf and
Technical Expert Panel (TEP) for CrossSetting Function Measure Development
Summary Report (January 2022 TEP)
available at https://mmstest.battelle.org/sites/default/files/PACFunction-TEP-Summary-ReportJan2022-508.pdf.
d. Measure Application Partnership
(MAP) Review
Our pre-rulemaking process includes
making publicly available a list of
quality and efficiency measures, called
the MUC List, that the Secretary is
considering adopting through the
Federal rulemaking process for use in
Medicare programs. This allows multistakeholder groups to provide
recommendations to the Secretary on
the measures included on the list.
We included the DC Function
measure under the HH QRP in the
publicly available MUC List for
December 1, 2022,66 and the CBE
received five comments by industry
interested parties on the 2022 MUC List.
Three commenters were supportive of
the measure and two were not. Among
the commenters in support of the
measure, one commenter stated that
function scores are the most meaningful
outcome measure in the HH setting, as
they not only assess patient outcomes
but also can be used for clinical
improvement processes. Additionally,
the commenter noted the measure’s
good reliability and validity and that the
measure is feasible to implement. The
second commenter supported the
measure; however, the comments did
not appear to be directly related to any
aspect of the measure itself. The third
commenter supported the measure
without providing additional detailed
comments.
Among the two commenters who did
not support the DC Function measure,
one commenter raised the following
concerns: the ‘‘gameability’’ of the
expected discharge score, the measure’s
complexity, and the difficulty of
implementing a composite functional
score. CMS was able to address these
concerns during the MAP PAC/LTC
Workgroup Meeting held on December
12, 2022. Specifically, CMS clarified
that the expected discharge scores are
not calculated using self-reported
66 Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services.
Overview of the List of Measures Under
Consideration for December 1, 2022. https://
mmshub.cms.gov/sites/default/files/2022-MUC-ListOverview.pdf.
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functional goals and are simply
calculated by risk-adjusting the
observed discharge scores (see the
Quality Measure Calculation section
III.C.1.e of this proposed rule).
Therefore, CMS believes that these
scores cannot be ‘‘gamed’’ by reporting
less-ambitious functional goals. CMS
also pointed out that the measure is
highly usable as it is similar in design
and complexity to existing function
measures (for example, Discharge
Mobility Score and Discharge Self-Care
Score for IRF) and that the data
elements used in this measure are
already in use.
The other commenter who did not
support the DC Function measure raised
the following concerns: its performance
for stabilization patients and its ability
to account for patients that change payer
during a HH episode. CMS was able to
address the first concern during the
MAP PAC/LTC Workgroup Meeting
held on December 12, 2022.
Specifically, CMS clarified that an
episode will contribute to the numerator
of DC Function if the observed
discharge score meets or exceeds the
expected discharge score, a value
determined using clinical comorbidity
and setting-specific parameters at the
start or resumption of care. These
parameters can and do predict no
improvement among stabilization
patients, that is, the expected discharge
score can and does occasionally equal
the observed admission score if clinical
comorbidity and setting-specific
parameters indicate no expected
improvement in the risk adjustment
model.
The second concern was not raised
during the MAP PAC/LTC Workgroup
Meeting; however, we do not find any
convincing evidence that it influences
HHA-level performance for the majority
of HHAs. Payer changes will only affect
episodes ending between December 31
and March 31. By comparing HHA-level
performance calculated using the full
calendar year versus using a dataset that
excludes the dates with possibly
affected episodes (January 1 through
March 31 and December 31), we
assessed the degree to which this
requirement influences performance.
The Spearman correlation coefficient
between the two scenarios is 0.97, and
the changes in reliability and validity
are smaller than one percentage point.
The results imply that including or
excluding affected episodes does not
appear to influence HHA-level
performance for the majority of HHAs.
We will continue to monitor this
concern in the future, and we will
address it accordingly in the future if
necessary.
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Shortly after, several CBE-convened
MAP workgroups met virtually to
provide input on the proposed DC
Function measure. First, the MAP
Health Equity workgroup convened on
December 6–7, 2022. The workgroup
did not share any health equity
concerns related to the implementation
of the DC Function measure, and only
asked for clarification regarding
measure specifications from measure
developers. The MAP Rural Health
workgroup met on December 8–9, 2022,
during which two members provided
support for the DC Function measure
and other workgroup members did not
express rural health concerns regarding
the measure. The MAP Post-Acute Care/
Long-Term Care (PAC–LTC) workgroup
met virtually on December 12, 2022 and
provided input on the proposed DC
Function measure. The workgroup
voted to support the staff
recommendation of conditional support
for rulemaking.
In response to the MAP PAC/LTC
Workgroup’s preliminary
recommendation, the CBE received one
comment in support and one comment
not in support of the DC Function
measure. The commenter in support of
the DC Function measure supported the
measure under the condition that it be
reviewed and refined such that its
implementation supports patient
autonomy and results in care that aligns
with patients’ personal functional goals.
The commenter who did not support the
DC Function measure raised concern
with the applicability of the DC
Function measure considering the
different patient populations served by
the various PAC settings. CMS clarified
that the DC Function measure is not
designed to compare function across
PAC settings, and that this feature is not
a requirement of the IMPACT Act.
Finally, the MAP Coordinating
Committee convened on January 24–25,
2023, during which the CBE received no
comment on the PAC/LTC workgroup’s
preliminary recommendation for
conditional support of the DC Function
measure. The MAP Coordinating
Committee upheld the PAC/LTC
workgroup’s recommendation of
conditional support for rulemaking with
20 votes in support and one against. We
refer readers to the final MAP
recommendations, titled 2022–2023
MAP Final Recommendations available
at https://mmshub.cms.gov/measurelifecycle/measure-implementation/prerulemaking/lists-and-reports.
e. Quality Measure Calculation
The proposed outcome measure
estimates the percentage of HH patients
who meet or exceed an expected
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discharge score during the reporting
period. The proposed measure’s
numerator is the number of HH episodes
with an observed discharge function
score that is equal to or higher than the
calculated expected discharge function
score. The observed discharge function
score is the sum of individual function
items at discharge. The expected
discharge function score is computed by
risk adjusting the observed discharge
function score for each HH episode.
Risk adjustment controls for patient
characteristics such as admission
function score, age, and clinical
conditions. The denominator is the total
number of HH episodes in the measure
target period (four rolling quarters) that
do not meet the measure exclusion
criteria. For additional details regarding
the numerator, denominator, risk
adjustment, and exclusion criteria, refer
to the Discharge Function Score for
Home Health Agencies (HHAs)
Technical Report available at https://
www.cms.gov/files/document/hhdischarge-function-score-measuretechnical-report.pdf.
The proposed measure implements a
statistical imputation approach for
handling ‘‘missing’’ standardized
functional assessment data elements.
The coding guidance for standardized
functional assessment data elements
allows for using ANA codes, resulting in
‘‘missing’’ information about a patient’s
functional ability on at least some items,
at admission and/or discharge, for a
substantive portion of HH patients.
Statistical imputation replaces these
missing values with a variable based on
the values of other, non-missing
variables in the data and which are
otherwise similar to the assessment with
a missing value. Specifically, in this
proposed DC Function measure
statistical imputation allows missing
values (for example, the ANA codes) to
be replaced with any value from 1 to 6,
based on a patient’s clinical
characteristics and codes assigned on
other standardized functional
assessment data element. The measure
implements separate imputation models
for each standardized functional
assessment data element used in
measure construction at admission and
discharge. Relative to the current simple
imputation method, this statistical
imputation approach increases
precision and accuracy and reduces the
bias in estimates of missing item scores.
We refer readers to the Discharge
Function Score for Home Health
Agencies (HHAs) Technical Report
available at https://www.cms.gov/files/
document/hh-discharge-function-scoremeasure-technical-report.pdf for
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measure specifications and additional
details on measure testing, including the
method for comparing the statistical
imputation approach to the current
simple imputation method.
We invite public comment on our
proposal to adopt the DC Function
measure, beginning with the CY 2025
HH QRP.
2. Proposed Removal of the
‘‘Application of Percent of Long-Term
Care Hospital Patients With an
Admission and Discharge Functional
Assessment and a Care Plan That
Addresses Function’’ Beginning With
the CY 2025 HH QRP
We are proposing to remove the
‘‘Application of Percent of Long-Term
Care Hospital Patients with an
Admission and Discharge Functional
Assessment and a Care Plan That
Addresses Function’’ (Application of
Functional Assessment/Care Plan)
measure from the HH QRP beginning
with the CY 2025 HH QRP. Section 42
CFR 484.245(b)(3) of our regulations
specifies eight factors we consider for
measure removal from the HH QRP, and
we believe this measure should be
removed because it satisfies two of these
factors.
First, the Application of Functional
Assessment/Care Plan measure meets
the conditions for measure removal
factor one: measure performance among
HHAs is so high and unvarying that
meaningful distinctions in
improvements in performance can no
longer be made.67 Second, this measure
meets the conditions for measure
removal factor six: there is an available
measure that is more strongly associated
with desired patient functional
outcomes. We believe the proposed DC
function measure discussed in section
XX of this proposed rule better
measures functional outcomes than the
current Application of Functional
Assessment/Care Plan measure. We
discuss each of these reasons in more
detail later in this proposed rule.
In regards to removal factor one, the
Application of Functional Assessment/
Care Plan measure has become topped
out, with average performance rates
reaching nearly 100 percent over the
past 3 years (ranging from 96–98 percent
during calendar years (CYs) 2019–
2021).68 For the 12-month period of
67 For more information on the factors the Centers
for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) uses to
base decisions for measure removal, we refer
readers to the Code of Federal Regulations,
§ 484.245(b)(3) https://www.ecfr.gov/current/title42/chapter-IV/subchapter-G/part-484/subpart-E/
section-484.245.
68 CMS. Home Health Agency Data Archive,
2019—2021, Annual Files National Data. PDC,
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third quarter of CY 2021, HHAs had an
average score for this measure of 98
percent, with nearly 75 percent of HHAs
scoring 100 percent. The proximity of
these mean rates to the maximum score
of 100 percent suggests a ceiling effect
and a lack of variation that restricts
distinction among HHAs.
In regards to measure removal factor
six, the DC Function measure is more
strongly associated with desired patient
functional outcomes than this current
process measure, the Application of
Functional Assessment/Care Plan
measure. As described in section IIII.C.1
of this proposed rule, the DC Function
measure has the predictive ability to
distinguish patients with low expected
functional capabilities from those with
high expected functional capabilities.69
We have been collecting standardized
functional assessment elements across
PAC settings since 2016 which has
allowed for the development of the
proposed DC Function measure and
meets the statutory requirements to
submit standardized patient assessment
data and other necessary data with
respect to the domain of functional
status, cognitive function, and changes
in function and cognitive function. In
light of this development, this process
measure, the Application of Functional
Assessment/Care Plan measure which
measures only whether a functional
assessment is completed and a
functional goal is included in the care
plan, is no longer necessary, and can be
replaced with a measure that evaluates
the HHA’s outcome of care on a
patient’s function.
Because the Application of Functional
Assessment/Care Plan measure meets
measure removal factors one and six, we
are proposing to remove it from the HH
QRP beginning with the CY 2025 HH
QRP. We are also proposing that public
reporting of the Application of
Functional Assessment/Care Plan
measure would end by January 2025 or
as soon as technically feasible when
public reporting of the proposed DC
Function measure would begin (see
section III.F.2. of this proposed rule).
Under our proposal, HHAs would no
longer be required to report a Self-Care
Discharge Goal (that is, GG0130,
Column 2) or a Mobility Discharge Goals
(that is, GG0170, Column 2) on the
OASIS beginning with patients admitted
on April 1, 2024. We would remove the
items for Self-Care Discharge Goals (that
is, GG0130, Column 2) and Mobility
Discharge Goals (that is, GG0170,
https://data.cms.gov/provider-data/archived-data/
home-health-services.
69 ‘‘Expected functional capabilities’’ is defined as
the predicted discharge function score.
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Column 2) with the next release of the
OASIS. Under our proposal, these items
would not be required to meet HH QRP
requirements beginning with the CY
2025 HH QRP.
We invite public comment on our
proposal to remove the Application of
Functional Assessment/Care Plan
measure from the HH QRP beginning
with the CY 2025 HH QRP.
a. Background
COVID–19 has been and continues to
be a major challenge for PAC facilities,
including HHAs. The Secretary first
declared COVID–19 a PHE on January
31, 2020. As of March 15, 2023, the U.S.
has reported 103,801,821 cumulative
cases of COVID–19, and 1,121,512 total
deaths due to COVID–19.70 Although all
age groups are at risk of contracting
COVID–19, older persons are at a
significantly higher risk of mortality and
severe disease following infection, with
those over age 80 dying at five times the
average rate.71 Older adults, in general,
are prone to both acute and chronic
infections owing to reduced immunity,
and are a high-risk population.72 Adults
age 65 and older comprise over 75% of
total COVID–19 deaths despite
representing 13.4% of reported cases.73
Restrictions on freedom of movement
and physical distancing can lead to a
disruption of essential care and support
for older persons. Physical distancing
measures that restrict visitors and group
activities can negatively affect the
physical and mental health and wellbeing of older persons, particularly
those with cognitive decline or
dementia, and who are highly caredependent.74
Since the development of the vaccines
to combat COVID–19, studies have
shown that being up to date on these
vaccines continues to provide strong
protection against severe disease,
hospitalization, and death in adults,
including during the predominance of
Omicron BA.4 and BA.5 variants.75
Initial studies showed the efficacy of
FDA-approved COVID–19 vaccines in
reducing the risk of severe outcomes
caused by COVID–19. Further, residents
at skilled nursing facilities (SNF) with
high rates of staff testing for COVID–19
were less likely to be hospitalized or die
due to COVID–19 than their
counterparts in SNFs with low rates of
staff testing. Prior to the emergence of
the Delta variant of the virus, vaccine
effectiveness against COVID–19associated hospitalization among adults
age 65 and older was 91% for those
receiving a full mRNA vaccination
(Pfizer-BioNTech or Moderna), and 84%
for those receiving a viral vector
vaccination (Janssen). Adults age 65 and
older who were fully vaccinated with an
mRNA COVID–19 vaccine had a 94%
reduction in risk of COVID–19
hospitalization; those who were
partially vaccinated had a 64%
reduction in risk.76 Further, after the
emergence of the Delta variant, vaccine
effectiveness against COVID–19associated hospitalization for adults
who received the primary series of the
vaccine was 76% among adults age 75
and older.77
More recently, since the emergence of
the Omicron variants and availability of
booster doses, multiple studies have
shown that while vaccine effectiveness
against infection has waned, protection
is higher among those receiving booster
doses than among those only receiving
the primary series.78 79 80 CDC data show
70 Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
COVID Data Tracker. 2023, January 20. Last
accessed March 23, 2023. https://covid.cdc.gov/
covid-data-tracker/#cases_totalcases.
71 United Nations. Policy Brief: The impact of
COVID–19 on older persons. May 2020. https://
unsdg.un.org/sites/default/files/2020-05/PolicyBrief-The-Impact-of-COVID-19-on-OlderPersons.pdf.
72 Lekamwasam R, Lekamwasam S. Effects of
COVID–19 pandemic on health and wellbeing of
older people: a comprehensive review. Ann Geriatr
Med Res. 2020;24(3):166–172. https://dx.doi.org/
10.4235/agmr.20.0027. https://
www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7533189/.
73 Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Demographic trends of COVID–19 cases and deaths
in the US reported to CDC. COVID Data Tracker.
2023, March 15. Last accessed March 23, 2023.
https://covid.cdc.gov/covid-data-tracker/
#demographics.
74 United Nations. Policy Brief: The impact of
COVID–19 on older persons. May 2020. https://
unsdg.un.org/sites/default/files/2020-05/PolicyBrief-The-Impact-of-COVID-19-on-OlderPersons.pdf.
75 Chalkias S, Harper C, Vrbicky K, et al. A
bivalent omicron-containing booster vaccine against
COVID–19. N Engl J Med. 2022;387(14):1279–1291.
doi: 10.0156/NEJMoa2208343. https://
www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMoa2208343.
76 Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Press Release, April 28, 2021. Fully Vaccinated
Adults 65 and Older are 94% Less Likely to Be
Hospitalized with COID–19. https://www.cdc.gov/
media/releases/2021/p0428-vaccinated-adults-lesshospitalized.html.
77 Vaccine effectiveness after the emergence of the
Delta variant is based on data from CDC’s VISION
Network, which examined 32,867 medical
encounters from 187 hospitals and 221 emergency
departments and urgent care clinics across nine
states during June–August 2021, beginning on the
date the Delta variant accounted for over 50% of
sequenced isolates in each medical facility’s state
(Grannis SJ, et al. MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep.
2021;70(37):1291–1293. doi: https://dx.doi.org/
10.15585/mmwr.mm7037e2).
78 Surie D, Bonnell L, Adams K, et al.
Effectiveness of monovalent mRNA vaccines against
COVID–19–associated hospitalization among
immunocompetent adults during BA.1/BA.2 and
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that, among people age 50 and older,
those who have received both a primary
vaccination series and booster shots
have a lower risk of hospitalization and
dying from COVID–19 than their nonvaccinated counterparts.81 Additionally,
a second vaccine booster has been
shown to be effective against severe
outcomes related to COVID–19, such as
hospitalization or death.82 Furthermore,
more recent vaccination and booster
doses can decrease the rate of COVID–
19 transmission between individuals in
close contact.83 Early evidence also
demonstrates that the bivalent booster,
specifically aimed to combat the
prevalent BA.4/BA.5 Omicron
subvariants, provokes a superior
antibody response against Omicron than
the initial COVID–19 vaccines,
underscoring, the role of up-to-date
vaccination protocols in effectively
countering the spread of COVID–19.84
(1) Measure Importance
Despite the availability and
demonstrated effectiveness of COVID–
19 vaccinations, significant gaps
continue to exist in vaccination rates.85
As of March 15, 2023, vaccination rates
among people age 65 and older are
generally high for the primary
vaccination series (94.3%) but lower for
BA.4/BA.5 predominant periods of SARS-CoV–2
Omicron variant in the United States — IVY
Network, 18 states, December 26, 2021–August 31,
2022. MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep.
2022;71(42):1327–1334. https://dx.doi.org/10.15585/
mmwr.mm7142a3.
79 Andrews N, Stowe J, Kirsebom F, et al. Covid19 vaccine effectiveness against the Omicron
(B.1.1.529) variant. N Engl J Med.
2022;386(16):1532–1546. https://www.nejm.org/doi/
full/10.1056/NEJMoa2119451.
80 Buchan SA, Chung H, Brown KA, et al.
Estimated effectiveness of COVID–19 vaccines
against Omicron or Delta symptomatic infection
and severe outcomes. JAMA Netw Open.
2022;5(9):e2232760. https://dx.doi.org/10.1001/
jamanetworkopen.2022.32760. https://
jamanetwork.com/journals/jamanetworkopen/
fullarticle/2796615.
81 Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Daily update for the United States. COVID Data
Tracker. 2023, January 20. Last accessed January 17,
2023. https://covid.cdc.gov/covid-data-tracker.
82 Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
COVID–19 vaccine effectiveness monthly update.
COVID Data Tracker. March 23, 2023. https://
covid.cdc.gov/covid-data-tracker/#vaccineeffectiveness.
83 Tan ST., Kwan AT, Rodriguez-Barraquer I, et al.
Infectiousness of SARS–CoV–2 breakthrough
infections and reinfections during the Omicron
wave. Preprint at medRxiv:
84 Chalkias S, Harper C, Vrbicky K, et al. A
bivalent Omicron-containing booster vaccine
against COVID–19. N Engl J Med2022;387(14):1279–
1291. doi: 10.0156/NEJMoa2208343. https://
www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMoa2208343.
85 Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
COVID–19 vaccinations in the United States.
COVID Data Tracker. March 23, 2023. https://
covid.cdc.gov/covid-data-tracker/#vaccinations_
vacc-people-booster-percent-pop5.
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the first booster (73.6%) among those
who received a primary series) and even
lower for the second booster (59.9%)
among those who received a first
booster).86 Additionally, though the
uptake in boosters among people age 65
and older has been much higher than
among people of other ages, booster
uptake still remains relatively low
compared to primary vaccination among
older adults.87 Variations are also
present when examining vaccination
rates by race, gender, and geographic
location.88 For example, 66.2% of the
Asian, non-Hispanic population have
completed the primary series and 21.2%
have received the bivalent booster dose,
whereas 44.9% of the Black, nonHispanic population have completed
the primary series and only 8.9% have
received the bivalent booster dose.
Among Hispanic populations, 57.1% of
the population have completed the
primary series, with 8.5% receiving the
bivalent booster dose, while in White,
non-Hispanic populations, 51.9% have
completed the primary series and 16.2%
have received the bivalent booster
dose.89 Disparities have been found in
vaccination rates between rural and
urban areas, with lower vaccination
rates found in rural areas.90 91 Data show
that 55.1% of the population in rural
areas have completed the primary
vaccination series, as compared to
66.2% of the population in urban
areas.92 Receipt of first booster doses
86 Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
COVID–19 vaccination age and sex trends in the
United States, national and jurisdictional. Last
accessed March 24, 2023. Vaccination Trends.
87 Freed M, Neuman T, Kates J, Cubanski J. Deaths
among older adults due to COVID–19 jumped
during the summer of 2022 before falling somewhat
in September. Kaiser Family Foundation. October 6,
2022. https://www.kff.org/coronavirus-covid-19/
issue-brief/deaths-among-older-adults-due-to-covid19-jumped-during-the-summer-of-2022-beforefalling-somewhat-in-september/.
88 Saelee R, Zell E, Murthy BP, et al. Disparities
in COVID–19 vaccination coverage between urban
and rural counties—United States, December 14,
2020–January 31, 2022. MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly
Rep. 2022;71:335–340. https://dx.doi.org/10.15585/
mmwr.mm7109a2.
89 Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Trends in Demographic Characteristics of People
Receiving COVID–19 Vaccinations in the United
States. COVID Data Tracker. 2023, January 20. Last
accessed March 23, 2023. https://covid.cdc.gov/
covid-data-tracker/#vaccination-demographicstrends.
90 Saelee R, Zell E, Murthy BP, et al. Disparities
in COVID–19 vaccination coverage between urban
and rural counties—United States, December 14,
2020–January 31, 2022. MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly
Rep. 2022;71:335–340. DOI: https://dx.doi.org/
10.15585/mmwr.mm7109a2.
91 Sun Y, Monnat SM. Rural-urban and withinrural differences in COVID–19 vaccination rates. J
Rural Health. 2022;38(4):916–922. https://dx.doi.org/
10.1111/jrh.12625. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/
pmc/articles/PMC8661570/.
92 Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Vaccination Equity. COVID Data Tracker; 2023,
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was similar between urban (50.4%) and
rural (49.7%) counties.93 Receipt of
bivalent booster doses has been lower,
with 16.9% of urban population having
received the booster dose, and 10.9% of
the rural population having received the
booster dose.94
We are proposing to adopt the
COVID–19 Vaccine: Percent of Patients/
Residents who are Up to Date (Patient/
Resident COVID–19 Vaccine) measure
for the HH QRP beginning with the CY
2025 HH QRP. This proposed measure
has the potential to increase COVID–19
vaccination coverage of patients in
HHAs. This proposed measure also has
the potential to prevent the spread of
the virus within the HHA patient
population. Although this population
receives services within their own
homes, they can transfer the virus to
their caretakers and home healthcare
workers, who could then potentially
infect other home health patients. The
proposed Patient/Resident COVID–19
Vaccine measure would also support the
goal of the CMS Meaningful Measure
Initiative 2.0 to ‘‘Empower consumers to
make good health care choices through
patient-directed quality measures and
public transparency objectives.’’ The
Patient/Resident COVID–19 Vaccine
measure would be reported on Care
Compare and would provide patients,
including those who are at high risk for
developing serious complications from
COVID–19, and their caregivers, with
valuable information they can consider
when choosing a HHA. The proposed
Patient/Resident COVID–19 vaccine
measure would also facilitate patient
care and care coordination during the
hospital discharge planning process. For
example, a discharging hospital, in
collaboration with the patient and
family, could use this measure to
coordinate care and ensure patient
preferences are considered in the
discharge plan. Additionally, the
proposed Patient/Resident COVID–19
Vaccine measure would be an indirect
measure of HHA action. Since the
patient’s COVID–19 vaccination status
would be reported at discharge from the
HHA, if a patient is not up to date with
their COVID–19 vaccination per
January 20. Last accessed January 17, 2023. https://
covid.cdc.gov/covid-data-tracker/#vaccinationequity.
93 Saelee R, Zell E, Murthy BP, et al. Disparities
in COVID–19 vaccination coverage between urban
and rural counties—United States, December 14,
2020–January 31, 2022. MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly
Rep. 2022;71:335–340. https://dx.doi.org/10.15585/
mmwr.mm7109a2.
94 Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Vaccination Equity. COVID Data Tracker; 2023,
January 20. Last accessed January 17, 2023. https://
covid.cdc.gov/covid-data-tracker/#vaccinationequity.
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applicable CDC guidance at the time
they are admitted, the HHA has the
opportunity to educate the patient and
provide information on why they
should become up to date with their
COVID–19 vaccination. HHAs may also
choose to administer the vaccine to the
patient prior to their discharge from the
HHA or coordinate a follow up visit for
the patient to obtain the vaccine at their
physician’s office or local pharmacy.
(2) Item Testing
Item testing was conducted for the
proposed Patient/Resident COVID–19
Vaccine measure using patient scenarios
and cognitive interviews to assess HHA
providers’ comprehension of the item
and the associated guidance. The
patient scenarios were developed in
collaboration with a team of clinical
experts and represented the most
common scenarios HHA providers
encounter. The results of the item
testing supported its reliability, and
provided information to improve the
item itself, as well as the accompanying
guidance.
b. Competing and Related Measures
Section 1899B(e)(2)(A) of the Act
requires that, absent an exception under
section 1899B(e)(2)(B) of the Act, each
measure specified under section 1899B
of the Act be endorsed by the entity
with a contract under section 1890(a) of
the Act. In the case of a specified area
or medical topic determined appropriate
by the Secretary for which a feasible and
practical measure has not been
endorsed, section 1899B(e)(2)(B) of the
Act permits the Secretary to specify a
measure that is not so endorsed, as long
as due consideration is given to the
measures that have been endorsed or
adopted by a consensus organization
identified by the Secretary.
The proposed Patient/Resident
COVID–19 Vaccine measure is not
consensus-based entity (CBE) endorsed.
After review of other CBE endorsed
measures, we were unable to identify
any CBE endorsed measures for HHAs
focused on capturing COVID–19
vaccination coverage of HHA patients,
and found no related measures in the
HH QRP addressing COVID–19
vaccination. There have been COVID–19
Vaccination Coverage among Healthcare
Personnel (HCP) measures adopted by
the Skilled Nursing Facility (SNF) QRP,
the Intermediate Rehabilitation Facility
(QRP) and the Long-term Care Hospital
(LTCH) QRP that captures the
percentage of HCPs who receive a
complete COVID–19 vaccination course.
We also identified Nursing Home (NH)
COVID–19 vaccine rates posted on Care
Compare. However, these data are
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obtained from CDC’s NHSN and report
rates of vaccination for the NH resident
population. HHAs do not report patient/
resident or HCP COVID–19 vaccination
to the NHSN.
Therefore, after consideration of other
available measures that assess COVID–
19 vaccination rates, we believe the
exception under section 1899B(e)(2)(B)
of the Act applies. We intend to submit
the measure for CBE endorsement when
feasible.
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c. Interested Parties and Technical
Expert Panel (TEP) Input
In the development and specification
of this measure, a transparent process
was employed to seek input from
interested parties and national experts
and engage in a process that allows for
pre-rulemaking input in accordance
with section 1890A of the Act. First, the
measure development contractor
convened a focus group of patient and
family/caregiver advocates (PFAs) to
solicit input. The PFAs felt a measure
capturing raw vaccination rate,
irrespective of HHA action, would be
most helpful in patient and family/
caregiver decision-making. Next, TEP
meetings were held on November 19,
2021 and December 15, 2021 to solicit
feedback on the development of Patient/
Resident COVID–19 vaccination
measures and assessment items for the
PAC settings. The TEP panelists voiced
their support for PAC Patient/Resident
COVID–19 vaccination measures and
agreed that developing a measure to
report the rate of vaccination in an HHA
setting without denominator exclusions
was an important goal. All
recommendations from the TEP were
taken into consideration and applied
appropriately where technically feasible
and appropriate. A summary of the TEP
proceedings titled Technical Expert
Panel (TEP) for the Development of
Long-Term Care Hospital (LTCH),
Inpatient Rehabilitation Facility (IRF),
Skilled Nursing Facility (SNF)/Nursing
Facility (NF), and Home Health (HH)
COVID–19 Vaccination-Related Items
and Measures Summary Report is
available on the CMS Measures
Management System (MMS) Hub. at
https://mmshub.cms.gov/sites/default/
files/COVID19-Patient-LevelVaccination-TEP-Summary-ReportNovDec2021.pdf.
d. Measures Applications Partnership
Review
The pre-rulemaking process includes
making publicly available a list of
quality and efficiency measures, called
the Measures Under Consideration
(MUC) List that the Secretary is
considering adopting, through Federal
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rulemaking process, for use in Medicare
programs. This allows interested parties
to provide recommendations to the
Secretary on the measures included on
the list. The Patient/Resident COVID–19
Vaccine measure was included on the
publicly available 2022 MUC List for the
HH QRP.95 Shortly after, several CBEconvened MAP workgroups met
virtually to provide input on the
proposed measure. First, the MAP
Health Equity advisory group convened
on December 6, 2022. One MAP member
noted that the percentage of true
contraindications for the COVID–19
vaccine is low, and the lack of
exclusions on the measure makes sense
to avoid varying interpretations of valid
contraindications.96 Similarly, the MAP
Rural Health advisory group met on
December 8, 2022 and publicly stated
that the measure is important for rural
communities.97
Prior to convening the MAP PAC/LTC
workgroup, the CBE received seven
comments by industry interested parties
during the proposed measure’s MAP
pre-rulemaking process. Interested
parties were mostly supportive of the
measure and recognized that it is
important that patients be vaccinated
against COVID–19, and that
measurement and reporting is one
important method to help healthcare
organizations assess their performance
in achieving high rates of ‘‘up-to-date’’
vaccination. One interested party noted
that patient engagement is critical at this
stage of the pandemic because best
available information indicates COVID–
19 variants will continue to require
additional boosters to avert case surges.
Another interested party noted the
benefit of less-specific criteria for
inclusion in the numerator and
denominator of the proposed Patient/
Resident COVID–19 Vaccine measure,
which would provide flexibility for the
measure to remain relevant to current
circumstances. Other interested parties
raised concerns about the proposed
measure not including measuring the
HHA’s action in the numerator and
excluding patient refusals from the
denominator, and noted that there could
95 CMS Measures Management System (MMS).
Measure Implementation: Pre-rulemaking MUC
Lists and MAP reports. Last accessed March 23,
2023 https://mmshub.cms.gov/measure-lifecycle/
measure-implementation/pre-rulemaking/lists-andreports.
96 National Quality Forum MAP Health Equity
Advisory Group Materials. Meeting Summary—
MUC Review Meeting. Last accessed March 23,
2023. https://www.qualityforum.org/WorkArea/
linkit.aspx?LinkIdentifier=id&ItemID=97943.
97 National Quality Forum MAP Rural Health
Advisory Group Materials. Meeting Summary—
MUC Review Meeting. Last accessed March 23,
2023. https://www.qualityforum.org/WorkArea/
linkit.aspx?LinkIdentifier=id&ItemID=97964.
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43733
be unintended consequences to patient
access to care should the measure be
adopted.
Subsequently, the MAP Post-Acute
Care/Long-Term Care (PAC/LTC)
workgroup met on December 12, 2022.
The voting workgroup members noted
the importance of reporting patients’
vaccination status but raised concerns
that (1) the proposed Patient/Resident
COVID–19 Vaccine measure does not
account for patient refusals or those
who are unable to respond, and (2) the
difficulty of implementing ‘‘up to date.’’
CMS clarified during the MAP PAC/LTC
workgroup that the proposed Patient/
Resident COVID–19 Vaccine measure
does not have exclusions for patient
refusals because the proposed measure
was intended to report raw rates of
vaccination and this information is
important for consumer choice.
Additionally, CMS believes that PAC
providers, including HHAs, are in a
unique position to leverage their care
processes to increase vaccination
coverage in their settings to protect
patients and prevent negative outcomes.
CMS also clarified that the measure
defines ‘‘up to date’’ in a manner that
provides flexibility to reflect future
changes in CDC guidance. However, the
MAP PAC/LTC workgroup reached a 60
percent consensus on the vote of ‘‘Do
not support for rulemaking’’ for this
measure.98
The MAP received 10 comments by
interested parties in response to the
MAP PAC/LTC workgroup
recommendations. Interested parties
generally understood the importance of
COVID–19 vaccinations in preventing
the spread of COVID–19 infections,
however, a majority of commenters did
not recommend the inclusion of this
measure for HH QRP and raised several
concerns. Specifically, several
commenters were concerned about
vaccine hesitancy, HHAs’ inability to
influence measure results based on
factors outside of their control.
Commenters also noted that the
proposed Patient/Resident COVID–19
Vaccine measure has not been fully
tested, and encouraged CMS to monitor
the measure for unintended
consequences and ensure that the
measure has meaningful results. One
commenter was in support of the
proposed Patient/Resident COVID–19
Vaccine measure and provided
recommendations for CMS to consider.
including an exclusion for medical
98 National Quality Forum MAP Post-Acute Care/
Long Term Care Workgroup Materials. Meeting
Summary—MUC Review Meeting. Last accessed
March 23, 2023. https://www.qualityforum.org/
WorkArea/linkit.aspx?LinkIdentifier=id&
ItemID=97960.
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contraindications and submitting the
measure for CBE endorsement.
Finally, the MAP Coordinating
Committee convened on January 24,
2023, and raised concerns which were
previously discussed in the PAC/LTC
workgroup, such as potential for
selection bias based on the patient’s
vaccination status. CMS noted that this
measure does not have exclusions for
patient refusals since this is a process
measure intended to report raw rates of
vaccination, and is not intended to be
an HHA action measure. CMS
acknowledged that a measure
accounting for variables (such as HHA
actions to vaccinate patients) could be
important, but CMS is focused on a
measure which would provide and
publicly report vaccination rates for
consumers given the importance of this
information to patients and their
caregivers.
The MAP Coordinating Committee
recommended three changes to make
the Patient/Resident COVID–19 Vaccine
measure acceptable to the Committee: (i)
reconsider exclusions for medical
contraindications, (ii) complete
reliability and validity measure testing,
and (iii) seek CBE endorsement. The
MAP Coordinating Committee
ultimately reached consensus on its
voted recommendation of ‘Do not
support with potential for mitigation.’
We refer readers to the final MAP
recommendations, titled 2022–2023
MAP Final Recommendations 99 and the
MAP Final Report.100 Despite the
Coordinating Committee’s vote, we
believe it is still important to propose
the Patient/Resident COVID–19 Vaccine
measure for the HH QRP. As we stated
in section III.C.3.e of this proposed rule,
we did not include exclusions for
medical contraindications because the
PFAs we met with told us that a
measure capturing raw vaccination rate,
irrespective of any medical
contraindications, would be most
helpful in patient and family/caregiver
decision-making. We do plan to conduct
reliability and validity measure testing
once we have collected enough data,
and we intend to submit the proposed
measure to the CBE for consideration of
endorsement when feasible.
e. Quality Measure Calculation
The proposed Patient/Resident
COVID–19 Vaccine measure is an
assessment-based process measure that
reports the percent of home health
patients that are up to date on their
99 2022–2023
MAP Final Recommendations, can
be found at https://www.qualityforum.org/map/.
100 The Final MAP Report is available at https://
www.qualityforum.org/WorkArea/
linkit.aspx?LinkIdentifier=id&ItemID=98102.
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COVID–19 vaccinations per CDC’s latest
guidance.101 This measure has no
exclusions, and is not risk adjusted.
The numerator for this proposed
measure would be the total number of
home health patients that are up to date
with the COVID–19 vaccine during the
reporting period. The denominator for
the measure would be the total number
of home health stays with an End of
Care OASIS (Discharge, Transfer or
Death at Home) during the reporting
period.
The data source for the proposed
Patient/Resident COVID–19 Vaccine
measure is the OASIS assessment
instrument for home health patients. For
more information about the proposed
data submission requirements, we refer
readers to section III.E.2 of this
proposed rule. For additional technical
information about this proposed
measure, we refer readers to the draft
measure specifications document titled
Patient-Resident-COVID-Vaccine-DraftSpecs.pdf available at: https://
www.cms.gov/files/document/patientcovid-vaccine-measure-hh-qrpspecifications.pdf.
We invite public comments on our
proposal to adopt the COVID–19
Vaccine: Percent of Patients/Residents
Who Are Up to Date measure beginning
with the CY 2025 HH QRP.
E. Form, Manner, and Timing of Data
Submission Under the HH QRP
1. Proposed Schedule for Data
Submission of the Discharge Function
Score Measure Beginning With the FY
2025 LTCH QRP
As discussed in section III.C.1. of the
proposed rule, we are proposing to
adopt the Discharge Function Score
quality measure beginning with the CY
2025 HH QRP. If finalized as proposed,
HHAs would be required to report these
OASIS assessment data beginning with
patients discharged between January 1,
2024 and March 31, 2024 for the CY
2025 HH QRP. Starting in CY 2024,
HHAs would be required to submit data
for the entire calendar year beginning
with the CY 2026 HH QRP. Because the
Discharge Function Score quality
measure is calculated based on data that
are currently submitted to the Medicare
program, there would be no additional
information collection required from
HHAs.
We invite public comments on this
proposal to require HHAs to report
101 The definition of ‘‘up to date’’ may change
based on CDC’s latest guidelines and can be found
on the CDC web page, ‘‘Stay Up to Date with
COVID–19 Vaccines Including Boosters,’’ at https://
www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/vaccines/stayup-to-date.html (updated March 2, 2023).
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OASIS assessment data for the
Discharge Function Score quality
measure beginning with patients
discharged between January 1, 2024 and
March 31, 2024 for the CY 2025 HH
QRP.
2. Proposed Schedule for Data
Submission of the COVID–19 Vaccine:
Percent of Patients/Residents Who Are
Up to Date Beginning With the CY 2026
HH QRP
As discussed in section III.C.3 of the
proposed rule, we are proposing to
adopt the COVID–19 Vaccine: Percent of
Patients/Residents Who Are Up to Date
quality measure beginning with the CY
2025HH QRP. If finalized as proposed,
HHAs would be required to report these
OASIS assessment data beginning with
patients discharged between January 1,
2025 and March 31, 2025 for the CY
2025 HH QRP. Starting in CY 2025,
HHAs would be required to submit data
for the entire calendar year beginning
with the CY 2026 HH QRP.
If finalized as proposed, we would
revise the OASIS in order for HHAs to
submit data pursuant to this finalized
policy. A new item would be added to
the current item set to collect
information on whether a patient is up
to date with their COVID–19 vaccine at
the time of discharge from the HHA. A
draft of the new item is available in the
COVID–19 Vaccine: Percent of Patients/
Residents Who Are Up to Date Draft
Measure Specifications at https://
www.cms.gov/files/document/patientcovid-vaccine-measure-hh-qrpspecifications.pdf.
We invite public comments on this
proposal to require HHAs to report
OASIS assessment data for the COVID–
19 Vaccine: Percent of Patients/
Residents Who Are Up to Date quality
measure. HHAs would be required to
submit data beginning with patients
discharged between January 1, 2025 and
March 31, 2025 for public reporting of
this QM in the CY 2025 HH QRP.
3. Data Elements Proposed for Removal
From OASIS–E
CMS plans to remove two OASIS
items, the M0110—Episode Timing and
M2220—Therapy Needs effective
January 1, 2025. These items are no
longer used in the calculation of quality
measures already adopted in the HH
QRP, nor are they being used currently
for previously established purposes
unrelated to the HH QRP, including
payment, survey, the HH VBP Model or
care planning.
CMS proposes the removal of items
from OASIS–E from the specific time
points during a home health episode as
outlined in Table C3.
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For a discussion in the reduction in
burden associated with the removal of
these items, see section IX of this
proposed rule.
We invite public comment on our
proposal to remove the M0110—Episode
Timing and M2220—Therapy Needs
items from OASIS–E, effective January
1, 2025.
F. Policies Regarding Public Display of
Measure Data for the HH QRP
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1. Background
Section 1899B(g)(1) of the Act
requires, in part, that the Secretary
provide for public reporting of PAC
provider performance, including HHAs,
on quality measures under section
1899B(c)(1) of the Act, including by
establishing procedures for making
available to the public information
regarding the performance of individual
PAC providers with respect to such
measures. Section 1899B(g)(2) requires,
in part, that CMS give HHAs
opportunity to review and submit
corrections to the data and information
to be made public under section
1899B(g)(1) prior to such data being
made public. Section 1899B(g)(3) of the
Act requires that such procedures
provide that the data and information
with respect to a measure and PAC
provider is made publicly available
beginning not later than 2 years after the
applicable specified application date
applicable to such measure and
provider. Measure data are currently
publicly displayed on the Care Compare
website, an interactive web tool that
assists individuals by providing
information on quality of care. For more
information on Care Compare, we refer
readers to our website at: https://
www.medicare.gov/care-compare/.
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2. Public Reporting of the Cross-Setting
Functional Discharge Measure
Beginning With the CY 2025 HH QRP
We are proposing to begin publicly
displaying data for the DC Function
measure beginning with the January
2025 refresh of Care Compare, or as
soon as technically feasible, using data
collected from April 1, 2023 through
March 31, 2024 (Quarter 2 2023 through
Quarter 1 2024). If finalized as
proposed, an HHAs DC Function score
would be displayed based on four
quarters of data. Provider preview
reports would be distributed in October
2024, or as soon as technically feasible.
Thereafter, an HHA’s DC Function score
would be publicly displayed based on
four quarters of data and updated
quarterly. To ensure the statistical
reliability of the data, we are proposing
that we would not publicly report an
HHAs performance on the measure if
the HHA had fewer than 20 eligible
cases in any quarter. HHAs that have
fewer than 20 eligible cases would be
distinguished with a footnote that notes
that the number of cases/patient stays is
too small to report.
We invite public comment on the
proposal for the public display of the
Discharge Function Score measure
beginning with the January 2025 refresh
of Care Compare, or as soon as
technically feasible.
3. Public Reporting of the Transfer of
Health Information to the Patient PostAcute Care and Transfer of Health
Information to the Provider Post-Acute
Care Measures Beginning With the CY
2025 HH QRP
We are proposing to begin publicly
displaying data for the measures: (1)
Transfer of Health (TOH) Information to
the Provider—Post-Acute Care (PAC)
Measure (TOH-Provider); and (2)
Transfer of Health (TOH) Information to
the Patient—Post-Acute Care (PAC)
Measure (TOH-Patient). We would begin
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displaying data with the January 2025
Care Compare refresh or as soon as
technically feasible. We adopted these
measures in the fiscal year (FY) 2020
IPPS)/LTCH Prospective Payment
System (PPS) final rule (84 FR 42525
through 42535). In response to the
COVID–19 public health emergency
(PHE), we released an interim final rule
(85 FR 27595 through 27597) which
delayed the compliance date for the
collection and reporting of the TOHProvider and TOH-Patient measures.
The compliance date for the collection
and reporting of the TOH-Provider and
TOH-Patient measures was revised to
October 1, 2022 in the calendar year
(CY) 2022 Home Health PPS Rate
Update final rule (86 FR 62386 through
62390). Data collection for these two
assessment-based measures began with
patients admitted and discharged on or
after October 1, 2022.
We are proposing to publicly display
data for these two assessment-based
measures based on four rolling quarters,
initially using discharges from April 1,
2023 through March 31, 2024 (Quarter
2 2023 through Quarter 1 2024), and to
begin publicly reporting these measures
with the January 2025 refresh of Care
Compare, or as soon as technically
feasible. To ensure the statistical
reliability of the data, we are proposing
that we would not publicly report an
HHAs performance on the measure if
the HHA had fewer than 20 eligible
cases in any quarter. HHAs that have
fewer than 20 eligible cases would be
distinguished with a footnote that notes
that the number of cases/patient stays is
too small to report.
We invite public comment on our
proposal for the public display of the (1)
Transfer of Health (TOH) Information to
the Provider—Post-Acute Care (PAC)
Measure (TOH-Provider) and (2)
Transfer of Health (TOH) Information to
the Patient—Post-Acute Care (PAC)
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Measure (TOH-Patient) assessmentbased measures.
4. Public Reporting of the COVID–19
Vaccine: Percent of Patients/Residents
Who Are Up to Date Beginning With the
CY 2026 HH QRP
We are proposing to begin publicly
displaying data for the COVID–19
Vaccine: Percent of Patients/Residents
Who Are Up to Date measure beginning
with the January 2026 refresh of Care
Compare or as soon as technically
feasible using data collected for Q2 2024
(April 1, 2024 through June 30, 2024).
If finalized as proposed, an HHA’s
Patient/Resident level COVID–19
Vaccine percent of patients who are up
to date would be displayed based on
one quarter of data. Provider preview
reports would be distributed in October
2025, or as soon as technically feasible.
Thereafter, the percent of HHA patients
who are up to date with their COVID–
19 vaccinations would be publicly
displayed based on one quarter of data
and updated quarterly. To ensure the
statistical reliability of the data, we are
proposing that we would not publicly
report an HHAs performance on the
measure if the HHA had fewer than 20
eligible cases in any quarter. HHAs that
have fewer than 20 eligible cases would
be distinguished with a footnote that
notes that the number of cases/patient
stays is too small to report.
We invite public comment on the
proposal for the public display of the
COVID–19 Vaccine: Percent of Patients/
Residents Who Are Up to Date measure
beginning with the January 2026 refresh
of Care Compare, or as soon as
technically feasible.
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G. Health Equity Update
1. Background
In the CY 2023 Home Health Payment
Rate Update proposed rule (87 FR
66866), we included a Request for
Information (RFI) on several questions
related to a proposed health equity
measure concept. CMS defines health
equity as ‘‘the attainment of the highest
level of health for all people, where
everyone has a fair and just opportunity
to attain their optimal health regardless
of race, ethnicity, disability, sexual
orientation, gender identity,
socioeconomic status, geography,
preferred language, or other factors that
affect access to care and health
outcomes.’’ 102 CMS is working to
advance health equity by designing,
implementing, and operationalizing
policies and programs that support
102 Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services.
Available at https://www.cms.gov/pillar/healthequity. Accessed February 1, 2023.
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health for all the people served by our
programs and models, eliminating
avoidable differences in health
outcomes experienced by people who
are disadvantaged or underserved, and
providing the care and support that our
beneficiaries need to thrive. CMS’s goals
outlined in the CMS Framework for
Health Equity 2022–2023 103 are in line
with Executive Order 13985, on
Advancing Racial Equity and Support
for Underserved Communities Through
the Federal Government (January 25,
2021).104 The goals included in the CMS
Framework for Health Equity include:
strengthening CMS’s infrastructure for
assessment, creating synergies across
the health care system to drive
structural change, and identifying and
working to eliminate barriers to CMSsupported benefits, services, and
coverage.
In addition to the CMS Framework for
Health Equity, CMS seeks to ‘‘advance
health equity and whole-person care’’ as
one of eight goals comprising the CMS
National Quality Strategy (NQS).105 The
NQS identifies a wide range of potential
quality levers that can support our
advancement of equity, including: (1)
establishing a standardized approach for
resident-reported data and stratification;
(2) employing quality and value-based
programs to publicly report and
incentivize closing equity gaps; and, (3)
developing equity-focused performance
metrics, regulations, oversight strategies,
and quality improvement initiatives.
The NQS also acknowledges the
contribution of structural racism and
other systemic injustices to the
persistent disparities that underlie our
healthcare system.
Racial disparities in health, in
particular, are estimated to cost the U.S.
an estimated $93 billion in excess
medical costs and $42 billion in lost
productivity per year, in addition to
economic losses due to premature
deaths.106 Racial and ethnic diversity
has increased. An increase in the
percentage of people who identify as
two or more races accounts for most of
103 https://www.cms.gov/files/document/cmsframework-health-equity-2022.pdf.
104 Executive Order 13985, on ‘‘Advancing Racial
Equity and Support for Underserved Communities
Through the Federal Government,’’ can be found at:
https://www.whitehouse.gov/briefing-room/
presidential-actions/2021/01/20/executive-orderadvancing-racial-equity-and-support-forunderserved-communities-through-the-federalgovernment/.
105 Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services.
What is the CMS Quality Strategy? Available at
https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-InitiativesPatient-Assessment-Instruments/Value-BasedPrograms/CMS-Quality-Strategy.
106 Ani Turner, The Business Case for Racial
Equity, A Strategy for Growth, W.K. Kellogg
Foundation and Altarum, April 2018.
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the increase in diversity, rising from 2.9
percent to 10.2 percent between 2010
and 2020.107 Social determinants of
health, including social, economic,
environmental, and community
conditions, may have a stronger
influence on the population’s health
and well-being than services delivered
by practitioners and healthcare delivery
organizations.108
Measure stratification helps identify
disparities by calculating quality
measure outcomes separately for
different beneficiary subpopulations. By
looking at measure results for different
populations separately, CMS and
providers can see how care outcomes
may differ between certain patient
populations in a way that would not be
apparent from an overall score (that is,
a score averaged over all beneficiaries).
This helps CMS to better fulfill their
health equity goals. For example, certain
quality measures related to oral
healthcare outcomes for children, when
stratified by race, ethnicity, and income,
show how important health disparities
have been narrowed, because outcomes
for children in the lowest income
households and for Black and Hispanic
children improved faster than outcomes
for children in the highest income
households or for White children.109
These differences in outcomes would
not be apparent without stratification.
Additionally, the RFI solicited public
comments on a potential health equity
structural composite measure. We refer
readers to the CY 2023 Home Health
Payment Rate Update final rule (87 FR
66866) for a summary of the public
comments and suggestions received in
response to the health equity RFI.
We took these comments into
account, and we continue to work to
develop policies, quality measures, and
measurement strategies on this
important topic. After considering
public comments, CMS decided to
convene a health equity technical expert
panel to provide additional input to
inform the development of health equity
quality measures. The work of this
technical expert panel is described in
detail in the following section.
107 2022 National Healthcare Quality and
Disparities Report, page 15. Content last reviewed
November 2022. Agency for Healthcare Research
and Quality, Rockville, MD. https://www.ahrq.gov/
research/findings/nhqrdr/nhqdr22/.
108 2022 National Healthcare Quality and
Disparities Report. Content last reviewed November
2022, page 2. Agency for Healthcare Research and
Quality, Rockville, MD. https://www.ahrq.gov/
research/findings/nhqrdr/nhqdr22/.
109 2022 National Healthcare Quality and
Disparities Report, page 6. Content last reviewed
November 2022. Agency for Healthcare Research
and Quality, Rockville, MD. https://www.ahrq.gov/
research/findings/nhqrdr/nhqdr22/.
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2. Home Health and Hospice Health
Equity Technical Expert Panel
To support new health equity
measure development, the Home Health
and Hospice Health Equity Technical
Expert Panel (Home Health & Hospice
HE TEP) was convened by a CMS
contractor in Fall 2022. The Home
Health & Hospice HE TEP comprised
health equity experts from hospice and
home health settings, specializing in
quality assurance, patient advocacy,
clinical work, and measure
development. The TEP was charged
with providing input on a potential
cross-setting health equity structural
composite measure concept as set forth
in the CY 2023 Home Health Payment
Rate Update proposed rule (87 FR
66866) as part of an RFI related to the
HH QRP Health Equity Initiative. In
specific, the TEP assessed the face
validity and feasibility of the potential
structural measure. The TEP also
provided input on possible confidential
feedback report options to be used for
monitoring health equity. TEP members
also had the opportunity to provide
ideas for additional health equity
measure concepts or approaches to
addressing health equity in hospice and
home health settings. A summary of the
Home Health and Hospice HE TEP
meetings and final TEP
recommendations are available at
https://mmshub.cms.gov/sites/default/
files/HomeHealth-Hospice-HealthEquity-TEP-Report-508c.pdf.
3. Anticipated Future Health Equity
Activities
CMS is committed to developing
approaches to meaningfully incorporate
the advancement of health equity into
the HH QRP. We are considering health
equity measures used in other settings
like those in acute care that further
health equity in post-acute care. We
realize that the social determinants of
health data items in post-acute care
under the IMPACT Act of 2014 differ
from the SDOH data items in the acute
care health equity quality measures. We
could consider a future health equity
measure like screening for social needs
and intervention. With 30 to 55 percent
of health outcomes attributed to
SDOH,110 a measure capturing and
addressing SDOH could encourage
providers to identify specific needs and
connect residents with the community
resources necessary to overcome social
barriers to their wellness. We could
specify it using the SDOH data items
110 World Health Organization (WHO). (n.d.).
Social Determinants of Health. https://
www.who.int/health-topics/social-determinants-ofhealth#tab=tab_1, accessed February 1, 2023.
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that we currently collect as SPADEs on
the OASIS. These SDOH data items
assess health literacy, social isolation,
transportation problems, preferred
language (including need or want of an
interpreter), race, and ethnicity. These
SDOH data items differ from data
elements considered as screening items
in the acute care settings, which are
housing instability, food instability,
transportation needs, utility difficulties,
and interpersonal safety. This means
that we might consider in the future
adding the SDOH data items used by
acute care providers into the HH QRP as
we develop future health equity quality
measures under our HH QRP statutory
authority. This supports our desire to
align quality measures across CMS
consistent with the CMS path forward
for advancing health equity solutions.111
Consistent with ‘‘The Path Forward:
Improving Data to Advance Health
Equity Solutions’’ (CMS OMH,
November 2022) we also see value in
aligning SDOH data items across all care
settings and to the United States Core
Data for Interoperability (USCDI) where
applicable and appropriate. The USCDI
is a standardized set of health data
classes and constituent data elements
for nationwide, interoperable health
information exchange, including data
elements and associated vocabulary
standards to support computerized,
interoperable use of SDOH data.112
As we move this important work
forward, we will continue to take input
from interested parties. As of this
publication, the Initial Proposals for
Updating OMB’s Race and Ethnicity
Statistical Standards, (88 FR 5375), has
collected public comment. Additionally,
the Office of the National Coordinator
for Health IT (ONC) welcomes
submissions proposing additional data
classes and data elements via the USCDI
ONC New Data Element and Class
(ONDEC) submission system for future
versions of the USCDI.113 In addition,
while some of the anticipated health
equity efforts will proceed through the
rulemaking process, other activities may
be pursued through subregulatory
channels, such as Open-Door Forums
(ODF), Medicare Learning Network
(MLN), and public summary reports
such as TEP reports or information
gathering reports (IGR).
111 https://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/
NEJMp2215539, February 1, 2023.
112 https://www.healthit.gov/isa/united-statescore-data-interoperability-uscdi.
113 https://www.healthit.gov/isa/ONDEC.
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H. Proposal To Codify HH QRP Data
Completion Thresholds
1. Compliance
Section 1895(b)(3)(B)(v)(I) of the Act
requires that, for the CY 2007 payment
determination and subsequent years,
each HHA submit to the Secretary
quality data specified by the Secretary
in a form and manner, and at a time,
specified by the Secretary. As required
in accordance with subclause (II) for
such a year, for any HHA that does not
submit data in accordance with section
1895(b)(3)(B)(v)(I) of the Act with
respect to a given calendar year will
result in the reduction of the annual
home health market basket percentage
increase otherwise applicable to an
HHA for that calendar year by 2
percentage points. In the CY 2016 HH
PPS final rule (80 FR 68703 through
68705), we finalized a proposal to
define the quantity of OASIS
assessments each HHA must submit to
meet the pay-for reporting requirement.
We finalized a proposal that would
increase the reporting threshold for
HHAs over three years, starting with the
CY 2017 reporting period. HHAs were
required to score at least 70 percent on
the Quality Assessment Only (QAO)
metric of pay-for-reporting performance
requirement for CY 2017 (reporting
period July 1, 2015 to June 30, 2016), 80
percent for CY 2018 (reporting period
July 1, 2016 to June 30, 2017) and 90
percent for CY 2019 (reporting period
July 1, 2017 to June 30, 2018) or be
subject to a 2 percentage point reduction
to their market basket update for that
reporting period. In the 2018 HH PPS
final rule (82 FR 51737 through 51738),
we proposed to apply the 90 percent
threshold requirements established in
the CY 2016 HH PPS rule to the
submission of standardized patient
assessment data beginning with the CY
2019 HH QRP.
2. Proposal To Codify HH QRP Data
Completion Thresholds
We propose to codify these data
completeness thresholds at
§ 484.245(b)(2)(ii)(A) for measures data
collected using the OASIS. Under this
section, we propose to codify our
requirement that HHAs must meet or
exceed a data submission threshold set
at 90 percent of all required OASIS and
submit the data through the CMS
designated data submission systems.
This threshold would apply to required
quality measures data and standardized
patient assessment data collected
adopted into the HH QRP. We also
propose to codify our policy at
§ 484.245(b)(2)(ii)(B) that a HHA must
meet or exceed this threshold to avoid
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receiving a 2-percentage point reduction
to its annual payment update for a given
CY as codified at § 484.225(b).
We invite public comment on our
proposal to codify in regulations text the
HH QRP data completion thresholds at
§ 484.245(b)(2)(ii)(A) for measures and
standardized patient assessment
elements collected using the OASIS and
compliance threshold to avoid receiving
2 percentage point reduction as
described under § 484.245(b)(2)(ii)(B).
I. Principles for Selecting and
Prioritizing HH QRP Quality Measures
and Concepts Under Consideration for
Future Years: Request for Information
(RFI)
1. Background
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CMS has established a National
Quality Strategy 114 for its quality
programs which support a resilient,
high-value health care system
promoting quality outcomes, safety,
equity and accessibility for all
individuals. The CMS National Quality
Strategy is foundational for contributing
to improvements in health care,
enhancing patient outcomes, and
informing consumer choice. To advance
these goals, CMS leaders from across the
Agency have come together to move
towards a building-block approach to
streamline quality measures across CMS
quality programs for the adult and
pediatric populations. This ‘‘Universal
Foundation’’ 115 of quality measures will
focus provider attention, reduce burden,
identify disparities in care, prioritize
development of interoperable, digital
quality measures, allow for crosscomparisons across programs, and help
identify measurement gaps. The
development and implementation of the
Preliminary Adult and Pediatric
Universal Foundation Measures will
promote the best, safest, and most
equitable care for individuals as we all
come together on these critical quality
areas.
In alignment with the CMS National
Quality Strategy, the HH QRP endeavors
to move towards a more parsimonious
set of measures while continually
improving the quality of health care for
beneficiaries. The purpose of this RFI is
to gather input on existing gaps in HH
114 Schreiber M, Richards A, Moody-Williams J,
Fleisher L. The CMS National Quality Strategy: a
person-centered approach to improving quality.
Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services. June
6, 2022. Available at: https://www.cms.gov/blog/
cms-national-quality-strategy-person-centeredapproach-improving-quality. opens in new tab.
115 Jacobs D, Schreiber M, Seshamani M, Tsai D,
Fowler E, Fleisher L. Aligning Quality Measures
across CMS—The Universal Foundation. N Engl J
Med 2023; 338:776–779. DOI: 10.1056/
NEJMp2215539.
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QRP measures and to solicit public
comment on either fully developed HH
measures, fully developed measures in
other programs that may be appropriate
for the HH QRP, and measurement
concepts that could be developed into
HH QRP measures, to fill these
measurement gaps. While we will not be
responding to specific comments
submitted in response to this RFI in the
CY2024 HH PPS final rule, we intend to
use this input to inform future policies.
This RFI consists of four sections. The
first section is the background. The
second section discusses a general
framework or set of principles that CMS
utilizes to identify future HH QRP
measures. The third section draws from
an environmental scan conducted to
identify HH QRP measurement gaps,
and measures or measure concepts that
could be used to fill these gaps. The
final section solicits public comment on
(a) the set of principles for selecting
measures for the HH QRP, (b) identified
measurement gaps, and (c) measures
that are available for immediate use, or
that may be adapted or developed for
use in the HH QRP.
2. Guiding Principles for Selecting and
Prioritizing Measures
CMS has identified a set of principles
to guide future HH QRP measure set
development and maintenance. These
principles are intended to ensure that
measures resonate with beneficiaries
and caregivers, do not impose undue
burden on providers, align with CMS’
post-acute care (PAC) program goals,
and can be readily operationalized.
Specifically, measures incorporated into
the HH QRP should meet the following
four objectives:
• Actionability—Optimally, HH QRP
measures should focus on structural
elements, healthcare processes, and
outcomes of care that have been
demonstrated, such as through clinical
evidence or best practices, to be
amenable to improvement. In other
words, activities or approaches that
contribute to improvement on a measure
have been established and are feasible
for providers to implement.
• Comprehensiveness and
Conciseness—QRP measures should
assess performance of all HH core
services using the smallest number of
measures that comprehensively assess
the value of care provided in HH
settings. Parsimony in the QRP measure
set minimizes provider burden resulting
from data collection and submission.
• Focus on Provider Responses to
Payment—The HH PPS shapes
incentives for care delivery. HH
performance measures should neither
exacerbate nor induce unwanted
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responses to the payment systems. As
feasible, measures should identify and
mitigate adverse incentives of the
payment system.
• Alignment with CMS Statutory
Requirements and Key Program Goals—
Measures must align with CMS statutory
requirements, such as the IMPACT Act
of 2014 and the Meaningful Measures
Framework as well as align across PAC
programs where possible.
3. Gaps in HH QRP Measure Set
Identified by Environmental Scan and
Potential New Measures
CMS conducted an environmental
scan that utilized the previous-listed
principles to guide the identification of
gaps in the HH QRP. Measurement gaps
were identified in the domains of
cognitive function, behavioral and
mental health, and chronic conditions
and pain management. We discuss each
of these in more detail in the next
section.
a. Cognitive Function
Conditions associated with
limitations in cognitive function, which
may include stroke, traumatic brain
injuries, dementia, and Alzheimer’s
disease, as well as intellectual and
developmental disabilities (I/DD) affect
an individual’s ability to think, reason,
remember, problem-solve, and make
decisions. The IMPACT Act identifies
cognitive function as a key quality
measure domain, and an area for
inclusion as a standardized assessment
data element.
Two sources of information on
cognitive function currently collected in
HHAs are the Brief Interview for Mental
Status (BIMS) and Confusion
Assessment Method (CAM©).116 Both
the BIMS and CAM have been
incorporated into the OASIS. Scored by
providers via direct observation, the
BIMS is used to determine orientation
and the ability to register and recall new
information. The CAM assesses the
presence of inattention, disorganized
thinking, and level of consciousness.
The BIMS and CAM include items
representing different aspects of
cognitive function, from which quality
measures may be constructed. Although
these instruments have been subjected
to feasibility, reliability, and validity
testing, additional development and
testing would be required prior to
transforming the concepts reflected in
the BIMS and CAM (for example,
116 Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services.
Outcome and Assessment Information Set (OASIS–
E) Data Set. Effective January 1, 2023. https://
www.cms.gov/medicare/quality-initiatives-patientassessment-instruments/homehealthqualityinits/
oasis-data-sets.
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temporal orientation, recall) into fully
specified measures for implementation
in the HH QRP.
This RFI is requesting comment on
cognitive functioning measures that may
be available for immediate use, or that
may be adapted or developed for use in
the HH QRP, using the BIMS or the
CAM. In addition to comment on
specific measures and instruments, CMS
seeks input on the feasibility of
measuring improvement in cognitive
functioning during a HH stay, which
typically averages 56 days; 117 the
cognitive skills (for example, executive
functions) that are more likely to
improve during an HHA stay;
conditions for which measures of
maintenance—rather than improvement
in cognitive functioning—are more
practical; and the types of intervention
that have been demonstrated to assist in
improving or maintaining cognitive
functioning.
b. Behavioral and Mental Health
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Estimates suggest that one in five
Medicare beneficiaries have a ‘‘common
mental health disorder’’ and nearly 8%
have a serious mental illness.118
Behavioral and mental health includes
substance use disorders (SUD), which
are understudied in PAC.119 Research
using National Survey on Drug Use and
Health 2015–2019 data estimated that
1.7 million Medicare beneficiaries, or 8
percent of those aged less than 65 years
and 2 percent of those aged 65 years and
older, had a past-year substance use
disorder, 77 percent attributed to
alcohol and 16 percent attributed to
prescription drugs.120 In some
instances, such as following an ischemic
stroke or a new diagnosis of a chronic
condition such as diabetes, patients may
develop depression, anxiety, or SUD. In
other instances, patients may have been
dealing with mental or behavioral
health issues long before their postacute admission. Left unmanaged,
however, these conditions make it
difficult for affected patients to actively
participate in their rehabilitation and
117 Based on home health episodes ending in
CY2021 (the most recent year for which complete
data are available).
118 Figueroa J, Phelan J, Orav E, Patel V, Jha A.
Association of mental health disorders with health
care spending in the Medicare population. JAMA
Network Open 2020;3(3):e201210.
119 Desai A, Grossberg G. Substance Use Disorders
in Postacute and Long-Term Care Settings.
Psychiatr Clin North Am. 2022 Sep;45(3):467–482.
120 Parish W, Mark T, Weber E, Steinberg D.
Substance Use Disorders Among Medicare
Beneficiaries: Prevalence, Mental and Physical
Comorbidities, and Treatment Barriers. Am J Prev
Med 2022 Aug;63(2):225–232. Doi: 10.1016/
j.amepre.2022.01.021.
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treatment regimen, thereby contributing
to poor health outcomes.
Information on the availability and
appropriateness of behavioral and
mental health measures in PAC is
limited, and the 2021 National Impact
Assessment of the CMS Quality
Measures Report 121 identified PAC
program measurement gaps in the areas
of behavioral and mental health. Among
the mental health quality measures in
current use, the HH QRP uses a quality
measure, ‘‘Depression Assessment
Conducted’’ which is described as
‘‘How often the home health team check
patients for depression’’ (CMS ID 0198–
10). The measure was removed from
Care Compare—Home Health in July
2021. Although it may be possible to
adapt this measure for use in other PAC
settings, this process measure does not
directly assess performance in the
management of depression and related
mental health concerns.
Information on behavioral and mental
health currently collected in HHAs is
the Patient Mood Interview (PHQ–2 to
9), a validated interview that screens for
symptoms of depression, and provides a
standardized severity score and a rating
for evidence of a depressive disorder.
The PHQ–2 to 9 identifies signs and
symptoms of mood distress, a serious
condition that is underdiagnosed and
undertreated in home health and is
associated with significant morbidity.
There is currently no information on
substance use disorder collected in
HHAs.
The PHQ–2 to 9 represents one
mental health condition, from which
quality measures may be constructed.
Although this instrument has been
subjected to feasibility, reliability, and
validity testing, additional development
and testing would be required prior to
transforming the concepts reflected in
the PHQ–2 to 9 into fully specified
measures for implementation in the HH
QRP.
This RFI is requesting comment on
behavioral and mental health measures
that may be available for immediate use,
or that may be adapted or developed for
use in the HH QRP, using the PHQ–2 to
9. In addition to comment on specific
measures and instruments, CMS seeks
input on the feasibility of measuring
improvement in depressive symptoms
during a HH stay, which typically
121 Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services.
2021 National Impact Assessment of the Centers for
Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) Quality
Measures Report. June 2021. https://www.cms.gov/
files/document/2021-national-impact-assessmentreport.pdf.
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averages 56 days; 122 the symptoms that
are more likely to improve during an
HHA stay; and the types of intervention
that have been demonstrated to assist in
improving depressive symptoms.
CMS seeks feedback on behavioral
and mental health, including substance
use disorder, measures or instruments
that may be directly applied, adapted, or
developed for use in the HH QRP.
Further, CMS seeks comment on the
degree to which measures have been or
will require validation and testing prior
to application in the HH QRP. Input on
the availability of data, the manner in
which data could be collected and
reported to CMS, and the burden
imposed on providers is also sought.
c. Chronic Conditions and Pain
Management
Despite the availability of measures
focused on core HHA clinical care
services and, specifically, Improvement
in Management of Oral Medications
CBE #0176 (CMS ID 0189–11) and
Improvement on Dyspnea CBE #0179
(CMS ID 0187–11). HH QRP measures
do not directly address aspects of care
rendered to populations with chronic
conditions, such as chronic kidney
disease or cardiovascular disease.
Another example of a service area for
which existing measures could more
adequately capture HHA actions
concisely is pain management. Even
though pain has been demonstrated to
contribute to falls with major injury and
restrictions in mobility and daily
activity, a host of other factors also
contribute to these measure domains,
making it difficult to directly link
provider actions to performance.
Instead, a measure of provider actions in
reducing pain interference in daily
activities, including the ability to sleep,
would be a more concise measure of
pain management. Beginning January 1,
2023, HHAs began collecting new
standardized patient assessment data
elements, including items that assess
pain interference with (1) daily
activities, (2) sleep, and (3) participation
in therapy, providing an opportunity to
develop more concise measures of
provider performance.
Through this RFI CMS is seeking
input on measures of chronic condition
and pain management that may be used
to assess HHA performance.
Additionally, CMS seeks general
comment on the feasibility and
challenges of measuring and reporting
HHA performance on existing QRP
measures, such as Discharge to the
122 Based on home health episodes ending in
CY2021 (the most recent year for which complete
data are available).
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Community (CBE #3479) and Potentially
Preventable 30-day post-discharge
readmissions, for subgroups of patients
defined by type of chronic condition.
For example, measures could assess
rates of discharge to community or 30day post-discharge readmissions among
patients admitted to an HHA with
chronic obstructive pulmonary disease
(COPD) or chronic renal failure.
e. Solicitation of Public Comment
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We invite general comment on the
principles for identifying HH QRP
measures, as well as additional beliefs
about measurement gaps, and suitable
measures for filling these gaps.
Specifically, we solicit comment on the
following questions:
• Principles for Selecting and
Prioritizing HH QRP Measures
++ To what extent do you agree with
the principles for selecting and
prioritizing measures?
++ Are there principles that you
believe CMS should eliminate from the
measure selection criteria?
++ Are there principles that you
believe CMS should add to the measure
selection criteria?
++ How can CMS best consider
equity in measures?
• HH QRP Measurement Gaps
++ CMS requests input on the
identified measurement gaps, including
in the areas of cognitive function,
behavioral and mental health, and
chronic conditions and pain
management.
++ Are there gaps in the HH QRP
measures that have not been identified
in this RFI?
• Measures and Measure Concepts
Recommended for Use in the HH QRP
++ Are there measures that you
believe are either currently available for
use, or that could be adapted or
developed for use in the HH QRP
program to assess performance in the
areas of: (1) cognitive functioning; (2)
behavioral and mental health; (3)
chronic conditions; (4) pain
management; or (5) other areas not
mentioned in this RFI?
CMS also seeks input on data
available to develop measures,
approaches for data collection,
perceived challenges, or barriers, and
approaches for addressing challenges.
IV. Proposed Changes to the Expanded
Home Health Value-Based Purchasing
(HHVBP) Model
A. Background
As authorized by section 1115A of the
Act and finalized in the CY 2016 HH
PPS final rule (80 FR 68624), the Center
for Medicare and Medicaid Innovation
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(Innovation Center) implemented the
Home Health Value-Based Purchasing
(HHVBP) Model (‘‘original Model’’) in
nine states on January 1, 2016. The
design of the original HHVBP Model
leveraged the successes and lessons
learned from other CMS value-based
purchasing programs and
demonstrations to shift from volumebased payments to a model designed to
promote the delivery of higher quality
care to Medicare beneficiaries. The
specific goals of the original HHVBP
Model were to—
• Provide higher incentives for better
quality care with greater efficiency;
• Study new potential quality and
efficiency measures for appropriateness
in the home health setting; and,
• Enhance the current public
reporting process.
The original HHVBP Model resulted
in an average 4.6 percent improvement
in HHAs’ total performance scores (TPS)
and an average annual savings of $141
million to Medicare without evidence of
adverse risks.123 The evaluation of the
original Model also found reductions in
unplanned acute care hospitalizations
and skilled nursing facility (SNF) stays,
resulting in reductions in inpatient and
SNF spending. The U.S. Secretary of
Health and Human Services determined
that expansion of the original HHVBP
Model would further reduce Medicare
spending and improve the quality of
care. In October 2020, the CMS Chief
Actuary certified that expansion of the
HHVBP Model would produce Medicare
savings if expanded to all states.124
On January 8, 2021, CMS announced
the certification of the HHVBP Model
for expansion nationwide, as well as the
intent to expand the Model through
notice and comment rulemaking.125
In the CY 2022 HH PPS final rule (86
FR 62292 through 62336) and codified
at 42 CFR part 484 subpart F, we
finalized the decision to expand the
HHVBP Model to all Medicare certified
HHAs in the 50 States, territories, and
District of Columbia beginning January
1, 2022. CY 2022 was a preimplementation year. During CY 2022,
CMS provided HHAs with resources
and training, to allow HHAs time to
prepare and learn about the
expectations and requirements of the
expanded HHVBP Model without risk to
payments. We finalized that the
123 https://innovation.cms.gov/data-and-reports/
2020/hhvbp-thirdann-rpt.
124 https://www.cms.gov/files/document/
certificationhome-health-value-based-purchasinghhvbpmodel.pdf.
125 https://www.cms.gov/newsroom/pressreleases/cms-takes-action-improve-home-healthcare-seniors-announces-intent-expand-homehealth-value-based.
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expanded Model will generally use
benchmarks, achievement thresholds,
and improvement thresholds based on
CY 2019 data to assess achievement or
improvement of HHA performance on
applicable quality measures and that
HHAs will compete nationally in their
applicable size cohort, smaller-volume
HHAs or larger-volume HHAs, as
defined by the number of complete
unique beneficiary episodes for each
HHA in the year prior to the
performance year. All HHAs certified to
participate in the Medicare program
prior to January 1, 2022, will be
required to participate and will be
eligible to receive an annual Total
Performance Score based on their CY
2023 performance.
We finalized the quality measure set
for the expanded Model, as well as
policies related to the removal,
modification, and suspension of
applicable measures, and the addition of
new measures and the form, manner
and timing of the OASIS-based, Home
Health Consumer Assessment of
Healthcare Providers and Systems
(HHCAHPS) survey-based, and claimsbased measures submission in the
applicable measure set beginning in CY
2022 and subsequent years. We also
finalized an appeals process, an
extraordinary circumstances exception
policy, and public reporting of annual
performance data under the expanded
Model.
Additionally, in the CY 2022 HH PPS
final rule (86 FR 62312), we
summarized and responded to
comments received on the challenges
unique to value-based purchasing
frameworks in terms of health equity
and ways in which we could
incorporate health equity goals into the
expanded HHVBP Model. Comments
received were related to the use of
stabilization measures to promote access
to care for individuals with chronic
illness or limited ability to improve;
collection of patient level demographic
information for existing measures; and
stratification of outcome measures by
various patient populations to
determine how they are affected by
social determinants of health (SDOH).
In the CY 2023 HH PPS final rule (87
FR 66869 through 66876), we finalized
our policy to replace the term baseline
year with the terms HHA baseline year
and Model baseline year, and to change
the calendar years associated with each
of those baseline years. Specifically, we
changed the HHA baseline year for the
CY 2023 performance year from 2021 to
2022 for ‘‘new’’ HHAs with CMS
certification numbers (CCNs) with
effective dates prior 2022, and the
Model baseline year from CY 2019 to CY
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B. Proposed Changes to the Applicable
Measure Set
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We are proposing to make changes to
the applicable measure set. First, we are
proposing to codify the HHVBP measure
removal factors effective in CY 2024.
Second, we are proposing to remove five
measures from the current applicable
measure set and add three measures
starting in CY 2025. Third, due to the
net change in the number of measures
proposed, we are proposing to adjust the
weights for the measures in the OASISbased and claims-based measure
categories starting in CY 2025. Lastly,
we are proposing to update the Model
baseline year for all measures starting in
CY 2025.
In that same final rule (86 FR 62310
through 62313), we finalized that,
during the expanded Model, we would
address any needed adjustments or
modifications to the applicable measure
set; this process involves notice and
comment rulemaking for removing or
adding measures and for adopting
changes to measures that we consider to
substantially change the nature of the
measure. We also post the names of any
measures added to the expanded Model
finalized through the rulemaking
process on the CMS website by the first
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1. Codification of the HHVBP Measure
Removal Factors
In the CY 2022 HH PPS final rule (86
FR 62312), we stated that removal of an
expanded HHVBP Model measure
would take place through notice and
comment rulemaking. In that same final
rule (86 FR 62311 through 62312), we
adopted eight measure removal factors
that we consider when determining
whether to remove measures from the
expanded HHVBP Model’s applicable
measure set:
• Factor 1. Measure performance
among HHAs is so high and unvarying
that meaningful distinctions in
improvements in performance can no
longer be made (that is, topped out).
• Factor 2. Performance or
improvement on a measure does not
result in better patient outcomes.
• Factor 3. A measure does not align
with current clinical guidelines or
practice.
• Factor 4. A more broadly applicable
measure (across settings, populations, or
conditions) for the particular topic is
available.
• Factor 5. A measure that is more
proximal in time to desired patient
outcomes for the particular topic is
available.
• Factor 6. A measure that is more
strongly associated with desired patient
outcomes for the particular topic is
available.
• Factor 7. Collection or public
reporting of a measure leads to negative
unintended consequences other than
patient harm.
• Factor 8. The costs associated with
a measure outweigh the benefit of its
continued use in the program.
To be consistent with the HH QRP
and other quality reporting programs
(that is SNF QRP, IRF QRP, and LTCH
QRP) we propose to codify the eight
HHVBP measure removal factors for the
expanded Model at § 484.380.
We invite public comments on this
proposal.
December 1 upon publication of the
applicable final rule. Examples of
changes that we might consider to be
substantive would be those in which the
changes are so significant that the
measure is no longer the same measure,
or when a standard of performance
assessed by a measure becomes more
stringent, such as changes in acceptable
timing of medication, procedure/
process, test administration, or
expansion of the measure to a new
setting. If an update to a measure is
necessary in a manner that we consider
to not substantially change the nature of
the measure, we will use a
subregulatory process to incorporate
those updates to the measure
specifications that apply to the program.
Specifically, we would revise the
information that is posted on the CMS
website so that it clearly identifies the
updates and provides links to where
additional information on where the
updates can be found.
We have determined that five of the
measures finalized in the CY 2022 HH
PPS final rule require further
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2. Changes to the Applicable Measure
Set
a. Background
In the CY 2022 HH PPS final rule (86
FR 66308 through 66310), we finalized
the applicable measure set effective in
the CY 2022 pre-implementation year
and subsequent years, which includes
five OASIS-based measures, two claimsbased measures, and five HHCAHPS
Survey-based measures (see Table D1).
Details of these measures were included
in Tables 26 and 27 of the CY 2022 HH
PPS proposed rule (86 FR 35923
through 35926).
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2022 starting in CY 2023. Additionally,
we summarized the comments received
on future approaches to health equity
(HE) in the expanded HHVBP Model.
Comments received were related to the
support of addressing health equity,
potential unintended consequences,
thorough consideration and testing of
potential HE measures, data collection
and, applying HE data to the expanded
Model’s cohorts and risk adjustment
models.
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consideration. Specifically, we are
proposing to remove the following
measures from the applicable measure
set: (1) OASIS-based Discharged to
Community (DTC); (2) OASIS-based
Total Normalized Composite Change in
Self-Care (TNC Self-Care); (3) OASISbased Total Normalized Composite
Change in Mobility (TNC Mobility); (4)
claims-based Acute Care Hospitalization
During the First 60 Days of Home Health
Use (ACH); and (5) claims-based
Emergency Department Use without
Hospitalization During the First 60 Days
of Home Health (ED Use).
We propose to replace these five
measures with three measures (see
Table D2). Specifically, we are
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proposing to add the following
measures: (1) the claims-based
Discharge to Community-Post Acute
Care (DTC–PAC) Measure for Home
Health Agencies; (2) the OASIS-based
Discharge Function Score (DC Function)
measure; and (3) the claims-based Home
Health Within-Stay Potentially
Preventable Hospitalization (PPH)
measure. The claims-based DTC–PAC
measure would replace the OASISbased DTC measure. The OASIS-based
DC Function measure would replace the
two OASIS-based TNC measures (SelfCare and Mobility). The claims-based
PPH measure would replace the claimsbased ACH and ED Use measures.
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We are proposing to make these
changes to the applicable measure set
beginning with the CY 2025
performance year and subsequent
performance years. The proposed
changes will align the measures used in
the expanded HHVBP Model with the
measures in the HH QRP and publicly
reported on Home Health Care Compare.
This alignment will support
comparisons of provider quality and
streamline home health providers’ data
capture and reporting processes. Table
D2 summarizes the proposed applicable
measure set that would be effective for
the CY 2025 performance year (CY 2027
payment year).
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b. Changes to the Applicable Measure
Set
We propose to make all changes to the
applicable measure set discussed in this
rule beginning with the CY 2025
performance year, thus all changes will
affect the same payment year beginning
with the CY 2027 payment year.
(1) Proposal To Replace the OASISBased DTC Measure With the ClaimsBased DTC–PAC Measure Beginning CY
2025
We propose to replace the current
OASIS-based DTC measure with the
claims-based DTC–PAC measure. The
claims-based DTC–PAC measure
assesses successful discharge to the
community from an HHA, with
successful discharge to the community
including no unplanned rehospitalizations and no death in the 31
days following discharge. This measure
was adopted as part of the Home Health
Quality Reporting Program (HH QRP) in
the CY 2017 HH PPS final rule (81 FR
76765 through 76770). Details about the
measure can be found in the CY 2017
HH PPS final rule (81 FR 76765 through
76770) and the CY 2018 HH PPS final
rule (84 FR 60564 through 60566). One
difference between the current OASISbased DTC measure and the proposed
claims-based DTC–PAC measure is the
time period of the measure. The
proposed claims-based DTC–PAC
measure uses two years of claims data,
whereas the current OASIS-based DTC
measure uses one year of OASIS data.
Furthermore, the claims-based DTC–
PAC measure is aligned across PAC
settings in terms of risk-adjustment,
exclusions, numerator, and measure
intent, whereas the OASIS-based DTC
measure is not aligned. Therefore,
making the replacement is in
accordance with Measure Removal
Factor 4: A more broadly applicable
measure (across settings, populations, or
conditions) for the particular topic is
available. Additionally, the replacement
would further align the expanded
HHVBP Model applicable measure set
with the HH QRP measures. The HH
QRP added the claims-based DTC
measure in 2017 and stopped publicly
reporting the OASIS-based DTC
measure in 2017. The proposed use of
the claims-based DTC–PAC measure has
additional benefits as compared to the
current OASIS-based DTC measure in
that it assesses broader outcomes by
assessing post-discharge hospitalization
and mortality. Specifically, it first
examines whether a patient was
discharged to the community from the
PAC setting. For patients discharged to
the community, this measure examines
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whether they remained alive in the
community without an unplanned
admission to an acute care hospital or
LTCH in the 31-day post-discharge
observation window following
discharge to the community.
(2) Proposal to Jointly Replace the
OASIS-Based TNC Self-Care and TNC
Mobility Measures With the OASISBased Discharge Function Score
Measure Beginning CY 2025
We propose to jointly replace the TNC
Self-Care and TNC Mobility measures
with the DC Function measure. We
adopted the TNC Self-Care and TNC
Mobility measures in the CY 2019 HH
PPS final rule (83 FR 56529 through
56535) for use in the original Model
beginning with performance year 4 (CY
2019). The TNC measures, which are
composite measures, replaced three
individual measures (Improvement in
Bathing, Improvement in Bed
Transferring, and Improvement in
Ambulation-Locomotion). For these
composite measures, HHA performance
on the three mobility OASIS-items are
included in the TNC measures. The
TNC measures also include six
additional activities of daily living
(ADL) measures to create a more
comprehensive assessment of HHA
performance across a broader range of
patient ADL outcomes. The TNC
measures report the magnitude of
patient change (either improvement, no
change, or decline) across six self-care
and three mobility patient functional
activities. This methodology accounts
for changes to the scores on individual
OASIS items while also considering that
not all patients are able to improve on
all aspects of each composite measure.
The DC Function measure determines
how successful each HHA is at
achieving an expected level of
functional ability for its patients at
discharge. An expectation for discharge
function score is built for each HHA
episode by accounting for patient
characteristics that impact their
functional status. The final DC Function
measure for a given HHA is the
proportion of that HHA’s episodes
where a patient’s observed discharge
score meets or exceeds their expected
discharge score. Functional status is
measured through Section GG of OASIS
assessments, which are cross-setting
items. Section GG evaluates a patient’s
capacity to perform daily activities
related to three self-care (GG0130)
activities and eight mobility (GG0170)
activities.
The DC Function measure has been
proposed for adoption in all PAC
settings. We included the proposed DC
Function measure on the 2022 Measure
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Under Consideration (MUC) list for the
Inpatient Rehabilitation Facility QRP,
Home Health QRP, Long Term Care
Hospital QRP, SNF QRP, and SNF
VBP.126 It is proposed for the Skilled
Nursing Facility (SNF) Value-Based
Purchasing program in the FY 2024 SNF
PPS proposed rule and in this CY 2024
HH PPS proposed rule for adoption in
the HH QRP beginning CY 2025; details
about the measure can be found in
section III.D. of this proposed rule. We
propose adopting the measure for the
expanded HHVBP Model on the same
timeline as the HH QRP (CY 2025) given
that the GG items used in the measure
have gone through extensive testing,
and the measure has received
conditional support for rulemaking as
part of the most recent Measure
Applications Partnership (MAP)
process. While the DC Function
measure is not yet implemented in the
HH QRP or other PAC programs, the
OASIS data elements used to calculate
this measure have been collected since
2019. As such, we believe HHAs have
had sufficient time to ensure successful
reporting of the data elements needed
for this measure.
Replacement of the TNC measures
with the DC Function measure would
further align the expanded HHVBP
Model measure set with the HH QRP
measures, as well as with other PAC
settings. For these reasons, this
replacement is in accordance with
Measure Removal Factor 4.
Additionally, the DC Function measure
addresses self-care and mobility through
a single measure rather than two
measures, thereby streamlining the
calculation and reporting of measure
results.
(3) Proposal to Jointly Replace the Acute
Care Hospitalization During the First 60
Days of Home Health Measure and
Emergency Department Use Without
Hospitalization During the First 60 Days
of Home Health Measure With the Home
Health Within Stay Potentially
Preventable Hospitalization (PPH)
Measure Beginning CY 2025
We propose to jointly replace the
Acute Care Hospitalization During the
First 60 Days of Home Health Measure
(‘‘ACH’’ measure) and Emergency
Department Use Without
Hospitalization During the First 60 Days
of Home Health Measure (‘‘ED Use’’
measure) with the Home Health Within
Stay Potentially Preventable
Hospitalization (PPH) Measure. The
126 See CMS, Measures Under Consideration List
for 2022 (Dec. 1, 2022), available at https://
mmshub.cms.gov/sites/default/files/2022-MUCList.xlsx.
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current specifications for the PPH
measure are available on the CMS
website at https://www.cms.gov/files/
document/hh-qrpspecificationspotentially
preventablehospitalizations.pdf.
The CY 2022 HH PPS final rule (86 FR
62340 through 62345) finalized the joint
replacement of the ACH measure and
ED Use measure with the PPH measure
in the HH QRP beginning CY 2023. This
replacement under the HH QRP was
made under Measure Removal Factor 6:
A measure that is more strongly
associated with desired patient
outcomes for the particular topic is
available. Additional details of the
reason for replacement are found in the
CY 2022 HH PPS final rule (86 FR 62340
through 62345). Because these measures
have been finalized to be jointly
replaced with the PPH measure in the
HH QRP beginning CY 2023, we are
proposing to remove them from the
expanded HHVBP Model.
In the CY 2022 HH PPS proposed rule
(86 FR 35929), we requested comments
on whether we should align the
expanded HHVBP Model with the
proposed changes for the HH QRP by
proposing to remove the same two
measures (‘‘ACH’’ and ‘‘ED Use’’
measures) from the expanded Model in
a future year. As summarized in the CY
2022 HH PPS final rule (86 FR 62312),
the feedback was generally supportive,
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recommending that the expanded
HHVBP Model’s applicable measure set
align with the HH QRP measures.
Replacing ACH and ED Use with PPH
would further align the expanded
Model’s applicable measure set with the
HH QRP measures.
We propose no changes to the five
HHCAHPS Survey-based measures used
for the expanded HHVBP Model.
We invite public comments on these
proposals.
3. Measure Categories
As shown in Table D3, the expanded
Model utilizes established measure
categories that represent the data
sources including OASIS-based, claimsbased, and HHCAHPS Survey-based.
Although measures in the original
Model have been added, removed or
substituted in the past, the measure
category weights have remained
constant, maintaining the weighting
proportions of 35 percent, 35 percent
and 30 percent for OASIS-based, claimsbased and HHCAHPS Survey-based
measures for the larger-volume cohort,
respectively. For HHAs in the smallervolume cohort, the weighting
proportions of the OASIS-based and
claims-based measures are 50 percent
and 50 percent, respectively. Weights
for individual measures within these
categories have changed in the past due
to changes to the applicable measure set
(for example, replacing three individual
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OASIS-based measures with the two
TNC measures) and to encourage
improvement in the claims-based
measures. With the proposed changes to
the applicable measures in this
proposed rule, the number of measures
within the OASIS-based measure
category would change. Table D3
illustrates the change in the measure set
including the removal of the OASISbased DTC measure, the replacement of
the two OASIS-based TNC change
measures to the OASIS-based DC
Function measure, and the replacement
of the claims-based Acute
Hospitalization Measure and claimsbased ED Use Measure for the claimsbased PPH measure. Despite the changes
to the applicable measure set, we intend
to maintain the existing measure
categories and their relative weights. For
example, for the larger-volume cohort,
the claims-based measures would
continue to have a total weight of 35
percent. The relatively higher weight
given to the claims-based measures
reflects our belief in the importance of
those measures relative to OASIS-based
measures, which use self-reported data
and that the incentive to reduce hospital
utilization is maintained. We
continually monitor the effects of
weighting and will propose changes if
we determine there is a need through
future rulemaking.
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4. Weighting and Redistribution of
Weights Within the Measure Categories
b. Quality Measure Weights Within
Measure Categories
a. Background
Along with the proposed revisions to
the current measure set, we propose to
revise the weights of the individual
measures within the OASIS-based
measure category and within the claimsbased measure category. Currently, the
OASIS-based, claims-based, and
HHCAHPS Survey-based measures
contribute 35 percent, 35 percent, and
30 percent, respectively, to the Total
Performance Score (TPS) for HHAs in
the larger-volume cohort. For HHAs in
the smaller-volume cohort, the OASISbased and claims-based measures
contribute 50 percent and 50 percent,
respectively, to the TPS. The weights of
the measure categories, when one
category is missing, are based on the
relative weight of each category when
all measures are used. For example, if
an HHA is missing the HHCAHPS
Survey-based measure category, the
remaining two measure categories
(OASIS-based and claims-based) each
represent 50 percent. Table 28 in the CY
2022 HH PPS final rule (86 FR 62323
through 62324) presents the current
weights for measures and measure
As finalized in the CY 2022 HH PPS
final rule (86 FR 62240), the expanded
HHVBP Model uses the same policies
regarding the weighting of measures and
the redistribution of weights when
measures or measure categories are
missing as under the original Model (83
FR 56536).
As previously discussed in section
IV.B.2.b of this proposed rule, to align
with quality measures used in the HH
QRP, CMS proposes to replace the
OASIS-based DTC measure with the
claims-based DTC measure, jointly
replace the claims-based ACH and ED
Use measures with the claims-based
PPH measure, and jointly replace the
OASIS-based TNC Change in Mobility
and TNC Change in Self-Care measures
with the OASIS-based DC Function
measure in CY 2025 and subsequent
performance years. Due to these changes
to the applicable measure set and the
data sources, CMS proposes changes in
weights and redistribution of weights
within the measure categories
accordingly.
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categories under various reporting
scenarios.
Table D4 shows the measure weights
by quality measure in the expanded
HHVBP Model currently in place and
proposed for CY 2025 and subsequent
performance years for HHAs in the
larger-volume and smaller-volume
cohort, respectively.
As discussed in section IV.B.3 of this
proposed rule, for HHAs in the largervolume cohort, we are keeping the
measure category weights unchanged at
35 percent, 35 percent, and 30 percent
for OASIS-based, claims-based, and
HHCAHPS Survey-based measure
categories, respectively. Similarly, for
HHAs in the smaller-volume cohort, we
are keeping the measure category
weights unchanged at 50 percent and 50
percent for OASIS-based and claimsbased measure categories, respectively.
By keeping these measure category
weights unchanged, the number of
individual measures in each measure
category will affect the magnitude of the
individual measure weights. As
proposed, changes to the applicable
measure set would decrease the OASISbased measures from five measures to
three, while the number of individual
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(1) Proposal To Redistribute Weights
Within the OASIS-Based Measure
Category
Because we propose to replace the
two TNC measures jointly with the DC
Function measure, we propose that the
sum of the TNC measure weights be
given to the DC Function measure. This
will maintain the same relative weight
for functional measures. Due to the
proposed removal of the OASIS-based
DTC measure, we also propose to
distribute the weight for that measure
across the remaining three OASIS-based
measures. In addition, we propose to
maintain a relatively small weight for
Improvement in Dyspnea compared to
the other measures in the applicable
measure set. Under the current measure
set, Improvement in Dyspnea is
weighted at 5.833 for larger-volume
HHAs and 8.333 for smaller-volume
HHAs. Similarly, under the proposed
applicable measure set, Improvement in
Dyspnea would be weighted at 6.000 for
the larger-volume cohort and 8.571 for
the smaller-volume cohort. This
approach aims to encourage
improvement in quality of care, while
reducing its importance relative to other
quality measures that encourage both
improvement and maintenance of
quality care for all home health patients.
These proposed changes would be
effective in CY 2025. Table D4 describes
the proposed measure weight
redistributions for all measure
categories by larger-volume and smallervolume cohort, respectively. In addition
to increasing the individual measure
weight for Improvement in Dyspnea to
6.000, CMS proposes to increase the
individual measure weight for
Improvement in Management of Oral
Medications to 9.000 and to assign the
individual measure weight for DC
Function to 20.000 for HHAs in the
larger-volume cohort. These changes
maintain the overall weight of the
OASIS-based measures at 35 percent for
the larger-volume cohort and 50 percent
for the smaller-volume cohort.
(2) Proposal To Redistribute Weights
Within the Claims-Based Measure
Category
Because we propose to remove the
ACH and ED Use measures, we propose
to allot an individual measure weight of
26.000 to the proposed PPH measure.
The redistribution to the PPH measure
is intended to give this measure
approximately the same combined
weight as the ACH and ED Use
measures had previously. In addition,
CMS proposes to allot an individual
measure weight of 9.000 to the claimsbased DTC–PAC measure for the largervolume cohort. The slight increase in
weight for the claims-based DTC–PAC
measure maintains the same overall
weight of 35.000 for claims-based
measures for the larger-volume cohort.
Table D4 lists the corresponding
individual claims-based measure weight
redistributions applicable to HHAs in
the smaller-volume cohort.
measures for the claims-based measures
and HHCAHPS Survey-based measures
will remain unchanged. Given these
proposals, the individual measure
weights within the proposed OASISbased measure category would be higher
than those under the current applicable
OASIS-based measure category. The
subsequent sections discuss in more
detail the proposed measure weight
redistributions for each measure
category.
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(3) Weights Within the HHCAHPSBased Measure Category
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Given there are no changes proposed
to the measures within the HHCAHPS
Survey-based measure category, we
propose to keep the individual measure
weights for measures in this measure
category unchanged. Specifically, each
HHCAHPS Survey-based measure will
continue to have an individual measure
weight of 6.000 for HHAs in the largervolume cohort. Given that HHAs in the
smaller-volume cohort are not assessed
based on their HHCAHPS Survey-based
measure performance, the individual
Of these alternatives, Option 1 is most
consistent with the proposed weights
and most consistent with the weights
used for the current measure set;
however, it fails to apply the minimal
weight possible for Improvement in
Dyspnea. Similarly, Options 2–4 do not
reduce the weight for Improvement in
Dyspnea and deviate more substantially
than Option 1 from the current
weighting scheme. By attributing equal
weight to all measures in the proposed
measure set, Option 5 satisfies the
minimal weight criterion for
Improvement in Dyspnea; however, it
does so at the expense of applying the
same weight, which is inconsistent with
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measure weight is set to zero (0.000) for
the smaller-volume cohort (see Table
D4).
We invite public comments on these
proposals.
(4) Alternatives Considered
Several measure weighting
alternatives were considered prior to
choosing the previously discussed
proposals. Tables D5 describes these
alternative options for HHAs in the
larger-volume cohort, including weights
proportional to the weights for the
initial measure set (Option 1),
maintaining measure category weights
previous decisions about apply
differential weighting to measures to
incentivize HHAs to act on improving
measures with higher weights in the
applicable measure set as outlined in
the CY 2022 HH PPS final rule (86 FR
62322).
5. Updates to the Model Baseline Year
a. Background
In the CY 2022 HH PPS final rule, we
finalized that the first Model baseline
year for the expanded HHVBP Model
would be CY 2019 (January 1, 2019
through December 31, 2019), the first
performance year would be CY 2023,
and the first payment year would be CY
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consistent with current measure set
weights and equal within-category
weights (Option 2), using equal measure
category weights and maintaining
within-category weight proportions
(Option 3), using equal measure
category weights and equal withincategory weights (Option 4), and having
equal weights for all measures (Option
5). We also considered these options for
the smaller-volume cohort and came to
the same conclusions. Therefore, we
only provide a table with measure
weighting alternatives for the largervolume cohort.
2025 (86 FR 62294 through 62300). We
decided on CY 2019 as the Model
baseline year, as opposed to CY 2020 or
CY 2021, due to the potentially destabilizing effects of the public health
emergency (PHE) on the CY 2020 data
and because it was the most recent full
year of data available prior to CY 2020.
The performance year and payment year
were finalized after originally proposing
CY 2022 to be the first performance year
and CY 2024 to be the first payment
year. We decided to delay
implementation by 1 year to allow
additional time for HHAs to prepare and
learn about the expanded Model, thus
CY 2022 was defined as the pre-
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implementation year. In the CY 2023
HH PPS final rule, we changed the
Model baseline year to CY 2022 (87 FR
66869 through 66874). We decided to
use more recent data from the CY 2022
time period because it is more likely to
be aligned with performance years’ data
under the expanded Model, and provide
a more appropriate baseline for
assessing HHA improvement for all
measures under the Model as compared
to both the pre-PHE CY 2019 data, as
previously finalized for existing HHAs,
and the CY 2021 data, as previously
finalized for new HHAs certified
between January 1, 2019 and December
31, 2020.
Additionally, in the CY 2022 HH PPS
final rule (86 FR 62308 through 62309),
we finalized the current measure set, as
indicated in Table 25 of that final rule.
The removal and replacement of
measures from the current measure set
necessitates an updated implementation
and data reporting timeline, which will
be applied to all applicable measures so
that the Model baseline year is
consistent across measures.
Beginning with performance year CY
2025, we propose to update the Model
baseline year to CY 2023 for all
applicable measures in the proposed
measure set, including those measures
included in the current measure set. The
one exception is the new claims-based
DTC–PAC measure, which uses two
years of data. As such, the Model
baseline year for the claims-based DTC–
PAC measure will be CY 2022 and CY
2023 for the 2-year performance year
spanning CY 2024 and CY 2025. For
performance years CY 2023 and CY
2024, the Model baseline year will
continue to be CY 2022. Table D6 lists
the data periods for each measure and
respective Model baseline, performance
year, and payment years.
If we finalize our proposal to use CY
2023 for the Model baseline year, we
would provide HHAs with the final
achievement thresholds and
benchmarks in the July 2024 Interim
Performance Report (IPR). For all
measures but the claims-based DTC–
PAC measure, this timeline allows for
one year of performance between the
first performance year and the proposed
updated Model baseline year. Because
the claims-based DTC–PAC measure is a
two-year measure, there will be no gap
between the proposed updated Model
baseline year and the first performance
year, which would be consistent with
the rollout of the original HHVBP
Model, in which benchmarks and
achievement thresholds using CY 2015
data were made available to HHAs
during the summer of the first
performance year (CY 2016).
Furthermore, because the claimsbased DTC–PAC measure is a 2-year
measure, there will be an overlap in
how discharge to community is
measured for the expanded Model.
Specifically, CY 2024 performance will
be based on the current measure set,
which includes the OASIS-based DTC
measure. For the OASIS-based DTC
measure, CY 2024 performance will be
compared to baseline year CY 2022. CY
2025 performance would be based on
the proposed measure set, which
includes the claims-based DTC–PAC
measure and thus replaces the OASISbased DTC measure. Because the DTC–
PAC measure is a two-year measure, CY
2025 performance for the claims-based
DTC–PAC measure will be calculated
based on two years of performance data
(CY 2024/2025) and compared to two
years of baseline year data (CY 2022/
2023). Thus, for both the OASIS-based
DTC measure and the claims-based
DTC–PAC measure, CY 2022 data will
be used to calculate performance in a
Model baseline year, and CY 2024 data
will be used to calculate performance in
a performance year. Beyond CY 2025,
data for calculating DTC–PAC
performance will continue to overlap.
For example, CY 2026 DTC–PAC
(claims-based) performance will be
based on data from CY 2025/2026,
which overlaps by one year with the CY
2025 DTC–PAC (claims-based)
performance year data. See Table D7.
The DTC–PAC measure was designed as
a 2-year measure to optimize reliability.
In addition, each performance year will
consist of 1 year of performance data
that does not overlap with the prior
performance year data, which provides
sufficient opportunity to capture quality
improvement over time. Finally, the
DTC–PAC (claims-based) will provide a
smoother performance trend over time
compared to 1-year measures by
reflecting performance across a longer
reporting period.
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c. Alternatives Considered
We considered several alternative
timelines for updating the Model
baseline year. First, we considered
leaving the baseline year at CY 2022 for
those measures on the previously
finalized measure set. We opted against
this alternative because it uses less
recent data and makes it more difficult
for HHAs to track which achievement
thresholds and benchmarks are based on
which years of baseline data.
Second, because of the time between
the Model baseline year and the
performance year, we considered
delaying the implementation of the
claims-based DTC–PAC measure by one
year. Under this scenario, the measure’s
baseline year would remain CY 2022/
2023, but the measure’s first
performance year would be CY 2025/
2026. The first payment year that uses
the claims-based DTC–PAC measure
would then be CY 2028. As such, CY
2025 would be a transition year in
between the current applicable measure
set and the proposed applicable
measure set. During this transition year,
the OASIS-based DTC measure could be
retained through CY 2025 or removed.
Retaining the OASIS-based DTC
measure during the transition year
would ensure that the concept of being
discharged to the community will be
reflected in all performance and
payment years, while removing it before
the transition year would better align
with the removal of the other measures
as proposed. Because we view the
concept of being discharged to the
community as an important aspect of
home health quality, we favor retaining
the OASIS-based DTC measure during
the transition year over removing it,
assuming we delay implementation of
the claims-based DTC measure. We
rejected delayed implementation,
however, because it temporarily
increases the complexity of the
expanded Model and requires that the
Model uses the legacy OASIS-based
DTC measure for another year, despite
its removal from the HH QRP.
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Third, we considered delaying
implementation of the OASIS-based DC
Function measure, which is proposed
for CY 2025 implementation in the HH
QRP as indicated in section III. D.1. of
this proposed rule. Although a delay
would allow more time to evaluate the
measure’s performance prior to HHVBP
implementation, data utilized in this
measure have been a part of the HH
QRP’s OASIS assessment tool since CY
2019. We prefer the proposed timeline
for the OASIS-based DC Function
measure because it expedites alignment
with the HH QRP, SNF VBP, and the
other PAC programs and the timing
corresponds with the proposed removal
and replacement of other measures in
the Model.
Lastly, we considered delaying
implementation for all replacement
measures, such that their Model
baseline years would end on December
31, 2023 and their first performance
years would end on December 31, 2026
(CY 2026 for the OASIS-based DC
Function and claims-based PPH
measures and CY 2025/2026 for the
claims-based DTC–PAC measure).
Under this alternative, the first payment
year to use the proposed applicable
measure set would be CY 2028. We
favor the proposed timeline because we
prefer aligning more closely with the
HH QRP measure set as early as
possible.
6. Future Topics for Measure
Considerations
We will take into consideration
opportunities for further alignment with
measures in the HH QRP and publicly
reported on Home Health Care Compare
because alignment will facilitate
comparative assessments of provider
quality and streamline home health
providers’ data capture and reporting
processes. If we consider adding new
measures that require data that is not
already collected through existing
quality measure data reporting systems,
we will propose that option in future
rulemaking while being mindful of
provider burden.
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To further the goals of the CMS
National Quality Strategy, CMS leaders
from across the Agency have come
together to move towards a buildingblock approach to streamline quality
measure across CMS quality programs
for the adult and pediatric populations.
This ‘‘Universal Foundation’’ 127 of
quality measures will focus provider
attention, reduce burden, identify
disparities in care, prioritize
development of interoperable, digital
quality measures, allow for crosscomparisons across programs, and help
identify measurement gaps. The
development and implementation of the
Preliminary Adult and Pediatric
Universal Foundation Measures will
promote the best, safest, and most
equitable care for individuals as we all
come together on these critical quality
areas. As CMS moves forward with the
Universal Foundation, we will be
working to identify foundational
measures in other specific settings and
populations to support further measure
alignment across CMS programs as
applicable.
In recognition of persistent health
disparities and the importance of
closing the health equity gap, we will
consider future modifications that
promote health equity and ways in
which we could incorporate health
equity goals into the Model. Any
changes would be proposed in future
notice and comment rulemaking.
While we are not making any specific
proposals here, we invite stakeholders
to suggest future measures and the value
they may provide to the expanded
HHVBP Model.
C. Proposed Changes to the Appeals
Process
1. Background
As codified at § 484.375, the appeals
process under the expanded HHVBP
127 Jacobs, D.B., Schreiber, M., Seshamani, M.,
Tsai, D., Fowler, E., & Fleisher, L.A. (2023).
Aligning quality measures across CMS—the
universal foundation. New England Journal of
Medicine, 388(9), 776–779. https://www.nejm.org/
doi/full/10.1056/NEJMp2215539.
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Model allows HHAs to submit
recalculation requests for the interim
performance reports and the Annual
Total Performance Score (TPS) and
Payment Adjustment Report (Annual
Performance Report or APR). Under this
process, an HHA may also make a
reconsideration request if it disagrees
with the results of a recalculation
request for the APR. We refer the reader
to the CY 2022 HH PPS final rule (86 FR
62331 through 62332) for details of the
appeals process. We also finalized (86
FR 62329) that we would make available
the Final APR after all reconsideration
requests are processed and no later than
30 calendar days before the payment
adjustment takes effect annually, both
for those HHAs that requested a
reconsideration and all other competing
HHAs.
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2. Proposed Revisions
We are proposing revisions to the
policy at § 484.375(b)(5) to acknowledge
the ability of the CMS Administrator to
review reconsideration decisions, and to
change the time for filing a request for
reconsideration. In particular, we are
proposing to amend § 484.375(b)(5) to
specify that an HHA may request
Administrator review of a
reconsideration decision within 7 days
from CMS’ notification to the HHA
contact of the outcome of the
reconsideration request. We propose to
amend § 484.375(b)(5) to state that the
CMS reconsideration official issues a
written decision that is final and
binding 7 calendar days after the
decision unless the CMS Administrator
renders a final determination reversing
or modifying the reconsideration
decision. And, that An HHA may
request within 7 calendar days of the
decision that the CMS Administrator
review the reconsideration decision.
The CMS Administrator may decline to
review the reconsideration decision,
render a final determination, or choose
to take no action on the request for
administrative review. Reconsideration
decisions are considered final if the
CMS Administrator declines an HHA’s
request for review or if the CMS
Administrator does not take any action
on the HHA’s request for review within
14 days.
This proposed change would ensure
that accountability for the decisions of
CMS is vested in a principal officer and
brings the reconsideration review
process to a more similar posture as
other CMS appeals entities that provide
Administrator review. This revision also
ensures that HHAs are aware that
administrative review is available to
those HHAs who wish to seek
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additional review of a reconsideration
decision.
We seek comment on these proposals.
avoidable differences in health
outcomes experienced by people who
are disadvantaged or underserved, and
providing the care and support that our
D. Public Reporting Reminder
enrollees need to thrive. Our goals
In the CY 2022 HH PPS final rule (86
outlined in the CMS Framework for
FR 62332 through 62333), we finalized
Health Equity 2022–2032 129 are in line
that we would publicly report the
with Executive Order 13985,
following information for the expanded
‘‘Advancing Racial Equity and Support
HHVBP Model:
for Underserved Communities Through
• Applicable measure benchmarks
the Federal Government.’’ 130 The goals
and achievement thresholds for each
included in the CMS Framework for
small- and large-volume cohort.
Health Equity serve to further advance
• For each HHA that qualified for a
health equity, expand coverage, and
payment adjustment based on the data
improve health outcomes for the more
for the applicable performance year—
than 170 million individuals supported
• Applicable measure results and
by our programs, and sets a foundation
improvement thresholds;
• The HHA’s Total Performance Score and priorities for our work including:
strengthening our infrastructure for
(TPS);
• The HHA’s TPS Percentile Ranking; assessment, creating synergies across
the health care system to drive
and
• The HHA’s payment adjustment for structural change, and identifying and
a given year.
working to eliminate barriers to CMSIn that same rule, we stated that we
supported benefits, services, and
anticipate this information would be
coverage.
made available to the public on a CMS
In addition to the CMS Framework for
website on or after December 1, 2024,
Health Equity, CMS seeks to ‘‘advance
the date by which we would intend to
health equity and whole-person care’’ as
complete the CY 2023 Annual Report
one of eight goals comprising the CMS
appeals process and issuance of the
National Quality Strategy (NQS).131 The
Final Annual Report to each competing
NQS
identifies a wide range of potential
HHA. For each year thereafter, we
quality
levers that can support our
anticipate following the same
advancement of equity, including: (1)
approximate timeline for publicly
establishing a standardized approach for
reporting the payment adjustment for
the upcoming calendar year. This policy patient-reported data and stratification;
(2) employing quality and value-based
is codified at § 484.355(c). We are not
programs to address closing equity gaps;
proposing any changes to this policy.
and, (3) developing equity-focused data
This simply serves as a reminder of our
collection, analysis, regulations, and
existing policy.
quality improvement initiatives.
E. Health Equity Update
A goal of this NQS is to address
1. Background
persistent disparities that underly our
healthcare system. Racial disparities, in
In the Calendar Year 2023 Home
particular, are estimated to cost the U.S.
Health Prospective Payment System
$93 billion in excess medical costs and
Proposed Rule (CMS–1766–P), we
included a Request for Information (RFI) $42 billion in lost productivity per year,
on a future approach to health equity in in addition to economic losses due to
the expanded HHVBP Model. We define premature deaths.132 At the same time,
racial and ethnic diversity has increased
health equity as ‘‘the attainment of the
in recent years, with an increase in the
highest level of health for all people,
percentage of people who identify as
where everyone has a fair and just
two or more races accounting for most
opportunity to attain their optimal
of the change, rising from 2.9 percent to
health regardless of race, ethnicity,
disability, sexual orientation, gender
129 https://www.cms.gov/files/document/cmsidentity, socioeconomic status,
framework-health-equity-2022.pdf.
geography, preferred language, or other
130 https://www.whitehouse.gov/briefing-room/
factors that affect access to care and
presidential-actions/2021/01/20/executive-order128
health outcomes.’’
We are working to advancing-racial-equity-and-support-foradvance health equity by designing,
underserved-communities-through-the-federalgovernment/.
implementing, and operationalizing
131 Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services.
policies and programs that support
What is the CMS Quality Strategy? Available at
health for all the people served by our
https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiativesprograms and models, eliminating
Patient-Assessment-Instruments/Value-Basedfor Medicare and Medicaid Services.
Available at https://www.cms.gov/pillar/healthequity. Accessed February 1, 2023.
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Programs/CMS-Quality-Strategy.
132 Ani Turner, The Business Case for Racial
Equity, A Strategy for Growth, W.K. Kellogg
Foundation and Altarum, April 2018.
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10.2 percent between 2010 and 2020.133
Therefore, we need to consider ways to
reduce disparities, achieve equity, and
support our diverse beneficiary
population through the way we measure
quality and display the data.
We solicited public comments via the
previously discussed RFI on policy
changes that we should consider on the
topic of health equity. We specifically
requested input on whether we should
explore incorporating adjustments into
the expanded HHVBP Model to reflect
the varied patient populations that
HHAs serve around the country and tie
equity-focused outcomes to the payment
adjustments we make based on HHA
performance under the Model. We refer
readers to the CY 2023 HH PPS final
rule (87 FR 66876), for a summary of the
public comments and suggestions we
received in response to the health equity
RFI. We will take these comments into
account as we continue to work to
develop policies and quality measures
on this important topic.
2. Anticipated Future State
We are committed to developing
approaches to meaningfully incorporate
the advancement of health equity into
the expanded HHVBP Model. As we
move this important work forward, we
will continue to take input from
interested parties. We also note that
there are proposals being made to
implement a health equity adjustment
in the Hospital Inpatient Quality
Reporting Program and the SNF ValueBased Purchasing Program. At this time,
however, we would like to give HHAs
time to learn the requirements of the
expanded Model, gather at least 2 years
of performance data, and study effects of
the expanded Model on health equity
outcomes before incorporating any
potential changes to the expanded
Model regarding health equity.
V. Medicare Home Intravenous
Immune Globulin (IVIG) Items and
Services
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A. General Background
1. Statutory Background
Division FF, section 4134 of the CAA,
2023 added coverage and payment of
items and services related to
administration of IVIG in a patient’s
home of a patient with a diagnosed
primary immune deficiency disease
furnished on or after January 1, 2024.
Division FF, section 4134(a) of the CAA,
2023 amended the existing IVIG benefit
133 2022 National Healthcare Quality and
Disparities Report. Content last reviewed November
2022. Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality,
Rockville, MD https://www.ahrq.gov/research/
findings/nhqrdr/nhqdr22/.
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category at section 1861(s)(2)(Z) of the
Act by adding coverage for IVIG
administration items and services in a
patient’s home of a patient with a
diagnosed primary immune deficiency
disease. This benefit covers items and
services related to administration of
IVIG in a patient’s home of a patient
with a diagnosed primary immune
deficiency disease. In addition, section
4134(b) of Division FF of the CAA, 2023
amended section 1842(o) of the Act by
adding a new paragraph (8) that
established the payment for IVIG
administration items and services.
Under the CAA, 2023 provision,
payment for these IVIG administration
items and services is required to be a
bundled payment separate from the
payment for the IVIG product, made to
a supplier for all items and services
related to administration of IVIG
furnished in the home during a calendar
day.
2. Overview
Primary immune deficiency diseases
(PIDD) are conditions triggered by
genetic defects that cause a lack of and/
or impairment in antibody function,
resulting in the body’s immune system
not being able to function in a normal
way. Immune globulin (Ig) therapy is
used to temporarily replace some of the
antibodies (that is, immunoglobulins)
that are missing or not functioning
properly in people with PIDD.134 The
goal of Ig therapy is to use Ig obtained
from normal donor plasma to maintain
a sufficient level of antibodies in the
blood of individuals with PIDD to fight
off bacteria and viruses. Ig is formulated
for both intravenous and subcutaneous
administration (SCIg). Clinicians can
prescribe either product to the
beneficiary with PIDD according to
clinical need and preference, and
beneficiaries can switch between
intravenous and subcutaneous
administration of Ig.
3. Legislative Summary
Section 642 of the Medicare
Prescription Drug, Improvement, and
Modernization Act of 2003 (Pub. L. 108–
173), amended section 1861 of the Act
to provide Medicare Part B coverage of
the IVIG product for the treatment of
PIDD in the home, but not the items and
services involved with administration.
Section 101 of the Medicare IVIG
Access and Strengthening Medicare and
Repaying Taxpayers Act of 2012
(Medicare IVIG Access Act) (Pub. L.
112–242), mandated the establishment,
EE, Orange JS, Bonilla F, et al. (2017)
Update on the use of immunoglobulin in human
disease: A review of evidence; Journal Allergy Clin
Immunol. 139(3S): S1–S46.
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implementation, and evaluation of a 3year Medicare Intravenous Immune
Globulin (IVIG) Demonstration Project
(the Demonstration) under Part B of title
XVIII of the Act. The Demonstration was
implemented to evaluate the benefits of
providing coverage and payment for
items and services needed for the home
administration of IVIG for the treatment
of PIDD, and to determine if it would
improve access to home IVIG therapy
for patients with PIDD. The Medicare
IVIG Access Act mandated that
Medicare would establish a per visit
payment amount for the items and
services necessary for the home
administration of IVIG therapy for
beneficiaries with specific PIDD
diagnoses. The Demonstration did not
include Medicare payment for the IVIG
product which continues to be paid
under Part B in accordance with section
1842(o) and 1847(A) of the Act. The
Demonstration covered and paid a per
visit payment amount for the items and
services needed for the administration
of IVIG in the home. Items may include
infusion set and tubing, and services
include nursing services to complete an
infusion of IVIG lasting on average three
to five hours.135
On September 28, 2017, Congress
passed the Disaster Tax Relief and
Airport and Airway Extension Act of
2017 (Pub. L. 115–63). Section 302 of
Public Law 115–63 extended the
Demonstration through December 31,
2020.
Division CC, section 104, of the
Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2021
(CAA, 2021) (Pub. L. 116–260), further
extended the Demonstration for another
3 years through December 31, 2023.
Division FF, section 4134 of the CAA,
2023 (CAA, 2023) (Pub. L. 117–328)
mandated that CMS establish permanent
coverage and payment for items and
services related to administration of
IVIG in a patient’s home of a patient
with PIDD. The permanent home IVIG
items and services payment is effective
for home IVIG administration furnished
on or after January 1, 2024. Payment for
these items and services is required to
be a separate bundled payment made to
a supplier for all administration items
and services furnished in the home
during a calendar day. The statute
provides that payment amount may be
based on the amount established under
the Demonstration. The standard Part B
coinsurance and the Part B deductible is
required to apply. In addition, that
statute states that the separate bundled
135 Updated Interim Report to Congress:
Evaluation of the Medicare Patient Intravenous
Immunoglobulin Demonstration Project, 2022:
https://innovation.cms.gov/data-and-reports/2022/
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payment for these IVIG administration
items and services does not apply for
individuals receiving services under the
Medicare home health benefit. The
CAA, 2023 provision clarifies that a
supplier who furnishes these services
meet the requirements of a supplier of
medical equipment and supplies.
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4. Demonstration Overview
Under the Demonstration, Medicare
provides a bundled payment under Part
B, that is separate from the IVIG
product, for items and services that are
necessary to administer IVIG in the
home to enrolled beneficiaries who are
not otherwise homebound and receiving
services under the home health benefit.
The Demonstration only applies to
situations where the beneficiary
requires IVIG for the treatment of certain
PIDD diagnoses, or was receiving SCIg
to treat PIDD and wishes to switch to
IVIG.
Services covered under the
Demonstration are required to be
provided and billed by specialty
pharmacies enrolled as durable medical
equipment (DME) suppliers, that
provide the Medicare Part B-covered Ig.
The covered items and services under
the Demonstration are paid as a single
bundle and are subject to coinsurance
and deductible in the same manner as
other Part B services. HHAs are not
eligible to bill for services covered
under the Demonstration, but can bill
for services related to the administration
of IVIG if the patient is receiving
services under a home health episode of
care, in which case the home health
payment covers the items and services.
In order to participate in the
Demonstration, beneficiaries must meet
the following requirements:
• Be eligible to have the IVIG paid for
at home under Part B FFS
• Have a diagnosis of PIDD
• Not be enrolled in a Medicare
Advantage plan
• Cannot be in a home health episode
of care on the date of service (in such
circumstances, the home health
payment covers the services)
• Must receive the service in their
home or a setting that is ‘‘home like’’.
To participate in the Demonstration,
the beneficiary must submit an
application, signed by their physician.
DME suppliers billing for the items
and services covered under the
Demonstration must meet the following
requirements:
• Meet all Medicare, as well as other
national, state, and local standards and
regulations applicable to the provision
of services related to home infusion of
IVIG.
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• Be enrolled and current with the
National Supplier Clearinghouse.
• Be able to bill the DME Medicare
Administrative Contractors (MACs).
CMS implemented a bundled per visit
payment amount under the
Demonstration, statutorily required to
be based on the national per visit lowutilization payment adjustment (LUPA)
for skilled nursing services used under
the Medicare HH PPS established under
section 1895 of the Act. The payment
amount is subject to coinsurance and
deductible.
For billing under the Demonstration,
CMS established a ‘‘Q’’ code for
services, supplies, and accessories used
in the home under the IVIG
Demonstration:
• Q2052—(Long Description)—
Services, supplies, and accessories used
in the home under Medicare
Intravenous immune globulin (IVIG)
Demonstration.
• Q2052—(Short Description)—IVIG
demo, services/supplies.
The code is used for the IVIG
Demonstration only. Suppliers must bill
Q2052 as a separate claim line on the
same claim for the IVIG drug.
B. Proposed Scope of Expanded IVIG
Benefit
As discussed previously, Division FF,
section 4134 of the CAA, 2023, added
coverage of items and services related to
the administration of IVIG in a patient’s
home, to the existing IVIG benefit
category at section 1861(s)(2)(Z) of the
Act, effective January 1, 2024. Currently,
IVIG is covered in the home under Part
B if all of the following criteria are met:
• It is an approved pooled plasma
derivative for the treatment of primary
immune deficiency disease.
• The patient has a diagnosis of
primary immune deficiency disease.
• The IVIG is administered in the
home.
• The treating practitioner has
determined that administration of the
IVIG in the patient’s home is medically
appropriate.
Therefore, as section 4134(a)(1) of the
CAA, 2023, adds the items and services
(furnished on or after January 1, 2024)
related to the administration of IVIG to
the benefit category defined under
section 1861(s)(2)(Z) of the Act (the
Social Security Act provision requiring
coverage of the IVIG product in the
home), the same beneficiary eligibility
requirements for the IVIG product
would apply for the IVIG administration
items and services described in section
V.A.4. of this proposed rule. Subpart B
of Part 410 of the regulations set out the
medical and other health services
requirements under Part B. The
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regulations at § 410.10 identify the
services that are subject to the
conditions and limitations specified in
this subpart. Section 410.10(y) includes
intravenous immune globulin
administered in the home for the
treatment of primary immune deficiency
diseases. Section 410.12 outlines
general basic conditions and limitations
for coverage of medical and other health
services under Part B, as identified in
section 410.10. Section 410.12(a)
includes the conditions that must be
met in order for these services to be
covered, and include the following:
• When the services must be
furnished. The services must be
furnished while the individual is in a
period of entitlement.
• By whom the services must be
furnished. The services must be
furnished by a facility or other entity as
specified in §§ 410.14 through 410.69.
• Physician certification and
recertification requirements. If the
services are subject to physician
certification requirements, they must be
certified as being medically necessary,
and as meeting other applicable
requirements, in accordance with
subpart B of part 424.
As the definition of IVIG at section
1861(zz) of the Act now includes the
items and services necessary to
administer IVIG in the home, we
propose to add the term ‘‘items and
services’’ to the regulation at
§ 410.10(y). Furthermore, sub-regulatory
guidance documents (that is, IVIG LCD
(33610) 136 and IVIG Policy Article
(A52509) 137) provide direction on
coding and coverage for the IVIG
product at home. Through the Local
Coverage Determination (LCD) for
Intravenous Immune Globulin
(L33610),138 the Durable Medical
Equipment Medicare administrative
contractors (DME MACs) specify the
Healthcare Common Procedure Coding
System (HCPCS) codes for which IVIG
derivatives are covered under this
benefit. Therefore, a beneficiary must be
receiving one of the IVIG derivatives
specified under the LCD for IVIG in
order to qualify to receive the items and
services covered under section
1861(s)(2)(Z) of the Act. Furthermore,
for any item (including IVIG) to be
covered by Medicare, it must (1) be
eligible for a defined Medicare benefit
category, (2) be reasonable and
136 https://www.cms.gov/medicare-coveragedatabase/view/lcd.aspx?LCDId=33610.
137 https://www.cms.gov/medicare-coveragedatabase/view/article.aspx?articleId=52509.
138 Local Coverage Determination (LCD): IVIG
(L33610) https://www.cms.gov/medicare-coveragedatabase/view/
lcd.aspx?LCDId=33610&ContrId=389.
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necessary for the diagnosis or treatment
of illness or injury or to improve the
functioning of a malformed body
member, and (3) meet all other
applicable Medicare statutory and
regulatory requirements. Policy
guidance for the LCD for IVIG 139
identifies the ICD–10–CM codes that
support medical necessity for the
provision of IVIG in the home. These
diagnosis codes are listed in Table E1.
In accordance with this guidance, a
beneficiary must be diagnosed with one
of the primary immune deficiencies
identified by the ICD–10–CM codes, set
out in Table E1 and as updated in
subregulatory guidance, in order to
qualify to receive the items and services
covered under section 1861(s)(2)(Z) of
the Act. This policy guidance is revised
as needed by the DME MACs. And
finally, in order to qualify to receive
IVIG in the home, section 1861(zz) of
the Act requires that a treating
practitioner must have determined that
administration of the IVIG in the
patient’s home is medically appropriate.
Accordingly, we intend to update the
sub-regulatory guidance pursuant to the
CAA, 2023 to reflect the expansion of
the benefit to the items and services
related to the administration of IVIG at
home. Leveraging the existing
regulations and sub-regulatory guidance
would maintain one set of standards
across the entire IVIG benefit (that is, for
the product and for the related items
and services). This would result in
seamless implementation from the
existing IVIG Demonstration, thereby
ensuring immediate access for
beneficiaries requiring such items and
services. We solicit comments on our
proposal to add ‘‘items and services’’ to
the regulation at § 410.10(y).
section 4134 of the CAA, 2023 to make
permanent coverage of the same items
and services under the existing IVIG
Demonstration in order to ensure
continuous and comprehensive
coverage for beneficiaries who choose to
receive home IVIG therapy. Under the
Demonstration, the bundled payment
for the items and services necessary to
administer the drug intravenously in the
home includes the infusion set and
tubing, and nursing services to complete
an infusion of IVIG lasting on average
three to five hours.140 Although ‘‘items
and services’’ are not explicitly defined
under section 4134 of the CAA, 2023,
we believe the items and services
covered under the Demonstration are
inherently the same items and services
that would be covered under the
payment added to the benefit category at
section 1861(s)(2)(Z) of the Act. While
139 https://www.cms.gov/medicare-coveragedatabase/view/article.aspx?articleId=52509.
140 Updated Interim Report to Congress:
Evaluation of the Medicare Patient Intravenous
Immunoglobulin Demonstration Project, August
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1. Items and Services Related to the
Home Administration of IVIG
Section 101(c) of the Medicare IVIG
Access Act established coverage for
items and services needed for the inhome administration of IVIG for the
treatment of primary
immunodeficiencies under a Medicare
demonstration program. We interpret
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we are not enumerating a list of services
that must be included in the separate
bundled payment, we anticipate that the
nursing services would include such
professional services as IVIG
administration, assessment and site
care, and education. Moreover, it is up
the provider to determine the services
and supplies that are appropriate and
necessary to administer the IVIG for
each individual. This may or may not
include the use of a pump. Because IVIG
does not have to be administered
through a pump (although it can be),
external infusion pumps are not covered
under the DME benefit for the
administration of IVIG. An external
infusion pump is only covered under
the DME benefit if the infusion pump is
necessary to safely administer the drug.
The Local Coverage Determination
(LCD) for External Infusion Pumps
identify the drugs and biologicals that
the DME Medicare Administrative
Contractors (MACs) have determined
require the use of such pumps and
cannot be administered via a disposable
elastomeric pump or the gravity drip
method.141 As such, under the IVIG
Demonstration, coverage does not
extend to the DME pump, and thereby,
would not be covered separately under
the home IVIG items and services
payment.
We invite comments on any
additional interpretations of items and
services that may be considered under
the scope of the home IVIG benefit.
2. Home IVIG Items and Services and
the Relationship to/Interaction With
Home Health and Home Infusion
Therapy Services
Prior to enactment of the CAA, 2023,
IVIG administration items and services
were explicitly excluded from coverage
under the Part B IVIG benefit. However,
if a beneficiary was considered
homebound and qualified for the home
health benefit, the items and services
needed to administer IVIG in the home
could be covered as home health
services. Section 4134(b) of the CAA,
2023 excludes the IVIG items and
services bundled payment in the case of
an individual receiving home health
services under section 1895 of the Act.
Therefore, a beneficiary does not have to
be considered confined to the home
(that is, homebound) in order to be
eligible for the home IVIG benefit;
however, homebound beneficiaries
requiring items and services related to
the administration of home IVIG, and
who are receiving services under a
home health plan of care, may continue
141 https://www.cms.gov/medicare-coveragedatabase/view/lcd.aspx?LCDId=33794.
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to receive services related to the
administration of home IVIG as covered
home health services. As such, in the
case that a beneficiary is receiving home
health services under the home health
benefit, the home health agency could
continue to bill for these items and
services under the home health benefit
and the drug would be continued to be
paid under Part B. A separate payment
for the IVIG items and services under
the IVIG benefit would be prohibited.
With regard to the home infusion
therapy (HIT) services benefit, Medicare
payment for home infusion therapy
services is for services furnished in
coordination with the furnishing of
intravenous and subcutaneous infusion
drugs and biologicals specified on the
DME LCD for External Infusion Pumps
(L33794),142 with the exception of
insulin pump systems and certain drugs
and biologicals on a self-administered
drug exclusion list. In order for the
drugs and biologicals to be covered
under the Part B DME benefit they must
require infusion through an external
infusion pump. If the drug or biological
can be infused through a disposable
pump or by a gravity drip, it does not
meet this criterion. IVIG does not
require an external infusion pump for
administration purposes and therefore,
is explicitly excluded from the DME
LCD for External Infusion Pumps.
However, subcutaneous
immunoglobulin (SCIg) is covered
under the DME LCD for External
Infusion Pumps, and items and services
for administration in the home are
covered under the HIT services benefit.
While a DME supplier and a HIT
supplier (or a DME supplier also
enrolled as a HIT supplier) could not
furnish services related to the
administration of immunoglobulin
(either IVIG or SCIg) to the same
beneficiary on the same day, a
beneficiary could potentially receive
services under both benefits for services
related to the infusion of different drugs.
For example, a DME supplier also
accredited and enrolled as a HIT
supplier, could furnish HIT services to
a beneficiary receiving intravenous
acyclovir as well as IVIG, and bill both
the IVIG and the HIT services benefits
on the same date of service. We also
recognize that a beneficiary may, on
occasion, switch from receiving
immunoglobulin subcutaneously to
intravenously and vice versa, and as
such, utilize both the HIT services and
the IVIG benefits within the same
142 Local Coverage Determination (LCD): External
Infusion Pumps (L33794) https://www.cms.gov/
medicare-coverage-database/view/lcd.aspx?LCDId=
33794.
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month. We invite comments on how
typical it is for a patient to alternate
between receiving IVIG and SCIg and
the frequency with which it may occur.
C. Proposed IVIG Administration Items
and Services Payment
As discussed previously, section 101
of the Medicare IVIG Access Act
established the authority for a
Demonstration providing payment for
items and services needed for the inhome administration of IVIG. We
believe the provisions established under
that law serve as the basis for the
conditions for payment with respect to
the requirements that must be met for
Medicare payment to be made to
suppliers for the items and services
covered under section 1861(s)(2)(Z) of
the Act.
1. Home IVIG Administration Items and
Services Supplier Type
Section 4134(b) of the CAA, 2023
amends section 1842(o) of the Act by
adding a new paragraph (8) that
establishes a separate bundled payment
to the supplier for all items and services
related to the administration of such
intravenous immune globulin, described
in section 1861(s)(2)(Z) of the Act to
such individual in the patient’s home
during a calendar day. Section 4134(c)
of the CAA, 2023 amends section
1834(j)(5) of the Act, which are a
requirement for supplier of medical
equipment and supplies, by adding a
new subparagraph (E), clarifying with
respect to payment, that items and
services related to the administration of
intravenous immune globulin furnished
on or after January 1, 2024, as described
in section 1861(zz) of the Act, are
included in the definition of medical
equipment and supplies. This means
that suppliers that furnish IVIG
administration items and services must
meet the existing DMEPOS supplier
requirement for payment purposes
under this benefit. Suppliers of IVIG
administration items and services must
enroll as a DMEPOS supplier and
comply with the Medicare program’s
DMEPOS supplier standards (found at
42 CFR 424.57(c)) and DMEPOS quality
standards to become accredited for
furnishing medical equipment and
supplies. Further, in order to receive
payment for home IVIG items and
services, the supplier must also meet the
requirements under subpart A of Part
424—Conditions for Medicare Payment.
The DMEPOS supplier may subcontract
with a provider in order to meet the
professional services identified in
section V.B.1. of this proposed rule. All
professionals who furnish services
directly, under an individual contract,
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or under arrangements with a DMEPOS
supplier to furnish services related to
the administration of IVIG in the home,
must be legally authorized (licensed,
certified, or registered) in accordance
with applicable Federal, State, and local
laws, and must act only within the
scope of their State license or State
certification, or registration. A supplier
may not contract with any entity that is
currently excluded from the Medicare
program, any State health care programs
or from any other federal procurement
or non-procurement programs.
2. Home IVIG Administration
Section 1861(s)(2)(Z) of the Act
defines benefit coverage of intravenous
immune globulin for the treatment of
primary immune deficiency diseases in
the home. Under the IVIG
Demonstration, beneficiaries are eligible
to participate if they receive IVIG
services in ‘‘their home or a setting that
is ‘home like’ 143 ’’. Section 410.12(b)
identifies the supplier types who can
furnish the services identified at
§ 410.10. Section 410.38 provides the
conditions for payment for DME
suppliers and identifies the institutions
that may not qualify as the patient’s
home. As such, the home administration
of IVIG items and services must be
furnished in the patient’s home, defined
as a place of residence used as the home
of an individual, including an
institution that is used as a home. An
institution that is used as a home may
not be a hospital, CAH, or SNF as
defined in § 410.38(b).
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D. Proposed Home IVIG Items and
Services Payment Rate
1. Proposed Payment Amount for Home
IVIG Items and Services for CY 2024
Section 1842(o) of the Act provides
the authority for the development of a
separate bundled payment for Medicarecovered items and services related to the
administration of intravenous immune
globulin to an individual in the patient’s
home during a calendar day, in an
amount that the Secretary determines to
be appropriate. This payment may be
based on the payment established
pursuant to section 101(d) of the
Medicare IVIG Access Act. Section
4134(d) of the CAA, 2023, amends
section 1833(a)(1) of the Act to provide
that, with respect to items and services
related to the administration of IVIG
furnished on or after January 1, 2024, as
described in section 1861(zz) of the Act,
the amounts paid shall be the lesser of
143 Intravenous Immune Globulin Demonstration
MLN Fact Sheet: https://www.cms.gov/files/
document/mln3191598-intravenous-immuneglobulin-demonstration.pdf.
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the 80 percent of the actual charge or
the payment amount established under
section 1842(o)(8).
In accordance with section 101(d) of
the Medicare IVIG Access Act, the
Secretary established a per visit
payment amount for the items and
services needed for the in-home
administration of IVIG based on the
national per visit low-utilization
payment amount (LUPA) under the
prospective payment system for home
health services established under
section 1895 of the Social Security Act.
Per the Demonstration, the bundled
payment amount for services needed for
the home administration of IVIG
includes infusion services provided by
a skilled nurse. Therefore, the bundled
payment is based on the LUPA amount
for skilled nursing, based on an average
4-hour infusion. The initial payment
rate for the first year of the
Demonstration, was based on the full
skilled nursing LUPA for the first 90
minutes of the infusion and 50 percent
of the LUPA for each hour thereafter for
an additional 3 hours. Thereafter, the
payment rate is annually updated based
on the nursing LUPA rate for such year.
The service is subject to coinsurance
and deductibles similar to other Part B
services.
As we noted in sectionV.B.1. of this
proposed rule, we believe that payment
under section 1861(s)(2)(Z) of the Act
covers the same items and services
covered under the IVIG Demonstration.
Likewise, we also agree that the
professional services needed to safely
administer IVIG in the home would be
services furnished by a registered nurse.
Therefore, we believe setting the CY
2024 payment rate for the home IVIG
items and services under section
1861(s)(2)(Z) of the Act, based on the CY
2023 payment amount established
under the Demonstration ($408.23) is
appropriate. However, although the
Demonstration used the LUPA rate,
which is annually adjusted by the wage
index budget neutrality factor, as well as
the home health payment rate update
percentage, we believe it is appropriate
to propose to update the CY 2023 IVIG
services Demonstration rate by only the
CY 2024 home health payment rate
update percentage and not include the
wage index budget neutrality factor, as
the IVIG items and services payment
rate is not statutorily required to be
geographically wage adjusted.
Therefore, the proposed home IVIG
items and services payment rate for CY
2024 would be $408.23*1.027 =
$419.25.
Further, although section 1842(o) of
the Act states that payment is for the
items and services furnished to an
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individual in the patient’s home during
a calendar day, we believe that, as the
statute aligns the payment amount with
such amount determined under the
Demonstration, the best reading of
‘‘calendar day’’ is ‘‘per visit.’’
Additionally, we would expect a
supplier to furnish only one visit per
calendar day.
We propose to establish a new
Subpart R under the regulations at 42
CFR part 414 to incorporate payment
provisions for the implementation of the
IVIG items and services payment in
accordance with section 1842(o) of the
Act for home IVIG items and services
furnished on or after January 1, 2024.
We propose at § 414.1700(a), that a
single payment amount is made for
items and services furnished by a
DMEPOS supplier per visit. We propose
at § 414.1700(b), to set the initial
payment amount equivalent to the CY
2023 ‘‘Services, Supplies, and
Accessories Used in the home under the
Medicare IVIG Demonstration’’ payment
amount, updated by the proposed CY
2024 home health update percentage of
2.7 percent. We are soliciting comments
on these payment proposals, including
the proposed CY 2024 payment rate.
(a) Proposed Annual Payment Update
As discussed previously, the IVIG
Demonstration used the nursing LUPA
rate, which is annually adjusted by the
wage index budget neutrality factor, as
well as the home health update
percentage, as the payment rate for such
year of services. Because the IVIG
services payment is not geographically
wage adjusted, we believe it is more
appropriate to annually adjust the IVIG
items and services payment rate only by
the home health payment update
percentage. As such we propose at
§ 414.1700(c), beginning in 2025, the
per-visit payment amount from the prior
year will be annually increased by the
home health update percentage for the
current calendar year. We solicit
comments on the use of the home health
update percentage to annually update
the IVIG items and services payment
beyond CY 2024.
E. Billing Procedures for Home IVIG
Items and Services
In order to ensure a smooth transition
for DME suppliers to bill for the items
and services related to the home
administration of IVIG, we will use the
existing Q-code (Q2052) under the
Demonstration, with a new descriptor
(‘‘Services, Supplies, and Accessories
used in the Home for the
Administration of Intravenous Immune
Globulin’’) in order to bill for items and
services under Medicare FFS. The Q-
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code would continue to be billed
separately from, or on the same claim
as, the J-code for the IVIG product and
would be processed through the DME
MACs. The Q-code should be billed as
a separate claim line on the same claim
for the same place of service as the Jcode for the IVIG. In cases where the
IVIG product is mailed or delivered to
the patient prior to administration, the
date of service for the administration of
the IVIG (the Q-code) may be no more
than 30 calendar days after the date of
service on the IVIG product claim line.
No more than one Q-code should be
billed per claim line per date of service.
If a provider is billing for multiple
administrations of IVIG on a single
claim, then the supplier would bill the
Q-code for each date of service on a
separate claim line, which would be
payable per visit (that is, each time the
IVIG is administered). There may be
situations in which multiple units of
IVIG are shipped to the patient and
billed on a single ‘‘J’’ code claim line
followed by more than one Q-code
administration claim line, each with the
date of service on which the IVIG was
administered. However, only one Qcode shall be paid per infusion date of
service. In order to implement the
requirements for this separate bundled
payment under section 1861(s)(2)(Z) of
the Act, we would issue a Change
Request (CR) prior to implementation of
this payment, including the Q-code
needed for billing, outlining the
requirements for the claims processing
changes needed to implement this
payment.
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VI. Hospice Informal Dispute
Resolution and Special Focus Program
A. Background and Statutory Authority
Division CC, section 407 of the
Consolidated Appropriations Act of
2021 (CAA), 2021, amended Part A of
Title XVIII of the Act to add a new
section 1822, and amended sections
1864(a) and 1865(b) of the Act,
establishing new hospice program
survey and enforcement requirements,
required public reporting of survey
information, and a new hospice hotline.
The provisions in the CAA, 2021
direct the Secretary to create a Special
Focus Program (SFP) for poorperforming hospice programs, give
authority for imposing enforcement
remedies for noncompliant hospice
programs, and require the development
and implementation of a range of
remedies as well as procedures for
appealing determinations regarding
these remedies. These enforcement
remedies can be imposed instead of, or
in addition to, termination of the
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hospice programs’ participation in the
Medicare program. The remedies
include civil money penalties (CMP),
directed in-service training, directed
plan of correction, suspension of all or
part of payments, and appointment of
temporary management to oversee
operations.
In the CY 2022 HH PPS final rule (86
FR 62240), we addressed provisions
related to hospice survey enforcement
and other activities described in the
rule. A summary of the finalized CAA,
2021 provisions regarding hospice
survey and enforcement can be found in
the CY 2022 HH PPS final rule (86 FR
62243), available at https://
www.govinfo.gov/content/pkg/FR-202111-09/pdf/2021-23993.pdf. We finalized
all the CAA, 2021 provisions related to
hospice survey and enforcement in CY
2022 rulemaking except for the SFP. As
outlined in the CY 2022 HH PPS final
rule, we stated that we would consider
public comments we received and seek
additional collaboration with
stakeholders to further develop a
revised proposal and methodology for
the SFP.
In the FY 2023 Hospice Wage Index
and Payment Rate Update and Hospice
Quality Reporting Requirements final
rule (87 FR 4566) (Hospice rule), we
affirmed our intention to initiate a
hospice Technical Expert Panel (TEP) to
provide input on the structure and
methodology of the SFP. Public
comments received in response to the
FY 2023 Hospice rule generally
supported CMS’s efforts to establish an
SFP and to convene a TEP as part of the
SFP development. A 30-day call for
nominations was held July 14 through
August 14, 2022, and nine TEP members
were selected, representing a diverse
range of experience and expertise
related to hospice care and quality. A
CMS contractor convened a TEP in
October and November 2022, which
provided feedback and considerations
on the preliminary SFP concepts,
including developing a methodology to
identify hospice poor-performers,
criteria for completing the SFP and for
termination from Medicare when a
hospice cannot complete the SFP, and
public reporting. Details from the TEP
meetings, including their
recommendations, are available in the
TEP summary report 144 on the CMS
website at https://www.cms.gov/
medicare/quality-safety-oversightcertification-compliance/hospicespecial-focus-program.
144 2022 Technical Expert Panel and Stakeholder
Listening Sessions: Hospice Special Focus Program
Summary Report (April 28, 2023).
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B. Proposed Regulatory Provisions
1. Overview
In this proposed rule, we are
proposing in Subpart M—Survey and
Certification of Hospice Programs, to
add new definitions of ‘‘Hospice Special
Focus Program,’’ ‘‘IDR,’’ ‘‘SFP status,’’
and ‘‘SFP survey’’ at § 488.1105. We are
also proposing a hospice informal
dispute resolution process at § 488.1130
to provide hospice programs an
informal opportunity to resolve disputes
related to condition-level survey
findings for those hospice programs that
are seeking recertification from the State
survey agency (SA), CMS, or
reaccreditation from the accrediting
organization (AO) for continued
participation in Medicare. Informal
dispute resolution would also be offered
to hospice programs following a
complaint or validation survey and
those in the SFP. We are proposing the
specific details on the hospice SFP at
§ 488.1135, which includes the criteria
for selection and completion of the SFP,
hospice termination from Medicare, and
public reporting of the SFP. We are
proposing that the hospice SFP will
commence as of the effective date of the
rule, and we anticipate selecting SFP
hospices in CY 2024. We also propose
to periodically review the effectiveness
of the methodology and the algorithm.
2. Proposed Definitions (§ 488.1105)
We propose to add four new
definitions to § 488.1105, that would
define the hospice SFP, IDR, SFP status,
and SFP survey. The definitions
proposed for hospice programs are as
follows:
• Hospice Special Focus Program
(SFP) means a program conducted by
CMS to identify hospices as poor
performers, based on defined quality
indicators, in which CMS selects
hospices for increased oversight to
ensure that they meet Medicare
requirements. Selected hospices either
successfully complete the SFP program
or are terminated from the Medicare
program.
• IDR stands for informal dispute
resolution.
• SFP status means the status of a
hospice provider in the SFP with
respect to the provider’s standing in the
SFP, which is indicated by one of the
following status levels: Level 1—in
progress; Level 2—completed
successfully; or Level 3—terminated
from the Medicare program.
• SFP survey refers to a standard
survey as defined in § 488.1105 and is
performed after a hospice is selected for
the SFP and is conducted every 6
months, up to three occurrences.
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3. Informal Dispute Resolution
(§ 488.1130)
We propose at new § 488.1130 to
make an Informal Dispute Resolution
(IDR) process available to hospice
programs to address disputes related to
condition-level survey findings
following a hospice program’s receipt of
the official survey Statement of
Deficiencies and Plan of Correction,
Form CMS–2567. The proposed IDR for
hospices would be similar to the process
already in existence for home health
agencies. The proposed IDR process for
hospice programs, like that of HHAs, is
for condition-level survey findings
which may be the impetus for an
enforcement action. Standard-level
findings alone do not trigger an
enforcement action and are not
accompanied by appeal and hearing
rights. The proposed IDR process would
provide hospice programs an informal
opportunity to resolve disputes
regarding survey findings for those
hospice programs seeking recertification
from the SA, CMS, or reaccreditation
from the AO for continued participation
in Medicare. Additionally, proposed
IDR may be initiated for programs under
SA monitoring (either through a
complaint investigation or validation
survey) and those in the proposed SFP.
For hospice programs deemed through a
CMS-approved AO, the AO would
receive the IDR request from their
deemed facility program, following the
same process and coordinating with
CMS regarding any enforcement actions.
In accordance with 42 CFR 488.5(a)(4),
AOs must have a comparable survey
process to the SAs. For deemed hospice
programs, the AO communicates any
condition-level findings to the
applicable CMS Location. If a deemed
hospice fails to meet the Medicare
requirements or shows continued
condition-level noncompliance, deemed
status is generally removed and
oversight is placed under the SA. The
purpose of the proposed IDR process
would be to provide an opportunity to
settle disagreements at the earliest stage,
prior to a formal hearing, and to
conserve time and money resources
potentially spent by the hospice, the SA,
and CMS. The proposed IDR process
may not be used to refute an
enforcement action or selection into the
SFP. Additionally, we propose that
failure of CMS, or the State or the AO,
as appropriate, to complete IDR must
not delay the effective date of any
enforcement action.
When survey findings indicate a
condition-level deficiency (or
deficiencies), the hospice program
would be notified in writing of its
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opportunity to request an IDR for those
deficiencies. This notice will would be
provided to the hospice program when
the CMS–2567 Statement of Deficiencies
and Plan of Correction is issued to the
hospice. We propose that the hospice’s
request for IDR must be submitted in
writing (electronically or hard copy),
include the specific survey findings that
are disputed, and be submitted within
the same 10 calendar days allowable for
submitting an acceptable plan of
correction.
The proposed IDR provision balances
the need for hospice programs to avoid
unnecessary disputes and protracted
litigation using the most rapid
mechanism for correcting deficiencies
and aligning with the interests of
hospice patients/caregivers. IDR is
meant to be an informal process
whereby the provider has an
opportunity to address the surveyor’s
findings, either by disputing them or
providing additional information.
We propose that if any survey
findings are revised or removed by the
State or CMS based on IDR, and if CMS
accepts the IDR results, the CMS–2567
would be revised accordingly. If CMS
accepts the IDR results and the revised
Form CMS–2567, then CMS would
adjust any enforcement actions imposed
solely due to those cited and revised
deficiencies. If the survey findings are
upheld by CMS or the state following
IDR, the Form CMS–2567 would not be
revised based on the IDR and there
would not be adjustments to the
enforcement actions.
4. Special Focus Program (§ 488.1135)
Section 1822(b) of the Act requires the
Secretary to conduct a Special Focus
Program for hospice programs that the
Secretary has identified as having
substantially failed to meet applicable
requirements of the Act. We propose at
§ 488.1135 a hospice SFP to address
issues that place hospice beneficiaries at
risk for poor quality of care through
increased oversight. We propose that
specific criteria would be used to
determine whether a hospice program
participates in the SFP as outlined in
the proposed rule. We also propose the
proposed hospice SFP would commence
as per the effective date of the final rule
when published, and we anticipate
selecting SFP hospices starting in CY
2024. We propose to periodically review
the effectiveness of the methodology
and the algorithm and make
adjustments through rulemaking as
necessary.
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a. Proposed Hospice Special Focus
Program Algorithm
In establishing the proposed Hospice
SFP, we examined the Special Focus
Facility program for nursing homes and
its methodology for facility selection.
Although the proposed methodology for
the hospice program SFP is similar in
certain facets, the proposed SFP
methodology is tailored specifically to
this setting and to the data that is
available to evaluate hospice
performance.
We propose to identify a subset of 10
percent of hospice programs based on
the highest aggregate scores determined
by the algorithm. The hospices selected
for the SFP from the 10 percent would
be determined by CMS.
To identify ‘‘poor performance,’’ we
have identified several indicators,
namely, survey reports with ConditionLevel Deficiencies (CLDs) and
complaints with substantiated
allegations, and CMS Medicare data
sources from the Hospice Quality
Reporting Program (HQRP) (Medicare
claims and Consumer Assessment of
Healthcare Providers and Systems
(CAHPS®) Hospice Survey). These
indicators, which can be used to
identify potential poor performance,
have been integrated into the proposed
SFP algorithm to assist in identifying
potential hospice providers for the SFP.
As discussed previously, we propose
to use multiple data sources to provide
a comprehensive view of the quality of
care provided at the identified hospices.
The compilation of these data sources
illustrates areas of concern—validated/
identified issues based on in-person/onsite review of a hospice to meet
Medicare requirements; caregiver and
public complaints about hospices not
providing quality of care or not meeting
Medicare requirements; and quality
measures that inform the public of
whether a hospice is providing expected
care processes or outcomes. We believe
these are indicators of poor quality
hospice care. The proposed SFP
algorithm is designed as an initial step
in identifying poor quality indicators.
b. Proposed Use of Medicare Data
Sources To Identify Poor Performing
Hospices
To identify hospices with poor quality
indicators, we propose using the most
recent complete Medicare hospice data
from two data sources: (1) hospice
surveys; and (2) Medicare HQRP. Each
source represents distinct dimensions of
hospice care that we have identified as
related to a hospice’s performance or
practices. From these data sources, we
propose using multiple indicators of
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hospice care delivery to identify poor
performing hospices (see Table 1).
Hospices would be identified for
potential SFP enrollment if they—(1)
have data from any of the
aforementioned data sources; (2) are
listed as an active provider (that is, have
billed at least one claim to Medicare
FFS in the last 12 months); and (3)
operate in the United States, including
the District of Columbia and U.S.
territories. Each data source and the
proposed quality indicators are
discussed further later in this preamble.
Based on these proposed criteria, in CY
2019 through CY 2021 analytic file,
5,943 hospices would be eligible for
participation in the SFP.
(1) Hospice Survey Data
information related to the hospice
survey process, we encourage the public
to review the CMS State Operations
Manual (SOM), Appendix M (internet
Only Publication 100–07).
A CLD is cited on a survey when a
hospice is found to be noncompliant
with all or part of a condition of
participation (CoP), which is one of the
health and safety requirements all
hospices are required to meet to
participate in Medicare. As discussed in
the QSOG memo (QSO–23–08–hospice)
issued on January 27, 2023, a significant
change in the hospice survey protocol
was made to provide an enhanced
approach to investigating the quality-ofcare provided to hospice patients. While
each of the 23 CoPs continues to have
equal weight in the final certification
decision, special attention is directed to
those CoPs directly impacting patient
care for purposes of the proposed SFP.
Consistent with this enhanced survey
process, we have identified 11 quality-
of-care CoPs that directly contribute to
the quality-of-care delivered to patients,
their caregivers, and families, and
believe that a cited CLD on any one of
them may indicate a hospice is
providing poor quality-of-care.
Therefore, we propose to include the 11
quality-of-care CLDs noted in Table F2)
as data indicators in the SFP algorithm.
The SFP algorithm would focus on
quality-of-care CLDs because they are
based on observable quality concerns
seen and reported by hospice surveyors
to identify hospices that provide poorer
quality-of-care to hospice patients.
Additionally, we did not include all 23
hospice CoPs because we did not want
to dilute the methodology’s ability to
identify quality concerns. However, we
may explore incorporating other CoPs
into the methodology, and we solicit
comments on an alternative approach
that would incorporate other CoPs in
the calculation for the SFP algorithm.
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(a) Quality-of-Care Condition-Level
Deficiencies (CLDs)
Hospices are surveyed for compliance
with hospice program requirements
prior to becoming certified as a hospice
provider in Medicare (initial
certification survey) and then at least
once every 36 months (standard survey
for recertification (§ 418.1110)), with
roughly one-third of all hospices being
surveyed each year. A post-survey
revisit or follow-up survey may also
occur to determine if the hospice
corrected cited deficiencies. Hospice
survey data (initial certification,
standard recertification, and follow-up)
is collected on the Certification And
Survey Provider Enhanced Reports
(CASPER) system. CMS will be posting
publicly available hospice survey
finding information to the Quality,
Certification and Oversight Report
(QCOR) website in CY 2023. For
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We propose to count the total number
of quality-of-care CLDs from the
previous 3 consecutive years of data.
Our analysis of data from CY 2019
through 2021 found that very few
hospices are not present in the survey
data, and that the overwhelming
majority of hospices (88.3 percent of all
proposed SFP-eligible hospices or 5,248
out of 5,943) had no quality-of-care
CLDs cited over these 3 years. Of the
5,943 hospices identified that would be
SFP-eligible under the CY 2019–2021
data, 5.7 percent (that is, 341 hospices)
are not present in the survey data. This
means that each of those 341 hospices
has not yet received its standard survey
or their survey results had not been
recorded as of the time the data was
accessed for analysis from the CASPER
system and/or had no recorded
substantiated complaint in the internet
Quality Improvement and Evaluation
System (iQIES). Considering public
comments received on the CY 2022 HH
PPS final rule (86 FR 62240) and the
SFP TEP feedback, stakeholders
expressed concern about inter-surveyor
reliability and state-to-state variability
in survey policy as potential drawbacks
of including survey data as part of the
SFP program methodology. However,
the TEP also acknowledged the
importance and value of survey data
that identifies whether a hospice
complies with Medicare requirements to
support basic care quality. Furthermore,
the TEP supported using the total count
of quality-of-care CLDs to indicate
significant noncompliance with
multiple CoPs. To address the intersurveyor reliability and variability
concerns, we have implemented
improvements to surveyor training
guidelines to increase surveyor
standardization between SAs and AOs.
Based on our efforts to improve
surveyor training, and considering the
TEP and stakeholder concerns, we
propose counting the total number of
quality-of-care CLDs from the last 3
consecutive years of data.
(b) Substantiated Complaints
In addition to quality-of-care CLDs,
we propose to include the total number
of substantiated complaints received
against a hospice in the last 3
consecutive years of data before the
release of the SFP selection list.
Complaints against a hospice may be
filed with the SA or Beneficiary and
Family Centered Care Quality
Improvement Organization at any time
by a patient and/or caregiver(s) and
hospice staff members (Medicare SOM
Chapter 5). Once a complaint is filed
with the SA, the SA can conduct an
unannounced complaint investigation
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survey to substantiate or refute the
complaint. If the allegation is found to
be substantiated or confirmed, the SA
informs the hospice and submits the
findings to iQIES. A post-survey revisit
or follow-up survey may also occur to
determine if the hospice has made
corrections and is in compliance with
all requirements. A hospice may have
many complaints filed against them, but
not all complaints may be substantiated
upon SA review. The results of the
review of complaints are submitted to
the iQIES system, which is not publicly
available. Like quality-of-care CLDs,
most hospices in our analysis currently
have no substantiated complaints in the
identified 3-year period. Our CY 2019–
2021 survey data analysis found that
currently 81.8 percent of hospice
programs (that is,4,860 of the 5,943 SFPeligible hospices) have had no
substantiated complaints over the past 3
years. As noted previously, there are 5.7
percent of eligible hospices that have no
survey data, or in other words, there is
missingness in the survey data for those
hospices. Unlike quality-of-care CLDs,
where missingness is likely due to the
absence of a recent survey, the absence
of substantiated complaints from this
data is likely because the hospice
program has no substantiated
complaints.
(2) Hospice Quality Reporting Program
(HQRP) Data
In addition to survey data, we propose
to use quality measures from the
Hospice Quality Reporting Program
(HQRP) to capture hospice care
processes and beneficiary/caregiver care
experiences. The HQRP includes data
submitted by hospices via the Hospice
Item Set (HIS), Medicare hospice claims,
and the CAHPS Hospice Surveys. All
Medicare-certified hospices must
comply with these reporting
requirements or face penalties for a
failure to report, although some
hospices may be exempt from reporting
certain measures.145 This ensures that
most hospices have these data available
for use in the SFP algorithm. These
quality measure data are publicly
available in the Provider Data Catalog
(PDC) at https://data.cms.gov/providerdata/topics/hospice-care and Care
Compare at https://www.medicare.gov/
care-compare/?providerType=Hospice.
A description of current HQRP
measures and public reporting dates is
available online. We propose to include
five publicly reported HQRP measures
145 Information on the reporting requirements and
Annual Payment Update payment penalties for the
failure to report can be found on the HQRP
Overview website or section 1814(i) of the Act.
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to identify poor performing hospices.
The proposed measures are as follows:
• Medicare claims-based measure:—
Hospice Care Index (HCI) Overall
Score
• CAHPS Hospice Survey Data
measures:
++ Help for Pain and Symptoms
++ Getting Timely Help
++ Willingness to Recommend this
Hospice
++ Overall Rating of this Hospice
(a) Hospice Care Index (HCI)
We propose including the HCI overall
score based on eight quarters of
Medicare claims data. The HCI captures
multiple aspects of care delivery across
ten indicators that comprise a composite
HCI overall score, with hospices earning
a point for each indicator met (range: 0–
10 such that a lower score indicates
lower quality of care). The proposed
HCI overall score indicates hospice care
quality between admission and
discharge (HCI Technical Report).
Moreover, the HCI score is based on
Medicare claims data, which provide
direct evidence of care delivery
decisions at a hospice that is readily
available for all hospices. For public
reporting, hospices with less than 20
claims over the eight quarters are
excluded from reporting the measure.
The HCI measure would also be
suppressed if any 1 of the 10 indicators
is not reported for any reason.
Additional details of the HCI, such as
the quality measure specifications, data
period, and exclusion criteria, are
available in the HQRP Quality Measure
(QM) User’s Manual posted on the
HQRP Current Measures web page. The
TEP and previous public comments
generally supported the inclusion of
HCI data in the preliminary
methodology because the HCI captures
a robust majority of hospices
participating in Medicare and covers
key aspects of the hospice care
continuum. Our analysis of FYs 2019 to
2021 (excluding January through June
2020) HCI data found that 78.3 percent
of hospice programs (that is, 4,656 of the
5,943 SFP-eligible hospices) had a
publicly reported HCI score. The
overwhelming majority of those
hospices receive an HCI score of 8 or
more out of 10—4,007 (86.1 percent) of
the 4,656 SFP eligible hospices with an
HCI score reported.
(b) CAHPS Hospice Survey
To represent decedent/caregiver
experience of hospice care, and in
consideration of TEP and stakeholder
perspectives, we propose using four
measures from the CAHPS Hospice
Survey: (1) help for pain and symptoms;
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(2) getting timely help; (3) willingness to
recommend the hospice; and (4) overall
rating of the hospice. CAHPS Hospice
Survey measure scores are calculated
across eight rolling quarters for all
hospices with at least 30 completed
surveys. Some hospices do not
participate in CAHPS as new hospices
are exempt from reporting CAHPS
measures for the calendar year in which
they receive their CMS Certification
Number (CCN), and hospices can apply
for a CAHPS exemption if they serve
fewer than 50 survey—eligible
decedents/caregivers in a given calendar
year. The CAHPS Hospice measures are
publicly available from the Provider
CAHPS Hospice Survey Data file on the
Hospice PDC. Additional details are in
the QM User’s Manual on the HQRP
Current Measures web page. These
CAHPS Hospice Survey measure scores
are also publicly reported on the Care
Compare website at https://
www.medicare.gov/care-compare/
?providerType=Hospice. As discussed
in the SFP TEP report, TEP and other
stakeholders agreed that the algorithm is
strengthened by including the four
CAHPS Hospice Survey measures as
they reflect caregiver-reported
experiences in key areas of hospice
quality not reflected in claims or
inspection surveys.
From the CAHPS Hospice Survey
data, we propose to use adjusted
bottom-box scores of the four measures
described previously above to create a
CAHPS Hospice Survey Index. As
described in the CMS document,
‘‘Calculating CAHPS® Hospice Survey
Top-, Middle-, and Bottom-Box Scores,’’
that summarizes the steps we use to
calculate CAHPS Hospice Survey
measure scores, ‘‘bottom-box’’ scores are
calculated for each respondent as ‘‘100’’
if the respondent selected the least
positive response categories for that
question and ‘‘0’’ if the respondent
selected a different response category;
survey respondents who do not answer
a question are not included in the
scoring of that question. In the CAHPS
Hospice Survey, different questions
have different response scales, so the
bottom-box responses vary across the
survey. For example, for questions with
response options of ‘‘Yes, definitely,’’
‘‘Yes, somewhat,’’ and ‘‘No,’’ the
bottom-box response is ‘‘No’’; for
questions with response options of
‘‘Never,’’ ‘‘Sometimes,’’ ‘‘Usually,’’ and
‘‘Always,’’ the bottom-box responses are
both ‘‘Never’’ and ‘‘Sometimes’’; Personlevel bottom-box scores for each
question are then adjusted for mode of
survey administration and case-mix to
produce hospice-level bottom-box
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scores. Bottom-box scores for a
particular question can be interpreted as
the percentage of respondents who
selected the least positive response
category(ies) after adjusting for mode of
survey administration and differences in
the mix of decedent/caregiver
characteristics across hospices.
Composite measure scores, such as
those for Help for Pain and Symptoms
and Getting Timely Help, are formed by
taking the average of fully-adjusted
hospice-level question scores within the
composite. We propose using bottombox scores for the SFP, because they
quantify reported problematic care
experiences. To create the CAHPS
Hospice Survey Index, we propose to
calculate a single score for each hospice
by taking a weighted sum of the bottombox scores for the four CAHPS
measures, as described later in this
section. Specifically, we propose that
the two measures that represent overall
assessments of hospice care (that is,
Willingness to Recommend this Hospice
and Overall Rating of this Hospice) each
be given a weight of 0.5 as these
measures assess similar concepts. We
propose to weight the other two
measures, Help for Pain and Symptoms
and Getting Timely Help, at 1.0 each to
reflect that these measures assess
distinct aspects of care.
To illustrate, not including usually
applied adjustments to the data for case
mix and mode of survey administration,
if Hospice A received a bottom-box
score of 100 on the Overall Rating of
this Hospice, that means that all the
survey respondents responded to the
question and gave the hospice an overall
rating of zero to six, the least positive
possible responses (middle-box options:
7–8; top-box option: 9–10). The hospice
could then receive, a bottom-box score
of 0 on the Help for Pain and Symptoms
measure, meaning none of the survey
respondents selected the least positive
responses on any of the questions that
make up this measure. If Hospice A also
received a bottom-box score of 12 on the
Willingness to Recommend this Hospice
and a bottom-box score of 4.5 on the
Getting Timely Help measure, meaning
that approximately 12 percent and 4.5
percent of respondents, respectively,
selected the bottom-box scores, then
Hospice A’s total CAHPS Hospice
Survey Index would be 60.5, calculated
as follows: ((100 + 12) * 0.5) + (0 + 4.5)
= 60.5. The maximum value for the
CAHPS Hospice Survey Index would be
300 points. For this index, a lower
number of points would indicate a
higher quality score.
Our analysis of CYs 2019 to 2021
(excluding January through June 2020)
CAHPS Hospice Survey data found that
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49.3 percent of eligible hospice
programs (2,929 of the 5,943 SFPeligible hospices) report the four CAHPS
Hospice Survey measures. Compared to
the other three indicators (quality-ofcare CLDs, substantiated complaints,
and HCI), the scores from the four
CAHPS measures are more dispersed
around their average value. The average
CAHPS Hospice Survey Index value for
these four measures combined is 24,
with an overall range of 2 to 83 from the
SFP-eligible hospices (lower scores
indicate better performance; total
possible range: 0–300). The distribution
of these values is roughly symmetric
and centered on an average such that
the likelihood of observing a value
different from the average value
becomes smaller the further away the
value is from the average.
c. Proposed Data Source Preparation
We propose to compile the data for
the algorithm indicators (quality-of-care
CLDs, substantiated complaints, HCI,
the four CAHPS Hospice measures) and
remove hospices not eligible for SFP to
create a single score for every hospice.
A Medicare-certified hospice program
would be included in the algorithm if
it—(1) is an active provider that has
billed at least one claim to Medicare
FFS in the last 12 months as captured
in iQIES; and (2) has data for at least one
algorithm indicator.
For the HCI and CAHPS data, we
propose pulling the latest HCI and
CAHPS data from the Hospice PDC. For
example, we would use data from
November 2023 to identify the pool of
hospices eligible to be in the SFP on or
after January 1, 2024.
(1) Survey Data and HCI
For the survey data, we propose the
following steps to prepare data for the
algorithm:
• Step One: We propose to pull 3
consecutive years of survey data
preceding the release of the SFP
selection list, including data for all
relevant hospice survey types (initial
certification, standard, complaint, and
follow-up surveys). For identifying the
pool of hospices eligible to be in the
SFP on or after January 1, 2024, we
propose to use 2020–2023 survey data.
• Step Two: From the survey data in
Step One, we propose to count the total
number of quality-of-care CLDs for each
hospice in the data file. Quality-of-care
CLDs can be found in any hospice
survey (initial certification, standard,
complaint, follow-up). They are denoted
within a survey under specific citation
codes (Table F2).
• Step Three: From the data file in
Step One, we propose to count the total
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number of substantiated complaints for
each hospice in the data file.
Substantiated complaints can be found
in complaint and follow-up hospice
surveys.
Our initial analysis found that the
proposed SFP-eligible hospices may
have missing indicators from the survey
data (quality-of-care CLDs, substantiated
complaints,) and/or HCI. To address the
algorithm’s missing data for these
indicators, we propose standardizing
each indicator for quality-of-care CLDs,
substantiated complaints, and HCI.
Specifically, we propose that hospices
missing any of these three indicators
would be assigned a value of zero for
that indicator after standardization (see
section VI.B.4.d. of this proposed rule).
(2) CAHPS® Hospice Survey Data
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As discussed previously, CAHPS
Hospice Survey data are not available
for hospices that are exempt from
participating due to size or newness, or
for hospices for which there are fewer
than 30 completed surveys over an
eight-quarter reporting period. Since
these hospices may differ systematically
from hospices that do have publicly
reported CAHPS Hospice Survey data,
we do not believe it is appropriate to
assign hospices the average value of the
CAHPS Hospice Survey Index if they
are missing these data. After
standardizing the CAHPS Hospice
Survey measures (using the same
process for survey data and HCI as
proposed in sections VI.B.4. and
VI.B.4.d. of this proposed rule), we
propose addressing missing CAHPS
Hospice Survey data by averaging the
total number of data indicators used to
derive the score. The score for hospices
with missing CAHPS Hospice Survey
data would be based solely on all other
indicators (CLDs, complaints, and HCI),
and the score for hospices with
available CAHPS Hospice Survey data
includes the CAHPS Hospice Survey
Index in addition to the other indicators
As a function of this proposed
approach, all indicators are centered
with a mean of zero and a standard
deviation of one. The transformed
indicator tells us how likely a value for
a given hospice would be observed and
allows us to compare indicators (by
adding them together) to determine
which hospices have the most unlikely
values compared to other hospices.
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(see section VI.B.4.d.(2) of this proposed
ruled.
d. Proposed Data Source
Standardization
We propose standardizing each
indicator (that is, quality-of-care CLDs,
substantiated complaints, HCI, and the
CAHPS Hospice Survey Index) to
compare indicators equally despite each
data source’s different units of
measurement. For example, both
quality-of-care CLDs and substantiated
complaints are continuous variables that
have no ceiling to how many quality-ofcare CLDs or substantiated complaints a
single hospice can receive. In contrast,
a hospice can only receive a maximum
value of 10 from the HCI quality
measure. Therefore, if we do not rescale
HCI, we would be deemphasizing the
importance of HCI for the SFP as a
relevant dimension of care quality
because the range of possible values for
HCI is much smaller than the range of
possible values for quality-of-care CLDs
and substantiated complaints. By
standardizing the data as proposed, we
can understand how different the
indicator is for a single hospice
compared to the indicator from the
average hospice and shift the unit to a
magnitude of difference from the
average across all indicators to compare
the data source indicators under a
shared measurement unit.
As a simplified example to illustrate
the importance of standardization,
Hospice A has one quality-of-care CLD
and HCI score of 3. These two numbers’
absolute differences are two (3 HCI¥1
quality-of-care CLD = 2). However,
examining the absolute difference in
these numbers does not indicate that
Hospice A delivers poor care quality. To
better explain how these two indicators
relate to one another and quality, we
look at the likelihood that Hospice A
would receive one quality-of-care CLD
and the likelihood that it would receive
an HCI score of 3. To determine this
likelihood, we propose comparing these
(1) Proposed Weighting of the
Standardized Values
The proposed standardization
discussed earlier allows an indicator’s
data to be compared to another
standardized indicator. Therefore, we
would be comparing how different the
observed value is from the average value
to make all indicators mathematically
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numbers to the respective averages of all
other hospices for the indicators. The
average number of quality-of-care CLDs
for hospices is a little less than 0.5. Most
hospices have zero quality-of-care CLDs.
While a quality-of-care CLD of one is
larger than the average (0.5), the
magnitude of difference between the
one quality-of-care CLD in Hospice A
and the 0.5 quality-of-care CLDs for the
average hospice is not very large. When
considering HCI, the average HCI score
for all hospices is 8.9 (a higher HCI
score indicates better performance on
the measure). An HCI score of three is
a large difference from the average of
8.9, and as a result, it is unlikely that
a hospice would receive this kind of
score if it was an average HCI performer.
The likelihood of observing a value
different from the average is the type of
information we propose to include to
determine poor performers. By
standardizing the indicators, we shift
our interpretation from what value they
received to an estimation of how likely
they are to receive the value if they were
an average hospice. We believe this
approach would improve the proposed
algorithm’s ability to identify those
hospice programs with the most
unlikely values across our four
indicators and those that are the poorest
performers across indicators compared
to all other active hospices in the SFP
analytic file.
The previous fictitious example
illustrates how indicators are
standardized. We propose to adopt the
most common standardization method,
which would be applied to each of the
indicators for a specific hospice
(hospice indicators). For each indicator,
this would be done by taking the
indicator’s observed value for the
hospice and subtracting that indicator’s
average value for all hospices. We
propose to then divide this number (the
difference) by the standard deviation, a
common measure of data variance, to
tell us how clustered data are around
the average (see the following equation).
equal. We propose to weight each
indicator by multiplying an indicator by
a constant value to account for their
relative importance in the methodology.
As part of our consideration for
determining the weights for each
indicator, the TEP and stakeholder
listening sessions offered considerations
related to weighting the data sources. In
discussing the weighting of
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substantiated complaints, quality-ofcare CLDs, and HCI, the TEP and
stakeholders agreed that they represent
relevant dimensions of care quality but
did not raise concerns or discuss
whether one of these indicators was
more or less indicative of care quality
relative to another. However, the TEP
and stakeholders emphasized the
importance of patient and caregiver
perspectives represented by the CAHPS
measures, noting they are the most
integral dimension of hospice care
quality. As discussed in the SFP TEP
report on page 15, ‘‘some TEP members
argued that the valuable perspectives of
families and caregivers on the CAHPS
Hospice Survey justified weighting it
more than other data sources.’’ Based on
the consistent feedback from the TEP
and stakeholder listening sessions, we
propose to weight the CAHPS Hospice
Survey Index by twice that of the other
measures (that is, multiply CAHPS
Hospice Survey Index by two).
(2) Proposed Approach for Missing
CAHPS Data
In three of the four indicators used in
the algorithm, data exhibit an
exceptional amount of concentration
around the average value for the
indicator. We propose replacing missing
values in quality-of-care CLDs,
substantiated complaints, and HCI with
the average value for each of those
indicators for an individual hospice to
assign a score to that hospice (see
section VI.B.4.d. of this proposed rule).
The CAHPS Hospice Survey, Index is
distinct from these other three
43763
indicators for several reasons warranting
separate treatment for its missingness.
First, the CAHPS Hospice Survey Index
does not exhibit the same high
concentration around the average value
as the other measures. This means that
there is more variability in the CAHPS
Hospice Survey Index than in the other
indicators. As a result of this increased
variability, it is increasingly unlikely
that those values that are missing are
close to the average value. Second, more
hospices are missing CAHPS Hospice
Survey data than are missing data for
other indicators in the algorithm. In our
review of the CY 2019–2021 analytic file
(excluding January 1–June 30, 2020),
there is CAHPS Hospice Survey data for
only about 49 percent of all SFP-eligible
hospices. Due to reporting exemptions
for small and/or newer hospices, those
missing values are disproportionately
from that cohort of providers. Because
of this trend, it is difficult to draw any
conclusions about the missing values
given that there are no data from small
hospices by which we can compare if
the smaller/newer hospice CAHPS
average is similar to those for which we
have observed data. Third, hospices
with fewer than 50 distinct beneficiaries
can file for an exemption from reporting
CAHPS. If we replace missing CAHPS
Hospice Survey measure values with the
average value, poor performing small
hospices could benefit from being small
by opting into being treated as an
average hospice by becoming exempt
from reporting their poor CAHPS
Hospice Survey measure values. For
these reasons, we propose a different
treatment for CAHPS Hospice Survey
missingness. Instead of replacing
missing CAHPS Hospice Survey
measure scores with the average values
for those measures, we propose to run
hospices with data for CAHPS Hospice
Survey measures through a version of
the algorithm that considers the CAHPS
Hospice Survey Index, and for those
hospices that do not have CAHPS
Hospice Survey data, through a version
of the algorithm that does not consider
the CAHPS Hospice Survey Index. To
make the two resulting scores
comparable, we then average the scores
based on the total number of indicators
used to calculate the score.
For the hospices without CAHPS
Hospice Survey data, we would divide
their scores by three because their score
was calculated from three indicators:
quality-of-care CLDs, substantiated
complaints, and HCI. For the hospices
with CAHPS Hospice Survey data, we
would divide their scores by five
because the weight on the CAHPS
Hospice Survey Index means it is
mathematically counted twice, so the
indicators would be quality-of-care
CLDs, substantiated complaints, HCI,
and the CAHPS Hospice Survey Index,
which is counted twice due to the
weight of two on the indicator. This
approach to handling missing CAHPS
data is beneficial because it does not
make assumptions about the values for
missing CAHPS data.
• With CAHPS Hospice Survey Index:
last 3 years. Over the past 3 years, they
received zero quality-of-care CLDs, two
substantiated complaints, and an HCI
score of nine. At the same time, their
CAHPS Hospice Survey Index measure
is 44.5, which is larger than the average
value of 28, which may indicate a
quality concern. When we standardize
these values to examine how different
they are from the average hospice, we
find that their quality-of-care CLD
standardized value is zero, their
substantiated complaint standardized
value is 0.6, their HCI is 0.1, and their
CAHPS Hospice Survey Index is 2.4. As
we suspected, three of their indicators
are closely in line with the average
hospice. Only their CAHPS Hospice
Survey Index of 2.4 tells us that their
bottom-box scores for the four quality
measures is 2.4 standard deviations
away from the average hospice. We
would then include these four
indicators in the algorithm: 0 + 0.6¥0.1
+ (2*2.4) = 5.3. As explained above, for
hospices with CAHPS data, we would
To illustrate how the proposed
algorithm would behave, we discuss
later in this section how two example
hospices’ (Hospice A’s and Hospice B’s)
algorithm scores would be produced
based on their indicator values. As
discussed previously, the methodology
would be one step in determining
whether a hospice is selected for the
SFP.
Hospice A is a large hospice, serving
500 beneficiaries on average over the
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divide their scores by five, and since
Hospice A has a CAHPS Hospice Survey
Index, the final value would be divided
by five. Hospital A’s final algorithm
score is: 5.3/5 = 1.06. We then take this
score and compare it to all other scores
generated from all hospices and put
them in order from highest to lowest,
and we find that Hospice A ranks at
331. Because of the algorithm’s
emphasis on CAHPS, Hospice A’s poor
CAHPS Hospice Survey Index would
make it more likely to be identified as
a candidate, but because Hospice A
performed well on the other three
indicators, it would be less likely to be
selected as a SFP participant compared
to other hospices.
Hospice B is a mid-sized hospice
serving an average of 120 distinct
beneficiaries over the past 3 years. It has
not reported CAHPS Hospice Survey
data across the four measures. They
received 42 substantiated complaints,
15 quality-of-care CLDs, and an HCI of
10. The number of substantiated
complaints and quality-of-care CLDs are
quite high even though they have
achieved all 10 indicators of HCI. After
we standardize, Hospice B’s quality-ofcare CLD value is 9.2, its complaint rate
is 16.4, and its HCI is 0.9. We would
calculate Hospice B’s score in the
following way: 9.2 + 16.4¥0.9 = 24.7.
As explained previously, for hospices
without CAHPS® data, we would divide
their scores by three, and since Hospice
B does not have a CAHPS Hospice
Survey Index, this final value would be
divided by three: 24.7/3 = 8.2. When
comparing this score of 8.2 to all other
hospices, we would find that Hospice B
has the highest algorithm score among
all hospices, indicating it has the
poorest quality indicator outcomes.
Even though its HCI score is high and
we do not know its CAHPS value,
Hospice B’s high substantiated
complaint rate and high number of
quality-of-care CLDs would make it a
very likely candidate for the SFP.
e. Proposed Selection Criteria
Based on public comment in the CY
2022 HH PPS final rule and
recommendations from the SFP TEP and
other stakeholders, we propose a SFP
selection process that utilizes a nostratification approach. In addition, we
considered the input of the SFP TEP
and stakeholders, who expressed that
the selection approach should identify
the poorest performing hospices,
regardless of characteristics, such as size
or location, and therefore favored an
approach with no stratification by state
or otherwise.
We propose at § 488.1135(b) that
hospices with AO deemed status that
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are placed in the SFP would not retain
deemed status and would be placed
under CMS or, as needed, SA oversight
jurisdiction until completion of the SFP
or termination.
The number of hospices selected to
participate in the SFP would be
determined in the first quarter of each
calendar year. The claims-based quality
measure data used in the proposed
algorithm is not available until
November of each calendar year. This
data is needed to run the algorithm,
which is used to establish the aggregate
score from which SFP participants are
selected. As an SFP selectee, a hospice
would not be removed from the SFP
until they either meet the criteria for
graduation or are terminated from the
Medicare program.
f. Proposed Survey and Enforcement
Criteria
As indicated in the CAA, 2021 adding
section 1822(b)(2) of the Act, once in the
SFP, a hospice must be surveyed ‘‘not
less than once every 6 months.’’ Based
on the TEP discussion, TEP members
agreed with the 6-month recertification
survey frequency for hospices in the
SFP, and we are proposing this
frequency at proposed § 488.1135(c).
Additionally, SFP hospices would be
subject to one or more remedies
specified in § 488.1220, and progressive
enforcement remedies, as appropriate, at
the discretion of CMS and consistent
with 42 CFR part 488, subpart N. When
CMS chooses to apply one or more
remedies specified in § 488.1220, the
remedies would be applied on the basis
of noncompliance with one or more
conditions of participation and may be
based on failure to correct previous
deficiency findings as evidenced by
repeat condition-level deficiencies. The
enforcement remedies could be imposed
for an SFP hospice with condition-level
deficiencies on a SFP survey or
complaint survey while in the program.
Furthermore, if subsequent surveys also
result in the citation of a condition-level
deficiency or deficiencies for an SFP
hospice, the enforcement remedies
imposed could be of increasing severity.
Increasing severity could mean a higher
CMP than was imposed for the earlier
noncompliance or increasing from one
remedy to more than one remedy being
imposed. CMS would use its discretion
to determine what remedies are most
appropriate given the survey results,
and the hospice may be subject to
remedies of increasing severity.
g. Proposed SFP Completion Criteria
The TEP generally agreed that to
complete and graduate from the SFP,
SFP hospices should have no CLDs
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cited for two consecutive 6-month
recertification surveys in an 18-month
timeframe. TEP members also suggested
that SFP hospices should have no
substantiated complaints and less than
a defined number of standard-level
deficiencies (SLDs) on two consecutive
6-month recertification surveys within
the 18-month timeframe to complete the
SFP. TEP members recommended a
stepwise completion process, with SFP
hospices preliminarily graduating after
completing two consecutive 6-month
recertification surveys within the 18month timeframe in accordance with all
completion requirements as proposed at
§ 488.1135(d). We considered the TEP’s
recommendations. However, we are
proposing that SFP hospices have no
CLDs for any two SFP surveys in an 18month period. Therefore, we propose in
new § 488.1135(d) that a hospice will
have completed the SFP if it has in an
18-month timeframe, no CLDs cited or
IJ’s for any two 6-month SFP surveys,
and has no pending complaint survey
triaged at an immediate jeopardy or
condition level, or has returned to
substantial compliance with all
requirements. If there are complaint
investigations or a 36-month
recertification survey for a hospice
while in the SFP, the SFP timeline may
extend beyond the 18-month timeframe.
The official completion date would be
the date of the CMS notice letter
informing the hospice of its removal
from the SFP. After completing the SFP,
hospice programs would receive a oneyear post SFP survey and then would
start a new standard 36-month survey
cycle.
h. Proposed Termination Criteria
A hospice in the SFP that fails any
two SFP surveys, by having any CLDs
on the surveys, in an 18-month period,
or pending complaint investigations
triaged at IJ or condition-level, would be
considered for termination from the
Medicare program as proposed at new
§ 488.1135(e). This criterion would
apply to all hospices, regardless of
geographical location, and reflects some
TEP recommendations. CMS would
issue the termination letter to the
hospice program in accordance with 42
CFR 489.53. Depending on the
deficiencies that brought a hospice into
the SFP, CMS recognizes that a provider
may need a reasonable period to achieve
substantial compliance. But, if the
hospice is not able to achieve
substantial compliance at any time
during the 18 months, they would be
considered for termination from the
Medicare program. Those providers that
are unable to resolve the deficiencies
that brought them into the SFP and
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cannot meet the proposed completion
criteria of having no CLDs cited for any
two SFP surveys during an 18-month
period, would be placed on a
termination track. If a hospice in the
SFP has an IJ-level deficiency cited
during a survey, CMS would follow the
requirements at § 488.1225.
i. Public Reporting of SFP Information
Public reporting of the proposed SFP
includes making accessible both general
information about the SFP program and
hospices selected for SFP. A guideline
for communicating SFP information
appears in the section 407 of CAA, 2021
(Pub. L. 116–260), which requires
hospice survey findings to be
‘‘prominent, easily accessible, readily
understandable, and searchable for the
general public and allows for timely
updates.’’
We propose in new § 488.1135(f) to
publicly report, at least on an annual
basis, the hospice programs selected for
the SFP under proposed § 488.1135(b).
Initially, this information would be
posted on a CMS public-facing website
at https://www.cms.gov/medicare/
quality-safety-oversight-certificationcompliance/hospice-special-focusprogram, or a successor website.
Specifically, we propose the website
will include, at a minimum, general
information, program guidance, a subset
consisting of 10 percent of hospice
programs based on the highest aggregate
scores determined by the algorithm, and
SFP selections from the 10 percent
subset as determined by CMS, and SFP
status as proposed in the definitions at
§ 488.1105.
VII. Proposed Changes Regarding
Durable Medical Equipment,
Prosthetics, Orthotics, and Supplies
(DMEPOS)
A. Medicare Durable Medical
Equipment, Prosthetics, Orthotics, and
Supplies (DMEPOS) Competitive
Bidding Program (CBP)
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1. Background
a. Durable Medical Equipment,
Prosthetics, Orthotics, and Supplies
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, December 8,
2003), mandates the Medicare Durable
Medical Equipment, Prosthetics,
Orthotics, and Supplies (DMEPOS)
Competitive Bidding Program (CBP) for
contract award purposes to furnish
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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.
For a list of product categories
included in the DMEPOS CBP, please
refer to https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/
Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/
DMEPOSCompetitiveBid/Round-2021/
PCs. Areas in which the CBP are not
implemented are known as noncompetitive 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).
b. 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
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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 single
payment amounts for such items and
services in the CBAs.
The methodologies set forth in
§ 414.210(g) account for regional
variations in prices, including for rural
and non-contiguous areas of the United
States. In accordance with
§ 414.210(g)(1), regional adjustments to
fee schedule amounts for each state in
the contiguous United States and the
District of Columbia, are determined
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 United States 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 noncontiguous areas are adjusted based on
the higher of the average of the single
payment amounts for CBAs in noncontiguous areas in the United States, or
the national ceiling amount.
Under existing rules, ZIP codes for
rural, non-rural, and non-contiguous
areas are used to establish geographic
areas that are then used to define nonCBAs for the purposes of the DMEPOS
fee schedule adjustments. A rural area is
defined in § 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 Metropolitan Statistical Area (79 FR
66228). 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 United States—that is,
areas such as Alaska, Guam, and Hawaii
(81 FR 77936).
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Section 3712 of the of the CARES Act
(Pub. L. 116–136, as enacted on March
27, 2020) revised the fee schedule
amounts 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. Specifically, this emergency period
is the Public Health Emergency (PHE)
for COVID–19, including renewals of
the PHE.
Section 3712(a) of the CARES Act
directed the Secretary to implement
§ 414.210(g)(9)(iii) (or any successor
regulation), to apply the transition rule
described in such section to all
applicable items and services as
planned through December 31, 2020,
and through the duration of the
emergency period described in section
1135(g)(1)(B) of the Act, if longer.
Therefore, section 3712(a) of the CARES
Act continued our policy at
§ 414.210(g)(9)(iii) of paying for
DMEPOS items and services furnished
in rural and non-contiguous non-CBAs
based on a 50/50 blend of adjusted and
unadjusted fee schedule amounts
through December 31, 2020, or through
the duration of the emergency period,
whichever is longer. This fee schedule
adjustment in rural and non-contiguous
areas results in fee schedule amounts
that are approximately 66 percent
higher than the fully adjusted fee
schedule amounts previously paid for
DMEPOS items and services furnished
in non-rural areas in the contiguous
United States.
Section 3712(b) of the CARES Act
directed the Secretary to increase the fee
schedule amounts for DMEPOS items
and services furnished in non-CBAs
other than rural and non-contiguous
non-CBAs through the duration of the
COVID–19 PHE (the emergency period
described in section 1135(g)(1)(B) of the
Act). Beginning March 6, 2020, the
payment rates for DME and enteral
nutrients, supplies, and equipment
furnished in these areas was based on
75 percent of the adjusted fee schedule
amount and 25 percent of the historic,
unadjusted fee schedule amount until
the end of the emergency period, which
results in higher payment rates as
compared to the fully adjusted fee
schedule amounts under
§ 414.210(g)(9)(iv). This increased
payments so that they are approximately
33 percent higher than the payments at
the fully adjusted fee schedule amounts.
In the May 8, 2020, interim final rule
with comment period (IFC) (85 FR
27550) titled ‘‘Medicare and Medicaid
Programs, Basic Health Program, and
Exchanges; Additional Policy and
Regulatory Revisions in Response to the
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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’’), conforming changes
were made to § 414.210(g)(9), consistent
with section 3712(a) and (b) of the
CARES Act.
The final rule entitled, ‘‘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’’ published in the
December 28, 2021 Federal Register (86
FR 73860) (hereinafter CY 2022
DMEPOS final rule), established fee
schedule adjustment methodologies for
items and services furnished in nonCBAs 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.
The CY 2022 DMEPOS final rule
explained that the 50/50 blended rates
in non-contiguous non-CBAs will
continue to be paid, but the 50/50 blend
would no longer be a transition rule
under § 414.210(g)(9) and would 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 non-contiguous non-CBAs,
the fee schedule amounts for such items
and services furnished on or after the
effective date of the CY 2022 DMEPOS
final rule (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, would 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
§ 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
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orthotics, and enteral nutrients,
supplies, and equipment (86 FR 73873).
As explained in the CY 2022
DMEPOS final rule, the 50/50 blended
rates in rural contiguous areas will
continue to be paid, but the 50/50 blend
would no longer be a transition rule
under § 414.210(g)(9) and would 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 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, the fee schedule
amounts would 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 DME and medical
supplies, off-the-shelf orthotics, and
enteral nutrients, supplies, and
equipment (86 FR 73873).
Finally, for items and services
furnished on or after February 28, 2022,
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 would be equal to
100 percent of the adjusted payment
amount established under
§ 414.210(g)(1)(iv).
2. Current Issues
Section 4139 of Division FF, Title IV,
Subtitle D of the CAA, 2023 sets the fee
schedule adjustment methodologies for
non-competitive bidding areas through
the remainder of the duration of the
emergency period described in section
1135(g)(1)(B) of the Act or December 31,
2023, whichever is later. The federal
PHE for COVID–19, declared by the
Secretary under Section 319 of the
Public Health Service Act, expired at
the end of the day on May 11, 2023. We
are proposing to make conforming
changes to the regulation at 42 CFR
414.210(g)(9) to account for these
changes.
Specifically, section 4139(a) of the
CAA, 2023 directs the Secretary to
implement 42 CFR 414.210(g)(9)(v) (or
any successor regulation), to apply the
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transition rule described in the first
sentence of such section to all
applicable items and services furnished
in areas other than rural or
noncontiguous areas 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)) or December 31, 2023,
whichever is later. This continues the
policy set forth by section 3712(b) of the
CARES Act, which requires CMS to pay
for these DMEPOS items and services
furnished in areas other than rural or
noncontiguous areas based on 75
percent of the adjusted fee schedule
amount and 25 percent of the historic,
unadjusted fee schedule amount until
the end of the emergency period. This
increases payments so that they are
approximately 33 percent higher than
the payments at the fully adjusted fee
schedule amounts.
Section 4139(b) of the CAA, 2023
directs the Secretary to not implement
42 CFR 414.210(g)(9)(vi) of title 42,
Code of Federal Regulations (or any
successor regulation) until the date
immediately following the last day of
the emergency period described in
section 1135(g)(1)(B) of the Act (42
U.S.C. 1320b–5(g)(1)(B)), or January 1,
2024, whichever is later. This change
has the effect of continuing the policy
at § 414.210(g)(9)(vi), but changes the
February 28, 2022 date in the regulation
to January 1, 2024. That is, the fee
schedule amount for all non-CBAs is
equal to the adjusted payment amount
established under paragraph (g) of this
section only until the date immediately
following the last day of the emergency
period described in section
1135(g)(1)(B) of the Act (42 U.S.C.
1320b–5(g)(1)(B)), or January 1, 2024,
whichever is later.
Additionally, section 4139 of the
CAA, 2023 does not affect the current
adjusted fee schedule amounts in former
CBAs. In accordance with
§ 414.210(g)(10), the fee schedule
amounts in the former CBAs will
continue to be based on the single
payment amounts from 2018 increased
by update factors for subsequent
calendar years until new competitive
bidding contracts are in place.
3. Proposed Changes
We are proposing to make conforming
changes to § 414.210(g)(9), consistent
with requirements in section 4139(a)
and 4139(b) of the CAA, 2023. First,
section 4139 of the CAA, 2023 does not
change the current policy under
§ 414.210(g)(9)(iii) of paying for
DMEPOS items and services furnished
in rural and non-contiguous non-CBAs
based on a 50/50 blend of adjusted and
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unadjusted fee schedule amounts
through the duration of the PHE for
COVID–19. While section 4139 of the
CAA, 2023 does not specifically
mention § 414.210(g)(9)(iii), we believe
that section 4139(b) of the CAA, 2023
prohibits implementation of the
regulation language in § 414.210(g)(vi)
until the date immediately following the
last day of the PHE, or January 1, 2024.
This regulation applies the transition
rules for the adjusted payment amount
in the non-CBAs established under
paragraph (g) of § 414.210 to items and
services furnished in ‘‘all areas,’’ and it
also provides for extension of the
transition 50/50 blended rates in rural,
non-contiguous areas and non-rural
areas through December 31, 2023, if the
PHE ends prior to that date. We are
proposing to revise § 414.210(g)(9)(vi),
as described in this rule. Further, we are
proposing to revise § 414.210(g)(9)(iii),
to state that for items and services
furnished in rural areas and noncontiguous areas (Alaska, Hawaii, and
U.S. territories) with dates of service
from June 1, 2018 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)) or December
31, 2023, whichever is later, based on
the fee schedule amount for the area is
equal to 50 percent of the adjusted
payment amount established under this
section and 50 percent of the unadjusted
fee schedule amount. We are proposing
to make conforming changes to
§ 414.210(g)(2) for the rural and noncontiguous areas in order to reference
the December 31, 2023 date specified in
section 4139 of the CAA, 2023.
We are proposing to revise
§ 414.210(g)(9)(v) to state 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)) or December
31, 2023, whichever is later, the fee
schedule amount for the area is equal to
75 percent of the adjusted payment
amount established under this section
and 25 percent of the unadjusted fee
schedule amount. We are proposing to
remove outdated text from
§ 414.210(g)(9)(v) that states ‘‘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, the fee schedule
amount for the area is equal to 100
percent of the adjusted payment amount
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established under this section.’’ This is
text was added in the May 2020 COVID–
19 IFC (85 FR 27571), as section 3712(b)
of the CARES Act required CMS to pay
the higher fee schedule amounts for 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)), but it
did not specify the fee schedule
amounts that should be in effect if the
emergency period ends before December
31, 2020. If not for section 3712(b) of the
CARES Act, CMS would have paid the
fully adjusted fee schedule amounts for
DME items and services furnished in
non-rural and contiguous non-CBAs
until December 31, 2020. As such,
§ 414.210(g)(9)(v) specified that the fee
schedule amounts in non-rural and
contiguous non-CBAs would again be
based on 100 percent of the fee schedule
amounts adjusted in accordance with
§ 414.210(g)(1)(iv) if the emergency
period described in section
1135(g)(1)(B) of the Act (42 U.S.C.
1320b–5(g)(1)(B)) ended before
December 31, 2020. As this situation no
longer applies and is in the past, we are
proposing to remove this obsolete text
from § 414.210(g)(9)(v).
We are proposing to revise
§ 414.210(g)(9)(vi) to state that for items
and services furnished in all areas with
dates of service on or after the date
immediately following the duration of
the emergency period described in
section 1135(g)(1)(B) of the Act, or
January 1, 2024, whichever is later, the
fee schedule amount for the area is
equal to the adjusted payment amount
established under paragraph (g) of this
section. Finally, we are proposing to
make conforming changes to
§ 414.210(g)(2) for the rural and noncontiguous areas in order to specify the
December 31, 2023 date specified in
section 4139 of the CAA, 2023.
Finally, section 4139(c) of the CAA,
2023 authorizes the Secretary to
implement the provisions of this section
by program instruction or otherwise.
Given that the PHE for COVID–19 ended
on May 11, 2023, which is prior to when
the proposed changes to the regulations
would be finalized, we intend to issue
program instructions or other
subregulatory guidance to effectuate the
changes, as previously described. We
believe this approach will serve to
ensure a smooth transition after the end
of the PHE for COVID–19.
B. Scope of the Benefit and Payment for
Lymphedema Compression Treatment
Items
1. Statutory Authority
Effective for items furnished on or
after January 1, 2024, section 4133(a)(1)
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of Division FF, Title V, Subtitle D of the
CAA, 2023 amends section 1861 of the
Act, adding subparagraph (JJ) to
subsection (s)(2) and coverage under a
new benefit category under Medicare
Part B for lymphedema compression
treatment items as defined in new
subsection (mmm) of section 1861 of the
Act. Section 4133(a)(2) of the CAA, 2023
amends section 1833(a)(1) of the Act,
adding subparagraph (GG) to indicate
that the amount paid for lymphedema
compression treatment items defined in
section 1861(mmm) of the Act shall be
equal to 80 percent of the lesser of the
actual charge or the amount determined
using the payment basis established by
the Secretary under paragraph (1) of
new subsection (z) of section 1834 of the
Act. Paragraph (2) of new subsection (z)
of section 1834 of the Act prohibits
payments under Part B for lymphedema
compression treatment items furnished
other than at such frequency as the
Secretary may establish. Paragraph (3) of
new subsection (z) of section 1834 of the
Act specifies that in the case of
lymphedema compression treatment
items that are included in a competitive
bidding program under section 1847(a)
of the Act, the payment basis under
section 1847(a) of the Act shall be the
payment basis determined under the
competitive bidding program, and the
Secretary may use information on the
payment determined under the
competitive bidding program to adjust
the payment amount otherwise
determined under section 1834(z) of the
Act for an area that is not a competitive
bidding area under section 1847 of the
Act. Section 4133(a)(3) of the CAA, 2023
amends section 1847(a)(2) of the Act,
adding lymphedema compression
treatment items to the competitive
bidding program under subparagraph
(D) of section 1847(a)(2) of the Act.
Finally, section 4133(b)(3) of the CAA,
2023 amends section 1834 of the Act
under subsections (a)(20)(D) and (j)(5) to
mandate application of the DMEPOS
quality standards and accreditation and
DMEPOS supplier enrollment and
supplier standards requirements,
respectively, to suppliers of
lymphedema compression treatment
items.
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2. Background
Currently, Medicare Part B does not
include coverage for lymphedema
compression treatment items other than
compression pumps and accessories
that meet the definition of DME covered
under the DME benefit category under
section 1861(n) of the Act. Section 4133
of the CAA, 2023 amends the Act to
establish a new Part B benefit category
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for lymphedema compression treatment
items.
The lymphatic system is an integral
component of the human circulatory
system and consists of lymphatic
vessels, lymph nodes and associated
lymphoid organs.146 147 The
International Society of Lymphology
defines lymphedema as ‘‘an external
(and/or internal) manifestation of
lymphatic system insufficiency and
deranged lymph transport’’ and is ‘‘a
symptom or sign resulting from
underlying lymphatic disease.148 ’’ The
Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention (CDC) defines lymphedema
as swelling due to a buildup of lymph
fluid in the body.149 According to the
National Institutes of Health (NIH)
National Library of Medicine,
lymphedema is a chronic disorder
characterized by swelling under the skin
caused by the inability of protein rich
lymph fluid to drain, usually due to a
blockage or damage to the lymph
system.150 Additionally, according to
the National Lymphedema Network,
this swelling commonly occurs in the
arm or leg, but it may also occur in other
body areas including the breast, chest,
head and neck, and genitals.151
Lymphedema develops when a body
region, where lymphatic vessels and
lymph nodes are missing or impaired,
becomes overloaded with lymphatic
fluid. Lymphedema is a chronic
condition with no definitive curative
treatment that can become progressive,
so early detection and institution of
decompressive measures are essential in
avoiding its potentially disabling
sequela.152 153 154 155 The gradual
146 Aspelund A, Robciuc MR, Karaman S,
Makinen T, Alitalo K. Lymphatic System in
Cardiovascular Medicine. Circulation Research.
2016. Volume 118(3). 515–530.
147 Suamia H, Scaglioni MF. Anatomy of the
Lymphatic System and the Lymphosome Concept
with Reference to Lymphedema. Seminars in Plastic
Surgery. 2018 Feb; 32(1): 5–11.
148 International Society of Lymphology
Executive Committee. The Diagnosis and Treatment
of Peripheral Lymphedema. Lymphology 28 (1995).
149 Lymphedema CDC.gov. https://www.cdc.gov/
cancer/survivors/patients/lymphedema.htm.
150 Lymphedema. Bryan C. Sleigh; Biagio Manna,
September 2018. Found at https://www.ncbi.nlm.
nih.gov/books/NBK537239/.
151 https://lymphnet.org/what-is-lymphedema.
152 Korpan MI, Crevenna R, Fialka-Moser V.
Lymphedema a Therapeutic Approach in the
Treatment and Rehabilitation of Cancer Patients.
American Journal of Physical Medicine and
Rehabilitation. 2011. May. 90(suppl). S69–S75.
153 Preston NJ, Seers K, Mortimer PS. Physical
therapies for reducing and controlling
lymphoedema of the limbs. Cochrane Database of
Systematic Reviews 2004, Issue 4. Art. No.:
CD003141.
154 The International Society of Lymphology. The
Diagnosis and Treatment of Peripheral
Lymphedema: 2020 Consensus Document of the
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accumulation of plasma and cellular
components into the interstitial tissue
space leads to a chronic inflammatory
process that can result in long-term
tissue changes and permanent structural
damage to the affected anatomical site
and its overlying skin layer.156 157 158
These changes also make the patient
more susceptible to skin and potentially
disabling or life-threatening soft tissue
infections.159 160 The physical
manifestations of lymphedema are
tissue swelling, pain, heaviness and
difficulty using the affected body
part.161
Lymphedema occurs in four stages.
Stage one may have no outward signs or
symptoms but is evidenced by abnormal
flow through the lymphatic system.
When stage two is reached, there is
some swelling that may be alleviated by
elevation or compression. Stage three is
diagnosed by swelling of an area that
does not resolve with elevation and
there may be skin thickening and
scarring. The fourth stage is
characterized by severe swelling and
skin abnormalities.162 Infections such as
cellulitis and sepsis may result from
lymphedema due to the dense protein
rich nature of the lymphatic fluid and
requires treatment with antibiotics.163
Studies have shown that gradient
compression garments are effective in
reducing and/or preventing progression
International Society of Lymphology. Lymphology.
2020. 53: 3–19.
155 King M, Deveaux A, White H, Rayson.
Compression garments versus compression
bandaging in decongestive lymphatic therapy for
breast cancer-related lymphedema: a randomized
controlled trial. Support Care Cancer. 2012; 20:
1031–1036.
156 Korpan MI, Crevenna R, Fialka-Moser V.
Lymphedema a Therapeutic Approach in the
Treatment and Rehabilitation of Cancer Patients.
American Journal of Physical Medicine and
Rehabilitation. 2011. May. 90(suppl). S69–S75.
157 Warren AG, Brorson H, Borud LJ, Slavin SA.
Lymphedema A Comprehensive Review. Annals of
Plastic Surgery. 2007. Vol 59, No. 4. 464–472.
158 Ly CL, Kataru RO, Mehrara B. Inflammatory
Manifestations of Lymphedema. Int J Mol Scie.
2017. Jan; 18(1): 171.
159 Grada AA, Phillips TJ. Lymphedema,
Pathophysiology and clinical manifestations. J Am
Academ Dermatol. 2017;77: 1009–20.
160 Bakar Y, Tugral A. Lower Extremity
Lymphedema Management after Gynecologic
Cancer Surgery: A Review of Current Management
Strategies. Ann of Vasc Surg. 2017. Vol. 44; 442–
450.
161 Warren AG, Brorson H, Borud LJ, Slavin SA.
Lymphedema A Comprehensive Review. Annals of
Plastic Surgery. 2007. Vol 59, No. 4. 464–472.
162 The Johns Hopkins Hospital https://
www.hopkinsmedicine.org/health/treatment-testsand-therapies/treating-lymphedema.
163 https://www.cancerresearchuk.org/aboutcancer/coping/physically/lymphoedema-andcancer/infection-lymphoedema#:∼:text=
Infection%20in%20people%20with
%20lymphoedema,and%20will%20need
%20antibiotic%20treatment.
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of lymphedema in the arm and leg.164
They have also shown to be effective in
maintaining limb circumference.
Gradient compression garments
designed for daytime use, while an
individual is awake, are different than
those for nighttime use, when an
individual is asleep. Gradient
compression garments meant for
daytime (waking) provide a higher level
of compression, and use of them while
sleeping could cause new or additional
damage to the affected tissue.165
Additionally, gradient compression
garments appropriate for daytime use
can inadvertently become repositioned
at night while the individual is sleeping
and cause a tourniquet effect, essentially
cutting off circulation to the limb and
resulting in further swelling.165 In
contrast, gradient compression garments
made for nighttime use or times of low
activity offer milder compression and
are less snug against the skin.166
Wearing gradient compression garments
designed for nighttime use may also
help with skin abnormalities resulting
from lymphedema and can help prevent
a phenomenon called ‘‘creeping refill,’’
where swelling reoccurs during
sleep.167 Generally, more serious cases
require gradient compression garments
for both daytime and nighttime use.
Various types of nighttime garments
have been designed as alternatives to
the day time compression system
garments. Nighttime garments apply
gentle gradient pressure to the limb
through a garment with a foam liner and
a series of adjustable straps. The
garments are non-elastic and provide
low resting pressure on the limb,
making them safe to wear while
sleeping at night.168 Many of these
garments are custom-made, but there are
ready-to-wear options available as well.
The elastic fibers of daytime
compression garments will break down
with wear. Because nighttime garments
164 Yasuhara H, Shigematsu H, Muto T. A study
of the advantages of elastic stockings for leg
lymphedema. Int Angiol. 1996 Sep;15(3):272–7.
PMID: 8971591. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/
8971591/.
165 Lymphedema Products, LLC. (2019,
September 11). Day Compression vs Night
Compression. Lymphedemaproducts.com. https://
www.lymphedemaproducts.com/blog/day-vs-nightcompression-wear/.
166 Caring Touch Medical, Inc. Can You Sleep in
a Lymphedema Sleeve? Caringtouchmed.com.
https://www.caringtouchmed.com/can-you-sleepin-a-lymphedema-sleeve/.
167 Mastectomy Shop. Can You Sleep in a
Lymphedema Sleeve? Mastectomyshop.com.
https://www.mastectomyshop.com/blogs/can-yousleep-in-a-lymphedema-sleeve/.
168 McNeely, M. L. et al. Nighttime compression
supports improved self-management of breast
cancer related lymphedema: A multicenter
randomized controlled trial. Cancer 128, 587–596
(2021).
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are made of inelastic components,
compared to the day-time garments,
they do not commonly break down with
wear and last longer. While proper care
will increase the lifespan of garments,
they will need to be replaced sometime
within 1 to 3 years if used daily. Studies
showed if the garments are used with
aftercare regimen, that is, they are in
minimum contact with moisturizer
during use, they could last longer.169 In
meetings with CMS, some clinicians
and lymphologists indicated that they
believe that the nighttime garments are
quite durable and can last for 2 to 3
years because the materials are more
durable than the materials used with the
daytime garments. They also indicated
that previous versions used strapping in
addition to more durable foam materials
and could last for up to 5 years. In
comparison, daytime garments are
elastic garments that are typically made
of breathable elastic fabrics such as
nylon, cotton, spandex or natural rubber
to provide compression and therefore
have a much shorter lifespan of
approximately 6 months.170
Gradient compression garments are
either standard fit or custom-fit.
Standard compression garments are also
referred to as ready-made or ready-towear and are widely available pre-made,
off-the-shelf and in a range of standard
sizes. Individuals with mild or moderate
lymphedema can often use standard fit
garments. Standard gradient
compression garments are easier to
measure and are readily available at
retailers without requiring a
prescription, but they do not conform as
well to limbs or provide homogenous
compression. Standard fit compression
wear for all gradient compression
garments come in different compression
classification ranges specified in mmHg.
While there are no national standards
for gradient compression hosiery,171 the
most common compression
classification ranges for hosiery in the
U.S. include: 8–15 mmHg (mild), 15–20
mmHg (medium or over the counter),
20–30 mmHg (firm or medical class 1),
30–40 mmHg (extra firm or medical
class 2), and 40–50 mmHg (medical
169 Macintyre, Lisa Ph.D.; Gilmartin, Sian BSc;
Rae, Michelle BSc; Journal of Burn Care & Research:
September/October 2007—Volume 28—Issue 5—pp
725–733.
170 Mukhopadhyay, A., & Shaw, V. P. (2022).
Reliability analysis of stretchable workwear fabric
under abrasive damage: Influence of stretch yarn
composition. Journal of Natural Fibers, 20(1).
171 Lymphedema Framework. Best Practice for the
Management of Lymphoedema. International
Consensus. London. MEP Ltd, 2006. https://
www.woundsme.com/uploads/resources/content_
11160.pdf.
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class 3).172 For all compression ranges,
the highest compression is at the ankle
or wrist, and compression slowly
decreases as it moves up the extremity.
Some manufacturers’ compression class
pressure ranges for hosiery may be
different from the compression class
ranges used for upper limb gradient
compression garment.173
Alternatively, custom-fit gradient
compression garments are garments that
are uniquely sized, shaped, and custommade to fit the exact dimensions of the
affected extremity (circumferential
measurements are every one and a half
to two inches) and provide more
accurate and consistent gradient
compression to manage the individual’s
symptoms.174 The type of gradient
compression garment prescribed is
influenced by the site and extent of the
swelling, together with the individual’s
comfort, lifestyle, preferences, and
ability to apply and remove garments.
Poorly fitting gradient compression
garments may not contain or resolve the
lymphedema, can cause tissue damage,
may be uncomfortable, and can
dissuade a patient from long-term
usage.175
Custom-fit gradient compression
garments are typically required when an
individual has severe shape distortion
and/or short, long, or bulky limbs.176 In
addition, individuals with complex
lower limb and torso lymphedema often
require custom-fit gradient compression
garments, as do those who need special
adaptations or when there is need for
varying levels of pressure within the
same garment.177 Some studies indicate
that approximately 50 percent of
lymphedema patients require custom-fit
gradient compression garments versus
standard fit gradient compression
172 Lymphedema Products, LLC. Determining
Compression Levels. Lymphedemaproducts.com.
https://www.lymphedemaproducts.com/blog/howto-determine-compression-levels-foryour-garments/.
173 Lympoedema Framework. Best Practice for the
Management of Lymphoedema. International
Consensus. London. MEP Ltd, 2006. https://
www.woundsme.com/uploads/resources/content_
11160.pdf.
174 https://www.forwardhealth.wi.gov/kw/html/
3485_Compression_Garments.html.
175 Doherty DC, Morgan PA, & Moffatt CJ (2009).
Hosiery in Lower Limb Lymphedema. J
Lymphoedema, 4(1), 30–37. https://
www.woundsme.com/uploads/resources/content_
11160.pdf.
176 Chang M–H, Chang DW, & Patel KM (2022).
‘‘Lymphedema Risk Reduction and Management’’
in Principles and Practice of Lymphedema Surgery,
2nd Ed., 78–90. https://www.sciencedirect.com/
topics/medicine-and-dentistry/compressiongarment.
177 Doherty DC, Morgan PA, & Moffatt CJ (2009).
Hosiery in Lower Limb Lymphedema. J
Lymphoedema, 4(1), 30–37. https://
www.woundsme.com/uploads/resources/content_
11160.pdf.
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garments for effective treatment,
although estimates vary.178 179 Patients
requiring custom-fit gradient
compression garments must be properly
evaluated and fitted by a qualified
practitioner with appropriate training
and specialized skills in the evaluation
of gradient compression, such as a
physical or occupational therapist, or a
physician.
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3. Current Issues: Scope of the Benefit
for Lymphedema Compression
Treatment Items
This proposed rule would implement
a new benefit category established at
section 1861(s)(2)(JJ) of the Act for
‘‘lymphedema compression treatment
items’’ defined at section 1861(mmm) of
the Act as standard and custom fitted
gradient compression garments and
other items determined by the Secretary
that are—
• Furnished on or after January 1,
2024, to an individual with a diagnosis
of lymphedema for the treatment of
such condition;
• Primarily and customarily used to
serve a medical purpose and for the
treatment of lymphedema, as
determined by the Secretary; and
• Prescribed by a physician (or a
physician assistant, nurse practitioner,
or a clinical nurse specialist (as these
terms are defined in section 1861(aa)(5))
to the extent authorized under State
law).
We are proposing that any other items
covered under this new benefit category
in addition to gradient compression
garments must also use compression in
treating lymphedema since the specific
category of medical items to be covered
under section 1861(s)(2) of the Act are
‘‘lymphedema compression treatment
items.’’ Similarly, we are proposing that
this benefit category is limited to
compression treatment items and does
not include professional lymphedema
treatment services or other services not
directly related to the furnishing of the
lymphedema compression treatment
items. Payment for any covered
professional service related to these
items would be made under the
Medicare Physician Fee Schedule. The
statute limits the benefit to items used
for the treatment of lymphedema as
178 Lymphedema Advocacy Group (2021 Apr).
‘‘Cost and Utilization of Lymphedema Compression
Garments.’’ https://lymphedematreatmentact.org/
wp-content/uploads/2021/04/Cost-and-Utilizationof-Lymphedema-Compression-Garments.pdf.
179 Boyages J, Xu Y, Kalfa S, Koelmeyer L,
Parkinson B, Mackie H, Viveros H, Gollan P, &
Taksa L (2017). Financial cost of lymphedema
borne by women with breast cancer.
Psychooncology, 26(6), 849–855. doi: 10.1002/
pon.4239. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/
articles/PMC5484300/.
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determined by the Secretary, and we are
proposing that this includes items used
to treat all types or diagnoses of
lymphedema, but does not include the
same items when used to treat injuries
or illnesses other than lymphedema. In
other words, if a gradient compression
garment or other lymphedema
compression treatment item is furnished
to treat an injury or illness other than
lymphedema, those items would not be
classified under the Medicare benefit
category for lymphedema compression
treatment items.
We are proposing that other
compression items used to treat
lymphedema that would be covered
under this benefit category in addition
to gradient compression garments
would include ready-to-wear, nonelastic, gradient compression wraps
with adjustable straps such as the items
described by HCPCS code A6545. In
addition, we are proposing that
compression bandaging systems applied
in a clinical setting as part of phase one
decongestive therapy would also be
items covered under the new benefit
category for lymphedema compression
treatment items if this rule is finalized.
However, as discussed in section
VII.B.6. of this rule, section 1834(j) of
the Act, as amended by section
4133(b)(2) of the CAA, 2023, requires
the therapists that furnish these items to
become enrolled and accredited
DMEPOS suppliers in order to bill for
these items as lymphedema
compression treatment items per section
1834(j)(5) of the Act or payment for the
items applied during phase one of
decongestive therapy would not be
allowed. We also note that while these
items may be covered under the new
Part B benefit for lymphedema
compression treatment items, the
professional services of applying these
items would not and would need to be
covered under a different Medicare
benefit category in order for Medicare
payments to be made for these services.
We are specifically soliciting comments
on the topic of coverage of compression
bandaging items under the new benefit
for lymphedema compression treatment
items. We are also soliciting comments
on whether the professional services of
applying these bandages could be
covered under another Medicare benefit
category, such as outpatient physical
therapy services under section 1861(p)
of the Act or physician services under
section 1861(s) of the Act.
With regard to custom garments, we
understand that therapists often take
measurements of affected body areas
and perform other fitting services
related to the furnishing of these items.
Since these measurements are necessary
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for the furnishing of the custom
garments and are part of what makes the
garments custom garments rather than
standard garments, these measurements
are an integral part of furnishing the
custom garments and the suppliers of
the garments are responsible for fitting
the garments they furnish. Typically,
DMEPOS suppliers are responsible for
all aspects of furnishing the item.
Following that approach, a supplier
receiving payment for furnishing a
lymphedema compression treatment
item to a beneficiary has responsibility
for ensuring that any necessary fitting,
training (how to appropriately don/doff
and maintain), and adjustment services
are provided as part of furnishing the
item. Payment for all services necessary
for furnishing a gradient compression
garment are included in the rates paid
by the Medicaid State agencies and we
are proposing to use the average
Medicaid payment rate plus twenty
percent as the payment basis for
Medicare (when such Medicaid rates are
available). Therefore, the Medicare
payments would likewise include
payment for all services necessary for
furnishing the gradient compression
garment; this is consistent with how
Medicare payment is made for
DMEPOS. We understand that in many
cases a therapist may take
measurements and provide other fitting
services necessary for furnishing a
gradient compression garment that is
then furnished by a separate supplier.
Under this scenario, the supplier
receiving payment for the garment
would be responsible for paying the
therapist for the fitting component that
is an integral part of furnishing the item.
An alternative option, which we are not
proposing but are seeking comment on,
would be to pay separately for the fitting
component furnished by the therapist
and then back this payment out of the
payment for the garment. If a separate
Medicare payment amount was made to
an entity other than the supplier of the
garment for fitting services necessary for
furnishing the garment, this amount
would have to be subtracted from the
payment to the supplier of the garment
in order to avoid paying twice for these
services. For example, if code Axxx1
describes a ‘‘Gradient compression arm
sleeve and glove combination, custom,
each,’’ with a payment amount of $350
established for each garment, a supplier
furnishing two of these garments to a
beneficiary for daytime use would
receive $700 if the garments are
furnished on an assignment basis, and
part of this payment would cover the
cost of the fitting of the garment that is
furnished by the supplier or a separate
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therapist that is then paid by the
supplier for the cost of taking the fitting
measurements. Alternatively, a separate
allowance and code could be
established for the fitting component,
such as $80 for Axxx2 for ‘‘Fitting of
gradient compression arm sleeve and
glove combination, custom, per two
garments.’’ Under this scenario, it
would be necessary to back out the
payment for the cost of the separate
fitting component from the payment for
the two garments ($700¥$80 = $620),
since the payment for the garments
already includes payment for all
services necessary for furnishing the
garment. As a result, the supplier
furnishing the garments would be paid
$310 for each garment rather than $350
since they did not conduct the fitting
component that is paid for separately.
We are not proposing this alternative
because of many complexities. For
example, the therapist providing the
fitting component would be required to
become an enrolled DMEPOS supplier,
accredited for furnishing the garment
fitting component, and responsible for
meeting all of the requirements for being
a DMEPOS supplier, such as meeting
the DMEPOS supplier standards and
quality standards, obtaining a surety
bond, and submitting claims to the
appropriate DME MAC. As part of the
DMEPOS supplier standards, a supplier
must accept return of substandard
items. In cases where a mistake is made
in measuring and fitting the beneficiary
for two custom gradient compression
garments, resulting in the furnishing
and payment for custom gradient
compression garments that do not
properly fit the patient, the risk would
be assumed by the fitter and not the
supplier to accept return of the garments
and cover the cost of two replacement
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garments. Again, we are not proposing
to make separate payment for the fitting
services under this benefit when
furnished by a supplier other than the
supplier of the garments; however, we
are specifically soliciting comments on
the topic and comments on options to
resolve the issues we outlined
previously. We recognize that there is
not necessarily a standard industry
practice for the fitting and training
components for furnishing lymphedema
compression garments and seek
comment on whether there are best
practices in this space that CMS should
consider further in the future. We also
welcome comment on whether any
HCPCS level I (Current Procedural
Terminology or CPT®) codes may
describe the services of the therapist in
these scenarios.
Finally, there are accessories such as
zippers in garments, liners worn under
garments or wraps with adjustable
straps, and padding or fillers that are
not compression garments but may be
necessary for the effective use of a
gradient compression garment or wraps
with adjustable straps. There are also
accessories like donning and doffing
aids for different body parts such as
lower limb butlers or foot slippers that
allow the patients to put on the
compression stockings with minimum
effort and are not used with
compression bandaging systems or
supplies. We are proposing that
accessories necessary for the effective
use of gradient compression garments
and gradient compression wraps with
adjustable straps would also fall under
this new benefit for lymphedema
compression treatment items. For
example, a liner that is used with a
garment because it is needed to prevent
skin breakdown could be covered under
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the new benefit because it is necessary
for the effective use of the garment. We
are specifically soliciting comments on
the topic of coverage of accessories
necessary for the effective use of
gradient compression garment or wraps
with adjustable straps, including what
HCPCS codes should be established to
describe these items, as well as
comments on whether there are
additional items other than the gradient
compression garments, gradient
compression wraps with adjustable
straps, and compression bandaging
supplies that could potentially fall
under the new benefit category for
lymphedema compression treatment
items.
4. Healthcare Common Procedure
Coding System (HCPCS) Codes for
Lymphedema Compression Treatment
Items
HCPCS codes are divided into two
principal subsystems, referred to as
Level I and Level II of the HCPCS. Level
I of the HCPCS is comprised of Current
Procedural Terminology (CPT), a
numeric coding system maintained by
the American Medical Association
(AMA). HCPCS Level II is a
standardized coding system that is used
primarily to identify drugs, biologicals
and non-drug and non-biological items,
supplies, and services not included in
the CPT codes, such as ambulance
services and DMEPOS when used
outside a physician’s office. As shown
in Table FF–A 1, there are currently
Level II HCPCS codes for compression
garments (stockings, sleeves, gloves, and
gauntlets) and compression wraps with
adjustable straps that may be used in the
treatment of lymphedema and other
conditions.
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codes for items when they are covered
under Medicare Part B as surgical
dressing versus when they are covered
under Medicare Part B as lymphedema
compression treatment for billing and
claims processing purposes. We are
therefore proposing to add three new
HCPCS codes for use when billing for
A6531, A6532, and A6545 items used as
surgical dressings. The proposed codes
are as follows:
• A—Gradient compression stocking,
below knee, 30–40 mmhg, used as
surgical dressing in treatment of open
venous stasis ulcer, each
• A—Gradient compression stocking,
below knee, 40–50 mmhg, used as
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surgical dressing in treatment of open
venous stasis ulcer, each
• A—Gradient compression wrap with
adjustable straps, non-elastic, below
knee, 30–50 mmhg, used as surgical
dressing in treatment of open venous
stasis ulcer, each
The surgical dressing fee schedule
amounts for codes A6531, A6532, and
A6545 would be applied to the three
new codes. The remaining discussion in
this section addresses the coding for the
lymphedema compression treatment
items.
For gradient compression stockings,
we are proposing to use existing codes
A6530 through A6541, and code A6549
from Table FFA–1. For codes A6530
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The items described by HCPCS codes
A6531, A6532, and A6545 are covered
by Medicare under the Part B benefit for
surgical dressings at section 1861(s)(5)
of the Act, when used in the treatment
of an open venous stasis ulcer. Total
allowed charges for these three codes in
2022 was approximately $2.5 million,
with around $1.9 million for the nonelastic, below knee, gradient
compression wrap with adjustable
straps described by code A6545,
$500,000 for the below knee, gradient
compression stocking code A6531, and
$100,000 for the below knee, gradient
compression stocking code A6532. We
are not proposing to change this policy
with this rule, but we must address the
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through A6541, we are soliciting
comments on whether we should
maintain the three pressure level
differentiations in the codes and
whether these differentiations should be
something other than 18–30, 30–40, and
40–50 mmHg. We are also soliciting
comments on whether there is a better
way to describe the body areas these
garments cover rather than ‘‘below
knee,’’ ‘‘thigh-length,’’ ‘‘full-length/chap
style,’’ and ‘‘waist-length.’’ For each
code, we propose to add a matching
code for the custom version of the
garment. For example, if we continue to
use codes A6530 through A6532 for
below knee stockings with the current
descriptions, we would add
corresponding codes for the custom
versions of these garments, such as the
following:
• A—Gradient compression stocking,
below knee, 18–30 mmhg, custom,
each
• A—Gradient compression stocking,
below knee, 30–40 mmhg, custom,
each
• A—Gradient compression stocking,
below knee, 40–50 mmhg, custom,
each
For gradient compression garments
for the upper extremities and areas of
the body, we propose to use existing
codes A6549 and S8420 through S8428.
We propose renumbering codes S8420
through S8428 as ‘‘A’’ codes rather than
S codes. We also propose removing the
words ‘‘ready-made’’ and revising
‘‘custom made’’ to ‘‘custom’’ for the
codes for the upper extremity gradient
compression garments and replacing the
word ‘‘pressure’’ with ‘‘compression,’’
in order to be consistent with the
wording for the codes for the lower
extremity garments. We propose to add
the word ‘‘arm’’ in front of the word
‘‘sleeve’’ for the upper extremity
garments. We also propose to add a code
for a custom gauntlet. Finally, we
propose to add the word ‘‘each’’ to the
description for each code. If no other
changes are made, the new codes would
be as follows:
• —Gradient compression arm sleeve
and glove combination, each
• A—Gradient compression arm sleeve
and glove combination, custom, each
• A—Gradient compression arm sleeve,
each
• A—Gradient compression arm sleeve,
custom, medium weight, each
• A—Gradient compression arm sleeve,
custom, heavy weight, each
• A—Gradient compression glove, each
• A—Gradient compression glove,
custom, medium weight, each
• A—Gradient compression glove,
custom, heavy weight, each
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• A—Gradient compression gauntlet,
each
• A—Gradient compression gauntlet,
custom, each
We are soliciting comment on
whether separate codes are needed for
mastectomy sleeves or whether these
items can be grouped together under the
same codes used for other arm sleeves
(S8422 thru S8424). We are soliciting
comments on whether there is a need to
retain codes S8420 through S8428, in
addition to the renumbered A code
versions, for use by other payers other
than Medicare. If these codes are
retained, they would be invalid for
Medicare use, but could be used by
other payers in lieu of the new A codes.
We are also proposing to add the
following new codes for other upper
body areas:
• A—Gradient compression garment,
neck/head, each
• A—Gradient compression garment,
neck/head, custom, each
• A—Gradient compression garment,
torso and shoulder, each
• A—Gradient compression garment,
torso/shoulder, custom, each
• A—Gradient compression garment,
genital region, each
• A—Gradient compression garment,
genital region, custom, each
For all of the codes for the upper
extremities and upper body areas, we
are soliciting comments on whether we
should establish codes for pressure level
differentiations similar to the pressure
level differentiations in codes A6530
through A6541, possibly replacing the
words medium and heavy weight, as
well as whether codes are needed for
additional upper body areas.
We are proposing the following new
codes for nighttime garments:
• A—Gradient compression garment,
glove, padded, for nighttime use, each
• A—Gradient compression garment,
arm, padded, for nighttime use, each
• A—Gradient compression garment,
lower leg and foot, padded, for
nighttime use, each
• A—Gradient compression garment,
full leg and foot, padded, for
nighttime use, each
For gradient compression wraps with
adjustable straps, we are proposing to
use code A6545 in Table FF–A 1 for
below knee wraps and solicit comments
on whether additional codes or coding
revisions are needed for the purpose of
submitting claims for gradient
compression wraps with adjustable
straps. Regarding HCPCS codes for
compression bandaging systems, we
believe more codes are needed than
existing codes S8430 (Padding for
compression bandage, roll) and S8431
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(Padding for compression bandage, roll),
for example, to describe the supplies
used in a compression bandaging
system consisting of more than two
layers. We also believe that specific base
sizes should be added to the code, for
example ‘‘10cm by 2.9m’’ rather than
the vague unit of ‘‘roll’’ and are
soliciting comments on HCPCS coding
changes needed to adequately describe
the various compression bandaging
systems used for the treatment of
lymphedema. Finally, as noted in
section VII.B.3. of this rule, we are
soliciting comments on HCPCS codes
needed to describe accessories
necessary for the effective use of
gradient compression garments or wraps
with adjustable straps.
5. Procedures for Making Benefit
Category Determinations and Payment
Determinations for New Lymphedema
Compression Treatment Items
We are proposing to implement the
new Part B benefit for lymphedema
compression treatment items and the
initial set of HCPCS codes to identify
these items for claims processing
purposes, effective January 1, 2024. In
the future, as new products come on the
market and refinements are made to
existing technology, there will be a need
to determine whether these newer
technology items are lymphedema
compression treatment items covered
under this new benefit and what
changes to the HCPCS are needed to
identify these items for claims
processing purposes. There will also be
a need to establish payment amounts for
the newer items in accordance with the
payment rules established as part of this
rulemaking.
Currently, CMS uses the procedures at
42 CFR 414.114 to make benefit category
determinations and payment
determinations for new splints and
casts, parenteral and enteral nutrition
(PEN) items and services covered under
the prosthetic device benefit, and
intraocular lenses (IOLs) inserted in a
physician’s office covered under the
prosthetic device benefit. CMS uses the
same procedures at 42 CFR 414.240 to
make benefit category determinations
and payment determinations for new
DME items and services, prosthetics and
orthotics, surgical dressings, therapeutic
shoes and inserts, and other prosthetic
devices other than PEN items and
services and IOLs inserted in a
physician’s office. These procedures
involve the use of the HCPCS public
meetings where consultation from the
public is obtained on preliminary
HCPCS coding determinations for new
items and services. Public consultation
is also obtained at these meetings on
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preliminary benefit category
determinations and preliminary
payment determinations for the new
items and services. To ensure
appropriate and timely consideration of
future items that may qualify as
lymphedema compression treatment
items, we are proposing to use these
same procedures to make benefit
category determinations and payment
determinations for new lymphedema
compression treatment items. Future
changes to the HCPCS codes established
in section 2 of this rule for lymphedema
compression treatment items would also
be made using this public meeting
process.
We are proposing to use the same
process described in § 414.240 to obtain
public consultation on preliminary
coding, benefit category, and payment
determinations for new lymphedema
compression treatment items. That is,
when a request is received for a new
HCPCS code or change to an existing
HCPCS code(s) for a lymphedema
compression treatment item, CMS
would perform an analysis to determine
if a new code or other coding change is
warranted and if the item meets the
definition of lymphedema compression
treatment item at section 1861(mmm) of
the Act. A preliminary payment
determination would also be developed
for items determined to be lymphedema
compression treatment items and are
implemented in April or October of
each year. The preliminary
determinations would be posted on
CMS.gov approximately 2 weeks prior to
a public meeting. As part of this coding
and payment determination process, it
may be necessary to combine or divide
existing codes; in this situation, we are
proposing to follow the same process as
outlined in 42 CFR 414.236. After
consideration of public input on the
preliminary determinations, CMS would
post final HCPCS coding decisions,
benefit category determinations, and
payment determinations on CMS.gov,
and then issue program instructions to
implement the changes.
In addition to these proposals for
initial payment determinations for
lymphedema treatment items and the
proposed process for addressing new
lymphedema treatment items, as
required by the Act, we also propose to
revise the DMEPOS regulations to
include lymphedema treatment items in
the competitive bidding process. We are
proposing changes to 42 CFR 414.402 to
add lymphedema treatment items to the
definition of ‘‘items’’ for competitive
bidding, § 414.408 to include
lymphedema treatment items in the list
of items for which payment would be
made on a lump sum purchase basis
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under the competitive bidding program
in accordance with any frequency
limitations established under proposed
subpart Q in accordance with section
1834(z)(2) of the Act, and § 414.412 to
add reference to the proposed subpart Q
to the bid rules.
6. Enrollment, Quality Standards, and
Accreditation Requirements for
Suppliers of Lymphedema Compression
Treatment Items and Medicare Claims
Processing Contractors for These Items
Section 1834(a)(20) of the Act requires
the establishment of quality standards
for suppliers of DMEPOS that are
applied by independent accreditation
organizations. Section 4133(b)(1) of the
CAA, 2023 amends section
1834(a)(20)(D) of the Act to apply these
requirements to lymphedema
compression treatment items as medical
equipment and supplies.
Section 1834(j) of the Act requires
that suppliers of medical equipment and
supplies obtain and continue to
periodically renew a supplier number in
order to be allowed to submit claims
and receive payment for furnishing
DMEPOS items and services. The
suppliers must meet certain supplier
standards in order to possess a supplier
number and are also subject to other
requirements specified in section
1834(j) of the Act. Section 4133(b)(2) of
the CAA, 2023 amends section
1834(j)(5) of the Act to include
lymphedema compression treatment
items as medical equipment and
supplies subject to the requirements of
section 1834(j) of the Act.
Suppliers of DMEPOS meeting the
requirements of sections 1834(a)(20) and
1834(j) of the Act, and related
implementing regulations at 42 CFR
424.57 must enroll in Medicare or
change their enrollment using the paper
application Medicare Enrollment
Application for DMEPOS Suppliers
(CMS–855S) or through the Medicare
Provider Enrollment, Chain, and
Ownership System (PECOS). For more
information on supplier enrollment, go
to: https://www.cms.gov/medicare/
provider-enrollment-and-certification/
become-a-medicare-provider-orsupplier.
Regulations at 42 CFR 421.210
establish regional contractors to process
Medicare claims for DMEPOS items and
services. These contractors are known as
Durable Medical Equipment Medicare
Administrative Contractors (DME
MACs). We are proposing to include
lymphedema compression treatment
items as DMEPOS items that fall within
the general text of section 421.210(b)(7)
for other items or services which are
designated by CMS. Thus, claims for
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these items would be processed by the
DME MACs.
7. Payment Basis and Frequency
Limitations for Lymphedema
Compression Treatment Items
Section 1834(z)(1) of the Act
mandates an appropriate payment basis
for lymphedema compression treatment
items defined in section 1861(mmm) of
the Act and specifically identifies
payment rates from other government
and private sector payers that may be
taken into account in establishing the
payment basis for these items. These
sources include payment rates used by
Medicaid state plans, the Veterans
Health Administration (VHA), group
health plans, and health insurance
coverage (as defined in section 2791 of
the Public Health Service Act). Section
1834(z)(1) of the Act also indicates that
other information determined to be
appropriate may be taken into account
in establishing the payment basis for
lymphedema compression treatment
items.
Based on our research, Medicaid state
plans generally classify and provide
lymphedema compression treatment
items in the same manner as other
durable medical equipment and
supplies for home health. While State
Medicaid Director Letter #18–001
focuses on how states may demonstrate
compliance with the restriction on
claiming federal financial participation
for ‘‘excess’’ durable medical equipment
spending, it describes how Medicaid
state plan payment for the broader
category of such items (outside of a
managed care contract) is usually made
either through established fee
schedules, a competitive bidding
process of the state’s design, or through
a manual pricing methodology based on
the invoice submitted with each
claim.180 For the purpose of this
proposed rule, we took into account the
average Medicaid fee schedule payment
amounts across all states that have
published fee schedule amounts for
these items in developing, in part, an
appropriate payment basis for
lymphedema compression treatment
items under Medicare.
The VHA does not have established
fee schedules for lymphedema
compression treatment items, but rather
follows a policy of paying for these
items based on the reasonableness of
vendor pricing. Based on our
conversations with the VHA, we
understand that for these items, vendor
prices at or below acquisition cost plus
50 percent is typically considered
180 Available at https://www.medicaid.gov/
federal-policy-guidance/downloads/smd18001.pdf
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average Medicaid fee schedule amounts
plus 20 percent. We believe that
appropriate payment amounts for
Medicare for lymphedema compression
treatment items would be payment
amounts that approximate the payment
rates determined to be reasonable by
other government payers such as
TRICARE, State Medicaid agencies, and,
as previously explained, estimates of the
payment rates determined to be
reasonable by the VHA based on 120
percent of the average Medicaid state
plan rates. Because these rates are in
line with internet retail prices, we have
not closely examined non-government
payers.
Having taken into account the
payment amounts from the various
sources, as previously described, as
required by Act, we propose to set
payment amounts for lymphedema
compression treatment items using the
following methodology. Where
Medicaid state plan payment amounts
are available for a lymphedema
compression treatment item, we propose
to set payment amounts at 120 percent
of the average of the Medicaid payment
amounts for the lymphedema
compression treatment item. Where
Medicaid payment amounts are not
available for an item, we propose to set
payment amounts at 100 percent of the
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average of internet retail prices and
payment amounts for that item from
TRICARE. Where payment amounts are
not available from Medicaid state plans
or TRICARE for a given lymphedema
compression treatment item, we propose
to base payment amounts based on 100
percent of average internet retail prices
for that item. We seek comment on these
payment methodologies and whether
further adjustments are appropriate.
As previously noted, payment rates
for the supply of these items includes
payment for fitting services and any
other services necessary for furnishing
the item. As noted earlier, taking
measurements of affected body areas
and other fitting services necessary for
furnishing lymphedema compression
treatment items are an integral part of
furnishing the items and the suppliers
receiving payment for furnishing
lymphedema compression treatment
items are responsible for ensuring that
any necessary fitting services are
provided as part of furnishing the items.
The following table presents a
preliminary example of what payment
amounts may be, based on the proposed
methodology described, as previously
detailed, and certain HCPCS codes that
we are proposing to be classified under
the Medicare Part B benefit category for
lymphedema treatment items.
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reasonable, while Medicaid state plans
typically pay for DMEPOS items that do
not have fee schedule amounts at
acquisition cost plus 20 to 30 percent.
Given this difference in the allowed
supplier margin, the amounts
determined to be reasonable payment
rates for these items by the VHA may be
approximated by increasing the average
Medicaid payment rate by 20 to 30
percent. While the VHA may not have
fee schedule amounts for these items,
the Department of Defense’s TRICARE
system maintains fee schedule amounts
for lower-extremity lymphedema
compression garments. These amounts
are approximately equal to the average
Medicaid fee schedule amount plus 20
percent. We therefore believe that the
average Medicaid fee schedule amount
plus 20 percent represents what other
government payers such as the VHA and
TRICARE consider an appropriate
payment basis for these items and a
slightly higher payment basis than the
average payment rates established by
Medicaid state plans that have fee
schedule amounts for these items; we
are specifically soliciting comments on
this. We also conducted a search of
internet prices for lymphedema
compression treatment items and found
these prices to be in line with the
TRICARE fee schedule amounts and
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Where new items are added to this
benefit category, following the process
outlined in section 3 of this section of
this rule, the data sources (Medicaid,
TRICARE, VHA, or internet prices) may
not initially be available for establishing
an appropriate payment amount. We are
proposing that in this situation, until
the data necessary for establishing the
payment amount becomes available, the
DME MACs would consider what an
appropriate payment amount would be
for each item on an individual, claimby-claim basis and may consider using
pricing for similar items that already
have established payment amounts.
Section 1834(z)(2) of the Act
authorizes the establishment of
frequency limitations for lymphedema
compression treatment items and
specifies that no payment may be made
for lymphedema compression treatment
items furnished other than at a
frequency established in accordance
with this provision of the Act. Gradient
compression garments are designed
differently depending on whether for
daytime or nighttime use. Those meant
for daytime provide a higher level of
compression while those for nighttime
offer milder compression and are less
snug against the skin. We are seeking
comment on our proposal to cover and
make payment for two garments or
wraps with adjustable straps for daytime
use (one to wear while another is being
washed), per affected extremity, or part
of the body, to be replaced every 6
months or when the items is lost, stolen,
or irreparably damaged, or if needed
based on a change in the beneficiary’s
medical or physical condition such as
an amputation, complicating injury or
illness, or a significant change in body
weight. In order to maintain mobility,
patients may require separate garments
or wraps above and below the joint of
the affected extremity or part of the
body. As discussed in section B of this
section of this rule, nighttime garments
are inelastic and more durable than the
elastic daytime garments and we believe
it would be appropriate to replace these
garments once per year. We are
proposing to cover one nighttime
garment per affected extremity or part of
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the body to be replaced once a year or
when the garment is lost, stolen, or
irreparably damaged, or if needed based
on a change in the beneficiary’s medical
or physical condition such as an
amputation, complicating injury or
illness, or a significant change in body
weight. Lymphedema is a chronic
condition that can be stabilized if
properly treated. It may also worsen as
the result of infection, radiation and
chemotherapy, or progression of
comorbid conditions such as obesity. At
this point, patients may require changes
in their garment prescription. Such
changes due to medical necessity will
not be subject to the frequency
limitations, as previously described. In
addition, as with other DMEPOS items,
payment could be made for replacement
of garments and other items when they
are lost, stolen, or irreparably damaged.
Examples of lost items include items left
behind after evacuating due to a disaster
like a hurricane or tornado. Examples of
irreparably damaged items include
items that burn in a fire, are exposed to
toxic chemicals, or are damaged by
some other event and does not include
items that wear out over time.
With regard to replacement
frequencies for compression bandaging
systems and supplies, the weekly
frequency and overall length of phase
one (active) treatment is dependent on
the severity of lymphedema. Some
patients may require treatment 4 to 5
days per week in phase one while others
may only need treatment 2 to 3 days per
week. Bandages are used following
some form of hands-on decompression
to maintain the reduction. Therefore, we
are not proposing specific replacement
frequencies for the compression
bandaging systems and supplies. We are
proposing that the DME MACs would
make determinations regarding whether
the quantities of compression bandaging
supplies furnished and billed during
phase one of treatment of the
beneficiary’s lymphedema are
reasonable and necessary.
As previously discussed, section
4133(a)(3) of the CAA, 2023 adds
subparagraph D to section 1847(a)(2) of
the Act to add lymphedema
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compression treatment items to the
DMEPOS competitive bidding program.
Section 1834(z)(3)(A) of the Act
specifies that the payment basis under
section 1847(a) of the Act becomes the
payment basis for lymphedema
compression treatment items furnished
under the competitive bidding program.
Section 1834(z)(3)(B) of the Act
provides authority to use information on
the payment determined for these items
under the competitive bidding program
to adjust the payment amounts
otherwise determined under section
1834(z) for an area that is not a
competitive bidding area under section
1847 of the Act, and in the case of such
adjustment, section 1842(b)(8) and (9) of
the Act shall not be applied.
8. Proposed Changes
We are proposing to amend 42 CFR
410.36 to add paragraph (a)(4) for
lymphedema compression treatment
items as a new category of medical
supplies, appliances, and devices
covered and payable under Medicare
Part B, including: standard and custom
fitted gradient compression garments;
gradient compression wraps with
adjustable straps; compression
bandaging systems; other items
determined to be lymphedema
compression treatment items under the
process established under § 414.1670;
and accessories such as zippers in
garments, liners worn under garments or
wraps with adjustable straps, and
padding or fillers that are necessary for
the effective use of a gradient
compression garment or wrap with
adjustable straps. In order to maintain
mobility, patients may require separate
garments or wraps above and below the
joint of the affected extremity or part of
the body, and we are proposing that
payment may be made in these
circumstances. We are proposing that
payment may be made for multiple
garments used on different parts of the
body when the multiple garments are
determined to be reasonable and
necessary for the treatment of
lymphedema. For example, if it is
determined that a beneficiary needs
three daytime garments to cover one
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affected area for the treatment of
lymphedema, Medicare would pay for
two sets of those three garments for that
specific affected area, as well as any
other areas of the body affected by
lymphedema. For the purpose of
establishing the scope of the benefit for
these items, we are seeking comment on
the following definitions we are
proposing to add to 42 CFR 410.2 as
they apply to lymphedema compression
treatment items:
Gradient compression means the
ability to apply a higher level of
compression or pressure to the distal
(farther) end of the limb or body part
affected by lymphedema with lower,
decreasing compression or pressure at
the proximal (closer) end of the limb or
body part affected by lymphedema.
Custom fitted gradient compression
garment means a garment that is
uniquely sized and shaped to fit the
exact dimensions of the affected
extremity or part of the body of an
individual to provide accurate gradient
compression to treat lymphedema.
The proposed definition of ‘‘gradient
compression’’ would apply to all
lymphedema compression treatment
items (garments, wraps, etc.) that utilize
gradient compression in treating
lymphedema. The proposed definition
of ‘‘custom fitted gradient compression
garment’’ would apply to custom fitted
gradient compression garments covered
under the new benefit category for
lymphedema compression treatment
items. We believe these definitions are
necessary for establishing the scope of
this new benefit.
Lymphedema compression treatment
item means standard and custom fitted
gradient compression garments and
other items specified under
§ 410.36(a)(4) that are—
• Furnished on or after January 1,
2024, to an individual with a diagnosis
of lymphedema for treatment of such
condition;
• Primarily and customarily used to
serve a medical purpose and for the
treatment of lymphedema; and
• Prescribed by a physician (or a
physician assistant, nurse practitioner,
or a clinical nurse specialist (as those
terms are defined in section 1861(aa)(5)
of the Social Security Act) to the extent
authorized under State law.
We are proposing to modify and add
to the existing HCPCS codes for surgical
dressings and lymphedema compression
treatment items as explained in section
VII.B.4. of this rule. We are proposing
that future changes to the HCPCS codes
for these items based on external
requests for changes to the HCPCS or
internal CMS changes would be made
through the HCPCS public meeting
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process described at: https://
www.cms.gov/medicare/coding/
medhcpcsgeninfo/hcpcspublicmeetings.
We are proposing to add § 414.1670
under new subpart Q and use the same
process described in § 414.240 to obtain
public consultation on preliminary
benefit category determinations and
payment determinations for new
lymphedema compression treatment
items. The preliminary determinations
would be posted on CMS.gov in
advance of a public meeting. After
consideration of public input on the
preliminary determinations, CMS would
post final HCPCS coding decisions,
benefit category determinations, and
payment determinations on CMS.gov,
and then issue program instructions to
implement the changes.
We are proposing to add a new
subpart Q under the regulations at 42
CFR part 414 titled, ‘‘Payment for
Lymphedema Compression Treatment
Items’’ to implement the provisions of
section 1834(z) of the Act. We are
proposing to add § 414.1600 to our
regulations explaining the purpose and
definitions under the new subpart Q.
We are proposing to add § 414.1650 and
paragraph (a) to establish the payment
basis equal to 80 percent of the lesser of
the actual charge for the item or the
payment amounts established for the
item under paragraph (b). We are
proposing under § 414.1650(b) to
establish the payment amounts for
lymphedema compression treatment
items based on the average of state
Medicaid fee schedule amounts plus 20
percent. Where Medicaid rates are not
available, we are proposing to use the
average of average internet retail prices
and payment amounts established by
TRICARE (or, where there is no
TRICARE fee schedule rate, the average
of internet retail prices alone). We
propose under § 414.1650(c) that,
beginning January 1, 2025, and on
January 1 of each subsequent year, the
Medicare payment rates established for
these items in accordance with section
1834(z)(1) of the Act and § 414.1650(b)
would be increased by the percentage
change in the Consumer Price Index for
All Urban Consumers (CPI–U) for the
12-month period ending June of the
preceding year. For example, effective
beginning January 1, 2025, the payment
rates that were in effect on January 1,
2024 would be increased by the
percentage change in the CPI–U from
June 2023 to June 2024.
We are also proposing to add
§ 414.1660 to address continuity of
pricing when HCPCS codes for
lymphedema compression treatment
items are divided or combined. Similar
to current regulations at 42 CFR 414.110
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and 414.236, we propose that when
there is a single HCPCS code that
describes two or more distinct complete
items (for example, two different but
related or similar items), and separate
codes are subsequently established for
each item, the payment amounts that
applied to the single code continue to
apply to each of the items described by
the new codes. We propose that when
the HCPCS codes for several different
items are combined into a single code,
the payment amounts for the new code
are established using the average
(arithmetic mean), weighted by allowed
services, of the payment amounts for the
formerly separate codes.
We are proposing to add § 414.1680
and the following frequency limitations
for lymphedema compression treatment
items established in accordance with
section 1834(z)(2) of the Act under new
subpart Q:
• Two daytime garments or wraps
with adjustable straps for each affected
limb or area of the body, replaced every
6 months.
• One nighttime garment for each
affected limb or area of the body,
replaced once a year.
We are soliciting comments on
whether two nighttime garments should
be allowed, with both garments being
replaced once every 2 years, to allow for
more than 1 day for washing and drying
of the garment(s). We are also proposing
to cover replacements of garments or
wraps that are lost, stolen, irreparably
damaged, or when needed due to a
change in the patient’s medical or
physical condition. We are not
proposing specific replacement
frequencies for compression bandaging
systems or supplies. We are proposing
that determinations regarding the
quantity of compression bandaging
supplies covered for each beneficiary
during phase one of decongestive
therapy would be made by the DME
MAC that processes the claims for the
supplies.
We are proposing to revise the
regulations for competitive bidding
under subpart F at 42 CFR 414 to
include lymphedema compression
treatment items under the competitive
bidding program as mandated by section
1847(a)(2)(D) of the Act. We propose to
modify the list of items that may be
included in competitive bidding
described in § 414.402 to include
lymphedema treatment items and revise
§ 414.408 to include lymphedema
treatment items in the list of items for
which payment would be made on a
lump sum purchase basis under the
competitive bidding program in
accordance with any frequency
limitations established under proposed
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subpart Q in accordance with section
1834(z)(2) of the Act. Finally, we
propose to add reference the proposed
subpart Q to the bid rules described at
§ 414.412.
The methodologies for adjusting
DMEPOS payment amounts for items
included in the DMEPOS Competitive
Bidding Program (CBP) that are
furnished in non-CBAs based on the
payments determined under the
DMEPOS CBP are set forth at
§ 414.210(g). Section 4133(a)(3) of the
CAA, 2023 amended section 1847(a)(2)
of the Act to include lymphedema
compression treatment items under the
DMEPOS CBP, and section 4133(a)(2) of
the CAA, 2023 amended section 1834 of
the Act to provide authority to adjust
the payment amounts established for
lymphedema compression treatment
items in accordance with new
subsection z based on the payments
determined for these items under the
DMEPOS CBP. We believe the
methodologies for adjusting DMEPOS
payment amounts at § 414.210(g) should
also be used to adjust the payment
amounts for lymphedema compression
treatment items included in the
DMEPOS CBP that are furnished in nonCBAs. We see no reason why different
methodologies for adjusting payment
amounts based on payments determined
under the DMEOPS CBP would need to
be established for lymphedema
compression treatment items. We are
therefore proposing to add § 414.1690
indicating that the payment amounts
established under § 414.1650(b) for
lymphedema compression treatment
items may be adjusted using
information on the payment determined
for lymphedema compression treatment
items as part of implementation of the
DMEPOS CBP under subpart F using the
methodologies set forth at § 414.210(g).
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C. Definition of Brace
1. Background
The Social Security Act of 1965 (the
Act) defines the scope of benefits
available to eligible Medicare
beneficiaries under Medicare Part B, the
voluntary supplementary medical
insurance program defined by section
1832 of the Act. Section 1832(a)(1) of
the Act establishes the Medicare Part B
benefit for ‘‘medical and other health
services.’’ Section 1861(s) of the Act
further defines ‘‘medical and other
health services’’ to include under
paragraph (9) leg, arm, back, and neck
braces, and artificial legs, arms, and
eyes. Artificial legs, arms, and eyes are
artificial replacements for missing legs,
arms, and eyes and this rule does not
address the scope of the Medicare
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benefit for these items. Section
1834(h)(4)(C) of the Act details the
payment rules for particular items and
services including specifying that ‘‘the
term ‘orthotics and prosthetics’ has the
meaning given to such term in section
1861(s)(9).’’ Regulations at 42 CFR
410.36(a)(3) include leg, arm, back, and
neck braces under the list of medical
supplies, appliances, and devices in the
scope of items paid for under Part B of
Medicare. However, the term ‘‘brace’’ is
not defined in the Act or in regulation.
Specifically, the term brace is not
defined in 42 CFR 410.2 Definitions for
supplementary medical insurance
benefits for Medicare.
The Medicare program instruction
that defines the term brace is located at
CMS Pub. 100–02, Chapter 15, § 130 of
the Medicare Benefit Policy Manual for
Part B coverage of ‘‘Leg, Arm, Back, and
Neck Braces, Trusses, and Artificial
Legs, Arms, and Eyes.’’ Within this
instruction, braces are defined as ‘‘rigid
and semi-rigid devices which are used
for the purpose of supporting a weak or
deformed body member or restricting or
eliminating motion in a diseased or
injured part of the body.’’ The Medicare
definition of brace in program
instructions dates back to the 1970s and
was previously located in the Medicare
Carriers Manual, HCFA Pub. 14, Part III,
Chapter 2, § 2133. This longstanding
definition of brace in our program
instructions is used for the purpose of
making benefit category determinations
in accordance with the procedures
located at 42 CFR 414.240 (86 FR 73911)
regarding when a device constitutes or
does not constitute a leg, arm, back, or
neck brace for Medicare program
purposes.
2. Current Issues
We believe that adding the definition
of brace to the regulations at 42 CFR
410.2 is necessary for describing the
scope of the Medicare Part B benefit for
leg, arm, back, and neck braces. We
believe that codifying the definition that
is currently located in Medicare
program instructions would continue
the efficiency of the administration of
the Medicare program by providing
clarity and transparency regarding the
scope of the benefit, for example,
whether a specific device is a leg, arm,
back, or neck brace as defined in section
1861(s)(9) of the Act, and consequently,
payment determinations for such items.
We also believe that adding the
definition of brace to the regulations
would support our benefit category
determination process described in 42
CFR 414.240 (86 FR 73911).
The orthopedic industry has long
established the attributes of a ‘‘brace.’’
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We believe the definition of a brace in
CMS Pub 100–02, Chapter 15, § 130
adequately captures the attributes of a
brace. The words ‘‘rigid’’ and ‘‘semirigid’’ are used to describe the stiffness
of a material. Rigid materials are used to
eliminate motion but also to support
underload. Components of a brace can
use semi-rigid materials, which
intentionally allow some amount of
motion as compared to materials that
completely immobilize a part of the
body. Braces are typically prescribed to
patients during the process of recovery
and rehabilitation in order to stop limbs,
joints, or specific body segments from
moving for a pre-determined period.
Braces may also be prescribed for
ongoing medical problems that require
restriction or limitation of joint
movement; removal of weight or
pressure from healing or injured joints,
muscles, or body parts; or reduction of
misalignment and function to reduce
pain and facilitate improved
mobility. 181 182
In order for a brace to properly
function, it must utilize a three-point
pressure system to provide angular
control over anatomical joints.183 184 185
A three-point pressure system places a
single force at the area of the deformity,
while two counter forces act in the
opposing direction. This pressure
system requires that a brace be rigid or
semi-rigid in structure to apply
sufficient relevant force to support,
restrict, or eliminate motion of the joint
or specific body part. The rigidity level
of a brace is dependent on the body part
and purpose for which the brace is used.
For example, a fully rigid brace is used
to eliminate motion and support
underload. We believe the definition of
brace in CMS Pub 100–02, Chapter 15,
§ 130, and our proposed definition of
181 Webster, J., Murphy, D., 2019, Atlas of
Orthoses and Assistive Devices, 5th Edition,
Elsevier, Philadelphia, PA. (Chapter 1) https://
www.sciencedirect.com/book/9780323483230/atlasof-orthoses-and-assistive-devices
182 CHAMPVA OPERATIONAL POLICY
MANUAL: CHAPTER: 2, SECTION: 17.4. https://
www.vha.cc.va.gov/system/templates/selfservice/
va_ssnew/help/customer/locale/en-US/portal/
554400000001036/content/554400000008979/
021704-ORTHOTICS
183 Webster, J., Murphy, D., 2019, Atlas of
Orthoses and Assistive Devices, 5th Edition,
Elsevier, Philadelphia, PA. (Chapter 18). https://
www.sciencedirect.com/book/9780323483230/atlasof-orthoses-and-assistive-devices
184 Chalmers, D. D., & Hamer, G. P. (1985). Threepoint dynamic orthosis. Prosthetics and Orthotics
International, 9(2), 115–116. https://
journals.sagepub.com/doi/pdf/10.3109/
03093648509164718. https://journals.sagepub.com/
doi/pdf/10.3109/03093648509164718. https://
journals.sagepub.com/doi/pdf/10.3109/
03093648509164718. https://journals.sagepub.com/
doi/pdf/10.3109/03093648509164718.
185 Article—Spinal Orthoses: TLSO and LSO—
Policy Article (A52500) (cms.gov).
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brace, adequately captures the various
attributes of a brace.
It is important to note that a rigid or
semi-rigid device may look like a brace
in that it has metal struts, joints, and
cuffs that go over a limb, but may be
used for purposes other than bracing the
limb. We believe that devices used for
purposes other than supporting a weak
or deformed body member or restricting
or eliminating motion of a diseased or
injured part of the body do not fall
within the definition of a brace in
accordance with Pub 100–02, Chapter
15, § 130 Medicare Benefit Policy
Manual, and would not fall within our
proposed definition of brace. However,
items that are not braces may meet the
Medicare Part B definition for durable
medical equipment (DME) at 42 CFR
414.202. For example, continuous
passive motion devices are covered as
DME in accordance with CMS Pub 100–
03, Chapter 1, Part 4, § 280.1 of the
Medicare National Coverage
Determinations Manual to rehabilitate
the knee to increase range of motion
following surgery. During continuous
passive motion therapy, the joint area is
secured to the device, which then
moves the affected joint through a
prescribed range of motion for an
extended period of time. Continuous
passive motion devices have metal
struts, joints, and cuffs that go over a
limb but are not used for the purpose of
restricting or eliminating motion in a
diseased or injured part of the body or
to support a weak or deformed body
member. While these devices do not
meet the definition of a brace in
accordance with Pub 100–02, Chapter
15, § 130 of the Medicare Benefit Policy
Manual, they are covered by Medicare
as DME. Similarly, dynamic adjustable
extension/flexion devices and static
progressive stretch devices are used to
stretch an arm or leg or other part of the
body to treat contractures and increase
range of motion. While these devices
may look similar to a brace, they are
used for the purpose of treating
contractures and are not used for the
purpose of supporting a weak or
deformed body member or restricting or
eliminating motion in a diseased or
injured part of the body. As a result,
dynamic adjustable extension/flexion
devices and static progressive stretch
devices do not fall under the definition
of brace in accordance with CMS Pub
100–02, Chapter 15, § 130, but are
covered by Medicare as DME.
It is also important to note that
although braces in the past have
typically not included powered devices
or devices with power features,
technology has evolved to include
newer technology devices with power
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features designed to assist with
traditional bracing functions. For
example, effective January 1, 2020, code
L2006 was added to the HCPCS for a
knee ankle foot device, any material,
single or double upright, swing and
stance phase microprocessor control
with adjustability, includes all
components (for example, sensors,
batteries, charger), any type activation,
with or without ankle joint(s), custom
fabricated). CMS classified this device
as a brace because it supports a weak or
deformed knee by preventing it from
buckling under the patient. This brace
includes a microprocessor controlled
hydraulic swing and stance control knee
joint that restricts/affects knee joint
kinematics during the swing and stance
phases of the gait cycle. There are also
powered brace exoskeleton devices that
support a patient’s weak arms or legs
and have been classified as DME in the
past. We determined that these devices
should be classified as braces due to
their use in stabilizing, positioning,
supporting and restoring the function of
a patient’s weak limbs. In addition,
upper extremity powered exoskeleton
devices used by patients with chronic
arm weakness such as from
complications of stroke or other
neurological/neuromuscular injury and
illness to support and assist movement
of weak arms were recently introduced
to the market. HCPCS codes L8701
(Powered upper extremity range of
motion assist device, elbow, wrist, hand
with single or double upright(s),
includes microprocessor, sensors, all
components and accessories, custom
fabricated) and L8702 (Powered upper
extremity range of motion assist device,
elbow, wrist, hand, finger, single or
double upright(s), includes
microprocessor, sensors, all components
and accessories, custom fabricated))
were added to the HCPCS effective
January 1, 2019 to describe two
categories of these items. These devices
support the arm of the patient and
allows them to use volitional, intact
electromyographic signals in weak
muscles to control the device through a
normal range of motion. A lower
extremity powered exoskeleton device
that supports the weak legs of a patient
with spinal cord injury (SCI) at levels
T7 to L5 to enable the patient to perform
ambulatory functions was also recently
introduced to the market. Code K1007
(Bilateral hip, knee, ankle, foot device,
powered, includes pelvic component,
single or double upright(s), knee joints
any type, with or without ankle joints
any type, includes all components and
accessories, motors, microprocessors,
sensors)) was added to the HCPCS
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effective January 1, 2020 to describe this
category of items. The device uses
motion sensors with an exoskeleton
frame and onboard computer system.
Patients using all of the devices, as
previously described, are better able to
elongate and flex their limbs using the
respective device, sometimes in a
braced manner and sometimes in a
controlled manner of motion, thus
improving the functioning of the
malformed body member and
supporting the weak limbs. Additional
information on the items, as previously
discussed, can be found at:
www.cms.gov/files/document/2022hcpcs-application-summary-biannual-12022-non-drug-and-non-biologicalitems-and-services.pdf.
One additional issue related to leg
braces with shoes that are an integral
part of the brace. Section 1862(a)(8) of
the Act generally excludes orthopedic
shoes or other supportive devices for the
feet from coverage under the Medicare
program. However, longstanding policy
at CMS Pub 100–02, Chapter 15, § 290
of the Medicare Benefit Policy Manual
indicates that this exclusion does not
apply to such a shoe if it is an integral
part of a leg brace, and if that shoe or
other supportive device for the feet is an
integral part of a leg brace, then the cost
of that shoe or device is included as part
of the cost of the brace. We are
proposing to include this exception in
the proposed definition of a brace at
§ 410.2.
3. Proposed Regulation Changes
We are proposing to amend the
regulations at 42 CFR 410.2 to add the
definition of brace to improve clarity
and transparency regarding coverage
and payment for the term brace as
defined in section 1861(s)(9) of the Act.
Also, we believe adding the definition
in regulations will improve the
efficiency of the administration of the
Medicare program when considering
whether a new device is a leg, arm,
back, or neck brace for benefit category
and payment determinations under our
review procedures at § 414.240. In
addition, we believe that adding the
definition of a brace in regulation would
expedite coverage and payment for
newer technology and powered devices,
potentially providing faster access to
these new healthcare technologies for
Medicare beneficiaries.
We are proposing that the definition
of brace at 42 CFR 410.2 would be
consistent with CMS’s longstanding
brace policy and information at section
130 of chapter 15 of the Medicare
Benefit Policy Manual (CMS Pub 100–
02). Thus, we are proposing to specify
in the definition that a brace is rigid or
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semi-rigid and that the stiffness of the
material used in making the device is
essential to the definition of a brace for
purposes of the scope of this Medicare
benefit. Rigid refers to material used to
eliminate motion but also to support
underload. Components of a brace will
use semi-rigid materials, which
intentionally allow some amount of
motion as compared to materials that
completely immobilize. Also, we are
proposing at 42 CFR 410.2 to specify in
the definition that a brace is used for the
purpose of supporting a weak or
deformed body member or restricting or
eliminating motion in a diseased or
injured part of the body. In addition, we
are proposing to specify at
§ 410.36(a)(3)(i)(A) that a brace may
include a shoe if it is an integral part of
a leg brace and its expense is included
as part of the cost of the brace.
We note three HCPCS codes were
established to permit billing of the
powered upper extremity devices and
powered lower extremity exoskeleton
devices. Two HCPCS codes were
established effective October 1, 2019
which are: L8701 (Powered upper
extremity range of motion assist device,
elbow, wrist, hand with single or double
upright(s), includes microprocessor,
sensors, all components and accessories,
custom fabricated) and L8702 (Powered
upper extremity range of motion assist
device, elbow, wrist, hand, finger, single
or double upright(s), includes
microprocessor, sensors, all components
and accessories, custom fabricated). One
HCPCS was established effective
October 1, 2020 which is K1007
(Bilateral hip, knee, ankle, foot device,
powered, includes pelvic component,
single or double upright(s), knee joints
any type, with or without ankle joints
any type, includes all components and
accessories, motors, microprocessors,
sensors). However, corresponding
Medicare benefit category and Medicare
payment determinations were not
finalized for these HCPCS codes to
permit more time for evaluation. As a
result of the proposal to amend the
regulations at 42 CFR 410.2 to add the
definition of brace, if finalized, these
codes would be classified under the
definition of brace. Using the processes
outlined in regulations at 42 CFR
414.240, we intend to obtain public
consultation on the payment
determinations for these codes at an
upcoming HCPCS Level II public
meeting. Additional information on
these HCPCS codes can be found in the
HCPCS Level II Final Coding, Benefit
Category and Payment Determinations
First Biannual (B1), 2022 HCPCS Coding
Cycle at www.cms.gov/files/document/
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2022-hcpcs-application-summarybiannual-1-2022-non-drug-and-nonbiological-items-and-services.pdf. The
agenda and dates for a public meeting
will be available on the CMS HCPCS
website: https://www.cms.gov/
Medicare/Coding/MedHCPCSGenInfo/
HCPCSPublicMeetings.
D. Documentation Requirements for
Durable Medical Equipment,
Prosthetics, Orthotics, and Supplies
Products Supplied as Refills to the
Original Order
1. Background
Durable medical equipment (DME) is
covered as a benefit category under Part
B under medical or other health services
as described in section1861(s)(6) of the
Act and defined under section 1861(n)
of the Act. We further defined DME in
regulations at § 414.202 as equipment
that can withstand repeated use, is
primarily and customarily used to serve
a medical purpose, is not generally
useful to a person in the absence of an
illness or injury, is appropriate for use
in the home, and effective with respect
to items classified as DME after January
1, 2012, has an expected life of at least
3 years. Certain items of DME require
supplies for effective use. Supplies
include, but are not limited to, drugs
and biologicals that must be put directly
into the equipment to achieve the
therapeutic benefit or to assure the
proper functioning of the equipment.
Examples include oxygen, tumor
chemotherapy agents transfused via an
infusion pump, or diabetic test strips
used with a home glucose monitor.
Prosthetics and orthotics are defined
under section 1861(s)(9) of the Act and
include leg, arm, back, and neck braces
and artificial legs, arms, and eyes—
including replacements if required
because of a change in the patient’s
physical condition. These items are
referred to collectively as Durable
Medical Equipment, Prosthetics,
Orthotics, and Supplies (DMEPOS).
DMEPOS items and supplies may be
furnished on a recurring basis to
beneficiaries with chronic or longerterm conditions. For such items, the
practitioner may be able to forecast and
prescribe, at the time of the beneficiary’s
initial need or during later clinical
interaction, the ongoing medical need
for DMEPOS items and/or supplies. In
other words, the practitioner may be
able to determine the beneficiary’s
expected, ongoing medical need both at
the time of the interaction and as
anticipated need for later dates of
service. In such cases, the practitioner
may write an order for immediate use
and refills for later dates of service.
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Section 1893(a) of the Act authorized
the Secretary to promote the program
integrity of the Medicare program by
entering into contracts with eligible
entities to carry out activities specified
in subsection (b) of such section.
Section 1893(b)(1) of the Act, authorizes
‘‘[r]eview of activities of providers of
services or other individuals and
entities furnishing items and services
for which payment may be made under
this title . . . including medical and
utilization review [emphasis added]
. . .’’. In response to concerns related to
auto-shipments and delivery of
DMEPOS supplies that may no longer be
needed or not needed at the same level
of frequency/volume (for example,
stockpiling), CMS instituted policies to
require suppliers to contact the
beneficiary prior to dispensing DMEPOS
refills. In CY 2004, we updated our
Medicare Program Integrity Manual to
include timeframes related to refillable
DMEPOS items.186 This was done to
ensure that the refilled item was
necessary and to confirm any changes/
modifications to the order. At that time,
CMS stated that contact with the
beneficiary or designee regarding refills
should take place no sooner than 7 days
prior to the delivery/shipping date. CMS
further stated that subsequent deliveries
of refills of DMEPOS products should
occur no sooner than 5 days prior to the
end of the usage for the current product.
This change intended to allow for
shipping of refills on ‘‘approximately’’
the 25th day of the month in the case
of a month’s supply, as later clarified
and emphasized in preamble discussion
in the CY 2005 Physician Fee Schedule
final rule (69 FR 66235).
In 2011, due to stakeholder concerns
related to burden, we amended the
Medicare Program Integrity Manual to
state that contact with the beneficiary or
designee regarding refills must take
place no sooner than 14 calendar days
prior to the delivery/shipping date, and
that delivery of the DMEPOS product
occur no sooner than 10 calendar days
prior to the end of usage for the current
product.187 This is the current policy on
DMEPOS refills as described in the
Medicare Program Integrity Manual.188
186 internet Only Manual 100–08, Program
Integrity Manual (2004), available at: https://
www.cms.gov/Regulations-and-Guidance/
Guidance/Transmittals/downloads/R61PI.pdf.
187 internet Only Manual 100–08, Program
Integrity Manual (2011), available at: https://
www.cms.gov/Regulations-and-Guidance/
Guidance/Transmittals/Downloads/R378PI.pdf.
188 internet Only Manual 100–08, Program
Integrity Manual, Chapter 5, Section 5.2.6—Refills
of DMEPOS Items Provided on a Recurring Basis
(2022), available at: https://www.cms.gov/
Regulations-and-Guidance/Guidance/Manuals/
Downloads/pim83c05.pdf.
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We note that while the timeframes are
applicable to all refillable items, they
are most pertinent to the mail/delivery
model because those beneficiaries could
potentially be most at risk for receiving
unnecessary or unsolicited items and
supplies. For beneficiaries calling,
texting, or otherwise contacting their
pharmacy or retail store and picking up
their refills, we note the decreased
potential for providing supplies that
may not be medically necessary or for
which the beneficiary has sufficient
supply. For items that the beneficiary
obtains in-person at a retail store, the
signed delivery slip or a copy of the
itemized sales receipt is sufficient
documentation of a request for refill.
Both delivery models are intended to
allow for uninterrupted supply of the
necessary item(s), and allow for the
processing of claims for refills
delivered/shipped prior to the
beneficiary’s complete exhaustion of
their supply. We note that prior
guidance related to this policy referred
to this sort of permissible overlap as
refills for items ‘‘pending exhaustion’’.
Despite the long-standing
programmatic safeguards, compliance
with refill procedures continues to
cause concerns. As recently as 2019, the
HHS Office of Inspector General (HHS
OIG) did a national study demonstrating
that suppliers did not maintain
sufficient refill documentation.189 In
fact, one national DMEPOS supplier was
recently revoked from the Medicare
program due to billing for refills for
beneficiaries that were deceased.190
Due to ongoing compliance concerns,
and in efforts to promote transparency,
we propose to codify our refill
documentation requirements. At the
same time, we are continuing our efforts
to reduce administrative burden. We
have worked to identify many obsolete
and burdensome regulations that could
be eliminated or reformed to improve
effectiveness. We have also examined
our longstanding policies and practices
that are not codified in regulations but
could be changed or streamlined to
achieve better outcomes and reduce
provider and supplier burden.
Additionally, we are requesting
comment on whether there are ways to
reduce burden for certain beneficiary
populations for future rulemaking.
189 Medicare Improperly Paid Suppliers an
Estimated $92.5 Million for Inhalation Drugs,
(October 2019), https://oig.hhs.gov/oas/reports/
region9/91803018.pdf.
190 Press Release: Mail-Order Diabetic Testing
Supplier and Parent Company Agree to Pay $160
Million to Resolve Alleged False Claims to
Medicare (August 2, 2021), available at: https://
www.justice.gov/opa/pr/mail-order-diabetic-testingsupplier-and-parent-company-agree-pay-160million-resolve-alleged.
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Our refill policy has primarily been
maintained in the Medicare Program
Integrity Manual, Local Coverage
Determinations, and related articles. We
propose to codify and update our refill
policy, in this proposed rule, to
maintain program integrity controls
while being mindful of supplier burden.
2. Provisions of the Proposed
Regulations
a. Overview
At this time, we believe it is
appropriate to codify policies related to
refills of DMEPOS items; taking into
consideration the need to balance
program integrity concerns (for
example, stockpiling) against supplier
burden concerns. While we continue to
believe it appropriate to confirm the
medical need for the refill prior to
disbursement, we have found that minor
deviations in timing are not always
reflective of medical need. Therefore,
we are proposing to strengthen our
program integrity requirements to not
only require beneficiary contact, but to
specify that such contact must result in
affirmative response from the
beneficiary or designee. We propose to
eliminate the 14-day timeframe, for
beneficiary contact, and to rather rely
upon a single 30-day timeframe for
contact and confirmation of the need for
refill. That is, beneficiary contact and
confirmation of need for the refill must
occur within the 30-day period prior to
the end of the current supply. We
propose to remove the term ‘‘pending
exhaustion’’, which may be subject to
interpretation, and instead use the
phrase ‘‘the expected end of the current
supply.’’
We note that documentation of the
need for refill, as obtained from the
Medicare beneficiary or designee, is not
expected to require specific quantities
remaining—but rather to simply confirm
their need for the next refillable item.
Suppliers contacting the beneficiaries to
confirm their need for the refill, shall
confirm both that the beneficiary is
using the item and requires the refill, as
evidenced by the supplier
documentation of an affirmative need
for the refill. We believe this type of
generalized affirmation, in conjunction
with our claims processing controls,
will provide sufficient program integrity
controls.
We believe the refill policy ensures
that beneficiaries are participating in
their health care to confirm they get the
DMEPOS item(s) ordered and needed,
which prevents individuals from
receiving unnecessary supplies. It also
protects the Trust Fund from the
unnecessary provision of DMEPOS. We
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elongated the timeframe to 30-days and
clarified that the beneficiary need not
provide specific remaining quantities to
comply. We believe this helps mitigate
potential burden. However, we are
seeking comment on if, due to
beneficiary burdens, there are certain
diagnosis/device combinations that a
beneficiary should not need to confirm
the need for a refill or confirm the need
for refill with the same frequency. In
other words, are there beneficiary
populations for which we would not
expect any fluctuations in the type or
quantity of device, due to a permanent
disability or health condition, for which
the supplier verification of need would
prove burdensome? Are there ways that
Medicare could better balance the
beneficiary burden of responding to
supplier outreach (for example, text
messaging, phone call to affirm need for
recurring supply) when contrasted with
the burden of receiving potentially
unnecessary items (e.g., co-insurance
payments)? We would take these
comments into consideration for
potential future policy changes to our
DMEPOS refill policies.
We propose to codify our
longstanding requirement that delivery
of DMEPOS items (that is, date of
service) be no sooner than 10 calendar
days before the expected end of the
current supply. We note that the
shipping timeframes have been relied
upon for approximately 20 years—to
help both suppliers and Medicare Feefor-Service contractors prevent
overlapping billings and unnecessary
refills. For example, contractors may use
this timeframe to set up claims
processing edits and alert suppliers
when an item is being rendered/billed
that was previously rendered and is not
yet eligible for refill. We propose that
date of service may be defined as either
the date of delivery of the DMEPOS
item, or for items rendered via delivery
or shipping service, the supplier may
use the shipping date as the date of
delivery. We propose the shipping date
may be defined as either the date the
delivery/shipping service label is
created or the date the item is retrieved
for shipment by the mail carrier/
delivering party; however, such dates
should not demonstrate significant
variation.
b. Documentation To Support Refill
We propose to revise § 410.38,
paragraph (d), by adding paragraph
(d)(4) which outlines the documentation
needed to support refill requirements. In
paragraph (d)(4)(i), we define refills,
date of service, and shipping date for
purposes of this section. In paragraph
(d)(4)(ii), we propose that
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documentation must include the
following:
• Evidence of the beneficiary or their
representative’s affirmative response of
the need for supplies, which should be
obtained as close to the expected end of
the current supply as possible; Contact
and affirmative response shall be within
30 calendar days from the expected end
of the current supply.
• For shipped items, the beneficiary
name, date of contact, the item
requested, and an affirmative response
from the beneficiary, indicative of the
need for refill, prior to dispensing the
product.
• For items obtained in-person from a
retail store, the delivery slip signed by
the beneficiary or their representative or
a copy of the itemized sales receipt is
sufficient documentation of a request for
refill.
In paragraph (d)(4)(iii), we propose
the date of service for DMEPOS items
provided on a recurring basis be no
sooner than 10 calendar days prior to
the expected end of the current supply.
VIII. Proposed Changes to the Provider
and Supplier Enrollment Requirements
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A. Background
1. Overview of Medicare Provider
Enrollment
Section 1866(j)(1)(A) of the Act
requires the Secretary to establish a
process for the enrollment of providers
and suppliers into the Medicare
program. The overarching purpose of
the enrollment process is to help
confirm that providers and suppliers
seeking to bill Medicare for services and
items furnished to Medicare
beneficiaries meet all applicable federal
and state requirements to do so. The
process is, to an extent, a ‘‘gatekeeper’’
that prevents unqualified and
potentially fraudulent individuals and
entities from entering and
inappropriately billing Medicare. Since
2006, we have undertaken rulemaking
efforts to outline our enrollment
procedures. These regulations are
generally codified in 42 CFR part 424,
subpart P (currently §§ 424.500 through
424.575 and hereafter occasionally
referenced as subpart P). They address,
among other things, requirements that
providers and suppliers must meet to
obtain and maintain Medicare billing
privileges.
As outlined in § 424.510, one such
requirement is that the provider or
supplier must complete, sign, and
submit to its assigned Medicare
Administrative Contractor (MAC) the
appropriate enrollment form, typically
the Form CMS–855 (OMB Control No.
0938–0685). The Form CMS–855, which
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can be submitted via paper or
electronically through the internetbased Provider Enrollment, Chain, and
Ownership System (PECOS) process
(SORN: 09–70–0532, PECOS), collects
important information about the
provider or supplier. Such data
includes, but is not limited to, general
identifying information (for example,
legal business name), licensure and/or
certification data, and practice
locations. The application is used for a
variety of provider enrollment
transactions, including the following:
• Initial enrollment—The provider or
supplier is—(1) enrolling in Medicare
for the first time; (2) enrolling in another
Medicare contractor’s jurisdiction; or (3)
seeking to enroll in Medicare after
having previously been enrolled.
• Change of ownership—The
provider or supplier is reporting a
change in its ownership.
• Revalidation—The provider or
supplier is revalidating its Medicare
enrollment information in accordance
with § 424.515. (Suppliers of durable
medical equipment, prosthetics,
orthotics, and supplies (DMEPOS) must
revalidate their enrollment every 3
years); all other providers and suppliers
must do so every 5 years.)
• Reactivation—The provider or
supplier is seeking to reactivate its
Medicare billing privileges after it was
deactivated in accordance with
§ 424.540.
• Change of information—The
provider or supplier is reporting a
change in its existing enrollment
information in accordance with
§ 424.516.
After receiving the provider’s or
supplier’s initial enrollment
application, CMS or the MAC reviews
and confirms the information thereon
and determines whether the provider or
supplier meets all applicable Medicare
requirements. We believe this screening
process has greatly assisted CMS in
executing its responsibility to prevent
Medicare fraud, waste, and abuse.
As previously discussed, over the
years we have issued various final rules
pertaining to provider enrollment.
These rules were intended not only to
clarify or strengthen certain components
of the enrollment process but also to
enable us to take action against
providers and suppliers: (1) engaging (or
potentially engaging) in fraudulent or
abusive behavior; (2) presenting a risk of
harm to Medicare beneficiaries or the
Medicare Trust Funds; or (3) that are
otherwise unqualified to furnish
Medicare services or items. Consistent
with this, and as we discuss in section
VIII.B. of this proposed rule, we propose
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several changes to our existing Medicare
provider enrollment regulations.
2. Legal Authorities
There are two principal categories of
legal authorities for our proposed
Medicare provider enrollment
provisions:
• Section 1866(j) of the Act furnishes
specific authority regarding the
enrollment process for providers and
suppliers.
• Sections 1102 and 1871 of the Act
provide general authority for the
Secretary to prescribe regulations for the
efficient administration of the Medicare
program.
B. Proposed Provisions
1. Provisional Period of Enhanced
Oversight
Section 1866(j)(3)(A) of the Act states
that the Secretary shall establish
procedures to provide for a provisional
period of between 30 days and 1 year
during which new providers and
suppliers—as the Secretary determines
appropriate, including categories of
providers or suppliers—would be
subject to enhanced oversight. (Per
section 1866(j)(3)(A) of the Act, such
oversight can include, but is not limited
to, prepayment review and payment
caps). As authorized by section
1866(j)(3)(B) of the Act, CMS previously
implemented such procedures through
sub-regulatory guidance with respect to
newly enrolling HHAs’ requests for
anticipated payments (RAP). RAPs were
upfront payments that HHAs received
from Medicare before the beginning of a
30-day period of home health services.
‘‘New’’ HHAs were subject to a
suppression of RAPs for a period
between 30 days to 1 year (as
determined by CMS) during the
timeframe they were in the provisional
period of enhanced oversight (PPEO).
Each new HHA received notice of the
length of time for which it was to be in
the PPEO with RAP suppression. (CMS
eliminated the use of RAPs for HHAs;
beginning January 1, 2022, CMS
replaced RAP submissions with a Notice
of Admission.)
During this prior PPEO, CMS received
inquiries regarding the scope of the term
‘‘new HHA’’ as well as when the
provisional period commenced.
Although section 1866(j)(3)(B) of the Act
states that we may implement
procedures by program instruction, we
believe in this particular instance (and
based partly on our experience with the
aforementioned HHA PPEO) that
rulemaking is appropriate, though not
statutorily required. This would help
clarify: (1) what constitutes a ‘‘new’’
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provider or supplier for purposes of
section 1866(j)(3) of the Act; and (2)
when the PPEO begins. Such
elucidation is important because we
may, in the future, elect to apply our
PPEO statutory authority to other
categories of providers or suppliers per
section 1866(j)(3)(A) of the Act.
Accordingly, we propose the following
provisions, both of which, we
emphasize, would apply to PPEOs
irrespective of the provider or supplier
type involved.
First, we propose in new § 424.527(a)
to define a ‘‘new’’ provider or supplier
(exclusively for purposes of our PPEO
authority under section 1866(j)(3) of the
Act) as any of the following:
++ A newly enrolling Medicare
provider or supplier. (This includes
providers that must enroll as a new
provider in accordance with the change
in majority ownership provisions in
§ 424.550(b).)
++ A certified provider or certified
supplier undergoing a change of
ownership consistent with the
principles of 42 CFR 489.18. (This
includes providers that qualify under
§ 424.550(b)(2) for an exception from the
change in majority ownership
requirements in § 424.550(b)(1) but
which are undergoing a change of
ownership under 42 CFR 489.18).
++ A provider or supplier (including
an HHA or hospice) undergoing a 100
percent change of ownership via a
change of information request under
§ 424.516.
We are including these transactions
within our proposed definition because
they have historically and generally
involved the effective establishment of a
new provider or supplier for purposes of
Medicare enrollment. (To illustrate,
CMS typically treats suppliers such as
ambulance companies that are
undergoing 100 percent ownership
changes as new suppliers because of our
uncertainty about the new owner’s
compliance with enrollment
regulations, its billing behavior, etc.)
Including such situations within
proposed § 424.527(a) is therefore
necessary for CMS to exercise enhanced
oversight, when warranted, of such
entities. CMS would rely on the codified
version of this policy once it becomes
effective.
Second, we propose in § 424.527(b)
that the effective date of the PPEO’s
commencement is the date on which the
new provider or supplier submits its
first claim (rather than, for example, the
date the first service was performed or
the effective date of the ownership
change). There are two reasons for this
proposal. One is that § 424.527(b) would
align with our current practice as
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outlined in sub-regulatory guidance.
Also, we found during the previouslyreferenced HHA PPEO that certain
affected HHAs refrained from billing
after their placement in the PPEO to
circumvent the enhanced oversight
mechanism; then, once their PPEO
lapsed, the HHA engaged in improper
billing without the intended oversight.
We believe § 424.527(b) would help
stem this practice via the PPEO’s
commencement upon the provider’s or
supplier’s first claim submission. The
provider or supplier would be unable to
avoid the PPEO by delaying billing until
the PPEO’s expiration, as was the case
with the HHA PPEO.
Although we have elected to address
the issues in proposed § 424.527 via
rulemaking, we note that we retain the
authority under section 1866(j)(3)(B) of
the Act to establish and implement
PPEO procedures via sub-regulatory
guidance.
2. Retroactive Provider Agreement
Terminations
Under section 1866(a)(1) of the Act,
all Medicare providers (as that term is
defined in section 1866(e) of the Act)
must enter into a provider agreement
with the Secretary. Subparts A, B, and
E of 42 CFR part 489 contain regulations
concerning provider agreements. In
accordance with § 489.52, a provider
may voluntarily terminate its provider
agreement and thus depart the Medicare
program. In doing so, and under existing
sub-regulatory policy, the provider may
request a retroactive termination
effective date (for example, retroactive
to the date the provider’s facility
closed). To incorporate this practice into
regulation, we propose in new
§ 489.52(b)(4) that a provider may
request a retroactive termination date,
but only if no Medicare beneficiary
received services from the facility on or
after the requested termination date.
This latter caveat would financially
protect beneficiaries by helping to
ensure that Medicare may still cover the
services furnished to them near the end
of the provider’s operations.
3. Hospice-Specific Provisions
a. Categorical Risk Screening
(1) Background
Under the authority granted to us by
section 6401(a) of the Affordable Care
Act (which amended section 1866(j) to
the Act), § 424.518 outlines levels of
screening by which CMS and its MACs
review initial applications, revalidation
applications, applications to add a
practice location, and applications to
report any new owner. These screening
categories and requirements are based
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on a CMS assessment of the level of risk
of fraud, waste, and abuse posed by a
particular type of provider or supplier.
In general, the higher the level of risk a
certain provider or supplier type poses,
the greater the level of scrutiny with
which CMS will screen and review
providers or suppliers within that
category.
There are three levels of screening in
§ 424.518: high, moderate, and limited.
Irrespective of which level a provider or
supplier type falls within, the MAC
performs the following screening
functions upon receipt of an initial
enrollment application, a revalidation
application, an application to add a new
location, or an application to report a
new owner:
• Verifies that the provider or
supplier meets all applicable federal
regulations and state requirements for
their provider or supplier type.
• Conducts state license verifications.
• Conducts database checks on a preand post-enrollment basis to ensure that
providers and suppliers continue to
meet the enrollment criteria for their
provider or supplier type.
Providers and suppliers at the
moderate and high categorical risk
levels must also undergo a site visit.
Furthermore, for those at the high
screening level, the MAC performs two
additional functions under
§ 424.518(c)(2). First, the MAC requires
the submission of a set of fingerprints
for a national background check from all
individuals who have a 5 percent or
greater direct or indirect ownership
interest in the provider or supplier.
Second, it conducts a fingerprint-based
criminal history record check of the
Federal Bureau of Investigation’s
Integrated Automated Fingerprint
Identification System on these 5 percent
or greater owners. These additional
verification activities are meant to
correspond to the heightened risk
involved.
There currently are only five provider
and supplier types that fall within the
high categorical risk level under
§ 424.518(c)(1): newly/initially enrolling
OTPs that have not been fully and
continuously certified by SAMHSA
since October 23, 2018 (hereafter
collectively referenced as simply
‘‘OTPs’’ unless specified otherwise);
newly/initially enrolling HHAs; newly/
initially enrolling DMEPOS suppliers;
newly/initially enrolling Medicare
diabetes prevention program (MDPP)
suppliers; and newly/initially enrolling
skilled nursing facilities (SNFs). These
five provider and supplier types are also
subject to high-risk level screening if, as
previously indicated, they are
submitting a change of ownership
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application under 42 CFR 489.18 or
reporting any new owner (regardless of
ownership percentage) in accordance
with a change of information or other
enrollment transaction under Title 42.
They are subject to moderate level
screening (rather than high) if they are
revalidating their enrollment under
§ 424.518.
(2) Categorical Risk Designation—
Hospices
Hospices are currently in the
moderate-risk screening category under
§ 424.518. However, CMS in recent
years has become increasingly
concerned about program integrity
issues within the hospice community,
particularly (though not exclusively)
potential and actual criminal behavior,
fraud schemes, and improper billing.
There have been a number of criminal
and False Claims Act cases involving
hospice owners and overseers that have
arisen since our initial designation of
hospices as moderate risk in 2011.
These include, but are by no means
limited to, the following:
• In May 2014, a Pennsylvania
hospice owner was sentenced to 176
months in prison for organizing a
scheme to defraud Medicare via his
home hospice business. He had been
found guilty of conspiracy to commit
health care fraud, 21 counts of health
care fraud, 11 counts of money
laundering, and two counts of mail
fraud. The owner’s hospice had
submitted to Medicare approximately
$16.2 million in false claims for patients
who were ineligible for hospice services
and/or never received the level of
hospice services for which the hospice
billed. Other activities included the
owner and co-owner: (1) directing staff
to alter patient files and rewrite nursing
documentation to make patients appear
sicker than they actually were; and (2)
paying doctors and other health care
professionals for referring patients to the
hospice even when the patients were
neither eligible nor appropriate for
hospice care.191
• In 2020, the owner and the chief
executive officer (CEO) of a Texas-based
group of hospices and HHAs were
sentenced to 20 and 15 years in prison,
respectively. Both had falsely told
thousands of patients with long-term
incurable illnesses that they had under
6 months left to live so as to enroll them
in hospice programs for which they did
not qualify.192 The OIG Dallas Region’s
191 https://www.justice.gov/usao-edpa/pr/
hospice-owner-sentenced-more-14-years-healthcare-fraud-scheme.
192 https://www.justice.gov/opa/pr/ceo-sentenced150-million-health-care-fraud-and-moneylaundering-scheme; https://www.justice.gov/opa/
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special agent in charge stated that the
owner’s scheme, which involved over
$150 million in false and fraudulent
claims, included ‘‘paying kickbacks to
physicians and fraudulently enrolling
vulnerable beneficiaries in hospice care
that prevented them from accessing
curative care—all done to steal millions
of dollars from Medicare to fund lavish
personal spending.’’ 193
• A California hospice administrator
in February 2021 was sentenced to 30
months in prison for his part in a
multimillion-dollar Medicare fraud
scheme. The administrator and others
paid illegal kickbacks to patient
recruiters for referring beneficiaries to
the hospice. When hospice staff
informed the administrator that these
referred individuals did not qualify for
hospice care, the administrator
overruled them and caused the
beneficiaries to receive hospice
services.194
• In 2015, an Oklahoma hospice
owner was convicted of Medicare fraud
for submitting millions of dollars in
fraudulent claims to Medicare. This
included directing that certain medical
documents be changed or written in a
manner to: (1) give the appearance that
nurses had visited patients or conducted
assessments when they had not; and (2)
make it appear that patients were sicker
than they actually were.195
• A Georgia hospice owner in
December 2021 pled guilty to one felony
count of Medicaid fraud. State
investigators found that the owner
‘‘frequently took flights out of the
country on dates that the defendant
claimed she had personally provided
hospice care here in Georgia.’’ 196
• In August 2020, a New York
hospice agreed to pay the United States
$4,850,000 to resolve civil allegations
that it billed Medicare and Medicaid for
services furnished to hospice
beneficiaries at heightened levels of care
for which the patients did not
qualify.197
• A Florida hospice in July 2020
agreed to pay the United States $3.2
pr/owner-texas-chain-hospice-companiessentenced-150-million-health-care-fraud-andmoney.
193 https://www.justice.gov/opa/pr/owner-texaschain-hospice-companies-sentenced-150-millionhealth-care-fraud-and-money.
194 https://www.justice.gov/opa/pr/hospiceadministrator-sentenced-role-hospice-fraudscheme.
195 https://www.fbi.gov/news/stories/hospiceowner-falsified-numerous-claims.
196 https://law.georgia.gov/press-releases/202112-22/carr-medicaid-fraud-control-unit-securesguilty-plea-dekalb-county.
197 https://www.justice.gov/usao-edny/pr/newyork-hospice-provider-settles-civil-healthcare-fraudallegations.
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million to resolve allegations that it
knowingly submitted false claims to
Medicare, Medicaid, and TRICARE for
hospice care furnished to patients who
did not qualify for it. According to the
Department of Justice, the hospice
‘‘billed Medicare for four or more years
of hospice care for certain patients who
were not terminally ill for at least a
portion of their greater than four-year
hospice stay.’’ 198
• A multi-state hospice provider in
December 2021 agreed to pay $5.5
million to the federal government to
resolve allegations that it knowingly
violated the False Claims Act by
submitting claims to Medicare for
hospice services furnished to
beneficiaries who were not terminally
ill.199
• In December 2018, a Pennsylvania
hospice agreed to pay over $5.8 million
to the federal government to resolve
allegations that it violated the False
Claims Act by submitting Medicare
claims for hospice services that were
medically unnecessary or lacked
documentation.200
• Another Pennsylvania hospice and
its owner and CEO agreed in February
2018 to pay the United States $1.24
million to resolve allegations that the
hospice: (1) fraudulently billed
Medicare and Medicaid for hospice
services furnished to beneficiaries who
were not eligible for them; and (2)
falsified records to support the false
claims.201
• The founders of a Texas hospice
and related HHA in January 2021 paid
over $1.8 million following an
investigation into improper payments to
physicians for referrals.202
• A Florida-headquartered hospice in
December 2021 agreed to pay the federal
government over $5 million to resolve
allegations that it knowingly billed
Medicare and Medicaid for medically
unnecessary and undocumented
hospice services, including for at least
63 patients who had lengths of stays of
more than 3 years. According to the
government, for the 63 patients in
question, the hospice either knowingly
or recklessly did not document a
198 https://www.justice.gov/usao-mdfl/pr/hopehospice-agrees-pay-32-million-settle-false-claimsact-liability.
199 https://www.justice.gov/usao-wdtn/pr/
crossroads-hospice-agrees-pay-55-million-settlefalse-claims-act-liability.
200 https://www.justice.gov/usao-edpa/pr/
hospice-care-provider-pays-nearly-6-millionresolve-false-claims-act-allegations.
201 https://www.justice.gov/usao-wdpa/pr/
hospice-company-and-owner-agree-pay-124million-settle-two-false-claims-act.
202 https://www.justic.gov/usao-sdtx/pr/hospicehome-health-agency-and-owners-pay-over-18mresolve-claims-concerning-physician.
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legitimate reason for the initial
commencement of hospice care and/or
subsequent hospice coverage. The
government added that ‘‘(m)any patients
failed to demonstrate objective
indications of decline throughout their
time in the company’s care, despite
some being in hospice for nearly six
years. Some patients had their hospice
diagnoses changed after several years
when they did not show decline under
their original ‘terminal’ diagnosis.’’ 203
• A Minnesota-based hospice in July
2016 agreed to pay $18 million to
resolve False Claims Act allegations that
it billed Medicare for services for nonterminally ill patients. The federal
government alleged that the hospice
aimed to maximize the number of its
Medicare patients ‘‘without regard to
whether the patients were eligible for
and needed hospice. These business
practices allegedly included
discouraging doctors from
recommending that ineligible patients
be discharged from hospice.’’ 204
• In February 2015, a multi-state
hospice company agreed to pay $4
million to resolve allegations that it
knowingly submitted or caused to be
submitted false claims for hospice
beneficiaries who were not terminally
ill. The federal government contended
that the company ‘‘engaged in certain
business practices that contributed to
claims being submitted for patients who
did not have a terminal prognosis of six
months or less by. . . paying bonuses to
staff, including hospice marketers,
admission nurses and executive
directors, based on the number of
patients enrolled.’’ 205 The government
also alleged that the hospice ‘‘hired
medical directors based on their ability
to refer patients, focusing particularly
on medical directors with ties to nursing
homes, which were seen as an easy
source of patient referrals.’’ 206
• A Mississippi-based hospice chain
in September 2015 agreed to pay the
United States over $5.8 million to
resolve False Claims Act allegations that
it submitted false claims for continuous
home care hospice services to
beneficiaries who were not eligible to
receive them.207
203 https://www.justice.gov/usao-mdfl/pr/unitedstates-settles-false-claims-allegations-againsthaven-hospice-more-5-million.
204 https://www.justice.gov/opa/pr/minnesotabased-hospice-provider-pay-18-million-allegedfalse-claims-medicare-patients-who.
205 https://www.justice.gov/opa/pr/united-statessettles-false-claims-act-suit-against-good-shepherdhospice-inc-and-related.
206 Ibid.
207 https://www.justice.gov/usao-sdms/pr/
hospice-facility-and-its-managermajority-ownerpay-approximately-586-million-resolve.
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One recent and especially disturbing
case involved the sentencing in January
2022 of the CEO of a Texas hospice
agency to over 13 years in prison after
pleading guilty to conspiracy to commit
Medicare and Medicaid fraud. The CEO
admitted that he: (1) billed Medicare
and Medicaid for hospice services that
were not provided, not directed by a
medical professional, or provided to
patients who were ineligible for hospice
care; and (2) used blank, pre-signed
controlled substance prescriptions to
prescribe potent drugs even though the
CEO was not a medical professional.208
The CEO’s scheme involved other
individuals, thirteen of whom
(including physicians) also pled guilty
to crimes such as conspiracy to commit
health care fraud.209 The acting United
States Attorney for the case stated that
the CEO ‘‘scammed federal healthcare
programs out of millions of dollars, and
worse yet, denied vulnerable patients
the medical oversight they deserved,
writing pain prescriptions without
physician input and allowing terminally
ill patients to go unexamined.’’ 210 The
Federal Bureau of Investigation special
agent in charge added: ‘‘In addition to
causing fraudulent billing for tens of
millions of dollars, [the CEO] preyed
upon patients and families that did not
have a true understanding of [the
company] and hospice services. The
core of the company was rooted in
deception, and the lack of physician
oversight allowed [the defendant] to
make medical decisions for his own
financial benefit.’’ 211
The OIG, too, has noted the
prevalence of hospice fraud schemes,
issuing a July 2018 study titled
‘‘Vulnerabilities in the Medicare
Hospice Program Affect Quality Care
and Program Integrity’’ (OEI–02–16–
00570). According to this report,
Medicare in 2016 spent about $16.7
billion for hospice care for 1.4 million
beneficiaries, an increase from $9.2
billion for less than 1 million
beneficiaries in 2006; with this growth,
the OIG stated that ‘‘significant
vulnerabilities’’ have arisen, one of
which involves improper activity.212
The report noted that some such
schemes involved: (1) paying recruiters
to target beneficiaries who were
208 https://www.justice.gov/usao-ndtx/pr/novushospice-ceo-sentenced-13-years-healthcare-fraud.
209 https://www.justice.gov/usao-ndtx/pr/13novus-healthcare-fraud-defendants-sentencedcombined-84-years-prison#:∼:text=Bradley%20
Harris%2C%20Novus%20CEO%2C%20pleaded,Dr.
210 https://www.justice.gov/usao-ndtx/pr/novushospice-ceo-pleads-guilty-healthcare-fraud.
211 Ibid.
212 https://oig.hhs.gov/oei/reports/oei-02-1600570.pdf, p. 1.
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43785
ineligible for hospice services; and (2)
physicians falsely certifying
beneficiaries as terminally ill when they
were not. The OIG cited several of the
cases discussed in this section
VIII.B.3.a.(2) of this proposed rule as
examples of this behavior.213
Given all of the foregoing, we believe
that certain provider enrollment
measures are necessary to help address
these issues. One of these measures
involves closer screening of the owners
of hospices. We previously cited
criminal convictions of hospice owners
and overseers. Although not every case
of hospice fraud involves or can be
attributable to the hospice’s owner, we
believe the owner can set the tone for
the hospice’s operations as a whole. If,
accordingly, an owner has a criminal
background involving fraud or patient
abuse, this could lead to similar activity
within the hospice. We believe that the
increasing number of fraud cases
warrants a revisiting of our original
assignment of hospices to the moderate
risk category. With our obligation to
protect the Trust Funds and vulnerable
Medicare beneficiaries, we believe more
thorough scrutiny of hospice owners is
required.
To this end, we propose to revise
§ 424.518 to move initially enrolling
hospices and those submitting
applications to report any new owner
(as described in § 424.518’s opening
paragraph) into the ‘‘high’’ level of
categorical screening; revalidating
hospices would be subject to moderate
risk-level screening. Requiring all
hospice owners with 5 percent or
greater direct or indirect ownership to
submit fingerprints for a criminal
background check would help us detect
parties potentially posing a risk of fraud,
waste, or abuse before it begins. Indeed,
we have found our fingerprint-based
criminal background checks to be of
great assistance in detecting felonious
behavior by the owners of high-risk
providers and suppliers.
We note that there is precedent for
performing criminal background
reviews on hospice personnel. Under
the hospice conditions of participation
at 42 CFR 418.114(d): (1) the hospice
must obtain a criminal background
check on all hospice employees who
have direct patient contact or access to
patient records; and (2) hospice
contracts must require that all
contracted entities obtain criminal
background checks on contracted
employees who have direct patient
contact or access to patient records.
Considering that hospice owners
generally have oversight authority or
213 Ibid.
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responsibility for all the hospice’s
operations, we believe it is important
that the owner be subject to similar
scrutiny.
Initially enrolling hospices would be
incorporated within revised paragraph
(c)(1)(vi). The current language in
paragraph (c)(1)(vi) would be included
within new proposed paragraph
(c)(1)(vii), to which would be added
hospices disclosing a new owner.
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b. 36-Month Rule
The general purpose of a state survey
or accreditation review for any Medicare
provider or supplier type subject thereto
is to determine whether the provider or
supplier is in compliance with its
regulatorily prescribed conditions of
participation or conditions of coverage
(hereafter collectively referenced as
CoPs). CoPs are federal requirements
that a provider or supplier must meet to
participate in the Medicare program,
and they generally focus on health and
safety protections. Although they can
vary by provider and supplier type, they
address matters such as, but not limited
to, the following:
• Personnel qualifications
• Infection prevention and control
• Emergency preparedness
• Staffing ratios
• Patient safety
• Patients’ bill of rights
• Licensure
• Fire prevention
• Adherence to federal, state, and local
requirements
CoPs are critical to ensuring that
providers and suppliers are legitimate,
bona fide entities capable of furnishing
quality care and following safety
requirements.
Though it is a provider enrollment
provision, § 424.550(b)(1) recognizes the
importance of the HHA survey and
accreditation processes (hereafter
sometimes collectively referenced as the
‘‘survey process’’), which help confirm
the HHA’s compliance with the CoPs
and the quality and safety requirements
they entail. Section 424.550(b)(1) states
if an HHA undergoes a change in
majority ownership (occasionally
referenced as a ‘‘CIMO’’) by sale within
36 months after the effective date of the
HHA’s initial enrollment in Medicare or
within 36 months after the HHA’s most
recent CIMO, the provider agreement
and Medicare billing privileges do not
convey to the HHA’s new owner. The
prospective provider/owner of the HHA
must instead: (1) enroll in Medicare as
a new (initial) HHA; and (2) obtain a
state survey or an accreditation from an
approved accreditation organization. As
defined in 42 CFR 424.502, a ‘‘change in
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majority ownership’’ occurs when an
individual or organization acquires
more than a 50 percent direct ownership
interest in an HHA during the 36
months following the HHA’s initial
enrollment or most recent CIMO; this
includes an acquisition of majority
ownership through the cumulative
effect of asset sales, stock transfers,
consolidations, or mergers. Under
§ 424.550(b)(1), a 42 CFR 489.18-level
change of ownership and/or 100 percent
ownership transfer is not necessary to
trigger this ‘‘36-month rule.’’ Only
crossing the 50 percent ownership
threshold is required.
Section 424.550(b)(1) was
promulgated in 2009 and modified in
2010. There were two principal
objectives behind its establishment.
First, there was a trend in the HHA
community whereby an HHA applied
for Medicare certification, underwent a
survey, and became enrolled in
Medicare, but then immediately sold the
HHA without having seen a Medicare
beneficiary or hired an employee. These
brokers, in other words, enrolled in
Medicare exclusively to sell the HHA
rather than to provide services to
beneficiaries. This practice enabled a
purchaser of an HHA from the broker to
enter Medicare with no survey, which,
in turn, sometimes led that owner to
soon sell the business to another party.
The ‘‘flipping’’ or ‘‘turn-key’’
mechanism, in short, was used to
circumvent the survey process.
Second, we were more broadly
concerned about the lack of scrutiny of
new owners as a whole, not merely in
cases of flipping. We made clear in the
CY 2010 HH PPS final rule (74 FR
58078), in which we promulgated
§ 424.550(b)(1), that the intent of
§ 424.550(b)(1) goes beyond the issue of
’’turn-key’’ operations.214 We explained
that if an HHA undergoes a change of
ownership, CMS—at the current time—
generally does not perform a survey
pursuant thereto. Consequently, CMS
has no sure way of knowing whether the
HHA, under its new ownership and
management, is in compliance with the
HHA CoPs. Unless CMS can make this
determination, there is a risk that the
newly-purchased HHA, without having
been appropriately vetted, will bill for
services when it is out of compliance
with the CoPs.215 We added that in light
of a GAO report we cited in the CY 2010
HH PPS proposed rule that outlined
problematic activities involving HHAs,
we believed it was imperative that we
ensure that a newly-purchased HHA be
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214 74
FR 58118.
215 Ibid.
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subjected to an appropriate level of
review.216
We previously outlined in this section
VIII.B.3.a.(2). of this proposed rule our
growing concerns about improper
behavior within the hospice
community. Yet, we are equally
concerned about the quality of care
furnished in some of these facilities.
Indeed, we have seen an increase in the
number of hospice changes of
ownership (including the types of
CIMOs described in 42 CFR
424.550(b)(1)) in recent years, and a
number of these ownership changes
have occurred within the applicable 36month timeframe. In fact, some such
changes have taken place within only a
few months after enrollment or the
previous CIMO, akin to what we saw
with the ‘‘flipping’’ practice outlined in
the CY 2010 HH PPS proposed and final
rules; specifically, we have received
reports that hospices are being sold
quickly after enrollment or purchase so
that the new owner can avoid any
survey. This is because, as had been our
concern with HHAs, hospice ownership
changes generally do not result in a state
survey or accreditation review.
Aside from the July 2018 OIG report
referenced earlier, which, as noted by its
title, stated that vulnerabilities in the
Medicare hospice program impact
quality care, the Government
Accountability Office (GAO) in October
2019 issued a report titled, ‘‘Medicare
Hospice Care: Opportunities Exist to
Strengthen CMS Oversight of Hospice
Providers’’ (GAO–20–10).217 The GAO
observed therein that the number of: (1)
Medicare hospice beneficiaries had
almost tripled from 2000 to nearly 1.5
million by 2017; and (2) Medicare
hospice providers had doubled.218 The
GAO stated that in light of this growth:
‘‘It is imperative that CMS’s oversight of
the quality of Medicare hospice care
keeps pace with changes so that the
agency can ensure the health and safety
of these terminally ill beneficiaries.’’ 219
In sum, hundreds of hospice
ownership changes have occurred since
2018 for which CMS may not know
whether the facility under its new
ownership and leadership is compliant
with the hospice CoPs. This is a
significant vulnerability. Many millions
of dollars could be improperly paid to
newly purchased hospices that are not
adhering to Medicare requirements.
More crucially, it is unknown whether
216 74 FR 58118–58119; ‘‘Improvements Needed
to Address Improper Payments in Home Health’’
(GAO–09–185).
217 https://www.gao.gov/assets/gao-20-10.pdf.
218 Ibid., p. 25.
219 Ibid.
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newly purchased hospices are
furnishing quality care to the facility’s
beneficiaries, which, if they are not, can
put patients’ lives in danger; we
previously saw in this section
VIII.B.3.a.(2). of this proposed rule the
great risks associated with uncommitted
ownership. We believe that a
comprehensive survey would be the
most effective means of confirming that
newly purchased hospices are meeting
the CoPs and are positioned to provide
quality care and protect beneficiaries.
Consequently, we are proposing to
expand the scope of § 424.550(b)(1) to
include hospice CIMOs within its
purview. (The aforementioned
definition of ‘‘change in majority
ownership’’ in § 424.502 would also be
expanded to incorporate hospices
therein.) We believe that our previously
detailed concerns about hospices, such
as fraud schemes, patient abuse, and
improper billing, require the level of
scrutiny that a survey can furnish.
Although surveys cannot by themselves
entirely halt all of these issues, we are
confident that a survey’s thoroughness
can greatly assist the vetting of the new
owner to help ensure the latter’s
commitment to quality care.
We note that § 424.550(b)(2) contains
several exceptions to the 36-month rule.
Specifically, even if an HHA undergoes
a CIMO, the requirement in
§ 424.550(b)(1) that the HHA enroll as a
new HHA and undergo a survey or
accreditation does not apply if any of
the following four exceptions are
implicated:
• The HHA submitted 2 consecutive
years of full cost reports since initial
enrollment or the last CIMO, whichever
is later.
• An HHA’s parent company is
undergoing an internal corporate
restructuring, such as a merger or
consolidation.
• The owners of an existing HHA are
changing the HHA’s existing business
structure (for example, from a
corporation to a partnership (general or
limited)), and the owners remain the
same.
• An individual owner of an HHA
dies.
These exceptions were added to
§ 424.550(b) in a final rule published in
the Federal Register on November 17,
2010 titled, ‘‘Medicare Program; Home
Health Prospective Payment System
Rate Update for Calendar Year 2011;
Changes in Certification Requirements
for Home Health Agencies and
Hospices’’ (75 FR 70372). We
promulgated them because the HHA
community had expressed concerns that
the 36-month rule could inhibit bona
fide HHA ownership transactions; for
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example, prospective new owners may
not wish to have to enroll as a new HHA
and will therefore decline to purchase
the entity. We believed that our
exceptions struck a solid balance
between the need for more scrutiny of
new owners via the survey process
while not inadvertently obstructing
legitimate transactions involving
legitimate parties. As an illustration, a
CIMO resulting from an internal
restructuring can frequently pose less of
a risk of ‘‘flipping’’ than an HHA that—
2 months after initial enrollment—is
sold to another party strictly to
circumvent the survey process. These
exceptions, in our view, still soundly
balance the two aforementioned
considerations, and we therefore are not
proposing to exempt hospices from
them.
c. Additional Hospice Ownership
Matters
CMS is taking additional provider
enrollment steps to address (either
wholly or in part) hospice ownership
and program integrity. To illustrate, we
proposed in a December 15, 2022
Paperwork Reduction Act submission
(87 FR 76626) to revise the Form CMS–
855A Medicare provider enrollment
application (Medicare Enrollment
Application—Institutional Providers;
OMB Control No. 0938–0685) to collect
from providers/suppliers (including
hospices) that complete this form
important data such as, but not limited
to:
• Requiring the provider/supplier/
hospice to specifically identify via a
checkbox whether a reported
organizational owner is itself owned by
another organization or individual.
• Requiring the provider/supplier/
hospice to explicitly identify whether a
listed organizational owner/manager
does or does not fall within the
categories of entities listed on the
application (for example, holding
company, investment firm, etc.), with
‘‘private-equity company’’ and ‘‘real
estate investment trust’’ being added to
this list of organization types.
This information will assist CMS in
better understanding the provider/
supplier/hospice’s indirect ownership
relationships and the types of entities
that own it.
In addition, in a proposed rule
published in the Federal Register on
April 4, 2023 titled ‘‘Medicare Program;
FY 2024 Hospice Wage Index and
Payment Rate Update, Hospice
Conditions of Participation Updates,
Hospice Quality Reporting Program
Requirements, and Hospice Certifying
Physician Provider Enrollment
Requirements’’ (88 FR 20022), we
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proposed to require physicians who
order or certify hospice services for
Medicare beneficiaries to be enrolled in
or validly opted-out of Medicare as a
prerequisite for the payment of the
hospice service in question. We stated
therein our belief that the careful
screening the enrollment process entails
would help us determine whether the
physician meets all federal and state
requirements (such as licensure) or
presents any program integrity risks (for
example, final adverse actions).
Our aforementioned hospice high-risk
screening and 36-month rule proposals
represent further steps towards
addressing hospice ownership and
payment safeguard issues, and we are
considering additional measures
regarding these topics.
4. Deactivation for 12-Months of NonBilling
Regulatory policies regarding the
provider enrollment concept of
deactivation are addressed in § 424.540.
Deactivation means that the provider’s
or supplier’s billing privileges are
stopped but can be restored (or
‘‘reactivated’’) upon the submission of
information required under § 424.540. A
deactivated provider or supplier is not
revoked from Medicare and remains
enrolled. Also, per § 424.540(c),
deactivation does not impact the
provider’s or supplier’s existing
provider or supplier agreement; the
deactivated provider or supplier may
also file a rebuttal to the action in
accordance with § 424.546. Nonetheless,
the provider’s or supplier’s ability to bill
Medicare is halted pending its
compliance with § 424.540’s
requirements for reactivation.
To reactivate its billing privileges, the
affected provider or supplier per
§ 424.540(b) must recertify that its
current enrollment information on file
with Medicare is correct, furnish any
missing information as appropriate, and
be in compliance with all applicable
enrollment requirements in Title 42.
CMS reserves the right, though, to
require the submission of a complete
Form CMS–855 application prior to any
reactivation. The reactivation process is
designed to confirm that the deactivated
provider or supplier is adherent to all
applicable Title 42 provider enrollment
provisions.
There are currently eight reasons
under § 424.540(a) for which CMS can
deactivate a provider or supplier, one of
which is that the provider or supplier
has not submitted any Medicare claims
for 12 consecutive months. (The 12month period begins the first day of the
first month without a claims submission
through the last day of the 12th month
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without a submitted claim.) This
particular deactivation ground was
established via a final rule published in
the Federal Register on April 21, 2006
titled ‘‘Medicare Program; Requirements
for Providers and Suppliers to Establish
and Maintain Medicare Enrollment’’ (71
FR 20754). In the April 25, 2003
proposed rule associated with this final
rule, we proposed to have the authority
to deactivate a provider or supplier after
6 months of Medicare non-billing.220
Although, at the time per subregulatory
guidance, our policy was to permit
deactivation after 12 months, we
proposed 6 months due to several
program integrity issues related to
inactive billing numbers. We outlined in
that proposed rule our desire to prevent,
for instance: (1) questionable businesses
from deliberately obtaining multiple
numbers so they could keep one ‘in
reserve’ [for future use] if their active
billing number is subject to a payment
suspension; and (2) fraudulent entities
from obtaining information about
discontinued providers or suppliers and
then, for example, using the Medicare
billing number of a deceased
physician.221
Based on feedback from commenters,
we did not finalize our proposed
reduction to 6 months in the April 21,
2006 final rule. Yet we remained
concerned about situations where a
provider or supplier does not bill for 6
months, as this could indicate, for
instance, that the provider or supplier is
no longer operational and that its billing
number thus could be accessed by
another party intent on improper
billing. More importantly, we have
recently detected fraud schemes
involving extended periods of nonbilling. A common situation involves a
provider that: (1) establishes multiple
enrollments with multiple billing
numbers; (2) abusively or
inappropriately bills under one billing
number; (3) receives an overpayment
demand letter or becomes the subject of
investigation; (4) voluntary terminates
the billing number in question; and then
(5) begins to bill via another of its
billing numbers that is dormant (for
example, 6 consecutive months without
billing) but nonetheless active, repeating
the same improper conduct as before.
The problem in this case is that we
cannot deactivate the dormant billing
number (hence rendering it unusable
and inaccessible pending a reactivation)
under § 424.540(a)(1) because the
220 Medicare Program; Requirements for
Establishing and Maintaining Medicare Billing
Privileges (68 FR 22064).
221 Ibid. (68 FR 22072).
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applicable 12-month period has not yet
expired.
This type of ‘‘whack-a-mole’’ activity
is similar to that which we cited
previously in the April 25, 2003
proposed rule as justification for the
proposed 6-month deactivation
threshold therein. The difference,
though, is that these fraud schemes have
become increasingly prevalent in recent
years such that we must revisit the
current 12-month timeframe in
§ 424.540(a)(1). We do not believe we
can or should wait for a year to elapse
before taking deactivation action against
these providers and suppliers. To
protect the Trust Funds against
improper payments, we must be able to
move more promptly to deactivate these
‘‘spare’’ billing numbers so the latter
cannot be inappropriately used or
accessed.
However, we emphasize that our
concerns are not limited to the
aforementioned scenarios regarding
fraudulent activity. A lack of billing for
an extended period can, as previously
discussed, indicate that the provider or
supplier has ceased operations without
notifying CMS. Deactivating the number
enables CMS to not only prevent it from
being accessed by other parties but also
confirm via the deactivation process
whether the provider or supplier is in
fact operational—specifically, whether
the provider or supplier responds with
a reactivation application. In other
words, action under § 424.540(a)(1)
helps protect the Medicare program by
deactivating the number while verifying
whether the provider or supplier
remains in existence; if it does, and it
subsequently submits a reactivation
application, CMS can validate the data
thereon to ensure the provider’s or
supplier’s continued credentials and
compliance with Medicare
requirements. This protective process,
we believe, should be available to us
upon the expiration of a 6-month nonbilling period, for our earlier-referenced
concerns exist whenever any extensive
timeframe of non-billing occurs. The
sooner we can address these non-billing
cases, the better we can protect the
Trust Funds. For these reasons, we
propose to revise § 424.540(a)(1) to
change the 12-month time therein to 6
months.
We certainly recognize that there are
lengthy periods of non-billing that do
not involve any improper activity. To
illustrate, we know that some providers
are required to be enrolled in Medicare
in order to enroll in another health care
program; as the provider does not
intend to bill Medicare but only the
other program, an extended period of
Medicare non-billing can result. While
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CMS retains the discretion, as it always
has, to deactivate a provider or supplier
if the contingency in § 424.540(a)(1) is
triggered, providers and suppliers that
are not typically deactivated for 12
months of non-billing should not
assume they would be more likely to be
so deactivated under our proposed
change to 6 months.
5. Definition of ‘‘Managing Employee’’
Consistent with sections 1124 and
1124A of the Act, providers and
suppliers are required to report their
managing employees via the applicable
Medicare enrollment application in
order to enroll in Medicare. We
currently define a ‘‘managing
employee’’ in § 424.502 as a ‘‘general
manager, business manager,
administrator, director, or other
individual that exercises operational or
managerial control over, or who directly
or indirectly conducts, the day-to-day
operation of the provider or supplier
(either under contract or through some
other arrangement), whether or not the
individual is a W–2 employee of the
provider or supplier.’’ In a proposed
rule published in the Federal Register
on February 15, 2023 titled ‘‘Medicare
and Medicaid Programs; Disclosures of
Ownership and Additional Disclosable
Parties Information for Skilled Nursing
Facilities and Nursing Facilities’’ (88 FR
9820), we proposed to revise this
definition under our proposed
implementation via that rule of section
1124(c) of the Act. We specifically
proposed that, for purposes of 42 CFR
424.516(g) and with respect to a SNF, a
managing employee also includes a
general manager, business manager,
administrator, director, or consultant,
who directly or indirectly manages,
advises, or supervises any element of
the practices, finances, or operations of
the facility. As proposed, this SNFexclusive definition would be in a new
paragraph (2) of the managing employee
definition in § 424.502; the existing
version of the definition would be
included within new paragraph (1).
We are proposing to further revise this
definition in the present proposed rule.
We have received questions from the
hospice and SNF communities
regarding whether hospice and SNF
facility administrators and medical
directors must be disclosed as managing
employees on the enrollment
application. It has been our experience
in overseeing the Medicare provider
enrollment process that such
individuals indeed exercise managing
control over the hospice or SNF, and we
have long required that they be reported
as managing employees.
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Accordingly, we propose to further
revise the managing employee
definition in § 424.502 by adding the
following language immediately after
(and in the same paragraph as) the
current definition: For purposes of this
definition, this includes, but is not
limited to, a hospice or skilled nursing
facility administrator and a hospice or
skilled nursing facility medical director.
This change would be reflected in the
first paragraph of the revised definition
of this term as proposed in the February
15, 2023 proposed rule. That is, the
revision described in this section
VIII.(B)(5) would be added to the end of
new paragraph (1) as the latter was
proposed in the February 15, 2023
proposed rule.
We stress that this clarification
regarding hospice and SNF facility
administrators and medical directors
should in no manner be construed as
CMS’ establishment of a minimum
threshold for reporting managing
employees of hospices, SNFs, or any
other provider or supplier type. Put
otherwise, simply because an individual
has less managing control within a
particular organization than a facility
administrator or medical director does
not mean that the person need not be
disclosed. Any individual who meets
the definition of managing employee in
§ 424.502 must be reported irrespective
of the precise amount of managing
control the person has. The exclusive
purpose of our proposed elucidation is
to address specific questions raised by
hospices and SNFs concerning whether
the individuals at issue must be
reported. It is not meant to change
existing reporting requirements
regarding managing employees and who
must be disclosed as such.
6. Previously Waived Fingerprinting of
High-Risk Providers and Suppliers
During the recent COVID–19 public
health emergency (PHE), CMS
temporarily waived the requirement for
fingerprint-based criminal background
checks (FBCBCs) for 5 percent or greater
owners of newly enrolling providers
and suppliers falling within the highrisk screening category in § 424.518(c).
The principal purpose was to facilitate
beneficiary access to services by
potentially increasing the number of
health care providers and suppliers.
Given the scope of the emergency, we
believed this had to take priority. To
reduce the program integrity risks of
this waiver, we continuously monitored
criminal alerts produced via our
internal screening mechanism.
Nevertheless, we remained concerned
during the waiver period about the lack
of FBCBCs being performed. Although
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the criminal alerts were useful, we have
found FBCBCs to be the best and surest
means of detecting felonious behavior
by the owners of high-risk providers and
suppliers.
With this in mind, we wish to
perform FBCBCs for high-risk providers
and suppliers that initially enrolled
during the PHE upon their revalidation
once the PHE ends. Yet this is not
possible under our existing regulations
because the revalidation applications
would only be screened at the moderaterisk level. To remedy this, we propose
to add new § 424.518(c)(1)(viii) that
would incorporate within the highscreening category revalidating
DMEPOS suppliers, HHAs, OTPs,
MDPPs, and SNFs for which CMS
waived the FBCBC requirement when
they initially enrolled in Medicare.
However, given the potential for future
emergencies for which CMS might
waive FBCBCs under applicable legal
authority (such as that for the PHE), we
more specifically propose in new
§ 424.518(c)(1)(viii) that this high-risk
category (which would include hospices
with respect to future waivers) would
apply to situations where CMS waived
FBCBCs, in accordance with applicable
legal authority, due to a national, state,
or local emergency declared under
existing law. We emphasize that our
proposal does not obligate CMS to
waive the FBCBC requirement in any
such emergency. Any decision to do so
rests with CMS, and such waivers
would, if they occur at all in the future,
would be reserved for the most
exceptional of circumstances.
Along with adding new
§ 424.518(c)(1)(viii), we propose to
delete current § 424.518(b)(1)(iv), (ix),
(x), (xi), (xiii), and (xiv), which
individually identify the six previously
discussed provider and supplier types
(including hospices) as moderate-risk if
they are revalidating their enrollment.
We would redesignate existing
paragraphs (b)(1)(v) through (b)(1)(viii)
as revised paragraphs (b)(1)(iv) through
(b)(1)(vii). We would also redesignate
existing paragraph (b)(1)(xii) as revised
(b)(1)(viii), with the former paragraph
being deleted. Revised paragraph
(b)(1)(viii) would include both
prospective and revalidating OTPs that
have been fully and continuously
certified by SAMHSA since October 23,
2018. Furthermore, we would establish
a revised paragraph (b)(1)(ix) that would
include within the moderate-risk
category revalidating DMEPOS
suppliers, HHAs, OTPs, MDPPs, SNFs,
and hospices that underwent FBCBCs:
(1) when they initially enrolled in
Medicare; or (2) upon revalidation after
CMS waived the FBCBC requirement
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(under the circumstances described in
paragraph (c)(1)(viii)) when the provider
or supplier initially enrolled in
Medicare. This second provision is to
clarify that the providers and suppliers
referenced in paragraph (c)(1)(viii) do
not remain in the high-screening
category in perpetuity solely because
they were not fingerprinted upon initial
enrollment. Once the provider or
supplier is fingerprinted upon
revalidation, it would move to the
moderate-risk category unless another
basis exists under paragraph (c) for
retaining it within the high-risk
category.
As indicated previously, DMEPOS
suppliers are required to revalidate their
Medicare enrollment every 3 years;
HHAs, OTPs, MDPPs, SNFs, and
hospices must do so every 5 years. We
note, though, that CMS under
§ 424.515(d) can perform off-cycle
revalidations; that is, we can revalidate
a provider or supplier at any time and
need not wait until the arrival of their
5-year (or, for DMEPOS suppliers, 3year) revalidation cycle. Should this
proposed rule be finalized, CMS would
accordingly reserve the right to conduct
off-cycle revalidations of the previously
discussed FBCBC-waived high-risk
providers and suppliers.
7. Expansion of Reapplication Bar
Section 424.530(f) permits CMS to
prohibit a prospective provider or
supplier from enrolling in Medicare for
up to 3 years if its enrollment
application is denied because the
provider or supplier submitted false or
misleading information on or with (or
omitted information from) its
application in order to enroll. The
purpose of § 424.530(f) is to prevent
dishonest providers and suppliers from
submitting false information on their
initial application and, after being
denied enrollment on this ground under
§ 424.530(a)(4), simply submitting a new
application with correct data.
The existing maximum length of a
reapplication bar under § 424.530(f) is 3
years. We propose to expand this to 10
years to account for provider or supplier
conduct of particular severity. We must
be able to prevent such problematic
parties from repeatedly submitting
applications over many years with the
goal of somehow getting into the
program. We note that there is
precedent for this 10-year period.
Section 424.530(a)(3)(ii) states that a
denial based on a felony conviction is
for a period not less than 10 years from
the date of conviction if the individual
has been convicted on one previous
occasion of one or more offenses. Too,
reenrollment bars under
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§ 424.535(c)(1)(i) are for a maximum 10year timeframe. Although reenrollment
bars are different from reapplication
bars in terms of how and when they are
applied, the aim of both is to protect
Medicare and its beneficiaries. We
believe it is largely immaterial from a
program integrity standpoint whether a
denial or revocation and subsequent bar
stemming from the submission of false
or misleading data involved a
prospective or an enrolled provider, for
the underlying conduct in either case is
the same.
8. Ordering, Referring, Certifying, and
Prescribing Restrictions
We discussed previously: (1) the need
to increase the maximum reapplication
bar to keep dishonest providers and
suppliers out of Medicare for longer
than 3 years; and (2) our concerns about
felonious provider and supplier activity.
We believe such provider and supplier
behavior should result in restrictions
regarding the ordering, referring,
certifying, or prescribing of Medicare
services, items, and drugs, too. Indeed,
such ordering, referring, certifying, or
prescribing can involve improper
conduct that is as harmful to Medicare
beneficiaries as the actual furnishing of
services; this includes, for example, the
over-prescribing of opioids and the
unnecessary ordering of potentially
dangerous tests. Consequently, and
using our general rulemaking authority
under sections 1102 and 1871 of the
Act, we propose the following two
provisions.
First, we propose to add a new
paragraph (3) to § 424.530(f) stating that
a provider or supplier that is currently
subject to a reapplication bar under
paragraph (f) may not order, refer,
certify, or prescribe Medicare-covered
services, items, or drugs. To enforce this
policy, we would further state in
proposed § 424.530(f)(3) that Medicare
does not pay for any otherwise covered
service, item, or drug that is ordered,
referred, certified, or prescribed by a
provider or supplier that is currently
under a reapplication bar.
Second, we propose in paragraph (a)
of new § 424.542 that a physician or
other eligible professional (regardless of
whether he or she is or was enrolled in
Medicare) who has had a felony
conviction within the previous 10 years
that CMS determines is detrimental to
the best interests of the Medicare
program and its beneficiaries may not
order, refer, certify, or prescribe
Medicare-covered services, items, or
drugs. Akin to proposed § 424.530(f)(3),
we would state in § 424.542(b) that
Medicare does not pay for any otherwise
covered service, item, or drug that is
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ordered, referred, certified, or
prescribed by a physician or other
eligible professional (as that term is
defined in section 1848(k)(3)(B) of the
Act) who has had a felony conviction
within the previous 10 years that CMS
determines is detrimental to the best
interests of the Medicare program and
its beneficiaries.
These provisions would apply
regardless of whether the provider or
supplier has opted-out of Medicare.
This is because the conduct associated
with a reapplication bar and a felony
conviction presents a risk irrespective of
the provider’s or supplier’s opt-out
status.
IX. Collection of Information
Requirements
A. Statutory Requirement for
Solicitation of Comments
Under the Paperwork Reduction Act
of 1995, we are required to provide a 60day notice in the Federal Register and
solicit public comment before a
collection of information requirement is
submitted to the Office of Management
and Budget (OMB) for review and
approval. In order to fairly evaluate
whether an information collection
should be approved by OMB, section
3506(c)(2)(A) of the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995 requires that we
solicit comment on the following issues:
• The need for the information
collection and its usefulness in carrying
out the proper functions of our agency.
• The accuracy of our estimate of the
information collection burden.
• The quality, utility, and clarity of
the information to be collected.
• Recommendations to minimize the
information collection burden on the
affected public, including automated
collection techniques.
B. Information Collection Requirements
(ICRs)
In the CY 2023 HH PPS rule, we
solicited public comment on each of
these issues for the following sections of
this document that contain information
collection requirements (ICRs).
1. ICRs for HH QRP
As discussed in section III. of this
proposed rule, we propose that HHAs
would collect data on one new quality
measure, the Discharge Function Score
(DC Function) measure, beginning with
assessments completed on January 1,
2024. However, the DC Function
measure utilizes data items that HHAs
already report to CMS for quality
reporting purposes, and therefore, the
burden is accounted for in the PRA
package approved under OMB control
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number 0938–1279 (expiration
November 30, 2025).
As discussed in section III.C.2. of this
proposed rule, we propose to remove a
measure from the HH QRP, the
Application of Percent of Long-Term
Care Hospital Patients with an
Admission and Discharge Functional
Assessment and a Care Plan That
Addresses Function (Application of
Functional Assessment/Care Plan)
measure, beginning with admission
assessments completed on January 1,
2025. We have also proposed to remove
OASIS items for Self-Care Discharge
Goals (that is, GG0130, Column 2) and
Mobility Discharge Goals (that is,
GG0170, Column 2) at the start of care
and resumption of care timepoints with
the next release of the OASIS in 2025.
This amounts to a net reduction in 2
data elements. We assume that each
data element requires 0.3 minutes of
clinician time to complete. Therefore,
we estimate that there would be a
reduction in clinician burden per
OASIS assessment of 0.3 minutes at
start of care and 0.3 minutes at
resumption of care.
As stated in section III.C.3. of this
proposed rule, we propose to adopt the
COVID–19 Vaccine: Percent of Patients/
Residents Who Are Up to Date (Patient/
Resident COVID–19 Vaccine) measure
beginning with the CY 2025 HH QRP.
This proposed assessment-based quality
measure would be collected using the
OASIS. The OASIS–E is currently
approved under OMB control number
0938–1279 (CMS–10387). One data
element would need to be added to the
OASIS at the transfer of care, death at
home, and discharge time points in
order to allow for the collection of the
Patient/Resident COVID–19 Vaccine
measure. We assume this would result
in an increase 0.3 minutes of clinician
staff time at the transfer of care, death
at home, and discharge time points
starting with the CY 2025 HH QRP.
As stated in section III.E.3. of this
proposed rule, we propose to remove
the M0110—Episode Timing and
M2220- Therapy Needs OASIS items,
effective January 1, 2025. These items
are no longer used by the HH QRP, nor
are they intended for use by CMS
payment, survey or the expanded
HHVBP model. The removal of these
two items would result in the removal
of two data elements at start of care, two
at resumption of care, and one data
element at follow-up for a total
reduction of five data elements.
The net effect of the proposals
outlined in this proposed rule is a
reduction in four data elements
collected across all time points for the
OASIS implemented on January 1, 2025.
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(approximately 0.7 percent of the time).
Based on this analysis, we estimated a
weighted clinician average hourly wage
of $87.52, inclusive of fringe benefits,
using the hourly wage data in Table G1.
Individual providers determine the
staffing resources necessary.
For purposes of calculating the costs
associated with the information
collection requirements, we obtained
mean hourly wages for these from the
U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics’ May
2022 National Occupational
Employment and Wage Estimates
(https://www.bls.gov/oes/current/oes_
nat.htm). To account for other indirect
costs such as overhead and fringe
benefits (100 percent), we have doubled
the hourly wage. These amounts are
detailed in Table G2.
For purposes of estimating burden, we
utilize item-level burden estimates for
OASIS–E that will be released on
January 1, 2025 compared to the
OASIS–E as currently implemented as
of January 1, 2023. Table G3 shows the
total number of OASIS assessments that
HHAs actually completed in CY 2021,
as well as how those numbers would
have decreased if non-Medicare and
non-Medicaid OASIS assessments had
been required at that time.
Table G4 summarizes the estimated
clinician hourly burden for the current
OASIS and the OASIS in 2025 with the
net removal of four data elements for
each OASIS assessment type using CY
2021 assessment totals. We estimate a
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The OASIS is completed by RNs or
PTs, or very occasionally by
occupational therapists (OT) or speech
language pathologists (SLP/ST). Data
from 2021 show that the SOC/ROC
OASIS is completed by RNs
(approximately 77.14 percent of the
time), PTs (approximately 22.16 percent
of the time), and other therapists,
including OTs and SLP/STs
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Table G1 outlines the net change in data
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net reduction of 58,540.1 hours of
clinician burden across all HHAs or 5
hours for each of the 11,700 active
HHAs.
Table G5 summarizes the estimated
clinician costs for the current OASIS
and the OASIS in 2025 with the net
removal of four data elements for each
OASIS assessment type using CY 2021
assessment totals. We estimate a
reduction in costs of $5,123,429.55
related to the implementation of the
proposals outlined in this proposed rule
across all HHAs or a $437 reduction for
each of the 11,700 active HHAs. This
reduction in burden would begin with
January 1, 2025 HHA discharges.
2. ICRs for HHVBP
4. ICRs for DMEPOS Refills
The proposals for the expanded
HHVBP Model included in this
proposed rule do not result in an
increase in costs to HHAs. Section
1115A(d)(3) of the Act exempts
Innovation Center model tests and
expansions, which include the
expanded HHVBP Model, from the
provisions of the PRA. Specifically, this
section provides that the provisions of
the PRA do not apply to the testing and
evaluation of Innovation Center models
or to the expansion of such models.
In section VII.E. of this proposed rule,
we are proposing to codify our refill
policy, with some changes. The policy
originally arose in response to concerns
related to auto-shipments and delivery
of DMEPOS products that may no longer
be needed or not needed at the same
level of frequency/volume. The policy
has been historically maintained in the
Medicare Program Integrity Manual,
sporadically mentioned in certain Local
Coverage Determinations (LCDs), and
detailed in articles. We propose to
require documentation indicating that
the beneficiary confirmed the need for
the refill within the 30-day period prior
to the end of the current supply. We
propose to codify our requirement that
delivery of DMEPOS items (that is, date
of service) must be no sooner than 10
calendar days before the expected end
of the current supply.
5. ICRs for Provider Enrollment
Provisions
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We are proposing to revise § 424.518
to: (1) move initially enrolling hospices
(and those undergoing an ownership
change as described in § 424.518) into
the high-risk screening category; and (2)
include within the high-risk screening
category revalidating DMEPOS
suppliers, HHAs, OTPs, MDPPs, and
SNFs for whom CMS legally waived the
fingerprint-based criminal background
check requirement in § 424.518 when
they initially enrolled in Medicare.
These changes would result in an
increase in the annual number of
providers and suppliers that must
submit the fingerprints for a national
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In accordance with 5 CFR 1320.4(a)(2)
and (c), the following information
collection activities are exempt from the
requirements of the Paperwork
Reduction Act since they are associated
with administrative actions: (1)
proposed § 488.1130 Hospice IDR; and
(2) proposed § 488.1135 Hospice SFP.
a. High-Risk Screening and
Fingerprinting
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3. ICRs for Hospice Information Dispute
Resolution (IDR) and Hospice Special
Focus Program (SFP)
Except as explained in this section IX.
of this proposed rule, we do not
anticipate that any of our proposed
provider enrollment provisions would
implicate an ICR burden.
Based on internal CMS data, we
estimate that each year approximately
50 hospices would be required to
initially enroll in Medicare due to a
change in majority ownership as
opposed to simply reporting the sale via
a change of information. This would
result in an additional Form CMS–855A
hour burden of 150 hours (50 × 3 hours),
with the 3-hour figure reflecting the
difference between initial applications
and changes of information. In terms of
cost, it has been our experience that
Form CMS–855A applications are
completed by the provider’s office staff.
Consequently, we will use the following
wage category and hourly rate from the
U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics’ (BLS)
May 2022 National Occupational
Employment and Wage Estimates for all
salary estimates (https://www.bls.gov/
oes/current/oes_nat.htm):
This results in an additional Form
CMS–855A annual cost burden of
$6,225 (150 hours × $41.50).
We anticipate the following
additional costs associated with our 36month rule expansion:
• Fingerprinting: As we proposed that
hospices would be subject to high-risk
level screening under § 424.518,
hospices that must initially enroll under
§ 424.550(b) would have to submit a set
of fingerprints for a national criminal
background check (via FBI Applicant
Fingerprint Card FD–258) from each
individual with a 5 percent or greater
direct or indirect ownership interest in
the hospice. An analysis of the impact
of this requirement can be found in
section X.C.8.of this proposed rule.
• Application Fee: Under § 424.514,
an institutional provider (as that term is
defined in § 424.502) that is initially
enrolling in Medicare must pay the
required application fee. Hospices that
are initially enrolling in accordance
with the 36-month rule would
accordingly have to pay this fee. The
application fee does not meet the
definition of a ‘‘collection of
information’’ and, as such, is not subject
to the requirements of the PRA.
However, the cost is scored under
section X.C.8. of this proposed rule.
• Provider Agreement: A hospice that
is initially enrolling in Medicare (which
would include those doing so in
accordance with § 424.550(b)) must also
sign a provider agreement per 42 CFR
part 489 (Health Insurance Benefits
Agreement—CMS Form 1561 (OMB
control number 0938–0832)). The
applicable May 2022 BLS categories and
hourly wage rates for completing this
form are as follows:
We anticipate that 100 hospices per
year would have to sign this provider
agreement due to our revision to
§ 424.550(b): the 50 previously
referenced hospices that would
otherwise have reported the ownership
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b. Hospice 36-Month Rule
We are proposing to expand
§ 424.550(b) to apply the 36-month rule
provisions therein to hospices. This
would require a hospice undergoing a
change in majority ownership (as
defined in § 424.502 and assuming no
exceptions apply) to: (1) enroll in
Medicare as a new hospice; and (2)
undergo a state survey or accreditation.
The principal ICR burden of this
requirement would involve the
completion of an initial Form CMS–
855A application rather than a Form
CMS–855A change of ownership
(CHOW) application or a Form CMS–
855A change of information application.
Consistent with the general time
estimates for these three categories of
applications, it typically takes a
provider approximately 4 hours to
complete an initial Form CMS–855A, 4
hours for a CHOW application, and 1
hour for a change of information
application. The key ICR burden
difference, therefore, would be between
submitting an initial application and
submitting a change of information
(since there is no burden difference
between an initial application and a
CHOW application).
criminal background check (via FBI
Applicant Fingerprint Card FD–258) of
all individuals with a 5 percent or
greater direct or indirect ownership
interest in the provider or supplier. The
burden is currently approved by OMB
under control number 1110–0046. We
are not scoring the burden under this
ICR section since the fingerprint card is
not owned by CMS. However, an
analysis of the impact of this
requirement can be found in the RIA
section of this proposed rule.
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change via a Form CMS–855A change of
information and another 50 that would
have done so via a Form CMS–855A
CHOW application. We anticipate that it
would take the hospice 5 minutes at
$236.96/hr for a chief executive to
review and sign the Form CMS–1561
and an additional 5 minutes at $39.68/
hr for a medical secretary to file the
document when fully executed. This
results in an annual hour burden of 17
hours (100 × 0.166 hours) and a cost of
$2,305 (or (($236.96 × 0.0833) + ($39.68
× 0.0833)) × 100).
Combining these initial enrollment
application and provider agreement ICR
costs associated with a hospice’s change
in majority ownership results in an
annual burden of 167 hours (150 + 17)
and a cost of $8,530 ($6,225 + $2,305).
We solicit comment from
stakeholders, including hospices,
regarding any other ICR costs that may
be associated with our proposed
expansion of the 36-month rule to
incorporate hospices. This could
include ICR costs incurred during the
survey, accreditation, or certification
processes.
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c. Remaining Provider Enrollment
Provisions
With one exception, we do not believe
our other provider enrollment proposals
would result in an information
collection burden. Concerning the
proposal in revised § 424.540(a)(1) to
reduce the timeframe in which CMS can
deactivate a provider or supplier for
non-billing from 12 months to 6 months,
an increase in the number of
deactivations on this basis could result.
However, we are unable to establish an
estimate of this number or any
associated burden for two reasons. First,
fraud schemes change and fluctuate,
meaning that CMS cannot predict the
number of instances in which it would
apply § 424.540(a)(1) to address such
situations. Second, a deactivation is a
purely discretionary action by CMS; that
is, CMS can, but is not required to,
impose a deactivation if a basis for
doing so exists. Accordingly, we are
unable to quantify the increase, if any,
of cases where we would invoke revised
§ 424.540(a)(1).
C. Submission of PRA-Related
Comments
We have submitted a copy of this final
rule to OMB for its review of the rule’s
information collection requirements.
The requirements are not effective until
they have been approved by OMB.
To obtain copies of the supporting
statement and any related forms for the
proposed collections, as previously
discussed, please visit the CMS website
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at https://www.cms.hhs.gov/
PaperworkReductionActof1995, or call
the Reports Clearance Office at 410–
786–1326.
We invite public comments on these
potential information collection
requirements.
X. Regulatory Impact Analysis
A. Statement of Need
1. HH PPS
Section 1895(b)(1) of the Act requires
the Secretary to establish a HH PPS for
all costs of home health services paid
under Medicare. In addition, section
1895(b) of the Act requires: (1) the
computation of a standard prospective
payment amount include all costs for
home health services covered and paid
for on a reasonable cost basis and that
such amounts be initially based on the
most recent audited cost report data
available to the Secretary; (2) the
prospective payment amount under the
HH PPS to be an appropriate unit of
service based on the number, type, and
duration of visits provided within that
unit; and (3) the standardized
prospective payment amount be
adjusted to account for the effects of
case-mix and wage levels among HHAs.
Section 1895(b)(3)(B) of the Act
addresses the annual update to the
standard prospective payment amounts
by the home health applicable
percentage increase. Section 1895(b)(4)
of the Act governs the payment
computation. Sections 1895(b)(4)(A)(i)
and (b)(4)(A)(ii) of the Act requires the
standard prospective payment amount
be adjusted for case-mix and geographic
differences in wage levels. Section
1895(b)(4)(B) of the Act requires the
establishment of appropriate case-mix
adjustment factors for significant
variation in costs among different units
of services. Lastly, section 1895(b)(4)(C)
of the Act requires the establishment of
wage adjustment factors that reflect the
relative level of wages, and wage-related
costs applicable to home health services
furnished in a geographic area
compared to the applicable national
average level.
Section 1895(b)(3)(B)(iv) of the Act
provides the Secretary with the
authority to implement adjustments to
the standard prospective payment
amount (or amounts) for subsequent
years to eliminate the effect of changes
in aggregate payments during a previous
year or years that were the result of
changes in the coding or classification
of different units of services that do not
reflect real changes in case-mix. Section
1895(b)(5) of the Act provides the
Secretary with the option to make
changes to the payment amount
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otherwise paid in the case of outliers
because of unusual variations in the
type or amount of medically necessary
care. Section 1895(b)(3)(B)(v) of the Act
requires HHAs to submit data for
purposes of measuring health care
quality, and links the quality data
submission to the annual applicable
percentage increase.
Sections 1895(b)(2) and 1895(b)(3)(A)
of the Act, as amended by section
51001(a)(1) and 51001(a)(2) of the BBA
of 2018 respectively, required the
Secretary to implement a 30-day unit of
service, for 30-day periods beginning on
and after January 1, 2020. Section
1895(b)(3)(D)(i) of the Act, as added by
section 51001(a)(2)(B) of the BBA of
2018, requires the Secretary to annually
determine the impact of differences
between assumed behavior changes, as
described in section 1895(b)(3)(A)(iv) of
the Act, and actual behavior changes on
estimated aggregate expenditures under
the HH PPS with respect to years
beginning with 2020 and ending with
2026. Section 1895(b)(3)(D)(ii) of the Act
requires the Secretary, at a time and in
a manner determined appropriate,
through notice and comment
rulemaking, to provide for one or more
permanent increases or decreases to the
standard prospective payment amount
(or amounts) for applicable years, on a
prospective basis, to offset for such
increases or decreases in estimated
aggregate expenditures, as determined
under section 1895(b)(3)(D)(i) of the Act.
Additionally, 1895(b)(3)(D)(iii) of the
Act requires the Secretary, at a time and
in a manner determined appropriate,
through notice and comment
rulemaking, to provide for one or more
temporary increases or decreases to the
payment amount for a unit of home
health services for applicable years, on
a prospective basis, to offset for such
increases or decreases in estimated
aggregate expenditures, as determined
under section 1895(b)(3)(D)(i) of the Act.
The HH PPS wage index utilizes the
wage adjustment factors used by the
Secretary for purposes of sections
1895(b)(4)(A)(ii) and (b)(4)(C) of the Act
for hospital wage adjustments.
2. HH QRP
Section 1895(b)(3)(B)(v) of the Act
authorizes the HH QRP, which requires
HHAs to submit data in accordance with
the requirements specified by CMS.
Failure to submit data required under
section 1895(b)(3)(B)(v) of the Act with
respect to a program year will result in
the reduction of the annual home health
market basket percentage increase
otherwise applicable to an HHA for the
corresponding calendar year by 2
percentage points.
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3. Expanded HHVBP Model
In the CY 2022 HH PPS final rule (86
FR 62292 through 62336) and codified
at 42 CFR part 484 subpart F, we
finalized our policy to expand the
HHVBP Model to all Medicare certified
HHAs in the 50 States, territories, and
District of Columbia beginning January
1, 2022. CY 2022 was a preimplementation year. CY 2023 is the
first performance year in which HHAs
individual performance on the
applicable measures will affect their
Medicare payments in CY 2025. In this
proposed rule, we are proposing to
remove five quality measures from the
current applicable measure set and add
three quality measures to the applicable
measure set. Along with the proposed
revisions to the current measure set, we
propose to revise the weights of the
individual measures within the OASISbased measure category and within the
claims-based measure category starting
in the CY 2025 performance year. In
addition, we are proposing to update the
Model baseline year from CY 2022 to CY
2023 starting in the CY 2025
performance year to enable CMS to
measure competing HHAs performance
on benchmarks and achievement
thresholds that are more current for the
proposed applicable measure set.
Additionally, we are amending the
appeals process such that
reconsideration decisions may be
reviewed by the Administrator. We are
including an update to the RFI, Future
Approaches to Health Equity in the
Expanded HHVBP Model, that was
published in the CY 2023 HH PPS rule.
We will also include an update that
reminds interested parties that we will
begin public reporting of HHVBP
performance data on or after December
1, 2024.
4. Home IVIG Items and Services
Division FF, section 4134 of the CAA,
2023 (CAA, 2023) (Pub. L. 117–328)
mandated that CMS establish a
permanent, bundled payment for items
and services related to administration of
IVIG in a patient’s home. The
permanent, bundled home IVIG items
and services payment is effective for
home IVIG infusions furnished on or
after January 1, 2024. Payment for these
items and services is required to be a
separate bundled payment made to a
supplier for all items and services
furnished in the home during a calendar
day. This payment amount may be
based on the amount established under
the Demonstration. The standard Part B
coinsurance and the Part B deductible
apply. The separate bundled payment
does not apply for individuals receiving
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services under the Medicare home
health benefit. The CAA, 2023 provision
clarifies that a supplier who furnishes
these services meet the requirements of
a supplier of medical equipment and
supplies.
5. Informal Dispute Resolution (IDR)
and Hospice Special Focus Program
(SFP)
The proposed hospice IDR would be
an administrative process offered to
hospice programs that is conducted by
CMS, the SAs, or the accrediting
organizations (AOs) as applicable, as
part of their survey activities to provide
an informal opportunity to address
survey findings. The proposed Hospice
SFP would be implementing a part of
the hospice provisions required under
the CAA 2021 directing the Secretary to
create an SFP for poor-performing
hospice programs.
6. DMEPOS CAA, 2023-Related
Requirements
a. Conforming Changes to Regulations
To Codify Change Mandated by Section
4139 of the Consolidated
Appropriations Act, 2023
The purpose of the provision related
to adjusted fees is to extend the 75/25
blend in non-rural, non-CBAs as
described in 42 CFR 414.210(g)(9)(v).
The statutory language for this provision
is found in section 4139 of the CAA,
2023.
b. Scope of the Benefit and Payment for
Lymphedema Compression Treatment
Items
The purpose of the provision related
to lymphedema compression treatment
items is to define in regulation section
4133 of the CAA, 2023 that adds section
1861(s)(2)(JJ) to the Act establishing a
Medicare Part B benefit for lymphedema
compression treatment item. This
provision would address the scope of
the new benefit by defining what
constitutes a standard or custom fitted
gradient compression garment and
determining what other compression
items may exist that are used for the
treatment of lymphedema and would
fall under the new benefit. This rule
would also implement section 1834(z)
of the Act in establishing payment
amounts for items covered under the
new benefit and frequency limitations
for lymphedema compression treatment
items.
c. Definition of Brace
The purpose of the provision related
to the definition of a brace is to codify
in regulations the longstanding
definition of brace that exists in
Medicare program instructions.
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7. Requirements for Refillable DMEPOS
This provision is needed to require
documentation indicating that the
beneficiary confirmed the need for the
refill within the 30-day period prior to
the end of the current supply and to
codify our requirement that the delivery
of DMEPOS items (that is, date of
service) must be no sooner than 10
calendar days before the expected end
of the current supply.
8. Provider Enrollment Provisions
This proposed rule is needed to make
regulatory enhancements to our
provider enrollment policies. These
provisions focus on, but are not limited
to: (1) subjecting a greater number of
providers and suppliers, such as
hospices, to the highest level of
screening, which includes
fingerprinting all 5 percent or greater
owners of these providers and suppliers;
and (2) applying the change in majority
ownership (CIMO) provisions in 42 CFR
424.550(b) to hospices. These changes
are necessary to help ensure that
payments are made only to qualified
providers and suppliers and that owners
of these entities are carefully screened.
As explained in section VIII. of this
proposed rule, we believe that fulfilling
both of these objectives would assist in
protecting the Trust Funds and
Medicare beneficiaries.
B. Overall Impact
We have examined the impacts of this
rule as required by Executive Order
12866 on Regulatory Planning and
Review (September 30, 1993), Executive
Order 13563 on Improving Regulation
and Regulatory Review (January 18,
2011), Executive Order 14094 on
Modernizing Regulatory Review (April
6, 2023), the Regulatory Flexibility Act
(RFA) (September 19, 1980, Pub. L. 96
354), section 1102(b) of the Act, section
202 of the Unfunded Mandates Reform
Act of 1995 (March 22, 1995; Pub. L.
104–4), Executive Order 13132 on
Federalism (August 4, 1999), and the
Congressional Review Act (5 U.S.C.
804(2)).
Executive Orders 12866 and 13563
direct agencies to assess all costs and
benefits of available regulatory
alternatives and, if regulation is
necessary, to select regulatory
approaches that maximize net benefits
(including potential economic,
environmental, public health and safety
effects, distributive impacts, and
equity). Executive Order 14094 amends
section 3(f) of Executive Order 12866 to
define a ‘‘significant regulatory action’’
as an action that is likely to result in a
rule: (1) having an annual effect on the
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economy of $200 million or more in any
1 year, or adversely affect in a material
way the economy, productivity,
competition, jobs, the environment,
public health or safety, or State, local or
tribal governments or communities; (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 legal or policy issues for which
centralized review would meaningfully
further the President’s priorities or the
principles set forth in this Executive
Order.
A regulatory impact analysis (RIA)
must be prepared for major rules with
significant regulatory action/s and/or
with significant effects as per section
3(f)(1) of $200 million or more in any 1
year. Based on our estimates, OMB’S
Office of Information and Regulatory
Affairs has determined this rulemaking
is significant per section 3(f)(1) as
measured by the $200 million or more
in any 1 year. According 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 this
proposed rule, and the Departments
have provided the following assessment
of their impact. We solicit comments on
the regulatory impact analysis provided.
C. Detailed Economic Analysis
1. Effects of the Proposed Changes for
the CY 2024 HH PPS
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This rule proposes to update
Medicare payments under the HH PPS
for CY 2024. The net transfer impact
related to the changes in payments
under the HH PPS for CY 2024 is
estimated to be ¥$375 million (¥2.2
percent). The $375 million decrease in
estimated payments for CY 2024 reflects
the effects of the proposed CY 2024
home health payment update percentage
of 2.7 percent ($460 million increase),
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an estimated 5.1 percent decrease that
reflects the effects of the permanent
behavior adjustment ($870 million
decrease) and an estimated 0.2 percent
increase that reflects the effects of an
updated FDL ($35 million increase).
We use the latest data and analysis
available. However, we do not adjust for
future changes in such variables as
number of visits or case-mix. This
analysis incorporates the latest
estimates of growth in service use and
payments under the Medicare home
health benefit, based primarily on
Medicare claims data for periods that
ended on or before December 31, 2022.
We note that certain events may
combine to limit the scope or accuracy
of our impact analysis, because such an
analysis is future-oriented and, thus,
susceptible to errors resulting from
other changes in the impact time period
assessed. Some examples of such
possible events are newly-legislated
general Medicare program funding
changes made by the Congress or
changes specifically related to HHAs. In
addition, changes to the Medicare
program may continue to be made as a
result of new statutory provisions.
Although these changes may not be
specific to the HH PPS, the nature of the
Medicare program is such that the
changes may interact, and the
complexity of the interaction of these
changes could make it difficult to
predict accurately the full scope of the
impact upon HHAs.
Table GG 1 represents how HHA
revenues are likely to be affected by the
finalized policy changes for CY 2024.
For this analysis, we used an analytic
file with linked CY 2022 OASIS
assessments and home health claims
data for dates of service that ended on
or before December 31, 2022. The first
column of Table GG 1 classifies HHAs
according to a number of characteristics
including provider type, geographic
region, and urban and rural locations.
The second column shows the number
of facilities in the impact analysis. The
third column shows the payment effects
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of the permanent behavior assumption
adjustment on all payments. The
aggregate impact of the permanent BA
adjustment reflected in the third column
does not equal the proposed ¥5.653
percent permanent BA adjustment
because the adjustment only applies to
the national, standardized 30-day period
payments and does not impact
payments for 30-day periods which are
LUPAs. The fourth column shows the
payment effects of the recalibration of
the case-mix weights offset by the casemix weights budget neutrality factor.
The fifth column shows the payment
effects of updating the CY 2024 wage
index with a 5-percent cap on wage
index decreases. The sixth column
shows the effect of the proposed CY
2024 labor-related share. The aggregate
impact of the changes in the fifth and
sixth columns is zero percent, due to the
wage index budget neutrality factor and
the labor-related share budget neutrality
factor. The seventh column shows the
payment effects of the proposed CY
2024 home health payment update
percentage. The eighth column shows
the payment effects of the revised FDL,
and the last column shows the
combined effects of all the proposed
provisions.
Overall, it is projected that aggregate
payments in CY 2024 would decrease by
2.2 percent which reflects the 5.1
percent decrease from the permanent
behavior adjustment, the 2.7 payment
update percentage increase, and the 0.2
percent increase from decreasing the
FDL. As illustrated in Table GG 1, the
combined effects of all of the changes
vary by specific types of providers and
by location. We note that some
individual HHAs within the same group
may experience different impacts on
payments than others due to the
distributional impact of the CY 2024
wage index, the percentage of total HH
PPS payments that were subject to the
LUPA or paid as outlier payments, and
the degree of Medicare utilization.
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2. Effects of the Proposed Changes for
the HH QRP for CY 2024
Failure to submit HH QRP data
required under section 1895(b)(3)(B)(v)
of the Act with respect to a program
year will result in the reduction of the
annual home health market basket
percentage increase otherwise
applicable to an HHA for the
corresponding calendar year by 2
percentage points. For the CY 2023
program year, 820 of the 11,549 active
Medicare-certified HHAs, or
approximately 7.1 percent, did not
receive the full annual percentage
increase because they did not meet
assessment submission requirements.
The 820 HHAs that did not satisfy the
reporting requirements of the HH QRP
for the CY 2023 program year represent
$149 million in home health claims
payment dollars during the reporting
period out of a total $16.4 billion for all
HHAs.
This proposed rule proposes the
adoption of the ‘‘COVID–19 Vaccine:
Percent of Patients/Residents Who Are
Up to Date’’ (Patient/Resident COVID–
19 Vaccine) measure to the HH QRP
beginning with the CY 2025 HH QRP.
CMS also proposes to adopt the
‘‘Functional Discharge Score’’ (DC
Function) measure to the HH QRP
beginning with the CY 2025 HH QRP.
With the addition of the Discharge
Function measure, we propose to
remove the ‘‘Application of Percent of
Long-Term Care Hospital (LTCH)
Patients with an Admission and
Discharge Functional Assessment and a
Care Plan That Addresses Function’’
(Application of Functional Assessment/
Care Plan) measure from the HH QRP
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beginning with the CY 2025 HH QRP.
CMS additionally propose the removal
of two OASIS items no longer necessary
for collection, the M0110—‘‘Episode
Timing’’ and M2220—‘‘Therapy Needs’’
items. The net effect of these proposals
is a reduction of four data elements
across all OASIS data collection time
points and a net reduction in burden.
Section IX.B.1. of this proposed rule
provides a detailed description of the
net decrease in burdens associated with
the proposed changes. We proposed that
additions and removal of data elements
associated with the HH QRP proposals
would begin with January 1, 2025
discharges. The cost impact of this
proposed changes was estimated to be a
net decrease of $5,123,429 in
annualized cost to HHAs, discounted at
7 percent relative to year 2021, over a
perpetual time horizon beginning in CY
2025. We described the estimated
burden and cost reductions for these
measures in section IX of this proposed
rule. In summary, the implementation of
proposals outlined in this proposed rule
for the HH QRP is estimated to decrease
the burden on HHAs by $437 per HHA
annually, or $5,123,429 for all HHAs
annually.
3. Effects of the Proposed Changes for
the Expanded HHVBP Model
In the CY 2023 HH PPS final rule (87
FR 66883), we estimated that the
expanded HHVBP Model would
generate a total projected 5-year gross
FFS savings for CYs 2023 through 2027
of $3,376,000,000. The proposed
changes to the applicable measure set
and the Model baseline year in this
proposed rule will not change those
estimates because they do not change
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the number of HHAs in the Model or the
payment methodology.
Based on proposed policies discussed
in this proposed rule, Tables GG2A and
GG2B display the distribution of
possible payment adjustments using CY
2021 data as the performance year and
CY 2019 for the baseline year. Note that
due to limited data availability, this
impact analysis does not account for
improvement points for the PPH
measure because this measure is not
available based on CY 2022 data at the
time of the release of this proposed rule.
Table GG2A and GG2B shows the
value-based incentive payment
adjustments for the estimated 6,750
HHAs that would qualify to compete in
the expanded Model based on CY 2021
performance data stratified by volumebased cohort, as defined in section III.F.
of the CY 2022 HH PPS final rule (86 FR
62312). This impact analysis used CY
2019 to determine HHA size instead of
the calendar year prior to the
performance year (that is, CY 2020) to
avoid using data impacted by the Public
Health Emergency (PHE). Using CY
2021 performance year data and the
finalized payment adjustment of 5
percent, based on the 10 proposed
quality measures, the 6,504 HHAs in the
larger-volume cohort would have an
average payment adjustment of positive
0.164 percent (+0.164 percent).
Furthermore, 246 HHAs have fewer than
60 unique beneficiaries in CY 2019 and
are, therefore, included in the smallervolume cohort. Overall, smaller-volume
HHAs would have an average payment
adjustment of negative 0.114 percent
(¥0.114 percent). Twenty-four states/
territories do not have any HHAs in the
smaller-volume cohort, including
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Alabama, District of Columbia, and
Georgia. The remaining states/territories
have HHAs in both volume-based
cohorts. Florida, for example, has 622
HHAs in the larger-volume cohort with
an average payment adjustment of
positive 1.154 percent (+1.154 percent)
and 17 HHAs in the smaller-volume
cohort with an average payment
adjustment of positive 0.102 percent
(+0.102 percent). The next columns
provide the distribution of payment
adjustment by percentile. Specifically,
10 percent of HHAs in the larger-volume
cohort would receive downward
payment adjustments of more than
negative 3.851 percent (¥3.851
percent). Among smaller-volume HHAs,
10 percent of HHAs would receive
downward payment adjustments of
more than negative 4.120 percent
(¥4.120 percent). For larger-volume
HHAs in Florida, the payment
adjustments range from negative 3.161
percent (¥3.161 percent) at the 10th
percentile to positive 5.000 percent
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(+5.000 percent) at the 90th percentile,
while the median (50th percentile)
payment adjustment is positive 1.160
percent (+1.160 percent).
Table GG3 provides the payment
adjustment distribution based on the
proportion of dual-eligible beneficiaries,
average case mix using Hierarchical
Condition Category (HCC) scores,
proportion of beneficiaries that reside in
rural areas, and HHA organizational
status. To define cutoffs for the
‘‘percentage of dual eligible
beneficiaries,’’ low through high
percentage dual-eligible are based on
the 20th, 40th, 60th, and 80th
percentiles of percent dual eligible
beneficiaries, respectively, across HHAs
in CY 2021. To define case mix cutoffs,
low, medium, or high acuity are based
on less than the 25th percentile,
between the 25th and 75th percentiles,
and greater than the 75th percentile of
average HCC scores, respectively, across
HHAs in CY 2021. To define cutoffs for
percentage of rural beneficiaries, all
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non-rural, up to 50 percent rural, and
over 50 percent rural are based on the
home health beneficiaries’ core-based
statistical area (CBSA) urban versus
rural designation. Based on CY 2021
data, HHAs with the highest proportion
of dual-eligible beneficiaries served
have a positive average payment
adjustment (+0.035 percent). In
addition, a higher proportion of rural
beneficiaries served is associated with
better performance. Specifically, HHAs
serving over 50 percent rural
beneficiaries have an average payment
adjustment of positive 0.728 percent
(+0.728 percent), compared to HHAs
serving only rural beneficiaries or HHAs
serving up to 50 percent rural
beneficiaries. Among organizational
type, proprietary HHAs have a slightly
negative average payment adjustment of
0.092, whereas HHAs in other
organizational type categories have a
positive average payment adjustment.
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items and services rate. The fifth
column estimates the cost to Medicare
for CY 2024 ($8,779,095). The estimated
cost for CY 2023 under the
Demonstration is $8,543,520 (not shown
in chart) resulting in an increase of
$235,575 in payments to providers
under the permanent benefit. Table GG
6 represents the estimated impacts of
the home IVIG items and services
payment for CY 2024 by census region.
5. Effects of the Proposed Changes for
Hospice IDR and SFP
6. Effects of the Proposed Changes for
DMEPOS CAA, 2023-Related Provisions
populations is expected to be $4
million.
The proposed hospice IDR is an
administrative process to be conducted
by CMS, SAs, or AOs as part of their
survey activities, and is separate from
the SFP. SAs and AOs may already have
existing IDR processes in place for the
HHA IDR requirements. The hospice
IDR requirements will align with HHA.
The Congress has already allocated $10
million annually to CMS to implement
the CAA 2021 hospice survey and
enforcement provisions, which includes
the SFP. Additionally, CMS obligates
monies to the SAs to carry out survey
and certification responsibilities under
their agreement with the Secretary
under section 1864 of the Act.
Therefore, no additional burden will be
incurred by CMS, SAs, or AOs.
a. Conforming Changes to Regulations
To Codify Change Mandated by Section
4139 of the Consolidated
Appropriations Act, 2023
b. Scope of the Benefit and Payment for
Lymphedema Compression Treatment
Items
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One benefit of this provision is that it
provides additional revenue to DMEPOS
suppliers. One cost of this provision is
that it increases the copayments of the
Medicare beneficiaries. The transfer
from the Medicare program to the
DMEPOS suppliers of $100 million for
CY 2023 paid in CY 2023 and CY 2024.
The amount of copayments from
Medicare beneficiaries over the same
period is expected to be $30 million.
The Federal share of Medicaid for the
copayments for dual eligibles is
expected to be $5 million and the State
share of the Medicare payments for this
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The benefits of this provision are that
Medicare enrollees suffering from
lymphedema will have Medicare pay 80
percent off the cost of the lymphedema
compression treatment items. This
Medicare payment should enable more
Medicare enrollees suffering from
lymphedema to access treatment items
in the home, reducing both the financial
burden of lymphedema and, by
encouraging earlier treatment, the
frequency of institutional care for
infections or other complications of
lymphedema. The transfer from the
Medicare program to the lymphedema
compression treatment suppliers is
estimated to be $230 million from CY
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The following analysis applies to the
home IVIG items and services payment
rate as set forth in section V.D.1. of this
rule as added by section 4134 of the
CAA, 2023 and accordingly, describes
the impact for CY 2024 only. Table GG
5 represents the estimated costs of home
IVIG users for CY 2024. We used CY
2022 data to identify beneficiaries
actively enrolled in the IVIG
demonstration (that is, beneficiaries
with Part B claims that contain the
Q2052 HCPCS code) to estimate the
number of potential CY 2024 active
enrollees in the new benefit, which are
shown in column 2. In column 3, CY
2022 claims for IVIG visits under the
Demonstration were again used to
estimate potential utilization under the
new benefit in CY 2024. Column 4
shows the proposed CY 2024 home IVIG
4. Impacts of Home IVIG Items and
Services
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2024 to CY 2028. The amount of
copayments from Medicare beneficiaries
over the same period is expected to be
$50 million. The Federal share of
Medicaid expenditures for the
copayments of dual eligibles is expected
to be $9 million and the State share for
this population is expected to be $6
million.
c. Definition of Brace
The benefit of this provision is to add
the definition of brace in regulation to
more clearly identify what is included
in the definition of a brace. This is
purely an administrative effort with no
impact on Medicare coverage or
expenditure, and, for this reason, has no
cost or transfer associated with it.
7. Effects of the Proposed Changes to the
Requirements for Refillable DMEPOS
This rule proposes to codify and
clarify our requirements for refillable
DMEPOS items. The fiscal impact of
these requirements cannot be estimated
as claims often deny for multiple
reasons, which may include noncompliance with our refill requirements;
creating an inability for us to accurately
demonstrate a causal relationship. In
addition, to demonstrate impacts we
would have to be able to predict
behaviors and anticipated noncompliance in future claim submissions,
which are unknown variables to us.
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8. Effects of the Proposed Changes
Regarding for Provider Enrollment
Requirements
There are four principal impacts of
our provider enrollment proposals
outlined in section VIII. of this proposed
rule.
The first was addressed in section IX.
and involves the ICR burden associated
with a hospice’s completion of an initial
Form CMS–855A application and Form
CMS–1561 provider agreement in
accordance with a § 424.550(b) change
in majority ownership for which an
exception does not apply. The
combined annual burden was estimated
to be 167 hours at a cost of $8,530.
The second involves moving hospices
from the moderate-risk screening
category to the high-risk screening level.
The third involves incorporating
within the high-risk screening category
revalidating DMEPOS suppliers, HHAs,
OTPs, MDPP suppliers, and SNFs for
which CMS waived the fingerprintbased criminal background check
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requirement when they initially
enrolled in Medicare.
The fourth involves the fingerprinting
and application fee requirements
(referenced in section IX. of this
proposed rule) associated with a
§ 424.550(b) change in majority
ownership.
We address the second, third, and
fourth impacts as follows:
a. Moving Hospices to High-Risk
With this change to § 424.518,
hospices that are initially enrolling in
Medicare or reporting any new owner
would have to submit the fingerprints of
their 5 percent or greater direct or
indirect owners for a Federal Bureau of
Investigation criminal background
check. Based on enrollment statistics
and our experience, we project that
1,782 hospices per year (425 initially
enrolling + 1,357 reporting a new 5
percent or greater owner) would be
required to submit these fingerprints.
(This figure does not include hospices
initially enrolling pursuant to
§ 424.550(b); this matter is addressed in
section X.C.8.d. of this proposed rule).
Using an estimate of one owner per
hospice (which aligns with previous
fingerprinting projections we have
made), 1,782 sets of fingerprints per
year would be submitted.
Consistent with prior burden
estimates, we project that it would take
each owner approximately 2 hours to be
fingerprinted. According to the most
recent BLS wage data for May 2022, the
mean hourly wage for the general
category of ‘‘Top Executives’’ (the most
appropriate BLS category for owners) is
$62.04. With fringe benefits and
overhead, the figure is $124.08. This
would result in an estimated annual
burden of this proposed change of 3,564
hours (1,782 × 2) at a cost of $442,221
(3,564 × $124.08).
b. Providers and Suppliers Previously
Waived From Fingerprinting
Approximately 6,388 high-risk level
providers and suppliers were waived
from fingerprinting when they initially
enrolled in Medicare during the PHE.
We are proposing that these providers
and suppliers, upon their revalidation,
be subject to high-risk category
screening and, consequently,
fingerprinting. Using our estimates from
section X.C.8.a. of this proposed rule,
we project the total burden of this
proposal to be 12,776 hours (6,388 × 2
hr) and $1,585,246 (12,776 × $124.08).
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Calculated as annual figures over a 3year period, this results in a burden of
4,259 hours and $528,415.
c. Hospice Changes in Majority
Ownership
Hospices that are initially enrolling in
Medicare due to a change in majority
ownership under § 424.550(b) would be
subject to fingerprinting and must pay
an application fee in accordance with
§ 424.514. Using the fingerprinting
estimates already referenced in section
X.C.8. of this proposed rule, we estimate
an annual fingerprinting burden to
hospices per § 424.550(b) of 200 hours
(100 × 2 hr) at a cost of $24,816 (200 hr
× $124.08).
The application fees for each of the
past 3 calendar years were or are $599
(CY 2021), $631 (CY 2022), and $688
(CY 2023). Consistent with § 424.514,
the differing fee amounts were
predicated on changes/increases in the
CPI for all urban consumers (all items;
United States city average, CPI–U) for
the 12-month period ending on June 30
of the previous year. While we cannot
predict future changes to the CPI, the fee
amounts between 2021 and 2023
increased by an average of $45 per year.
We believe this is a reasonable
barometer with which to establish
estimates (strictly for purposes of this
proposed rule) of the fee amounts in the
first 3 calendar years of the proposed
provision (that is, 2024, 2025, and
2026). Thus, we project a fee amount of
$733 in 2024, $778 for 2025, and $823
for 2026.
Applying these prospective fee
amounts to the annual number of
projected hospices impacted by our
change in majority ownership proposal,
this results in a cost of $73,300 (or 100
× $733) in the first year, $77,800 in the
second year, and $82,300 in the third
year.
Applying these prospective fee
amounts to the annual number of
projected hospices impacted by our
change in majority ownership proposal,
this results in a cost of $73,300 (or 100
× $733) in the first year, $77,800 in the
second year, and $82,300 in the third
year.
d. Totals
The following table outlines the total
annual costs associated with the
proposals addressed in section X.C.8. of
this proposed rule for each of the first
3 years.
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D. Regulatory Review Cost Estimation
If regulations impose administrative
costs on private entities, such as the
time needed to read and interpret this
proposed or final rule, we should
estimate the cost associated with
regulatory review. Due to the
uncertainty involved with accurately
quantifying the number of entities that
will review the rule, we assume that the
total number of unique commenters on
last year’s proposed rule will be the
number of reviewers of this proposed
rule. We acknowledge that this
assumption may understate or overstate
the costs of reviewing this rule. It is
possible that not all commenters
reviewed last year’s rule in detail, and
it is also possible that some reviewers
chose not to comment on the proposed
rule. For these reasons we thought that
the number of past commenters would
be a fair estimate of the number of
reviewers of this rule. We seek
comments on the approach used in
estimating the number of entities
reviewing this proposed rule. We also
recognize that different types of entities
are in many cases affected by mutually
exclusive sections of this proposed rule,
and therefore for the purposes of our
estimate we assume that each reviewer
reads approximately 50 percent of the
rule. We seek comments on this
assumption.
Using the wage information from the
BLS for medical and health service
managers (Code 11–9111), we estimate
that the cost of reviewing this rule is
$115.22 per hour, including overhead
and fringe benefits https://www.bls.gov/
oes/current/oes_nat.htm. Assuming an
average reading speed, we estimate that
it would take approximately 1.98 hours
for the staff to review half of this
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proposed rule. For each entity that
reviews the rule, the estimated cost is
$228.14 (1.98 hours × $115.22).
Therefore, we estimate that the total cost
of reviewing this regulation is
$205,554.14 ($228.14 × 901) [901 is the
number of estimated reviewers, which is
based on the total number of unique
commenters from last year’s proposed
rule].
E. Alternatives Considered
1. HH PPS
For the CY 2024 HH PPS proposed
rule, we considered alternatives to the
provisions articulated in section II.C. of
this proposed rule. As described in
section II.C.1.g. of this rule, to help
prevent future over or underpayments,
we calculated a permanent prospective
adjustment by determining what the 30day base payment amount should have
been in CYs 2020, 2021, and 2022 in
order to achieve the same estimated
aggregate expenditures as obtained from
the simulated 60-day episodes. One
alternative to the proposed ¥5.653
percent permanent payment adjustment
included halving the proposed
adjustment similar to how we finalized
the permanent adjustment for CY 2023.
Another alternative would be a phase-in
approach, where we could reduce the
permanent adjustment, by spreading out
the CY 2024 permanent adjustment over
a specified period of years, rather than
halving the adjustment in CY 2024 and
adjusting the CY 2025 rate by the rest of
that amount. Another alternative would
be to delay the permanent adjustment to
a future year. However, we believe that
a reduction, a phase-in approach, or
delay in the permanent adjustment
would not be appropriate, as reducing,
phasing in, or delaying the permanent
adjustment would further impact budget
neutrality and likely lead to a
compounding effect creating the need
for a larger reduction to the payment
rate in future years.
We also considered proposing to
implement the one-time temporary
adjustment to reconcile retrospective
overpayments in CYs 2020, 2021, and
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2022. However, as stated previously in
this rule, we believe that implementing
both the permanent and temporary
adjustments to the CY 2024 payment
rate may adversely affect HHAs given
the magnitude of the adjustment to the
payment rate in a single year. Likewise,
section 1895(b)(3)(D)(iii) of the Act gives
CMS the authority to make any
temporary adjustment in a time and
manner appropriate though notice and
comment rulemaking. Therefore, we
believe it is best to propose only the
implementation of the permanent
decrease of 5.653 percent to the CY 2024
base payment rate.
2. HH QRP
We considered alternative measures
to the Discharge Function measure and
determined this measure was the
strongest. No appropriate alternative
was available for the COVID–19 Patient
Vaccination measure.
3. Expanded HHVBP Model
We discuss the alternatives we
considered to the proposed weights of
the individual measures within the
OASIS-based measure category and
within the claims-based measure
category starting in the CY 2025
performance year for the expanded
HHVBP Model in section IV.B.2. of this
proposed rule.
4. Home IVIG Items and Services
For the CY 2024 HH PPS proposed
rule, we did not consider alternatives to
implementing the home IVIG items and
services payment for CY 2024 because
section 1842(o)(8) of the Act requires
the Secretary to establish a separate
bundled payment to the supplier for all
items and services related to the
administration of intravenous immune
globulin to an individual in the patient’s
home during a calendar day effective
January 1, 2024. We did consider
alternatives to annually updating this
payment rate, as articulated in section
II.V.D. of this proposed rule. We
considered updating the annual rate
using the LUPA rate for skilled nursing
in accordance with the demonstration
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We solicit comment from
stakeholders, including hospices,
regarding any other RIA costs that may
be associated with our proposed
expansion of the 36-month rule to
incorporate hospices. This could
include costs incurred during the
survey, accreditation, and/or
certification processes.
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program update. However, as the IVIG
services payment is not geographically
wage adjusted, and the LUPA rate
incorporates a wage index budget
neutrality factor, we believe it is more
appropriate to annually adjust the IVIG
items and services payment rate only by
the home health payment update
percentage. We also considered
annually updating the rate by the CPI–
U percentage increase in accordance
with the annual update to the home
infusion therapy services payment rate.
However, the Demonstration has never
used the CPI–U percentage increase to
update the payment rate, and we believe
it is more beneficial to keep the
permanent payment as closely aligned
with the Demonstration rate as possible.
5. IDR and Hospice SFP
We did not consider any alternatives
in this proposed rule for either proposal.
An initial alternative proposal was
published in CY 22 Home Health PPS
proposed rule (86 FR 35874) but was not
finalized due to public comments and
requests that CMS establish a Technical
Expert Panel (TEP) to inform the
development of the SFP. We believe the
new proposed methodology, based on
feedback provided by the TEP, is the
best way to identify and remedy the
issue of poor-performing hospices.
2. HH QRP
a. Scope of the Benefit and Payment for
Lymphedema Compression Treatment
Items
As this provision is statutorily
mandated, CMS needed to consider no
alternatives for implementation.
Similarly, the statutory language
provided a definition for the
lymphedema compression treatment
items to be covered by this benefit, so
CMS did not consider any alternative to
coverage of a list of items meeting the
statutory requirements. Regarding the
payment methodology, CMS considered
numerous sources for prices as
suggested in statute. Different
combinations of internet and insurer
prices were alternatives considered.
Ultimately, CMS decided on a payment
methodology that CMS considered
reasonable given the market for these
items.
b. Conforming Changes to Regulations
To Codify Change Mandated by Section
4139 of the Consolidated
Appropriations Act, 2023
This is a conforming change to a
statutory mandate and therefore
required no alternatives be considered.
c. Definition of Brace
This is a codification of an existing
definition and therefore required no
alternatives be considered.
At this time, we did not consider
alternatives as this is existing policy
that is being codified with additional
leniencies based on prior experiences.
We welcome the submission of
comments.
8. Provider Enrollment Provisions
We considered several alternatives for
addressing our provider enrollmentrelated concerns regarding hospice
program integrity and quality of care.
We concluded that moving hospices to
the high-risk screening category and
expanding § 424.550(b) to include
hospices were the most appropriate
provider enrollment regulatory means of
addressing these issues.
F. Accounting Statements and Tables
1. HH PPS
As required by OMB Circular A–4
(available at https://
www.whitehouse.gov/wp-content/
uploads/legacy_drupal_files/omb/
circulars/A4/a-4.pdf, in Table GG 8, we
have prepared an accounting statement
showing the classification of the
transfers and benefits associated with
the CY 2024 HH PPS provisions of this
rule.
rule as they relate to HHAs. Table GG
9 provides our best estimate of the
increase in burden for OASIS
submission.
EP10JY23.101
whitehouse.gov/files/omb/circulars/A4/
a-4.pdf), in Table GG 9, we have
prepared an accounting statement
showing the classification of the
expenditures associated with this final
7. Refillable DMEPOS
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As required by OMB Circular A–4
(available at https://
www.whitehouse.gov/sites/
6. DMEPOS CAA, 2023-Related
Provisions
4. Home IVIG Items and Services
As required by OMB Circular A–4
(available at https://
5. DMEPOS
a. Conforming Changes to Regulations
To Codify Change Mandated by Section
4139 of the Consolidated
Appropriations Act, 2023
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As required by OMB Circular A–4
(available at https://
b. Scope of the Benefit and Payment for
Lymphedema Compression Treatment
Items
As required by OMB Circular A–4
(available at https://
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GG 10 provides our best estimate of the
decrease in Medicare payments under
the expanded HHVBP Model.
www.whitehouse.gov/wp-content/
uploads/legacy_drupal_files/omb/
circulars/A4/a-4.pdf, in Table GG 11,
we have prepared an accounting
statement showing the classification of
the transfers and benefits associated
with the CY 2024 IVIG provisions of this
rule.
www.whitehouse.gov/sites/
whitehouse.gov/files/omb/circulars/A4/
a-4.pdf), in Table GG 12, we have
prepared an accounting statement
showing the classification of the
expenditures associated with this
provision. Table GG 12 provides our
best estimate of the transfers.
www.whitehouse.gov/sites/
whitehouse.gov/files/omb/circulars/A4/
a-4.pdf), in Table GG 13, we have
prepared an accounting statement
showing the classification of the
expenditures associated with this
provision. Table GG 13 provides our
best estimate of the transfers.
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As required by OMB Circular A–4
(available at https://
www.whitehouse.gov/sites/
whitehouse.gov/files/omb/circulars/A4/
a-4.pdf), in Table GG 10 we have
prepared an accounting statement. Table
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3. Expanded HHVBP Model
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G. Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)
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, small
entities include small businesses,
nonprofit organizations, and small
governmental jurisdictions. In addition,
HHAs are small entities, as that is the
term used in the RFA. Individuals and
States are not included in the definition
of a small entity.
The NAICS was adopted in 1997 and
is the current standard used by the
Federal statistical agencies related to the
U.S. business economy. We utilized the
NAICS U.S. industry title ‘‘Home Health
Care Services’’ and corresponding
NAICS code 621610 in determining
impacts for small entities. The NAICS
code 621610 has a size standard of $19
million 222 and approximately 96
percent of HHAs are considered small
entities. Table GG 14 shows the number
of firms, revenue, and estimated impact
per home health care service category.
The economic impact assessment is
based on estimated Medicare payments
(revenues) and HHS’s practice in
interpreting the RFA is to consider
effects economically ‘‘significant’’ only
if greater than 5 percent of providers
reach a threshold of 3 to 5 percent or
more of total revenue or total costs. The
majority of HHAs’ visits are Medicare
paid visits and therefore the majority of
HHAs’ revenue consists of Medicare
payments. Based on our analysis, we
conclude that the policies finalized in
this rule would result in an estimated
total impact of 3 to 5 percent or more
on Medicare revenue for greater than 5
percent of HHAs. Therefore, the
Secretary has determined that this HH
PPS final rule will have significant
economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities. We estimate
that the net impact of the policies in this
rule is approximately $375 million in
decreased payments to HHAs in CY
2024. The $375 million in decreased
payments are reflected in the last
column of the first row in Table GG 14
222 https://www.sba.gov/sites/sbagov/files/202303/Table%20of%20Size%20Standards_
Effective%20March%2017%2C%202023.xlsx.
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as a 2.2 percent decrease in
expenditures when comparing CY 2024
payments to estimated CY 2023
payments. The 2.2 percent decrease is
mostly driven by the impact of the
permanent behavior assumption
adjustment reflected in the third column
of Table GG 1. Further detail is
presented in Table GG 1, by HHA type
and location.
With regards to options for regulatory
relief, we note that section
1895(b)(3)(D)(i) of the Act requires CMS
to annually determine the impact of
differences between the assumed
behavior changes finalized in the CY
2019 HH PPS final rule with comment
period (83 FR 56455) and actual
behavior changes on estimated aggregate
expenditures under the HH PPS with
respect to years beginning with 2020
and ending with 2026. Additionally,
section 1895(b)(3)(D)(ii) and (iii) of the
Act requires us to make permanent and
temporary adjustments to the payment
rate to offset for such increases or
decreases in estimated aggregate
expenditures through notice and
comment rulemaking. While we find
that the ¥5.653 percent permanent
payment adjustment, described in
section II.C.1.g. of this proposed rule, is
necessary to offset the increase in
estimated aggregate expenditures for
CYs 2020 through 2022 based on the
impact of the differences between
assumed behavior changes and actual
behavior changes, we will also continue
to reprice claims, per the finalized
methodology, and make any additional
adjustments at a time and manner
deemed appropriate in future
rulemaking. As discussed previously,
we also explored alternatives to the
proposed ¥5.653 percent permanent
payment adjustment including a phasein approach, where we could reduce the
permanent adjustment, by spreading out
the CY 2024 permanent adjustment over
a period of years. Another alternative
would be to delay the permanent
adjustment to a future year. However,
we believe that a reduction to the
permanent adjustment, a phase-in
approach, or delay in the permanent
adjustment would not be appropriate, as
reducing, phasing in, or delaying the
permanent adjustment would further
impact budget neutrality and likely lead
to a compounding effect creating the
need for a larger reduction to the
payment rate in future years. We also
considered proposing to implement the
one-time temporary adjustment to
reconcile retrospective overpayments in
CYs 2020, 2021, and 2022. However, as
stated previously in this rule, we
recognize that applying the full
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permanent and temporary adjustments
to the CY 2024 payment rate may
adversely affect HHAs, including small
entities. We are soliciting comments on
the overall HH PPS RFA analysis.
Guidance issued by HHS interpreting
the Regulatory Flexibility Act considers
the effects economically ‘significant’
only if greater than 5 percent of
providers reach a threshold of 3 to 5
percent or more of total revenue or total
costs. Among the over 7,500 HHAs that
are estimated to qualify to compete in
the expanded HHVBP Model, we
estimate that the percent payment
adjustment resulting from this rule
would be larger than 3 percent, in
magnitude, for about 28 percent of
competing HHAs (estimated by applying
the proposed 5-percent maximum
payment adjustment under the
expanded Model to CY 2019 data). As
a result, more than the RFA threshold of
5-percent of HHA providers nationally
would be significantly impacted. We
refer readers to Tables 43 and 44 in the
CY 2022 HH PPS final rule (86 FR 62407
through 62410) for our analysis of
payment adjustment distributions by
State, HHA characteristics, HHA size,
and percentiles.
Thus, the Secretary has certified that
this final rule would have a significant
economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities. Though the
RFA requires consideration of
alternatives to avoid economic impacts
on small entities, the intent of the rule,
itself, is to encourage quality
improvement by HHAs through the use
of economic incentives. As a result,
alternatives to mitigate the payment
reductions would be contrary to the
intent of the rule, which is to test the
effect on quality and costs of care of
applying payment adjustments based on
HHAs’ performance on quality
measures.
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 603
of 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
and has fewer than 100 beds. This rule
is not applicable to hospitals. Therefore,
the Secretary has certified that this
proposed rule would not have a
significant economic impact on the
operations of small rural hospitals.
anticipated costs and benefits before
issuing any rule whose mandates
require spending in any 1 year of $100
million in 1995 dollars, updated
annually for inflation. In 2023, that
threshold is approximately $177
million. This proposed 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 $177
million in any one year.
H. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
(UMRA)
Section 202 of UMRA of 1995 UMRA
also requires that agencies assess
42 CFR Part 414
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I. Federalism
Executive Order 13132 establishes
certain requirements that an agency
must meet when it promulgates a
proposed rule (and subsequent final
rule) that imposes substantial direct
requirement costs on State and local
governments, preempts State law, or
otherwise has Federalism implications.
We have reviewed this final rule under
these criteria of Executive Order 13132
and have determined that it would not
impose substantial direct costs on State
or local governments.
J. Conclusion
In conclusion, we estimate that the
provisions in this proposed rule will
result in an estimated net decrease in
home health payments of 2.2 percent for
CY 2024 (¥$375 million). The $375
million decrease in estimated payments
for CY 2024 reflects the effects of the CY
2024 home health payment update
percentage increase of 2.7 percent ($460
million increase), a 0.2 percent increase
in payments due to the new lower FDL
ratio, which will increase outlier
payments in order to target to pay no
more than 2.5 percent of total payments
as outlier payments ($35 million
increase) and an estimated 5.1 percent
decrease in payments that reflects the
effects of the permanent behavior
adjustment ($870 million decrease).
Chiquita Brooks-LaSure,
Administrator of the Centers for
Medicare & Medicaid Services,
approved this document on June 26,
2023.
List of Subjects
42 CFR Part 409
Health facilities, Medicare.
42 CFR Part 410
Diseases, Health facilities, Health
professions, Laboratories, Medicare,
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Rural areas, X-rays.
Administrative practice and
procedure, Health facilities, Health
professions, Kidney diseases, Medicare,
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Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.
42 CFR Part 424
Emergency medical services, Health
facilities, Health professions, Medicare,
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.
42 CFR Part 484
Administrative practice and
procedure, Grant programs-health,
Health facilities, Health professions,
Home health care, Medicare, Reporting
and recordkeeping requirements.
42 CFR Part 488
Administrative practice and
procedure, Health facilities, Health
professions, Medicare, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
42 CFR Part 489
Health facilities, Medicare, Reporting
and recordkeeping requirements.
For the reasons stated in the
preamble, the Centers for Medicare &
Medicaid Services proposes to amend
42 CFR Chapter IV as follows:
PART 409—HOSPITAL INSURANCE
BENEFITS
1. The authority citation for part 409
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 1302 and 1395hh.
§ 409.50
[Amended]
2. In § 409.50 amend paragraph (b) by
removing the phrase ‘‘for furnishing the
Negative Pressure Wound Therapy
(NPWT) using a disposable device’’ and
adding in its place the phrase ‘‘for the
disposable Negative Pressure Wound
Therapy (NPWT) device’’.
motion in a diseased or injured part of
the body.
*
*
*
*
*
Custom fitted gradient compression
garment means a garment that is
uniquely sized and shaped to fit the
exact dimensions of the affected
extremity or part of the body, of an
individual to provide accurate gradient
compression to treat lymphedema.
*
*
*
*
*
Gradient compression means the
ability to apply a higher level of
compression or pressure to the distal
(farther) end of the limb or body part
affected by lymphedema with lower,
decreasing compression or pressure at
the proximal (closer) end of the limb or
body part affected by lymphedema.
Lymphedema compression treatment
item means standard and custom fitted
gradient compression garments and
other items specified under
§ 410.36(a)(4) that are—
(1) Furnished on or after January 1,
2024, to an individual with a diagnosis
of lymphedema for treatment of such
condition;
(2) Primarily and customarily used to
serve a medical purpose and for the
treatment of lymphedema; and
(3) Prescribed by a physician (or a
physician assistant, nurse practitioner,
or a clinical nurse specialist (as those
terms are defined in section 1861(aa)(5)
of the Act) to the extent authorized
under State law.
*
*
*
*
*
■
PART 410—SUPPLEMENTARY
MEDICAL INSURANCE (SMI)
BENEFITS
3. The authority citation for part 410
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 1302, 1395m, 1395hh,
1395rr, and 1395ddd.
4. Amend § 410.2 by adding the
definitions of ‘‘Brace’’, ‘‘Custom fitted
gradient compression garment’’,
‘‘gradient compression’’, and
‘‘lymphedema compression treatment
item’’ in alphabetical order to read as
follows:
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■
§ 410.2
Definitions
*
*
*
*
*
Brace means a rigid or semi-rigid
device used for the purpose of
supporting a weak or deformed body
member or restricting or eliminating
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§ 410.10
[Amended]
5. In § 410.10 amend paragraph (y) by
removing the phrase ‘‘globulin
administered’’ and adding in its place
the phrase ‘‘globulin, including items
and services, administered’’.
■ 6. Amend § 410.36 by revising
paragraph (a)(3) and adding paragraph
(a)(4) to read as follows:
■
§ 410.36 Medical supplies, appliances, and
devices: Scope.
*
*
*
*
*
(a) * * *
(3)(i) Leg, arm, back, and neck braces.
(A) A leg brace may include a shoe if
it is an integral part of the brace
(necessary for the leg brace to function
properly) and its expense is included as
part of the cost of the brace.
(ii) Artificial legs, arms, and eyes; and
(iii) Replacements for the devices
specified in paragraphs (a)(3)(i) and (ii)
if required because of a change in the
individual’s physical condition.
(4) Lymphedema compression
treatment items, including the
following:
(i) Standard and custom fitted
gradient compression garments.
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(ii) Gradient compression wraps with
adjustable straps.
(iii) Compression bandaging systems.
(iv) Other items determined to be
lymphedema compression treatment
items under the process established
under § 414.1670.
(v) For the purposes of paragraphs (i)
and (ii) of this paragraph, the scope of
the benefit for lymphedema
compression treatment items includes
accessories such as zippers in garments,
liners worn under garments or wraps
with adjustable straps, and padding or
fillers that are necessary for the effective
use of a gradient compression garment
or wrap with adjustable straps.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 7. Section 410.38 is amended by
adding paragraph (d)(4) to read as
follows:
§ 410.38 Durable medical equipment,
prosthetics, orthotics and supplies
(DMEPOS): Scope and conditions.
*
*
*
*
*
(d) * * *
(4) Refills—(i) Definitions. As used in
this paragraph (d):
Date of service (for refilled items)
means either—
(1) The date of delivery for the
DMEPOS item; or
(2) For items rendered via delivery or
shipping service, the shipping date.
Refills mean DMEPOS products that
are provided on a recurring basis
secondary to a medically necessary
DMEPOS order.
Shipping date means—
(1) The date the delivery/shipping
service label is created; or
(2) The date that the item is retrieved
for delivery. These dates must not
demonstrate significant variation.
(ii) Documentation. The DMEPOS
supplier must document contact with
the beneficiary or their representative to
verify the refill is needed. This
documentation must include both of the
following:
(A) Evidence of the beneficiary or
their representative’s affirmative
response of the need for supplies, which
should be obtained as close to the
expected end of the current supply as
possible. Contact and affirmative
response must be within 30 calendar
days from the expected end of the
current supply.
(B)(1) For shipped items, the
beneficiary name, date of contact, the
item requested, and an affirmative
response from the beneficiary,
indicative of the need for refill, prior to
dispensing the product; or
(2) For items obtained in-person from
a retail store, the delivery slip signed by
the beneficiary or their representative or
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a copy of the itemized sales receipt is
sufficient documentation of a request for
refill.
(iii) Delivery of DMEPOS items
provided on a recurring basis. The date
of service for DMEPOS items provided
on a recurring basis must be no earlier
than 10 calendar days before the
expected end of the current supply.
*
*
*
*
*
PART 414—PAYMENT FOR PART B
MEDICAL AND OTHER HEALTH
SERVICES
8. The authority citation for part 414
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 1302, 1395hh, and
1395rr(b)(l).
9. Section 414.210 is amended by—
a. In paragraph (g)(2)(ii) introductory
text, removing the phrase ‘‘(42 U.S.C.
1320b–5(g)(1)(B)), whichever is later’’
and adding in its place the phrase ‘‘(42
U.S.C. 1320b–5(g)(1)(B)), or December
31, 2023, whichever is later’’;
■ b. In paragraph (g)(2)(iii) introductory
text, removing the phrase ‘‘(42 U.S.C.
1320b–5(g)(1)(B)), whichever is later’’
and adding in its place the phrase ‘‘(42
U.S.C. 1320b–5(g)(1)(B)), or December
31, 2023, whichever is later’’;
■ c. In paragraph (g)(9)(iii) removing the
phrase ‘‘from June 1, 2018 through
December 31, 2020 or through the
duration’’ and adding in its place the
phrase ‘‘from June 1, 2018 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)) or
December 31, 2023’’;
■ d. Revising paragraph (g)(9)(v); and
■ e. In paragraph (g)(9)(vi), removing the
date ‘‘February 28, 2022’’ and adding in
its place the date ‘‘January 1, 2024’’.
The revision reads as follows:
■
■
§ 414.210
General payment rules.
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(g) * * *
(9) * * *
(v) 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)) or December 31, 2023,
whichever is later, based on the fee
schedule amount for the area is equal to
75 percent of the adjusted payment
amount established under this section
and 25 percent of the unadjusted fee
schedule amount.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 10. Amend § 414.402 by revising the
definition of ‘‘Item’’ to read as follows:
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§ 414.402
Definitions.
*
*
*
*
*
Item means a product included in a
competitive bidding program that is
identified by a HCPCS code, which may
be specified for competitive bidding (for
example, a product when it is furnished
through mail order), or a combination of
codes with or without modifiers, and
includes the services directly related to
the furnishing of that product to the
beneficiary. Items that may be included
in a competitive bidding program are as
follows:
(1) DME other than class III devices
under the Federal Food, Drug and
Cosmetic Act, as defined in § 414.402,
group 3 complex rehabilitative power
wheelchairs, complex rehabilitative
manual wheelchairs, manual
wheelchairs described by HCPCS codes
E1235, E1236, E1237, E1238, and
K0008, and related accessories when
furnished in connection with such
wheelchairs, and further classified into
the following categories:
(i) Inexpensive or routinely purchased
items, as specified in § 414.220(a).
(ii) Items requiring frequent and
substantial servicing, as specified in
§ 414.222(a).
(iii) Oxygen and oxygen equipment,
as specified in § 414.226(c)(1).
(iv) Other DME (capped rental items),
as specified in § 414.229.
(2) Supplies necessary for the
effective use of DME other than
inhalation and infusion drugs.
(3) Enteral nutrients, equipment, and
supplies.
(4) Off-the-shelf orthotics, which are
orthotics described in section 1861(s)(9)
of the Act that require minimal selfadjustment for appropriate use and do
not require expertise in trimming,
bending, molding, assembling or
customizing to fit a beneficiary.
(5) Lymphedema compression
treatment items.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 11. Amend § 414.408 by adding
paragraph (g)(5) to read as follows:
§ 414.408
Payment rules.
*
*
*
*
*
(g) * * *
(5) Lymphedema compression
treatment items.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 12. Amend § 414.412 by revising
paragraph (b)(2) to read as follows:
§ 414.412 Submission of bids under a
competitive bidding program.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) * * *
(2) The bid submitted for each lead
item and product category cannot
exceed the payment amount that would
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43813
otherwise apply to the lead item
under—
(i) Subpart C of this part, without the
application of § 414.210(g);
(ii) Subpart D of this part, without the
application of § 414.105; or
(iii) Subpart Q of this part, without
the application of § 414.1690.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 13. Add subpart Q, consisting of
§§ 414.1600 through 414.1690, to read
as follows:
Subpart Q—Payment for Lymphedema
Compression Treatment Items
Sec.
414.1600 Purpose and definitions.
414.1650 Payment basis for lymphedema
compression treatment items.
414.1660 Continuity of pricing when
HCPCS codes are divided or combined.
414.1670 Procedures for making benefit
category determinations and payment
determinations for new lymphedema
compression treatment items.
414.1680 Frequency limitations.
414.1690 Application of competitive
bidding information.
Subpart Q—Payment for Lymphedema
Compression Treatment Items
§ 414.1600
Purpose and definitions.
(a) Purpose. This subpart implements
section 1834(z) of the Act and
establishes procedures for making
benefit category determinations and
payment determinations for
lymphedema compression treatment
items.
(b) Definitions. For purposes of this
subpart the following definitions apply:
Benefit category determination means
a national determination regarding
whether an item or service meets the
Medicare definition of lymphedema
compression treatment item at section
1861(mmm) of the Act and the rules of
this subpart and is not otherwise
excluded from coverage by statute.
Lymphedema compression treatment
item means an item as described in
§ 410.2.
§ 414.1650 Payment basis for lymphedema
compression treatment items.
(a) General payment rule. For items
furnished on or after January 1, 2024,
Medicare pays for lymphedema
compression treatment items on the
basis of 80 percent of the lesser of –
(1) The actual charge for the item; or
(2) The payment amount for the item,
as determined in accordance with
paragraph (b) of this section.
(b) Payment amounts. The payment
amounts for covered lymphedema
compression treatment items paid for
under this subpart are established based
on one of the following:
(1) If payment amounts are available
from Medicaid state plans, then 120
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percent of the average of the Medicaid
payment amounts.
(2) If payment amounts are not
available from Medicaid state plans,
then 100 percent of the average of
average internet retail prices and
payment amounts from TRICARE
(Department of Defense).
(3) If payment amounts are not
available from Medicaid state plans or
TRICARE, then 100 percent of average
internet retail prices.
(c) Updates to payment amounts. The
payment amounts for covered
lymphedema compression treatment
items established in accordance with
paragraph (b) of this section are
increased on an annual basis beginning
on January 1 of the year subsequent to
the year in which the payment amounts
are initially established based on the
percent change in the Consumer Price
Index for all Urban Consumers (CPI–U)
for the 12-month period ending with
June of the previous year.
§ 414.1680
§ 414.1660 Continuity of pricing when
HCPCS codes are divided or combined.
(a) General rule. If HCPCS codes for
lymphedema compression treatment
items are divided or combined, the
payment amounts for the old codes are
mapped to the new codes to ensure
continuity of pricing.
(b) Mapping of payment amounts. (1)
If there is a single code that describes
two or more distinct complete items (for
example, two different but related or
similar items), and separate codes are
subsequently established for each item,
then the payment amounts that applied
to the single code continue to apply to
each of the items described by the new
codes.
(2) If the codes for several different
items are combined into a single code,
then the payment amounts for the new
code are established using the average
(arithmetic mean), weighted by allowed
services, of the payment amounts for the
formerly separate codes.
lotter on DSK11XQN23PROD with PROPOSALS2
§ 414.1670 Procedures for making benefit
category determinations and payment
determinations for new lymphedema
compression treatment items.
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:
(a) At the start of a HCPCS coding
cycle, CMS performs an analysis to
determine if the item is statutorily
excluded from coverage under Medicare
under section 1862 of the Act.
(1) If not excluded by statute, then
CMS determines whether the item is a
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lymphedema compression treatment
item as defined under section
1861(mmm) of the Act.
(2) If excluded by statute, the analysis
is concluded.
(b) If a preliminary determination is
made that the item is a lymphedema
compression treatment item, CMS
makes a preliminary payment
determination for the item or service.
(c) CMS posts preliminary benefit
category determinations and payment
determinations on CMS.gov
approximately 2 weeks prior to a public
meeting.
(d) After consideration of public
consultation provided at a public
meeting on preliminary benefit category
determinations and payment
determinations for items, CMS
establishes the benefit category
determinations and payment
determinations for items through
program instructions.
Frequency limitations.
(a) General rule. With the exception of
replacements of items that are lost,
stolen, or irreparably damaged, or if
needed due to a change in the patient’s
medical or physical condition, no
payment may be made for gradient
compression garments or wraps with
adjustable straps furnished other than at
the frequencies established in
paragraphs (b) and (c) of this section.
(b) Initial furnishing of lymphedema
compression treatment items. The
following frequency limitations apply to
items initially furnished to the
beneficiary if determined to be
reasonable and necessary for the
treatment of lymphedema:
(1) Two units of daytime gradient
compression garments or wraps with
adjustable straps per affected extremity
or part of the body.
(2) One garment for nighttime use per
affected extremity or part of the body.
(c) Replacements of lymphedema
compression treatment items. The
following frequency limitations apply to
replacements of lymphedema
compression treatment items if
determined to be reasonable and
necessary for the treatment of
lymphedema:
(1) Payment for the replacement of
gradient compression garments or wraps
with adjustable straps per each affected
extremity or part of the body can be
made once every 6 months.
(2) Payment for the replacement of
nighttime garments per each affected
extremity or part of the body can be
made once a year.
(d) Replacements of lymphedema
compression bandaging systems or
supplies. Specific frequency limitations
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are not established for these items.
Determinations regarding the quantity of
compression bandaging supplies needed
by each beneficiary during phase one of
decongestive therapy are made by the
DME MAC that processes the claims for
the supplies.
§ 414.1690 Application of competitive
bidding information.
The payment amounts for
lymphedema compression treatment
items under § 414.1650(b) may be
adjusted using information on the
payment determined as part of
implementation of the programs under
subpart F using the methodologies set
forth at § 414.210(g).
■ 14. Add subpart R, consisting of
§ 141.1700, to read as follows:
Subpart R—Home Intravenous
Immunoglobulin (IVIG) Items and
Services Payment
§ 414.1700
Basis of payment.
(a) General rule. For home
intravenous immunoglobulin (IVIG)
items or services furnished on or after
January 1, 2024, Medicare payment is
made on the basis of 80 percent of the
lesser of the following:
(1) The actual charge for the item or
service.
(2) The fee schedule amount for the
items and services, as determined in
accordance with the provisions of this
section.
(b) Per visit amount. A single payment
amount is made for items and services
furnished by a DME supplier per visit.
(c) Initial establishment of the
payment amount. In establishing the
initial per visit IVIG items and services
payment amount for CY 2024, CMS
used the CY 2023 bundled payment rate
under the IVIG Demonstration updated
by the home health payment percentage
update for CY 2024.
(d) Annual payment adjustment. The
per visit payment amount represents
payment in full for all costs associated
with the furnishing of home IVIG items
and services and is subject to the
following adjustment:
(1) Beginning in 2025, an annual
increase in the per-visit payment
amount from the prior year by the home
health update percentage increase for
the current calendar year.
(2) [Reserved]
PART 424—CONDITIONS FOR
MEDICARE PAYMENT
15. The authority for part 424
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 1302 and 1395hh.
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Subpart P—Requirements for
Establishing and Maintaining Medicare
Billing Privileges
16. Further amend § 424.502 (as
proposed to be amended at 88 FR 9829,
February 15, 2023) by—
■ a. In the definition of ‘‘Change in
majority ownership’’ removing the term
‘‘HHA’’ and in its place the phrase
‘‘HHA or hospice’’ wherever it appears.
■ b. Revising paragraph (1) of the
proposed definition of ‘‘Managing
employee’’.
The revision reads as follows:
■
§ 424.502
Definitions.
*
*
*
*
*
Managing employee means—(1) A
general manager, business manager,
administrator, director, or other
individual that exercises operational or
managerial control over, or who directly
or indirectly conducts, the day-to-day
operation of the provider or supplier,
either under contract or through some
other arrangement, whether or not the
individual is a W–2 employee of the
provider or supplier. For purposes of
this definition, this includes a hospice
or skilled nursing facility administrator
and a hospice or skilled nursing facility
medical director.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 17. Amend § 424.518 by—
■ a. Removing paragraph (b)(1)(iv);
■ b. Redesignating paragraphs (b)(1)(v)
through (b)(1)(viii) as paragraphs
(b)(1)(iv) through (b)(1)(vii);
■ c. Redesignating paragraph (b)(1)(xii)
as paragraph (b(1)(viii);
■ d. Revising newly redesignated
paragraph (b)(1)(viii) and paragraph
(b)(1)(ix);
■ e. Removing paragraphs (b)(1)(x)
through (b)(1)(xiv);
■ f. Revising (c)(1)(vi); and
■ g. Adding paragraphs (c)(1)(vii) and
(viii).
The revisions and additions read as
follows:
§ 424.518 Screening levels for Medicare
providers and suppliers.
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(b) * * *
(1) * * *
(viii) Prospective (newly enrolling)
and revalidating opioid treatment
programs that have been fully and
continuously certified by the Substance
Abuse and Mental Health Services
Administration (SAMHSA) since
October 23, 2018.
(ix) Revalidating opioid treatment
programs that have not been fully and
continuously certified by SAMHSA
since October 23, 2018, revalidating
DMEPOS suppliers, revalidating MDPP
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suppliers, revalidating HHAs,
revalidating SNFs, and revalidating
hospices to which CMS applied the
fingerprinting requirements outlined in
paragraph (c)(2)(ii) of this section upon
the provider’s or supplier’s—
(A) New/initial enrollment; or
(B) Revalidation after CMS waived the
fingerprinting requirements, under the
circumstances described in paragraph
(c)(1)(viii) of this section, when the
provider or supplier initially enrolled in
Medicare.
*
*
*
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*
(c) * * *
(1) * * *
(vi) Prospective (newly enrolling)
hospices.
(vii) Enrolled opioid treatment
programs that have not been fully and
continuously certified by SAMHSA
since October 23, 2018, DMEPOS
suppliers, MDPP suppliers, HHAs,
SNFs, and hospices that are submitting
a change of ownership application
under 42 CFR 489.18 or reporting any
new owner (regardless of ownership
percentage) in accordance with a change
of information or other enrollment
transaction under title 42.
(viii) Except as stated in paragraph
(b)(1)(ix) of this section, revalidating
opioid treatment programs that have not
been fully and continuously certified by
SAMHSA since October 23, 2018,
revalidating DMEPOS suppliers,
revalidating MDPP suppliers,
revalidating HHAs, revalidating SNFs,
and revalidating hospices for which,
upon their new/initial enrollment, CMS
waived the fingerprinting requirements
outlined in paragraph (c)(2)(ii) of this
section in accordance with applicable
legal authority due to a national, state,
or local emergency declared under
existing law.
*
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*
*
■ 18. Add § 424.527 to read as follows:
§ 424.527
Provisional period of oversight.
(a) New provider or supplier.
Exclusively for purposes of both section
1866(j)(3) of the Act and this § 424.527,
the term ‘‘new provider or supplier’’ is
defined as any of the following:
(1) A newly enrolling Medicare
provider or supplier. (This includes
providers that are required to enroll as
a new provider in accordance with the
change in majority ownership
provisions in § 424.550(b).)
(2) A certified provider or certified
supplier undergoing a change of
ownership consistent with the
principles of 42 CFR 489.18. (This
includes providers that qualify under
§ 424.550(b)(2) for an exception from the
change in majority ownership
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43815
requirements in § 424.550(b)(1) but
which are undergoing a change of
ownership under 42 CFR 489.18).
(3) A provider or supplier (including
an HHA or hospice) undergoing a 100
percent change of ownership via a
change of information request under
§ 424.516.
(b) Effective date. The effective date of
a provisional period of enhanced
oversight that is commenced under
section 1866(j)(3) of the Act is the date
on which the new provider or supplier
submits its first claim.
■ 19. Amend § 424.530 by—
■ a. In paragraph (f) introductory text
removing the phrase ‘‘3 years’’ and
adding in its place ‘‘10 years’’.
■ b. Adding paragraph (f)(3).
The revision and additions read as
follows:
§ 424.530 Denial of enrollment in the
Medicare program.
*
*
*
*
*
(f) * * *
(3)(i) A provider or supplier that is
currently subject to a reapplication bar
under paragraph (f) of this section may
not order, refer, certify, or prescribe
Medicare-covered services, items, or
drugs.
(ii) Medicare does not pay for any
otherwise covered service, item, or drug
that is ordered, referred, certified, or
prescribed by a provider or supplier that
is currently under a reapplication bar.
■ 20. Section 424.540(a)(1) is amended
by removing the number ‘‘12’’ and
adding in its place the number ‘‘6’’
wherever it appears.
■ 21 Add § 424.542 to read as follows:
§ 424.542 Prohibition on ordering,
certifying, referring, or prescribing based
on felony conviction.
(a) General prohibition. A physician
or other eligible professional (regardless
of whether he or she is or was enrolled
in Medicare) who has had a felony
conviction within the previous 10 years
that CMS determines is detrimental to
the best interests of the Medicare
program and its beneficiaries may not
order, refer, certify, or prescribe
Medicare-covered services, items, or
drugs.
(b) Payment. Medicare does not pay
for any otherwise covered service, item,
or drug that is ordered, referred,
certified, or prescribed by a physician or
other eligible professional (as that term
is defined in section 1848(k)(3)(B) of the
Act) who has had a felony conviction
within the previous 10 years that CMS
determines is detrimental to the best
interests of the Medicare program and
its beneficiaries.
■ 22. Amend § 424.550 by—
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a. Revising paragraph (b)(1)
introductory text;
■ b. In paragraph (b)(1)(i) removing the
term ‘‘HHA’’ and adding in its place the
phrase ‘‘HHA or hospice’’;
■ c. In paragraph (b)(2)(i) removing the
phrase ‘‘The HHA submitted two
consecutive years’’ and adding in its
place the phrase ‘‘The HHA or hospice
submitted 2 consecutive years’’;
■ d. In paragraph (b)(2)(ii), removing the
term ‘‘HHA’s’’ and adding in its place
the phrase ‘‘HHA’s or hospice’s’’;
■ e. In paragraph (b)(2)(iii), removing
the phrase ‘‘The owners of an existing
HHA are changing the HHA’s’’ and
adding in its place the phrase ‘‘The
owners of an existing HHA or hospice
are changing the HHA’s or hospice’s’’;
■ f. In paragraph (b)(2)(iv) removing the
term ‘‘HHA’’ and adding in its place the
phrase ‘‘HHA or hospice’’.
The revision reads as follows:
■
§ 424.550 Prohibitions on the sale or
transfer of billing privileges.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) * * *
(1) Unless an exception in paragraph
(b)(2) of this section applies, if there is
a change in majority ownership of a
home health agency (HHA) or hospice
by sale (including asset sales, stock
transfers, mergers, and consolidations)
within 36 months after the effective date
of the HHA’s or hospice’s initial
enrollment in Medicare or within 36
months after the HHA’s or hospice’s
most recent change in majority
ownership, the provider agreement and
Medicare billing privileges do not
convey to the new owner. The
prospective provider/owner of the HHA
or hospice must instead do both of the
following:
*
*
*
*
*
PART 484—HOME HEALTH SERVICES
23. The authority citation for part 484
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 1302 and 1395hh.
24. Section 484.202 is amended by
revising the definition of ‘‘Furnishing
Negative Pressure Wound Therapy
(NPWT) using a disposable device’’ to
read as follows:
■
§ 484.202
Definitions.
lotter on DSK11XQN23PROD with PROPOSALS2
*
*
*
*
*
Furnishing Negative Pressure Wound
Therapy (NPWT) using a disposable
device means the device is paid
separately (specified by the assigned
CPT® code) and does not include
payment for the professional services.
The nursing and therapy services are to
be included as part of the payment
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under the home health prospective
payment system.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 25. Section 484.245 is amended by
redesignating paragraph (b)(2) as
paragraph (b)(2)(i) and adding paragraph
(b)(2)(ii) to read as follows:
§ 484.245 Data submission requirements
under the home health quality reporting
program.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) * * *
(2) * * *
(ii) Data completion thresholds. (A) A
home health agency must meet or
exceed the data submission threshold
set at 90 percent of all required OASIS
or successor instrument records within
30-days of the beneficiary’s admission
or discharge and submitted through the
CMS designated data submission
systems.
(B) A home health agency must meet
or exceed the data submission
compliance threshold described in
paragraph (b)(2)(ii)(A) of this section to
avoid receiving a 2-percentage point
reduction to its annual payment update
for a given fiscal year described under
§ 484.225(b).
*
*
*
*
*
■ 26. Add § 484.358 to read as follows:
§ 484.358
factors.
HHVBP Measure removal
CMS may remove a quality measure
from the expanded HHVBP Model based
on one or more of the following factors:
(a) Measure performance among
HHAs is so high and unvarying that
meaningful distinctions in
improvements in performance can no
longer be made (that is, topped out).
(b) Performance or improvement on a
measure does not result in better patient
outcomes.
(c) A measure does not align with
current clinical guidelines or practice.
(d) A more broadly applicable
measure (across settings, populations, or
conditions) for the particular topic is
available.
(e) A measure that is more proximal
in time to desired patient outcomes for
the particular topic is available.
(f) A measure that is more strongly
associated with desired patient
outcomes for the particular topic is
available.
(g) Collection or public reporting of a
measure leads to negative unintended
consequences other than patient harm.
(h) The costs associated with a
measure outweigh the benefit of its
continued use in the program.
■ 27. Amend § 484.375 by revising
paragraph (b)(5) to read as follows:
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§ 484.375 Appeals process for the
Expanded Home Health Value-Based
Purchasing (HHVBP) Model.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) * * *
(5) Reconsideration decision. (i) CMS
reconsideration officials issue a written
decision that is final and binding upon
issuance unless the CMS
Administrator—
(A) Renders a final determination
reversing or modifying the
reconsideration decision; or
(B) Does not review the
reconsideration decision within 14 days
of the request.
(ii) An HHA may request that the
CMS Administrator review the
reconsideration decision within 7
calendar days of the decision.
(iii) If the CMS Administrator receives
a request to review, the CMS
Administrator must do one of the
following:
(A) Render a final determination
based on his or her review of the
reconsideration decision.
(B) Decline to review a
reconsideration decision made by CMS.
(C) Choose to take no action.
(iv) If the CMS Administrator does not
review an HHA’s request within 14 days
(as described in paragraph (b)(5)(iii)(B)
or (C) of this section), the
reconsideration official’s written
reconsideration decision is final.
PART 488—SURVEY, CERTIFICATION,
AND ENFORCEMENT PROCEDURES
28. The authority citation for part 488
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 1302 and 1395hh.
Subpart M—Survey and Certification of
Hospice Programs
29. Amend § 488.1105 by adding the
definitions of ‘‘Hospice Special Focus
Program’’, ‘‘IDR’’, ‘‘SFP status’’, and
‘‘SFP survey’’ in alphabetical order to
read as follows:
■
§ 488.1105
*
Definitions.
*
*
*
*
Hospice Special Focus Program (SFP)
means a program conducted by CMS to
identify hospices as poor performers,
based on defined quality indicators, in
which CMS selects hospices for
increased oversight to ensure that they
meet Medicare requirements. Selected
hospices either successfully complete
the SFP program or are terminated from
the Medicare program.
IDR stands for informal dispute
resolution.
*
*
*
*
*
SFP status means the status of a
hospice provider in the SFP with
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respect to the provider’s progress in the
SFP, which is indicated by one of the
following status levels:
(1) Level 1—in progress.
(2) Level 2—completed successfully.
(3) Level 3—terminated from the
Medicare program.
SFP survey means a standard survey
as defined in this section that is applied
after a hospice is selected for the SFP.
The survey is conducted every 6
months, up to 3 occurrences.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 30. Add § 488.1130 to read as follows:
§ 488.1130
(IDR).
Informal dispute resolution
lotter on DSK11XQN23PROD with PROPOSALS2
(a) Opportunity to refute survey
findings. Upon the provider’s receipt of
an official statement of deficiencies,
hospice programs can request an
informal opportunity to dispute
condition-level survey findings.
(b) Failure to conduct IDR timely.
Failure of CMS, the State, or the AO, as
appropriate, to complete IDR must not
delay the effective date of any
enforcement action.
(c) Revised statement of deficiencies
as a result of IDR. If any findings are
revised or removed by CMS, the State,
or the AO based on IDR, the official
statement of deficiencies is revised
accordingly and any enforcement
actions imposed solely as a result of
those cited deficiencies are adjusted
accordingly.
(d) Notification. (1) If the survey
findings indicate a condition-level
deficiency, the hospice program is
notified in writing of its opportunity for
participating in an IDR process at the
time the official statement of
deficiencies is issued.
(2) The request for IDR must—
(i) Be submitted in writing;
(ii) Include the specific deficiencies
that are disputed; and
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(iii) Be made within the same 10
calendar day period that the hospice
program has for submitting an
acceptable plan of correction.
■ 31. Add § 488.1135 to read as follows:
§ 488.1135 Hospice Special Focus
Program (SFP).
(a) Applicability. (1) The provisions of
this section are effective on or after [the
effective date of the final rule]; and
(2) SFP selection begins in CY 2024.
(b) Selection criteria. (1) Selection of
hospices for the SFP is made based on
the highest aggregate scores based on
the algorithm used by CMS.
(2) Hospice programs with accrediting
organization deemed status placed in
the SFP—
(i) Do not retain deemed status; and
(ii) Are placed under CMS or State
survey agency jurisdiction until
completion of the SFP or termination.
(c) Survey and enforcement criteria. A
hospice in the SFP—
(1) Is surveyed not less than once
every 6 months by CMS or the State
agency; and
(2) With condition level deficiencies
on any survey is subject to standard
enforcement actions and may be subject
to progressive enforcement remedies at
the discretion of CMS.
(d) Completion criteria. A hospice in
the SFP that has two SFP surveys within
18 months with no condition-level
deficiencies, and that has no pending
complaint survey triaged at an
immediate jeopardy or condition level,
or that has returned to substantial
compliance with all requirements may
complete the SFP.
(e) Termination criteria. (1) A hospice
in the SFP that does not meet the SFP
completion requirements in paragraph
(d) of this section is considered for
termination from the Medicare program
in accordance with 42 CFR 489.53.
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Sfmt 9990
43817
(2) CMS may consider termination
from the Medicare program in
accordance with § 488.1225 if any
survey results in an immediate jeopardy
citation while the hospice is in the SFP.
(f) Public reporting. CMS posts all of
the following at least annually on a CMS
public-facing website:
(1) A subset of 10 percent of hospice
programs based on the highest aggregate
scores as determined by the algorithm
used by CMS.
(2) Hospice SFP selection from the list
in paragraph (f)(1) of this section as
determined by CMS.
(3) SFP status as defined in
§ 488.1105.
PART 489—PROVIDER AGREEMENTS
AND SUPPLIER APPROVAL
32. The authority citation for part 489
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 1302, 1395i–3, 1395x,
1395aa(m), 1395cc, 1395ff, and 1395(hh).
33. Section 489.52 is amended by
adding paragraph (b)(4) to read as
follows:
■
§ 489.52
Termination by the provider.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) * * *
(4) A provider may request a
retroactive termination date if no
Medicare beneficiary received services
from the facility on or after the
requested termination date.
*
*
*
*
*
Dated: June 28, 2023.
Xavier Becerra,
Secretary, Department of Health and Human
Services.
[FR Doc. 2023–14044 Filed 6–30–23; 4:15 pm]
BILLING CODE 4120–01–P
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 88, Number 130 (Monday, July 10, 2023)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 43654-43817]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2023-14044]
[[Page 43653]]
Vol. 88
Monday,
No. 130
July 10, 2023
Part II
Department of Health and Human Services
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Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services
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42 CFR Parts 409, 410, 414, et al.
Medicare Program; Calendar Year (CY) 2024 Home Health (HH) Prospective
Payment System Rate Update; HH Quality Reporting Program Requirements;
HH Value-Based Purchasing Expanded Model Requirements; Home Intravenous
Immune Globulin Items and Services; Hospice Informal Dispute Resolution
and Special Focus Program Requirements, Certain Requirements for
Durable Medical Equipment Prosthetics and Orthotics Supplies; and
Provider and Supplier Enrollment Requirements; Proposed Rule
Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 130 / Monday, July 10, 2023 /
Proposed Rules
[[Page 43654]]
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DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services
42 CFR Parts 409, 410, 414, 424, 484, 488, and 489
[CMS-1780-P]
RIN 0938-AV03
Medicare Program; Calendar Year (CY) 2024 Home Health (HH)
Prospective Payment System Rate Update; HH Quality Reporting Program
Requirements; HH Value-Based Purchasing Expanded Model Requirements;
Home Intravenous Immune Globulin Items and Services; Hospice Informal
Dispute Resolution and Special Focus Program Requirements, Certain
Requirements for Durable Medical Equipment Prosthetics and Orthotics
Supplies; and Provider and Supplier Enrollment Requirements
AGENCY: Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS), Department of
Health and Human Services (HHS).
ACTION: Proposed rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: This proposed rule would set forth routine updates to the
Medicare home health payment rates for calendar year (CY) 2024 in
accordance with existing statutory and regulatory requirements. This
rule would--provide information on home health utilization trends and
solicits comments regarding access to home health aide services;
implement home health payment-related changes; rebase and revise the
home health market basket and revise the labor-related share; codify
statutory requirements for disposable negative pressure wound therapy
(dNPWT); and implement the new items and services payment for the home
intravenous immune globulin (IVIG) benefit. In addition, it proposes--
changes to the Home Health Quality Reporting Program (HH QRP)
requirements and the expanded Home Health Value-Based Purchasing
(HHVBP) Model; to implement the new Part B benefit for lymphedema
compression treatment items, codify the Medicare definition of brace,
and make other codification changes based on recent legislation; to add
an informal dispute resolution (IDR) and special focus program (SFP)
for hospice programs; to codify DMEPOS refill policy; and to revise
Medicare provider and supplier enrollment requirements.
DATES: To be assured consideration, comments must be received at one of
the addresses provided in the ADDRESSES section, no later than 5 p.m.
EDT on August 29, 2023.
ADDRESSES: In commenting, please refer to file code CMS-1780-P. Because
of staff and resource limitations, we cannot accept comments by
facsimile (FAX) transmission.
Comments, including mass comment submissions, must be submitted in
one of the following three ways (please choose only one of the ways
listed):
1. Electronically. You may (and we encourage you to) submit
electronic comments on this regulation to https://www.regulations.gov.
Follow the instructions under the ``submit a comment'' tab.
2. By regular mail. You may mail written comments to the following
address ONLY: Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, Department of
Health and Human Services, Attention: CMS-1780-P, P.O. Box 8013,
Baltimore, MD 21244-8013.
Please allow sufficient time for mailed comments to be received
before the close of the comment period.
3. By express or overnight mail. You may send written comments via
express or overnight mail to the following address ONLY: Centers for
Medicare & Medicaid Services, Department of Health and Human Services,
Attention: CMS-1780-P, Mail Stop C4-26-05, 7500 Security Boulevard,
Baltimore, MD 21244-1850.
For information on viewing public comments, we refer readers to the
beginning of the SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Brian Slater, (410) 786-5229, for home health and home IVIG payment
inquiries.
For general information about the Home Health Prospective Payment
System (HH PPS), send your inquiry via email to
[email protected].
For information about the Home Health Quality Reporting Program (HH
QRP), send your inquiry via email to [email protected].
Frank Whelan (410) 786-1302, for Medicare provider and supplier
enrollment inquiries.
For more information about the expanded Home Health Value-Based
Purchasing Model, please visit the Expanded HHVBP Model web page at
https://innovation.cms.gov/innovation-models/expanded-home-health-value-based-purchasing-model.
For more information about the hospice informal dispute resolution
and special focus program, send your inquiry to
[email protected].
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Inspection of Public Comments: All comments received before the
close of the comment period are available for viewing by the public,
including any personally identifiable or confidential business
information that is included in a comment. We post all comments
received before the close of the comment period on the following
website as soon as possible after they have been received: https://www.regulations.gov/. Follow the search instructions on that website to
view public comments.
Table of Contents
I. Executive Summary
A. Purpose and Legal Authority
B. Summary of the Provisions of This Proposed Rule
C. Summary of Costs, Transfers, and Benefits
II. Home Health Prospective Payment System
A. Overview of the Home Health Prospective Payment System
B. Monitoring the Effects of the Implementation of PDGM
C. Proposed Provisions for CY 2024 Payment Under the HH PPS
III. Home Health Quality Reporting Program (HH QRP)
A. Background and Statutory Authority
B. General Considerations Used for the Selection of Quality
Measures for the HH QRP
C. Quality Measures Currently Adopted for the CY 2024 HH QRP
D. HH QRP Quality Measure Proposals Beginning With the CY 2025
HH QRP
E. Form, Manner, and Timing of Data Submission Under the HH QRP
F. Policies Regarding Public Display of Measure Data for the HH
QRP
G. Health Equity Update
H. Proposal To Codify HH QRP Data Completion Thresholds
I. Principles for Selecting and Prioritizing HH QRP Quality
Measures and Concepts Under Consideration for Future Years: Request
for Information (RFI)
IV. Proposed Changes to the Expanded Home Health Value-Based
Purchasing (HHVBP) Model
A. Background
B. Proposed Changes to the Applicable Measure Set
C. Proposed Changes to the Appeals Process
D. Public Reporting Reminder
E. Health Equity Update
V. Medicare Home Intravenous Immune Globulin (IVIG) Items and
Services
A. General Background
B. Proposed Scope of Expanded IVIG Benefit
C. Proposed IVIG Administration Items and Services Payment
D. Proposed Home IVIG Items and Services Payment Rate
E. Billing Procedures for Home IVIG Items and Services
VI. Hospice Informal Dispute Resolution and Special Focus Program
[[Page 43655]]
A. Background and Statutory Authority
B. Proposed Regulatory Provisions
VII. Proposed Changes Regarding Durable Medical Equipment,
Prosthetics, Orthotics, and Supplies (DMEPOS)
A. Medicare Durable Medical Equipment, Prosthetics, Orthotics,
and Supplies (DMEPOS) Competitive Bidding Program (CBP)
B. Scope of the Benefit and Payment for Lymphedema Compression
Treatment Items
C. Definition of Brace
D. Documentation Requirements for Durable Medical Equipment,
Prosthetics, Orthotics, and Supplies Products Supplied as Refills to
the Original Order
VIII. Proposed Changes to the Provider and Supplier Enrollment
Requirements
A. Background
B. Proposed Provisions
IX. Collection of Information Requirements
A. Statutory Requirement for Solicitation of Comments
B. Information Collection Requirements (ICRs)
C. Submission of PRA-Related Comments
X. Regulatory Impact Analysis
A. Statement of Need
B. Overall Impact
C. Detailed Economic Analysis
D. Regulatory Review Cost Estimation
E. Alternatives Considered
F. Accounting Statements and Tables
G. Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)
H. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act (UMRA)
I. Federalism
J. Conclusion
Regulations Text
I. Executive Summary
A. Purpose and Legal Authority
1. Home Health Prospective Payment System (HH PPS)
As required under section 1895(b) of the Social Security Act (the
Act), this proposed rule would update the payment rates for home health
agencies (HHAs) for CY 2024. In this proposed rule we include analysis
on home health utilization and solicit comments related to access to
home health aide services. This rule also provides analysis determining
the difference between assumed versus actual behavior change on
estimated aggregate expenditures for home health payments as result of
the change in the unit of payment to 30 days and the implementation of
the PDGM case-mix adjustment methodology, and proposes a permanent
prospective adjustment to the CY 2024 home health payment rate. In
addition, this rule proposes to recalibrate the PDGM case-mix weights
and update the LUPA thresholds, functional impairment levels, and
comorbidity adjustment subgroups under section 1895(b)(4)(A)(i) and
(b)(4)(B) of the Act for 30-day periods of care in CY 2024. This rule
proposes to rebase and revise the home health market basket and
proposes to revise the labor-related share. Additionally, this rule
proposes to codify statutory requirements for dNPWT and updates the CY
2024 fixed-dollar loss ratio (FDL) for outlier payments (so that
outlier payments as a percentage of estimated total payments are not to
exceed 2.5 percent, as required by section 1895(b)(5)(A) of the Act).
2. Home Health (HH) Quality Reporting Program (QRP)
In accordance with the statutory authority at section
1895(b)(3)(B)(v) of the Act, we are proposing updated policies, the
codification of the previously finalized 90 percent Outcome and
Assessment Information Set (OASIS) data completion threshold policy in
the Code of Federal Regulations (CFR) and the public reporting of four
measures. We are also including a request for information on future HH
QRP measure concepts and an update on health equity in the HH QRP.
3. Expanded Home Health Value-Based Purchasing (HHVBP) Model
In accordance with the statutory authority at section 1115A of the
Act, we are proposing updated policies, including the codification of
previously finalized measure removal factors, changes to the applicable
measure set, updating the Model baseline year, and an amendment to the
appeals process for the expanded HHVBP Model. We are also including
updates on health equity and public reporting.
4. Home Intravenous Immune Globulin (IVIG) Items and Services
As required under Division FF, section 4134 of the Consolidated
Appropriations Act, 2023 (CAA, 2023), this proposed rule would
implement coverage and payment for items and services related to the
administration of IVIG in the home of a patient with a diagnosed
primary immune deficiency disease (PIDD).
5. Hospice Informal Dispute Resolution and Special Focus Program
As required under Division CC, section 407 of the Consolidated
Appropriations Act of 2021 (CAA 2021), this proposed rule would
implement a special focus program (SFP) for poor performing hospices
that includes the SFP algorithm (including data sources) to identify
indicators of hospice poor performance, the criteria for selection and
completion of the SFP, hospice termination from Medicare, and public
reporting of the SFP. We are also proposing regulations to implement an
informal dispute resolution (IDR) process to provide hospice programs
an informal opportunity to resolve disputes related to condition-level
survey findings for those hospice programs that are seeking
recertification for continued participation in Medicare.
6. Durable Medical Equipment, Prosthetics, Orthotics, and Supplies
Products and CAA 2023-Related Changes
Section 3712 of the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security
Act (CARES) Act (Pub. L. 116-136, March 27, 2020) https://www.govinfo.gov/link/plaw/116/public/136 requires that Medicare payment
rates for durable medical equipment (DME) in areas other than rural and
noncontiguous areas during the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)
public health emergency (PHE) be equal to 75 percent of the adjusted
payment amounts (based on the DME competitive bidding program
information), and 25 percent of the unadjusted fee schedule amounts.
The regulations at Sec. 414.210(g)(9)(v) codified these payment rates
for the duration of the PHE. Section 4139 of the Consolidated
Appropriations Act (CAA), 2023 (Pub. L. 117-328, December 29, 2022)
requires payment based on these rates through the end of the COVID-19
PHE or December 31, 2023, whichever is later. We are proposing to make
changes to the regulations to codify these payment rates through the
end of the COVID-19 PHE or unless otherwise specified by law.
The scope of the benefit and payment for lymphedema compression
treatment items in section 4133 of the CAA, 2023 adds section
1861(s)(2)(JJ) to the Act, adding the Medicare Part B benefit for
lymphedema compression treatment items effective January 1, 2024. This
rule would address the scope of the new benefit by defining what
constitutes a standard or custom fitted gradient compression garment
and determining what other compression items may exist that are used
for the treatment of lymphedema and would fall under the new benefit.
This rule would also implement section 1834(z) of the Act in
establishing payment amounts for items covered under the new benefit
and frequency limitations for lymphedema compression treatment items.
CMS expects to conduct outreach for individuals with Medicare and issue
provider education regarding this benefit.
The definition of brace in section 1861(s)(9) of the Act provides
coverage
[[Page 43656]]
under Part B for leg, arm, back, and neck braces. This rule would
codify the existing definition of a brace found in the Medicare Benefit
Policy Manual (CMS 100-02) and clarify that this definition encompasses
newer, technology-powered devices.
7. Documentation Requirements for Durable Medical Equipment,
Prosthetics, Orthotics, and Supplies Products Supplied as Refills to
the Original Order
Section 1893(b)(1) of the Act, authorizes ``[r]eview of activities
of providers of services or other individuals and entities furnishing
items and services for which payment may be made under this title . . .
including medical and utilization review . . .''. The requirement for
documentation to support DMEPOS refills originally arose in response to
concerns related to auto-shipments and delivery of DMEPOS products that
may no longer be needed or not needed at the same level of frequency/
volume. We are proposing to codify our long-standing refill policy,
with some changes. We propose to require documentation indicating that
the beneficiary confirmed the need for the refill within the 30-day
period prior to the end of the current supply. We propose to codify our
requirement that delivery of DMEPOS items (that is, date of service) be
no sooner than 10 calendar days before the expected end of the current
supply. We seek comments for consideration in future rulemaking on ways
to balance beneficiary burden with the potential risks/burdens of not
verifying the beneficiary's actual need for recurring supplies for
certain individuals with permanent conditions.
8. Provider and Supplier Enrollment Requirements
The purpose of our provider enrollment provisions is to strengthen
and clarify certain aspects of the provider enrollment process. This
includes, but is not limited to: (1) subjecting a greater number of
providers and suppliers, such as hospices, to the highest level of
screening, which includes fingerprinting all 5 percent or greater
owners of these providers and suppliers; (2) applying the change in
majority ownership (CIMO) provisions in 42 CFR 424.550(b) to hospices;
and (3) reducing the period of Medicare non-billing for which a
provider or supplier can be deactivated under Sec. 424.540(a)(1) from
12 months to 6 months. These changes are necessary to help ensure that
payments are made only to qualified providers and suppliers and/or that
owners of these entities are carefully screened. We believe that
fulfilling both of these objectives would assist in protecting the
Trust Funds and Medicare beneficiaries.
B. Summary of the Provisions of This Proposed Rule
1. Home Health Prospective Payment System (HH PPS)
In section II.B.1. of this proposed rule, we provide monitoring and
data analysis on PDGM utilization for CYs 2020, 2021, and 2022. In this
section we also solicit comments related to access to home health aide
services. In section II.C.1. of this rule, we provide analysis
determining the difference between assumed versus actual behavior
change on estimated aggregate expenditures for home health payments as
result of the change in the unit of payment to 30 days and the
implementation of the PDGM case-mix adjustment methodology; and a
proposal to apply a permanent prospective adjustment of -5.653 percent
to the CY 2024 home health payment rate.
In section II.C.2. of this proposed rule, we explain plans to
recalibrate the PDGM case-mix weights, LUPA thresholds, functional
levels, and comorbidity adjustment subgroups for CY 2024.
In section II.C.3. of this rule we set out proposals to rebase and
revise the home health market basket to reflect a 2021 base year. We
propose to use this 2021-based home health market basket to calculate
the home health payment update percentage for CY 2024 as well as to
revise the labor-related share.
In section II.C.4. of this rule, we detail proposals to update the
home health wage index, the CY 2024 national, standardized 30-day
period payment rates, and the CY 2024 national per-visit payment
amounts by the home health payment update percentage. The proposed home
health payment update percentage for CY 2024 is 2.7 percent.
Additionally, this rule proposes the CY 2024 FDL ratio to ensure that
aggregate outlier payments do not exceed 2.5 percent of the total
aggregate payments, as required by section 1895(b)(5)(A) of the Act.
In section II.C.5 of this rule, we discuss our proposal to codify
statutory payment changes for negative pressure wound therapy using a
disposable device (dNPWT).
2. Home Health Quality Reporting Program (HH QRP)
In section III. of this proposed rule, we are proposing the
adoption of the measure ``COVID-19 Vaccine: Percent of Patients/
Residents Who Are Up to Date'' (Patient/Resident COVID-19 Vaccine) to
the HH QRP beginning with the CY 2025 HH QRP. CMS also proposes to
adopt the ``Functional Discharge Score'' (DC Function) measure to the
HH QRP beginning with the CY 2025 HH QRP. With the addition of the
Discharge Function measure, we propose to remove the measure
``Application of Percent of Long-Term Care Hospital (LTCH) Patients
with an Admission and Discharge Functional Assessment and a Care Plan
That Addresses Function'' (Application of Functional Assessment/Care
Plan) from the HH QRP beginning with the CY 2025 HH QRP. CMS
additionally propose the removal of two OASIS items no longer necessary
for collection, the M0110--Episode Timing and M2220--Therapy Needs
items. We are also proposing technical changes to Sec. 484.245(b) to
codify our requirement that HHAs must meet or exceed a data submission
threshold set at 90 percent of all required OASIS and submit the data
through the CMS designated data submission systems. Lastly, we seek
input on future HH QRP measure concepts and provide updates on HH QRP
health equity initiatives.
3. Expanded Home Health Value Based Purchasing (HHVBP) Model
In section IV. of this proposed rule, we discuss our proposal to
codify the HHVBP measure removal factors at Sec. 484.380. We are
proposing to remove five and add three quality measures to the
applicable measure set. Along with the proposed revisions to the
current measure set, we propose to revise the weights of the individual
measures within the OASIS-based measure category and within the claims-
based measure category starting in the CY 2025 performance year. We are
proposing to update the Model baseline year from CY 2022 to CY 2023
starting in the CY 2025 performance year to enable CMS to measure
competing HHAs performance on benchmarks and achievement thresholds
that are more current for all applicable measures. Additionally, we are
amending the appeals process such that reconsideration decisions may be
reviewed by the Administrator. We are including an update to the RFI,
Future Approaches to Health Equity in the Expanded HHVBP Model, that
was published in the CY 2023 HH PPS rule. We will also include an
update that reminds stakeholders that we will begin public reporting of
HHVBP performance data on or after December 1, 2024.
[[Page 43657]]
4. Home Intravenous Immune Globulin (IVIG) Items and Services
As required under Division FF, section 4134 of the Consolidated
Appropriations Act, 2023 (CAA, 2023), section V. of this rule proposes
regulations to implement coverage and payment of items and services
related to administration of IVIG in a patient's home for a patient
with PIDD.
5. Hospice Informal Dispute Resolution and Special Focus Program
In section VI. of this proposed rule, we discuss our proposal for a
new hospice informal dispute resolution (IDR) process at Sec. 488.1130
to align with the process that is available for home health agencies
(HHAs). We are proposing the hospice IDR to address disputes related to
condition-level survey findings following a hospice program's receipt
of the official survey statement of deficiencies. The IDR will provide
hospice programs an informal opportunity to resolve disputes in the
survey findings for those hospice programs that are seeking
recertification from the State Survey Agency (SA) or reaccreditation
from an accrediting organization (AO) for continued participation in
Medicare. Additionally, the IDR may be initiated for those hospice
programs that are currently under SA monitoring (either through a
complaint investigation or validation survey) and those in the SFP. In
section VII we discuss our proposal to add the hospice Special Focus
Program (SFP) at Sec. 488.1135. In the proposed rule, we include the
SFP algorithm (including data sources) to identify indicators of
hospice poor performance, the criteria for selection and completion of
the SFP, hospice termination from Medicare, and public reporting of the
SFP. In response to previous comments urging CMS to seek technical
expert panel (TEP) recommendations to better inform the development of
the SFP, a TEP was convened to gain input from key stakeholders on
various aspects of the SFP proposed in this rule. We propose the
hospice SFP will commence beginning the effective date of the rule with
implementation during CY 2024. We propose to periodically review the
effectiveness of the methodology and the algorithm.
6. Durable Medical Equipment, Prosthetics, Orthotics, and Supplies
Products and CAA 2023 Related Changes
In section VII.A.3. of this rule, we discuss our proposal to make
conforming changes to Sec. 414.210(g)(9), consistent with section
4139(a) and 4139(b) of the CAA, 2023. First, section 4139 of the CAA,
2023 does not change the current policy under Sec. 414.210(g)(9)(iii)
of paying for DMEPOS items and services furnished in rural and non-
contiguous non-competitive bidding areas (CBAs) based on a 50/50 blend
of adjusted and unadjusted fee schedule amounts through the duration of
the PHE for COVID-19.
As a result, we are proposing to revise Sec. 414.210(g)(9)(iii),
to state that for items and services furnished in rural areas and non-
contiguous areas (Alaska, Hawaii, and U.S. territories) with dates of
service from June 1, 2018 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)) or December 31, 2023, whichever is later, based on the fee
schedule amount for the area is equal to 50 percent of the adjusted
payment amount established under this section and 50 percent of the
unadjusted fee schedule amount.
We are proposing to revise Sec. 414.210(g)(9)(v) to state that for
items and services furnished in areas other than rural or noncontiguous
areas with dates of service from March 6, 2020 through December 31,
2023 or 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)), whichever is later, the fee schedule amount for the area
is equal to 75 percent of the adjusted payment amount established under
this section and 25 percent of the unadjusted fee schedule amount.
We are proposing to remove outdated text from Sec.
414.210(g)(9)(v) that states ``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, the fee schedule amount for the area is equal to 100 percent
of the adjusted payment amount established under this section.''
We are proposing to revise Sec. 414.210(g)(9)(vi) to state that
for items and services furnished in all areas with dates of service on
or after January 1, 2024, or the date immediately following the
duration of the emergency period described in section 1135(g)(1)(B) of
the Act, whichever is later, the fee schedule amount for the area is
equal to the adjusted payment amount established under paragraph (g) of
this section.
We are proposing to make conforming changes to Sec. 414.210(g)(2)
for the rural and non-contiguous areas in order to specify the December
31, 2023 date specified in section 4139 of the CAA, 2023.
In section VII.B.8. of this rule, we discuss our proposal to amend
42 CFR 410.36(a) to add paragraph (4) and the following new category of
medical supplies, appliances, and devices covered under Medicare Part
B; Lymphedema compression items including: standard and custom fitted
gradient compression garments; gradient compression wraps with
adjustable straps; compression bandaging systems; and other items
determined to be lymphedema compression treatment items under the
process established under Sec. 414.1670. Other covered items would
include accessories such as zippers in garments, liners worn under
garments or wraps with adjustable straps, and padding or fillers that
are necessary for the effective use of a gradient compression garment
or wrap with adjustable straps.
We are proposing to modify and add to the existing HCPCS codes for
lymphedema compression treatment items.
We are proposing to add Sec. 414.1670 under new subpart Q and use
the same process described in Sec. 414.240 to obtain public
consultation on preliminary benefit category determinations and payment
determinations for new lymphedema compression treatment items.
We are proposing to add a new subpart Q under the regulations at 42
CFR part 414 titled, ``Payment for Lymphedema Compression Treatment
Items'' to implement the provisions of section 1834(z) of the Act.
We are proposing to add Sec. 414.1600 to explain the purpose and
definitions found in subpart Q.
We are also proposing to add Sec. 414.1660 to address continuity
of pricing when HCPCS codes for lymphedema compression treatment items
are divided or combined.
We are proposing to add Sec. 414.1680 and the following frequency
limitations for lymphedema compression treatment items
We are proposing to revise the regulations for competitive bidding
under at 42 CFR part 414, subpart F to include lymphedema compression
treatment items under the competitive bidding program as mandated by
section 1847(a)(2)(D) of the Act. We propose to add lymphedema
compression treatment items to the definition of item at Sec. 414.402.
We are proposing to revise Sec. 414.408 to indicate that payment for
these items would be calculated on a lump sum purchase basis and
payment under the program would be made in accordance with any
frequency
[[Page 43658]]
limitations established under subpart Q in accordance with section
1834(z)(2) of the Act. We are also proposing to add lymphedema
compression treatment items to Sec. 414.412 to address limiting bids
submitted under the program using the payment established under subpart
Q.
We are proposing to add Sec. 414.1690 indicating that the payment
amounts established under Sec. 414.1650(b) may be adjusted using
information on the payment determined for lymphedema compression
treatment items as part of implementation of the competitive bidding
programs under subpart F using the methodologies set forth at Sec.
414.210(g).
In section VII.C.3. of this rule, we discuss our proposal to amend
the regulations at 42 CFR 410.2 to add the definition of brace and to
add clarification at Sec. 410.36(a)(3)(i) for the purpose of
determining the Medicare Part B benefit and scope for leg, arm, back,
and neck braces and making benefit category determinations regarding
specific items in accordance with the review process for benefit
category and payment determinations under Sec. 414.240.
7. Documentation Requirements for Durable Medical Equipment,
Prosthetics, Orthotics, and Supplies Products Supplied as Refills to
the Original Order
We propose updating the refill documentation requirements such that
a beneficiary affirmation would need to be documented by the supplier.
We propose to require documentation indicating that the beneficiary
confirmed the need for the refill within the 30-day period prior to the
end of the current supply. We propose to codify our requirement that
delivery of DMEPOS items (that is, date of service) be no sooner than
10 calendar days before the expected end of the current supply. There
is no associated paperwork burden as the burden is already accounted
for and approved by the Office of Management and Budget under OMB
control number 0938-0969 (CMS-10417).
8. Provider and Supplier Enrollment Requirements
We are proposing a number of changes to our Medicare provider and
supplier enrollment requirements. These include, but are not limited
to: (1) provisions related to hospice enrollment and ownership; and (2)
deactivation of providers and suppliers.
C. Summary of Costs, Transfers, and Benefits
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II. Home Health Prospective Payment System
A. Overview of the Home Health Prospective Payment System
1. Statutory Background
Section 1895(b)(1) of the Act requires the Secretary to establish a
Home Health Prospective Payment System (HH PPS) for all costs of home
health services paid under Medicare. Section 1895(b)(2) of the Act
requires that, in defining a prospective payment amount, the Secretary
will consider an appropriate unit of service and the number, type, and
duration of visits provided within that unit, potential changes in the
mix of services provided within that unit and their cost, and a general
system design that provides for continued access to quality services.
In accordance with the statute, as amended by the Balanced Budget Act
of 1997 (BBA), (Pub. L. 105-33, enacted August 5, 1997) we published a
final rule in the July 3, 2000 Federal Register (65 FR 41128) to
implement the HH PPS legislation.
Section 5201(c) of the Deficit Reduction Act of 2005 (DRA) (Pub. L.
109-171, enacted February 8, 2006) added new section 1895(b)(3)(B)(v)
to the Act, requiring home health agencies (HHAs) to submit data for
purposes of measuring health care quality, and linking the quality data
submission to the annual applicable home health payment update
percentage increase. This data submission requirement is applicable for
CY 2007 and each subsequent year. If an HHA does not submit quality
data, the home health market basket percentage increase is reduced by 2
percentage points. In the November 9, 2006 Federal Register (71 FR
65935), we published a final rule to implement the pay-for-reporting
requirement of the DRA, which was codified at Sec. 484.225(h) and (i)
in
[[Page 43661]]
accordance with the statute. The pay-for-reporting requirement was
implemented on January 1, 2007.
Section 51001(a)(1)(B) of the Bipartisan Budget Act of 2018 (BBA of
2018) (Pub. L. 115-123) amended section 1895(b) of the Act to require a
change to the home health unit of payment to 30-day periods beginning
January 1, 2020. Section 51001(a)(2)(A) of the BBA of 2018 added a new
subclause (iv) under section 1895(b)(3)(A) of the Act, requiring the
Secretary to calculate a standard prospective payment amount (or
amounts) for 30-day units of service furnished that end during the 12-
month period beginning January 1, 2020, in a budget neutral manner,
such that estimated aggregate expenditures under the HH PPS during CY
2020 are equal to the estimated aggregate expenditures that otherwise
would have been made under the HH PPS during CY 2020 in the absence of
the change to a 30-day unit of service. Section 1895(b)(3)(A)(iv) of
the Act requires that the calculation of the standard prospective
payment amount (or amounts) for CY 2020 be made before the application
of the annual update to the standard prospective payment amount as
required by section 1895(b)(3)(B) of the Act.
Additionally, section 1895(b)(3)(A)(iv) of the Act requires that in
calculating the standard prospective payment amount (or amounts), the
Secretary must make assumptions about behavior changes that could occur
as a result of the implementation of the 30-day unit of service under
section 1895(b)(2)(B) of the Act and case-mix adjustment factors
established under section 1895(b)(4)(B) of the Act. Section
1895(b)(3)(A)(iv) of the Act further requires the Secretary to provide
a description of the behavior assumptions made in notice and comment
rulemaking. CMS finalized these behavior assumptions in the CY 2019 HH
PPS final rule with comment period (83 FR 56461).
Section 51001(a)(2)(B) of the BBA of 2018 also added a new
subparagraph (D) to section 1895(b)(3) of the Act. Section
1895(b)(3)(D)(i) of the Act requires the Secretary annually to
determine the impact of differences between assumed behavior changes,
as described in section 1895(b)(3)(A)(iv) of the Act, and actual
behavior changes on estimated aggregate expenditures under the HH PPS
with respect to years beginning with 2020 and ending with 2026. Section
1895(b)(3)(D)(ii) of the Act requires the Secretary, at a time and in a
manner determined appropriate, through notice and comment rulemaking,
to provide for one or more permanent increases or decreases to the
standard prospective payment amount (or amounts) for applicable years,
on a prospective basis, to offset for such increases or decreases in
estimated aggregate expenditures, as determined under section
1895(b)(3)(D)(i) of the Act. Additionally, section 1895(b)(3)(D)(iii)
of the Act requires the Secretary, at a time and in a manner determined
appropriate, through notice and comment rulemaking, to provide for one
or more temporary increases or decreases to the payment amount for a
unit of home health services for applicable years, on a prospective
basis, to offset for such increases or decreases in estimated aggregate
expenditures, as determined under section 1895(b)(3)(D)(i) of the Act.
Such a temporary increase or decrease shall apply only with respect to
the year for which such temporary increase or decrease is made, and the
Secretary shall not take into account such a temporary increase or
decrease in computing the payment amount for a unit of home health
services for a subsequent year. Finally, section 51001(a)(3) of the BBA
of 2018 amends section 1895(b)(4)(B) of the Act by adding a new clause
(ii) to require the Secretary to eliminate the use of therapy
thresholds in the case-mix system for CY 2020 and subsequent years.
Division FF, section 4136 of the Consolidated Appropriations Act,
2023 (CAA, 2023) amended section 1834(s)(3)(A) of the Act to require
that, beginning with 2024, the separate payment for furnishing negative
pressure wound therapy (NPWT) be for just the device and not for
nursing and therapy services. Payment for nursing and therapy services
are to be included as part of payments under the HH PPS. The separate
payment for 2024 is to be equal to the supply price used to determine
the relative value for the service under the Medicare Physician Fee
Schedule (as of January 1, 2022) for the applicable disposable device
updated by the percentage increase in the Consumer Price Index for All
Urban Consumers (CPI-U). The separate payment for 2025 and each
subsequent year is to be the payment amount for the previous year
updated by the percentage increase in the CPI-U (United States city
average) for the 12-month period ending in June of the previous year
minus the productivity adjustment as described in section
1886(b)(3)(B)(xi)(II) for such year. The CAA, 2023 also added section
1834(s)(4) of the Act to require that beginning with 2024, as part of
submitting claims for the separate payment, the Secretary shall accept
and process claims submitted using the type of bill that is most
commonly used by home health agencies to bill services under a home
health plan of care.
2. Current System for Payment of Home Health Services
For home health periods of care beginning on or after January 1,
2020, Medicare makes payment under the HH PPS on the basis of a
national, standardized 30-day period payment rate that is adjusted for
case-mix and area wage differences in accordance with section
51001(a)(1)(B) of the BBA of 2018. The national, standardized 30-day
period payment rate includes payment for the six home health
disciplines (skilled nursing, home health aide, physical therapy,
speech-language pathology, occupational therapy, and medical social
services). Payment for non-routine supplies (NRS) is also part of the
national, standardized 30-day period rate. Durable medical equipment
(DME) provided as a home health service, as defined in section 1861(m)
of the Act, is paid the fee schedule amount or is paid through the
competitive bidding program and such payment is not included in the
national, standardized 30-day period payment amount. Additionally, the
30-day period payment rate does not include payment for certain
injectable osteoporosis drugs and negative pressure wound therapy
(NPWT) using a disposable device (though this rule is proposing changes
to this provision pursuant to section 4136 of the CAA, 2023), but such
drug and services must be billed by the HHA while a patient is under a
home health plan of care, as the law requires consolidated billing of
osteoporosis drugs and NPWT using a disposable device.
To better align payment with patient care needs and to better
ensure that clinically complex and ill beneficiaries have adequate
access to home health care, in the CY 2019 HH PPS final rule with
comment period (83 FR 56406), we finalized case-mix methodology
refinements through the Patient-Driven Groupings Model (PDGM) for home
health periods of care beginning on or after January 1, 2020. The PDGM
did not change eligibility or coverage criteria for Medicare home
health services, and as long as the individual meets the criteria for
home health services as described at 42 CFR 409.42, the individual can
receive Medicare home health services, including therapy services. For
more information about the role of therapy services under the PDGM, we
refer readers to the Medicare Learning Network (MLN) Matters article
SE20005 available at https://www.cms.gov/
[[Page 43662]]
regulations-and-guidanceguidancetransmittals2020-transmittals/se20005.
To adjust for case-mix for 30-day periods of care beginning on and
after January 1, 2020, the HH PPS uses a 432-category case-mix
classification system to assign patients to a home health resource
group (HHRG) using patient characteristics and other clinical
information from Medicare claims and the Outcome and Assessment
Information Set (OASIS) assessment instrument. These 432 HHRGs
represent the different payment groups based on five main case-mix
categories under the PDGM, as shown in Figure B1. Each HHRG has an
associated case-mix weight that is used in calculating the payment for
a 30-day period of care. For periods of care with visits less than the
low-utilization payment adjustment (LUPA) threshold for the HHRG,
Medicare pays national per-visit rates based on the discipline(s)
providing the services. Medicare also adjusts the national standardized
30-day period payment rate for certain intervening events that are
subject to a partial payment adjustment. For certain cases that exceed
a specific cost threshold, an outlier adjustment may also be available.
Under this case-mix methodology, case-mix weights are generated for
each of the different PDGM payment groups by regressing resource use
for each of the five categories (admission source, timing, clinical
grouping, functional impairment level, and comorbidity adjustment)
using a fixed effects model. A detailed description of each of the
case-mix variables under the PDGM have been described previously, and
we refer readers to the CY 2021 HH PPS final rule (85 FR 70303 through
70305).
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B. Monitoring the Effects of the Implementation of PDGM
1. Routine PDGM Monitoring
CMS routinely analyzes Medicare home health benefit utilization,
including but not limited to, overall total 30-day periods of care and
average periods of care per HHA user; distribution of the type of
visits in a 30-day period of care; the percentage of periods that
receive the LUPA; estimated costs; the percentage of 30-day periods of
care by clinical group, comorbidity adjustment, admission source,
timing, and functional impairment level; and the proportion of 30-day
periods of care with and without any therapy visits, nursing visits,
and/or aide/social worker visits. For the monitoring included in this
rule, we examine simulated data for CYs 2018 and 2019 and actual data
for CYs 2020, 2021, and 2022 for 30-day periods of care. We refer
readers to the CY 2022 HH PPS final rule (86 FR 35881) for discussion
about simulated data for CYs 2018 and 2019.
(a) Utilization
Table B1 shows the overall utilization of home health services and
Table B2 shows the average utilization of visits per 30-day period of
care by home health discipline. This data indicates the average number
of 30-day periods of care per unique HHA user is similar between CY
2021 and CY 2022. The data also indicates that the number of 30-day
periods of care decreased between CY 2018 and CY 2022. Table B3 shows
the proportion of 30-day periods of care that are LUPAs and the average
number of visits per discipline of those LUPA 30-day periods of care
over time.
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(b) Analysis of 2021 Cost Report Data for 30-Day Periods of Care
In the CY 2023 HH PPS proposed rule (87 FR 37607), we provided a
summary of analysis on FY 2020 HHA Medicare cost report data, as this
was the most recent and complete cost report data at the time of
rulemaking, and CY 2021 home health claims to estimate 30-day period of
care costs. Our analysis showed that the CY 2021 national, standardized
30-day period payment rate of $1,901.12 was approximately 34 percent
more than the estimated CY 2021 estimated 30-day period cost of
$1,420.35. In MedPAC's March 2023 Report to Congress,\1\ their review
of home health payment adequacy found that ``access is more than
adequate in most areas and that Medicare payments are substantially in
excess of costs''.
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\1\ Report to Congress, Medicare Payment Policy. Home Health
Care Services, Chapter 8. MedPAC. March 2023 https://www.medpac.gov/wp-content/uploads/2023/03/Ch8_Mar23_MedPAC_Report_To_Congress_SEC.pdf.
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Using this same process in this proposed rule to compare home
health payment to costs, we examined 2021 HHA Medicare cost reports
(CMS Form 1728-20, OMB No. 0938-0222), as this is the most recent and
complete cost report data at the time of rulemaking, and CY 2022 home
health claims, to estimate 30-day period of care costs. We excluded
LUPAs and partial payment adjustments in the average number of visits.
The 2021 average NRS costs per visit is $6.71. To update the estimated
30-day period of care costs, we begin with the 2021 average costs per
visit with NRS for each discipline and multiply that amount by the CY
2022 home health payment update percentage of 2.6 percent. That amount
for each discipline is then multiplied by the 2022 average number of
visits by discipline to determine the 2022 estimated 30-day period
costs. Table B4 shows the estimated average costs for 30-day periods of
care by discipline with NRS and the total 30-day period of care costs
with NRS for CY 2022.
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[[Page 43665]]
The CY 2022 national, standardized 30-day period payment rate was
$2,031.64, which is approximately 45 percent more than the estimated CY
2022 estimated 30-day period cost of $1,402.27. Note that in the CY
2023 HH PPS proposed rule (87 FR 37608), the average number of visits
for non-LUPA, non- partial payment adjustments 30-day periods of care
in 2021 was 8.81 visits. Using actual CY 2022 claims data, the average
number of visits for a non-LUPA, non-partial payment adjustments 30-day
periods of care was 8.6 visits--a decrease of approximately 2.4
percent. Note that in the CY 2020 HH PPS final rule with comment period
(84 FR 60484), the average number of visits for non-LUPA, non- partial
payment adjustments 30-day periods of care in 2017 was estimated to be
10.5 visits. Therefore, the average number of visits for non-LUPA, non-
partial payment adjustments, 30-day periods of care in CY 2022
represents a decrease of 18 percent from the average number of visits
for non-LUPA, non- partial payment adjustments 30-day periods of care
in CY 2017. In its March 2023 Report to Congress, MedPAC assumed a cost
growth of 4.1 percent for CY 2023.\2\ Furthermore, MedPAC noted that
for more than a decade, payments under the HH PPS have significantly
exceeded HHAs' costs primarily due to two factors. First, agencies have
reduced the average number of visits per period to reduce period costs.
Second, cost growth in recent years has been lower than the annual home
health payment update percentages. As shown in Table B4 in this
proposed rule, HHAs have reduced visits under the PDGM in CY 2022.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ Report to Congress, Medicare Payment Policy. Home Health
Care Services, Chapter 8. MedPAC. March 2023 https://www.medpac.gov/wp-content/uploads/2023/03/Ch8_Mar23_MedPAC_Report_To_Congress_SEC.pdf
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
(c) Clinical Groupings and Comorbidities
Each 30-day period of care is grouped into one of 12 clinical
groups, which describe the primary reason for which a patient is
receiving home health services under the Medicare home health benefit.
The clinical grouping is based on the principal diagnosis reported on
the home health claim. Table B5 shows the distribution of the 12
clinical groups over time.
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TP10JY23.009
Thirty-day periods of care will receive a comorbidity adjustment
category based on the presence of certain secondary diagnoses reported
on home health claims. These diagnoses are based on a home health
specific list of clinically and statistically significant secondary
diagnosis subgroups with similar resource use. We refer readers to
section II.B.4.c. of this proposed rule and the CY 2020 HH PPS final
rule with comment period (84 FR 60493) for further information on the
comorbidity adjustment categories. Home health 30-day periods of care
can receive a low or a high comorbidity adjustment, or no comorbidity
adjustment. Table B6 shows the distribution of 30-day periods of care
by comorbidity adjustment category for all 30-day periods.
[[Page 43666]]
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TP10JY23.010
(d) Admission Source and Timing
Each 30-day period of care is classified into one of two admission
source categories--community or institutional--depending on what
healthcare setting was utilized in the 14 days prior to receiving home
health care. Thirty-day periods of care for beneficiaries with any
inpatient acute care hospitalizations, inpatient psychiatric facility
(IPF) stays, skilled nursing facility (SNF) stays, inpatient
rehabilitation facility (IRF) stays, or long-term care hospital (LTCH)
stays within 14-days prior to a home health admission will be
designated as institutional admissions. The institutional admission
source category will also include patients that had an acute care
hospital stay during a previous 30-day period of care and within 14
days prior to the subsequent, contiguous 30-day period of care and for
which the patient was not discharged from home health and readmitted.
Thirty-day periods of care are classified as ``early'' or ``late''
depending on when they occur within a sequence of 30-day periods of
care. The first 30-day period of care is classified as early and all
subsequent 30-day periods of care in the sequence (second or later) are
classified as late. A subsequent 30-day period of care would not be
considered early unless there is a gap of more than 60 days between the
end of one previous period of care and the start of another.
Information regarding the timing of a 30-day period of care comes from
Medicare home health claims data and not the OASIS assessment to
determine if a 30-day period of care is ``early'' or ``late''. Table B7
shows the distribution of 30-day periods of care by admission source
and period timing.
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TP10JY23.011
(e) Functional Impairment Level
Each 30-day period of care is placed into one of three functional
impairment levels (low, medium, or high) based on responses to certain
OASIS functional items associated with grooming, bathing, dressing,
ambulating, transferring, and risk for hospitalization. The specific
OASIS items that are used for the functional impairment level are found
in Table B7 in the CY 2020 HH PPS final rule with comment period (84 FR
60490).\3\ Responses to these OASIS items are grouped together into
response categories with similar resource use and each response
category has associated points. A more detailed description as to how
these response categories were
[[Page 43667]]
established can be found in the technical report, ``Overview of the
Home Health Groupings Model'' posted on the HHA webpage.\4\ The sum of
these points results in a functional impairment score used to group 30-
day periods of care into a functional impairment level with similar
resource use. The scores associated with the functional impairment
levels vary by clinical group to account for differences in resource
utilization. A patient's functional impairment level will remain the
same for the first and second 30-day periods of care unless there is a
significant change in condition that warrants an ``other follow-up''
assessment prior to the second 30-day period of care. For each 30-day
period of care, the Medicare claims processing system will look for
occurrence code 50 on the claim to correspond to the M0090 date of the
applicable assessment. Table B8 shows the distribution of 30-day
periods by functional impairment level.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ CMS continues to use the M1800-1860 items to determine
functional impairment level for case-mix purposes while we continue
to analyze the relationship between the analogous GG items (required
as standardized patient assessment data) and the M1800 items used
for payment.
\4\ https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/HomeHealthPPS/HH-PDGM.
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TP10JY23.012
(f) Therapy Visits
Beginning in CY 2020, section 1895(b)(4)(B)(ii) of the Act
eliminated the use of therapy thresholds in calculating payments for CY
2020 and subsequent years. Prior to implementation of the PDGM, HHAs
could receive an adjustment to payment based on the number of therapy
visits provided during a 60-day episode of care. We examined the
proportion of actual 30-day periods of care with and without therapy
visits. To be covered as skilled therapy, the services must require the
skills of a qualified therapist (that is, PT, OT, or SLP) or qualified
therapist assistant and must be reasonable and necessary for the
treatment of the patient's illness or injury.\5\ As shown in Table B2,
we monitor the number of visits per 30-day period of care by each home
health discipline. Any 30-day period of care can include both therapy
and non-therapy visits. If any 30-day period of care consisted of only
visits for PT, OT, or SLP, then this 30-day period of care is
considered ``therapy only''. If any 30-day period of care consisted of
only visits for skilled nursing, home health aide, or social worker,
then this 30-day period of care is considered ``no therapy''. If any
30-day period of care consisted of at least one therapy visit and one
non-therapy, then this 30-day period of care is considered ``therapy +
non-therapy''. Table B9 shows the proportion of 30-day periods of care
with only therapy visits, at least one therapy visit and one non-
therapy visit, and no therapy visits. Figure B2 shows the proportion of
30-day periods of care by the number of therapy visits (excluding zero)
provided during 30-day periods of care.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\5\ Medicare Benefit Policy Manual, Chapter 7 Home Health
Services, Section 40.2 Skilled Therapy Services https://www.cms.gov/Regulations-and-Guidance/Guidance/Manuals/Downloads/bp102c07.pdf.
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BILLING CODE 4120-01-P
[[Page 43668]]
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TP10JY23.013
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TP10JY23.014
Both Table B9 and Figure B2, as previously discussed, indicate
there have been changes in the distribution of both therapy and non-
therapy visits in CY 2022 compared to CY 2021. For example, the percent
of 30-day periods with one through seven therapy visits during a 30-day
period increased in CY 2022 compared to CY 2021. Comparing therapy
utilization from before the PDGM (CYs 2018 and 2019) to after the
implementation of the PDGM (CYs 2020-2022), we have also seen a decline
in therapy visits across all clinical groups, as shown in Figure B3.
[[Page 43669]]
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TP10JY23.015
We also examined the proportion of 30-day periods of care with and
without skilled nursing, social work, or home health aide visits. Table
B10 shows the number of 30-day periods of care with only skilled
nursing visits, at least one skilled nursing visit and one other visit
type (therapy or non-therapy), and no skilled nursing visits. Table B11
shows the number of 30-day periods of care with and without home health
aide or social worker visits.
[[Page 43670]]
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TP10JY23.016
Finally, we looked at home health aide utilization during CYs 2018-
2022. Figure B4 shows the total and average of home health aide visits
by 30-day periods of care.
[[Page 43671]]
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TP10JY23.017
BILLING CODE 4120-01-C
We will continue to monitor the provision of home health services,
including any changes in the number and duration of home health visits,
composition of the disciplines providing such services, and overall
home health payments to determine if refinements to the case-mix
adjustment methodology may be needed in the future.
2. Request for Information (RFI) for Access to Home Health Aide
Services
Medicare covers intermittent/part-time personal care services and
assistance with activities of daily living (ADL) provided by home
health aides if a Medicare beneficiary is certified as needing a
skilled service \6\ (Sec. 409.45). All home health services, including
aide services, are to be furnished in accordance with a physician-
established plan of care. For home health services to be covered, the
individualized plan of care must specify the services necessary to meet
the patient-specific needs identified in the comprehensive assessment.
In addition, the plan of care must include the identification of the
responsible discipline(s) and the frequency and duration of all visits
as well as those items listed in Sec. 484.60(a) that establish the
need for such services. As the population ages, the prevalence of
chronic disease increases and the need for home-based dependent
services is on the rise.\7\ For eligible beneficiaries, home health
aides can provide a necessary adjunct to medical care in managing
medical conditions; assisting with ADLs (help with tasks such as
bathing, grooming, dressing and toileting allows beneficiaries,
particularly those with physical disabilities or chronic health
conditions, to maintain their independence); assisting with medication
management and adherence (help with reminders for beneficiaries to take
their medications as prescribed and monitoring for adverse reactions or
side effects); taking vital signs (home health aides can take vital
signs such as blood pressure and heart rate, and report changes to the
beneficiary's health care provider); and supplementing socialization
(instances of social interaction during prescribed visits can help to
improve the mental health and well-being of beneficiaries).\8\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\6\ Intermittent skilled nursing care, physical therapy, speech
language pathology, or a continuing need for occupational therapy.
\7\ Maresova, P., Javanmardi, E., Barakovic, S. et al.
Consequences of chronic diseases and other limitations associated
with old age--a scoping review. BMC Public Health 19, 1431
(2019).https://doi.org/10.1186/s12889-019-7762-5
\8\ Russell D, Rosati RJ, Peng TR, Barr[oacute]n Y, Andreopoulos
E. Continuity in the Provider of Home Health Aide Services and the
Likelihood of Patient Improvement in Activities of Daily Living.
Home Health Care Management & Practice. 2013;25(1):6-12.
doi:10.1177/1084822312453046
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Anecdotally, CMS has heard that beneficiaries have had difficulty
receiving home health aide visits under the Medicare home health
benefit. Additionally, our monitoring has shown that home health aide
visits have decreased, as exhibited in Table B2 and Figure B4. CMS
wants to ensure that all Medicare beneficiaries receiving care under
the home health benefit are afforded all covered services for which
they qualify. Therefore, in an effort to better understand any
challenges facing Medicare beneficiaries in accessing home health aide
services, CMS solicits public comment on the following:
[[Page 43672]]
Why is utilization of home health aides continuing to
decline as shown in Table B2 and Figure B4 if the need for these
services remains strong?
To what extent are higher acuity individuals eligible for
Medicare (for example, individuals with multiple co-morbidities or
impairments of multiple activities of daily living) having more
difficulty accessing home health care services, specifically home
health aide services?
What are notable barriers or obstacles that home health
agencies experience relating to recruiting and retaining home health
aides? What steps could home health agencies take to improve the
recruitment and retention of home health aides?
Are HHAs paying home health aides less than equivalent
positions in other care settings (for example, are aides in the
inpatient hospital setting or nursing home setting paid more than in
home health)? What are the reasons for the disparity in hourly wages or
total pay for equivalent services?
In what ways could HHAs ensure that home health aides are
consistently paid wages that are commensurate with the impact they have
on patient care that they provide to Medicare beneficiaries?
How effective is the coordination between Medicare and
Medicaid to ensure adequate access to home health aide services? Please
share insights on the level of utilization of Medicaid benefits by
dually eligible beneficiaries for additional home health aide services
that are not being provided by Medicare.
Are physicians' plans of care less reliant on home health
aide services in the past, or are HHAs less willing/able to provide
these services? If so, what are the primary reasons for why such
services are not provided?
What are the consequences of beneficiary difficulty in
accessing home health aide services?
C. Proposed Provisions for CY 2024 Payment Under the HH PPS
1. Proposed Behavior Assumption Adjustments Under the HH PPS
(a) Background
As discussed in section II.A.1. of this rule, starting in CY 2020,
the Secretary was statutorily required by Section 1895 (b)(2)(B) of the
Act, to change the unit of payment under the HH PPS from a 60-day
episode of care to a 30-day period of care. CMS was also required to
make assumptions about behavior changes that could occur as a result of
the implementation of the 30-day unit of payment and the case-mix
adjustment factors that eliminated the use of therapy thresholds. In
the CY 2019 HH PPS final rule with comment period (83 FR 56455), we
finalized three behavior change assumptions which were also described
in the CY 2022 and 2023 HH PPS rules (86 FR 35890, 87 FR 37614, and 87
FR 66795 through 66796). In the CY 2020 HH PPS final rule with comment
period (84 FR 60519), we included these behavior change assumptions in
the calculation of the 30-day budget neutral payment amount for CY
2020, finalizing a negative 4.36 percent behavior change assumption
adjustment (``assumed behaviors''). We did not propose any changes for
CYs 2021 and 2022 relating to the behavior assumptions finalized in the
CY 2019 HH PPS final rule with comment period, or to the negative 4.36
percent behavior change assumption adjustment, finalized in the CY 2020
HH PPS final rule with comment period.
In the CY 2023 HH PPS final rule (87 FR 66796), we stated, based on
our annual monitoring at that time, the three assumed behavior changes
did occur as a result of the implementation of the PDGM and that other
behaviors, such as changes in the provision of therapy and changes in
functional impairment levels also occurred. We also reminded readers
that in the CY 2020 HH PPS final rule with comment period (84 FR 60513)
we stated we interpret actual behavior changes to encompass both
behavior changes that were previously outlined as assumed by CMS, and
other behavior changes not identified at the time the budget-neutral
30-day payment rate for CY 2020 was established. In the CY 2023 HH PPS
final rule (87 FR 66796) we provided supporting evidence that indicated
the number of therapy visits declined in CYs 2020 and 2021, as well as
a slight decline in therapy visits beginning in CY 2019 after the
finalization of the removal of therapy thresholds, but prior to
implementation of the PDGM. In section II.B.1. of this rule, our
analysis continues to show overall the actual 30-day periods are
similar to the simulated 30-day periods and there continues to be a
decline in therapy visits, indicating that HHAs changed their behavior
to reduce therapy visits. Although the analysis demonstrates evidence
of individual behavior changes (for example, in the volume of visits
for LUPAs, therapy sessions, etc.), we use the entirety of the
behaviors in order to calculate estimated aggregate expenditures. The
law instructs us to ensure that estimated aggregate expenditures under
the PDGM are equal to the estimated aggregate expenditures that
otherwise would have been made under the prior system.
Section 4142(a) of the CAA, 2023, required CMS to present, to the
extent practicable, a description of the actual behavior changes
occurring under the HH PPS from CYs 2020-2026. This subsection of the
CAA, 2023, also required CMS to provide datasets underlying the
simulated 60-day episodes, and discuss and provide time for
stakeholders to provide input and ask questions on the payment rate
development for CY 2023. CMS complied with these requirements by
posting online both the supplemental LDS and descriptive files and the
description of actual behavior changes that affected CY 2023 payment
rate development. Additionally, on March 29, 2023, CMS conducted a
webinar entitled Medicare Home Health Prospective Payment System (HH
PPS) Calendar Year (CY) 2023 Behavior Change Recap, 60-Day Episode
Construction Overview, and Payment Rate Development. The webinar was
open to the public and discussed the actual behavior changes that
occurred upon implementation of the PDGM, our approach used to
construct simulated 60-day episodes using 30-day periods, payment rate
development for CY 2023, and information on the supplemental data files
containing information on the simulated 60-day episodes and actual 30-
day periods used in calculating the permanent adjustment to the payment
rate. Materials from the webinar, including the presentation and the CY
2023 descriptive statistics from the supplemental LDS files, containing
information on the number of simulated 60-day episodes and actual 30-
day periods in CY 2021 that were used to construct the permanent
adjustment to the payment rate, as well as information such as the
number of episodes and periods by case-mix group, case-mix weights, and
simulated payments, can be found on the Home Health Patient-Driven
Groupings Model web page at https://www.cms.gov/medicare/medicare-fee-
for-service-payment/homehealthpps/hh-pdgm.
(b) Method To Annually Determine the Impact of Differences Between
Assumed Behavior Changes and Actual Behavior Changes on Estimated
Aggregate Expenditures
In the CY 2023 HH PPS final rule (87 FR 66804), we finalized the
methodology to evaluate the impact of the differences between assumed
and actual behavior changes on estimated aggregate expenditures. For
CYs 2020 through 2026, we will evaluate if the 30-day budget neutral
payment rate and resulting aggregate expenditures are equal under the
PDGM to what they
[[Page 43673]]
would have been under the 153-group case-mix system and 60-day unit of
payment. An overview of the methodology is listed in this section,
followed by detailed instructions on each step.
Create simulated 60-day episodes from 30-day periods
Price out the simulated 60-day episodes and determine
aggregate expenditures
Price out only the 30-day periods which were used to create
the simulated 60-day episodes and determine aggregate expenditures
Compare aggregate expenditures between the simulated 60-day
episodes and actual 30-day periods
Determine what the 30-day payment rate should have been to
equal aggregate expenditures
(1) Create Simulated 60-Day Episodes From 30-Day Periods
The first step in our methodology is to determine which PDGM 30-day
periods of care could be grouped together to form simulated 60-day
episodes of care. To facilitate grouping, we made some exclusions and
assumptions as described later in this section prior to pricing out the
simulated 60-day episodes of care. We note in the early months of CY
2020, there were 60-day episodes which started in 2019 and ended in
2020 and therefore, some of these exclusions and assumptions may be
specific to the first year of the PDGM. We identify, through footnotes,
if an exclusion or assumption is specific to CY 2020 only.
(a) Exclusions
Claims where the claim occurrence code 50 date (OASIS
assessment date) occurred on or after October 31 of that year. This
exclusion was applied to ensure the simulated 60-day episodes contained
both 30-day periods from the same year and would not overlap into the
following year (for example, 2021, 2022, 2023). This is done because
any 30-day periods with an OASIS assessment date in November or
December might be part of a simulated 60-day episode that would
continue into the following year and where payment would have been made
based on the ``through'' date. For CYs 2021 through 2026, we also
excluded claims with an OASIS assessment date before January 1 of that
year.\9\ Again, this is to ensure a simulated 60-day episode (simulated
from two 30-day periods) does not overlap years.
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\9\ There are no 30-day PDGM claims which started in CY 2019 and
ended in CY 2020, and therefore this exclusion would not apply to
the CY 2020 dataset.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Beneficiaries and all of their claims if they have
overlapping claims from the same provider (as identified by CCN).\10\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\10\ Claims are dropped from the same provider that extend into
the following calendar year to ensure episode timing is accurate for
simulated 60-day episodes. All of a beneficiary's claims are
dropped, rather then only a subset, so as not to create a conflict
in assigning episode timing.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Beneficiaries and all of their claims if three or more
claims from the same provider are linked to the same occurrence code 50
date.\11\
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\11\ This is done because if three or more claims link to the
same OASIS it would not be clear which claims should be joined to
simulate a 60-day episode.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
(b) Assumptions
If two 30-day periods of care from the same provider
reference the same OASIS assessment date (using occurrence code 50),
then we assume those two 30-day periods of care would have been billed
as a 60-day episode of care under the 153-group system.
If two 30 day-periods of care reference different OASIS
assessment dates and each of those assessment dates is referenced by a
single 30-day period of care, and those two 30-day periods of care
occur together close in time (that is, the ``from''date of the later
30-day period of care is between 0 to 14 days after the ``through''date
of the earlier 30-day period of care), then we assume those two 30-day
periods of care also would have been billed as a 60-day episode of care
under the 153-group system.
For all other 30-day periods of care, we assume that they
would not be combined with another 30-day period of care and would have
been billed as a single 30-day period.
(2) Price Out the Simulated 60-Day Episodes and Determine Aggregate
Expenditures
After application of the exclusions and assumptions described
previously, we have the simulated 60-day episodes dataset for each
year. We assign each simulated 60-day episode of care as a normal
episode, PEP, LUPA, or outlier based on the payment parameters
established in the CY 2020 HH PPS final rule with comment period (84 FR
60478) for 60-day episodes of care. Next, using the October 2019 3M
Home Health Grouper (v8219) \12\ we assign a HIPPS code to each
simulated 60-day episode of care using the 153-group methodology.
Finally, we price the simulated 60-day episodes of care using the
payment parameters described in the CY 2020 final rule with comment
period (84 FR 60537) for 60-day episodes of care.
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\12\ https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/HomeHealthPPS/CaseMixGrouperSoftware.
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For CYs 2021 through 2026, we adjust the simulated 60-day base
payment rate to align with current payments for the analysis year (that
is, wage index budget neutrality factor and home health payment
update). For example, to calculate the CY 2021 simulated 60-day episode
base payment rate, we started with the final CY 2020 60-day base
payment rate ($3,220.79) and multiplied by the final CY 2021 wage index
budget neutrality factor (0.9999) and the CY 2021 home health payment
update (1.020) to get an adjusted 60-day base payment rate ($3,284.88)
for CY 2021. We used that adjusted 60-day base payment rate ($3,284.88)
to price out the CY 2021 simulated 60-day claims. Once each claim is
priced under the pre-PDGM HH PPS, that is each claim is adjusted from
the base payment rate by case-mix, wage index, etc., we calculate the
estimated aggregate expenditures for all simulated 60-day episodes in
CY 2021. This method is then replicated to price out the simulated 60-
day episodes for each year of claims data through CY 2026.
(3) Price Out the 30-Day Periods and Determine Aggregate Expenditures
Next, we calculated the PDGM aggregate expenditures for CY 2020
using those specific 30-day periods that were used to create the
simulated 60-day episodes. Therefore, both the actual PDGM expenditures
and the simulated pre-PDGM aggregate expenditures are based on the
exact same claims for the permanent adjustment calculation.
(4) Compare Aggregate Expenditures Between the Simulated 60-Day
Episodes and Actual 30-Day Periods
We determine if the total aggregate expenditures under the PDGM
were higher or lower than under the 153-case mix group system in each
year beginning with CY 2020 through CY 2026. If expenditures were
higher under the PDGM (that is, we paid more than we would have if the
153-group payment system was in place), then the actual base payment
rate we implemented was too high. If the expenditures were lower under
the PDGM (that is, we paid less than we would have if the 153-group
payment system was in place), then the actual base payment rate we
implemented was too low.
[[Page 43674]]
(5) Determine What the 30-Day Payment Rate Should Have Been
Using an iterative process, we determine what the 30-day base
payment rate should have been, in order to achieve the same estimated
aggregate expenditures as obtained from the simulated 60-day episodes.
This is our recalculated (``repriced'') base payment rate.
(c) Calculating Permanent and Temporary Payment Adjustments
To offset prospectively for such increases or decreases in
estimated aggregate expenditures as a result of the impact of
differences between assumed behavior changes and actual behavior
changes, in any given year, we calculate a permanent prospective
adjustment by calculating the percent change between the actual 30-day
base payment rate and the recalculated 30-day base payment rate. This
percent change is converted into a behavior adjustment factor and
applied in the annual rate update process.
To offset retrospectively for such increases or decreases in
estimated aggregate expenditures as a result of the impact of
differences between assumed behavior changes and actual behavior
changes in any given year, we calculate a temporary prospective
adjustment by calculating the dollar amount difference between the
estimated aggregate expenditures from all 30-day periods using the
recalculated 30-day base payment rate, and the aggregate expenditures
for all 30-day periods using the actual 30-day base payment rate for
the same year. In other words, when determining the temporary
retrospective dollar amount, we use the full dataset of actual 30-day
periods using both the actual and recalculated 30-day base payment
rates to ensure that the utilization and distribution of claims are the
same. In accordance with section 1895(b)(3)(D)(iii) of the Act, the
temporary adjustment is to be applied on a prospective basis and shall
apply only with respect to the year for which such temporary increase
or decrease is made. Therefore, after we determine the dollar amount to
be reconciled in any given year, we calculate a temporary adjustment
factor to be applied to the base payment rate for that year. The
temporary adjustment factor is based on an estimated number of 30-day
periods in the next year using historical data trends, and as
applicable, we control for a permanent adjustment factor, case-mix
weight recalibration neutrality factor, wage index budget neutrality
factor, and the home health payment update. The temporary adjustment
factor is applied last.
(d) CY 2020 Results
This section discusses the final results CMS determined from CY
2020 claims data that was previously published in the CY 2023 final
rule (87 FR 66804 through 66805). CMS did not do any recalculations for
CY 2020 data and this section simply reiterates what was done
previously for informative purposes only. Using the methodology
described previously, we simulated 60-day episodes using actual CY 2020
30-day periods to determine what the CY 2020 permanent and temporary
payment adjustments should be to offset for such increases or decreases
in estimated aggregate expenditures. For CY 2020, we began with
8,423,688 30-day periods and dropped 603,157 30-day periods that had a
claim occurrence code 50 date after October 31, 2020. We also
eliminated 79,328 30-day periods that didn't appear to group with
another 30-day period to form a 60-day episode if the 30-day period had
a ``from date'' before January 15, 2020 or a ``through date'' after
November 30, 2020. This was done to ensure a 30-day period would not
have been part of a 60-day episode that would have overlapped into CY
2021. Applying the additional exclusions and assumptions as described
previously, an additional 14,062 30-day periods were excluded from this
analysis. Additionally, we excluded 66,469 simulated 60-day episodes of
care where no OASIS information was available in the CCW VRDC or could
not be grouped to a HIPPS due to a missing primary diagnosis or other
reason. Our simulated 60-day episodes of care produced a distribution
of two 30-day periods of care (70.6 percent) and single 30-day periods
of care (29.4 percent). This distribution is similar to what we found
when we simulated 30-day periods of care for implementation of the
PDGM. After all exclusions and assumptions were applied, the final
dataset included 7,618,061 actual 30-day periods of care and 4,463,549
simulated 60-day episodes of care for CY 2020.
Using the final dataset for CY 2020 (7,618,061 actual 30-day
periods which made up the 4,463,549 simulated 60-day episodes) we
determined the estimated aggregate expenditures under the pre-PDGM HH
PPS were lower than the actual estimated aggregate expenditures under
the PDGM HH PPS. This indicates that aggregate expenditures under the
PDGM were higher than if the 153-group payment system was still in
place in CY 2020. As described previously in the methodology, we needed
to calculate what the actual CY 2020 30-day base payment rate
($1,864.03) should have been to equal the aggregate expenditures that
we calculated using the simulated CY 2020 60-day episodes. We
determined the CY 2020 30-day base payment rate should have been
$1,742.52 based on actual behavior rather than the $1,864.03 based on
assumed behaviors. The percent change between the two payment rates
(actual and recalculated) would be the permanent adjustment. Next, we
calculated the difference in aggregate expenditures for all CY 2020
PDGM 30-day claims using the actual and recalculated payment rates.
This difference is the retrospective dollar amount needed to offset
payment. Our results are shown in Table B12.
[[Page 43675]]
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TP10JY23.018
As shown in Table B12 and in the CY 2023 HH PPS final rule (87 FR
66805), a permanent prospective adjustment of -6.52 percent to the CY
2023 30-day payment rate would be required to offset for such increases
in estimated aggregate expenditures in future years. Additionally, we
determined that our initial estimate of base payment rates required to
achieve budget neutrality resulted in excess expenditures of HHAs of
approximately $873 million in CY 2020. This would require a temporary
adjustment to offset for such increase in estimated aggregate
expenditures for CY 2020.
(e) CY 2021 Results
This section discusses the final results CMS determined from CY
2021 claims data that was previously published in the CY 2023 final
rule (87 FR 66805 through 66806). CMS did not do any recalculations for
CY 2021 data and this section simply reiterates what was done
previously for informative purposes only. Using the methodology
described previously, we simulated 60-day episodes using actual CY 2021
30-day periods to determine what the permanent and temporary payment
adjustments should be to offset for such increases or decreases in
estimated aggregate expenditures as a result of the impact of
differences between assumed behavior changes and actual behavior
changes. For CY 2021, we began with 9,269,971 30-day periods of care
and dropped 570,882 30-day periods of care that had claim occurrence
code 50 date after October 31, 2021. We also excluded 968,434 30-day
periods of care that had claim occurrence code 50 date before January
1, 2021 to ensure the 30-day period would not be part of a simulated
60-day episode that began in CY 2020. Applying the additional
exclusions and assumptions as described previously, an additional 5,868
30-day periods were excluded.
Additionally, we excluded 14,302 simulated 60-day episodes of care
where no OASIS information was available in the CCW VRDC or could not
be grouped to a HIPPS due to a missing primary diagnosis or other
reason. Our simulated 60-day episodes of care produced a distribution
of two 30-day periods of care (70.0 percent) and single 30-day periods
of care (30.0 percent) that was similar to what we found when we
simulated two 30-day periods of care for implementation of the PDGM.
After all exclusions and assumptions were applied, the final dataset
included 7,703,261 actual 30-day periods of care and 4,529,498
simulated 60-day episodes of care for CY 2021.
Using the final dataset for CY 2021 (7,703,261 actual 30-day
periods which made up the 4,529,498 simulated 60-day episodes) we
determined the estimated aggregate expenditures under the pre-PDGM HH
PPS were lower than the actual estimated aggregate expenditures under
the PDGM HH PPS. This indicates that aggregate expenditures under the
PDGM were higher than if the 153-group payment system was still in
place in CY 2021. As described previously in the methodology, we needed
to calculate what the actual CY 2021 30-day base payment rate
($1,901.12) should have been to equal aggregate expenditures that we
calculated using the simulated CY 2021 60-day episodes. We determined
the CY 2021 30-day base payment rate should have been $1,751.90 based
on actual behavior rather than the $1,901.12 based on assumed
behaviors. The actual CY 2021 base payment rate of $1,901.12 does not
account for any behavior adjustments needed for CY 2020, and therefore
to evaluate changes for only CY 2021 we would need to control for the -
6.52 percent prospective adjustment that we determined for CY 2020.
Therefore, using the recalculated CY 2020 base payment rate of
$1,742.52, multiplied by the CY 2021 wage index budget neutrality
factor (0.9999) and the CY 2021 home health payment update (1.020), the
CY 2021 base payment rate for assumed behaviors would have been
$1,777.19. The percent change between the two payment rates would be
the annual permanent adjustment for CY 2021 (assuming the -6.52 percent
adjustment was already taken). Next, we calculated the difference in
aggregate expenditures for all CY 2021 PDGM 30-day claims using the
actual ($1,901.12, as this was what CMS actually paid in CY 2021) and
recalculated ($1,751.90) payment rates. This difference is the
retrospective dollar amount needed to offset payment. Our results are
shown in Table B13.
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As shown in Table B13 and in the CY 2023 HH PPS final rule (87 FR
66806), a permanent prospective adjustment of -1.42 percent (assuming
the -6.52 percent adjustment was already taken) would be required to
offset for such increases in estimated aggregate expenditures in future
years. Additionally, we determined that our initial estimate of base
payment rates required to achieve budget neutrality resulted in excess
expenditures of approximately $1.2 billion in CY 2021. This would
require a one-time temporary adjustment factor to offset for such
increases in estimated aggregate expenditures for CY 2021.
(f) CY 2022 Preliminary Results
We will continue the practice of using the most recent complete
home health claims data at the time of rulemaking. The HH PPS limited
data set (LDS) file released with this proposed rule includes two
files: the actual CY 2022 30-day periods and the CY 2022 simulated 60-
day episodes. We remind readers a data use agreement (DUA) is required
to purchase the CY 2024 proposed HH PPS LDS file. Access will be
granted for both the 30-day periods and the simulated 60-day episodes
under one DUA. Visit the HH PPS LDS web page for more information.\13\
In addition, the proposed CY 2024 Home Health Descriptive Statistics
from the LDS Files spreadsheet is available on the Home Health
Prospective Payment System Regulations and Notices web page,\14\ does
not require a DUA, and is available at no cost to interested parties.
The spreadsheet contains information on the number of simulated 60-day
episodes and actual 30-day periods in CY 2022 that were used to
determine the behavior adjustments. The spreadsheet also provides
information such as the number of episodes and periods by case-mix
group, case-mix weights, and simulated payments. The CY 2022 analysis
presented in this proposed rule is considered preliminary and, as more
data become available from the latter half of CY 2022, we will update
our results in the final rule. The CY 2024 final rule will utilize the
CY 2022 finalized data for determining any behavior adjustment needed
to the CY 2024 payment rate. However, while the claims data and the
permanent and temporary behavior adjustment results will be considered
complete, any adjustments to future payment rates may be subject to
additional considerations such as permanent adjustments taken in
previous years.
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\13\ https://www.cms.gov/research-statistics-data-and-systems/files-for-order/limiteddatasets/home_health_pps_lds.
\14\ https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/HomeHealthPPS/Home-Health-Prospective-Payment-System-Regulations-and-Notices.
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Using the methodology described previously, we simulated 60-day
episodes using actual CY 2022 30-day periods to determine what the
permanent and temporary payment adjustments should be to offset for
such increases or decreases in estimated aggregate expenditures as a
result of the impact of differences between assumed behavior changes
and actual behavior changes. For CY 2022, we began with 8,386,706 30-
day periods of care and dropped 476,889 30-day periods of care that had
claim occurrence code 50 date after October 31, 2022. We also excluded
894,319 30-day periods of care that had claim occurrence code 50 date
before January 1, 2022 to ensure the 30-day period would not be part of
a simulated 60-day episode that began in CY 2021. Applying the
additional exclusions and assumptions as described previously, an
additional 5,452 30-day periods were excluded.
Additionally, we excluded 17,054 simulated 60-day episodes of care
where no OASIS information was available in the CCW VRDC or could not
be grouped to a HIPPS due to a missing primary diagnosis or other
reason. Our simulated 60-day episodes of care produced a distribution
of two 30-day periods of care (69.1 percent) and single 30-day periods
of care (30.9 percent) that was similar to what we found when we
simulated two 30-day periods of care for implementation of the PDGM.
After all exclusions and assumptions were applied, the final dataset
for this proposed rule included 6,982,837 actual 30-day periods of care
and 4,127,754 simulated 60-day episodes of care for CY 2022.
Using the final dataset for CY 2022 (6,982,837 actual 30-day
periods which made up the 4,127,754 simulated 60-day episodes) we
determined the estimated aggregate expenditures under the pre-PDGM HH
PPS were lower than the actual estimated aggregate expenditures under
the PDGM HH PPS as shown in Table B14. This indicates that aggregate
expenditures under the PDGM were higher than if the 153-group payment
system was still in place in CY 2022. As described previously in the
methodology, we needed to calculate
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what the actual CY 2022 30-day base payment rate ($2,031.64) should
have been to equal aggregate expenditures that we calculated using the
simulated CY 2022 60-day episodes. We determined the CY 2022 30-day
base payment rate should have been $1,841.55 based on actual behavior
rather than the $2,031.64 based on assumed behaviors. We note, the
actual CY 2022 base payment rate of $2,031.64 does not account for any
behavior adjustments needed for CYs 2020 and 2021, and therefore to
evaluate changes for only CY 2022 we need to account for the -7.85
percent prospective adjustment that we determined for CYs 2020 and
2021. Therefore, using the recalculated CY 2021 base payment rate of
$1,751.90 (shown in Table B13), multiplied by the CY 2022 case-mix
weights recalibration neutrality factor (1.0396), the CY 2022 wage
index budget neutrality factor (1.0019) and the CY 2022 home health
payment update (1.026), the CY 2022 base payment rate for assumed
behavior would have been $1,872.18. The percent change between the two
payment rates would be the additional permanent adjustment (assuming
the -7.85 percent adjustment was already taken). Next, we calculated
the difference in aggregate expenditures for all CY 2022 PDGM 30-day
claims using the actual ($2,031.64) and recalculated ($1,841.55)
payment rates. This difference is the retrospective dollar amount
needed to offset payment. Our results are shown in Table B14.
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As shown in Table B14, a permanent prospective adjustment of -1.636
percent to the CY 2024 30-day payment rate (assuming the -7.85 percent
adjustment was already taken) would be required to offset for such
increases in estimated aggregate expenditures in future years.
Additionally, we determined that our initial estimate of base payment
rates required to achieve budget neutrality resulted in excess
expenditures of approximately $1.4 billion in CY 2022. This would
require a one-time temporary adjustment factor to offset for such
increases in estimated aggregate expenditures for CY 2022.
(g) Proposed CY 2024 Permanent Adjustment and Temporary Adjustment
Calculations
To offset the increase in estimated aggregate expenditures for CYs
2020 and 2021 based on the impact of the differences between assumed
and actual behavior changes, CMS needed to apply a -7.85 percent
permanent adjustment to the CY 2023 base payment rate, as well as
implement a temporary adjustment of approximately $2.1 billion to
reconcile retrospective overpayments in CYs 2020 and 2021. We
recognized that applying the full permanent and temporary adjustment
immediately would result in a significant negative adjustment in a
single year. However, if the PDGM 30-day base payment rate remains
higher than it should be, then there would likely be a compounding
effect, potentially creating the need for an even larger reduction to
adjust for behavioral changes in future years. Therefore, we proposed
to apply only the permanent adjustment to the CY 2023 base payment
rate. We believed this could mitigate the need for a larger permanent
adjustment and could reduce the amount of any additional temporary
adjustments in future years.
We also recognized the potential hardship to some providers of
implementing the full -7.85 percent permanent adjustment in a single
year. As we have the discretion to implement any adjustment in a time
and manner determined appropriate, in accordance with section
1895(b)(3)(D) of the Act, we finalized only a -3.925 percent (half of
the -7.85 percent) permanent adjustment for CY 2023. However, we
emphasized that the permanent adjustment needed in CY 2023 to account
fully for actual behavior changes in CYs 2020 and 2021 was -7.85
percent, and applying a -3.925 percent permanent adjustment to the CY
2023 30-day payment rate would not fully account for differences in
behavior changes on estimated aggregate expenditures during those
years, as well as CYs 2022 and 2023. We stated we would need to account
for that difference in future rulemaking, and any additional
adjustments needed to the base payment rate, to account for behavior
change based on more recent data analysis.
The percent change between the actual CY 2022 base payment rate of
$2,031.64 (based on assumed behaviors) and the CY 2022 recalculated
base payment rate of $1,841.55 (based on actual behaviors) (shown in
Table B14) is the total (cumulative) permanent adjustment for CY 2022.
The summation of the dollar amount for CYs 2020, 2021, and 2022 is the
amount that represents the temporary payment adjustment to offset for
increased aggregate expenditures in CYs 2020, 2021, and 2022. Our
results are shown in Table B15 and B16.
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We remind readers adjustment factors are multiplied in this payment
system and therefore individual numbers (that is, percentages) do not
sum precisely to the permanent adjustment needed to account for the
total permanent adjustment in that year. Additionally, as we stated in
the CY 2023 HH PPS final rule (87 FR 66808), applying a -3.925 percent
permanent adjustment to the CY 2023 30-day payment rate would not
adjust the rate fully to account for differences in behavior changes on
estimated aggregate expenditures in CYs 2020 and 2021. Therefore, we
cannot determine the CY 2024 proposed permanent adjustment by simply
subtracting -3.925 percent from the total permanent adjustment of -
9.356 percent.
Instead, we look at the total permanent adjustment needed for the
current year of data and account for any prior permanent adjustments
through multiplication and division of factors. In other words, we
determined the total permanent adjustment based on CY 2022 data (which
had no prior adjustments) is -9.356 percent, which is converted to a
0.90644 factor. We recognize that in CY 2023 we implemented a -3.925
percent permanent behavior adjustment, converted to a 0.96075 factor,
and we must account for it in the proposed CY 2024 permanent
adjustment. Next, we calculated the CY 2024 permanent adjustment factor
by solving (1-x) = 0.90644 (9.356 percent) divided by 0.96075 (3.925
percent). The resulting factor (1-x) is 0.94347, which is converted to
a 5.653 percent reduction to the CY 2024 national, standardized base
payment rate. In other words, 1 minus the factor 0.94347 equals 0.05653
which is equal to 5.653 percent reduction. Therefore, to offset the
increase in estimated aggregate expenditures for CY 2022 based on the
impact of the differences between assumed and actual behavior changes,
and to account for the permanent adjustment of -3.925 percent taken in
CY 2023 rulemaking, CMS would need to apply a -5.653 percent permanent
adjustment to the CY 2024 base payment rate. We are proposing to apply
a -5.653 percent permanent adjustment to the CY 2024 national,
standardized 30-day payment rate.
We acknowledge that, as previously discussed, we finalized, in the
CY 2023 HH PPS final rule, half of the -7.85 percent permanent
adjustment, noting that the full permanent adjustment may be burdensome
for some providers. However, we believe applying the full permanent
adjustment of -5.635 in CY 2024 would potentially reduce any future
permanent adjustments, stem the accrual of the temporary payment
adjustment dollar amount, and would help fulfill the statutory
requirements at section 1895(b)(3)(D) of the Act to offset any
increases or decreases on the impact of differences between assumed
behavior and actual behavior changes on estimated aggregate
expenditures. We previously explained when reducing the permanent
adjustment in CY 2023 that we would need to implement a greater rate
reduction in future years, therefore home health agencies have had some
time to consider this proposed rate reduction.
In order to calculate the temporary adjustment, we would add the CY
2022 temporary adjustment dollar amount of $1,355,208,655 to the
previously finalized CYs 2020 and 2021 dollar amounts for a total of
$3,439,284,729. We stated in the CY 2023 HH PPS final rule (87 FR
66804) and in this proposed rule, after we determine the dollar amount
to be reconciled we will calculate a temporary adjustment factor to be
applied to the base payment rate for that year. That is, the dollar
amount will be converted to a factor. However, as we noted in the CY
2023 HH PPS proposed rule (87 FR 37682), we recognize that implementing
both the permanent and temporary adjustments may adversely affect HHAs.
Given that the magnitude of both the temporary and permanent
adjustments for CY 2024 rate setting may result in a significant
reduction of the payment rate, we are not proposing to take the
temporary adjustment in CY 2024. We will propose a temporary adjustment
factor to the
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national, standardized base payment rate when we propose this temporary
payment adjustment in future rulemaking. As noted previously, we will
update these permanent and temporary adjustments in the final rule to
reflect more complete claims data for CY 2022. We solicit comments on
the proposal to apply a -5.653 percent permanent adjustment to the CY
2024 base payment rate.
2. Proposed CY 2024 PDGM LUPA Thresholds and PDGM Case-Mix Weights
(a) Proposed CY 2024 PDGM LUPA Thresholds
Under the HH PPS, LUPAs are paid when a certain visit threshold for
a payment group during a 30-day period of care is not met. In the CY
2019 HH PPS final rule with comment period (83 FR 56492), we finalized
that the LUPA thresholds would be set at the 10th percentile of visits
or 2 visits, whichever is higher, for each payment group. This means
the LUPA threshold for each 30-day period of care varies depending on
the PDGM payment group to which it is assigned. If the LUPA threshold
for the payment group is met under the PDGM, the 30-day period of care
will be paid the full 30-day period case-mix adjusted payment amount
(subject to any partial payment adjustment or outlier adjustments). If
a 30-day period of care does not meet the PDGM LUPA visit threshold,
then payment will be made using the CY 2024 per-visit payment amounts
as described in section II.C.4.f.2 of this proposed rule. For example,
if the LUPA visit threshold is four, and a 30-day period of care has
four or more visits, it is paid the full 30-day period payment amount;
if the period of care has three or less visits, payment is made using
the per-visit payment amounts.
In the CY 2019 HH PPS final rule with comment period (83 FR 56492),
we finalized our policy that the LUPA thresholds for each PDGM payment
group would be reevaluated every year based on the most current
utilization data available at the time of rulemaking. However, as CY
2020 was the first year of the new case-mix adjustment methodology, we
stated in the CY 2021 HH PPS final rule (85 FR 70305, 70306) that we
would maintain the LUPA thresholds that were finalized and shown in
Table 17 of the CY 2020 HH PPS final rule with comment period (84 FR
60522) for CY 2021 payment purposes. We stated that at that time, we
did not have sufficient CY 2020 data to reevaluate the LUPA thresholds
for CY 2021.
In the CY 2022 HH PPS final rule with comment period (86 FR 62249),
we finalized the proposal to recalibrate the PDGM case-mix weights,
functional impairment levels, and comorbidity subgroups while
maintaining the LUPA thresholds for CY 2022. We stated that because
there are several factors that contribute to how the case-mix weight is
set for a particular case-mix group (such as the number of visits,
length of visits, types of disciplines providing visits, and non-
routine supplies) and the case-mix weight is derived by comparing the
average resource use for the case-mix group relative to the average
resource use across all groups, we believe the COVID-19 PHE would have
impacted utilization within all case-mix groups similarly. Therefore,
the impact of any reduction in resource use caused by the PHE on the
calculation of the case-mix weight would be minimized since the impact
would be accounted for both in the numerator and denominator of the
formula used to calculate the case-mix weight. However, in contrast,
the LUPA thresholds are based on the number of overall visits in a
particular case-mix group (the threshold is the 10th percentile of
visits or 2 visits, whichever is greater) instead of a relative value
(like what is used to generate the case-mix weight) that would control
for the impacts of the COVID-19 PHE. We noted that visit patterns and
some of the decrease in overall visits in CY 2020 may not be
representative of visit patterns in CY 2022. Therefore, to mitigate any
potential future and significant short-term variability in the LUPA
thresholds due to the COVID-19 PHE, we finalized the proposal to
maintain the LUPA thresholds finalized and displayed in Table 17 in the
CY 2020 HH PPS final rule with comment period (84 FR 60522) for CY 2022
payment purposes.
For CY 2023, we proposed to update the LUPA thresholds using CY
2021 Medicare home health claims (as of March 21, 2022) linked to OASIS
assessment data. After reviewing the CY 2022 home health claims
utilization data we determined that visit patterns have stabilized. Our
data analysis indicated that visits in 2022 were similar to visits in
2020. We believed that CY 2021 data will be more indicative of visit
patterns in CY 2023 rather than continuing to use the LUPA thresholds
derived from the CY 2018 data pre-PDGM. Therefore, we finalized a
policy to update the LUPA thresholds for CY 2023 using data from CY
2021.
For CY 2024, we are proposing to update the LUPA thresholds using
CY 2022 home health claims utilization data (as of March 17, 2023), in
accordance with our policy to annually recalibrate the case-mix weights
and update the LUPA thresholds, functional impairment levels and
comorbidity subgroups. The proposed LUPA thresholds for the CY 2024
PDGM payment groups with the corresponding Health Insurance Prospective
Payment System (HIPPS) codes and the case-mix weights are listed in
Table B22 We solicit public comments on the proposed updates to the
LUPA thresholds for CY 2024.
(b) CY 2024 Functional Impairment Levels
Under the PDGM, the functional impairment level is determined by
responses to certain OASIS items associated with activities of daily
living and risk of hospitalization; that is, responses to OASIS items
M1800-M1860 and M1033. A home health period of care receives points
based on each of the responses associated with these functional OASIS
items, which are then converted into a table of points corresponding to
increased resource use. The sum of all of these points results in a
functional score which is used to group home health periods into a
functional level with similar resource use. That is, the higher the
points, the higher the response is associated with increased resource
use. The sum of all of these points results in a functional impairment
score which is used to group home health periods into one of three
functional impairment levels with similar resource use. The three
functional impairment levels of low, medium, and high were designed so
that approximately one-third of home health periods from each of the
clinical groups fall within each level. This means home health periods
in the low impairment level have responses for the functional OASIS
items that are associated with the lowest resource use, on average.
Home health periods in the high impairment level have responses for the
functional OASIS items that are associated with the highest resource
use on average.
For CY 2024, we propose to use CY 2022 claims data to update the
functional points and functional impairment levels by clinical group.
The CY 2018 HH PPS proposed rule (82 FR 35320) and the technical report
from December 2016, posted on the Home Health PPS Archive web page
located at: https://www.cms.gov/medicare/home-health-pps/home-health-pps-archive, provides a more detailed explanation as to the
construction of these functional impairment levels using the OASIS
items. We are proposing to use this
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same methodology previously finalized to update the functional
impairment levels for CY 2024. The updated OASIS functional points
table and the table of functional impairment levels by clinical group
for CY 2024 are listed in Tables B17 and B18, respectively. We solicit
public comments on the updates to functional points and the functional
impairment levels by clinical group.
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(c) CY 2024 Comorbidity Subgroups
Thirty-day periods of care receive a comorbidity adjustment
category based on the presence of certain secondary diagnoses reported
on home health claims. These diagnoses are based on a home-health
specific list of clinically and statistically significant secondary
diagnosis subgroups with similar resource use, meaning the diagnoses
have at least as high as the median resource use and are reported in
more than 0.1 percent of 30-day periods of care. Home health 30-day
periods of care can receive a comorbidity adjustment under the
following circumstances:
Low comorbidity adjustment: There is a reported secondary
diagnosis on the home health-specific comorbidity subgroup list that is
associated with higher resource use.
High comorbidity adjustment: There are two or more
secondary diagnoses on the home health-specific comorbidity subgroup
interaction list that are associated with higher resource use when both
are reported together compared to when they are reported separately.
That is, the two diagnoses may interact with one another, resulting in
higher resource use.
No comorbidity adjustment: A 30-day period of care
receives no comorbidity adjustment if no secondary diagnoses exist or
do not meet the criteria for a low or high comorbidity adjustment.
In the CY 2019 HH PPS final rule with comment period (83 FR 56406),
we stated that we would continue to
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examine the relationship of reported comorbidities on resource
utilization and make the appropriate payment refinements to help ensure
that payment is in alignment with the actual costs of providing care.
For CY 2024, we propose to use the same methodology used to establish
the comorbidity subgroups to update the comorbidity subgroups using CY
2022 home health data.
For CY 2024, we propose to update the comorbidity subgroups to
include 21 low comorbidity adjustment subgroups as identified in Table
B19 and 101 high comorbidity adjustment interaction subgroups as
identified in Table B20. The proposed CY 2024 low comorbidity
adjustment subgroups and the high comorbidity adjustment interaction
subgroups including those diagnoses within each of these comorbidity
adjustments will also be posted on the HHA Center web page at https://www.cms.gov/Center/Provider-Type/Home-Health-Agency-HHA-Center.
We invite comments on the proposed updates to the low comorbidity
adjustment subgroups and the high comorbidity adjustment interactions
for CY 2024.
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(d) CY 2024 PDGM Case-Mix Weights
As finalized in the CY 2019 HH PPS final rule with comment period
(83 FR 56502), the PDGM places patients into meaningful payment
categories based on patient and other characteristics, such as timing,
admission source, clinical grouping using the reported principal
diagnosis, functional impairment level, and comorbid conditions. The
PDGM case-mix methodology results in 432 unique case-mix groups called
home health resource groups (HHRGs). We also finalized a policy in the
CY 2019 HH PPS final rule with comment period (83 FR 56515) to
recalibrate annually the PDGM case-mix weights using a fixed effects
model with the most recent and complete utilization data available at
the time of annual rulemaking. Annual recalibration of the PDGM case-
mix weights ensures that the case-mix weights reflect, as accurately as
possible, current home health resource use and changes in utilization
patterns. To generate the proposed recalibrated CY 2024 case-mix
weights, we used CY 2022 home health claims data with linked OASIS data
(as of March 17, 2023). These data are the most current and complete
data available at this time. We believe that recalibrating the case-mix
weights using data from CY 2022 would be reflective of PDGM utilization
and patient resource use for CY 2024. The proposed recalibrated case-
mix weights will be updated based on more complete CY 2022 claims data
for the final rule.
The claims data provide visit-level data and data on whether non-
routine supplies (NRS) were provided during the period and the total
charges of NRS. We determine the case-mix weight for each of the 432
different PDGM payment groups by regressing resource use on a series of
indicator variables for each of the categories using a fixed effects
model as described in the following steps:
Step 1: Estimate a regression model to assign a functional
impairment level to each 30-day period. The regression model estimates
the relationship between a 30-day period's resource use and the
functional status and risk of hospitalization items included in the
PDGM, which are obtained from certain OASIS items. We refer readers to
Table B17 for further information on the OASIS items used for the
functional impairment level under the PDGM. We measure resource use
with the cost-per-minute + NRS approach that uses information from 2021
home health cost reports. We use 2021 home health cost report data
because it is the most complete cost report data available at the time
of rulemaking. Other variables in the regression model include the 30-
day period's admission source, clinical group, and 30-day period
timing. We also include home health agency level fixed effects in the
regression model. After estimating the regression model using 30-day
periods, we divide the coefficients that correspond to the functional
status and risk of hospitalization items by 10 and round to the nearest
whole number. Those rounded numbers are used to compute a functional
score for each 30-day period by summing together the rounded numbers
for the functional status and risk of hospitalization items that are
applicable to each 30-day period. Next, each 30-day period is assigned
to a functional impairment level (low, medium, or high) depending on
the 30-day period's total functional score. Each clinical group has a
separate set of functional thresholds used to assign 30-day periods
into a low, medium or high functional impairment level. We set those
thresholds so that we assign roughly a third of 30-day periods within
each clinical group to each functional impairment level (low, medium,
or high).
Step 2: A second regression model estimates the relationship
between a 30-day period's resource use and indicator variables for the
presence of any of the comorbidities and comorbidity interactions that
were originally examined for inclusion in the PDGM. Like the first
regression model, this model also includes home health agency level
fixed effects and includes control variables for each 30-day period's
admission source, clinical group, timing, and functional impairment
level. After we estimate the model, we assign comorbidities to the low
comorbidity adjustment if any comorbidities have a coefficient that is
statistically significant (p-value of 0.05 or less) and which have a
coefficient that is larger than the 50th percentile of positive and
statistically significant comorbidity coefficients. If two
comorbidities in the model and their interaction term have coefficients
that sum together to exceed $150 and the interaction term is
statistically significant (p-value of 0.05 or less), we assign the two
comorbidities together to the high comorbidity adjustment.
Step 3: After Step 2, each 30-day period is assigned to a clinical
group, admission source category, episode timing category, functional
impairment level, and comorbidity adjustment category. For each
combination of those variables (which represent the 432 different
payment groups that comprise the PDGM), we then calculate the 10th
percentile of visits across all 30-day periods within a particular
payment group. If a 30-day period's number of visits is less than the
10th percentile for their payment group, the 30-day period is
classified as a Low Utilization Payment Adjustment (LUPA). If a payment
group has a 10th percentile of visits that is less than two, we set the
LUPA threshold for that payment group to be equal to two. That means if
a 30-day period has one visit, it is classified as a LUPA and if it has
two or more visits, it is not classified as a LUPA.
Step 4: Take all non-LUPA 30-day periods and regress resource use
on the 30-day period's clinical group, admission source category,
episode timing category, functional impairment level, and comorbidity
adjustment category. The regression includes fixed effects at the level
of the home health agency. After we estimate the model, the model
coefficients are used to predict each 30-day period's resource use. To
create the case-mix weight for each 30-day period, the predicted
resource use is divided by the overall resource use of the 30-day
periods used to estimate the regression.
The case-mix weight is then used to adjust the base payment rate to
determine each 30-day period's payment. Table B21 shows the
coefficients of the payment regression used to generate the weights,
and the coefficients divided by average resource use.
BILLING CODE 4120-01-P
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The case-mix weights proposed for CY 2024 are listed in Table B22
and will also be posted on the HHA Center web page \15\ upon display of
this proposed rule.
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\15\ HHA Center web page: https://www.cms.gov/Center/Provider-Type/Home-Health-Agency-HHA-Center.
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BILLING CODE 4120-01-C
Changes to the PDGM case-mix weights are implemented in a budget
neutral manner by multiplying the CY 2024 national standardized 30-day
[[Page 43703]]
period payment rate by a case-mix budget neutrality factor. Typically,
the case-mix weight budget neutrality factor is also calculated using
the most recent, complete home health claims data available. For CY
2024, we will continue the practice of using the most recent complete
home health claims data at the time of rulemaking, which is CY 2022
data. The case-mix budget neutrality factor is calculated as the ratio
of 30-day base payment rates such that total payments when the CY 2024
PDGM case-mix weights (developed using CY 2022 home health claims data)
are applied to CY 2022 utilization (claims) data are equal to total
payments when CY 2023 PDGM case-mix weights (developed using CY 2021
home health claims data) are applied to CY 2022 utilization data. This
produces a case-mix budget neutrality factor for CY 2024 of 1.0121.
We invite public comments on the CY 2024 proposed case-mix weights
and proposed case-mix weight budget neutrality factor.
3. Proposal To Rebase and Revise the Home Health Market Basket and
Revise the Labor-Related Share
(a) Background
Section 1895(b)(3)(B) of the Act requires that the standard
prospective payment amounts for CY 2024 be increased by a factor equal
to the applicable home health market basket update for those HHAs that
submit quality data as required by the Secretary. Effective for cost
reporting periods beginning on or after July 1, 1980, we developed and
adopted an HHA input price index (that is, the home health ``market
basket''). Although ``market basket'' technically describes the mix of
goods and services used to produce home health care, this term is also
commonly used to denote the input price index derived from that market
basket. Accordingly, the term ``home health market basket'' used in
this document refers to the HHA input price index.
The percentage change in the home health market basket reflects the
average change in the price of goods and services purchased by HHAs in
providing an efficient level of home health care services. We first
used the home health market basket to adjust HHA cost limits by an
amount that reflected the average increase in the prices of the goods
and services used to furnish reasonable cost home health care. This
approach linked the increase in the cost limits to the efficient
utilization of resources. For a greater discussion on the home health
market basket, see the notice with comment period published in the
February 15, 1980 Federal Register (45 FR 10450, 10451), the notice
with comment period published in the February 14, 1995 Federal Register
(60 FR 8389, 8392), and the notice with comment period published in the
July 1, 1996 Federal Register (61 FR 34344, 34347). Beginning with the
FY 2002 HH PPS payments, we have used the growth in a home health
market basket to update payments under the HH PPS.
We have rebased and revised the home health market basket
periodically through the years since FY 2002. We rebased the home
health market basket effective with the FY 2005 update (69 FR 31251-
31255), with the CY 2008 update (72 FR 25435-25442), and with the CY
2013 update (77 FR 67081). We last rebased and revised the home health
market basket effective with the CY 2019 update (83 FR 56425 through
56435) reflecting a 2016 base year. Beginning with CY 2024, we are
proposing to rebase and revise the home health market basket to reflect
a 2021 base year. In the following discussion, we provide an overview
of the proposed home health market basket and describe the
methodologies used to determine the proposed 2021-based home health
market basket.
The home health market basket is a fixed-weight, Laspeyres-type
price index. A Laspeyres-type price index measures the change in price,
over time, of the same mix of goods and services purchased in the base
period. Any changes in the quantity or mix of goods and services (that
is, intensity) purchased over time relative to the base period are not
measured.
The index itself is constructed in three steps. First, a base
period is selected (for the proposed home health market basket, we are
proposing to use 2021 as the base period) and total base period costs
are estimated for a set of mutually exclusive and exhaustive cost
categories. Each category is calculated as a proportion of total costs.
These proportions are called cost weights. Second, each expenditure
category is matched to an appropriate price or wage variable, referred
to as a price proxy. In almost every instance, these price proxies are
derived from publicly available statistical series that are published
on a consistent schedule (preferably at least on a quarterly basis).
Finally, the cost weight for each cost category is multiplied by the
level of its respective price proxy. The sum of these products (that
is, the cost weights multiplied by their price index levels) for all
cost categories yields the composite index level of the market basket
in a given period. Repeating this step for other periods produces a
series of market basket levels over time. Dividing an index level for a
given period by an index level for an earlier period produces a rate of
growth in the input price index over that timeframe.
As noted previously, the market basket is described as a fixed-
weight index because it represents the change in price over time of a
constant mix (quantity and intensity) of goods and services needed to
provide HHA services. The effects on total costs resulting from changes
in the mix of goods and services purchased subsequent to the base
period are not measured. For example, an HHA hiring more nurses after
the base period to accommodate the needs of patients would increase the
volume of goods and services purchased by the HHA, but would not be
factored into the price change measured by a fixed-weight home health
market basket. Only when the index is rebased would changes in the
quantity and intensity be captured, with those changes being reflected
in the cost weights. Therefore, we rebase the home health market basket
periodically so that the cost weights reflect recent changes in the mix
of goods and services that HHAs purchase to furnish inpatient care
between base periods.
(b) Proposed Rebasing and Revising of the Home Health Market Basket
We believe that it is technically appropriate to rebase the home
health market basket periodically so that the cost category weights
reflect changes in the mix of goods and services that HHAs purchase in
furnishing home health care. For the CY 2024 HH PPS proposed rule, we
propose to rebase and revise the home health market basket to reflect a
2021 base year using 2021 Medicare cost report data for Medicare-
participating freestanding HHAs, the latest available and most complete
data on the actual structure of HHA costs at the time of this
rulemaking. In prior rulemaking, commenters have expressed concern that
recent cost pressures and the impact of the COVID-19 PHE have impacted
input price inflation in providing home health services. We are
proposing to use 2021 as the base year because we believe that the
Medicare cost reports for this year represent the most recent, complete
set of Medicare cost report data available for developing the proposed
home health market basket that captures recent cost trends. Given the
potential impact of the COVID-19 PHE on the Medicare cost report data,
we will continue to monitor these data going forward and any changes to
the
[[Page 43704]]
home health market basket will be proposed in future rulemaking.
The terms ``rebasing'' and ``revising,'' while often used
interchangeably, denote different activities. The term ``rebasing''
means moving the base year for the structure of costs of an input price
index (that is, in this exercise, we are proposing to move the base
year cost structure from 2016 to 2021) without making any other major
changes to the methodology. The term ``revising'' means changing data
sources, cost categories, and price proxies used in the input price
index. For the CY 2024 HH PPS proposed rule, we propose to rebase and
revise the home health market basket to reflect a 2021 base year.
(c) Derivation of the Proposed 2021-Based Home Health Market Basket
Major Cost Weights
The major cost weights for the proposed revised and rebased home
health market basket are derived from the Medicare cost reports (CMS
Form 1728-20, OMB No. 0938-0022) for freestanding HHAs whose cost
reporting period began on or after October 1, 2020 and before October
1, 2021. Of the 2021 Medicare cost reports for freestanding HHAs,
approximately 84 percent of the reports had a begin date on January 1,
2021, approximately 5 percent had a begin date on July 1, 2021, and
approximately 3 percent had a begin date on October 1, 2020. The
remaining 8 percent had a begin date within the specified range. Using
this methodology allowed our sample to include HHAs with varying cost
report years including, but not limited to, the Federal fiscal or
calendar year.
We propose to maintain our policy of using data from freestanding
HHAs, which account for about 93 percent of HHAs (87 FR 66882), as our
analysis has determined that they better reflect HHAs' actual cost
structure. Cost data for hospital-based HHAs can be affected by the
allocation of overhead costs over the entire institution.
We are proposing to derive seven major cost categories (Wages and
Salaries, Benefits, Transportation, Professional Liability Insurance
(PLI), Fixed Capital, Movable Capital, and Medical Supplies) from the
2021 HHA Medicare cost reports. The residual cost category, ``All
Other'', reflects all remaining costs not captured in the seven major
cost categories. These costs are based on those cost centers that are
reimbursable under the HH PPS, specifically cost centers 16 through 25
(Skilled Nursing Care--RN, Skilled Nursing Care--LPN, Physical Therapy,
Physical Therapy Assistant, Occupational Therapy, Certified
Occupational Therapy Assistant, Speech-Language Pathology, Medical
Social Services, Home Health Aide, and Medical Supplies Charged to
Patients). While the cost centers have changed in CMS Form 1728-20,
these generally coincide with those cost centers from CMS Form 1728-94
that were used to derive the 2016-based home health market basket (83
FR 56425). The cost centers used from CMS Form 1728-94 were cost
centers 6 through 12 (Skilled Nursing Care, Physical Therapy,
Occupational Therapy, Speech Pathology, Medical Social Services, Home
Health Aide, and Supplies). Total costs for the HH PPS reimbursable
services reflect overhead allocation. We note that Medical Supplies was
not considered to be a major cost category in the 2016-based home
health market basket because it was not derived directly from Medicare
cost report data, and was instead derived from the residual ``All
Other'' category using Benchmark Input-Output (I-O) data published by
the Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA). Next, we provide details on the
proposed calculations for the total Medicare allowable costs and each
of the proposed seven major cost categories derived from the Medicare
cost report data. Unless otherwise specified, proposed calculations are
consistent with 2016 methodology.
(1) Total Medicare Allowable Costs
We propose that total Medicare allowable costs for HHAs would be
equal to the sum of total costs for the Medicare allowable cost centers
as reported on Worksheet B, column 10, lines 16 through 25. We propose
that these total Medicare allowable costs for the HHA will be the
denominator for the cost weight calculations for the Wages and
Salaries, Benefits, Transportation, Professional Liability Insurance,
Fixed Capital, Movable Capital, and Medical Supplies cost weights. With
this work complete, we then set about deriving cost levels for the
seven major cost categories.
(2) Costs for the Seven Major Cost Categories Derived From the Medicare
Cost Report Data
(a) Wages and Salaries
We propose that wages and salaries costs reflect direct patient
care wage and salary costs, overhead wage and salary costs (associated
with the following overhead cost centers: Plant Operations and
Maintenance, Transportation, Telecommunications Technology,
Administrative and General, Nursing Administration, Medical Records,
and Other General Service cost centers), and a portion of direct
patient care contract labor costs. The estimation of the wage and
salary costs is derived using a similar methodology to that which was
implemented for the 2016-based home health market basket, with the
primary difference being the specific cost report line items now
available on the HHA cost report form.
(i) Direct Patient Care
We are proposing to calculate direct patient care wages and
salaries by summing costs from Worksheet A, column 1, lines 16 through
25.
(ii) Overhead
We are proposing to calculate overhead wages and salaries by
summing costs from Worksheet B, columns 3 through 9, lines 16 through
25 multiplied by the percentage of costs in the overhead cost centers
that were reported as salaries. This ratio is calculated as the sum of
costs on Worksheet A, column 1, lines 3 through 9, divided by the sum
of costs on Worksheet A, columns 1 through 5, lines 3 through 9.
(iii) Wages and Salaries Portion of Direct Patient Care Contract Labor
Contract labor costs allocated to wages and salaries costs reflect
a portion of the direct patient care contract labor costs.
Specifically, we are proposing to calculate direct patient care
contract labor costs by first summing costs from Worksheet A, column 4,
lines 16 through 25. These contract labor costs are then multiplied by
each provider's ratio of direct patient care wages and salaries costs
to total direct patient care wages and salaries and benefits costs.
This ratio is calculated as the sum of costs on Worksheet A, column 1,
lines 16 through 25, divided by the sum of costs on Worksheet A,
columns 1 and 2, lines 16 through 25. Similarly, the 2016 method for
deriving the wages and salaries costs multiplied the combined salaries
and benefits (both Direct Patient Care (DPC) and non-DPC) and DPC
contract labor, by the ratio of combined DPC and non-DPC salaries to
total DPC and non-DPC salaries and benefits.
(b) Benefits
Benefits costs reflect direct patient care benefit costs, overhead
benefit costs (associated with the following overhead cost centers:
Plant Operations and Maintenance, Transportation, Telecommunications
Technology, Administrative and General, Nursing Administration, Medical
Records, and Other General Service) and a portion of direct patient
care contract labor costs. Similarly, the 2016 method for deriving
[[Page 43705]]
the benefits costs multiplied the combined salaries and benefits (both
DPC and non-DPC) and DPC contract labor, by the ratio of combined DPC
and non-DPC benefits to total DPC and non-DPC salaries and benefits.
(i) Direct Patient Care
We are proposing to calculate the cost of the direct patient care
benefit costs by summing costs from Worksheet A, column 2, lines 16
through 25.
(ii) Overhead
We are proposing to calculate overhead benefit costs by summing
costs from Worksheet B, columns 3 through 9, lines 16 through 25
multiplied by the percentage of costs in the overhead cost centers that
were reported as benefits. This percentage is calculated as the sum of
costs on Worksheet A, column 2, lines 3 through 9, divided by the sum
of costs on Worksheet A, columns 1 through 5, lines 3 through 9.
(iii) Benefits Portion of Direct Patient Care Contract Labor
Contract labor costs allocated to Benefits costs reflect a portion
of the direct patient care contract labor costs. Specifically, we are
proposing to first calculate direct patient care contract labor costs
by summing costs from Worksheet A, column 4, lines 16 through 25. These
contract labor costs are then multiplied by each provider's ratio of
direct patient care benefits costs to total direct patient care wages
and salaries and benefits costs. This ratio is calculated as the sum of
costs on Worksheet A, column 2, lines 16 through 25, divided by the sum
of costs on Worksheet A, columns 1 and 2, lines 16 through 25.
(c) Transportation
Transportation costs reflect direct patient care costs as well as
transportation costs associated with Capital Expenses, Plant Operations
and Maintenance, and Administrative and General cost centers.
Specifically, we are proposing to calculate transportation costs by
summing costs from Worksheet A, column 3, lines 16 through 25;
Worksheet A, column 3, lines 1 through 3; and costs on Worksheet B,
column 4, lines 16 through 25 multiplied by a ratio that reflects the
non-salary and benefits portion of these costs. Specifically, this
ratio was calculated as 1 minus the sum of costs on Worksheet A,
columns 1 and 2, line 4, divided by the sum of costs on Worksheet A,
columns 1 through 5, line 4.
(d) Professional Liability Insurance
Professional Liability Insurance reflects premiums, paid losses,
and self-insurance costs. Specifically, we are proposing to calculate
Professional Liability Insurance by summing costs from Worksheet S-2
Part I, line 14, columns 1 through 3.
(e) Fixed Capital
Fixed Capital-related costs reflect the portion of Medicare-
allowable costs reported in Capital Related Buildings and Fixtures
(Worksheet A, column 5, line 1). We are proposing to calculate this
Medicare allowable portion by first calculating a ratio for each
provider that reflects fixed capital costs as a percentage of HHA
reimbursable services. Specifically, this ratio was calculated as the
sum of costs from Worksheet B, column 1, lines 16 through 25 divided by
the sum of costs from Worksheet B, column 1, line 1 minus lines 3
through 9. This percentage is then applied to the costs from Worksheet
A, column 5, line 1.
(f) Movable Capital
Movable Capital-related costs reflect the portion of Medicare-
allowable costs reported in Capital Related Movable Equipment
(Worksheet A, column 5, line 2). We are proposing to calculate this
Medicare allowable portion by first calculating a ratio for each
provider that reflects movable capital costs as a percentage of HHA
reimbursable services. Specifically, this ratio was calculated as the
sum of costs from Worksheet B, column 2, lines 16 through 25 divided by
the sum of costs from Worksheet B, column 2, line 2 minus lines 3
through 9. This percentage is then applied to the costs from Worksheet
A, column 5, line 2.
(g) Medical Supplies
Medical Supplies costs reflect the cost of supplies furnished to
individual patients and for which a separate charge is made, as well as
minor medical and surgical supplies not expected to be specifically
identified in the plan of treatment or for which a separate charge is
not made. Specifically, we propose to calculate Medical Supplies as the
sum of Worksheet A, column 5, line 25; and Worksheet B, column 6, line
25 multiplied by a ratio that reflects the non-salary and benefits
portion of these costs. Specifically, this ratio was calculated as 1
minus the sum of costs on Worksheet A, columns 1 and 2, line 6, divided
by the sum of costs on Worksheet A, columns 1 through 5, line 6. We
note that in the 2016-based home health market basket, the Medical
Supplies cost weight was derived from the ``All Other'' residual cost
weight.
(3) Derivation of the Major Cost Weights
After we derive costs for each of the seven major cost categories
and total Medicare allowable costs for each provider using the Medicare
cost report data, we propose to address data outliers using the
following steps. First, for each of the seven major cost categories, we
divide the costs in that category by total Medicare allowable costs
calculated for the provider to obtain cost weights for the universe of
HHA providers. We propose to trim the data to remove outliers (a
standard statistical process) by: (1) requiring that major costs (such
as wages and salaries costs) and total Medicare allowable costs be
greater than zero and requiring that category costs are less than the
total Medicare allowable costs; and (2) excluding the top and bottom
five percent of the major cost weight (for example, wages and salaries
costs as a percent of total Medicare allowable costs). We note that
missing values are assumed to be zero consistent with the methodology
for how missing values were treated in the 2016-based home health
market basket. After these outliers have been excluded, we sum the
costs for each category across all remaining providers. We then divide
this by the sum of total Medicare allowable costs across all remaining
providers to obtain a cost weight for the proposed 2021-based home
health market basket for the given category.
Finally, we propose to calculate the residual ``All Other'' cost
weight that reflects all remaining costs that are not captured in the
other categories listed by subtracting the major cost weight
percentages (Wages and Salaries, Benefits, Transportation, Professional
Liability Insurance, Fixed Capital, Movable Capital, and Medical
Supplies) from 1. We note that non-direct patient care contract labor
costs (such as contract labor costs reported in the Administrative and
General cost center of the Medicare cost report) are captured in the
``All Other'' residual cost weight and later disaggregated into more
detail as described later in this section.
Table B23 shows the major cost categories and their respective cost
weights as derived from the Medicare cost reports for this proposed
rule.
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The decrease in the proposed wages and salaries cost weight of 0.9
percentage point and the decrease in the proposed benefits cost weight
of 0.2 percentage point is primarily attributable to direct patient
care contract labor costs as reported on the Medicare cost report data,
as shown in Table B24. Our analysis of the Medicare cost report data
shows that a decrease in the compensation cost weight from 2016 to 2021
occurred, in aggregate, among for-profit, nonprofit, and government
providers and among providers serving only rural beneficiaries, only
urban beneficiaries, or both rural and urban beneficiaries.
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TP10JY23.046
Our analysis of the Medicare cost report data shows that decreased
contract labor utilization has occurred over most occupational
categories, including higher-paid specialties in particular, and that
utilization of direct patient care contract labor has been trending
downward since 2010. We also note that over the 2016 to 2021 time
period, the average number of full-time equivalents per provider
decreased considerably.
(4) Derivation of the Detailed Cost Weights
We propose to divide the ``All Other'' residual cost weight
estimated from the 2021 Medicare cost report data into more detailed
cost categories. To divide this cost weight, we are proposing to use
the 2012 Benchmark I-O ``Use Tables/Before Redefinitions/Purchaser
Value'' for North American Industrial Classification System (NAICS)
621600, Home Health Agencies, published by the BEA. These data are
publicly available at https://www.bea.gov/industry/io_annual.htm. For
the 2016-based home health market basket, we used the 2007 Benchmark I-
O data, the most recent data available at the time (83 FR 56427).
The BEA Benchmark I-O data are generally scheduled for publication
every five years with the most recent data available for 2012. The 2012
Benchmark I-O data are derived from the 2012 Economic Census and are
the building blocks for BEA's economic accounts. Therefore, they
represent the most comprehensive and complete set of data on the
economic processes or mechanisms by which output is produced and
distributed.\16\ Besides Benchmark I-O estimates, BEA also produces
Annual I-O estimates. While based on a similar methodology, the Annual
I-O estimates reflect less comprehensive and less detailed data sources
and are subject to revision when benchmark data become available.
Instead of using the less detailed Annual I-O data, we are proposing to
inflate the detailed 2012 Benchmark
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\16\ https://www.bea.gov/papers/pdf/IOmanual_092906.pdf.
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I-O data forward to 2021 by applying the annual price changes from the
respective price proxies to the appropriate market basket cost
categories that are obtained from the 2012 Benchmark I-O data. We
repeated this practice for each year. Then, we calculated the cost
shares that each cost category represents of the 2012 I-O data inflated
to 2021. These resulting 2021 cost shares were applied to the ``All
Other'' residual cost weight to obtain the detailed cost weights for
the proposed 2021-based home health market basket. For example, the
cost for Utilities represents 11.0 percent of the sum of the ``All
Other'' 2012 Benchmark I-O HHA costs inflated to 2021. Therefore, the
Utilities cost weight represents 11.0 percent of the proposed 2021-
based home health market basket's ``All Other'' cost category (18.6
percent), yielding a Utilities proposed cost weight of 2.0 percent in
the proposed 2021-based home health market basket (0.110 x 18.6 percent
= 2.0 percent). For the 2016-based home health market basket, we used
the same methodology utilizing the 2007 Benchmark I-O data (aged to
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2016).
Using this methodology, we propose to derive eight detailed cost
categories from the proposed 2021-based home health market basket ``All
Other'' residual cost weight (18.6 percent). These categories are: (1)
Utilities; (2) Administrative Support; (3) Financial Services; (4)
Rubber and Plastics; (5) Telephone; (6) Professional Fees; (7) Other
Products; and (8) Other Services. We note that the proposed Utilities
cost category is currently referred to as Operations & Maintenance in
the 2016-based home health market basket; however, the methodology and
data sources underlying this cost category remain the same.
Table B25 compares the cost categories and weights for the proposed
2021-based home health market basket compared to the 2016-based home
health market basket. In cases where a cost category has been
recategorized in the proposed 2021-based home health market basket, we
have entered ``n/a'' to maintain correct totals as they appear in the
CY 2019 HH PPS final rule with comment period (83 FR 56428).
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BILLING CODE 4120-01-C
(d) Selection of Price Proxies
After developing the cost weights for the proposed 2021-based home
health market basket, we select the most appropriate wage and price
proxies currently available to represent the rate of price change for
each cost category. With the exception of the price index for
Professional Liability Insurance costs, the proposed price proxies are
based on Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) data and are grouped into one
of the following BLS categories:
Employment Cost Indexes. Employment Cost Indexes (ECIs)
measure the rate of change in employment wage rates and employer costs
for employee benefits per hour worked. These indexes are fixed-weight
indexes and strictly measure the change in wage rates and employee
benefits per hour. ECIs are superior to Average Hourly Earnings (AHE)
as price proxies for input price indexes because they are not affected
by shifts in occupation or industry mix, and because they measure pure
price change and are available by both occupational group and by
industry. The industry ECIs are based on the NAICS and the occupational
ECIs are based on the Standard Occupational Classification System
(SOC).
Producer Price Indexes. Producer Price Indexes (PPIs)
measure the average change over time in the selling prices received by
domestic producers for their output. The prices included in the PPI are
from the first commercial transaction for many products and some
services (https://www.bls.gov/ppi/).
Consumer Price Indexes. Consumer Price Indexes (CPIs)
measure the average change over time in the prices paid by urban
consumers for a market basket of consumer goods and services (https://www.bls.gov/cpi/). CPIs are only used when the purchases are similar to
those of retail consumers rather than purchases at the producer level,
or if no appropriate PPIs are available.
We evaluate the price proxies using the criteria of reliability,
timeliness, availability, and relevance:
Reliability. Reliability indicates that the index is based
on valid statistical methods and has low sampling variability. Widely
accepted statistical methods ensure that the data were collected and
aggregated in a way that can be replicated. Low sampling variability is
desirable because it indicates that the sample reflects the typical
members of the population. (Sampling variability is variation that
occurs by chance because only a sample was surveyed rather than the
entire population.)
Timeliness. Timeliness implies that the proxy is published
regularly, preferably at least once a quarter. The market baskets are
updated quarterly, and therefore, it is important for the underlying
price proxies to be up-to-date, reflecting the most recent data
available. We believe that using proxies that are published regularly
(at least quarterly, whenever possible) helps to ensure that we are
using the most recent data available to update the market basket. We
strive to use publications that are disseminated frequently, because we
believe that this is an optimal way to stay abreast of the most current
data available.
Availability. Availability means that the proxy is
publicly available. We prefer that our proxies are publicly available
because this will help ensure that our market basket updates are as
transparent to the public as possible. In addition, this enables the
public to be able to obtain the price proxy data on a regular basis.
Relevance. Relevance means that the proxy is applicable
and representative of the cost category weight to which it is applied.
The CPIs, PPIs, and ECIs that we have selected to propose in this
regulation meet these criteria. Therefore, we believe that they
continue to be the best measure of price changes for the cost
categories to which they would be applied.
The following is a detailed explanation of the price proxies we are
proposing for each cost category weight.
(e) Proposed 2021-Based Home Health Market Basket Price Proxies
As part of the revising and rebasing of the home health market
basket, we are proposing to rebase and revise the home health blended
Wages and Salaries index and the home health blended Benefits index. We
propose to use these blended indexes as price proxies for the Wages and
Salaries and the Benefits categories of the proposed 2021-based home
health market basket, as we did in the 2016-based home health market
basket. The following is a more detailed discussion.
(1) Wages and Salaries
For measuring price growth in the 2021-based home health market
basket, we are proposing to apply six price proxies to six occupational
subcategories within the Wages and Salaries cost weight, which would
reflect the 2021 occupational mix in HHAs. This is a similar approach
that was used for the 2016-based market basket. We propose to use a
blended wage proxy because there is not a published wage proxy specific
to the home health industry.
We are proposing to continue to use the National Industry-Specific
Occupational Employment and Wage estimates for NAICS 621600, Home
Health Care Services, published by the BLS Office of Occupational
Employment and Wage Statistics (OEWS) as the data source for the cost
shares of the home health blended wage and benefits proxy. We note that
in the spring of 2021, the Occupational Employment Statistics (OES)
program began using the name Occupational Employment and Wage
Statistics (OEWS) to better reflect the range of data available from
the program. Data released on or after March 31, 2021 reflect the new
program name. This is the same data source that was used for the 2016-
based HHA blended wage and benefit proxies; however, we are proposing
to use the May 2021 estimates in place of the May 2016 estimates.
Detailed information on the methodology for the national industry-
specific occupational employment and wage estimates survey can be found
at https://www.bls.gov/oes/current/oes_tec.htm.
The six occupational subcategories (Health-Related Professional and
Technical, Non-Health-Related Professional and Technical, Management,
Administrative, Health and Social Assistance Service, and Other Service
Occupations) for the Wages and Salaries cost weight were tabulated from
the May 2021 OEWS data for NAICS 621600, Home Health Care Services.
Table B26 compares the proposed 2021 occupational assignments to the
2016 occupational assignments of the six CMS designated subcategories.
Data that are unavailable in the OEWS occupational classification for
2016 or 2021 are shown in Table B26 as ``n/a.''
BILLING CODE 4120-01-P
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Total costs by occupation were calculated by taking the OEWS number
of employees multiplied by the OEWS annual average salary for each
subcategory, and then calculating the proportion of total wage costs
that each subcategory represents of the total industry wage costs. The
proportions listed in Table B27 represent the proposed 2021 wages and
salaries blend weights, and the proposed ECIs for each occupational
category within the Wages and Salaries price proxy blend. We note that
the ECIs reflect the 2021 occupational mix of workers. We also note
that 2018 updates to the Standard Occupational Classification (SOC)
system included a reclassification of Personal Care Aides from SOC code
39-9021 to 31-1122, which is reflected in the updated weights and
represents the major reason for the higher weight for health care and
social assistance services and lower weight for other service
occupations.\17\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\17\ https://www.bls.gov/soc/2018/soc_2018_whats_new.pdf.
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A comparison of the yearly changes from CY 2021 to CY 2024 for the
2016-based home health Wages and Salaries proxy blend and the proposed
2021-based home health Wages and Salaries proxy blend is shown in Table
B28. The annual increases in the wages and salaries proposed price
proxy is 0.3 percentage point lower in 2021 and 2022 relative to the
2016-based price proxy, and 0.1 to 0.2 percentage point higher in 2023
and 2024. These differences are primarily driven by the aforementioned
reclassification of Personal Care Aides, which caused a shift in the
relative share from the Other Service Occupations to Health and Social
Assistance Services as illustrated previously in Table B27.
[[Page 43711]]
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(2) Benefits
For measuring Benefits price growth in the proposed 2021-based home
health market basket, we are proposing to apply applicable price
proxies to the six occupational subcategories that are used for the
proposed Wages and Salaries price proxy blend. The proposed six
categories in Table B29 are the same as those in the 2016-based home
health market basket and include the same occupational mix as listed in
Table B27.
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TP10JY23.052
There is no available data source that exists for benefit costs by
occupation for the home health industry. Thus, to construct weights for
the home health benefits blend we calculated the ratio of benefits to
wages and salaries for 2021 for the six ECI series we are proposing to
use in the blended `wages and salaries' and `benefits' indexes. To
derive the relevant benefits weight, we applied the benefit-to-wage
ratios to the 2021 OEWS wage and salary weights for each of the six
occupational subcategories, and normalized. For example, the 2021 ECI
data shows a ratio of benefits to wages for the health-related
professional & technical category of 1.010. We applied this ratio to
the 2021 OEWS weight for wages and salaries for health-related
professional & technical (9.7 percent) to get an unnormalized weight of
30.0 (29.7 times 1.010), and then normalized those weights relative to
the other five benefit occupational categories to obtain a final
benefit weight for health-related professional & technical (30.1
percent).
A comparison of the yearly changes from CY 2021 to CY 2024 for the
2016-based home health Benefits proxy blend and the proposed 2021-based
home health Benefits proxy blend is shown in Table B30. With the
exception of a 0.2 percentage point difference in 2022, the annual
increases in the two price proxies are the same when rounded to one
decimal place.
[[Page 43712]]
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(3) Medical Supplies
We are proposing to use a 75/25 blend of the PPI Commodity data for
Surgical and Medical Instruments (BLS series code #WPU1562) and the PPI
Commodity data for Personal Safety Equipment and Clothing (BLS series
code #WPU1571), which would replace the current price proxy of the PPI
for Medical, Surgical, and Personal Aid Devices (BLS series code
#WPU156). The PPI Commodity data for Personal Safety Equipment and
Clothing would reflect personal protective equipment (PPE) including
but not limited to face shields and protective clothing. The 2012
Benchmark I-O data does not provide specific costs for the two
categories we are proposing to blend. In absence of such data, we have
based the weights of this blend on the change in the medical supplies
weight as reported in the Medicare cost reports in the years prior to
and after the COVID-19 PHE. Specifically, analysis of Medicare cost
report data found that the average weight for medical supplies for the
2016-2019 period (stable around 1.5 percent) was about 75 percent of
the weight observed for the 2020-2021 period (roughly 2.0 percent).
Thus, we believe that it was likely that the increase in the cost
weight was mainly attributable to costs such as those associated with
personal safety equipment and clothing, and are basing the proposed 75/
25 blend on that analysis. We believe this change will more closely
proxy the rate of change of the underlying costs, including increased
utilization of personal protective equipment.
(4) Professional Liability Insurance
We are proposing to use the CMS Physician Professional Liability
Insurance price index to measure price growth of this cost category. To
generate this index, we collect commercial insurance premiums for a
fixed level of coverage while holding non-price factors constant (such
as a change in the level of coverage). The same proxy was used for the
2016-based home health market basket.
(5) Transportation
We are proposing to use the CPI U.S. city average for
Transportation (BLS series code #CUUR0000SAT) to measure price growth
of this category. The same proxy was used for the 2016-based home
health market basket.
(6) Administrative and Support
We are proposing to use the ECI for Total compensation for Private
industry workers in Office and administrative support (BLS series code
#CIU2010000220000I) to measure price growth of this cost category. The
same proxy was used for the 2016-based home health market basket.
(7) Financial Services
We are proposing to use the ECI for Total compensation for Private
industry workers in Financial activities (BLS series code
#CIU201520A000000I) to measure price growth of this cost category. The
same proxy was used for the 2016-based home health market basket.
(8) Rubber and Plastics
We are proposing to use the PPI Commodity data for Rubber and
plastic products (BLS series code #WPU07) to measure price growth of
this cost category. The same proxy was used for the 2016-based home
health market basket.
(9) Telephone
We are proposing to use CPI U.S. city average for Telephone
services (BLS series code #CUUR0000SEED) to measure price growth of
this cost category. The same proxy was used for the 2016-based home
health market basket.
(10) Professional Fees
We are proposing to use the ECI for Total compensation for Private
industry workers in Professional and related (BLS series code
#CIS2010000120000I) to measure price growth of this category. The same
proxy was used for the 2016-based home health market basket.
(11) Utilities
We are proposing to use CPI-U U.S. city average for Fuel and
utilities (BLS series code #CUUR0000SAH2) to measure price growth of
this cost category. The same proxy was used for the 2016-based home
health market basket.
(12) Other Products
We are proposing to use the PPI Commodity data for Final demand-
Finished goods less foods and energy (BLS series code #WPUFD4131) to
measure price growth of this category. The same proxy was used for the
2016-based home health market basket.
(13) Other Services
We are proposing to use the ECI for Total compensation for Private
industry workers in Service occupations (BLS series code
#CIU2010000300000I) to measure price growth of this category. The same
proxy was used for the 2016-based home health market basket.
(14) Fixed Capital
We are proposing to use the CPI U.S. city average for Owners'
equivalent rent of residences (BLS series code #CUUS0000SEHC) to
measure price growth of this cost category. The same proxy was used for
the 2016-based home health market basket.
(15) Movable Capital
We are proposing to use the PPI Commodity data for Machinery and
equipment (BLS series code #WPU11) to measure price growth of this cost
category. The same proxy was used for the 2016-based home health market
basket.
(f) Summary of Price Proxies of the Proposed 2021-Based Home Health
Market Basket
Table B31 shows the price proxies for the proposed 2021-based home
health market basket.
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[[Page 43714]]
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We invite public comment on our proposal to rebase and revise the
home health market basket to reflect a 2021 base year.
4. Proposed CY 2024 Home Health Payment Rate Updates
(a) Proposed CY 2024 Home Health Market Basket Percentage Increase
A comparison of the yearly percent changes from CY 2019 to CY 2026
for the 2016-based home health market basket and the proposed 2021-
based home health market basket based on IHS Global Inc.'s (IGI's)
first quarter 2023 forecast, with historical data through the fourth
quarter of 2022, is shown in Table B32. IGI is a nationally recognized
economic and financial forecasting firm with which CMS contracts to
forecast the components of the market baskets. Based on IGI's first
quarter 2023 forecast, the proposed CY 2024 home health market basket
percentage increase is 3.0 percent based on the proposed 2021-based
home health market basket. We propose that if more recent data
subsequently become available (for example, a more recent estimate of
the market basket), we would use such data, if appropriate, to
determine the market basket percentage increase in the final rule.
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TP10JY23.056
BILLING CODE 4120-01-C
Table B32 shows that the forecasted percentage increase for CY 2024
of the proposed 2021-based home health market basket is 3.0 percent;
0.1 percentage point lower growth as estimated using the 2016-based
home health market basket. The average historical estimates of the
growth in the proposed 2021-based and 2016-based home health market
baskets over CY 2019 through CY 2022 differ by an average of 0.1
percentage point. As discussed previously, this is primarily driven by
a reclassification of Personal Care Aides, which caused a shift in the
relative weight of the Wages and Salaries and Benefits blended price
proxies from Other Service Occupations to Health and Social Assistance
Services, which over this period grew relatively slower. Forecasted
updates from CY 2023 through CY 2026 are the same on average; however,
there is year to year variation of 0.1 percentage point for
any given year.
(b) Proposed CY 2024 Productivity Adjustment
In the CY 2015 HH PPS final rule (79 FR 38384), we finalized our
methodology for calculating and applying the multifactor productivity
adjustment. As we explained in that rule, section 1895(b)(3)(B)(vi) of
the Act, requires that, in CY 2015 (and in subsequent calendar years,
except CY 2018 (under section 411(c) of the Medicare Access and CHIP
Reauthorization Act of 2015 (MACRA) (Pub. L. 114-10, enacted April 16,
[[Page 43715]]
2015)), the market basket percentage under the HH PPS as described in
section 1895(b)(3)(B) of the Act be annually adjusted by changes in
economy-wide productivity. Section 1886(b)(3)(B)(xi)(II) of the Act
defines the productivity adjustment to be equal to the 10-year moving
average of change in annual economy-wide private nonfarm business
multifactor productivity (as projected by the Secretary for the 10-year
period ending with the applicable fiscal year, calendar year, cost
reporting period, or other annual period). The BLS publishes the
official measures of productivity for the United States economy. We
note that previously the productivity measure referenced in section
1886(b)(3)(B)(xi)(II) of the Act was published by BLS as private
nonfarm business multifactor productivity. Beginning with the November
18, 2021 release of productivity data, BLS replaced the term
``multifactor productivity'' with ``total factor productivity'' (TFP).
BLS noted that this is a change in terminology only and will not affect
the data or methodology. As a result of the BLS name change, the
productivity measure referenced in section 1886(b)(3)(B)(xi)(II) of the
Act is now published by BLS as ``private nonfarm business total factor
productivity''. We refer readers to https://www.bls.gov for the BLS
historical published TFP data. A complete description of IGI's TFP
projection methodology is available on the CMS website at https://www.cms.gov/Research-Statistics-Data-and-Systems/Statistics-Trends-and-Reports/MedicareProgramRatesStats/MarketBasketResearch. Based on IGI's
first quarter 2023 forecast, the proposed productivity adjustment (the
10-year moving average of TFP for the period ending December 31, 2024)
for CY 2024 is 0.3 percent. We also propose that if more recent data
subsequently become available (for example, a more recent estimate of
the productivity adjustment), we would use such data, if appropriate,
to determine the productivity adjustment in the CY 2024 HH PPS final
rule.
(c) Proposed CY 2024 Annual Update for HHAs
In accordance with section 1895(b)(3)(B)(iii) of the Act, we
propose to base the CY 2024 market basket percentage increase, which is
used to determine the applicable percentage increase for HHA payments,
on the most recent estimate of the proposed 2021-based home health
market basket percentage increase. Based on IGI's first quarter 2023
forecast with history through the fourth quarter of 2022, the projected
increase of the proposed 2021-based home health market basket for CY
2024 is 3.0 percent. We propose to then reduce this percentage increase
by the current estimate of the productivity adjustment for CY 2024 of
0.3 percentage point in accordance with section 1895(b)(3)(B)(vi) of
the Act. Therefore, the proposed CY 2024 home health payment update
percentage is 2.7 percent (3.0 percent market basket percentage
increase, reduced by 0.3 percentage point productivity adjustment).
Furthermore, we propose that if more recent data subsequently become
available (for example, a more recent estimate of the market basket and
productivity adjustment), we would use such data, if appropriate, to
determine the CY 2024 market basket percentage increase and
productivity adjustment in the final rule.
Section 1895(b)(3)(B)(v) of the Act requires that the home health
percentage update be decreased by 2 percentage points for those HHAs
that do not submit quality data as required by the Secretary. For HHAs
that do not submit the required quality data for CY 2024, the proposed
home health payment update percentage is 0.7 percent (2.7 percent minus
2 percentage points).
We invite public comment on our proposals for the CY 2024 home
health market basket percentage increase and productivity adjustment.
(d) Labor-Related Share
Effective for CY 2024, we are proposing to update the labor-related
share to reflect the proposed 2021-based home health market basket
Compensation (Wages and Salaries plus Benefits, which include direct
patient care contract labor costs) cost weight. The current labor-
related share is based on the Compensation cost weight of the 2016-
based home health market basket. Based on the proposed 2021-based home
health market basket, the proposed labor-related share is 74.9 percent
and the proposed non-labor-related share is 25.1 percent. The labor-
related share for the 2016-based home health market basket was 76.1
percent and the non-labor-related share was 23.9 percent. As explained
earlier, the decrease in the compensation cost weight of 1.2 percentage
points is primarily attributable to a lower cost weight of direct
patient care contract labor costs as reported in the Medicare cost
report data. Table B33 details the components of the labor-related
share for the 2016-based and proposed 2021-based home health market
baskets.
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TP10JY23.057
The revised labor-related share will be implemented in a budget
neutral manner through the use of labor-related share budget neutrality
factor (as described in section II.C.4.f.(2) below) so that the
aggregate payments do not increase or decrease due to changes in the
labor-related share values. We invite public comments on the proposed
labor-related share and the use of a labor-related share budget
neutrality factor.
(e) Proposed CY 2024 Home Health Wage Index
Sections 1895(b)(4)(A)(ii) and (b)(4)(C) of the Act require the
Secretary to provide appropriate adjustments to the proportion of the
payment amount under the HH PPS that account for area
[[Page 43716]]
wage differences, using adjustment factors that reflect the relative
level of wages and wage-related costs applicable to the furnishing of
home health services. Since the inception of the HH PPS, we have used
inpatient hospital wage data in developing a wage index to be applied
to home health payments. We propose to continue this practice for CY
2024, as it is our belief that, in the absence of home health-specific
wage data that accounts for area differences, using inpatient hospital
wage data is appropriate and reasonable for the HH PPS.
In the CY 2021 HH PPS final rule (85 FR 70298), we finalized our
proposal to adopt the revised OMB delineations with a 5-percent cap on
wage index decreases, where the estimated reduction in a geographic
area's wage index would be capped at 5-percent in CY 2021 only, meaning
no cap would be applied to wage index decreases for the second year (CY
2022). Therefore, we proposed and finalized the use of the FY 2022 pre-
floor, pre-reclassified hospital wage index with no 5-percent cap on
decreases as the CY 2022 wage adjustment to the labor portion of the HH
PPS rates (86 FR 62285). However, as described in the CY 2023 HH PPS
final rule (87 FR 66851 through 66853), for CY 2023 and each subsequent
year, we finalized that the CY HH PPS wage index would include a 5-
percent cap on wage index decreases. Specifically, we finalized for CY
2023 and subsequent years, the application of a permanent 5-percent cap
on any decrease to a geographic area's wage index from its wage index
in the prior year, regardless of the circumstances causing the decline.
That is, we finalized that a geographic area's wage index for CY 2023
would not be less than 95 percent of its final wage index for CY 2022,
regardless of whether the geographic area is part of an updated CBSA,
and that for subsequent years, a geographic area's wage index would not
be less than 95 percent of its wage index calculated in the prior CY.
For CY 2024, we propose to base the HH PPS wage index on the FY 2024
hospital pre-floor, pre-reclassified wage index for hospital cost
reporting periods beginning on or after October 1, 2019 and before
October 1, 2020 (FY 2020 cost report data). The proposed CY 2024 HH PPS
wage index would not take into account any geographic reclassification
of hospitals, including those in accordance with section 1886(d)(8)(B)
or 1886(d)(10) of the Act but would include the 5-percent cap on wage
index decreases. We will apply the appropriate wage index value to the
revised labor portion of the HH PPS rates based on the site of service
for the beneficiary (defined by section 1861(m) of the Act as the
beneficiary's place of residence).
To address those geographic areas in which there are no inpatient
hospitals, and thus, no hospital wage data on which to base the
calculation of the CY 2024 HH PPS wage index, we propose to continue to
use the same methodology discussed in the CY 2007 HH PPS final rule (71
FR 65884) to address those geographic areas in which there are no
inpatient hospitals. For rural areas that do not have inpatient
hospitals, we propose to use the average wage index from all contiguous
Core Based Statistical Areas (CBSAs) as a reasonable proxy. Currently,
the only rural area without a hospital from which hospital wage data
could be derived is Puerto Rico. However, for rural Puerto Rico, we do
not apply this methodology due to the distinct economic circumstances
that exist there (for example, due to the close proximity to one
another of almost all of Puerto Rico's various urban and non-urban
areas, this methodology would produce a wage index for rural Puerto
Rico that is higher than that in half of its urban areas). Instead, we
propose to continue to use the most recent wage index previously
available for that area. The most recent wage index previously
available for rural Puerto Rico is 0.4047, which is what we propose to
use. For urban areas without inpatient hospitals, we use the average
wage index of all urban areas within the State as a reasonable proxy
for the wage index for that CBSA. For CY 2024, the only urban area
without inpatient hospital wage data is Hinesville, GA (CBSA 25980).
Using the average wage index of all urban areas in Georgia as proxy, we
propose the CY 2024 wage index value for Hinesville, GA to be 0.8601.
On February 28, 2013, OMB issued Bulletin No. 13-01, announcing
revisions to the delineations of MSAs, Micropolitan Statistical Areas,
and CBSAs, and guidance on uses of the delineation of these areas. In
the CY 2015 HH PPS final rule (79 FR 66085 through 66087), we adopted
OMB's area delineations using a 1-year transition.
On August 15, 2017, OMB issued Bulletin No. 17-01 in which it
announced that one Micropolitan Statistical Area, Twin Falls, Idaho,
now qualifies as a Metropolitan Statistical Area. The new CBSA (46300)
comprises the principal city of Twin Falls, Idaho in Jerome County,
Idaho and Twin Falls County, Idaho. The CY 2022 HH PPS wage index value
for CBSA 46300, Twin Falls, Idaho, will be 0.8707. Bulletin No. 17-01
is available at https://www.whitehouse.gov/wp-content/uploads/legacy_drupal_files/omb/bulletins/2017/b-17-01.pdf.
On April 10, 2018 OMB issued OMB Bulletin No. 18-03, which
superseded the August 15, 2017 OMB Bulletin No. 17-01. On September 14,
2018, OMB issued OMB Bulletin No. 18-04 which superseded the April 10,
2018 OMB Bulletin No. 18-03. These bulletins established revised
delineations for Metropolitan Statistical Areas, Micropolitan
Statistical Areas, and Combined Statistical Areas, and provided
guidance on the use of the delineations of these statistical areas. A
copy of OMB Bulletin No. 18-04 may be obtained at: https://www.bls.gov/bls/omb-bulletin-18-04-revised-delineations-of-metropolitan-statistical-areas.pdf.
On March 6, 2020, OMB issued Bulletin No. 20-01, which provided
updates to and superseded OMB Bulletin No. 18-04 that was issued on
September 14, 2018. The attachments to OMB Bulletin No. 20-01 provided
detailed information on the update to statistical areas since September
14, 2018, and were based on the application of the 2010 Standards for
Delineating Metropolitan and Micropolitan Statistical Areas to Census
Bureau population estimates for July 1, 2017 and July 1, 2018. (For a
copy of this bulletin, we refer readers to https://www.whitehouse.gov/wp-content/uploads/2020/03/Bulletin-20-01.pdf). In OMB Bulletin No. 20-
01, OMB announced one new Micropolitan Statistical Area, one new
component of an existing Combined Statistical Area and changes to New
England City and Town Area (NECTA) delineations. In the CY 2021 HH PPS
final rule (85 FR 70298), we stated that if appropriate, we would
propose any updates from OMB Bulletin No. 20-01 in future rulemaking.
After reviewing OMB Bulletin No. 20-01, we have determined that the
changes in Bulletin 20-01 encompassed delineation changes that would
not affect the Medicare home health wage index for CY 2022.
Specifically, the updates consisted of changes to NECTA delineations
and the re-designation of a single rural county into a newly created
Micropolitan Statistical Area. The Medicare home health wage index does
not utilize NECTA definitions, and, as most recently discussed in the
CY 2021 HH PPS final rule (85 FR 70298) we include hospitals located in
Micropolitan Statistical areas in each State's rural wage index. In
other words, these OMB updates did not affect any geographic areas for
purposes of the HH PPS wage index calculation.
[[Page 43717]]
The proposed CY 2024 wage index is available on the CMS website at:
https://www.cms.gov/Center/Provider-Type/Home-Health-Agency-HHA-Center.
(f) Proposed CY 2024 Home Health Payment Update
(1) Background
The HH PPS has been in effect since October 1, 2000. As set forth
in the July 3, 2000 final rule (65 FR 41128), the base unit of payment
under the HH PPS was a national, standardized 60-day episode payment
rate. As finalized in the CY 2019 HH PPS final rule with comment period
(83 FR 56406), and as described in the CY 2020 HH PPS final rule with
comment period (84 FR 60478), the unit of home health payment changed
from a 60-day episode to a 30-day period effective for those 30-day
periods beginning on or after January 1, 2020.
As set forth in Sec. 484.220, we adjust the national, standardized
prospective payment rates by a case-mix relative weight and a wage
index value based on the site of service for the beneficiary. To
provide appropriate adjustments to the proportion of the payment amount
under the HH PPS to account for area wage differences, we apply the
appropriate wage index value to the labor portion of the HH PPS rates.
In the CY 2019 HH PPS final rule with comment period (83 FR 56435), we
finalized rebasing the home health market basket to reflect 2016
Medicare cost report data. We also finalized a revision to the labor-
related share to reflect the 2016-based home health market basket
Compensation (Wages and Salaries plus Benefits) cost weight. We
finalized that for CY 2019 and subsequent years, the labor-related
share would be 76.1 percent and the non-labor related share would be
23.9 percent. As discussed earlier in section II.C.3, for CY 2024 we
are proposing to rebase the home health market basket using 2021
Medicare cost report data. We are also proposing that the labor-related
share based on the proposed 2021-based home health market basket would
be 74.9 percent and the non-labor-related share would be 25.1 percent.
The following are the steps we take to compute the case-mix and wage-
adjusted 30-day period payment amount for CY 2024:
Multiply the national, standardized 30-day period rate by
the patient's applicable case-mix weight.
Divide the case-mix adjusted amount into a labor (74.9
percent) and a non-labor portion (25.1 percent).
Multiply the labor portion by the applicable wage index
based on the site of service of the beneficiary.
Add the wage-adjusted portion to the non-labor portion,
yielding the case-mix and wage adjusted 30-day period payment amount,
subject to any additional applicable adjustments.
We provide annual updates of the HH PPS rate in accordance with
section 1895(b)(3)(B) of the Act. Section 484.225 sets forth the
specific annual percentage update methodology. In accordance with
section 1895(b)(3)(B)(v) of the Act and Sec. 484.225(i), for an HHA
that does not submit home health quality data, as specified by the
Secretary, the unadjusted national prospective 30-day period rate is
equal to the rate for the previous calendar year increased by the
applicable home health payment update percentage, minus 2 percentage
points. Any reduction of the percentage change would apply only to the
calendar year involved and would not be considered in computing the
prospective payment amount for a subsequent calendar year.
The final claim that the HHA submits for payment determines the
total payment amount for the period and whether we make an applicable
adjustment to the 30-day case-mix and wage-adjusted payment amount. The
end date of the 30-day period, as reported on the claim, determines
which calendar year rates Medicare will use to pay the claim.
We may adjust a 30-day case-mix and wage-adjusted payment based on
the information submitted on the claim to reflect the following:
A LUPA is provided on a per-visit basis as set forth in
Sec. Sec. 484.205(d)(1) and 484.230.
A partial payment adjustment as set forth in Sec. Sec.
484.205(d)(2) and 484.235.
An outlier payment as set forth in Sec. Sec.
484.205(d)(3) and 484.240.
(2) CY 2024 National, Standardized 30-Day Period Payment Amount
Section 1895(b)(3)(A)(i) of the Act requires that the standard
prospective payment rate and other applicable amounts be standardized
in a manner that eliminates the effects of variations in relative case-
mix and area wage adjustments among different home health agencies in a
budget-neutral manner. To determine the CY 2024 national, standardized
30-day period payment rate, we will continue our practice of using the
most recent, complete utilization data at the time of rulemaking; that
is, we are using CY 2022 claims data for CY 2024 payment rate updates.
We apply a permanent behavioral adjustment factor, a case-mix weights
recalibration budget neutrality factor, a wage index budget neutrality
factor, a labor-related share budget neutrality factor and the home
health payment update percentage to update the CY 2024 payment rate. As
discussed in section II.C.1 of this proposed rule, we are proposing to
implement a permanent behavior adjustment of -5.653 percent to ensure
that payments under the PDGM do not exceed what payments would have
been under the 153-group payment system as required by law. The
proposed permanent behavior adjustment factor is 0.94347. As discussed
previously, to ensure the changes to the PDGM case-mix weights are
implemented in a budget neutral manner, we apply a case-mix weight
budget neutrality factor to the CY 2024 national, standardized 30-day
period payment rate. The proposed case-mix weight budget neutrality
factor for CY 2024 is 1.0121.
Additionally, we apply a wage index budget neutrality factor to
ensure that wage index updates and revisions are implemented in a
budget neutral manner. To calculate the wage index budget neutrality
factor, we first determine the payment rate needed for non-LUPA 30-day
periods using the CY 2024 wage index so those total payments are
equivalent to the total payments for non-LUPA 30-day periods using the
CY 2023 wage index and the CY 2023 national standardized 30-day period
payment rate adjusted by the case-mix weights recalibration neutrality
factor. Then, by dividing the payment rate for non-LUPA 30-day periods
using the CY 2024 wage index with a 5-percent cap on wage index
decreases by the payment rate for non-LUPA 30-day periods using the CY
2023 wage index with a 5-percent cap on wage index decreases, we obtain
a wage index budget neutrality factor of 1.0015. We then apply the wage
index budget neutrality factor of 1.0015 to the 30-day period payment
rate. After we apply the wage index budget neutrality factor, we will
also apply a labor-related share budget neutrality factor so that
aggregate payments do not increase or decrease due to changes in the
labor-related share values. In order to calculate the labor-related
share budget neutrality factor, we simulate total payments using CY
2022 home health utilization claims data with the CY 2024 HH PPS wage
index and the proposed labor-related share (labor-related share of 74.9
percent and non-labor-related share of 25.1 percent) and compare it to
our simulation of total payments using the CY 2024 HH PPS wage index
with the current labor-related share (labor-related share of 76.1
percent and non-labor-related share of 23.9 percent). By dividing the
base payment amount using the proposed labor-related share
[[Page 43718]]
and CY 2024 wage index and payment rate by the base payment amount
using the current labor-related share and CY 2024 wage index and
payment rate, we obtain a labor-related share budget neutrality factor
of 0.9998.
Next, we propose to update the 30-day period payment rate by the
proposed CY 2024 home health payment update percentage of 2.7 percent.
The CY 2024 national, standardized 30-day period payment rate is
calculated in Table B34.
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TP10JY23.058
The CY 2024 national, standardized 30-day period payment rate for
an HHA that does not submit the required quality data is updated by the
proposed CY 2024 home health payment update percentage of 0.7 percent
(2.7 percent minus 2 percentage points) and is shown in Table B35.
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TP10JY23.059
(3) CY 2024 National Per-Visit Rates for 30-Day Periods of Care
The national per-visit rates are used to pay LUPAs and are also
used to compute imputed costs in outlier calculations. The per-visit
rates are paid by type of visit or home health discipline. The six home
health disciplines are as follows:
Home health aide (HH aide).
Medical Social Services (MSS).
Occupational therapy (OT).
Physical therapy (PT).
Skilled nursing (SN).
Speech-language pathology (SLP).
To calculate the proposed CY 2024 national per-visit rates, we
started with the CY 2023 national per-visit rates. Then we applied a
wage index budget neutrality factor to ensure budget neutrality for
LUPA per-visit payments. We calculated the wage index budget neutrality
factor by simulating total payments for LUPA 30-day periods of care
using the CY 2024 wage index with a 5-percent cap on wage index
decreases and comparing it to simulated total payments for LUPA 30-day
periods of care using the CY 2023 wage index with 5-percent cap. By
dividing the total payments for LUPA 30-day periods of care using the
CY 2024 wage index by the total payments for LUPA 30-day periods of
care using the CY 2023 wage index, we obtained a wage index budget
neutrality factor of 1.0015. We apply the wage index budget neutrality
factor in order to calculate the CY 2024 national per-visit rates. In
order to calculate the labor-related share budget neutrality factor for
the national per visit amounts, we simulate total payments for LUPA 30-
day periods using CY 2022 home health utilization claims data with the
CY 2024 HH PPS wage index and the proposed labor-related share (labor-
related share of 74.9 percent and non-labor-related share of 25.1
percent) and compare it to our simulation of total payments for LUPA
30-day periods using the CY 2024 HH PPS wage index with the current
labor-related share (labor-related share of 76.1 percent and non-labor-
related share of 23.9 percent). By dividing the payment amounts for
LUPA 30-day periods using the proposed labor-related share and CY 2024
wage index and payment rate by the payment amounts for LUPA 30-day
periods using the current labor-related share and CY 2024 wage index
and payment rate, we obtain a labor-related share budget neutrality
factor of 0.9999.
The LUPA per-visit rates are not calculated using case-mix weights.
Therefore, no case-mix weight budget neutrality factor is needed to
ensure budget neutrality for LUPA payments. Additionally, we are not
applying the
[[Page 43719]]
permanent adjustment to the per visit payment rates but only to the
case-mix adjusted 30-day payment rate. Lastly, the per-visit rates for
each discipline are updated by the proposed CY 2024 home health payment
update percentage of 2.7 percent. The national per-visit rates are
adjusted by the wage index based on the site of service of the
beneficiary. The per-visit payments for LUPAs are separate from the
LUPA add-on payment amount, which is paid for episodes that occur as
the only episode or initial episode in a sequence of adjacent episodes.
The CY 2024 national per-visit rates for HHAs that submit the required
quality data are updated by the proposed CY 2024 home health payment
update percentage of 2.7 percent and are shown in Table B36.
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TP10JY23.060
The CY 2024 per-visit payment rates for HHAs that do not submit the
required quality data are updated by the proposed CY 2024 home health
payment update percentage of 2.7 percent minus 2 percentage points and
are shown in Table B37.
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TP10JY23.061
(4) LUPA Add-On Factors
Prior to the implementation of the 30-day unit of payment, LUPA
episodes were eligible for a LUPA add-on payment if the episode of care
was the first or only episode in a sequence of adjacent episodes. As
stated in the CY 2008 HH PPS final rule, the average visit lengths in
these initial LUPAs are 16 to 18 percent higher than the average visit
lengths in initial non-LUPA episodes (72 FR 49848). LUPA episodes that
occur as the only episode or as an initial episode in a sequence of
adjacent episodes are adjusted by applying an additional amount to the
LUPA payment before adjusting for area wage differences. In the CY 2014
HH PPS final rule (78 FR 72305), we changed the methodology for
calculating the LUPA add-on amount by finalizing the use of three LUPA
add-on factors: 1.8451 for SN; 1.6700 for PT; and 1.6266 for SLP. We
multiply the per-visit payment amount for the first SN, PT, or SLP
visit in LUPA episodes that occur as the only episode or an initial
episode in a sequence of adjacent episodes by the appropriate factor to
determine the LUPA add-on payment amount.
In the CY 2019 HH PPS final rule with comment period (83 FR 56440),
in addition to finalizing a 30-day unit of payment, we finalized our
policy of continuing to multiply the per-visit
[[Page 43720]]
payment amount for the first skilled nursing, physical therapy, or
speech-language pathology visit in LUPA periods that occur as the only
period of care or the initial 30-day period of care in a sequence of
adjacent 30-day periods of care by the appropriate add-on factor
(1.8451 for SN, 1.6700 for PT, and 1.6266 for SLP) to determine the
LUPA add-on payment amount for 30-day periods of care under the PDGM.
For example, using the proposed CY 2024 per-visit payment rates for
HHAs that submit the required quality data, for LUPA periods that occur
as the only period or an initial period in a sequence of adjacent
periods, if the first skilled visit is SN, the payment for that visit
would be $309.85 (1.8451 multiplied by $167.93), subject to area wage
adjustment.
(5) Occupational Therapy LUPA Add-On Factor
In order to implement Division CC, section 115, of CAA, 2021, CMS
finalized changes to regulations at Sec. 484.55(a)(2) and (b)(3) that
allowed occupational therapists to conduct initial and comprehensive
assessments for all Medicare beneficiaries under the home health
benefit when the plan of care does not initially include skilled
nursing care, but either PT or SLP (86 FR 62351). This change, led to
us establishing a LUPA add-on factor for calculating the LUPA add-on
payment amount for the first skilled occupational therapy (OT) visit in
LUPA periods that occurs as the only period of care or the initial 30-
day period of care in a sequence of adjacent 30-day periods of care.
As stated in the CY 2022 HH PPS final rule with comment period (86
FR 62289) since there was not sufficient data regarding the average
excess of minutes for the first visit in LUPA periods when the initial
and comprehensive assessments are conducted by occupational therapists
we finalized the use of the PT LUPA add-on factor of 1.6700 as a proxy.
We also stated that we would use the PT LUPA add-on factor as a proxy
until we have CY 2022 data to establish a more accurate OT add-on
factor for the LUPA add-on payment amounts (86 FR 62289). At this time,
we are analyzing the CY 2022 data and will continue to use the PT LUPA
add-on factor for OT LUPAs and plan to propose a LUPA add-on factor
specific to OT in future rulemaking.
(6) Payments for High-Cost Outliers Under the HH PPS
(a) Background
Section 1895(b)(5) of the Act allows for the provision of an
addition or adjustment to the home health payment amount otherwise made
in the case of outliers because of unusual variations in the type or
amount of medically necessary care. Under the HH PPS and the previous
unit of payment (that is, 60-day episodes), outlier payments were made
for 60-day episodes whose estimated costs exceed a threshold amount for
each HHRG. The episode's estimated cost was established as the sum of
the national wage-adjusted per visit payment amounts delivered during
the episode. The outlier threshold for each case-mix group or PEP
adjustment defined as the 60-day episode payment or PEP adjustment for
that group plus a fixed-dollar loss (FDL) amount. For the purposes of
the HH PPS, the FDL amount is calculated by multiplying the home health
FDL ratio by a case's wage-adjusted national, standardized 60-day
episode payment rate, which yields an FDL dollar amount for the case.
The outlier threshold amount is the sum of the wage and case-mix
adjusted PPS episode amount and wage-adjusted FDL amount. The outlier
payment is defined to be a proportion of the wage-adjusted estimated
cost that surpasses the wage-adjusted threshold. The proportion of
additional costs over the outlier threshold amount paid as outlier
payments is referred to as the loss-sharing ratio.
As we noted in the CY 2011 HH PPS final rule (75 FR 70397 through
70399), section 3131(b)(1) of the Affordable Care Act amended section
1895(b)(3)(C) of the Act to require that the Secretary reduce the HH
PPS payment rates such that aggregate HH PPS payments were reduced by 5
percent. In addition, section 3131(b)(2) of the Affordable Care Act
amended section 1895(b)(5) of the Act by redesignating the existing
language as section 1895(b)(5)(A) of the Act and revised the language
to state that the total amount of the additional payments or payment
adjustments for outlier episodes could not exceed 2.5 percent of the
estimated total HH PPS payments for that year. Section 3131(b)(2)(C) of
the Affordable Care Act also added section 1895(b)(5)(B) of the Act,
which capped outlier payments as a percent of total payments for each
HHA for each year at 10 percent.
As such, beginning in CY 2011, we reduced payment rates by 5
percent and targeted up to 2.5 percent of total estimated HH PPS
payments to be paid as outliers. To do so, we first returned the 2.5
percent held for the target CY 2010 outlier pool to the national,
standardized 60-day episode rates, the national per visit rates, the
LUPA add-on payment amount, and the NRS conversion factor for CY 2010.
We then reduced the rates by 5 percent as required by section
1895(b)(3)(C) of the Act, as amended by section 3131(b)(1) of the
Affordable Care Act. For CY 2011 and subsequent calendar years we
targeted up to 2.5 percent of estimated total payments to be paid as
outlier payments, and apply a 10-percent agency-level outlier cap.
In the CY 2017 HH PPS proposed and final rules (81 FR 43737 through
43742 and 81 FR 76702), we described our concerns regarding patterns
observed in home health outlier episodes. Specifically, we noted the
methodology for calculating home health outlier payments may have
created a financial incentive for providers to increase the number of
visits during an episode of care in order to surpass the outlier
threshold; and simultaneously created a disincentive for providers to
treat medically complex beneficiaries who require fewer but longer
visits. Given these concerns, in the CY 2017 HH PPS final rule (81 FR
76702), we finalized changes to the methodology used to calculate
outlier payments, using a cost-per-unit approach rather than a cost-
per-visit approach. This change in methodology allows for more accurate
payment for outlier episodes, accounting for both the number of visits
during an episode of care and the length of the visits provided. Using
this approach, we now convert the national per-visit rates into per 15-
minute unit rates. These per 15-minute unit rates are used to calculate
the estimated cost of an episode to determine whether the claim will
receive an outlier payment and the amount of payment for an episode of
care. In conjunction with our finalized policy to change to a cost-per-
unit approach to estimate episode costs and determine whether an
outlier episode should receive outlier payments, in the CY 2017 HH PPS
final rule we also finalized the implementation of a cap on the amount
of time per day that would be counted toward the estimation of an
episode's costs for outlier calculation purposes (81 FR 76725).
Specifically, we limit the amount of time per day (summed across the
six disciplines of care) to 8 hours (32 units) per day when estimating
the cost of an episode for outlier calculation purposes.
In the CY 2017 HH PPS final rule (81 FR 76724), we stated that we
did not plan to re-estimate the average minutes per visit by discipline
every year.
[[Page 43721]]
Additionally, the per unit rates used to estimate an episode's cost
were updated by the home health update percentage each year, meaning we
would start with the national per visit amounts for the same calendar
year when calculating the cost-per-unit used to determine the cost of
an episode of care (81 FR 76727). We will continue to monitor the visit
length by discipline as more recent data becomes available, and may
propose to update the rates as needed in the future.
In the CY 2019 HH PPS final rule with comment period (83 FR 56521),
we finalized a policy to maintain the current methodology for payment
of high-cost outliers upon implementation of PDGM beginning in CY 2020
and calculated payment for high-cost outliers based upon 30-day period
of care. Upon implementation of the PDGM and 30-day unit of payment, we
finalized the FDL ratio of 0.56 for 30-day periods of care in CY 2020.
Given that CY 2020 was the first year of the PDGM and the change to a
30-day unit of payment, we finalized maintaining the same FDL ratio of
0.56 in CY 2021 as we did not have sufficient CY 2020 data at the time
of CY 2021 rulemaking to propose a change to the FDL ratio for CY 2021.
In the CY 2022 HH PPS final rule with comment period (86 FR 62292), we
estimated that outlier payments would be approximately 1.8 percent of
total HH PPS final rule payments if we maintained an FDL of 0.56 in CY
2022. Therefore, in order to pay up to, but no more than, 2.5 percent
of total payments as outlier payments we finalized an FDL of 0.40 for
CY 2022. In the CY 2023 HH PPS final rule (87 FR 66875), using CY 2021
claims utilization data, we finalized an FDL of 0.35 in order to pay up
to, but no more than, 2.5 percent of the total payment as outlier
payments in CY 2023.
(b) Proposed FDL Ratio for CY 2024
For a given level of outlier payments, there is a trade-off between
the values selected for the FDL ratio and the loss-sharing ratio. A
high FDL ratio reduces the number of periods that can receive outlier
payments, but makes it possible to select a higher loss-sharing ratio,
and therefore, increase outlier payments for qualifying outlier
periods. Alternatively, a lower FDL ratio means that more periods can
qualify for outlier payments, but outlier payments per period must be
lower.
The FDL ratio and the loss-sharing ratio are selected so that the
estimated total outlier payments do not exceed the 2.5 percent
aggregate level (as required by section 1895(b)(5)(A) of the Act).
Historically, we have used a value of 0.80 for the loss-sharing ratio,
which, we believe, preserves incentives for agencies to attempt to
provide care efficiently for outlier cases. With a loss-sharing ratio
of 0.80, Medicare pays 80 percent of the additional estimated costs
that exceed the outlier threshold amount. Using CY 2022 claims data (as
of March 17, 2023) and given the statutory requirement that total
outlier payments do not exceed 2.5 percent of the total payments
estimated to be made under the HH PPS, we are proposing an FDL ratio of
0.31 for CY 2024. CMS will update the FDL, if needed, once we have more
complete CY 2022 claims data.
5. Proposal for Disposable Negative Pressure Wound Therapy
(1) Background
Negative pressure wound therapy (NPWT) is a medical procedure in
which a vacuum dressing is used to enhance and promote healing in
acute, chronic, and burn wounds. The therapy involves using a sealed
wound dressing attached to a pump to create a negative pressure
environment in the wound. Applying continued or intermittent vacuum
pressure helps to increase blood flow to the area and draw out excess
fluid from the wound. Moreover, the therapy promotes wound healing by
preparing the wound bed for closure, reducing edema, promoting
granulation tissue formation and perfusion, and removing exudate and
infectious material. The wound type and the location of the wound
determine whether the vacuum can either be applied continuously or
intermittently. NPWT can be utilized for varying lengths of time, as
indicated by the severity of the wound, from a few days of use up to a
span of several months.
The therapy can be administered using the conventional NPWT system,
classified as durable medical equipment (DME), or can be administered
using a disposable device. A disposable NPWT (dNPWT) device is a
single-use integrated system that consists of a non-manual vacuum pump,
a receptacle for collecting exudate, and wound dressings. Unlike
conventional NPWT systems classified as DME, dNPWT devices have preset
continuous negative pressure, no intermittent setting, are pocket-sized
and easily transportable, and are generally battery-operated with
disposable batteries.
In order for a beneficiary to receive dNPWT under the home health
benefit, the beneficiary must qualify for the home health benefit in
accordance with existing eligibility requirements. To be eligible for
Medicare home health services, as set out in sections 1814(a) and
1835(a) of the Act, a physician must certify that the Medicare
beneficiary (patient) meets the following criteria:
Is confined to the home.
Needs skilled nursing care on an intermittent basis or
physical therapy or speech-language pathology; or have a continuing
need for occupational therapy.
Is under the care of a physician.
Receive services under a plan of care established and
reviewed by a physician.
Has had a face-to-face encounter related to the primary
reason for home health care with a physician or allowed Non-Physician
Practitioner (NPP) within a required timeframe.
Coverage for dNPWT is determined based upon a doctor's order as
well as patient preference. Treatment decisions as to whether to use a
dNPWT system versus a conventional NPWT DME system are determined by
the characteristics of the wound, as well as patient goals and
preferences discussed with the ordering physician to best achieve wound
healing.
(2) Current Payment for Negative Pressure Wound Therapy Using a
Disposable Device
Prior to CY 2017, a dNPWT system was considered a non-routine
supply and thus payment for the disposable device was included in the
episode payment amount under the previous home health payment system.
However, section 504 of the CAA, 2016 (Pub. L. 114-113) amended both
section 1834 of the Act (42 U.S.C. 1395m) and section 1861(m)(5) of the
Act (42 U.S.C. 1395x(m)(5)), and required a separate payment for an
applicable disposable device when furnished on or after January 1,
2017, to an individual who receives home health services for which
payment is made under the Medicare home health benefit. Therefore, in
the CY 2017 HH PPS final rule (81 FR 76736), we finalized the
implementation of several changes in payment for furnishing dNPWT for a
patient under a home health plan of care beginning in CY 2017, and each
subsequent year. These payment changes included the implementation of a
separate payment amount for dNPWT that was set equal to the amount of
the payment that would be made under the Medicare Hospital Outpatient
Prospective Payment System (OPPS) using the CPT codes 97607 and 97608.
This separate payment amount included furnishing the service as well as
the dNPWT device. As a reminder, codes 97607 and 97608 are defined as
follows:
HCPCS 97607--Negative pressure wound therapy, (for
example, vacuum
[[Page 43722]]
assisted drainage collection), utilizing disposable, non-durable
medical equipment including provision of exudate management collection
system, topical application(s), wound assessment, and instructions for
ongoing care, per session; total wound(s) surface area less than or
equal to 50 square centimeters.
HCPCS 97608--Negative pressure wound therapy, (for
example, vacuum assisted drainage collection), utilizing disposable,
non-durable medical equipment including provision of exudate management
collection system, topical application(s), wound assessment, and
instructions for ongoing care, per session; total wound(s) surface area
greater than 50 square centimeters.
We also finalized that for instances where the sole purpose of a
home health visit is to furnish dNPWT, Medicare does not pay for the
visit under the HH PPS. Visits performed solely for the purposes of
furnishing a new dNPWT device are not reported on the HH PPS claim (TOB
32x). Where a home health visit is exclusively for the purpose of
furnishing dNPWT, the HHA submits only a TOB 34x. However, if the home
health visit includes the provision of other home health services in
addition to, and separate from, furnishing dNPWT, the HHA submits both
a TOB 32x and TOB 34x--the TOB 32x for other home health services and
the TOB 34x for furnishing NPWT using a disposable device. Payment for
home health visits related to wound care, but not requiring the
furnishing of an entirely new dNPWT device, are covered by the HH PPS
30-day period payment and must be billed using the home health claim.
(3) CAA, 2023
Division FF, section 4136 of the CAA, 2023 (Pub. L.117-328) amends
section 1834 of the Act (42 U.S.C. 1395m(s)), and mandates several
amendments to the Medicare separate payment for dNPWT devices beginning
in CY 2024. Section 4136(a) of the CAA, 2023 amends 1834(s)(3) of the
Act by adding subparagraph (A) which outlines the calculation of the
payment amounts for (i) years prior to CY 2024, (ii) CY 2024, (iii) CY
2025; and each subsequent year. As discussed previously, for a year
prior to CY 2024, the amount of the separate payment was set equal to
the amount of the payment that would be made under the Medicare
Hospital OPPS using the CPT codes 97607 and 97608 and included the
professional service as well as the furnishing of the device. For CY
2024, the CAA, 2023 requires that the separate payment amount for an
applicable dNPWT device would be set equal to the supply price used to
determine the relative value for the service under the Physician Fee
Schedule (PFS) under section 1848 as of January 1, 2022 (CY 2022)
updated by the specified adjustment described in subparagraph (B) for
such year. For 2025 and each subsequent year, the CAA, 2023 requires
that the separate payment amount will be set equal to the payment
amount established for the device in the previous year, updated by the
specified adjustment described in subparagraph (B) for such year.
Division FF section 4136 of the CAA, 2023 also adds a new
subparagraph 1834(s)(3)(B), which requires that the separate payment
amount to be adjusted by the percent increase in the CPI-U for the 12-
month period ending with June of the preceding year minus the
productivity adjustment described in section 1886(b)(3)(B)(xi)(II) for
such year. Accordingly, this may result in a percentage being less than
0.0 for a year, and may result in payment being less than such payment
rates for the preceding year.
Section 1834(s)(3)(C) of the Act, as added by Division FF, section
4136 of the CAA, 2023, specifies that the separate payment amount for
applicable devices furnished on or after January 1, 2024, would no
longer include payment for nursing or therapy services described in
section 1861(m) of the Act. Payment for such nursing or therapy
services would now be made under the prospective payment system
established under section 1895 of the Act, the HH PPS, and is no longer
separately billable.
Division FF, section 4136 of the CAA, 2023 also added a new
paragraph 1834(s)(4) of the Act that mandates a change in claims
processing for the separate payment amount for an applicable disposable
device. Beginning in CY 2024 and each subsequent year, claims for the
separate payment amount of an applicable dNPWT device would now be
accepted and processed on claims submitted using the type of bill that
is most commonly used by home health agencies to bill services under a
home health plan of care (TOB 32X). That is, claims with a date of
service on or after January 1, 2024 for an applicable dNPWT device will
no longer be submitted on TOB 34X.
(4) Proposed Payment Policies for dNPWT Devices
For the purposes of paying for a dNPWT device for a patient under a
Medicare home health plan of care, CMS is proposing that the payment
amount for CY 2024 would be equal to the supply price of the applicable
disposable device under the Medicare PFS (as of January 1, 2022)
updated by the specified adjustment as mandated by the CAA, 2023. The
supply price of an applicable disposable device under the Medicare PFS
for January 1, 2022 is $263.25. Therefore, the payment amount for CY
2024 would be set equal to the amount of $263.25 updated by the percent
increase in the CPI-U for the 12-month period ending in June of 2023
minus the productivity adjustment. We note that the CPI-U for the 12-
month period ending with June of 2023 is not available at the time of
this proposed rulemaking. The CPI-U for the 12-month period ending in
June of 2023 and the corresponding productivity adjustment will be
updated in the final rule. We are also proposing that the separate
payment for CY 2025 and each subsequent year would be based on the
established payment amount for the previous calendar year updated by
the percentage increase in the CPI-U minus the productivity adjustment
for the 12-month period ending in June of the previous year. The
application of productivity adjustment may result in a net update that
may be less than 0.0 for a year, and may result in the separate payment
amount under this subsection for an applicable device for a year being
less than such separate payment amount for such device for the
preceding year.
In accordance with the changes made by the CAA, 2023, we are also
proposing that claims reported for a dNPWT device would no longer be
reported on TOB 34x. Instead, for dates of service beginning on or
after January 1, 2024, the HHA would report the Healthcare Common
Procedure Coding System (HCPCS) code A9272 (for the device only) on the
home health type of bill TOB 32. The code HCPCS A9272 is defined as a
wound suction, disposable, includes dressing, all accessories and
components, any type, each. We will provide education and develop
materials outlining the new billing procedures for dNPWT under the home
health benefit including MLN Matters[supreg] articles and manual
guidance after publication of the CY 2024 HH PPS final rule.
We are also proposing that the services related to the application
of the device would be included in the HH PPS and would be excluded
from the separate payment amount for the device. In addition, only the
home health services for the administration of the device would be
geographically adjusted and the payment amount for HCPCS A9272 would
not be subject to geographic adjustment.
We are soliciting public comment on all aspects of the proposed
payment
[[Page 43723]]
policies for furnishing a dNPWT device as articulated in this section
as well as the corresponding proposed regulations text changes at Sec.
409.50 and Sec. 484.202.
III. Home Health Quality Reporting Program (HH QRP)
A. Background and Statutory Authority
The HH QRP is authorized by section 1895(b)(3)(B)(v) of the Act.
Section 1895(b)(3)(B)(v)(II) of the Act requires that, for 2007 and
subsequent years, each home health agency (HHA) submit to the Secretary
in a form and manner, and at a time, specified by the Secretary, such
data that the Secretary determines are appropriate for the measurement
of health care quality. To the extent that an HHA does not submit data
in accordance with this clause, the Secretary shall reduce the home
health market basket percentage increase applicable to the HHA for such
year by 2 percentage points. As provided at section 1895(b)(3)(B)(vi)
of the Act, depending on the market basket percentage increase
applicable for a particular year, as further reduced by the
productivity adjustment (except in 2018 and 2020) described in section
1886(b)(3)(B)(xi)(II) of the Act, the reduction of that increase by 2
percentage points for failure to comply with the requirements of the HH
QRP may result in the home health market basket percentage increase
being less than 0.0 percent for a year, and may result in payment rates
under the Home Health PPS for a year being less than payment rates for
the preceding year. Section 1890A of the Act requires that the
Secretary establish and follow a pre-rulemaking process, in
coordination with the consensus-based entity (CBE) with a contract
under section 1890 of the Act, to solicit input from certain groups
regarding the selection of quality and efficiency measures for the HH
QRP. The HH QRP regulations can be found at 42 CFR 484.245 and 484.250.
In this proposed rule, we are proposing to adopt two new measures
and remove one existing measure. Second, we propose the removal of two
OASIS items. Third, we are proposing to begin public reporting of four
measures in the HH QRP. Fourth, we are providing an update on our
efforts to close the health equity gap. Fifth, we propose codifying of
our 90 percent data submission threshold policy in the Code of Federal
Regulations. Lastly, we are seeking information on principles we could
use to select and prioritize HH QRP quality measures in future years.
These proposals are further specified in the following sections.
B. General Considerations Used for the Selection of Quality Measures
for the HH QRP
For a detailed discussion of the considerations we historically use
for measure selection for the HH QRP quality, resource use, and other
measures, we refer readers to the CY 2016 HH PPS final rule (80 FR
68695 through 68696). In the CY 2019 HH PPS final rule with comment
period (83 FR 56548 through 56550) we finalized the factors we consider
for removing previously adopted HH QRP measures.
C. Quality Measures Currently Adopted for the CY 2024 HH QRP
The HH QRP currently includes 20 measures for the CY 2023 program
year, as described in Table C1.
BILLING CODE 4120-01-P
[[Page 43724]]
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TP10JY23.062
[[Page 43725]]
BILLING CODE 4120-01-C
D. HH QRP Quality Measure Proposals Beginning With the CY 2025 HH QRP
1. Discharge Function Score Measure Beginning With the CY 2025 HH QRP
a. Background
Eligibility for Medicare's home health benefit stipulates that
beneficiaries must need part-time (fewer than eight hours per day) or
intermittent skilled care for their medical conditions and be unable to
leave their homes without considerable effort. Unlike skilled nursing
facilities, a proceeding hospital stay is not required for
beneficiaries to access the Medicare home health benefit.\18\ HH
patients frequently have complex medical issues, including cardiac,
circulatory and respiratory conditions, and between 30-40 percent of HH
patients begin their episode of care with a high level of functional
debility.\19\ Measuring functional status of HH patients can provide
valuable information about an HHA's quality of care. A patient's
functional status is associated with institutionalization,\20\ higher
risk of falls and falls-related hip fracture and death,21 22
greater risk of undernutrition,\23\ higher emergency department
admissions,\24\ higher risk of readmissions following home care
25 26 and higher prevalence of hypertension and
diabetes.\27\ Predictors of poorer recovery in function include greater
age, complications after hospital discharge, and residence in a nursing
home.\28\ Understanding factors associated with poorer functional
recovery facilitates the ability to estimate expected functional
outcome recovery for patients, based on their personal characteristics.
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\18\ Medicare Payment Advisory Commission. (2022). March 2022
report to the congress: Medicare payment policy. Washington, DC:
Medicare Payment Advisory Commission.
\19\ Medicare Payment Advisory Commission. (2022). March 2022
report to the congress: Medicare payment policy. Washington, DC:
Medicare Payment Advisory Commission.
\20\ Hajek, A., Brettschneider, C., Lange, C., Posselt, T.,
Wiese, B., Steinmann, S., Weyerer, S., Werle, J., Pentzek, M.,
Fuchs, A., Stein, J., Luck, T., Bickel, H., M[ouml]sch, E., Wagner,
M., Jessen, F., Maier, W., Scherer, M., Riedel-Heller, S.G.,
K[ouml]nig, H.H., & AgeCoDe Study Group. (2015). Longitudinal
Predictors of Institutionalization in Old Age. PLoS One,
10(12):e0144203.
\21\ Akahane, M., Maeyashiki, A., Yoshihara, S., Tanaka, Y., &
Imamura, T. (2016). Relationship between difficulties in daily
activities and falling: loco-check as a self-assessment of fall
risk. Interactive Journal of Medical Research, 5(2), e20.
\22\ Zaslavsky, O., Zelber-Sagi, S., Gray, S.L., LaCroix, A.Z.,
Brunner, R.L., Wallace, R.B., . . . Woods, N.F. (2016). Comparison
of Frailty Phenotypes for Prediction of Mortality, Incident Falls,
and Hip Fracture in Older Women. Journal of the American Geriatrics
Society, 64(9), 1858-1862.
\23\ van der Pols-Vijlbrief, R., Wijnhoven, H.A.H., Bosmans,
J.E., Twisk, J.W.R., & Visser, M. (2016). Targeting the underlying
causes of undernutrition. Cost-effectiveness of a multifactorial
personalized intervention in community-dwelling older adults: A
randomized controlled trial. Clinical Nutrition (Edinburgh,
Scotland).
\24\ Hominick, K., McLeod, V., & Rockwood, K. (2016).
Characteristics of older adults admitted to hospital versus those
discharged home, in emergency department patients referred to
internal medicine. Canadian Geriatrics Journal: CGJ, 19(1), 9-14.
\25\ Knox, S., Downer, B., Haas, A., Middleton, A., &
Ottenbacher, K.J. (2020). Function and caregiver support associated
with readmissions during home health for individuals with dementia.
Archives of physical medicine and rehabilitation, 101(6), 1009-1016.
\26\ Middleton, A. Downer, B., Haas, A., Knox, S., &
Ottenbacher, K.J. (2019) Functional status ss associated with 30-day
potentially preventable readmissions following home health Care.
Medical Care, 57(2):145-151.
\27\ Halaweh, H., Willen, C., Grimby-Ekman, A., & Svantesson, U.
(2015). Physical activity and health-related quality of life among
community dwelling elderly. J Clin Med Res, 7(11), 845-52.
\28\ C[oacute]rcoles-Jim[eacute]nez, M.P., Villada-Munera, A.,
Del Egido-Fernandez, M.A., Candel-Parra, E., Moreno-Moreno, M.,
Jimenez-Sanchez, M.D., & Pina-Martinez, A. (2015). Recovery of
activities of daily living among older people one year after hip
fracture. Clinical Nursing Research, 24(6), 604-623.
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Home health care can positively impact functional outcomes. There
is evidence the provision of home care services can lead to
statistically significant improvements in function and successful
discharge into the community.\29\ In stroke patients, home-based
rehabilitation programs administered by home health clinicians
significantly improved function.\30\ Home health services, delivered by
a registered nurse positively impacted patient Quality of Life (QOL)
and clinical outcomes, including significant improvement in dressing
lower body and bathing activities of daily living, meal preparation,
shopping, and housekeeping instrumental activities of daily living.\31\
In addition, a retrospective study, using data abstracted from the
Minimum Data Set and OASIS, reported that nursing home admissions were
delayed in the study population receiving home health services by an
average of eight months \32\ and for a similar population, community
dwelling adults receiving community-based services supporting aging in
place, health and functional outcomes were enhanced, and improved
cognition and lower rates of depression, function assistance, and
incontinence were noted.\33\
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\29\ Bowles, K.H., McDonald, M., Barron, Y., Kennedy, E.,
O'Connor, M., & Mikkelsen, M. (2021). Surviving COVID-19 after
hospital discharge: symptom, functional, and adverse outcomes of
home health recipients. Annals of internal medicine, 174(3), 316-
325.
\30\ Asiri, F.Y., Marchetti, G.F., Ellis, J.L., Otis, L.,
Sparto, P.J., Watzlaf, V., & Whitney, S.L. (2014). Predictors of
functional and gait outcomes for persons poststroke undergoing home-
based rehabilitation. Journal of Stroke and Cerebrovascular
Diseases: The Official Journal of National Stroke Association,
23(7), 1856-1864.
\31\ C[oacute]rcoles-Jim[eacute]nez, M.P., Villada-Munera, A.,
Del Egido-Fernandez, M.A., Candel-Parra, E., Moreno-Moreno, M.,
Jimenez-Sanchez, M.D., & Pina-Martinez, A. (2015). Recovery of
activities of daily living among older people one year after hip
fracture. Clinical Nursing Research, 24(6), 604-623.
\32\ Asiri, F.Y., Marchetti, G.F., Ellis, J.L., Otis, L.,
Sparto, P.J., Watzlaf, V., & Whitney, S.L. (2014). Predictors of
functional and gait outcomes for persons poststroke undergoing home-
based rehabilitation. Journal of Stroke and Cerebrovascular
Diseases: The Official Journal of National Stroke Association,
23(7), 1856-1864.
\33\ Han, S.J., Kim, H.K., Storfjell, J., & Kim, M.J. (2013).
Clinical outcomes and quality of life of home health care patients.
Asian Nursing Research, 7(2), 53-60.
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To satisfy the requirement of the Improving Medicare Post-Acute
Care Transformation (IMPACT) Act of 2014 (Pub. L. 113-185) to develop
and implement standardized quality measures from five quality measure
domains, including the domain of functional status, cognitive function,
and changes in function and cognitive function, across the post-acute
care (PAC) settings, CMS adopted the ``Application of Percent of Long-
Term Care Hospital Patients with an Admission and Discharge Functional
Assessment and a Care Plan That Addresses Function'' (Application of
Functional Assessment/Care Plan) measure in the CY 2018 HH PPS final
rule (82 FR 51722 through 51725). This cross-setting process measure
allowed for the standardization of functional assessments across
assessment instruments and facilitated cross-setting data collection,
quality measurement, and interoperable data exchange.
However, performance on this measure across the PAC settings,
including the range of HHAs, is so high and unvarying across most HH
providers that the measure no longer offers meaningful distinctions in
performance. Several measures addressing functional status are
currently part of the PAC QRPs. None of the existing functional outcome
measures are cross-setting in nature, in that they are either (a) not
implemented in all four settings (for instance, the ``Discharge
Mobility and Self-Care Score'' measures are reported for SNFs and IRFs
but not for LTCHs and HHAs); or (b) rely on functional status items not
collected in all settings (for instance, the ``Discharge Mobility and
Self-Care Score'' measures rely on items not collected in LTCHs). In
contrast, a cross-setting functional outcome measure would include the
HH setting. Moreover, the measure specifications would be aligned
across settings, including the use of a common set of standardized
functional assessment data
[[Page 43726]]
elements, thereby satisfying the requirements of the IMPACT Act.
(1) Measure Importance
Maintenance or improvement of physical function among older adults
is increasingly an important focus of healthcare. Worldwide, close to
20 percent of older adults living at home report needing some form of
assistance with their ADLs, and in the US 29 percent of older adults
report difficulties completing their activities of daily living
(ADLs).\34\ Adults aged 65 years and older constitute the most rapidly
growing population in the United States, and functional capacity in
physical (non-psychological) domains has been shown to decline with
age.\35\ Moreover, impaired functional capacity is associated with
poorer quality of life and an increased risk of all-cause mortality,
postoperative complications, and cognition, the latter of which can
complicate the return of a patient to the community from post-acute
care if the patient exhibits cognitive deficits.36 37 38
Nonetheless, evidence suggests that physical functional abilities,
including mobility and self-care, are modifiable predictors of patient
outcomes across PAC settings, including functional recovery or decline
after post-acute care,39 40 41 42 43 rehospitalization
rates,44 45 46 discharge to community,47 48 and
falls.\49\
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\34\ Chen, S., Jones, L.A., Jiang, S., Jin, H., Dong, D., Chen,
X., . . . Zhu, A. (2022). Difficulty and help with activities of
daily living among older adults living alone during the COVID-19
pandemic: a multi-country population-based study. BMC geriatrics,
22(1), 1-14.
\35\ High KP, Zieman S, Gurwitz J, Hill C, Lai J, Robinson T,
Schonberg M, Whitson H. Use of Functional Assessment to Define
Therapeutic Goals and Treatment. J Am Geriatr Soc. 2019
Sep;67(9):1782-1790. doi: 10.1111/jgs.15975. Epub 2019 May 13. PMID:
31081938; PMCID: PMC6955596.
\36\ Clouston SA, Brewster P, Kuh D, Richards M, Cooper R, Hardy
R, Rubin MS, Hofer SM. The dynamic relationship between physical
function and cognition in longitudinal aging cohorts. Epidemiol Rev.
2013;35(1):33-50. doi: 10.1093/epirev/mxs004. Epub 2013 Jan 24.
PMID: 23349427; PMCID: PMC3578448.
\37\ Michael YL, Colditz GA, Coakley E, Kawachi I. Health
Behaviors, Social Networks, and Healthy Aging: Cross-Sectional
Evidence from the Nurses' Health Study. Qual Life Res. 1999
Dec;8(8):711-22. doi: 10.1023/a:1008949428041. PMID: 10855345.
\38\ High KP, Zieman S, Gurwitz J, Hill C, Lai J, Robinson T,
Schonberg M, Whitson H. Use of Functional Assessment to Define
Therapeutic Goals and Treatment. J Am Geriatr Soc. 2019
Sep;67(9):1782-1790. doi: 10.1111/jgs.15975. Epub 2019 May 13. PMID:
31081938; PMCID: PMC6955596.
\39\ Deutsch A, Palmer L, Vaughan M, Schwartz C, McMullen T.
Inpatient Rehabilitation Facility Patients' Functional Abilities and
Validity Evaluation of the Standardized Self-Care and Mobility Data
Elements. Arch Phys Med Rehabil. 2022 Feb 11:S0003-9993(22)00205-2.
doi: 10.1016/j.apmr.2022.01.147. Epub ahead of print. PMID:
35157893.
\40\ Hong I, Goodwin JS, Reistetter TA, Kuo YF, Mallinson T,
Karmarkar A, Lin YL, Ottenbacher KJ. Comparison of Functional Status
Improvements Among Patients With Stroke Receiving Postacute Care in
Inpatient Rehabilitation vs Skilled Nursing Facilities. JAMA Netw
Open. 2019 Dec 2;2(12):e1916646. doi: 10.1001/
jamanetworkopen.2019.16646. PMID: 31800069; PMCID: PMC6902754.
\41\ Alcusky M, Ulbricht CM, Lapane KL. Postacute Care Setting,
Facility Characteristics, and Poststroke Outcomes: A Systematic
Review. Arch Phys Med Rehabil. 2018;99(6):1124-1140.e9. doi:
10.1016/j.apmr.2017.09.005. PMID: 28965738; PMCID: PMC5874162.
\42\ Chu CH, Quan AML, McGilton KS. Depression and Functional
Mobility Decline in Long Term Care Home Residents with Dementia: a
Prospective Cohort Study. Can Geriatr J. 2021;24(4):325-331.
doi:10.5770/cgj.24.511. PMID: 34912487; PMCID: PMC8629506.
\43\ Lane NE, Stukel TA, Boyd CM, Wodchis WP. Long-Term Care
Residents' Geriatric Syndromes at Admission and Disablement Over
Time: An Observational Cohort Study. J Gerontol A Biol Sci Med Sci.
2019;74(6):917-923. doi: 10.1093/gerona/gly151. PMID: 29955879;
PMCID: PMC6521919.
\44\ Li CY, Haas A, Pritchard KT, Karmarkar A, Kuo YF, Hreha K,
Ottenbacher KJ. Functional Status Across Post-Acute Settings is
Associated With 30-Day and 90-Day Hospital Readmissions. J Am Med
Dir Assoc. 2021 Dec;22(12):2447-2453.e5. doi: 10.1016/
j.jamda.2021.07.039. Epub 2021 Aug 30. PMID: 34473961; PMCID:
PMC8627458.
\45\ Middleton A, Graham JE, Lin YL, Goodwin JS, Bettger JP,
Deutsch A, Ottenbacher KJ. Motor and Cognitive Functional Status Are
Associated with 30-day Unplanned Rehospitalization Following Post-
Acute Care in Medicare Fee-for-Service Beneficiaries. J Gen Intern
Med. 2016 Dec;31(12):1427-1434. doi: 10.1007/s11606-016-3704-4. Epub
2016 Jul 20. PMID: 27439979; PMCID: PMC5130938.
\46\ Gustavson AM, Malone DJ, Boxer RS, Forster JE, Stevens-
Lapsley JE. Application of High-Intensity Functional Resistance
Training in a Skilled Nursing Facility: An Implementation Study.
Phys Ther. 2020;100(10):1746-1758. doi: 10.1093/ptj/pzaa126. PMID:
32750132; PMCID: PMC7530575.
\47\ Minor M, Jaywant A, Toglia J, Campo M, O'Dell MW. Discharge
Rehabilitation Measures Predict Activity Limitations in Patients
with Stroke Six Months after Inpatient Rehabilitation. Am J Phys Med
Rehabil. 2021 Oct 20. doi: 10.1097/PHM.0000000000001908. Epub ahead
of print. PMID: 34686630.
\48\ Dubin R, Veith JM, Grippi MA, McPeake J, Harhay MO,
Mikkelsen ME. Functional Outcomes, Goals, and Goal Attainment among
Chronically Critically Ill Long-Term Acute Care Hospital Patients.
Ann Am Thorac Soc. 2021;18(12):2041-2048. doi: 10.1513/
AnnalsATS.202011-1412OC. PMID: 33984248; PMCID: PMC8641806.
\49\ Hoffman GJ, Liu H, Alexander NB, Tinetti M, Braun TM, Min
LC. Posthospital Fall Injuries and 30-Day Readmissions in Adults 65
Years and Older. JAMA Netw Open. 2019 May 3;2(5):e194276. doi:
10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2019.4276. PMID: 31125100; PMCID:
PMC6632136.
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The implementation of interventions that improve patients'
functional outcomes and reduce the risks of associated undesirable
outcomes as a part of a patient-centered care plan is essential to
maximizing functional improvement. For many people, the overall goals
of HH care may include optimizing functional improvement, returning to
a previous level of independence, maintaining functional abilities, or
avoiding institutionalization. Studies have suggested that HH care has
the potential to improve patients' functional abilities including the
performance of ADLs at discharge through the provision of physical and
occupational therapy services for community dwelling older adult
patients with various diagnoses, including
dementia.50 51 52 53 54 55 Assessing functional status as a
health outcome in HH can thus provide valuable information in
determining treatment decisions throughout the care continuum, the need
for therapy service, and discharge planning,56 57 58 as well
as provide information to consumers about the effectiveness of the care
delivered. Because evidence shows that older adults experience aging
heterogeneously and require individualized and comprehensive health
care, functional status can serve as a vital component in informing the
provision of health care
[[Page 43727]]
and thus indicate HH quality of care.59 60 61 62
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\50\ Knox, S., Downer, B., Haas, A., & Ottenbacher, K.J. (2022).
Home health utilization association with discharge to community for
people with dementia. Alzheimer's & Dementia: Translational Research
& Clinical Interventions, 8(1), e12341.
\51\ Prvu Bettger, J., McCoy, L., Smith, E.E., Fonarow, G.C.,
Schwamm, L.H., & Peterson, E.D. (2015). Contemporary trends and
predictors of postacute service use and routine discharge home after
stroke. Journal of the American Heart Association, 4(2), e001038.
\52\ Golding-Day M, Whitehead P, Radford K, Walker M.
Interventions to reduce dependency in bathing in community dwelling
older adults: a systematic review. Syst Rev. 2017 Oct 11;6(1):198.
doi: 10.1186/s13643-017-0586-4. PMID: 29020974; PMCID: PMC5637353.
\53\ Foster, E.R., Carson, L. G., Archer, J., & Hunter, E.G.
(2021). Occupational therapy interventions for instrumental
activities of daily living for adults with Parkinson's disease: A
systematic review. The American Journal of Occupational Therapy,
75(3).
\54\ Anderson, W.L., & Wiener, J.M. (2015). The impact of
assistive technologies on formal and informal home care. The
Gerontologist, 55(3), 422-433.
\55\ Knox, S., Downer, B., Haas, A., Middleton, A., &
Ottenbacher, K.J. (2020). Function and caregiver support associated
with readmissions during home health for individuals with dementia.
Archives of physical medicine and rehabilitation, 101(6), 1009-1016.
\56\ Dubin R, Veith JM, Grippi MA, McPeake J, Harhay MO,
Mikkelsen ME. Functional Outcomes, Goals, and Goal Attainment among
Chronically Critically Ill Long-Term Acute Care Hospital Patients.
Ann Am Thorac Soc. 2021;18(12):2041-2048. doi:10.1513/
AnnalsATS.202011-1412OC. PMID: 33984248; PMCID: PMC8641806.
\57\ Warren M, Knecht J, Verheijde J, Tompkins J. Association of
AM-PAC ``6-Clicks'' Basic Mobility and Daily Activity Scores With
Discharge Destination. Phys Ther. 2021 Apr 4;101(4): pzab043. doi:
10.1093/ptj/pzab043. PMID: 33517463.
\58\ Cogan AM, Weaver JA, McHarg M, Leland NE, Davidson L,
Mallinson T. Association of Length of Stay, Recovery Rate, and
Therapy Time per Day With Functional Outcomes After Hip Fracture
Surgery. JAMA Netw Open. 2020 Jan 3;3(1):e1919672. doi: 10.1001/
jamanetworkopen.2019.19672. PMID: 31977059; PMCID: PMC6991278.
\59\ Chase, J.-A. D., Huang, L., Russell, D., Hanlon, A.,
O'Connor, M., Robinson, K.M., & Bowles, K.H. (2018). Racial/ethnic
disparities in disability outcomes among post-acute home care
patients. Journal of aging and health, 30(9), 1406-1426.
\60\ Fashaw-Walters, S.A., Rahman, M., Gee, G., Mor, V., White,
M., & Thomas, K.S. (2022). Out Of Reach: Inequities In The Use Of
High-Quality Home Health Agencies: Study examines inequities in the
use of high-quality home health agencies. Health Affairs, 41(2),
247-255.
\61\ Criss MG, Wingood M, Staples WH, Southard V, Miller KL,
Norris TL, Avers D, Ciolek CH, Lewis CB, Strunk ER. APTA Geriatrics'
Guiding Principles for Best Practices in Geriatric Physical Therapy:
An Executive Summary. J Geriatr Phys Ther. 2022 Apr-June;45(2):70-
75. doi: 10.1519/JPT.0000000000000342. PMID: 35384940.
\62\ Cogan AM, Weaver JA, McHarg M, Leland NE, Davidson L,
Mallinson T. Association of Length of Stay, Recovery Rate, and
Therapy Time per Day With Functional Outcomes After Hip Fracture
Surgery. JAMA Netw Open. 2020 Jan 3;3(1):e1919672. doi: 10.1001/
jamanetworkopen.2019.19672. PMID: 31977059; PMCID: PMC6991278.
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We are proposing to adopt the Discharge Function Score (DC
Function) measure \63\ in the HH QRP beginning with the CY 2025 HHQRP.
This assessment-based outcome measure evaluates functional status by
calculating the percentage of HH patients who meet or exceed an
expected discharge function score. We are proposing that this measure
would replace the topped-out, cross-setting Application of Functional
Assessment/Care Plan process measure. Like the cross-setting process
measure it is replacing, the proposed measure is calculated using
standardized patient assessment data from the current HH assessment
tool.
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\63\ Discharge Function Score for Home Health Agencies (HHAs)
Technical Report, which is available at https://www.cms.gov/files/document/hh-discharge-function-score-measure-technical-report.pdf.
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In addition to meeting the requirements of the Act, the DC Function
measure supports current CMS priorities. Specifically, the measure
aligns with the Streamline Quality Measurement domain in CMS's
Meaningful Measures 2.0 framework \64\ in two ways. First, the proposed
outcome measure would further CMS's objective to increase the
proportion of outcome measures in the HH QRP by replacing the
Application of Functional Assessment/Care Plan cross-setting process
measure with an outcome measure (see Section III.2 of this proposed
rule). Second, this measure adds no additional provider burden since it
would be calculated using data from the OASIS that are already reported
to the Medicare program for payment and quality reporting purposes.
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\64\ https://www.cms.gov/medicare/meaningful-measures-framework/meaningful-measures-20-moving-measure-reduction-modernization,
accessed February 1, 2023.
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The proposed DC Function measure would also follow a calculation
approach similar to the existing functional outcome measures.
Specifically, the measure (1) considers two dimensions of function
(that is, self-care and mobility activities) and (2) accounts for
missing data by using statistical imputation to improve the validity of
measure performance. The statistical imputation recodes missing
functional status data to a likely value had the status been assessed,
whereas the current imputation approach implemented in existing
function outcome measures recodes missing data to the lowest functional
status.
(b) Measure Testing
Measure testing was conducted on the DC Function measure to assess
validity, reliability, and reportability, all of which informed
stakeholder feedback and Technical Expert Panel (TEP) input (See the
Stakeholder and Technical Expert Panel (TEP) Input section of this
proposed rule). Validity was assessed for the measure performance, the
risk adjustment model, face validity, and statistical imputation
models. Validity testing of measure performance entailed determining
Spearman's rank correlations between the proposed measure's performance
and the performance of other publicly reported HH quality measures.
Results indicated that the measure captures the most probable
determination of actual outcomes based on the directionalities and
strengths of correlation coefficients and are further detailed in Table
C2.
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TP10JY23.063
Validity testing of the risk adjustment model showed good model
discrimination, as the measure model has the predictive ability to
distinguish patients with low expected functional capabilities from
those with high expected functional capabilities.\65\ The ratios of
observed-to-predicted discharge function score across eligible
episodes, by deciles of expected functional capabilities, ranged from
0.98 to 1.01. Both the Cross-Setting Discharge Function TEPs and
patient-family feedback showed strong support for the face validity and
importance of the proposed measure as an indicator of quality of care.
Lastly, validity testing of the measure's statistical imputation models
indicated that the models demonstrate good discrimination and produce
more precise and accurate estimates of function scores for items with
missing scores when compared to adopting the current imputation
approach implemented in the SNF QRP functional outcome measures,
specifically Change in Self-Care Score measure, Change in Mobility
Score measure, Application of IRF Functional Outcome Measure: Discharge
Self-Care Score for Medical Rehabilitation Patients (CBE ID #2635)
(Discharge Self-Care Score) measure, and Application of IRF Functional
Outcome Measure: Discharge Mobility Score for Medical Rehabilitation
Patients (CBE ID #2636) (Discharge Mobility Score) measure. The current
imputation approach involves recoding ``Activity Not Attempted'' (ANA)
codes to ``1'' or ``most dependent.''
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\65\ ``Expected functional capabilities'' is defined as the
predicted discharge function score.
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[[Page 43728]]
Reliability and reportability testing also yielded results that
support the measure's scientific acceptability. Split-half testing
revealed the proposed measure's excellent reliability, indicating an
intraclass correlation coefficient value of 0.94. Reportability testing
indicated good reportability (79 percent) of providers meeting the
public reporting threshold of 20 eligible episodes. For additional
measure testing details, we refer readers to the document titled
Discharge Function Score for Home Health Agencies (HHAs) Technical
Report, which is available at https://www.cms.gov/files/document/hh-discharge-function-score-measure-technical-report.pdf.
b. Competing and Related Measures
Section 1899B(e)(2)(A) of the Act requires that, absent an
exception under section 1899B(e)(2)(B) of the Act, measures specified
under section 1899B of the Act be endorsed by the entity with a
contract under section 1890(a). In the case of a specified area or
medical topic determined appropriate by the Secretary for which a
feasible and practical measure has not been endorsed, section
1899B(e)(2)(B) permits the Secretary to specify a measure that is not
so endorsed, as long as due consideration is given to measures that
have been endorsed or adopted by a consensus organization identified by
the Secretary.
The proposed DC Function measure is not CBE-endorsed, so we
considered whether there are other available measures that (1) assess
both functional domains of self-care and mobility in HHs and (2)
satisfy the requirement of the Act to develop and implement
standardized quality measures from the quality measure domain of
functional status, cognitive function, and changes in function and
cognitive function across the PAC settings. While the Application of
Functional Assessment/Care Plan measure assesses both functional
domains and satisfies the Act's requirement, this cross-setting process
measure is not CBE-endorsed and the performance on this measure among
HHs is so high and unvarying across most providers that the measure
does not offer meaningful distinctions in performance. Additionally,
after review of the CBE's consensus-endorsed measures, we were unable
to identify any CBE-endorsed measures for HHs that meet the
aforementioned requirements.
Therefore, after consideration of other available measures, we find
that the exception under section 1899B(e)(2)(B) of the Act applies and
are proposing to adopt the DC Function measure beginning with the CY
2025 HH QRP. We intend to submit the proposed measure to the CBE for
consideration of endorsement when feasible.
c. Interested Parties and Technical Expert Panel (TEP) Input
In our development and specification of this measure, we employed a
transparent process in which we sought input from stakeholders and
national experts and engaged in a process that allowed for pre-
rulemaking input, in accordance with section 1890A of the Act. To meet
this requirement, we provided the following opportunities for
stakeholder input: a Patient and Family Engagement Listening Session,
two TEPs, and public comments through a request for information (RFI).
First, the measure development contractor convened a Patient and
Family Engagement Listening Session, during which patients and
caregivers provided views on the proposed measure concept. Participants
expressed support and emphasized the importance of measuring functional
outcomes and found self-care and mobility to be critical aspects of
care. Additionally, they expressed a strong interest in metrics
assessing the number of patients discharged from particular agencies or
facilities with improvements in self-care and mobility, and their views
of self-care and mobility aligned with the functional domains captured
by the proposed measure. All feedback was used to inform measure
development efforts.
The measure development contractor subsequently convened TEPs on
July 14-15, 2021 and January 26-27, 2022 to obtain expert input on the
development of DC Function measure for use in the HH QRP. The TEPs
consisted of stakeholders with a diverse range of expertise, including
HH and PAC subject matter knowledge, clinical expertise, patient and
family perspectives, and measure development experience. The TEPs
supported the proposed measure concept and provided substantive
feedback regarding the measure's specifications and measure testing
data. First, the TEP was asked whether they prefer a cross-setting
measure that is modeled after the Inpatient Rehabilitation Facility
(IRF) Functional Outcome Measure: Discharge Mobility Score for Medical
Rehabilitation Patients (CBE ID #2636) (Discharge Mobility Score) and
IRF Functional Outcome Measure: Discharge Self-Care Score for Medical
Rehabilitation Patients (CBE ID #2635) (Discharge Self-Care Score)
measures, or one that is modeled after the IRF Functional Outcome
Measure: Change in Mobility for Medical Rehabilitation Patients (CBE ID
#2634) (Change in Mobility Score) and IRF Functional Outcome Measure:
Change in Self-Care Score for Medical Rehabilitation Patients (CBE ID
#2633) (Change in Self-Care Score). With the Discharge Mobility Score
and Change in Mobility Score measures and the Discharge Self-Care Score
and Change in Self-Care Score measures being both highly correlated and
not appearing to measure unique concepts, the TEP favored the Discharge
Mobility Score and Discharge Self-Care Score measures over the Change
in Mobility Score and Change in Self-Care Score measures and
recommended moving forward with the Discharge Mobility Score and
Discharge Self-Care Score measures for the cross-setting measure.
Second, in deciding on the standardized functional assessment data
elements to include in the cross-setting measure, the TEP recommended
removing redundant data elements. Strong correlations between scores of
functional items within the same functional domain suggested that
certain items may be redundant in eliciting information about patient
function and inclusion of these items could lead to overrepresentation
of a particular functional area. Subsequently, our measure development
contractor focused on the Discharge Mobility Score measure as a
starting point for cross-setting development due to the greater number
of cross-setting standardized functional assessment data elements for
mobility while also identifying redundant functional items that could
be removed from a cross-setting functional measure.
Additionally, the TEP supported including the cross-setting self-
care items such that the cross-setting function measure captures both
self-care and mobility. Panelists agreed that self-care items added
value to the measure and are clinically important to function. Lastly,
the TEP provided refinements to imputation strategies to more
accurately represent function performance across all PAC settings,
including the support of using statistical imputation over the current
imputation approach implemented in existing functional outcome measures
in the PAC QRPs. We considered all the TEP's recommendations for
developing a cross-setting function measure and applied those
recommendations where technically feasible and appropriate. Summaries
of the TEP proceedings titled Technical Expert Panel (TEP) for the
Refinement of Long-Term Care Hospital (LTCH), Inpatient Rehabilitation
Facility (IRF), Skilled
[[Page 43729]]
Nursing Facility (SNF)/Nursing Facility (NF), and Home Health (HH)
Function Measures Summary Report (July 2021 TEP) available at https://mms-test.battelle.org/sites/default/files/TEP-Summary-Report-PAC-Function.pdf and Technical Expert Panel (TEP) for Cross-Setting
Function Measure Development Summary Report (January 2022 TEP)
available at https://mms-test.battelle.org/sites/default/files/PAC-Function-TEP-Summary-Report-Jan2022-508.pdf.
d. Measure Application Partnership (MAP) Review
Our pre-rulemaking process includes making publicly available a
list of quality and efficiency measures, called the MUC List, that the
Secretary is considering adopting through the Federal rulemaking
process for use in Medicare programs. This allows multi-stakeholder
groups to provide recommendations to the Secretary on the measures
included on the list.
We included the DC Function measure under the HH QRP in the
publicly available MUC List for December 1, 2022,\66\ and the CBE
received five comments by industry interested parties on the 2022 MUC
List. Three commenters were supportive of the measure and two were not.
Among the commenters in support of the measure, one commenter stated
that function scores are the most meaningful outcome measure in the HH
setting, as they not only assess patient outcomes but also can be used
for clinical improvement processes. Additionally, the commenter noted
the measure's good reliability and validity and that the measure is
feasible to implement. The second commenter supported the measure;
however, the comments did not appear to be directly related to any
aspect of the measure itself. The third commenter supported the measure
without providing additional detailed comments.
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\66\ Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services. Overview of the
List of Measures Under Consideration for December 1, 2022. https://mmshub.cms.gov/sites/default/files/2022-MUC-List-Overview.pdf.
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Among the two commenters who did not support the DC Function
measure, one commenter raised the following concerns: the
``gameability'' of the expected discharge score, the measure's
complexity, and the difficulty of implementing a composite functional
score. CMS was able to address these concerns during the MAP PAC/LTC
Workgroup Meeting held on December 12, 2022. Specifically, CMS
clarified that the expected discharge scores are not calculated using
self-reported functional goals and are simply calculated by risk-
adjusting the observed discharge scores (see the Quality Measure
Calculation section III.C.1.e of this proposed rule). Therefore, CMS
believes that these scores cannot be ``gamed'' by reporting less-
ambitious functional goals. CMS also pointed out that the measure is
highly usable as it is similar in design and complexity to existing
function measures (for example, Discharge Mobility Score and Discharge
Self-Care Score for IRF) and that the data elements used in this
measure are already in use.
The other commenter who did not support the DC Function measure
raised the following concerns: its performance for stabilization
patients and its ability to account for patients that change payer
during a HH episode. CMS was able to address the first concern during
the MAP PAC/LTC Workgroup Meeting held on December 12, 2022.
Specifically, CMS clarified that an episode will contribute to the
numerator of DC Function if the observed discharge score meets or
exceeds the expected discharge score, a value determined using clinical
comorbidity and setting-specific parameters at the start or resumption
of care. These parameters can and do predict no improvement among
stabilization patients, that is, the expected discharge score can and
does occasionally equal the observed admission score if clinical
comorbidity and setting-specific parameters indicate no expected
improvement in the risk adjustment model.
The second concern was not raised during the MAP PAC/LTC Workgroup
Meeting; however, we do not find any convincing evidence that it
influences HHA-level performance for the majority of HHAs. Payer
changes will only affect episodes ending between December 31 and March
31. By comparing HHA-level performance calculated using the full
calendar year versus using a dataset that excludes the dates with
possibly affected episodes (January 1 through March 31 and December
31), we assessed the degree to which this requirement influences
performance. The Spearman correlation coefficient between the two
scenarios is 0.97, and the changes in reliability and validity are
smaller than one percentage point. The results imply that including or
excluding affected episodes does not appear to influence HHA-level
performance for the majority of HHAs. We will continue to monitor this
concern in the future, and we will address it accordingly in the future
if necessary.
Shortly after, several CBE-convened MAP workgroups met virtually to
provide input on the proposed DC Function measure. First, the MAP
Health Equity workgroup convened on December 6-7, 2022. The workgroup
did not share any health equity concerns related to the implementation
of the DC Function measure, and only asked for clarification regarding
measure specifications from measure developers. The MAP Rural Health
workgroup met on December 8-9, 2022, during which two members provided
support for the DC Function measure and other workgroup members did not
express rural health concerns regarding the measure. The MAP Post-Acute
Care/Long-Term Care (PAC-LTC) workgroup met virtually on December 12,
2022 and provided input on the proposed DC Function measure. The
workgroup voted to support the staff recommendation of conditional
support for rulemaking.
In response to the MAP PAC/LTC Workgroup's preliminary
recommendation, the CBE received one comment in support and one comment
not in support of the DC Function measure. The commenter in support of
the DC Function measure supported the measure under the condition that
it be reviewed and refined such that its implementation supports
patient autonomy and results in care that aligns with patients'
personal functional goals. The commenter who did not support the DC
Function measure raised concern with the applicability of the DC
Function measure considering the different patient populations served
by the various PAC settings. CMS clarified that the DC Function measure
is not designed to compare function across PAC settings, and that this
feature is not a requirement of the IMPACT Act.
Finally, the MAP Coordinating Committee convened on January 24-25,
2023, during which the CBE received no comment on the PAC/LTC
workgroup's preliminary recommendation for conditional support of the
DC Function measure. The MAP Coordinating Committee upheld the PAC/LTC
workgroup's recommendation of conditional support for rulemaking with
20 votes in support and one against. We refer readers to the final MAP
recommendations, titled 2022-2023 MAP Final Recommendations available
at https://mmshub.cms.gov/measure-lifecycle/measure-implementation/pre-rulemaking/lists-and-reports.
e. Quality Measure Calculation
The proposed outcome measure estimates the percentage of HH
patients who meet or exceed an expected
[[Page 43730]]
discharge score during the reporting period. The proposed measure's
numerator is the number of HH episodes with an observed discharge
function score that is equal to or higher than the calculated expected
discharge function score. The observed discharge function score is the
sum of individual function items at discharge. The expected discharge
function score is computed by risk adjusting the observed discharge
function score for each HH episode. Risk adjustment controls for
patient characteristics such as admission function score, age, and
clinical conditions. The denominator is the total number of HH episodes
in the measure target period (four rolling quarters) that do not meet
the measure exclusion criteria. For additional details regarding the
numerator, denominator, risk adjustment, and exclusion criteria, refer
to the Discharge Function Score for Home Health Agencies (HHAs)
Technical Report available at https://www.cms.gov/files/document/hh-discharge-function-score-measure-technical-report.pdf.
The proposed measure implements a statistical imputation approach
for handling ``missing'' standardized functional assessment data
elements. The coding guidance for standardized functional assessment
data elements allows for using ANA codes, resulting in ``missing''
information about a patient's functional ability on at least some
items, at admission and/or discharge, for a substantive portion of HH
patients. Statistical imputation replaces these missing values with a
variable based on the values of other, non-missing variables in the
data and which are otherwise similar to the assessment with a missing
value. Specifically, in this proposed DC Function measure statistical
imputation allows missing values (for example, the ANA codes) to be
replaced with any value from 1 to 6, based on a patient's clinical
characteristics and codes assigned on other standardized functional
assessment data element. The measure implements separate imputation
models for each standardized functional assessment data element used in
measure construction at admission and discharge. Relative to the
current simple imputation method, this statistical imputation approach
increases precision and accuracy and reduces the bias in estimates of
missing item scores. We refer readers to the Discharge Function Score
for Home Health Agencies (HHAs) Technical Report available at https://www.cms.gov/files/document/hh-discharge-function-score-measure-technical-report.pdf for measure specifications and additional details
on measure testing, including the method for comparing the statistical
imputation approach to the current simple imputation method.
We invite public comment on our proposal to adopt the DC Function
measure, beginning with the CY 2025 HH QRP.
2. Proposed Removal of the ``Application of Percent of Long-Term Care
Hospital Patients With an Admission and Discharge Functional Assessment
and a Care Plan That Addresses Function'' Beginning With the CY 2025 HH
QRP
We are proposing to remove the ``Application of Percent of Long-
Term Care Hospital Patients with an Admission and Discharge Functional
Assessment and a Care Plan That Addresses Function'' (Application of
Functional Assessment/Care Plan) measure from the HH QRP beginning with
the CY 2025 HH QRP. Section 42 CFR 484.245(b)(3) of our regulations
specifies eight factors we consider for measure removal from the HH
QRP, and we believe this measure should be removed because it satisfies
two of these factors.
First, the Application of Functional Assessment/Care Plan measure
meets the conditions for measure removal factor one: measure
performance among HHAs is so high and unvarying that meaningful
distinctions in improvements in performance can no longer be made.\67\
Second, this measure meets the conditions for measure removal factor
six: there is an available measure that is more strongly associated
with desired patient functional outcomes. We believe the proposed DC
function measure discussed in section XX of this proposed rule better
measures functional outcomes than the current Application of Functional
Assessment/Care Plan measure. We discuss each of these reasons in more
detail later in this proposed rule.
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\67\ For more information on the factors the Centers for
Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) uses to base decisions for
measure removal, we refer readers to the Code of Federal
Regulations, Sec. 484.245(b)(3) https://www.ecfr.gov/current/title-42/chapter-IV/subchapter-G/part-484/subpart-E/section-484.245.
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In regards to removal factor one, the Application of Functional
Assessment/Care Plan measure has become topped out, with average
performance rates reaching nearly 100 percent over the past 3 years
(ranging from 96-98 percent during calendar years (CYs) 2019-2021).\68\
For the 12-month period of third quarter of CY 2021, HHAs had an
average score for this measure of 98 percent, with nearly 75 percent of
HHAs scoring 100 percent. The proximity of these mean rates to the
maximum score of 100 percent suggests a ceiling effect and a lack of
variation that restricts distinction among HHAs.
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\68\ CMS. Home Health Agency Data Archive, 2019--2021, Annual
Files National Data. PDC, https://data.cms.gov/provider-data/archived-data/home-health-services.
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In regards to measure removal factor six, the DC Function measure
is more strongly associated with desired patient functional outcomes
than this current process measure, the Application of Functional
Assessment/Care Plan measure. As described in section IIII.C.1 of this
proposed rule, the DC Function measure has the predictive ability to
distinguish patients with low expected functional capabilities from
those with high expected functional capabilities.\69\ We have been
collecting standardized functional assessment elements across PAC
settings since 2016 which has allowed for the development of the
proposed DC Function measure and meets the statutory requirements to
submit standardized patient assessment data and other necessary data
with respect to the domain of functional status, cognitive function,
and changes in function and cognitive function. In light of this
development, this process measure, the Application of Functional
Assessment/Care Plan measure which measures only whether a functional
assessment is completed and a functional goal is included in the care
plan, is no longer necessary, and can be replaced with a measure that
evaluates the HHA's outcome of care on a patient's function.
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\69\ ``Expected functional capabilities'' is defined as the
predicted discharge function score.
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Because the Application of Functional Assessment/Care Plan measure
meets measure removal factors one and six, we are proposing to remove
it from the HH QRP beginning with the CY 2025 HH QRP. We are also
proposing that public reporting of the Application of Functional
Assessment/Care Plan measure would end by January 2025 or as soon as
technically feasible when public reporting of the proposed DC Function
measure would begin (see section III.F.2. of this proposed rule).
Under our proposal, HHAs would no longer be required to report a
Self-Care Discharge Goal (that is, GG0130, Column 2) or a Mobility
Discharge Goals (that is, GG0170, Column 2) on the OASIS beginning with
patients admitted on April 1, 2024. We would remove the items for Self-
Care Discharge Goals (that is, GG0130, Column 2) and Mobility Discharge
Goals (that is, GG0170,
[[Page 43731]]
Column 2) with the next release of the OASIS. Under our proposal, these
items would not be required to meet HH QRP requirements beginning with
the CY 2025 HH QRP.
We invite public comment on our proposal to remove the Application
of Functional Assessment/Care Plan measure from the HH QRP beginning
with the CY 2025 HH QRP.
3. COVID-19 Vaccine: Percent of Patients/Residents Who Are Up to Date
Beginning With the CY 2025 HH QRP
a. Background
COVID-19 has been and continues to be a major challenge for PAC
facilities, including HHAs. The Secretary first declared COVID-19 a PHE
on January 31, 2020. As of March 15, 2023, the U.S. has reported
103,801,821 cumulative cases of COVID-19, and 1,121,512 total deaths
due to COVID-19.\70\ Although all age groups are at risk of contracting
COVID-19, older persons are at a significantly higher risk of mortality
and severe disease following infection, with those over age 80 dying at
five times the average rate.\71\ Older adults, in general, are prone to
both acute and chronic infections owing to reduced immunity, and are a
high-risk population.\72\ Adults age 65 and older comprise over 75% of
total COVID-19 deaths despite representing 13.4% of reported cases.\73\
Restrictions on freedom of movement and physical distancing can lead to
a disruption of essential care and support for older persons. Physical
distancing measures that restrict visitors and group activities can
negatively affect the physical and mental health and well-being of
older persons, particularly those with cognitive decline or dementia,
and who are highly care-dependent.\74\
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\70\ Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. COVID Data
Tracker. 2023, January 20. Last accessed March 23, 2023. https://covid.cdc.gov/covid-data-tracker/#cases_totalcases.
\71\ United Nations. Policy Brief: The impact of COVID-19 on
older persons. May 2020. https://unsdg.un.org/sites/default/files/2020-05/Policy-Brief-The-Impact-of-COVID-19-on-Older-Persons.pdf.
\72\ Lekamwasam R, Lekamwasam S. Effects of COVID-19 pandemic on
health and wellbeing of older people: a comprehensive review. Ann
Geriatr Med Res. 2020;24(3):166-172. https://dx.doi.org/10.4235/agmr.20.0027. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7533189/.
\73\ Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Demographic
trends of COVID-19 cases and deaths in the US reported to CDC. COVID
Data Tracker. 2023, March 15. Last accessed March 23, 2023. https://covid.cdc.gov/covid-data-tracker/#demographics.
\74\ United Nations. Policy Brief: The impact of COVID-19 on
older persons. May 2020. https://unsdg.un.org/sites/default/files/2020-05/Policy-Brief-The-Impact-of-COVID-19-on-Older-Persons.pdf.
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Since the development of the vaccines to combat COVID-19, studies
have shown that being up to date on these vaccines continues to provide
strong protection against severe disease, hospitalization, and death in
adults, including during the predominance of Omicron BA.4 and BA.5
variants.\75\ Initial studies showed the efficacy of FDA-approved
COVID-19 vaccines in reducing the risk of severe outcomes caused by
COVID-19. Further, residents at skilled nursing facilities (SNF) with
high rates of staff testing for COVID-19 were less likely to be
hospitalized or die due to COVID-19 than their counterparts in SNFs
with low rates of staff testing. Prior to the emergence of the Delta
variant of the virus, vaccine effectiveness against COVID-19-associated
hospitalization among adults age 65 and older was 91% for those
receiving a full mRNA vaccination (Pfizer-BioNTech or Moderna), and 84%
for those receiving a viral vector vaccination (Janssen). Adults age 65
and older who were fully vaccinated with an mRNA COVID-19 vaccine had a
94% reduction in risk of COVID-19 hospitalization; those who were
partially vaccinated had a 64% reduction in risk.\76\ Further, after
the emergence of the Delta variant, vaccine effectiveness against
COVID-19-associated hospitalization for adults who received the primary
series of the vaccine was 76% among adults age 75 and older.\77\
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\75\ Chalkias S, Harper C, Vrbicky K, et al. A bivalent omicron-
containing booster vaccine against COVID-19. N Engl J Med.
2022;387(14):1279-1291. doi: 10.0156/NEJMoa2208343. https://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMoa2208343.
\76\ Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Press Release,
April 28, 2021. Fully Vaccinated Adults 65 and Older are 94% Less
Likely to Be Hospitalized with COID-19. https://www.cdc.gov/media/releases/2021/p0428-vaccinated-adults-less-hospitalized.html.
\77\ Vaccine effectiveness after the emergence of the Delta
variant is based on data from CDC's VISION Network, which examined
32,867 medical encounters from 187 hospitals and 221 emergency
departments and urgent care clinics across nine states during June-
August 2021, beginning on the date the Delta variant accounted for
over 50% of sequenced isolates in each medical facility's state
(Grannis SJ, et al. MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep. 2021;70(37):1291-
1293. doi: https://dx.doi.org/10.15585/mmwr.mm7037e2).
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More recently, since the emergence of the Omicron variants and
availability of booster doses, multiple studies have shown that while
vaccine effectiveness against infection has waned, protection is higher
among those receiving booster doses than among those only receiving the
primary series.78 79 80 CDC data show that, among people age
50 and older, those who have received both a primary vaccination series
and booster shots have a lower risk of hospitalization and dying from
COVID-19 than their non-vaccinated counterparts.\81\ Additionally, a
second vaccine booster has been shown to be effective against severe
outcomes related to COVID-19, such as hospitalization or death.\82\
Furthermore, more recent vaccination and booster doses can decrease the
rate of COVID-19 transmission between individuals in close contact.\83\
Early evidence also demonstrates that the bivalent booster,
specifically aimed to combat the prevalent BA.4/BA.5 Omicron
subvariants, provokes a superior antibody response against Omicron than
the initial COVID-19 vaccines, underscoring, the role of up-to-date
vaccination protocols in effectively countering the spread of COVID-
19.\84\
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\78\ Surie D, Bonnell L, Adams K, et al. Effectiveness of
monovalent mRNA vaccines against COVID-19-associated hospitalization
among immunocompetent adults during BA.1/BA.2 and BA.4/BA.5
predominant periods of SARS-CoV-2 Omicron variant in the United
States -- IVY Network, 18 states, December 26, 2021-August 31, 2022.
MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep. 2022;71(42):1327-1334. https://dx.doi.org/10.15585/mmwr.mm7142a3.
\79\ Andrews N, Stowe J, Kirsebom F, et al. Covid-19 vaccine
effectiveness against the Omicron (B.1.1.529) variant. N Engl J Med.
2022;386(16):1532-1546. https://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMoa2119451.
\80\ Buchan SA, Chung H, Brown KA, et al. Estimated
effectiveness of COVID-19 vaccines against Omicron or Delta
symptomatic infection and severe outcomes. JAMA Netw Open.
2022;5(9):e2232760. https://dx.doi.org/10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2022.32760. https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jamanetworkopen/fullarticle/2796615.
\81\ Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Daily update
for the United States. COVID Data Tracker. 2023, January 20. Last
accessed January 17, 2023. https://covid.cdc.gov/covid-data-tracker.
\82\ Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. COVID-19
vaccine effectiveness monthly update. COVID Data Tracker. March 23,
2023. https://covid.cdc.gov/covid-data-tracker/#vaccine-effectiveness.
\83\ Tan ST., Kwan AT, Rodriguez-Barraquer I, et al.
Infectiousness of SARS-CoV-2 breakthrough infections and
reinfections during the Omicron wave. Preprint at medRxiv:
\84\ Chalkias S, Harper C, Vrbicky K, et al. A bivalent Omicron-
containing booster vaccine against COVID-19. N Engl J
Med2022;387(14):1279-1291. doi: 10.0156/NEJMoa2208343. https://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMoa2208343.
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(1) Measure Importance
Despite the availability and demonstrated effectiveness of COVID-19
vaccinations, significant gaps continue to exist in vaccination
rates.\85\ As of March 15, 2023, vaccination rates among people age 65
and older are generally high for the primary vaccination series (94.3%)
but lower for
[[Page 43732]]
the first booster (73.6%) among those who received a primary series)
and even lower for the second booster (59.9%) among those who received
a first booster).\86\ Additionally, though the uptake in boosters among
people age 65 and older has been much higher than among people of other
ages, booster uptake still remains relatively low compared to primary
vaccination among older adults.\87\ Variations are also present when
examining vaccination rates by race, gender, and geographic
location.\88\ For example, 66.2% of the Asian, non-Hispanic population
have completed the primary series and 21.2% have received the bivalent
booster dose, whereas 44.9% of the Black, non-Hispanic population have
completed the primary series and only 8.9% have received the bivalent
booster dose. Among Hispanic populations, 57.1% of the population have
completed the primary series, with 8.5% receiving the bivalent booster
dose, while in White, non-Hispanic populations, 51.9% have completed
the primary series and 16.2% have received the bivalent booster
dose.\89\ Disparities have been found in vaccination rates between
rural and urban areas, with lower vaccination rates found in rural
areas.90 91 Data show that 55.1% of the population in rural
areas have completed the primary vaccination series, as compared to
66.2% of the population in urban areas.\92\ Receipt of first booster
doses was similar between urban (50.4%) and rural (49.7%) counties.\93\
Receipt of bivalent booster doses has been lower, with 16.9% of urban
population having received the booster dose, and 10.9% of the rural
population having received the booster dose.\94\
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\85\ Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. COVID-19
vaccinations in the United States. COVID Data Tracker. March 23,
2023. https://covid.cdc.gov/covid-data-tracker/#vaccinations_vacc-people-booster-percent-pop5.
\86\ Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. COVID-19
vaccination age and sex trends in the United States, national and
jurisdictional. Last accessed March 24, 2023. Vaccination Trends.
\87\ Freed M, Neuman T, Kates J, Cubanski J. Deaths among older
adults due to COVID-19 jumped during the summer of 2022 before
falling somewhat in September. Kaiser Family Foundation. October 6,
2022. https://www.kff.org/coronavirus-covid-19/issue-brief/deaths-among-older-adults-due-to-covid-19-jumped-during-the-summer-of-2022-before-falling-somewhat-in-september/.
\88\ Saelee R, Zell E, Murthy BP, et al. Disparities in COVID-19
vaccination coverage between urban and rural counties--United
States, December 14, 2020-January 31, 2022. MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly
Rep. 2022;71:335-340. https://dx.doi.org/10.15585/mmwr.mm7109a2.
\89\ Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Trends in
Demographic Characteristics of People Receiving COVID-19
Vaccinations in the United States. COVID Data Tracker. 2023, January
20. Last accessed March 23, 2023. https://covid.cdc.gov/covid-data-tracker/#vaccination-demographics-trends.
\90\ Saelee R, Zell E, Murthy BP, et al. Disparities in COVID-19
vaccination coverage between urban and rural counties--United
States, December 14, 2020-January 31, 2022. MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly
Rep. 2022;71:335-340. DOI: https://dx.doi.org/10.15585/mmwr.mm7109a2.
\91\ Sun Y, Monnat SM. Rural-urban and within-rural differences
in COVID-19 vaccination rates. J Rural Health. 2022;38(4):916-922.
https://dx.doi.org/10.1111/jrh.12625. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8661570/.
\92\ Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Vaccination
Equity. COVID Data Tracker; 2023, January 20. Last accessed January
17, 2023. https://covid.cdc.gov/covid-data-tracker/#vaccination-equity.
\93\ Saelee R, Zell E, Murthy BP, et al. Disparities in COVID-19
vaccination coverage between urban and rural counties--United
States, December 14, 2020-January 31, 2022. MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly
Rep. 2022;71:335-340. https://dx.doi.org/10.15585/mmwr.mm7109a2.
\94\ Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Vaccination
Equity. COVID Data Tracker; 2023, January 20. Last accessed January
17, 2023. https://covid.cdc.gov/covid-data-tracker/#vaccination-equity.
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We are proposing to adopt the COVID-19 Vaccine: Percent of
Patients/Residents who are Up to Date (Patient/Resident COVID-19
Vaccine) measure for the HH QRP beginning with the CY 2025 HH QRP. This
proposed measure has the potential to increase COVID-19 vaccination
coverage of patients in HHAs. This proposed measure also has the
potential to prevent the spread of the virus within the HHA patient
population. Although this population receives services within their own
homes, they can transfer the virus to their caretakers and home
healthcare workers, who could then potentially infect other home health
patients. The proposed Patient/Resident COVID-19 Vaccine measure would
also support the goal of the CMS Meaningful Measure Initiative 2.0 to
``Empower consumers to make good health care choices through patient-
directed quality measures and public transparency objectives.'' The
Patient/Resident COVID-19 Vaccine measure would be reported on Care
Compare and would provide patients, including those who are at high
risk for developing serious complications from COVID-19, and their
caregivers, with valuable information they can consider when choosing a
HHA. The proposed Patient/Resident COVID-19 vaccine measure would also
facilitate patient care and care coordination during the hospital
discharge planning process. For example, a discharging hospital, in
collaboration with the patient and family, could use this measure to
coordinate care and ensure patient preferences are considered in the
discharge plan. Additionally, the proposed Patient/Resident COVID-19
Vaccine measure would be an indirect measure of HHA action. Since the
patient's COVID-19 vaccination status would be reported at discharge
from the HHA, if a patient is not up to date with their COVID-19
vaccination per applicable CDC guidance at the time they are admitted,
the HHA has the opportunity to educate the patient and provide
information on why they should become up to date with their COVID-19
vaccination. HHAs may also choose to administer the vaccine to the
patient prior to their discharge from the HHA or coordinate a follow up
visit for the patient to obtain the vaccine at their physician's office
or local pharmacy.
(2) Item Testing
Item testing was conducted for the proposed Patient/Resident COVID-
19 Vaccine measure using patient scenarios and cognitive interviews to
assess HHA providers' comprehension of the item and the associated
guidance. The patient scenarios were developed in collaboration with a
team of clinical experts and represented the most common scenarios HHA
providers encounter. The results of the item testing supported its
reliability, and provided information to improve the item itself, as
well as the accompanying guidance.
b. Competing and Related Measures
Section 1899B(e)(2)(A) of the Act requires that, absent an
exception under section 1899B(e)(2)(B) of the Act, each measure
specified under section 1899B of the Act be endorsed by the entity with
a contract under section 1890(a) of the Act. In the case of a specified
area or medical topic determined appropriate by the Secretary for which
a feasible and practical measure has not been endorsed, section
1899B(e)(2)(B) of the Act permits the Secretary to specify a measure
that is not so endorsed, as long as due consideration is given to the
measures that have been endorsed or adopted by a consensus organization
identified by the Secretary.
The proposed Patient/Resident COVID-19 Vaccine measure is not
consensus-based entity (CBE) endorsed. After review of other CBE
endorsed measures, we were unable to identify any CBE endorsed measures
for HHAs focused on capturing COVID-19 vaccination coverage of HHA
patients, and found no related measures in the HH QRP addressing COVID-
19 vaccination. There have been COVID-19 Vaccination Coverage among
Healthcare Personnel (HCP) measures adopted by the Skilled Nursing
Facility (SNF) QRP, the Intermediate Rehabilitation Facility (QRP) and
the Long-term Care Hospital (LTCH) QRP that captures the percentage of
HCPs who receive a complete COVID-19 vaccination course. We also
identified Nursing Home (NH) COVID-19 vaccine rates posted on Care
Compare. However, these data are
[[Page 43733]]
obtained from CDC's NHSN and report rates of vaccination for the NH
resident population. HHAs do not report patient/resident or HCP COVID-
19 vaccination to the NHSN.
Therefore, after consideration of other available measures that
assess COVID-19 vaccination rates, we believe the exception under
section 1899B(e)(2)(B) of the Act applies. We intend to submit the
measure for CBE endorsement when feasible.
c. Interested Parties and Technical Expert Panel (TEP) Input
In the development and specification of this measure, a transparent
process was employed to seek input from interested parties and national
experts and engage in a process that allows for pre-rulemaking input in
accordance with section 1890A of the Act. First, the measure
development contractor convened a focus group of patient and family/
caregiver advocates (PFAs) to solicit input. The PFAs felt a measure
capturing raw vaccination rate, irrespective of HHA action, would be
most helpful in patient and family/caregiver decision-making. Next, TEP
meetings were held on November 19, 2021 and December 15, 2021 to
solicit feedback on the development of Patient/Resident COVID-19
vaccination measures and assessment items for the PAC settings. The TEP
panelists voiced their support for PAC Patient/Resident COVID-19
vaccination measures and agreed that developing a measure to report the
rate of vaccination in an HHA setting without denominator exclusions
was an important goal. All recommendations from the TEP were taken into
consideration and applied appropriately where technically feasible and
appropriate. A summary of the TEP proceedings titled Technical Expert
Panel (TEP) for the Development of Long-Term Care Hospital (LTCH),
Inpatient Rehabilitation Facility (IRF), Skilled Nursing Facility
(SNF)/Nursing Facility (NF), and Home Health (HH) COVID-19 Vaccination-
Related Items and Measures Summary Report is available on the CMS
Measures Management System (MMS) Hub. at https://mmshub.cms.gov/sites/default/files/COVID19-Patient-Level-Vaccination-TEP-Summary-Report-NovDec2021.pdf.
d. Measures Applications Partnership Review
The pre-rulemaking process includes making publicly available a
list of quality and efficiency measures, called the Measures Under
Consideration (MUC) List that the Secretary is considering adopting,
through Federal rulemaking process, for use in Medicare programs. This
allows interested parties to provide recommendations to the Secretary
on the measures included on the list. The Patient/Resident COVID-19
Vaccine measure was included on the publicly available 2022 MUC List
for the HH QRP.\95\ Shortly after, several CBE-convened MAP workgroups
met virtually to provide input on the proposed measure. First, the MAP
Health Equity advisory group convened on December 6, 2022. One MAP
member noted that the percentage of true contraindications for the
COVID-19 vaccine is low, and the lack of exclusions on the measure
makes sense to avoid varying interpretations of valid
contraindications.\96\ Similarly, the MAP Rural Health advisory group
met on December 8, 2022 and publicly stated that the measure is
important for rural communities.\97\
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\95\ CMS Measures Management System (MMS). Measure
Implementation: Pre-rulemaking MUC Lists and MAP reports. Last
accessed March 23, 2023 https://mmshub.cms.gov/measure-lifecycle/measure-implementation/pre-rulemaking/lists-and-reports.
\96\ National Quality Forum MAP Health Equity Advisory Group
Materials. Meeting Summary--MUC Review Meeting. Last accessed March
23, 2023. https://www.qualityforum.org/WorkArea/linkit.aspx?LinkIdentifier=id&ItemID=97943.
\97\ National Quality Forum MAP Rural Health Advisory Group
Materials. Meeting Summary--MUC Review Meeting. Last accessed March
23, 2023. https://www.qualityforum.org/WorkArea/linkit.aspx?LinkIdentifier=id&ItemID=97964.
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Prior to convening the MAP PAC/LTC workgroup, the CBE received
seven comments by industry interested parties during the proposed
measure's MAP pre-rulemaking process. Interested parties were mostly
supportive of the measure and recognized that it is important that
patients be vaccinated against COVID-19, and that measurement and
reporting is one important method to help healthcare organizations
assess their performance in achieving high rates of ``up-to-date''
vaccination. One interested party noted that patient engagement is
critical at this stage of the pandemic because best available
information indicates COVID-19 variants will continue to require
additional boosters to avert case surges. Another interested party
noted the benefit of less-specific criteria for inclusion in the
numerator and denominator of the proposed Patient/Resident COVID-19
Vaccine measure, which would provide flexibility for the measure to
remain relevant to current circumstances. Other interested parties
raised concerns about the proposed measure not including measuring the
HHA's action in the numerator and excluding patient refusals from the
denominator, and noted that there could be unintended consequences to
patient access to care should the measure be adopted.
Subsequently, the MAP Post-Acute Care/Long-Term Care (PAC/LTC)
workgroup met on December 12, 2022. The voting workgroup members noted
the importance of reporting patients' vaccination status but raised
concerns that (1) the proposed Patient/Resident COVID-19 Vaccine
measure does not account for patient refusals or those who are unable
to respond, and (2) the difficulty of implementing ``up to date.'' CMS
clarified during the MAP PAC/LTC workgroup that the proposed Patient/
Resident COVID-19 Vaccine measure does not have exclusions for patient
refusals because the proposed measure was intended to report raw rates
of vaccination and this information is important for consumer choice.
Additionally, CMS believes that PAC providers, including HHAs, are in a
unique position to leverage their care processes to increase
vaccination coverage in their settings to protect patients and prevent
negative outcomes. CMS also clarified that the measure defines ``up to
date'' in a manner that provides flexibility to reflect future changes
in CDC guidance. However, the MAP PAC/LTC workgroup reached a 60
percent consensus on the vote of ``Do not support for rulemaking'' for
this measure.\98\
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\98\ National Quality Forum MAP Post-Acute Care/Long Term Care
Workgroup Materials. Meeting Summary--MUC Review Meeting. Last
accessed March 23, 2023. https://www.qualityforum.org/WorkArea/linkit.aspx?LinkIdentifier=id&ItemID=97960.
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The MAP received 10 comments by interested parties in response to
the MAP PAC/LTC workgroup recommendations. Interested parties generally
understood the importance of COVID-19 vaccinations in preventing the
spread of COVID-19 infections, however, a majority of commenters did
not recommend the inclusion of this measure for HH QRP and raised
several concerns. Specifically, several commenters were concerned about
vaccine hesitancy, HHAs' inability to influence measure results based
on factors outside of their control. Commenters also noted that the
proposed Patient/Resident COVID-19 Vaccine measure has not been fully
tested, and encouraged CMS to monitor the measure for unintended
consequences and ensure that the measure has meaningful results. One
commenter was in support of the proposed Patient/Resident COVID-19
Vaccine measure and provided recommendations for CMS to consider.
including an exclusion for medical
[[Page 43734]]
contraindications and submitting the measure for CBE endorsement.
Finally, the MAP Coordinating Committee convened on January 24,
2023, and raised concerns which were previously discussed in the PAC/
LTC workgroup, such as potential for selection bias based on the
patient's vaccination status. CMS noted that this measure does not have
exclusions for patient refusals since this is a process measure
intended to report raw rates of vaccination, and is not intended to be
an HHA action measure. CMS acknowledged that a measure accounting for
variables (such as HHA actions to vaccinate patients) could be
important, but CMS is focused on a measure which would provide and
publicly report vaccination rates for consumers given the importance of
this information to patients and their caregivers.
The MAP Coordinating Committee recommended three changes to make
the Patient/Resident COVID-19 Vaccine measure acceptable to the
Committee: (i) reconsider exclusions for medical contraindications,
(ii) complete reliability and validity measure testing, and (iii) seek
CBE endorsement. The MAP Coordinating Committee ultimately reached
consensus on its voted recommendation of `Do not support with potential
for mitigation.' We refer readers to the final MAP recommendations,
titled 2022-2023 MAP Final Recommendations \99\ and the MAP Final
Report.\100\ Despite the Coordinating Committee's vote, we believe it
is still important to propose the Patient/Resident COVID-19 Vaccine
measure for the HH QRP. As we stated in section III.C.3.e of this
proposed rule, we did not include exclusions for medical
contraindications because the PFAs we met with told us that a measure
capturing raw vaccination rate, irrespective of any medical
contraindications, would be most helpful in patient and family/
caregiver decision-making. We do plan to conduct reliability and
validity measure testing once we have collected enough data, and we
intend to submit the proposed measure to the CBE for consideration of
endorsement when feasible.
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\99\ 2022-2023 MAP Final Recommendations, can be found at
https://www.qualityforum.org/map/.
\100\ The Final MAP Report is available at https://www.qualityforum.org/WorkArea/linkit.aspx?LinkIdentifier=id&ItemID=98102.
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e. Quality Measure Calculation
The proposed Patient/Resident COVID-19 Vaccine measure is an
assessment-based process measure that reports the percent of home
health patients that are up to date on their COVID-19 vaccinations per
CDC's latest guidance.\101\ This measure has no exclusions, and is not
risk adjusted.
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\101\ The definition of ``up to date'' may change based on CDC's
latest guidelines and can be found on the CDC web page, ``Stay Up to
Date with COVID-19 Vaccines Including Boosters,'' at https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/vaccines/stay-up-to-date.html
(updated March 2, 2023).
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The numerator for this proposed measure would be the total number
of home health patients that are up to date with the COVID-19 vaccine
during the reporting period. The denominator for the measure would be
the total number of home health stays with an End of Care OASIS
(Discharge, Transfer or Death at Home) during the reporting period.
The data source for the proposed Patient/Resident COVID-19 Vaccine
measure is the OASIS assessment instrument for home health patients.
For more information about the proposed data submission requirements,
we refer readers to section III.E.2 of this proposed rule. For
additional technical information about this proposed measure, we refer
readers to the draft measure specifications document titled Patient-
Resident-COVID-Vaccine-Draft-Specs.pdf available at: https://www.cms.gov/files/document/patient-covid-vaccine-measure-hh-qrp-specifications.pdf.
We invite public comments on our proposal to adopt the COVID-19
Vaccine: Percent of Patients/Residents Who Are Up to Date measure
beginning with the CY 2025 HH QRP.
E. Form, Manner, and Timing of Data Submission Under the HH QRP
1. Proposed Schedule for Data Submission of the Discharge Function
Score Measure Beginning With the FY 2025 LTCH QRP
As discussed in section III.C.1. of the proposed rule, we are
proposing to adopt the Discharge Function Score quality measure
beginning with the CY 2025 HH QRP. If finalized as proposed, HHAs would
be required to report these OASIS assessment data beginning with
patients discharged between January 1, 2024 and March 31, 2024 for the
CY 2025 HH QRP. Starting in CY 2024, HHAs would be required to submit
data for the entire calendar year beginning with the CY 2026 HH QRP.
Because the Discharge Function Score quality measure is calculated
based on data that are currently submitted to the Medicare program,
there would be no additional information collection required from HHAs.
We invite public comments on this proposal to require HHAs to
report OASIS assessment data for the Discharge Function Score quality
measure beginning with patients discharged between January 1, 2024 and
March 31, 2024 for the CY 2025 HH QRP.
2. Proposed Schedule for Data Submission of the COVID-19 Vaccine:
Percent of Patients/Residents Who Are Up to Date Beginning With the CY
2026 HH QRP
As discussed in section III.C.3 of the proposed rule, we are
proposing to adopt the COVID-19 Vaccine: Percent of Patients/Residents
Who Are Up to Date quality measure beginning with the CY 2025HH QRP. If
finalized as proposed, HHAs would be required to report these OASIS
assessment data beginning with patients discharged between January 1,
2025 and March 31, 2025 for the CY 2025 HH QRP. Starting in CY 2025,
HHAs would be required to submit data for the entire calendar year
beginning with the CY 2026 HH QRP.
If finalized as proposed, we would revise the OASIS in order for
HHAs to submit data pursuant to this finalized policy. A new item would
be added to the current item set to collect information on whether a
patient is up to date with their COVID-19 vaccine at the time of
discharge from the HHA. A draft of the new item is available in the
COVID-19 Vaccine: Percent of Patients/Residents Who Are Up to Date
Draft Measure Specifications at https://www.cms.gov/files/document/patient-covid-vaccine-measure-hh-qrp-specifications.pdf.
We invite public comments on this proposal to require HHAs to
report OASIS assessment data for the COVID-19 Vaccine: Percent of
Patients/Residents Who Are Up to Date quality measure. HHAs would be
required to submit data beginning with patients discharged between
January 1, 2025 and March 31, 2025 for public reporting of this QM in
the CY 2025 HH QRP.
3. Data Elements Proposed for Removal From OASIS-E
CMS plans to remove two OASIS items, the M0110--Episode Timing and
M2220--Therapy Needs effective January 1, 2025. These items are no
longer used in the calculation of quality measures already adopted in
the HH QRP, nor are they being used currently for previously
established purposes unrelated to the HH QRP, including payment,
survey, the HH VBP Model or care planning.
CMS proposes the removal of items from OASIS-E from the specific
time points during a home health episode as outlined in Table C3.
[[Page 43735]]
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TP10JY23.064
For a discussion in the reduction in burden associated with the
removal of these items, see section IX of this proposed rule.
We invite public comment on our proposal to remove the M0110--
Episode Timing and M2220--Therapy Needs items from OASIS-E, effective
January 1, 2025.
F. Policies Regarding Public Display of Measure Data for the HH QRP
1. Background
Section 1899B(g)(1) of the Act requires, in part, that the
Secretary provide for public reporting of PAC provider performance,
including HHAs, on quality measures under section 1899B(c)(1) of the
Act, including by establishing procedures for making available to the
public information regarding the performance of individual PAC
providers with respect to such measures. Section 1899B(g)(2) requires,
in part, that CMS give HHAs opportunity to review and submit
corrections to the data and information to be made public under section
1899B(g)(1) prior to such data being made public. Section 1899B(g)(3)
of the Act requires that such procedures provide that the data and
information with respect to a measure and PAC provider is made publicly
available beginning not later than 2 years after the applicable
specified application date applicable to such measure and provider.
Measure data are currently publicly displayed on the Care Compare
website, an interactive web tool that assists individuals by providing
information on quality of care. For more information on Care Compare,
we refer readers to our website at: https://www.medicare.gov/care-compare/.
2. Public Reporting of the Cross-Setting Functional Discharge Measure
Beginning With the CY 2025 HH QRP
We are proposing to begin publicly displaying data for the DC
Function measure beginning with the January 2025 refresh of Care
Compare, or as soon as technically feasible, using data collected from
April 1, 2023 through March 31, 2024 (Quarter 2 2023 through Quarter 1
2024). If finalized as proposed, an HHAs DC Function score would be
displayed based on four quarters of data. Provider preview reports
would be distributed in October 2024, or as soon as technically
feasible. Thereafter, an HHA's DC Function score would be publicly
displayed based on four quarters of data and updated quarterly. To
ensure the statistical reliability of the data, we are proposing that
we would not publicly report an HHAs performance on the measure if the
HHA had fewer than 20 eligible cases in any quarter. HHAs that have
fewer than 20 eligible cases would be distinguished with a footnote
that notes that the number of cases/patient stays is too small to
report.
We invite public comment on the proposal for the public display of
the Discharge Function Score measure beginning with the January 2025
refresh of Care Compare, or as soon as technically feasible.
3. Public Reporting of the Transfer of Health Information to the
Patient Post-Acute Care and Transfer of Health Information to the
Provider Post-Acute Care Measures Beginning With the CY 2025 HH QRP
We are proposing to begin publicly displaying data for the
measures: (1) Transfer of Health (TOH) Information to the Provider--
Post-Acute Care (PAC) Measure (TOH-Provider); and (2) Transfer of
Health (TOH) Information to the Patient--Post-Acute Care (PAC) Measure
(TOH-Patient). We would begin displaying data with the January 2025
Care Compare refresh or as soon as technically feasible. We adopted
these measures in the fiscal year (FY) 2020 IPPS)/LTCH Prospective
Payment System (PPS) final rule (84 FR 42525 through 42535). In
response to the COVID-19 public health emergency (PHE), we released an
interim final rule (85 FR 27595 through 27597) which delayed the
compliance date for the collection and reporting of the TOH-Provider
and TOH-Patient measures. The compliance date for the collection and
reporting of the TOH-Provider and TOH-Patient measures was revised to
October 1, 2022 in the calendar year (CY) 2022 Home Health PPS Rate
Update final rule (86 FR 62386 through 62390). Data collection for
these two assessment-based measures began with patients admitted and
discharged on or after October 1, 2022.
We are proposing to publicly display data for these two assessment-
based measures based on four rolling quarters, initially using
discharges from April 1, 2023 through March 31, 2024 (Quarter 2 2023
through Quarter 1 2024), and to begin publicly reporting these measures
with the January 2025 refresh of Care Compare, or as soon as
technically feasible. To ensure the statistical reliability of the
data, we are proposing that we would not publicly report an HHAs
performance on the measure if the HHA had fewer than 20 eligible cases
in any quarter. HHAs that have fewer than 20 eligible cases would be
distinguished with a footnote that notes that the number of cases/
patient stays is too small to report.
We invite public comment on our proposal for the public display of
the (1) Transfer of Health (TOH) Information to the Provider--Post-
Acute Care (PAC) Measure (TOH-Provider) and (2) Transfer of Health
(TOH) Information to the Patient--Post-Acute Care (PAC)
[[Page 43736]]
Measure (TOH-Patient) assessment-based measures.
4. Public Reporting of the COVID-19 Vaccine: Percent of Patients/
Residents Who Are Up to Date Beginning With the CY 2026 HH QRP
We are proposing to begin publicly displaying data for the COVID-19
Vaccine: Percent of Patients/Residents Who Are Up to Date measure
beginning with the January 2026 refresh of Care Compare or as soon as
technically feasible using data collected for Q2 2024 (April 1, 2024
through June 30, 2024). If finalized as proposed, an HHA's Patient/
Resident level COVID-19 Vaccine percent of patients who are up to date
would be displayed based on one quarter of data. Provider preview
reports would be distributed in October 2025, or as soon as technically
feasible. Thereafter, the percent of HHA patients who are up to date
with their COVID-19 vaccinations would be publicly displayed based on
one quarter of data and updated quarterly. To ensure the statistical
reliability of the data, we are proposing that we would not publicly
report an HHAs performance on the measure if the HHA had fewer than 20
eligible cases in any quarter. HHAs that have fewer than 20 eligible
cases would be distinguished with a footnote that notes that the number
of cases/patient stays is too small to report.
We invite public comment on the proposal for the public display of
the COVID-19 Vaccine: Percent of Patients/Residents Who Are Up to Date
measure beginning with the January 2026 refresh of Care Compare, or as
soon as technically feasible.
G. Health Equity Update
1. Background
In the CY 2023 Home Health Payment Rate Update proposed rule (87 FR
66866), we included a Request for Information (RFI) on several
questions related to a proposed health equity measure concept. CMS
defines health equity as ``the attainment of the highest level of
health for all people, where everyone has a fair and just opportunity
to attain their optimal health regardless of race, ethnicity,
disability, sexual orientation, gender identity, socioeconomic status,
geography, preferred language, or other factors that affect access to
care and health outcomes.'' \102\ CMS is working to advance health
equity by designing, implementing, and operationalizing policies and
programs that support health for all the people served by our programs
and models, eliminating avoidable differences in health outcomes
experienced by people who are disadvantaged or underserved, and
providing the care and support that our beneficiaries need to thrive.
CMS's goals outlined in the CMS Framework for Health Equity 2022-2023
\103\ are in line with Executive Order 13985, on Advancing Racial
Equity and Support for Underserved Communities Through the Federal
Government (January 25, 2021).\104\ The goals included in the CMS
Framework for Health Equity include: strengthening CMS's infrastructure
for assessment, creating synergies across the health care system to
drive structural change, and identifying and working to eliminate
barriers to CMS-supported benefits, services, and coverage.
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\102\ Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services. Available at
https://www.cms.gov/pillar/health-equity. Accessed February 1, 2023.
\103\ https://www.cms.gov/files/document/cms-framework-health-equity-2022.pdf.
\104\ Executive Order 13985, on ``Advancing Racial Equity and
Support for Underserved Communities Through the Federal
Government,'' can be found at: https://www.whitehouse.gov/briefing-room/presidential-actions/2021/01/20/executive-order-advancing-racial-equity-and-support-for-underserved-communities-through-the-federal-government/.
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In addition to the CMS Framework for Health Equity, CMS seeks to
``advance health equity and whole-person care'' as one of eight goals
comprising the CMS National Quality Strategy (NQS).\105\ The NQS
identifies a wide range of potential quality levers that can support
our advancement of equity, including: (1) establishing a standardized
approach for resident-reported data and stratification; (2) employing
quality and value-based programs to publicly report and incentivize
closing equity gaps; and, (3) developing equity-focused performance
metrics, regulations, oversight strategies, and quality improvement
initiatives. The NQS also acknowledges the contribution of structural
racism and other systemic injustices to the persistent disparities that
underlie our healthcare system.
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\105\ Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services. What is the CMS
Quality Strategy? Available at https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/Value-Based-Programs/CMS-Quality-Strategy.
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Racial disparities in health, in particular, are estimated to cost
the U.S. an estimated $93 billion in excess medical costs and $42
billion in lost productivity per year, in addition to economic losses
due to premature deaths.\106\ Racial and ethnic diversity has
increased. An increase in the percentage of people who identify as two
or more races accounts for most of the increase in diversity, rising
from 2.9 percent to 10.2 percent between 2010 and 2020.\107\ Social
determinants of health, including social, economic, environmental, and
community conditions, may have a stronger influence on the population's
health and well-being than services delivered by practitioners and
healthcare delivery organizations.\108\
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\106\ Ani Turner, The Business Case for Racial Equity, A
Strategy for Growth, W.K. Kellogg Foundation and Altarum, April
2018.
\107\ 2022 National Healthcare Quality and Disparities Report,
page 15. Content last reviewed November 2022. Agency for Healthcare
Research and Quality, Rockville, MD. https://www.ahrq.gov/research/findings/nhqrdr/nhqdr22/.
\108\ 2022 National Healthcare Quality and Disparities Report.
Content last reviewed November 2022, page 2. Agency for Healthcare
Research and Quality, Rockville, MD. https://www.ahrq.gov/research/findings/nhqrdr/nhqdr22/.
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Measure stratification helps identify disparities by calculating
quality measure outcomes separately for different beneficiary
subpopulations. By looking at measure results for different populations
separately, CMS and providers can see how care outcomes may differ
between certain patient populations in a way that would not be apparent
from an overall score (that is, a score averaged over all
beneficiaries). This helps CMS to better fulfill their health equity
goals. For example, certain quality measures related to oral healthcare
outcomes for children, when stratified by race, ethnicity, and income,
show how important health disparities have been narrowed, because
outcomes for children in the lowest income households and for Black and
Hispanic children improved faster than outcomes for children in the
highest income households or for White children.\109\ These differences
in outcomes would not be apparent without stratification.
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\109\ 2022 National Healthcare Quality and Disparities Report,
page 6. Content last reviewed November 2022. Agency for Healthcare
Research and Quality, Rockville, MD. https://www.ahrq.gov/research/findings/nhqrdr/nhqdr22/.
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Additionally, the RFI solicited public comments on a potential
health equity structural composite measure. We refer readers to the CY
2023 Home Health Payment Rate Update final rule (87 FR 66866) for a
summary of the public comments and suggestions received in response to
the health equity RFI.
We took these comments into account, and we continue to work to
develop policies, quality measures, and measurement strategies on this
important topic. After considering public comments, CMS decided to
convene a health equity technical expert panel to provide additional
input to inform the development of health equity quality measures. The
work of this technical expert panel is described in detail in the
following section.
[[Page 43737]]
2. Home Health and Hospice Health Equity Technical Expert Panel
To support new health equity measure development, the Home Health
and Hospice Health Equity Technical Expert Panel (Home Health & Hospice
HE TEP) was convened by a CMS contractor in Fall 2022. The Home Health
& Hospice HE TEP comprised health equity experts from hospice and home
health settings, specializing in quality assurance, patient advocacy,
clinical work, and measure development. The TEP was charged with
providing input on a potential cross-setting health equity structural
composite measure concept as set forth in the CY 2023 Home Health
Payment Rate Update proposed rule (87 FR 66866) as part of an RFI
related to the HH QRP Health Equity Initiative. In specific, the TEP
assessed the face validity and feasibility of the potential structural
measure. The TEP also provided input on possible confidential feedback
report options to be used for monitoring health equity. TEP members
also had the opportunity to provide ideas for additional health equity
measure concepts or approaches to addressing health equity in hospice
and home health settings. A summary of the Home Health and Hospice HE
TEP meetings and final TEP recommendations are available at https://mmshub.cms.gov/sites/default/files/HomeHealth-Hospice-Health-Equity-TEP-Report-508c.pdf.
3. Anticipated Future Health Equity Activities
CMS is committed to developing approaches to meaningfully
incorporate the advancement of health equity into the HH QRP. We are
considering health equity measures used in other settings like those in
acute care that further health equity in post-acute care. We realize
that the social determinants of health data items in post-acute care
under the IMPACT Act of 2014 differ from the SDOH data items in the
acute care health equity quality measures. We could consider a future
health equity measure like screening for social needs and intervention.
With 30 to 55 percent of health outcomes attributed to SDOH,\110\ a
measure capturing and addressing SDOH could encourage providers to
identify specific needs and connect residents with the community
resources necessary to overcome social barriers to their wellness. We
could specify it using the SDOH data items that we currently collect as
SPADEs on the OASIS. These SDOH data items assess health literacy,
social isolation, transportation problems, preferred language
(including need or want of an interpreter), race, and ethnicity. These
SDOH data items differ from data elements considered as screening items
in the acute care settings, which are housing instability, food
instability, transportation needs, utility difficulties, and
interpersonal safety. This means that we might consider in the future
adding the SDOH data items used by acute care providers into the HH QRP
as we develop future health equity quality measures under our HH QRP
statutory authority. This supports our desire to align quality measures
across CMS consistent with the CMS path forward for advancing health
equity solutions.\111\ Consistent with ``The Path Forward: Improving
Data to Advance Health Equity Solutions'' (CMS OMH, November 2022) we
also see value in aligning SDOH data items across all care settings and
to the United States Core Data for Interoperability (USCDI) where
applicable and appropriate. The USCDI is a standardized set of health
data classes and constituent data elements for nationwide,
interoperable health information exchange, including data elements and
associated vocabulary standards to support computerized, interoperable
use of SDOH data.\112\
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\110\ World Health Organization (WHO). (n.d.). Social
Determinants of Health. https://www.who.int/health-topics/social-determinants-of-health#tab=tab_1, accessed February 1, 2023.
\111\ https://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMp2215539,
February 1, 2023.
\112\ https://www.healthit.gov/isa/united-states-core-data-interoperability-uscdi.
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As we move this important work forward, we will continue to take
input from interested parties. As of this publication, the Initial
Proposals for Updating OMB's Race and Ethnicity Statistical Standards,
(88 FR 5375), has collected public comment. Additionally, the Office of
the National Coordinator for Health IT (ONC) welcomes submissions
proposing additional data classes and data elements via the USCDI ONC
New Data Element and Class (ONDEC) submission system for future
versions of the USCDI.\113\ In addition, while some of the anticipated
health equity efforts will proceed through the rulemaking process,
other activities may be pursued through subregulatory channels, such as
Open-Door Forums (ODF), Medicare Learning Network (MLN), and public
summary reports such as TEP reports or information gathering reports
(IGR).
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\113\ https://www.healthit.gov/isa/ONDEC.
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H. Proposal To Codify HH QRP Data Completion Thresholds
1. Compliance
Section 1895(b)(3)(B)(v)(I) of the Act requires that, for the CY
2007 payment determination and subsequent years, each HHA submit to the
Secretary quality data specified by the Secretary in a form and manner,
and at a time, specified by the Secretary. As required in accordance
with subclause (II) for such a year, for any HHA that does not submit
data in accordance with section 1895(b)(3)(B)(v)(I) of the Act with
respect to a given calendar year will result in the reduction of the
annual home health market basket percentage increase otherwise
applicable to an HHA for that calendar year by 2 percentage points. In
the CY 2016 HH PPS final rule (80 FR 68703 through 68705), we finalized
a proposal to define the quantity of OASIS assessments each HHA must
submit to meet the pay-for reporting requirement. We finalized a
proposal that would increase the reporting threshold for HHAs over
three years, starting with the CY 2017 reporting period. HHAs were
required to score at least 70 percent on the Quality Assessment Only
(QAO) metric of pay-for-reporting performance requirement for CY 2017
(reporting period July 1, 2015 to June 30, 2016), 80 percent for CY
2018 (reporting period July 1, 2016 to June 30, 2017) and 90 percent
for CY 2019 (reporting period July 1, 2017 to June 30, 2018) or be
subject to a 2 percentage point reduction to their market basket update
for that reporting period. In the 2018 HH PPS final rule (82 FR 51737
through 51738), we proposed to apply the 90 percent threshold
requirements established in the CY 2016 HH PPS rule to the submission
of standardized patient assessment data beginning with the CY 2019 HH
QRP.
2. Proposal To Codify HH QRP Data Completion Thresholds
We propose to codify these data completeness thresholds at Sec.
484.245(b)(2)(ii)(A) for measures data collected using the OASIS. Under
this section, we propose to codify our requirement that HHAs must meet
or exceed a data submission threshold set at 90 percent of all required
OASIS and submit the data through the CMS designated data submission
systems. This threshold would apply to required quality measures data
and standardized patient assessment data collected adopted into the HH
QRP. We also propose to codify our policy at Sec. 484.245(b)(2)(ii)(B)
that a HHA must meet or exceed this threshold to avoid
[[Page 43738]]
receiving a 2-percentage point reduction to its annual payment update
for a given CY as codified at Sec. 484.225(b).
We invite public comment on our proposal to codify in regulations
text the HH QRP data completion thresholds at Sec.
484.245(b)(2)(ii)(A) for measures and standardized patient assessment
elements collected using the OASIS and compliance threshold to avoid
receiving 2 percentage point reduction as described under Sec.
484.245(b)(2)(ii)(B).
I. Principles for Selecting and Prioritizing HH QRP Quality Measures
and Concepts Under Consideration for Future Years: Request for
Information (RFI)
1. Background
CMS has established a National Quality Strategy \114\ for its
quality programs which support a resilient, high-value health care
system promoting quality outcomes, safety, equity and accessibility for
all individuals. The CMS National Quality Strategy is foundational for
contributing to improvements in health care, enhancing patient
outcomes, and informing consumer choice. To advance these goals, CMS
leaders from across the Agency have come together to move towards a
building-block approach to streamline quality measures across CMS
quality programs for the adult and pediatric populations. This
``Universal Foundation'' \115\ of quality measures will focus provider
attention, reduce burden, identify disparities in care, prioritize
development of interoperable, digital quality measures, allow for
cross-comparisons across programs, and help identify measurement gaps.
The development and implementation of the Preliminary Adult and
Pediatric Universal Foundation Measures will promote the best, safest,
and most equitable care for individuals as we all come together on
these critical quality areas.
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\114\ Schreiber M, Richards A, Moody-Williams J, Fleisher L. The
CMS National Quality Strategy: a person-centered approach to
improving quality. Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services. June
6, 2022. Available at: https://www.cms.gov/blog/cms-national-quality-strategy-person-centered-approach-improving-quality. opens
in new tab.
\115\ Jacobs D, Schreiber M, Seshamani M, Tsai D, Fowler E,
Fleisher L. Aligning Quality Measures across CMS--The Universal
Foundation. N Engl J Med 2023; 338:776-779. DOI: 10.1056/
NEJMp2215539.
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In alignment with the CMS National Quality Strategy, the HH QRP
endeavors to move towards a more parsimonious set of measures while
continually improving the quality of health care for beneficiaries. The
purpose of this RFI is to gather input on existing gaps in HH QRP
measures and to solicit public comment on either fully developed HH
measures, fully developed measures in other programs that may be
appropriate for the HH QRP, and measurement concepts that could be
developed into HH QRP measures, to fill these measurement gaps. While
we will not be responding to specific comments submitted in response to
this RFI in the CY2024 HH PPS final rule, we intend to use this input
to inform future policies.
This RFI consists of four sections. The first section is the
background. The second section discusses a general framework or set of
principles that CMS utilizes to identify future HH QRP measures. The
third section draws from an environmental scan conducted to identify HH
QRP measurement gaps, and measures or measure concepts that could be
used to fill these gaps. The final section solicits public comment on
(a) the set of principles for selecting measures for the HH QRP, (b)
identified measurement gaps, and (c) measures that are available for
immediate use, or that may be adapted or developed for use in the HH
QRP.
2. Guiding Principles for Selecting and Prioritizing Measures
CMS has identified a set of principles to guide future HH QRP
measure set development and maintenance. These principles are intended
to ensure that measures resonate with beneficiaries and caregivers, do
not impose undue burden on providers, align with CMS' post-acute care
(PAC) program goals, and can be readily operationalized. Specifically,
measures incorporated into the HH QRP should meet the following four
objectives:
Actionability--Optimally, HH QRP measures should
focus on structural elements, healthcare processes, and outcomes of
care that have been demonstrated, such as through clinical evidence or
best practices, to be amenable to improvement. In other words,
activities or approaches that contribute to improvement on a measure
have been established and are feasible for providers to implement.
Comprehensiveness and Conciseness--QRP measures
should assess performance of all HH core services using the smallest
number of measures that comprehensively assess the value of care
provided in HH settings. Parsimony in the QRP measure set minimizes
provider burden resulting from data collection and submission.
Focus on Provider Responses to Payment--The HH
PPS shapes incentives for care delivery. HH performance measures should
neither exacerbate nor induce unwanted responses to the payment
systems. As feasible, measures should identify and mitigate adverse
incentives of the payment system.
Alignment with CMS Statutory Requirements and
Key Program Goals--Measures must align with CMS statutory requirements,
such as the IMPACT Act of 2014 and the Meaningful Measures Framework as
well as align across PAC programs where possible.
3. Gaps in HH QRP Measure Set Identified by Environmental Scan and
Potential New Measures
CMS conducted an environmental scan that utilized the previous-
listed principles to guide the identification of gaps in the HH QRP.
Measurement gaps were identified in the domains of cognitive function,
behavioral and mental health, and chronic conditions and pain
management. We discuss each of these in more detail in the next
section.
a. Cognitive Function
Conditions associated with limitations in cognitive function, which
may include stroke, traumatic brain injuries, dementia, and Alzheimer's
disease, as well as intellectual and developmental disabilities (I/DD)
affect an individual's ability to think, reason, remember, problem-
solve, and make decisions. The IMPACT Act identifies cognitive function
as a key quality measure domain, and an area for inclusion as a
standardized assessment data element.
Two sources of information on cognitive function currently
collected in HHAs are the Brief Interview for Mental Status (BIMS) and
Confusion Assessment Method (CAM(copyright)).\116\ Both the BIMS and
CAM have been incorporated into the OASIS. Scored by providers via
direct observation, the BIMS is used to determine orientation and the
ability to register and recall new information. The CAM assesses the
presence of inattention, disorganized thinking, and level of
consciousness.
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\116\ Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services. Outcome and
Assessment Information Set (OASIS-E) Data Set. Effective January 1,
2023. https://www.cms.gov/medicare/quality-initiatives-patient-assessment-instruments/homehealthqualityinits/oasis-data-sets.
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The BIMS and CAM include items representing different aspects of
cognitive function, from which quality measures may be constructed.
Although these instruments have been subjected to feasibility,
reliability, and validity testing, additional development and testing
would be required prior to transforming the concepts reflected in the
BIMS and CAM (for example,
[[Page 43739]]
temporal orientation, recall) into fully specified measures for
implementation in the HH QRP.
This RFI is requesting comment on cognitive functioning measures
that may be available for immediate use, or that may be adapted or
developed for use in the HH QRP, using the BIMS or the CAM. In addition
to comment on specific measures and instruments, CMS seeks input on the
feasibility of measuring improvement in cognitive functioning during a
HH stay, which typically averages 56 days; \117\ the cognitive skills
(for example, executive functions) that are more likely to improve
during an HHA stay; conditions for which measures of maintenance--
rather than improvement in cognitive functioning--are more practical;
and the types of intervention that have been demonstrated to assist in
improving or maintaining cognitive functioning.
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\117\ Based on home health episodes ending in CY2021 (the most
recent year for which complete data are available).
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b. Behavioral and Mental Health
Estimates suggest that one in five Medicare beneficiaries have a
``common mental health disorder'' and nearly 8% have a serious mental
illness.\118\ Behavioral and mental health includes substance use
disorders (SUD), which are understudied in PAC.\119\ Research using
National Survey on Drug Use and Health 2015-2019 data estimated that
1.7 million Medicare beneficiaries, or 8 percent of those aged less
than 65 years and 2 percent of those aged 65 years and older, had a
past-year substance use disorder, 77 percent attributed to alcohol and
16 percent attributed to prescription drugs.\120\ In some instances,
such as following an ischemic stroke or a new diagnosis of a chronic
condition such as diabetes, patients may develop depression, anxiety,
or SUD. In other instances, patients may have been dealing with mental
or behavioral health issues long before their post-acute admission.
Left unmanaged, however, these conditions make it difficult for
affected patients to actively participate in their rehabilitation and
treatment regimen, thereby contributing to poor health outcomes.
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\118\ Figueroa J, Phelan J, Orav E, Patel V, Jha A. Association
of mental health disorders with health care spending in the Medicare
population. JAMA Network Open 2020;3(3):e201210.
\119\ Desai A, Grossberg G. Substance Use Disorders in Postacute
and Long-Term Care Settings. Psychiatr Clin North Am. 2022
Sep;45(3):467-482.
\120\ Parish W, Mark T, Weber E, Steinberg D. Substance Use
Disorders Among Medicare Beneficiaries: Prevalence, Mental and
Physical Comorbidities, and Treatment Barriers. Am J Prev Med 2022
Aug;63(2):225-232. Doi: 10.1016/j.amepre.2022.01.021.
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Information on the availability and appropriateness of behavioral
and mental health measures in PAC is limited, and the 2021 National
Impact Assessment of the CMS Quality Measures Report \121\ identified
PAC program measurement gaps in the areas of behavioral and mental
health. Among the mental health quality measures in current use, the HH
QRP uses a quality measure, ``Depression Assessment Conducted'' which
is described as ``How often the home health team check patients for
depression'' (CMS ID 0198-10). The measure was removed from Care
Compare--Home Health in July 2021. Although it may be possible to adapt
this measure for use in other PAC settings, this process measure does
not directly assess performance in the management of depression and
related mental health concerns.
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\121\ Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services. 2021 National
Impact Assessment of the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services
(CMS) Quality Measures Report. June 2021. https://www.cms.gov/files/document/2021-national-impact-assessment-report.pdf.
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Information on behavioral and mental health currently collected in
HHAs is the Patient Mood Interview (PHQ-2 to 9), a validated interview
that screens for symptoms of depression, and provides a standardized
severity score and a rating for evidence of a depressive disorder. The
PHQ-2 to 9 identifies signs and symptoms of mood distress, a serious
condition that is underdiagnosed and undertreated in home health and is
associated with significant morbidity. There is currently no
information on substance use disorder collected in HHAs.
The PHQ-2 to 9 represents one mental health condition, from which
quality measures may be constructed. Although this instrument has been
subjected to feasibility, reliability, and validity testing, additional
development and testing would be required prior to transforming the
concepts reflected in the PHQ-2 to 9 into fully specified measures for
implementation in the HH QRP.
This RFI is requesting comment on behavioral and mental health
measures that may be available for immediate use, or that may be
adapted or developed for use in the HH QRP, using the PHQ-2 to 9. In
addition to comment on specific measures and instruments, CMS seeks
input on the feasibility of measuring improvement in depressive
symptoms during a HH stay, which typically averages 56 days; \122\ the
symptoms that are more likely to improve during an HHA stay; and the
types of intervention that have been demonstrated to assist in
improving depressive symptoms.
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\122\ Based on home health episodes ending in CY2021 (the most
recent year for which complete data are available).
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CMS seeks feedback on behavioral and mental health, including
substance use disorder, measures or instruments that may be directly
applied, adapted, or developed for use in the HH QRP. Further, CMS
seeks comment on the degree to which measures have been or will require
validation and testing prior to application in the HH QRP. Input on the
availability of data, the manner in which data could be collected and
reported to CMS, and the burden imposed on providers is also sought.
c. Chronic Conditions and Pain Management
Despite the availability of measures focused on core HHA clinical
care services and, specifically, Improvement in Management of Oral
Medications CBE #0176 (CMS ID 0189-11) and Improvement on Dyspnea CBE
#0179 (CMS ID 0187-11). HH QRP measures do not directly address aspects
of care rendered to populations with chronic conditions, such as
chronic kidney disease or cardiovascular disease. Another example of a
service area for which existing measures could more adequately capture
HHA actions concisely is pain management. Even though pain has been
demonstrated to contribute to falls with major injury and restrictions
in mobility and daily activity, a host of other factors also contribute
to these measure domains, making it difficult to directly link provider
actions to performance. Instead, a measure of provider actions in
reducing pain interference in daily activities, including the ability
to sleep, would be a more concise measure of pain management. Beginning
January 1, 2023, HHAs began collecting new standardized patient
assessment data elements, including items that assess pain interference
with (1) daily activities, (2) sleep, and (3) participation in therapy,
providing an opportunity to develop more concise measures of provider
performance.
Through this RFI CMS is seeking input on measures of chronic
condition and pain management that may be used to assess HHA
performance. Additionally, CMS seeks general comment on the feasibility
and challenges of measuring and reporting HHA performance on existing
QRP measures, such as Discharge to the
[[Page 43740]]
Community (CBE #3479) and Potentially Preventable 30-day post-discharge
readmissions, for subgroups of patients defined by type of chronic
condition. For example, measures could assess rates of discharge to
community or 30-day post-discharge readmissions among patients admitted
to an HHA with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) or chronic
renal failure.
e. Solicitation of Public Comment
We invite general comment on the principles for identifying HH QRP
measures, as well as additional beliefs about measurement gaps, and
suitable measures for filling these gaps. Specifically, we solicit
comment on the following questions:
Principles for Selecting and Prioritizing HH QRP Measures
++ To what extent do you agree with the principles for selecting
and prioritizing measures?
++ Are there principles that you believe CMS should eliminate from
the measure selection criteria?
++ Are there principles that you believe CMS should add to the
measure selection criteria?
++ How can CMS best consider equity in measures?
HH QRP Measurement Gaps
++ CMS requests input on the identified measurement gaps, including
in the areas of cognitive function, behavioral and mental health, and
chronic conditions and pain management.
++ Are there gaps in the HH QRP measures that have not been
identified in this RFI?
Measures and Measure Concepts Recommended for Use in the
HH QRP
++ Are there measures that you believe are either currently
available for use, or that could be adapted or developed for use in the
HH QRP program to assess performance in the areas of: (1) cognitive
functioning; (2) behavioral and mental health; (3) chronic conditions;
(4) pain management; or (5) other areas not mentioned in this RFI?
CMS also seeks input on data available to develop measures,
approaches for data collection, perceived challenges, or barriers, and
approaches for addressing challenges.
IV. Proposed Changes to the Expanded Home Health Value-Based Purchasing
(HHVBP) Model
A. Background
As authorized by section 1115A of the Act and finalized in the CY
2016 HH PPS final rule (80 FR 68624), the Center for Medicare and
Medicaid Innovation (Innovation Center) implemented the Home Health
Value-Based Purchasing (HHVBP) Model (``original Model'') in nine
states on January 1, 2016. The design of the original HHVBP Model
leveraged the successes and lessons learned from other CMS value-based
purchasing programs and demonstrations to shift from volume-based
payments to a model designed to promote the delivery of higher quality
care to Medicare beneficiaries. The specific goals of the original
HHVBP Model were to--
Provide higher incentives for better quality care with
greater efficiency;
Study new potential quality and efficiency measures for
appropriateness in the home health setting; and,
Enhance the current public reporting process.
The original HHVBP Model resulted in an average 4.6 percent
improvement in HHAs' total performance scores (TPS) and an average
annual savings of $141 million to Medicare without evidence of adverse
risks.\123\ The evaluation of the original Model also found reductions
in unplanned acute care hospitalizations and skilled nursing facility
(SNF) stays, resulting in reductions in inpatient and SNF spending. The
U.S. Secretary of Health and Human Services determined that expansion
of the original HHVBP Model would further reduce Medicare spending and
improve the quality of care. In October 2020, the CMS Chief Actuary
certified that expansion of the HHVBP Model would produce Medicare
savings if expanded to all states.\124\
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\123\ https://innovation.cms.gov/data-and-reports/2020/hhvbp-thirdann-rpt.
\124\ https://www.cms.gov/files/document/certificationhome-health-value-based-purchasing-hhvbpmodel.pdf.
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On January 8, 2021, CMS announced the certification of the HHVBP
Model for expansion nationwide, as well as the intent to expand the
Model through notice and comment rulemaking.\125\
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\125\ https://www.cms.gov/newsroom/press-releases/cms-takes-action-improve-home-health-care-seniors-announces-intent-expand-home-health-value-based.
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In the CY 2022 HH PPS final rule (86 FR 62292 through 62336) and
codified at 42 CFR part 484 subpart F, we finalized the decision to
expand the HHVBP Model to all Medicare certified HHAs in the 50 States,
territories, and District of Columbia beginning January 1, 2022. CY
2022 was a pre-implementation year. During CY 2022, CMS provided HHAs
with resources and training, to allow HHAs time to prepare and learn
about the expectations and requirements of the expanded HHVBP Model
without risk to payments. We finalized that the expanded Model will
generally use benchmarks, achievement thresholds, and improvement
thresholds based on CY 2019 data to assess achievement or improvement
of HHA performance on applicable quality measures and that HHAs will
compete nationally in their applicable size cohort, smaller-volume HHAs
or larger-volume HHAs, as defined by the number of complete unique
beneficiary episodes for each HHA in the year prior to the performance
year. All HHAs certified to participate in the Medicare program prior
to January 1, 2022, will be required to participate and will be
eligible to receive an annual Total Performance Score based on their CY
2023 performance.
We finalized the quality measure set for the expanded Model, as
well as policies related to the removal, modification, and suspension
of applicable measures, and the addition of new measures and the form,
manner and timing of the OASIS-based, Home Health Consumer Assessment
of Healthcare Providers and Systems (HHCAHPS) survey-based, and claims-
based measures submission in the applicable measure set beginning in CY
2022 and subsequent years. We also finalized an appeals process, an
extraordinary circumstances exception policy, and public reporting of
annual performance data under the expanded Model.
Additionally, in the CY 2022 HH PPS final rule (86 FR 62312), we
summarized and responded to comments received on the challenges unique
to value-based purchasing frameworks in terms of health equity and ways
in which we could incorporate health equity goals into the expanded
HHVBP Model. Comments received were related to the use of stabilization
measures to promote access to care for individuals with chronic illness
or limited ability to improve; collection of patient level demographic
information for existing measures; and stratification of outcome
measures by various patient populations to determine how they are
affected by social determinants of health (SDOH).
In the CY 2023 HH PPS final rule (87 FR 66869 through 66876), we
finalized our policy to replace the term baseline year with the terms
HHA baseline year and Model baseline year, and to change the calendar
years associated with each of those baseline years. Specifically, we
changed the HHA baseline year for the CY 2023 performance year from
2021 to 2022 for ``new'' HHAs with CMS certification numbers (CCNs)
with effective dates prior 2022, and the Model baseline year from CY
2019 to CY
[[Page 43741]]
2022 starting in CY 2023. Additionally, we summarized the comments
received on future approaches to health equity (HE) in the expanded
HHVBP Model. Comments received were related to the support of
addressing health equity, potential unintended consequences, thorough
consideration and testing of potential HE measures, data collection
and, applying HE data to the expanded Model's cohorts and risk
adjustment models.
B. Proposed Changes to the Applicable Measure Set
We are proposing to make changes to the applicable measure set.
First, we are proposing to codify the HHVBP measure removal factors
effective in CY 2024. Second, we are proposing to remove five measures
from the current applicable measure set and add three measures starting
in CY 2025. Third, due to the net change in the number of measures
proposed, we are proposing to adjust the weights for the measures in
the OASIS-based and claims-based measure categories starting in CY
2025. Lastly, we are proposing to update the Model baseline year for
all measures starting in CY 2025.
1. Codification of the HHVBP Measure Removal Factors
In the CY 2022 HH PPS final rule (86 FR 62312), we stated that
removal of an expanded HHVBP Model measure would take place through
notice and comment rulemaking. In that same final rule (86 FR 62311
through 62312), we adopted eight measure removal factors that we
consider when determining whether to remove measures from the expanded
HHVBP Model's applicable measure set:
Factor 1. Measure performance among HHAs is so high and
unvarying that meaningful distinctions in improvements in performance
can no longer be made (that is, topped out).
Factor 2. Performance or improvement on a measure does not
result in better patient outcomes.
Factor 3. A measure does not align with current clinical
guidelines or practice.
Factor 4. A more broadly applicable measure (across
settings, populations, or conditions) for the particular topic is
available.
Factor 5. A measure that is more proximal in time to
desired patient outcomes for the particular topic is available.
Factor 6. A measure that is more strongly associated with
desired patient outcomes for the particular topic is available.
Factor 7. Collection or public reporting of a measure
leads to negative unintended consequences other than patient harm.
Factor 8. The costs associated with a measure outweigh the
benefit of its continued use in the program.
To be consistent with the HH QRP and other quality reporting
programs (that is SNF QRP, IRF QRP, and LTCH QRP) we propose to codify
the eight HHVBP measure removal factors for the expanded Model at Sec.
484.380.
We invite public comments on this proposal.
2. Changes to the Applicable Measure Set
a. Background
In the CY 2022 HH PPS final rule (86 FR 66308 through 66310), we
finalized the applicable measure set effective in the CY 2022 pre-
implementation year and subsequent years, which includes five OASIS-
based measures, two claims-based measures, and five HHCAHPS Survey-
based measures (see Table D1). Details of these measures were included
in Tables 26 and 27 of the CY 2022 HH PPS proposed rule (86 FR 35923
through 35926).
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TP10JY23.065
In that same final rule (86 FR 62310 through 62313), we finalized
that, during the expanded Model, we would address any needed
adjustments or modifications to the applicable measure set; this
process involves notice and comment rulemaking for removing or adding
measures and for adopting changes to measures that we consider to
substantially change the nature of the measure. We also post the names
of any measures added to the expanded Model finalized through the
rulemaking process on the CMS website by the first December 1 upon
publication of the applicable final rule. Examples of changes that we
might consider to be substantive would be those in which the changes
are so significant that the measure is no longer the same measure, or
when a standard of performance assessed by a measure becomes more
stringent, such as changes in acceptable timing of medication,
procedure/process, test administration, or expansion of the measure to
a new setting. If an update to a measure is necessary in a manner that
we consider to not substantially change the nature of the measure, we
will use a subregulatory process to incorporate those updates to the
measure specifications that apply to the program. Specifically, we
would revise the information that is posted on the CMS website so that
it clearly identifies the updates and provides links to where
additional information on where the updates can be found.
We have determined that five of the measures finalized in the CY
2022 HH PPS final rule require further
[[Page 43742]]
consideration. Specifically, we are proposing to remove the following
measures from the applicable measure set: (1) OASIS-based Discharged to
Community (DTC); (2) OASIS-based Total Normalized Composite Change in
Self-Care (TNC Self-Care); (3) OASIS-based Total Normalized Composite
Change in Mobility (TNC Mobility); (4) claims-based Acute Care
Hospitalization During the First 60 Days of Home Health Use (ACH); and
(5) claims-based Emergency Department Use without Hospitalization
During the First 60 Days of Home Health (ED Use).
We propose to replace these five measures with three measures (see
Table D2). Specifically, we are proposing to add the following
measures: (1) the claims-based Discharge to Community-Post Acute Care
(DTC-PAC) Measure for Home Health Agencies; (2) the OASIS-based
Discharge Function Score (DC Function) measure; and (3) the claims-
based Home Health Within-Stay Potentially Preventable Hospitalization
(PPH) measure. The claims-based DTC-PAC measure would replace the
OASIS-based DTC measure. The OASIS-based DC Function measure would
replace the two OASIS-based TNC measures (Self-Care and Mobility). The
claims-based PPH measure would replace the claims-based ACH and ED Use
measures.
We are proposing to make these changes to the applicable measure
set beginning with the CY 2025 performance year and subsequent
performance years. The proposed changes will align the measures used in
the expanded HHVBP Model with the measures in the HH QRP and publicly
reported on Home Health Care Compare. This alignment will support
comparisons of provider quality and streamline home health providers'
data capture and reporting processes. Table D2 summarizes the proposed
applicable measure set that would be effective for the CY 2025
performance year (CY 2027 payment year).
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b. Changes to the Applicable Measure Set
We propose to make all changes to the applicable measure set
discussed in this rule beginning with the CY 2025 performance year,
thus all changes will affect the same payment year beginning with the
CY 2027 payment year.
(1) Proposal To Replace the OASIS-Based DTC Measure With the Claims-
Based DTC-PAC Measure Beginning CY 2025
We propose to replace the current OASIS-based DTC measure with the
claims-based DTC-PAC measure. The claims-based DTC-PAC measure assesses
successful discharge to the community from an HHA, with successful
discharge to the community including no unplanned re-hospitalizations
and no death in the 31 days following discharge. This measure was
adopted as part of the Home Health Quality Reporting Program (HH QRP)
in the CY 2017 HH PPS final rule (81 FR 76765 through 76770). Details
about the measure can be found in the CY 2017 HH PPS final rule (81 FR
76765 through 76770) and the CY 2018 HH PPS final rule (84 FR 60564
through 60566). One difference between the current OASIS-based DTC
measure and the proposed claims-based DTC-PAC measure is the time
period of the measure. The proposed claims-based DTC-PAC measure uses
two years of claims data, whereas the current OASIS-based DTC measure
uses one year of OASIS data. Furthermore, the claims-based DTC-PAC
measure is aligned across PAC settings in terms of risk-adjustment,
exclusions, numerator, and measure intent, whereas the OASIS-based DTC
measure is not aligned. Therefore, making the replacement is in
accordance with Measure Removal Factor 4: A more broadly applicable
measure (across settings, populations, or conditions) for the
particular topic is available. Additionally, the replacement would
further align the expanded HHVBP Model applicable measure set with the
HH QRP measures. The HH QRP added the claims-based DTC measure in 2017
and stopped publicly reporting the OASIS-based DTC measure in 2017. The
proposed use of the claims-based DTC-PAC measure has additional
benefits as compared to the current OASIS-based DTC measure in that it
assesses broader outcomes by assessing post-discharge hospitalization
and mortality. Specifically, it first examines whether a patient was
discharged to the community from the PAC setting. For patients
discharged to the community, this measure examines whether they
remained alive in the community without an unplanned admission to an
acute care hospital or LTCH in the 31-day post-discharge observation
window following discharge to the community.
(2) Proposal to Jointly Replace the OASIS-Based TNC Self-Care and TNC
Mobility Measures With the OASIS-Based Discharge Function Score Measure
Beginning CY 2025
We propose to jointly replace the TNC Self-Care and TNC Mobility
measures with the DC Function measure. We adopted the TNC Self-Care and
TNC Mobility measures in the CY 2019 HH PPS final rule (83 FR 56529
through 56535) for use in the original Model beginning with performance
year 4 (CY 2019). The TNC measures, which are composite measures,
replaced three individual measures (Improvement in Bathing, Improvement
in Bed Transferring, and Improvement in Ambulation-Locomotion). For
these composite measures, HHA performance on the three mobility OASIS-
items are included in the TNC measures. The TNC measures also include
six additional activities of daily living (ADL) measures to create a
more comprehensive assessment of HHA performance across a broader range
of patient ADL outcomes. The TNC measures report the magnitude of
patient change (either improvement, no change, or decline) across six
self-care and three mobility patient functional activities. This
methodology accounts for changes to the scores on individual OASIS
items while also considering that not all patients are able to improve
on all aspects of each composite measure. The DC Function measure
determines how successful each HHA is at achieving an expected level of
functional ability for its patients at discharge. An expectation for
discharge function score is built for each HHA episode by accounting
for patient characteristics that impact their functional status. The
final DC Function measure for a given HHA is the proportion of that
HHA's episodes where a patient's observed discharge score meets or
exceeds their expected discharge score. Functional status is measured
through Section GG of OASIS assessments, which are cross-setting items.
Section GG evaluates a patient's capacity to perform daily activities
related to three self-care (GG0130) activities and eight mobility
(GG0170) activities.
The DC Function measure has been proposed for adoption in all PAC
settings. We included the proposed DC Function measure on the 2022
Measure Under Consideration (MUC) list for the Inpatient Rehabilitation
Facility QRP, Home Health QRP, Long Term Care Hospital QRP, SNF QRP,
and SNF VBP.\126\ It is proposed for the Skilled Nursing Facility (SNF)
Value-Based Purchasing program in the FY 2024 SNF PPS proposed rule and
in this CY 2024 HH PPS proposed rule for adoption in the HH QRP
beginning CY 2025; details about the measure can be found in section
III.D. of this proposed rule. We propose adopting the measure for the
expanded HHVBP Model on the same timeline as the HH QRP (CY 2025) given
that the GG items used in the measure have gone through extensive
testing, and the measure has received conditional support for
rulemaking as part of the most recent Measure Applications Partnership
(MAP) process. While the DC Function measure is not yet implemented in
the HH QRP or other PAC programs, the OASIS data elements used to
calculate this measure have been collected since 2019. As such, we
believe HHAs have had sufficient time to ensure successful reporting of
the data elements needed for this measure.
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\126\ See CMS, Measures Under Consideration List for 2022 (Dec.
1, 2022), available at https://mmshub.cms.gov/sites/default/files/2022-MUC-List.xlsx.
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Replacement of the TNC measures with the DC Function measure would
further align the expanded HHVBP Model measure set with the HH QRP
measures, as well as with other PAC settings. For these reasons, this
replacement is in accordance with Measure Removal Factor 4.
Additionally, the DC Function measure addresses self-care and mobility
through a single measure rather than two measures, thereby streamlining
the calculation and reporting of measure results.
(3) Proposal to Jointly Replace the Acute Care Hospitalization During
the First 60 Days of Home Health Measure and Emergency Department Use
Without Hospitalization During the First 60 Days of Home Health Measure
With the Home Health Within Stay Potentially Preventable
Hospitalization (PPH) Measure Beginning CY 2025
We propose to jointly replace the Acute Care Hospitalization During
the First 60 Days of Home Health Measure (``ACH'' measure) and
Emergency Department Use Without Hospitalization During the First 60
Days of Home Health Measure (``ED Use'' measure) with the Home Health
Within Stay Potentially Preventable Hospitalization (PPH) Measure. The
[[Page 43745]]
current specifications for the PPH measure are available on the CMS
website at https://www.cms.gov/files/document/hh-qrp-specificationspotentiallypreventablehospitalizations.pdf.
The CY 2022 HH PPS final rule (86 FR 62340 through 62345) finalized
the joint replacement of the ACH measure and ED Use measure with the
PPH measure in the HH QRP beginning CY 2023. This replacement under the
HH QRP was made under Measure Removal Factor 6: A measure that is more
strongly associated with desired patient outcomes for the particular
topic is available. Additional details of the reason for replacement
are found in the CY 2022 HH PPS final rule (86 FR 62340 through 62345).
Because these measures have been finalized to be jointly replaced with
the PPH measure in the HH QRP beginning CY 2023, we are proposing to
remove them from the expanded HHVBP Model.
In the CY 2022 HH PPS proposed rule (86 FR 35929), we requested
comments on whether we should align the expanded HHVBP Model with the
proposed changes for the HH QRP by proposing to remove the same two
measures (``ACH'' and ``ED Use'' measures) from the expanded Model in a
future year. As summarized in the CY 2022 HH PPS final rule (86 FR
62312), the feedback was generally supportive, recommending that the
expanded HHVBP Model's applicable measure set align with the HH QRP
measures. Replacing ACH and ED Use with PPH would further align the
expanded Model's applicable measure set with the HH QRP measures.
We propose no changes to the five HHCAHPS Survey-based measures
used for the expanded HHVBP Model.
We invite public comments on these proposals.
3. Measure Categories
As shown in Table D3, the expanded Model utilizes established
measure categories that represent the data sources including OASIS-
based, claims-based, and HHCAHPS Survey-based. Although measures in the
original Model have been added, removed or substituted in the past, the
measure category weights have remained constant, maintaining the
weighting proportions of 35 percent, 35 percent and 30 percent for
OASIS-based, claims-based and HHCAHPS Survey-based measures for the
larger-volume cohort, respectively. For HHAs in the smaller-volume
cohort, the weighting proportions of the OASIS-based and claims-based
measures are 50 percent and 50 percent, respectively. Weights for
individual measures within these categories have changed in the past
due to changes to the applicable measure set (for example, replacing
three individual OASIS-based measures with the two TNC measures) and to
encourage improvement in the claims-based measures. With the proposed
changes to the applicable measures in this proposed rule, the number of
measures within the OASIS-based measure category would change. Table D3
illustrates the change in the measure set including the removal of the
OASIS-based DTC measure, the replacement of the two OASIS-based TNC
change measures to the OASIS-based DC Function measure, and the
replacement of the claims-based Acute Hospitalization Measure and
claims-based ED Use Measure for the claims-based PPH measure. Despite
the changes to the applicable measure set, we intend to maintain the
existing measure categories and their relative weights. For example,
for the larger-volume cohort, the claims-based measures would continue
to have a total weight of 35 percent. The relatively higher weight
given to the claims-based measures reflects our belief in the
importance of those measures relative to OASIS-based measures, which
use self-reported data and that the incentive to reduce hospital
utilization is maintained. We continually monitor the effects of
weighting and will propose changes if we determine there is a need
through future rulemaking.
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4. Weighting and Redistribution of Weights Within the Measure
Categories
a. Background
As finalized in the CY 2022 HH PPS final rule (86 FR 62240), the
expanded HHVBP Model uses the same policies regarding the weighting of
measures and the redistribution of weights when measures or measure
categories are missing as under the original Model (83 FR 56536).
As previously discussed in section IV.B.2.b of this proposed rule,
to align with quality measures used in the HH QRP, CMS proposes to
replace the OASIS-based DTC measure with the claims-based DTC measure,
jointly replace the claims-based ACH and ED Use measures with the
claims-based PPH measure, and jointly replace the OASIS-based TNC
Change in Mobility and TNC Change in Self-Care measures with the OASIS-
based DC Function measure in CY 2025 and subsequent performance years.
Due to these changes to the applicable measure set and the data
sources, CMS proposes changes in weights and redistribution of weights
within the measure categories accordingly.
b. Quality Measure Weights Within Measure Categories
Along with the proposed revisions to the current measure set, we
propose to revise the weights of the individual measures within the
OASIS-based measure category and within the claims-based measure
category. Currently, the OASIS-based, claims-based, and HHCAHPS Survey-
based measures contribute 35 percent, 35 percent, and 30 percent,
respectively, to the Total Performance Score (TPS) for HHAs in the
larger-volume cohort. For HHAs in the smaller-volume cohort, the OASIS-
based and claims-based measures contribute 50 percent and 50 percent,
respectively, to the TPS. The weights of the measure categories, when
one category is missing, are based on the relative weight of each
category when all measures are used. For example, if an HHA is missing
the HHCAHPS Survey-based measure category, the remaining two measure
categories (OASIS-based and claims-based) each represent 50 percent.
Table 28 in the CY 2022 HH PPS final rule (86 FR 62323 through 62324)
presents the current weights for measures and measure categories under
various reporting scenarios.
Table D4 shows the measure weights by quality measure in the
expanded HHVBP Model currently in place and proposed for CY 2025 and
subsequent performance years for HHAs in the larger-volume and smaller-
volume cohort, respectively.
As discussed in section IV.B.3 of this proposed rule, for HHAs in
the larger-volume cohort, we are keeping the measure category weights
unchanged at 35 percent, 35 percent, and 30 percent for OASIS-based,
claims-based, and HHCAHPS Survey-based measure categories,
respectively. Similarly, for HHAs in the smaller-volume cohort, we are
keeping the measure category weights unchanged at 50 percent and 50
percent for OASIS-based and claims-based measure categories,
respectively. By keeping these measure category weights unchanged, the
number of individual measures in each measure category will affect the
magnitude of the individual measure weights. As proposed, changes to
the applicable measure set would decrease the OASIS-based measures from
five measures to three, while the number of individual
[[Page 43747]]
measures for the claims-based measures and HHCAHPS Survey-based
measures will remain unchanged. Given these proposals, the individual
measure weights within the proposed OASIS-based measure category would
be higher than those under the current applicable OASIS-based measure
category. The subsequent sections discuss in more detail the proposed
measure weight redistributions for each measure category.
(1) Proposal To Redistribute Weights Within the OASIS-Based Measure
Category
Because we propose to replace the two TNC measures jointly with the
DC Function measure, we propose that the sum of the TNC measure weights
be given to the DC Function measure. This will maintain the same
relative weight for functional measures. Due to the proposed removal of
the OASIS-based DTC measure, we also propose to distribute the weight
for that measure across the remaining three OASIS-based measures. In
addition, we propose to maintain a relatively small weight for
Improvement in Dyspnea compared to the other measures in the applicable
measure set. Under the current measure set, Improvement in Dyspnea is
weighted at 5.833 for larger-volume HHAs and 8.333 for smaller-volume
HHAs. Similarly, under the proposed applicable measure set, Improvement
in Dyspnea would be weighted at 6.000 for the larger-volume cohort and
8.571 for the smaller-volume cohort. This approach aims to encourage
improvement in quality of care, while reducing its importance relative
to other quality measures that encourage both improvement and
maintenance of quality care for all home health patients. These
proposed changes would be effective in CY 2025. Table D4 describes the
proposed measure weight redistributions for all measure categories by
larger-volume and smaller-volume cohort, respectively. In addition to
increasing the individual measure weight for Improvement in Dyspnea to
6.000, CMS proposes to increase the individual measure weight for
Improvement in Management of Oral Medications to 9.000 and to assign
the individual measure weight for DC Function to 20.000 for HHAs in the
larger-volume cohort. These changes maintain the overall weight of the
OASIS-based measures at 35 percent for the larger-volume cohort and 50
percent for the smaller-volume cohort.
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(2) Proposal To Redistribute Weights Within the Claims-Based Measure
Category
Because we propose to remove the ACH and ED Use measures, we
propose to allot an individual measure weight of 26.000 to the proposed
PPH measure. The redistribution to the PPH measure is intended to give
this measure approximately the same combined weight as the ACH and ED
Use measures had previously. In addition, CMS proposes to allot an
individual measure weight of 9.000 to the claims-based DTC-PAC measure
for the larger-volume cohort. The slight increase in weight for the
claims-based DTC-PAC measure maintains the same overall weight of
35.000 for claims-based measures for the larger-volume cohort. Table D4
lists the corresponding individual claims-based measure weight
redistributions applicable to HHAs in the smaller-volume cohort.
[[Page 43748]]
(3) Weights Within the HHCAHPS-Based Measure Category
Given there are no changes proposed to the measures within the
HHCAHPS Survey-based measure category, we propose to keep the
individual measure weights for measures in this measure category
unchanged. Specifically, each HHCAHPS Survey-based measure will
continue to have an individual measure weight of 6.000 for HHAs in the
larger-volume cohort. Given that HHAs in the smaller-volume cohort are
not assessed based on their HHCAHPS Survey-based measure performance,
the individual measure weight is set to zero (0.000) for the smaller-
volume cohort (see Table D4).
We invite public comments on these proposals.
(4) Alternatives Considered
Several measure weighting alternatives were considered prior to
choosing the previously discussed proposals. Tables D5 describes these
alternative options for HHAs in the larger-volume cohort, including
weights proportional to the weights for the initial measure set (Option
1), maintaining measure category weights consistent with current
measure set weights and equal within-category weights (Option 2), using
equal measure category weights and maintaining within-category weight
proportions (Option 3), using equal measure category weights and equal
within-category weights (Option 4), and having equal weights for all
measures (Option 5). We also considered these options for the smaller-
volume cohort and came to the same conclusions. Therefore, we only
provide a table with measure weighting alternatives for the larger-
volume cohort.
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Of these alternatives, Option 1 is most consistent with the
proposed weights and most consistent with the weights used for the
current measure set; however, it fails to apply the minimal weight
possible for Improvement in Dyspnea. Similarly, Options 2-4 do not
reduce the weight for Improvement in Dyspnea and deviate more
substantially than Option 1 from the current weighting scheme. By
attributing equal weight to all measures in the proposed measure set,
Option 5 satisfies the minimal weight criterion for Improvement in
Dyspnea; however, it does so at the expense of applying the same
weight, which is inconsistent with previous decisions about apply
differential weighting to measures to incentivize HHAs to act on
improving measures with higher weights in the applicable measure set as
outlined in the CY 2022 HH PPS final rule (86 FR 62322).
5. Updates to the Model Baseline Year
a. Background
In the CY 2022 HH PPS final rule, we finalized that the first Model
baseline year for the expanded HHVBP Model would be CY 2019 (January 1,
2019 through December 31, 2019), the first performance year would be CY
2023, and the first payment year would be CY 2025 (86 FR 62294 through
62300). We decided on CY 2019 as the Model baseline year, as opposed to
CY 2020 or CY 2021, due to the potentially de-stabilizing effects of
the public health emergency (PHE) on the CY 2020 data and because it
was the most recent full year of data available prior to CY 2020. The
performance year and payment year were finalized after originally
proposing CY 2022 to be the first performance year and CY 2024 to be
the first payment year. We decided to delay implementation by 1 year to
allow additional time for HHAs to prepare and learn about the expanded
Model, thus CY 2022 was defined as the pre-
[[Page 43749]]
implementation year. In the CY 2023 HH PPS final rule, we changed the
Model baseline year to CY 2022 (87 FR 66869 through 66874). We decided
to use more recent data from the CY 2022 time period because it is more
likely to be aligned with performance years' data under the expanded
Model, and provide a more appropriate baseline for assessing HHA
improvement for all measures under the Model as compared to both the
pre-PHE CY 2019 data, as previously finalized for existing HHAs, and
the CY 2021 data, as previously finalized for new HHAs certified
between January 1, 2019 and December 31, 2020.
Additionally, in the CY 2022 HH PPS final rule (86 FR 62308 through
62309), we finalized the current measure set, as indicated in Table 25
of that final rule. The removal and replacement of measures from the
current measure set necessitates an updated implementation and data
reporting timeline, which will be applied to all applicable measures so
that the Model baseline year is consistent across measures.
b. Proposal To Update the Model Baseline Year
Beginning with performance year CY 2025, we propose to update the
Model baseline year to CY 2023 for all applicable measures in the
proposed measure set, including those measures included in the current
measure set. The one exception is the new claims-based DTC-PAC measure,
which uses two years of data. As such, the Model baseline year for the
claims-based DTC-PAC measure will be CY 2022 and CY 2023 for the 2-year
performance year spanning CY 2024 and CY 2025. For performance years CY
2023 and CY 2024, the Model baseline year will continue to be CY 2022.
Table D6 lists the data periods for each measure and respective Model
baseline, performance year, and payment years.
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If we finalize our proposal to use CY 2023 for the Model baseline
year, we would provide HHAs with the final achievement thresholds and
benchmarks in the July 2024 Interim Performance Report (IPR). For all
measures but the claims-based DTC-PAC measure, this timeline allows for
one year of performance between the first performance year and the
proposed updated Model baseline year. Because the claims-based DTC-PAC
measure is a two-year measure, there will be no gap between the
proposed updated Model baseline year and the first performance year,
which would be consistent with the rollout of the original HHVBP Model,
in which benchmarks and achievement thresholds using CY 2015 data were
made available to HHAs during the summer of the first performance year
(CY 2016).
Furthermore, because the claims-based DTC-PAC measure is a 2-year
measure, there will be an overlap in how discharge to community is
measured for the expanded Model. Specifically, CY 2024 performance will
be based on the current measure set, which includes the OASIS-based DTC
measure. For the OASIS-based DTC measure, CY 2024 performance will be
compared to baseline year CY 2022. CY 2025 performance would be based
on the proposed measure set, which includes the claims-based DTC-PAC
measure and thus replaces the OASIS-based DTC measure. Because the DTC-
PAC measure is a two-year measure, CY 2025 performance for the claims-
based DTC-PAC measure will be calculated based on two years of
performance data (CY 2024/2025) and compared to two years of baseline
year data (CY 2022/2023). Thus, for both the OASIS-based DTC measure
and the claims-based DTC-PAC measure, CY 2022 data will be used to
calculate performance in a Model baseline year, and CY 2024 data will
be used to calculate performance in a performance year. Beyond CY 2025,
data for calculating DTC-PAC performance will continue to overlap. For
example, CY 2026 DTC-PAC (claims-based) performance will be based on
data from CY 2025/2026, which overlaps by one year with the CY 2025
DTC-PAC (claims-based) performance year data. See Table D7. The DTC-PAC
measure was designed as a 2-year measure to optimize reliability. In
addition, each performance year will consist of 1 year of performance
data that does not overlap with the prior performance year data, which
provides sufficient opportunity to capture quality improvement over
time. Finally, the DTC-PAC (claims-based) will provide a smoother
performance trend over time compared to 1-year measures by reflecting
performance across a longer reporting period.
[[Page 43750]]
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c. Alternatives Considered
We considered several alternative timelines for updating the Model
baseline year. First, we considered leaving the baseline year at CY
2022 for those measures on the previously finalized measure set. We
opted against this alternative because it uses less recent data and
makes it more difficult for HHAs to track which achievement thresholds
and benchmarks are based on which years of baseline data.
Second, because of the time between the Model baseline year and the
performance year, we considered delaying the implementation of the
claims-based DTC-PAC measure by one year. Under this scenario, the
measure's baseline year would remain CY 2022/2023, but the measure's
first performance year would be CY 2025/2026. The first payment year
that uses the claims-based DTC-PAC measure would then be CY 2028. As
such, CY 2025 would be a transition year in between the current
applicable measure set and the proposed applicable measure set. During
this transition year, the OASIS-based DTC measure could be retained
through CY 2025 or removed. Retaining the OASIS-based DTC measure
during the transition year would ensure that the concept of being
discharged to the community will be reflected in all performance and
payment years, while removing it before the transition year would
better align with the removal of the other measures as proposed.
Because we view the concept of being discharged to the community as an
important aspect of home health quality, we favor retaining the OASIS-
based DTC measure during the transition year over removing it, assuming
we delay implementation of the claims-based DTC measure. We rejected
delayed implementation, however, because it temporarily increases the
complexity of the expanded Model and requires that the Model uses the
legacy OASIS-based DTC measure for another year, despite its removal
from the HH QRP.
Third, we considered delaying implementation of the OASIS-based DC
Function measure, which is proposed for CY 2025 implementation in the
HH QRP as indicated in section III. D.1. of this proposed rule.
Although a delay would allow more time to evaluate the measure's
performance prior to HHVBP implementation, data utilized in this
measure have been a part of the HH QRP's OASIS assessment tool since CY
2019. We prefer the proposed timeline for the OASIS-based DC Function
measure because it expedites alignment with the HH QRP, SNF VBP, and
the other PAC programs and the timing corresponds with the proposed
removal and replacement of other measures in the Model.
Lastly, we considered delaying implementation for all replacement
measures, such that their Model baseline years would end on December
31, 2023 and their first performance years would end on December 31,
2026 (CY 2026 for the OASIS-based DC Function and claims-based PPH
measures and CY 2025/2026 for the claims-based DTC-PAC measure). Under
this alternative, the first payment year to use the proposed applicable
measure set would be CY 2028. We favor the proposed timeline because we
prefer aligning more closely with the HH QRP measure set as early as
possible.
6. Future Topics for Measure Considerations
We will take into consideration opportunities for further alignment
with measures in the HH QRP and publicly reported on Home Health Care
Compare because alignment will facilitate comparative assessments of
provider quality and streamline home health providers' data capture and
reporting processes. If we consider adding new measures that require
data that is not already collected through existing quality measure
data reporting systems, we will propose that option in future
rulemaking while being mindful of provider burden.
To further the goals of the CMS National Quality Strategy, CMS
leaders from across the Agency have come together to move towards a
building-block approach to streamline quality measure across CMS
quality programs for the adult and pediatric populations. This
``Universal Foundation'' \127\ of quality measures will focus provider
attention, reduce burden, identify disparities in care, prioritize
development of interoperable, digital quality measures, allow for
cross-comparisons across programs, and help identify measurement gaps.
The development and implementation of the Preliminary Adult and
Pediatric Universal Foundation Measures will promote the best, safest,
and most equitable care for individuals as we all come together on
these critical quality areas. As CMS moves forward with the Universal
Foundation, we will be working to identify foundational measures in
other specific settings and populations to support further measure
alignment across CMS programs as applicable.
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\127\ Jacobs, D.B., Schreiber, M., Seshamani, M., Tsai, D.,
Fowler, E., & Fleisher, L.A. (2023). Aligning quality measures
across CMS--the universal foundation. New England Journal of
Medicine, 388(9), 776-779. https://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMp2215539.
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In recognition of persistent health disparities and the importance
of closing the health equity gap, we will consider future modifications
that promote health equity and ways in which we could incorporate
health equity goals into the Model. Any changes would be proposed in
future notice and comment rulemaking.
While we are not making any specific proposals here, we invite
stakeholders to suggest future measures and the value they may provide
to the expanded HHVBP Model.
C. Proposed Changes to the Appeals Process
1. Background
As codified at Sec. 484.375, the appeals process under the
expanded HHVBP
[[Page 43751]]
Model allows HHAs to submit recalculation requests for the interim
performance reports and the Annual Total Performance Score (TPS) and
Payment Adjustment Report (Annual Performance Report or APR). Under
this process, an HHA may also make a reconsideration request if it
disagrees with the results of a recalculation request for the APR. We
refer the reader to the CY 2022 HH PPS final rule (86 FR 62331 through
62332) for details of the appeals process. We also finalized (86 FR
62329) that we would make available the Final APR after all
reconsideration requests are processed and no later than 30 calendar
days before the payment adjustment takes effect annually, both for
those HHAs that requested a reconsideration and all other competing
HHAs.
2. Proposed Revisions
We are proposing revisions to the policy at Sec. 484.375(b)(5) to
acknowledge the ability of the CMS Administrator to review
reconsideration decisions, and to change the time for filing a request
for reconsideration. In particular, we are proposing to amend Sec.
484.375(b)(5) to specify that an HHA may request Administrator review
of a reconsideration decision within 7 days from CMS' notification to
the HHA contact of the outcome of the reconsideration request. We
propose to amend Sec. 484.375(b)(5) to state that the CMS
reconsideration official issues a written decision that is final and
binding 7 calendar days after the decision unless the CMS Administrator
renders a final determination reversing or modifying the
reconsideration decision. And, that An HHA may request within 7
calendar days of the decision that the CMS Administrator review the
reconsideration decision. The CMS Administrator may decline to review
the reconsideration decision, render a final determination, or choose
to take no action on the request for administrative review.
Reconsideration decisions are considered final if the CMS Administrator
declines an HHA's request for review or if the CMS Administrator does
not take any action on the HHA's request for review within 14 days.
This proposed change would ensure that accountability for the
decisions of CMS is vested in a principal officer and brings the
reconsideration review process to a more similar posture as other CMS
appeals entities that provide Administrator review. This revision also
ensures that HHAs are aware that administrative review is available to
those HHAs who wish to seek additional review of a reconsideration
decision.
We seek comment on these proposals.
D. Public Reporting Reminder
In the CY 2022 HH PPS final rule (86 FR 62332 through 62333), we
finalized that we would publicly report the following information for
the expanded HHVBP Model:
Applicable measure benchmarks and achievement thresholds
for each small- and large-volume cohort.
For each HHA that qualified for a payment adjustment based
on the data for the applicable performance year--
Applicable measure results and improvement thresholds;
The HHA's Total Performance Score (TPS);
The HHA's TPS Percentile Ranking; and
The HHA's payment adjustment for a given year.
In that same rule, we stated that we anticipate this information
would be made available to the public on a CMS website on or after
December 1, 2024, the date by which we would intend to complete the CY
2023 Annual Report appeals process and issuance of the Final Annual
Report to each competing HHA. For each year thereafter, we anticipate
following the same approximate timeline for publicly reporting the
payment adjustment for the upcoming calendar year. This policy is
codified at Sec. 484.355(c). We are not proposing any changes to this
policy. This simply serves as a reminder of our existing policy.
E. Health Equity Update
1. Background
In the Calendar Year 2023 Home Health Prospective Payment System
Proposed Rule (CMS-1766-P), we included a Request for Information (RFI)
on a future approach to health equity in the expanded HHVBP Model. We
define health equity as ``the attainment of the highest level of health
for all people, where everyone has a fair and just opportunity to
attain their optimal health regardless of race, ethnicity, disability,
sexual orientation, gender identity, socioeconomic status, geography,
preferred language, or other factors that affect access to care and
health outcomes.'' \128\ We are working to advance health equity by
designing, implementing, and operationalizing policies and programs
that support health for all the people served by our programs and
models, eliminating avoidable differences in health outcomes
experienced by people who are disadvantaged or underserved, and
providing the care and support that our enrollees need to thrive. Our
goals outlined in the CMS Framework for Health Equity 2022-2032 \129\
are in line with Executive Order 13985, ``Advancing Racial Equity and
Support for Underserved Communities Through the Federal Government.''
\130\ The goals included in the CMS Framework for Health Equity serve
to further advance health equity, expand coverage, and improve health
outcomes for the more than 170 million individuals supported by our
programs, and sets a foundation and priorities for our work including:
strengthening our infrastructure for assessment, creating synergies
across the health care system to drive structural change, and
identifying and working to eliminate barriers to CMS-supported
benefits, services, and coverage.
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\128\ Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services. Available at
https://www.cms.gov/pillar/health-equity. Accessed February 1, 2023.
\129\ https://www.cms.gov/files/document/cms-framework-health-equity-2022.pdf.
\130\ https://www.whitehouse.gov/briefing-room/presidential-actions/2021/01/20/executive-order-advancing-racial-equity-and-support-for-underserved-communities-through-the-federal-government/.
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In addition to the CMS Framework for Health Equity, CMS seeks to
``advance health equity and whole-person care'' as one of eight goals
comprising the CMS National Quality Strategy (NQS).\131\ The NQS
identifies a wide range of potential quality levers that can support
our advancement of equity, including: (1) establishing a standardized
approach for patient-reported data and stratification; (2) employing
quality and value-based programs to address closing equity gaps; and,
(3) developing equity-focused data collection, analysis, regulations,
and quality improvement initiatives.
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\131\ Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services. What is the CMS
Quality Strategy? Available at https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/Value-Based-Programs/CMS-Quality-Strategy.
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A goal of this NQS is to address persistent disparities that
underly our healthcare system. Racial disparities, in particular, are
estimated to cost the U.S. $93 billion in excess medical costs and $42
billion in lost productivity per year, in addition to economic losses
due to premature deaths.\132\ At the same time, racial and ethnic
diversity has increased in recent years, with an increase in the
percentage of people who identify as two or more races accounting for
most of the change, rising from 2.9 percent to
[[Page 43752]]
10.2 percent between 2010 and 2020.\133\ Therefore, we need to consider
ways to reduce disparities, achieve equity, and support our diverse
beneficiary population through the way we measure quality and display
the data.
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\132\ Ani Turner, The Business Case for Racial Equity, A
Strategy for Growth, W.K. Kellogg Foundation and Altarum, April
2018.
\133\ 2022 National Healthcare Quality and Disparities Report.
Content last reviewed November 2022. Agency for Healthcare Research
and Quality, Rockville, MD https://www.ahrq.gov/research/findings/nhqrdr/nhqdr22/.
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We solicited public comments via the previously discussed RFI on
policy changes that we should consider on the topic of health equity.
We specifically requested input on whether we should explore
incorporating adjustments into the expanded HHVBP Model to reflect the
varied patient populations that HHAs serve around the country and tie
equity-focused outcomes to the payment adjustments we make based on HHA
performance under the Model. We refer readers to the CY 2023 HH PPS
final rule (87 FR 66876), for a summary of the public comments and
suggestions we received in response to the health equity RFI. We will
take these comments into account as we continue to work to develop
policies and quality measures on this important topic.
2. Anticipated Future State
We are committed to developing approaches to meaningfully
incorporate the advancement of health equity into the expanded HHVBP
Model. As we move this important work forward, we will continue to take
input from interested parties. We also note that there are proposals
being made to implement a health equity adjustment in the Hospital
Inpatient Quality Reporting Program and the SNF Value-Based Purchasing
Program. At this time, however, we would like to give HHAs time to
learn the requirements of the expanded Model, gather at least 2 years
of performance data, and study effects of the expanded Model on health
equity outcomes before incorporating any potential changes to the
expanded Model regarding health equity.
V. Medicare Home Intravenous Immune Globulin (IVIG) Items and Services
A. General Background
1. Statutory Background
Division FF, section 4134 of the CAA, 2023 added coverage and
payment of items and services related to administration of IVIG in a
patient's home of a patient with a diagnosed primary immune deficiency
disease furnished on or after January 1, 2024. Division FF, section
4134(a) of the CAA, 2023 amended the existing IVIG benefit category at
section 1861(s)(2)(Z) of the Act by adding coverage for IVIG
administration items and services in a patient's home of a patient with
a diagnosed primary immune deficiency disease. This benefit covers
items and services related to administration of IVIG in a patient's
home of a patient with a diagnosed primary immune deficiency disease.
In addition, section 4134(b) of Division FF of the CAA, 2023 amended
section 1842(o) of the Act by adding a new paragraph (8) that
established the payment for IVIG administration items and services.
Under the CAA, 2023 provision, payment for these IVIG administration
items and services is required to be a bundled payment separate from
the payment for the IVIG product, made to a supplier for all items and
services related to administration of IVIG furnished in the home during
a calendar day.
2. Overview
Primary immune deficiency diseases (PIDD) are conditions triggered
by genetic defects that cause a lack of and/or impairment in antibody
function, resulting in the body's immune system not being able to
function in a normal way. Immune globulin (Ig) therapy is used to
temporarily replace some of the antibodies (that is, immunoglobulins)
that are missing or not functioning properly in people with PIDD.\134\
The goal of Ig therapy is to use Ig obtained from normal donor plasma
to maintain a sufficient level of antibodies in the blood of
individuals with PIDD to fight off bacteria and viruses. Ig is
formulated for both intravenous and subcutaneous administration (SCIg).
Clinicians can prescribe either product to the beneficiary with PIDD
according to clinical need and preference, and beneficiaries can switch
between intravenous and subcutaneous administration of Ig.
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\134\ Perez EE, Orange JS, Bonilla F, et al. (2017) Update on
the use of immunoglobulin in human disease: A review of evidence;
Journal Allergy Clin Immunol. 139(3S): S1-S46.
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3. Legislative Summary
Section 642 of the Medicare Prescription Drug, Improvement, and
Modernization Act of 2003 (Pub. L. 108-173), amended section 1861 of
the Act to provide Medicare Part B coverage of the IVIG product for the
treatment of PIDD in the home, but not the items and services involved
with administration.
Section 101 of the Medicare IVIG Access and Strengthening Medicare
and Repaying Taxpayers Act of 2012 (Medicare IVIG Access Act) (Pub. L.
112-242), mandated the establishment, implementation, and evaluation of
a 3-year Medicare Intravenous Immune Globulin (IVIG) Demonstration
Project (the Demonstration) under Part B of title XVIII of the Act. The
Demonstration was implemented to evaluate the benefits of providing
coverage and payment for items and services needed for the home
administration of IVIG for the treatment of PIDD, and to determine if
it would improve access to home IVIG therapy for patients with PIDD.
The Medicare IVIG Access Act mandated that Medicare would establish a
per visit payment amount for the items and services necessary for the
home administration of IVIG therapy for beneficiaries with specific
PIDD diagnoses. The Demonstration did not include Medicare payment for
the IVIG product which continues to be paid under Part B in accordance
with section 1842(o) and 1847(A) of the Act. The Demonstration covered
and paid a per visit payment amount for the items and services needed
for the administration of IVIG in the home. Items may include infusion
set and tubing, and services include nursing services to complete an
infusion of IVIG lasting on average three to five hours.\135\
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\135\ Updated Interim Report to Congress: Evaluation of the
Medicare Patient Intravenous Immunoglobulin Demonstration Project,
2022: https://innovation.cms.gov/data-and-reports/2022/ivig-updatedintrtc.
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On September 28, 2017, Congress passed the Disaster Tax Relief and
Airport and Airway Extension Act of 2017 (Pub. L. 115-63). Section 302
of Public Law 115-63 extended the Demonstration through December 31,
2020.
Division CC, section 104, of the Consolidated Appropriations Act,
2021 (CAA, 2021) (Pub. L. 116-260), further extended the Demonstration
for another 3 years through December 31, 2023.
Division FF, section 4134 of the CAA, 2023 (CAA, 2023) (Pub. L.
117-328) mandated that CMS establish permanent coverage and payment for
items and services related to administration of IVIG in a patient's
home of a patient with PIDD. The permanent home IVIG items and services
payment is effective for home IVIG administration furnished on or after
January 1, 2024. Payment for these items and services is required to be
a separate bundled payment made to a supplier for all administration
items and services furnished in the home during a calendar day. The
statute provides that payment amount may be based on the amount
established under the Demonstration. The standard Part B coinsurance
and the Part B deductible is required to apply. In addition, that
statute states that the separate bundled
[[Page 43753]]
payment for these IVIG administration items and services does not apply
for individuals receiving services under the Medicare home health
benefit. The CAA, 2023 provision clarifies that a supplier who
furnishes these services meet the requirements of a supplier of medical
equipment and supplies.
4. Demonstration Overview
Under the Demonstration, Medicare provides a bundled payment under
Part B, that is separate from the IVIG product, for items and services
that are necessary to administer IVIG in the home to enrolled
beneficiaries who are not otherwise homebound and receiving services
under the home health benefit. The Demonstration only applies to
situations where the beneficiary requires IVIG for the treatment of
certain PIDD diagnoses, or was receiving SCIg to treat PIDD and wishes
to switch to IVIG.
Services covered under the Demonstration are required to be
provided and billed by specialty pharmacies enrolled as durable medical
equipment (DME) suppliers, that provide the Medicare Part B-covered Ig.
The covered items and services under the Demonstration are paid as a
single bundle and are subject to coinsurance and deductible in the same
manner as other Part B services. HHAs are not eligible to bill for
services covered under the Demonstration, but can bill for services
related to the administration of IVIG if the patient is receiving
services under a home health episode of care, in which case the home
health payment covers the items and services.
In order to participate in the Demonstration, beneficiaries must
meet the following requirements:
Be eligible to have the IVIG paid for at home under Part B
FFS
Have a diagnosis of PIDD
Not be enrolled in a Medicare Advantage plan
Cannot be in a home health episode of care on the date of
service (in such circumstances, the home health payment covers the
services)
Must receive the service in their home or a setting that
is ``home like''.
To participate in the Demonstration, the beneficiary must submit an
application, signed by their physician.
DME suppliers billing for the items and services covered under the
Demonstration must meet the following requirements:
Meet all Medicare, as well as other national, state, and
local standards and regulations applicable to the provision of services
related to home infusion of IVIG.
Be enrolled and current with the National Supplier
Clearinghouse.
Be able to bill the DME Medicare Administrative
Contractors (MACs).
CMS implemented a bundled per visit payment amount under the
Demonstration, statutorily required to be based on the national per
visit low-utilization payment adjustment (LUPA) for skilled nursing
services used under the Medicare HH PPS established under section 1895
of the Act. The payment amount is subject to coinsurance and
deductible.
For billing under the Demonstration, CMS established a ``Q'' code
for services, supplies, and accessories used in the home under the IVIG
Demonstration:
Q2052--(Long Description)--Services, supplies, and
accessories used in the home under Medicare Intravenous immune globulin
(IVIG) Demonstration.
Q2052--(Short Description)--IVIG demo, services/supplies.
The code is used for the IVIG Demonstration only. Suppliers must
bill Q2052 as a separate claim line on the same claim for the IVIG
drug.
B. Proposed Scope of Expanded IVIG Benefit
As discussed previously, Division FF, section 4134 of the CAA,
2023, added coverage of items and services related to the
administration of IVIG in a patient's home, to the existing IVIG
benefit category at section 1861(s)(2)(Z) of the Act, effective January
1, 2024. Currently, IVIG is covered in the home under Part B if all of
the following criteria are met:
It is an approved pooled plasma derivative for the
treatment of primary immune deficiency disease.
The patient has a diagnosis of primary immune deficiency
disease.
The IVIG is administered in the home.
The treating practitioner has determined that
administration of the IVIG in the patient's home is medically
appropriate.
Therefore, as section 4134(a)(1) of the CAA, 2023, adds the items
and services (furnished on or after January 1, 2024) related to the
administration of IVIG to the benefit category defined under section
1861(s)(2)(Z) of the Act (the Social Security Act provision requiring
coverage of the IVIG product in the home), the same beneficiary
eligibility requirements for the IVIG product would apply for the IVIG
administration items and services described in section V.A.4. of this
proposed rule. Subpart B of Part 410 of the regulations set out the
medical and other health services requirements under Part B. The
regulations at Sec. 410.10 identify the services that are subject to
the conditions and limitations specified in this subpart. Section
410.10(y) includes intravenous immune globulin administered in the home
for the treatment of primary immune deficiency diseases. Section 410.12
outlines general basic conditions and limitations for coverage of
medical and other health services under Part B, as identified in
section 410.10. Section 410.12(a) includes the conditions that must be
met in order for these services to be covered, and include the
following:
When the services must be furnished. The services must be
furnished while the individual is in a period of entitlement.
By whom the services must be furnished. The services must
be furnished by a facility or other entity as specified in Sec. Sec.
410.14 through 410.69.
Physician certification and recertification requirements.
If the services are subject to physician certification requirements,
they must be certified as being medically necessary, and as meeting
other applicable requirements, in accordance with subpart B of part
424.
As the definition of IVIG at section 1861(zz) of the Act now
includes the items and services necessary to administer IVIG in the
home, we propose to add the term ``items and services'' to the
regulation at Sec. 410.10(y). Furthermore, sub-regulatory guidance
documents (that is, IVIG LCD (33610) \136\ and IVIG Policy Article
(A52509) \137\) provide direction on coding and coverage for the IVIG
product at home. Through the Local Coverage Determination (LCD) for
Intravenous Immune Globulin (L33610),\138\ the Durable Medical
Equipment Medicare administrative contractors (DME MACs) specify the
Healthcare Common Procedure Coding System (HCPCS) codes for which IVIG
derivatives are covered under this benefit. Therefore, a beneficiary
must be receiving one of the IVIG derivatives specified under the LCD
for IVIG in order to qualify to receive the items and services covered
under section 1861(s)(2)(Z) of the Act. Furthermore, for any item
(including IVIG) to be covered by Medicare, it must (1) be eligible for
a defined Medicare benefit category, (2) be reasonable and
[[Page 43754]]
necessary for the diagnosis or treatment of illness or injury or to
improve the functioning of a malformed body member, and (3) meet all
other applicable Medicare statutory and regulatory requirements. Policy
guidance for the LCD for IVIG \139\ identifies the ICD-10-CM codes that
support medical necessity for the provision of IVIG in the home. These
diagnosis codes are listed in Table E1.
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\136\ https://www.cms.gov/medicare-coverage-database/view/lcd.aspx?LCDId=33610.
\137\ https://www.cms.gov/medicare-coverage-database/view/article.aspx?articleId=52509.
\138\ Local Coverage Determination (LCD): IVIG (L33610) https://www.cms.gov/medicare-coverage-database/view/lcd.aspx?LCDId=33610&ContrId=389.
\139\ https://www.cms.gov/medicare-coverage-database/view/article.aspx?articleId=52509.
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TP10JY23.073
In accordance with this guidance, a beneficiary must be diagnosed
with one of the primary immune deficiencies identified by the ICD-10-CM
codes, set out in Table E1 and as updated in subregulatory guidance, in
order to qualify to receive the items and services covered under
section 1861(s)(2)(Z) of the Act. This policy guidance is revised as
needed by the DME MACs. And finally, in order to qualify to receive
IVIG in the home, section 1861(zz) of the Act requires that a treating
practitioner must have determined that administration of the IVIG in
the patient's home is medically appropriate. Accordingly, we intend to
update the sub-regulatory guidance pursuant to the CAA, 2023 to reflect
the expansion of the benefit to the items and services related to the
administration of IVIG at home. Leveraging the existing regulations and
sub-regulatory guidance would maintain one set of standards across the
entire IVIG benefit (that is, for the product and for the related items
and services). This would result in seamless implementation from the
existing IVIG Demonstration, thereby ensuring immediate access for
beneficiaries requiring such items and services. We solicit comments on
our proposal to add ``items and services'' to the regulation at Sec.
410.10(y).
1. Items and Services Related to the Home Administration of IVIG
Section 101(c) of the Medicare IVIG Access Act established coverage
for items and services needed for the in-home administration of IVIG
for the treatment of primary immunodeficiencies under a Medicare
demonstration program. We interpret section 4134 of the CAA, 2023 to
make permanent coverage of the same items and services under the
existing IVIG Demonstration in order to ensure continuous and
comprehensive coverage for beneficiaries who choose to receive home
IVIG therapy. Under the Demonstration, the bundled payment for the
items and services necessary to administer the drug intravenously in
the home includes the infusion set and tubing, and nursing services to
complete an infusion of IVIG lasting on average three to five
hours.\140\ Although ``items and services'' are not explicitly defined
under section 4134 of the CAA, 2023, we believe the items and services
covered under the Demonstration are inherently the same items and
services that would be covered under the payment added to the benefit
category at section 1861(s)(2)(Z) of the Act. While
[[Page 43755]]
we are not enumerating a list of services that must be included in the
separate bundled payment, we anticipate that the nursing services would
include such professional services as IVIG administration, assessment
and site care, and education. Moreover, it is up the provider to
determine the services and supplies that are appropriate and necessary
to administer the IVIG for each individual. This may or may not include
the use of a pump. Because IVIG does not have to be administered
through a pump (although it can be), external infusion pumps are not
covered under the DME benefit for the administration of IVIG. An
external infusion pump is only covered under the DME benefit if the
infusion pump is necessary to safely administer the drug. The Local
Coverage Determination (LCD) for External Infusion Pumps identify the
drugs and biologicals that the DME Medicare Administrative Contractors
(MACs) have determined require the use of such pumps and cannot be
administered via a disposable elastomeric pump or the gravity drip
method.\141\ As such, under the IVIG Demonstration, coverage does not
extend to the DME pump, and thereby, would not be covered separately
under the home IVIG items and services payment.
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\140\ Updated Interim Report to Congress: Evaluation of the
Medicare Patient Intravenous Immunoglobulin Demonstration Project,
August 2022 found at: https://innovation.cms.gov/data-and-reports/2022/ivig-updatedintrtc.
\141\ https://www.cms.gov/medicare-coverage-database/view/lcd.aspx?LCDId=33794.
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We invite comments on any additional interpretations of items and
services that may be considered under the scope of the home IVIG
benefit.
2. Home IVIG Items and Services and the Relationship to/Interaction
With Home Health and Home Infusion Therapy Services
Prior to enactment of the CAA, 2023, IVIG administration items and
services were explicitly excluded from coverage under the Part B IVIG
benefit. However, if a beneficiary was considered homebound and
qualified for the home health benefit, the items and services needed to
administer IVIG in the home could be covered as home health services.
Section 4134(b) of the CAA, 2023 excludes the IVIG items and services
bundled payment in the case of an individual receiving home health
services under section 1895 of the Act. Therefore, a beneficiary does
not have to be considered confined to the home (that is, homebound) in
order to be eligible for the home IVIG benefit; however, homebound
beneficiaries requiring items and services related to the
administration of home IVIG, and who are receiving services under a
home health plan of care, may continue to receive services related to
the administration of home IVIG as covered home health services. As
such, in the case that a beneficiary is receiving home health services
under the home health benefit, the home health agency could continue to
bill for these items and services under the home health benefit and the
drug would be continued to be paid under Part B. A separate payment for
the IVIG items and services under the IVIG benefit would be prohibited.
With regard to the home infusion therapy (HIT) services benefit,
Medicare payment for home infusion therapy services is for services
furnished in coordination with the furnishing of intravenous and
subcutaneous infusion drugs and biologicals specified on the DME LCD
for External Infusion Pumps (L33794),\142\ with the exception of
insulin pump systems and certain drugs and biologicals on a self-
administered drug exclusion list. In order for the drugs and
biologicals to be covered under the Part B DME benefit they must
require infusion through an external infusion pump. If the drug or
biological can be infused through a disposable pump or by a gravity
drip, it does not meet this criterion. IVIG does not require an
external infusion pump for administration purposes and therefore, is
explicitly excluded from the DME LCD for External Infusion Pumps.
However, subcutaneous immunoglobulin (SCIg) is covered under the DME
LCD for External Infusion Pumps, and items and services for
administration in the home are covered under the HIT services benefit.
While a DME supplier and a HIT supplier (or a DME supplier also
enrolled as a HIT supplier) could not furnish services related to the
administration of immunoglobulin (either IVIG or SCIg) to the same
beneficiary on the same day, a beneficiary could potentially receive
services under both benefits for services related to the infusion of
different drugs. For example, a DME supplier also accredited and
enrolled as a HIT supplier, could furnish HIT services to a beneficiary
receiving intravenous acyclovir as well as IVIG, and bill both the IVIG
and the HIT services benefits on the same date of service. We also
recognize that a beneficiary may, on occasion, switch from receiving
immunoglobulin subcutaneously to intravenously and vice versa, and as
such, utilize both the HIT services and the IVIG benefits within the
same month. We invite comments on how typical it is for a patient to
alternate between receiving IVIG and SCIg and the frequency with which
it may occur.
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\142\ Local Coverage Determination (LCD): External Infusion
Pumps (L33794) https://www.cms.gov/medicare-coverage-database/view/lcd.aspx?LCDId=33794.
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C. Proposed IVIG Administration Items and Services Payment
As discussed previously, section 101 of the Medicare IVIG Access
Act established the authority for a Demonstration providing payment for
items and services needed for the in-home administration of IVIG. We
believe the provisions established under that law serve as the basis
for the conditions for payment with respect to the requirements that
must be met for Medicare payment to be made to suppliers for the items
and services covered under section 1861(s)(2)(Z) of the Act.
1. Home IVIG Administration Items and Services Supplier Type
Section 4134(b) of the CAA, 2023 amends section 1842(o) of the Act
by adding a new paragraph (8) that establishes a separate bundled
payment to the supplier for all items and services related to the
administration of such intravenous immune globulin, described in
section 1861(s)(2)(Z) of the Act to such individual in the patient's
home during a calendar day. Section 4134(c) of the CAA, 2023 amends
section 1834(j)(5) of the Act, which are a requirement for supplier of
medical equipment and supplies, by adding a new subparagraph (E),
clarifying with respect to payment, that items and services related to
the administration of intravenous immune globulin furnished on or after
January 1, 2024, as described in section 1861(zz) of the Act, are
included in the definition of medical equipment and supplies. This
means that suppliers that furnish IVIG administration items and
services must meet the existing DMEPOS supplier requirement for payment
purposes under this benefit. Suppliers of IVIG administration items and
services must enroll as a DMEPOS supplier and comply with the Medicare
program's DMEPOS supplier standards (found at 42 CFR 424.57(c)) and
DMEPOS quality standards to become accredited for furnishing medical
equipment and supplies. Further, in order to receive payment for home
IVIG items and services, the supplier must also meet the requirements
under subpart A of Part 424--Conditions for Medicare Payment. The
DMEPOS supplier may subcontract with a provider in order to meet the
professional services identified in section V.B.1. of this proposed
rule. All professionals who furnish services directly, under an
individual contract,
[[Page 43756]]
or under arrangements with a DMEPOS supplier to furnish services
related to the administration of IVIG in the home, must be legally
authorized (licensed, certified, or registered) in accordance with
applicable Federal, State, and local laws, and must act only within the
scope of their State license or State certification, or registration. A
supplier may not contract with any entity that is currently excluded
from the Medicare program, any State health care programs or from any
other federal procurement or non-procurement programs.
2. Home IVIG Administration
Section 1861(s)(2)(Z) of the Act defines benefit coverage of
intravenous immune globulin for the treatment of primary immune
deficiency diseases in the home. Under the IVIG Demonstration,
beneficiaries are eligible to participate if they receive IVIG services
in ``their home or a setting that is `home like' \143\ ''. Section
410.12(b) identifies the supplier types who can furnish the services
identified at Sec. 410.10. Section 410.38 provides the conditions for
payment for DME suppliers and identifies the institutions that may not
qualify as the patient's home. As such, the home administration of IVIG
items and services must be furnished in the patient's home, defined as
a place of residence used as the home of an individual, including an
institution that is used as a home. An institution that is used as a
home may not be a hospital, CAH, or SNF as defined in Sec. 410.38(b).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\143\ Intravenous Immune Globulin Demonstration MLN Fact Sheet:
https://www.cms.gov/files/document/mln3191598-intravenous-immune-globulin-demonstration.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
D. Proposed Home IVIG Items and Services Payment Rate
1. Proposed Payment Amount for Home IVIG Items and Services for CY 2024
Section 1842(o) of the Act provides the authority for the
development of a separate bundled payment for Medicare-covered items
and services related to the administration of intravenous immune
globulin to an individual in the patient's home during a calendar day,
in an amount that the Secretary determines to be appropriate. This
payment may be based on the payment established pursuant to section
101(d) of the Medicare IVIG Access Act. Section 4134(d) of the CAA,
2023, amends section 1833(a)(1) of the Act to provide that, with
respect to items and services related to the administration of IVIG
furnished on or after January 1, 2024, as described in section 1861(zz)
of the Act, the amounts paid shall be the lesser of the 80 percent of
the actual charge or the payment amount established under section
1842(o)(8).
In accordance with section 101(d) of the Medicare IVIG Access Act,
the Secretary established a per visit payment amount for the items and
services needed for the in-home administration of IVIG based on the
national per visit low-utilization payment amount (LUPA) under the
prospective payment system for home health services established under
section 1895 of the Social Security Act. Per the Demonstration, the
bundled payment amount for services needed for the home administration
of IVIG includes infusion services provided by a skilled nurse.
Therefore, the bundled payment is based on the LUPA amount for skilled
nursing, based on an average 4-hour infusion. The initial payment rate
for the first year of the Demonstration, was based on the full skilled
nursing LUPA for the first 90 minutes of the infusion and 50 percent of
the LUPA for each hour thereafter for an additional 3 hours.
Thereafter, the payment rate is annually updated based on the nursing
LUPA rate for such year. The service is subject to coinsurance and
deductibles similar to other Part B services.
As we noted in sectionV.B.1. of this proposed rule, we believe that
payment under section 1861(s)(2)(Z) of the Act covers the same items
and services covered under the IVIG Demonstration. Likewise, we also
agree that the professional services needed to safely administer IVIG
in the home would be services furnished by a registered nurse.
Therefore, we believe setting the CY 2024 payment rate for the home
IVIG items and services under section 1861(s)(2)(Z) of the Act, based
on the CY 2023 payment amount established under the Demonstration
($408.23) is appropriate. However, although the Demonstration used the
LUPA rate, which is annually adjusted by the wage index budget
neutrality factor, as well as the home health payment rate update
percentage, we believe it is appropriate to propose to update the CY
2023 IVIG services Demonstration rate by only the CY 2024 home health
payment rate update percentage and not include the wage index budget
neutrality factor, as the IVIG items and services payment rate is not
statutorily required to be geographically wage adjusted. Therefore, the
proposed home IVIG items and services payment rate for CY 2024 would be
$408.23*1.027 = $419.25.
Further, although section 1842(o) of the Act states that payment is
for the items and services furnished to an individual in the patient's
home during a calendar day, we believe that, as the statute aligns the
payment amount with such amount determined under the Demonstration, the
best reading of ``calendar day'' is ``per visit.'' Additionally, we
would expect a supplier to furnish only one visit per calendar day.
We propose to establish a new Subpart R under the regulations at 42
CFR part 414 to incorporate payment provisions for the implementation
of the IVIG items and services payment in accordance with section
1842(o) of the Act for home IVIG items and services furnished on or
after January 1, 2024. We propose at Sec. 414.1700(a), that a single
payment amount is made for items and services furnished by a DMEPOS
supplier per visit. We propose at Sec. 414.1700(b), to set the initial
payment amount equivalent to the CY 2023 ``Services, Supplies, and
Accessories Used in the home under the Medicare IVIG Demonstration''
payment amount, updated by the proposed CY 2024 home health update
percentage of 2.7 percent. We are soliciting comments on these payment
proposals, including the proposed CY 2024 payment rate.
(a) Proposed Annual Payment Update
As discussed previously, the IVIG Demonstration used the nursing
LUPA rate, which is annually adjusted by the wage index budget
neutrality factor, as well as the home health update percentage, as the
payment rate for such year of services. Because the IVIG services
payment is not geographically wage adjusted, we believe it is more
appropriate to annually adjust the IVIG items and services payment rate
only by the home health payment update percentage. As such we propose
at Sec. 414.1700(c), beginning in 2025, the per-visit payment amount
from the prior year will be annually increased by the home health
update percentage for the current calendar year. We solicit comments on
the use of the home health update percentage to annually update the
IVIG items and services payment beyond CY 2024.
E. Billing Procedures for Home IVIG Items and Services
In order to ensure a smooth transition for DME suppliers to bill
for the items and services related to the home administration of IVIG,
we will use the existing Q-code (Q2052) under the Demonstration, with a
new descriptor (``Services, Supplies, and Accessories used in the Home
for the Administration of Intravenous Immune Globulin'') in order to
bill for items and services under Medicare FFS. The Q-
[[Page 43757]]
code would continue to be billed separately from, or on the same claim
as, the J-code for the IVIG product and would be processed through the
DME MACs. The Q-code should be billed as a separate claim line on the
same claim for the same place of service as the J-code for the IVIG. In
cases where the IVIG product is mailed or delivered to the patient
prior to administration, the date of service for the administration of
the IVIG (the Q-code) may be no more than 30 calendar days after the
date of service on the IVIG product claim line. No more than one Q-code
should be billed per claim line per date of service.
If a provider is billing for multiple administrations of IVIG on a
single claim, then the supplier would bill the Q-code for each date of
service on a separate claim line, which would be payable per visit
(that is, each time the IVIG is administered). There may be situations
in which multiple units of IVIG are shipped to the patient and billed
on a single ``J'' code claim line followed by more than one Q-code
administration claim line, each with the date of service on which the
IVIG was administered. However, only one Q-code shall be paid per
infusion date of service. In order to implement the requirements for
this separate bundled payment under section 1861(s)(2)(Z) of the Act,
we would issue a Change Request (CR) prior to implementation of this
payment, including the Q-code needed for billing, outlining the
requirements for the claims processing changes needed to implement this
payment.
VI. Hospice Informal Dispute Resolution and Special Focus Program
A. Background and Statutory Authority
Division CC, section 407 of the Consolidated Appropriations Act of
2021 (CAA), 2021, amended Part A of Title XVIII of the Act to add a new
section 1822, and amended sections 1864(a) and 1865(b) of the Act,
establishing new hospice program survey and enforcement requirements,
required public reporting of survey information, and a new hospice
hotline.
The provisions in the CAA, 2021 direct the Secretary to create a
Special Focus Program (SFP) for poor-performing hospice programs, give
authority for imposing enforcement remedies for noncompliant hospice
programs, and require the development and implementation of a range of
remedies as well as procedures for appealing determinations regarding
these remedies. These enforcement remedies can be imposed instead of,
or in addition to, termination of the hospice programs' participation
in the Medicare program. The remedies include civil money penalties
(CMP), directed in-service training, directed plan of correction,
suspension of all or part of payments, and appointment of temporary
management to oversee operations.
In the CY 2022 HH PPS final rule (86 FR 62240), we addressed
provisions related to hospice survey enforcement and other activities
described in the rule. A summary of the finalized CAA, 2021 provisions
regarding hospice survey and enforcement can be found in the CY 2022 HH
PPS final rule (86 FR 62243), available at https://www.govinfo.gov/content/pkg/FR-2021-11-09/pdf/2021-23993.pdf. We finalized all the CAA,
2021 provisions related to hospice survey and enforcement in CY 2022
rulemaking except for the SFP. As outlined in the CY 2022 HH PPS final
rule, we stated that we would consider public comments we received and
seek additional collaboration with stakeholders to further develop a
revised proposal and methodology for the SFP.
In the FY 2023 Hospice Wage Index and Payment Rate Update and
Hospice Quality Reporting Requirements final rule (87 FR 4566) (Hospice
rule), we affirmed our intention to initiate a hospice Technical Expert
Panel (TEP) to provide input on the structure and methodology of the
SFP. Public comments received in response to the FY 2023 Hospice rule
generally supported CMS's efforts to establish an SFP and to convene a
TEP as part of the SFP development. A 30-day call for nominations was
held July 14 through August 14, 2022, and nine TEP members were
selected, representing a diverse range of experience and expertise
related to hospice care and quality. A CMS contractor convened a TEP in
October and November 2022, which provided feedback and considerations
on the preliminary SFP concepts, including developing a methodology to
identify hospice poor-performers, criteria for completing the SFP and
for termination from Medicare when a hospice cannot complete the SFP,
and public reporting. Details from the TEP meetings, including their
recommendations, are available in the TEP summary report \144\ on the
CMS website at https://www.cms.gov/medicare/quality-safety-oversight-certification-compliance/hospice-special-focus-program.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\144\ 2022 Technical Expert Panel and Stakeholder Listening
Sessions: Hospice Special Focus Program Summary Report (April 28,
2023).
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B. Proposed Regulatory Provisions
1. Overview
In this proposed rule, we are proposing in Subpart M--Survey and
Certification of Hospice Programs, to add new definitions of ``Hospice
Special Focus Program,'' ``IDR,'' ``SFP status,'' and ``SFP survey'' at
Sec. 488.1105. We are also proposing a hospice informal dispute
resolution process at Sec. 488.1130 to provide hospice programs an
informal opportunity to resolve disputes related to condition-level
survey findings for those hospice programs that are seeking
recertification from the State survey agency (SA), CMS, or
reaccreditation from the accrediting organization (AO) for continued
participation in Medicare. Informal dispute resolution would also be
offered to hospice programs following a complaint or validation survey
and those in the SFP. We are proposing the specific details on the
hospice SFP at Sec. 488.1135, which includes the criteria for
selection and completion of the SFP, hospice termination from Medicare,
and public reporting of the SFP. We are proposing that the hospice SFP
will commence as of the effective date of the rule, and we anticipate
selecting SFP hospices in CY 2024. We also propose to periodically
review the effectiveness of the methodology and the algorithm.
2. Proposed Definitions (Sec. 488.1105)
We propose to add four new definitions to Sec. 488.1105, that
would define the hospice SFP, IDR, SFP status, and SFP survey. The
definitions proposed for hospice programs are as follows:
Hospice Special Focus Program (SFP) means a
program conducted by CMS to identify hospices as poor performers, based
on defined quality indicators, in which CMS selects hospices for
increased oversight to ensure that they meet Medicare requirements.
Selected hospices either successfully complete the SFP program or are
terminated from the Medicare program.
IDR stands for informal dispute resolution.
SFP status means the status of a hospice
provider in the SFP with respect to the provider's standing in the SFP,
which is indicated by one of the following status levels: Level 1--in
progress; Level 2--completed successfully; or Level 3--terminated from
the Medicare program.
SFP survey refers to a standard survey as
defined in Sec. 488.1105 and is performed after a hospice is selected
for the SFP and is conducted every 6 months, up to three occurrences.
[[Page 43758]]
3. Informal Dispute Resolution (Sec. 488.1130)
We propose at new Sec. 488.1130 to make an Informal Dispute
Resolution (IDR) process available to hospice programs to address
disputes related to condition-level survey findings following a hospice
program's receipt of the official survey Statement of Deficiencies and
Plan of Correction, Form CMS-2567. The proposed IDR for hospices would
be similar to the process already in existence for home health
agencies. The proposed IDR process for hospice programs, like that of
HHAs, is for condition-level survey findings which may be the impetus
for an enforcement action. Standard-level findings alone do not trigger
an enforcement action and are not accompanied by appeal and hearing
rights. The proposed IDR process would provide hospice programs an
informal opportunity to resolve disputes regarding survey findings for
those hospice programs seeking recertification from the SA, CMS, or
reaccreditation from the AO for continued participation in Medicare.
Additionally, proposed IDR may be initiated for programs under SA
monitoring (either through a complaint investigation or validation
survey) and those in the proposed SFP. For hospice programs deemed
through a CMS-approved AO, the AO would receive the IDR request from
their deemed facility program, following the same process and
coordinating with CMS regarding any enforcement actions. In accordance
with 42 CFR 488.5(a)(4), AOs must have a comparable survey process to
the SAs. For deemed hospice programs, the AO communicates any
condition-level findings to the applicable CMS Location. If a deemed
hospice fails to meet the Medicare requirements or shows continued
condition-level noncompliance, deemed status is generally removed and
oversight is placed under the SA. The purpose of the proposed IDR
process would be to provide an opportunity to settle disagreements at
the earliest stage, prior to a formal hearing, and to conserve time and
money resources potentially spent by the hospice, the SA, and CMS. The
proposed IDR process may not be used to refute an enforcement action or
selection into the SFP. Additionally, we propose that failure of CMS,
or the State or the AO, as appropriate, to complete IDR must not delay
the effective date of any enforcement action.
When survey findings indicate a condition-level deficiency (or
deficiencies), the hospice program would be notified in writing of its
opportunity to request an IDR for those deficiencies. This notice will
would be provided to the hospice program when the CMS-2567 Statement of
Deficiencies and Plan of Correction is issued to the hospice. We
propose that the hospice's request for IDR must be submitted in writing
(electronically or hard copy), include the specific survey findings
that are disputed, and be submitted within the same 10 calendar days
allowable for submitting an acceptable plan of correction.
The proposed IDR provision balances the need for hospice programs
to avoid unnecessary disputes and protracted litigation using the most
rapid mechanism for correcting deficiencies and aligning with the
interests of hospice patients/caregivers. IDR is meant to be an
informal process whereby the provider has an opportunity to address the
surveyor's findings, either by disputing them or providing additional
information.
We propose that if any survey findings are revised or removed by
the State or CMS based on IDR, and if CMS accepts the IDR results, the
CMS-2567 would be revised accordingly. If CMS accepts the IDR results
and the revised Form CMS-2567, then CMS would adjust any enforcement
actions imposed solely due to those cited and revised deficiencies. If
the survey findings are upheld by CMS or the state following IDR, the
Form CMS-2567 would not be revised based on the IDR and there would not
be adjustments to the enforcement actions.
4. Special Focus Program (Sec. 488.1135)
Section 1822(b) of the Act requires the Secretary to conduct a
Special Focus Program for hospice programs that the Secretary has
identified as having substantially failed to meet applicable
requirements of the Act. We propose at Sec. 488.1135 a hospice SFP to
address issues that place hospice beneficiaries at risk for poor
quality of care through increased oversight. We propose that specific
criteria would be used to determine whether a hospice program
participates in the SFP as outlined in the proposed rule. We also
propose the proposed hospice SFP would commence as per the effective
date of the final rule when published, and we anticipate selecting SFP
hospices starting in CY 2024. We propose to periodically review the
effectiveness of the methodology and the algorithm and make adjustments
through rulemaking as necessary.
a. Proposed Hospice Special Focus Program Algorithm
In establishing the proposed Hospice SFP, we examined the Special
Focus Facility program for nursing homes and its methodology for
facility selection. Although the proposed methodology for the hospice
program SFP is similar in certain facets, the proposed SFP methodology
is tailored specifically to this setting and to the data that is
available to evaluate hospice performance.
We propose to identify a subset of 10 percent of hospice programs
based on the highest aggregate scores determined by the algorithm. The
hospices selected for the SFP from the 10 percent would be determined
by CMS.
To identify ``poor performance,'' we have identified several
indicators, namely, survey reports with Condition-Level Deficiencies
(CLDs) and complaints with substantiated allegations, and CMS Medicare
data sources from the Hospice Quality Reporting Program (HQRP)
(Medicare claims and Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and
Systems (CAHPS[supreg]) Hospice Survey). These indicators, which can be
used to identify potential poor performance, have been integrated into
the proposed SFP algorithm to assist in identifying potential hospice
providers for the SFP.
As discussed previously, we propose to use multiple data sources to
provide a comprehensive view of the quality of care provided at the
identified hospices. The compilation of these data sources illustrates
areas of concern--validated/identified issues based on in-person/on-
site review of a hospice to meet Medicare requirements; caregiver and
public complaints about hospices not providing quality of care or not
meeting Medicare requirements; and quality measures that inform the
public of whether a hospice is providing expected care processes or
outcomes. We believe these are indicators of poor quality hospice care.
The proposed SFP algorithm is designed as an initial step in
identifying poor quality indicators.
b. Proposed Use of Medicare Data Sources To Identify Poor Performing
Hospices
To identify hospices with poor quality indicators, we propose using
the most recent complete Medicare hospice data from two data sources:
(1) hospice surveys; and (2) Medicare HQRP. Each source represents
distinct dimensions of hospice care that we have identified as related
to a hospice's performance or practices. From these data sources, we
propose using multiple indicators of
[[Page 43759]]
hospice care delivery to identify poor performing hospices (see Table
1). Hospices would be identified for potential SFP enrollment if they--
(1) have data from any of the aforementioned data sources; (2) are
listed as an active provider (that is, have billed at least one claim
to Medicare FFS in the last 12 months); and (3) operate in the United
States, including the District of Columbia and U.S. territories. Each
data source and the proposed quality indicators are discussed further
later in this preamble. Based on these proposed criteria, in CY 2019
through CY 2021 analytic file, 5,943 hospices would be eligible for
participation in the SFP.
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TP10JY23.074
(1) Hospice Survey Data
(a) Quality-of-Care Condition-Level Deficiencies (CLDs)
Hospices are surveyed for compliance with hospice program
requirements prior to becoming certified as a hospice provider in
Medicare (initial certification survey) and then at least once every 36
months (standard survey for recertification (Sec. 418.1110)), with
roughly one-third of all hospices being surveyed each year. A post-
survey revisit or follow-up survey may also occur to determine if the
hospice corrected cited deficiencies. Hospice survey data (initial
certification, standard recertification, and follow-up) is collected on
the Certification And Survey Provider Enhanced Reports (CASPER) system.
CMS will be posting publicly available hospice survey finding
information to the Quality, Certification and Oversight Report (QCOR)
website in CY 2023. For information related to the hospice survey
process, we encourage the public to review the CMS State Operations
Manual (SOM), Appendix M (internet Only Publication 100-07).
A CLD is cited on a survey when a hospice is found to be
noncompliant with all or part of a condition of participation (CoP),
which is one of the health and safety requirements all hospices are
required to meet to participate in Medicare. As discussed in the QSOG
memo (QSO-23-08-hospice) issued on January 27, 2023, a significant
change in the hospice survey protocol was made to provide an enhanced
approach to investigating the quality-of-care provided to hospice
patients. While each of the 23 CoPs continues to have equal weight in
the final certification decision, special attention is directed to
those CoPs directly impacting patient care for purposes of the proposed
SFP. Consistent with this enhanced survey process, we have identified
11 quality-of-care CoPs that directly contribute to the quality-of-care
delivered to patients, their caregivers, and families, and believe that
a cited CLD on any one of them may indicate a hospice is providing poor
quality-of-care. Therefore, we propose to include the 11 quality-of-
care CLDs noted in Table F2) as data indicators in the SFP algorithm.
The SFP algorithm would focus on quality-of-care CLDs because they are
based on observable quality concerns seen and reported by hospice
surveyors to identify hospices that provide poorer quality-of-care to
hospice patients. Additionally, we did not include all 23 hospice CoPs
because we did not want to dilute the methodology's ability to identify
quality concerns. However, we may explore incorporating other CoPs into
the methodology, and we solicit comments on an alternative approach
that would incorporate other CoPs in the calculation for the SFP
algorithm.
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TP10JY23.075
[[Page 43760]]
We propose to count the total number of quality-of-care CLDs from
the previous 3 consecutive years of data. Our analysis of data from CY
2019 through 2021 found that very few hospices are not present in the
survey data, and that the overwhelming majority of hospices (88.3
percent of all proposed SFP-eligible hospices or 5,248 out of 5,943)
had no quality-of-care CLDs cited over these 3 years. Of the 5,943
hospices identified that would be SFP-eligible under the CY 2019-2021
data, 5.7 percent (that is, 341 hospices) are not present in the survey
data. This means that each of those 341 hospices has not yet received
its standard survey or their survey results had not been recorded as of
the time the data was accessed for analysis from the CASPER system and/
or had no recorded substantiated complaint in the internet Quality
Improvement and Evaluation System (iQIES). Considering public comments
received on the CY 2022 HH PPS final rule (86 FR 62240) and the SFP TEP
feedback, stakeholders expressed concern about inter-surveyor
reliability and state-to-state variability in survey policy as
potential drawbacks of including survey data as part of the SFP program
methodology. However, the TEP also acknowledged the importance and
value of survey data that identifies whether a hospice complies with
Medicare requirements to support basic care quality. Furthermore, the
TEP supported using the total count of quality-of-care CLDs to indicate
significant noncompliance with multiple CoPs. To address the inter-
surveyor reliability and variability concerns, we have implemented
improvements to surveyor training guidelines to increase surveyor
standardization between SAs and AOs. Based on our efforts to improve
surveyor training, and considering the TEP and stakeholder concerns, we
propose counting the total number of quality-of-care CLDs from the last
3 consecutive years of data.
(b) Substantiated Complaints
In addition to quality-of-care CLDs, we propose to include the
total number of substantiated complaints received against a hospice in
the last 3 consecutive years of data before the release of the SFP
selection list. Complaints against a hospice may be filed with the SA
or Beneficiary and Family Centered Care Quality Improvement
Organization at any time by a patient and/or caregiver(s) and hospice
staff members (Medicare SOM Chapter 5). Once a complaint is filed with
the SA, the SA can conduct an unannounced complaint investigation
survey to substantiate or refute the complaint. If the allegation is
found to be substantiated or confirmed, the SA informs the hospice and
submits the findings to iQIES. A post-survey revisit or follow-up
survey may also occur to determine if the hospice has made corrections
and is in compliance with all requirements. A hospice may have many
complaints filed against them, but not all complaints may be
substantiated upon SA review. The results of the review of complaints
are submitted to the iQIES system, which is not publicly available.
Like quality-of-care CLDs, most hospices in our analysis currently have
no substantiated complaints in the identified 3-year period. Our CY
2019-2021 survey data analysis found that currently 81.8 percent of
hospice programs (that is,4,860 of the 5,943 SFP-eligible hospices)
have had no substantiated complaints over the past 3 years. As noted
previously, there are 5.7 percent of eligible hospices that have no
survey data, or in other words, there is missingness in the survey data
for those hospices. Unlike quality-of-care CLDs, where missingness is
likely due to the absence of a recent survey, the absence of
substantiated complaints from this data is likely because the hospice
program has no substantiated complaints.
(2) Hospice Quality Reporting Program (HQRP) Data
In addition to survey data, we propose to use quality measures from
the Hospice Quality Reporting Program (HQRP) to capture hospice care
processes and beneficiary/caregiver care experiences. The HQRP includes
data submitted by hospices via the Hospice Item Set (HIS), Medicare
hospice claims, and the CAHPS Hospice Surveys. All Medicare-certified
hospices must comply with these reporting requirements or face
penalties for a failure to report, although some hospices may be exempt
from reporting certain measures.\145\ This ensures that most hospices
have these data available for use in the SFP algorithm. These quality
measure data are publicly available in the Provider Data Catalog (PDC)
at https://data.cms.gov/provider-data/topics/hospice-care and Care
Compare at https://www.medicare.gov/care-compare/?providerType=Hospice.
A description of current HQRP measures and public reporting dates is
available online. We propose to include five publicly reported HQRP
measures to identify poor performing hospices. The proposed measures
are as follows:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\145\ Information on the reporting requirements and Annual
Payment Update payment penalties for the failure to report can be
found on the HQRP Overview website or section 1814(i) of the Act.
Medicare claims-based measure:--Hospice Care Index (HCI)
Overall Score
CAHPS Hospice Survey Data measures:
++ Help for Pain and Symptoms
++ Getting Timely Help
++ Willingness to Recommend this Hospice
++ Overall Rating of this Hospice
(a) Hospice Care Index (HCI)
We propose including the HCI overall score based on eight quarters
of Medicare claims data. The HCI captures multiple aspects of care
delivery across ten indicators that comprise a composite HCI overall
score, with hospices earning a point for each indicator met (range: 0-
10 such that a lower score indicates lower quality of care). The
proposed HCI overall score indicates hospice care quality between
admission and discharge (HCI Technical Report). Moreover, the HCI score
is based on Medicare claims data, which provide direct evidence of care
delivery decisions at a hospice that is readily available for all
hospices. For public reporting, hospices with less than 20 claims over
the eight quarters are excluded from reporting the measure. The HCI
measure would also be suppressed if any 1 of the 10 indicators is not
reported for any reason. Additional details of the HCI, such as the
quality measure specifications, data period, and exclusion criteria,
are available in the HQRP Quality Measure (QM) User's Manual posted on
the HQRP Current Measures web page. The TEP and previous public
comments generally supported the inclusion of HCI data in the
preliminary methodology because the HCI captures a robust majority of
hospices participating in Medicare and covers key aspects of the
hospice care continuum. Our analysis of FYs 2019 to 2021 (excluding
January through June 2020) HCI data found that 78.3 percent of hospice
programs (that is, 4,656 of the 5,943 SFP-eligible hospices) had a
publicly reported HCI score. The overwhelming majority of those
hospices receive an HCI score of 8 or more out of 10--4,007 (86.1
percent) of the 4,656 SFP eligible hospices with an HCI score reported.
(b) CAHPS Hospice Survey
To represent decedent/caregiver experience of hospice care, and in
consideration of TEP and stakeholder perspectives, we propose using
four measures from the CAHPS Hospice Survey: (1) help for pain and
symptoms;
[[Page 43761]]
(2) getting timely help; (3) willingness to recommend the hospice; and
(4) overall rating of the hospice. CAHPS Hospice Survey measure scores
are calculated across eight rolling quarters for all hospices with at
least 30 completed surveys. Some hospices do not participate in CAHPS
as new hospices are exempt from reporting CAHPS measures for the
calendar year in which they receive their CMS Certification Number
(CCN), and hospices can apply for a CAHPS exemption if they serve fewer
than 50 survey--eligible decedents/caregivers in a given calendar year.
The CAHPS Hospice measures are publicly available from the Provider
CAHPS Hospice Survey Data file on the Hospice PDC. Additional details
are in the QM User's Manual on the HQRP Current Measures web page.
These CAHPS Hospice Survey measure scores are also publicly reported on
the Care Compare website at https://www.medicare.gov/care-compare/?providerType=Hospice. As discussed in the SFP TEP report, TEP and
other stakeholders agreed that the algorithm is strengthened by
including the four CAHPS Hospice Survey measures as they reflect
caregiver-reported experiences in key areas of hospice quality not
reflected in claims or inspection surveys.
From the CAHPS Hospice Survey data, we propose to use adjusted
bottom-box scores of the four measures described previously above to
create a CAHPS Hospice Survey Index. As described in the CMS document,
``Calculating CAHPS[supreg] Hospice Survey Top-, Middle-, and Bottom-
Box Scores,'' that summarizes the steps we use to calculate CAHPS
Hospice Survey measure scores, ``bottom-box'' scores are calculated for
each respondent as ``100'' if the respondent selected the least
positive response categories for that question and ``0'' if the
respondent selected a different response category; survey respondents
who do not answer a question are not included in the scoring of that
question. In the CAHPS Hospice Survey, different questions have
different response scales, so the bottom-box responses vary across the
survey. For example, for questions with response options of ``Yes,
definitely,'' ``Yes, somewhat,'' and ``No,'' the bottom-box response is
``No''; for questions with response options of ``Never,''
``Sometimes,'' ``Usually,'' and ``Always,'' the bottom-box responses
are both ``Never'' and ``Sometimes''; Person-level bottom-box scores
for each question are then adjusted for mode of survey administration
and case-mix to produce hospice-level bottom-box scores. Bottom-box
scores for a particular question can be interpreted as the percentage
of respondents who selected the least positive response category(ies)
after adjusting for mode of survey administration and differences in
the mix of decedent/caregiver characteristics across hospices.
Composite measure scores, such as those for Help for Pain and Symptoms
and Getting Timely Help, are formed by taking the average of fully-
adjusted hospice-level question scores within the composite. We propose
using bottom-box scores for the SFP, because they quantify reported
problematic care experiences. To create the CAHPS Hospice Survey Index,
we propose to calculate a single score for each hospice by taking a
weighted sum of the bottom-box scores for the four CAHPS measures, as
described later in this section. Specifically, we propose that the two
measures that represent overall assessments of hospice care (that is,
Willingness to Recommend this Hospice and Overall Rating of this
Hospice) each be given a weight of 0.5 as these measures assess similar
concepts. We propose to weight the other two measures, Help for Pain
and Symptoms and Getting Timely Help, at 1.0 each to reflect that these
measures assess distinct aspects of care.
To illustrate, not including usually applied adjustments to the
data for case mix and mode of survey administration, if Hospice A
received a bottom-box score of 100 on the Overall Rating of this
Hospice, that means that all the survey respondents responded to the
question and gave the hospice an overall rating of zero to six, the
least positive possible responses (middle-box options: 7-8; top-box
option: 9-10). The hospice could then receive, a bottom-box score of 0
on the Help for Pain and Symptoms measure, meaning none of the survey
respondents selected the least positive responses on any of the
questions that make up this measure. If Hospice A also received a
bottom-box score of 12 on the Willingness to Recommend this Hospice and
a bottom-box score of 4.5 on the Getting Timely Help measure, meaning
that approximately 12 percent and 4.5 percent of respondents,
respectively, selected the bottom-box scores, then Hospice A's total
CAHPS Hospice Survey Index would be 60.5, calculated as follows: ((100
+ 12) * 0.5) + (0 + 4.5) = 60.5. The maximum value for the CAHPS
Hospice Survey Index would be 300 points. For this index, a lower
number of points would indicate a higher quality score.
Our analysis of CYs 2019 to 2021 (excluding January through June
2020) CAHPS Hospice Survey data found that 49.3 percent of eligible
hospice programs (2,929 of the 5,943 SFP-eligible hospices) report the
four CAHPS Hospice Survey measures. Compared to the other three
indicators (quality-of-care CLDs, substantiated complaints, and HCI),
the scores from the four CAHPS measures are more dispersed around their
average value. The average CAHPS Hospice Survey Index value for these
four measures combined is 24, with an overall range of 2 to 83 from the
SFP-eligible hospices (lower scores indicate better performance; total
possible range: 0-300). The distribution of these values is roughly
symmetric and centered on an average such that the likelihood of
observing a value different from the average value becomes smaller the
further away the value is from the average.
c. Proposed Data Source Preparation
We propose to compile the data for the algorithm indicators
(quality-of-care CLDs, substantiated complaints, HCI, the four CAHPS
Hospice measures) and remove hospices not eligible for SFP to create a
single score for every hospice. A Medicare-certified hospice program
would be included in the algorithm if it--(1) is an active provider
that has billed at least one claim to Medicare FFS in the last 12
months as captured in iQIES; and (2) has data for at least one
algorithm indicator.
For the HCI and CAHPS data, we propose pulling the latest HCI and
CAHPS data from the Hospice PDC. For example, we would use data from
November 2023 to identify the pool of hospices eligible to be in the
SFP on or after January 1, 2024.
(1) Survey Data and HCI
For the survey data, we propose the following steps to prepare data
for the algorithm:
Step One: We propose to pull 3 consecutive years of survey
data preceding the release of the SFP selection list, including data
for all relevant hospice survey types (initial certification, standard,
complaint, and follow-up surveys). For identifying the pool of hospices
eligible to be in the SFP on or after January 1, 2024, we propose to
use 2020-2023 survey data.
Step Two: From the survey data in Step One, we propose to
count the total number of quality-of-care CLDs for each hospice in the
data file. Quality-of-care CLDs can be found in any hospice survey
(initial certification, standard, complaint, follow-up). They are
denoted within a survey under specific citation codes (Table F2).
Step Three: From the data file in Step One, we propose to
count the total
[[Page 43762]]
number of substantiated complaints for each hospice in the data file.
Substantiated complaints can be found in complaint and follow-up
hospice surveys.
Our initial analysis found that the proposed SFP-eligible hospices
may have missing indicators from the survey data (quality-of-care CLDs,
substantiated complaints,) and/or HCI. To address the algorithm's
missing data for these indicators, we propose standardizing each
indicator for quality-of-care CLDs, substantiated complaints, and HCI.
Specifically, we propose that hospices missing any of these three
indicators would be assigned a value of zero for that indicator after
standardization (see section VI.B.4.d. of this proposed rule).
(2) CAHPS[supreg] Hospice Survey Data
As discussed previously, CAHPS Hospice Survey data are not
available for hospices that are exempt from participating due to size
or newness, or for hospices for which there are fewer than 30 completed
surveys over an eight-quarter reporting period. Since these hospices
may differ systematically from hospices that do have publicly reported
CAHPS Hospice Survey data, we do not believe it is appropriate to
assign hospices the average value of the CAHPS Hospice Survey Index if
they are missing these data. After standardizing the CAHPS Hospice
Survey measures (using the same process for survey data and HCI as
proposed in sections VI.B.4. and VI.B.4.d. of this proposed rule), we
propose addressing missing CAHPS Hospice Survey data by averaging the
total number of data indicators used to derive the score. The score for
hospices with missing CAHPS Hospice Survey data would be based solely
on all other indicators (CLDs, complaints, and HCI), and the score for
hospices with available CAHPS Hospice Survey data includes the CAHPS
Hospice Survey Index in addition to the other indicators (see section
VI.B.4.d.(2) of this proposed ruled.
d. Proposed Data Source Standardization
We propose standardizing each indicator (that is, quality-of-care
CLDs, substantiated complaints, HCI, and the CAHPS Hospice Survey
Index) to compare indicators equally despite each data source's
different units of measurement. For example, both quality-of-care CLDs
and substantiated complaints are continuous variables that have no
ceiling to how many quality-of-care CLDs or substantiated complaints a
single hospice can receive. In contrast, a hospice can only receive a
maximum value of 10 from the HCI quality measure. Therefore, if we do
not rescale HCI, we would be deemphasizing the importance of HCI for
the SFP as a relevant dimension of care quality because the range of
possible values for HCI is much smaller than the range of possible
values for quality-of-care CLDs and substantiated complaints. By
standardizing the data as proposed, we can understand how different the
indicator is for a single hospice compared to the indicator from the
average hospice and shift the unit to a magnitude of difference from
the average across all indicators to compare the data source indicators
under a shared measurement unit.
As a simplified example to illustrate the importance of
standardization, Hospice A has one quality-of-care CLD and HCI score of
3. These two numbers' absolute differences are two (3 HCI-1 quality-of-
care CLD = 2). However, examining the absolute difference in these
numbers does not indicate that Hospice A delivers poor care quality. To
better explain how these two indicators relate to one another and
quality, we look at the likelihood that Hospice A would receive one
quality-of-care CLD and the likelihood that it would receive an HCI
score of 3. To determine this likelihood, we propose comparing these
numbers to the respective averages of all other hospices for the
indicators. The average number of quality-of-care CLDs for hospices is
a little less than 0.5. Most hospices have zero quality-of-care CLDs.
While a quality-of-care CLD of one is larger than the average (0.5),
the magnitude of difference between the one quality-of-care CLD in
Hospice A and the 0.5 quality-of-care CLDs for the average hospice is
not very large. When considering HCI, the average HCI score for all
hospices is 8.9 (a higher HCI score indicates better performance on the
measure). An HCI score of three is a large difference from the average
of 8.9, and as a result, it is unlikely that a hospice would receive
this kind of score if it was an average HCI performer. The likelihood
of observing a value different from the average is the type of
information we propose to include to determine poor performers. By
standardizing the indicators, we shift our interpretation from what
value they received to an estimation of how likely they are to receive
the value if they were an average hospice. We believe this approach
would improve the proposed algorithm's ability to identify those
hospice programs with the most unlikely values across our four
indicators and those that are the poorest performers across indicators
compared to all other active hospices in the SFP analytic file.
The previous fictitious example illustrates how indicators are
standardized. We propose to adopt the most common standardization
method, which would be applied to each of the indicators for a specific
hospice (hospice indicators). For each indicator, this would be done by
taking the indicator's observed value for the hospice and subtracting
that indicator's average value for all hospices. We propose to then
divide this number (the difference) by the standard deviation, a common
measure of data variance, to tell us how clustered data are around the
average (see the following equation).
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TP10JY23.076
As a function of this proposed approach, all indicators are
centered with a mean of zero and a standard deviation of one. The
transformed indicator tells us how likely a value for a given hospice
would be observed and allows us to compare indicators (by adding them
together) to determine which hospices have the most unlikely values
compared to other hospices.
(1) Proposed Weighting of the Standardized Values
The proposed standardization discussed earlier allows an
indicator's data to be compared to another standardized indicator.
Therefore, we would be comparing how different the observed value is
from the average value to make all indicators mathematically equal. We
propose to weight each indicator by multiplying an indicator by a
constant value to account for their relative importance in the
methodology.
As part of our consideration for determining the weights for each
indicator, the TEP and stakeholder listening sessions offered
considerations related to weighting the data sources. In discussing the
weighting of
[[Page 43763]]
substantiated complaints, quality-of-care CLDs, and HCI, the TEP and
stakeholders agreed that they represent relevant dimensions of care
quality but did not raise concerns or discuss whether one of these
indicators was more or less indicative of care quality relative to
another. However, the TEP and stakeholders emphasized the importance of
patient and caregiver perspectives represented by the CAHPS measures,
noting they are the most integral dimension of hospice care quality. As
discussed in the SFP TEP report on page 15, ``some TEP members argued
that the valuable perspectives of families and caregivers on the CAHPS
Hospice Survey justified weighting it more than other data sources.''
Based on the consistent feedback from the TEP and stakeholder listening
sessions, we propose to weight the CAHPS Hospice Survey Index by twice
that of the other measures (that is, multiply CAHPS Hospice Survey
Index by two).
(2) Proposed Approach for Missing CAHPS Data
In three of the four indicators used in the algorithm, data exhibit
an exceptional amount of concentration around the average value for the
indicator. We propose replacing missing values in quality-of-care CLDs,
substantiated complaints, and HCI with the average value for each of
those indicators for an individual hospice to assign a score to that
hospice (see section VI.B.4.d. of this proposed rule).
The CAHPS Hospice Survey, Index is distinct from these other three
indicators for several reasons warranting separate treatment for its
missingness. First, the CAHPS Hospice Survey Index does not exhibit the
same high concentration around the average value as the other measures.
This means that there is more variability in the CAHPS Hospice Survey
Index than in the other indicators. As a result of this increased
variability, it is increasingly unlikely that those values that are
missing are close to the average value. Second, more hospices are
missing CAHPS Hospice Survey data than are missing data for other
indicators in the algorithm. In our review of the CY 2019-2021 analytic
file (excluding January 1-June 30, 2020), there is CAHPS Hospice Survey
data for only about 49 percent of all SFP-eligible hospices. Due to
reporting exemptions for small and/or newer hospices, those missing
values are disproportionately from that cohort of providers. Because of
this trend, it is difficult to draw any conclusions about the missing
values given that there are no data from small hospices by which we can
compare if the smaller/newer hospice CAHPS average is similar to those
for which we have observed data. Third, hospices with fewer than 50
distinct beneficiaries can file for an exemption from reporting CAHPS.
If we replace missing CAHPS Hospice Survey measure values with the
average value, poor performing small hospices could benefit from being
small by opting into being treated as an average hospice by becoming
exempt from reporting their poor CAHPS Hospice Survey measure values.
For these reasons, we propose a different treatment for CAHPS Hospice
Survey missingness. Instead of replacing missing CAHPS Hospice Survey
measure scores with the average values for those measures, we propose
to run hospices with data for CAHPS Hospice Survey measures through a
version of the algorithm that considers the CAHPS Hospice Survey Index,
and for those hospices that do not have CAHPS Hospice Survey data,
through a version of the algorithm that does not consider the CAHPS
Hospice Survey Index. To make the two resulting scores comparable, we
then average the scores based on the total number of indicators used to
calculate the score.
For the hospices without CAHPS Hospice Survey data, we would divide
their scores by three because their score was calculated from three
indicators: quality-of-care CLDs, substantiated complaints, and HCI.
For the hospices with CAHPS Hospice Survey data, we would divide their
scores by five because the weight on the CAHPS Hospice Survey Index
means it is mathematically counted twice, so the indicators would be
quality-of-care CLDs, substantiated complaints, HCI, and the CAHPS
Hospice Survey Index, which is counted twice due to the weight of two
on the indicator. This approach to handling missing CAHPS data is
beneficial because it does not make assumptions about the values for
missing CAHPS data.
With CAHPS Hospice Survey Index:
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TP10JY23.077
Without CAHPS Hospice Survey Index:
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TP10JY23.078
(3) Example Results
To illustrate how the proposed algorithm would behave, we discuss
later in this section how two example hospices' (Hospice A's and
Hospice B's) algorithm scores would be produced based on their
indicator values. As discussed previously, the methodology would be one
step in determining whether a hospice is selected for the SFP.
Hospice A is a large hospice, serving 500 beneficiaries on average
over the last 3 years. Over the past 3 years, they received zero
quality-of-care CLDs, two substantiated complaints, and an HCI score of
nine. At the same time, their CAHPS Hospice Survey Index measure is
44.5, which is larger than the average value of 28, which may indicate
a quality concern. When we standardize these values to examine how
different they are from the average hospice, we find that their
quality-of-care CLD standardized value is zero, their substantiated
complaint standardized value is 0.6, their HCI is 0.1, and their CAHPS
Hospice Survey Index is 2.4. As we suspected, three of their indicators
are closely in line with the average hospice. Only their CAHPS Hospice
Survey Index of 2.4 tells us that their bottom-box scores for the four
quality measures is 2.4 standard deviations away from the average
hospice. We would then include these four indicators in the algorithm:
0 + 0.6-0.1 + (2*2.4) = 5.3. As explained above, for hospices with
CAHPS data, we would
[[Page 43764]]
divide their scores by five, and since Hospice A has a CAHPS Hospice
Survey Index, the final value would be divided by five. Hospital A's
final algorithm score is: 5.3/5 = 1.06. We then take this score and
compare it to all other scores generated from all hospices and put them
in order from highest to lowest, and we find that Hospice A ranks at
331. Because of the algorithm's emphasis on CAHPS, Hospice A's poor
CAHPS Hospice Survey Index would make it more likely to be identified
as a candidate, but because Hospice A performed well on the other three
indicators, it would be less likely to be selected as a SFP participant
compared to other hospices.
Hospice B is a mid-sized hospice serving an average of 120 distinct
beneficiaries over the past 3 years. It has not reported CAHPS Hospice
Survey data across the four measures. They received 42 substantiated
complaints, 15 quality-of-care CLDs, and an HCI of 10. The number of
substantiated complaints and quality-of-care CLDs are quite high even
though they have achieved all 10 indicators of HCI. After we
standardize, Hospice B's quality-of-care CLD value is 9.2, its
complaint rate is 16.4, and its HCI is 0.9. We would calculate Hospice
B's score in the following way: 9.2 + 16.4-0.9 = 24.7. As explained
previously, for hospices without CAHPS[supreg] data, we would divide
their scores by three, and since Hospice B does not have a CAHPS
Hospice Survey Index, this final value would be divided by three: 24.7/
3 = 8.2. When comparing this score of 8.2 to all other hospices, we
would find that Hospice B has the highest algorithm score among all
hospices, indicating it has the poorest quality indicator outcomes.
Even though its HCI score is high and we do not know its CAHPS value,
Hospice B's high substantiated complaint rate and high number of
quality-of-care CLDs would make it a very likely candidate for the SFP.
e. Proposed Selection Criteria
Based on public comment in the CY 2022 HH PPS final rule and
recommendations from the SFP TEP and other stakeholders, we propose a
SFP selection process that utilizes a no-stratification approach. In
addition, we considered the input of the SFP TEP and stakeholders, who
expressed that the selection approach should identify the poorest
performing hospices, regardless of characteristics, such as size or
location, and therefore favored an approach with no stratification by
state or otherwise.
We propose at Sec. 488.1135(b) that hospices with AO deemed status
that are placed in the SFP would not retain deemed status and would be
placed under CMS or, as needed, SA oversight jurisdiction until
completion of the SFP or termination.
The number of hospices selected to participate in the SFP would be
determined in the first quarter of each calendar year. The claims-based
quality measure data used in the proposed algorithm is not available
until November of each calendar year. This data is needed to run the
algorithm, which is used to establish the aggregate score from which
SFP participants are selected. As an SFP selectee, a hospice would not
be removed from the SFP until they either meet the criteria for
graduation or are terminated from the Medicare program.
f. Proposed Survey and Enforcement Criteria
As indicated in the CAA, 2021 adding section 1822(b)(2) of the Act,
once in the SFP, a hospice must be surveyed ``not less than once every
6 months.'' Based on the TEP discussion, TEP members agreed with the 6-
month recertification survey frequency for hospices in the SFP, and we
are proposing this frequency at proposed Sec. 488.1135(c).
Additionally, SFP hospices would be subject to one or more remedies
specified in Sec. 488.1220, and progressive enforcement remedies, as
appropriate, at the discretion of CMS and consistent with 42 CFR part
488, subpart N. When CMS chooses to apply one or more remedies
specified in Sec. 488.1220, the remedies would be applied on the basis
of noncompliance with one or more conditions of participation and may
be based on failure to correct previous deficiency findings as
evidenced by repeat condition-level deficiencies. The enforcement
remedies could be imposed for an SFP hospice with condition-level
deficiencies on a SFP survey or complaint survey while in the program.
Furthermore, if subsequent surveys also result in the citation of a
condition-level deficiency or deficiencies for an SFP hospice, the
enforcement remedies imposed could be of increasing severity.
Increasing severity could mean a higher CMP than was imposed for the
earlier noncompliance or increasing from one remedy to more than one
remedy being imposed. CMS would use its discretion to determine what
remedies are most appropriate given the survey results, and the hospice
may be subject to remedies of increasing severity.
g. Proposed SFP Completion Criteria
The TEP generally agreed that to complete and graduate from the
SFP, SFP hospices should have no CLDs cited for two consecutive 6-month
recertification surveys in an 18-month timeframe. TEP members also
suggested that SFP hospices should have no substantiated complaints and
less than a defined number of standard-level deficiencies (SLDs) on two
consecutive 6-month recertification surveys within the 18-month
timeframe to complete the SFP. TEP members recommended a stepwise
completion process, with SFP hospices preliminarily graduating after
completing two consecutive 6-month recertification surveys within the
18-month timeframe in accordance with all completion requirements as
proposed at Sec. 488.1135(d). We considered the TEP's recommendations.
However, we are proposing that SFP hospices have no CLDs for any two
SFP surveys in an 18-month period. Therefore, we propose in new Sec.
488.1135(d) that a hospice will have completed the SFP if it has in an
18-month timeframe, no CLDs cited or IJ's for any two 6-month SFP
surveys, and has no pending complaint survey triaged at an immediate
jeopardy or condition level, or has returned to substantial compliance
with all requirements. If there are complaint investigations or a 36-
month recertification survey for a hospice while in the SFP, the SFP
timeline may extend beyond the 18-month timeframe. The official
completion date would be the date of the CMS notice letter informing
the hospice of its removal from the SFP. After completing the SFP,
hospice programs would receive a one-year post SFP survey and then
would start a new standard 36-month survey cycle.
h. Proposed Termination Criteria
A hospice in the SFP that fails any two SFP surveys, by having any
CLDs on the surveys, in an 18-month period, or pending complaint
investigations triaged at IJ or condition-level, would be considered
for termination from the Medicare program as proposed at new Sec.
488.1135(e). This criterion would apply to all hospices, regardless of
geographical location, and reflects some TEP recommendations. CMS would
issue the termination letter to the hospice program in accordance with
42 CFR 489.53. Depending on the deficiencies that brought a hospice
into the SFP, CMS recognizes that a provider may need a reasonable
period to achieve substantial compliance. But, if the hospice is not
able to achieve substantial compliance at any time during the 18
months, they would be considered for termination from the Medicare
program. Those providers that are unable to resolve the deficiencies
that brought them into the SFP and
[[Page 43765]]
cannot meet the proposed completion criteria of having no CLDs cited
for any two SFP surveys during an 18-month period, would be placed on a
termination track. If a hospice in the SFP has an IJ-level deficiency
cited during a survey, CMS would follow the requirements at Sec.
488.1225.
i. Public Reporting of SFP Information
Public reporting of the proposed SFP includes making accessible
both general information about the SFP program and hospices selected
for SFP. A guideline for communicating SFP information appears in the
section 407 of CAA, 2021 (Pub. L. 116-260), which requires hospice
survey findings to be ``prominent, easily accessible, readily
understandable, and searchable for the general public and allows for
timely updates.''
We propose in new Sec. 488.1135(f) to publicly report, at least on
an annual basis, the hospice programs selected for the SFP under
proposed Sec. 488.1135(b). Initially, this information would be posted
on a CMS public-facing website at https://www.cms.gov/medicare/quality-safety-oversight-certification-compliance/hospice-special-focus-program, or a successor website. Specifically, we propose the website
will include, at a minimum, general information, program guidance, a
subset consisting of 10 percent of hospice programs based on the
highest aggregate scores determined by the algorithm, and SFP
selections from the 10 percent subset as determined by CMS, and SFP
status as proposed in the definitions at Sec. 488.1105.
VII. Proposed Changes Regarding Durable Medical Equipment, Prosthetics,
Orthotics, and Supplies (DMEPOS)
A. Medicare Durable Medical Equipment, Prosthetics, Orthotics, and
Supplies (DMEPOS) Competitive Bidding Program (CBP)
1. Background
a. Durable Medical Equipment, Prosthetics, Orthotics, and Supplies
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, December 8, 2003), mandates the Medicare Durable
Medical Equipment, Prosthetics, Orthotics, and Supplies (DMEPOS)
Competitive Bidding Program (CBP) for contract 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.
For a list of product categories included in the DMEPOS CBP, please
refer to https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/DMEPOSCompetitiveBid/Round-2021/PCs. Areas in which the CBP are not
implemented are known 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).
b. 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 single payment amounts
for such items and services in the CBAs.
The methodologies set forth in Sec. 414.210(g) account for
regional variations in prices, including for rural and non-contiguous
areas of the United States. In accordance with Sec. 414.210(g)(1),
regional adjustments to fee schedule amounts for each state in the
contiguous United States and the District of Columbia, are determined
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 United States 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 single payment amounts for CBAs in non-
contiguous areas in the United States, or the national ceiling amount.
Under existing rules, ZIP codes for rural, non-rural, and non-
contiguous areas are used to establish geographic areas that are then
used to define non-CBAs for the purposes of the DMEPOS fee schedule
adjustments. A rural area is defined in Sec. 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 Metropolitan Statistical Area (79 FR 66228). 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 United States--that is, areas such as Alaska, Guam, and
Hawaii (81 FR 77936).
[[Page 43766]]
Section 3712 of the of the CARES Act (Pub. L. 116-136, as enacted
on March 27, 2020) revised the fee schedule amounts 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. Specifically, this emergency period is the
Public Health Emergency (PHE) for COVID-19, including renewals of the
PHE.
Section 3712(a) of the CARES Act directed the Secretary to
implement Sec. 414.210(g)(9)(iii) (or any successor regulation), to
apply the transition rule described in such section to all applicable
items and services as planned through December 31, 2020, and through
the duration of the emergency period described in section 1135(g)(1)(B)
of the Act, if longer. Therefore, section 3712(a) of the CARES Act
continued our policy at Sec. 414.210(g)(9)(iii) of paying for DMEPOS
items and services furnished in rural and non-contiguous non-CBAs based
on a 50/50 blend of adjusted and unadjusted fee schedule amounts
through December 31, 2020, or through the duration of the emergency
period, whichever is longer. This fee schedule adjustment in rural and
non-contiguous areas results in fee schedule amounts that are
approximately 66 percent higher than the fully adjusted fee schedule
amounts previously paid for DMEPOS items and services furnished in non-
rural areas in the contiguous United States.
Section 3712(b) of the CARES Act directed the Secretary to increase
the fee schedule amounts for DMEPOS items and services furnished in
non-CBAs other than rural and non-contiguous non-CBAs through the
duration of the COVID-19 PHE (the emergency period described in section
1135(g)(1)(B) of the Act). Beginning March 6, 2020, the payment rates
for DME and enteral nutrients, supplies, and equipment furnished in
these areas was based on 75 percent of the adjusted fee schedule amount
and 25 percent of the historic, unadjusted fee schedule amount until
the end of the emergency period, which results in higher payment rates
as compared to the fully adjusted fee schedule amounts under Sec.
414.210(g)(9)(iv). This increased payments so that they are
approximately 33 percent higher than the payments at the fully adjusted
fee schedule amounts.
In the May 8, 2020, interim final rule with comment period (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''), conforming changes were made to Sec. 414.210(g)(9), consistent
with section 3712(a) and (b) of the CARES Act.
The final rule entitled, ``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'' published in
the December 28, 2021 Federal Register (86 FR 73860) (hereinafter CY
2022 DMEPOS final rule), established fee schedule adjustment
methodologies for items and services furnished in non-CBAs 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.
The CY 2022 DMEPOS final rule explained that the 50/50 blended
rates in non-contiguous non-CBAs will continue to be paid, but the 50/
50 blend would no longer be a transition rule under Sec. 414.210(g)(9)
and would 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 of the CY 2022 DMEPOS
final rule (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, would 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 (86 FR
73873).
As explained in the CY 2022 DMEPOS final rule, the 50/50 blended
rates in rural contiguous areas will continue to be paid, but the 50/50
blend would no longer be a transition rule under Sec. 414.210(g)(9)
and would 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 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, the fee schedule amounts
would 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 DME and medical supplies, off-the-shelf
orthotics, and enteral nutrients, supplies, and equipment (86 FR
73873).
Finally, for items and services furnished on or after February 28,
2022, 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 would be equal to 100 percent of the
adjusted payment amount established under Sec. 414.210(g)(1)(iv).
2. Current Issues
Section 4139 of Division FF, Title IV, Subtitle D of the CAA, 2023
sets the fee schedule adjustment methodologies for non-competitive
bidding areas through the remainder of the duration of the emergency
period described in section 1135(g)(1)(B) of the Act or December 31,
2023, whichever is later. The federal PHE for COVID-19, declared by the
Secretary under Section 319 of the Public Health Service Act, expired
at the end of the day on May 11, 2023. We are proposing to make
conforming changes to the regulation at 42 CFR 414.210(g)(9) to account
for these changes.
Specifically, section 4139(a) of the CAA, 2023 directs the
Secretary to implement 42 CFR 414.210(g)(9)(v) (or any successor
regulation), to apply the
[[Page 43767]]
transition rule described in the first sentence of such section to all
applicable items and services furnished in areas other than rural or
noncontiguous areas 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)) or December 31, 2023, whichever is later. This
continues the policy set forth by section 3712(b) of the CARES Act,
which requires CMS to pay for these DMEPOS items and services furnished
in areas other than rural or noncontiguous areas based on 75 percent of
the adjusted fee schedule amount and 25 percent of the historic,
unadjusted fee schedule amount until the end of the emergency period.
This increases payments so that they are approximately 33 percent
higher than the payments at the fully adjusted fee schedule amounts.
Section 4139(b) of the CAA, 2023 directs the Secretary to not
implement 42 CFR 414.210(g)(9)(vi) of title 42, Code of Federal
Regulations (or any successor regulation) until the date immediately
following the last day of the emergency period described in section
1135(g)(1)(B) of the Act (42 U.S.C. 1320b-5(g)(1)(B)), or January 1,
2024, whichever is later. This change has the effect of continuing the
policy at Sec. 414.210(g)(9)(vi), but changes the February 28, 2022
date in the regulation to January 1, 2024. That is, the fee schedule
amount for all non-CBAs is equal to the adjusted payment amount
established under paragraph (g) of this section only until the date
immediately following the last day of the emergency period described in
section 1135(g)(1)(B) of the Act (42 U.S.C. 1320b-5(g)(1)(B)), or
January 1, 2024, whichever is later.
Additionally, section 4139 of the CAA, 2023 does not affect the
current adjusted fee schedule amounts in former CBAs. In accordance
with Sec. 414.210(g)(10), the fee schedule amounts in the former CBAs
will continue to be based on the single payment amounts from 2018
increased by update factors for subsequent calendar years until new
competitive bidding contracts are in place.
3. Proposed Changes
We are proposing to make conforming changes to Sec. 414.210(g)(9),
consistent with requirements in section 4139(a) and 4139(b) of the CAA,
2023. First, section 4139 of the CAA, 2023 does not change the current
policy under Sec. 414.210(g)(9)(iii) of paying for DMEPOS items and
services furnished in rural and non-contiguous non-CBAs based on a 50/
50 blend of adjusted and unadjusted fee schedule amounts through the
duration of the PHE for COVID-19. While section 4139 of the CAA, 2023
does not specifically mention Sec. 414.210(g)(9)(iii), we believe that
section 4139(b) of the CAA, 2023 prohibits implementation of the
regulation language in Sec. 414.210(g)(vi) until the date immediately
following the last day of the PHE, or January 1, 2024. This regulation
applies the transition rules for the adjusted payment amount in the
non-CBAs established under paragraph (g) of Sec. 414.210 to items and
services furnished in ``all areas,'' and it also provides for extension
of the transition 50/50 blended rates in rural, non-contiguous areas
and non-rural areas through December 31, 2023, if the PHE ends prior to
that date. We are proposing to revise Sec. 414.210(g)(9)(vi), as
described in this rule. Further, we are proposing to revise Sec.
414.210(g)(9)(iii), to state that for items and services furnished in
rural areas and non-contiguous areas (Alaska, Hawaii, and U.S.
territories) with dates of service from June 1, 2018 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)) or December 31, 2023, whichever is
later, based on the fee schedule amount for the area is equal to 50
percent of the adjusted payment amount established under this section
and 50 percent of the unadjusted fee schedule amount. We are proposing
to make conforming changes to Sec. 414.210(g)(2) for the rural and
non-contiguous areas in order to reference the December 31, 2023 date
specified in section 4139 of the CAA, 2023.
We are proposing to revise Sec. 414.210(g)(9)(v) to state 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)) or December 31, 2023, whichever
is later, the fee schedule amount for the area is equal to 75 percent
of the adjusted payment amount established under this section and 25
percent of the unadjusted fee schedule amount. We are proposing to
remove outdated text from Sec. 414.210(g)(9)(v) that states ``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, the fee schedule amount for the
area is equal to 100 percent of the adjusted payment amount established
under this section.'' This is text was added in the May 2020 COVID-19
IFC (85 FR 27571), as section 3712(b) of the CARES Act required CMS to
pay the higher fee schedule amounts for 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)), but it did not specify the fee schedule amounts that
should be in effect if the emergency period ends before December 31,
2020. If not for section 3712(b) of the CARES Act, CMS would have paid
the fully adjusted fee schedule amounts for DME items and services
furnished in non-rural and contiguous non-CBAs until December 31, 2020.
As such, Sec. 414.210(g)(9)(v) specified that the fee schedule amounts
in non-rural and contiguous non-CBAs would again be based on 100
percent of the fee schedule amounts adjusted in accordance with Sec.
414.210(g)(1)(iv) if the emergency period described in section
1135(g)(1)(B) of the Act (42 U.S.C. 1320b-5(g)(1)(B)) ended before
December 31, 2020. As this situation no longer applies and is in the
past, we are proposing to remove this obsolete text from Sec.
414.210(g)(9)(v).
We are proposing to revise Sec. 414.210(g)(9)(vi) to state that
for items and services furnished in all areas with dates of service on
or after the date immediately following the duration of the emergency
period described in section 1135(g)(1)(B) of the Act, or January 1,
2024, whichever is later, the fee schedule amount for the area is equal
to the adjusted payment amount established under paragraph (g) of this
section. Finally, we are proposing to make conforming changes to Sec.
414.210(g)(2) for the rural and non-contiguous areas in order to
specify the December 31, 2023 date specified in section 4139 of the
CAA, 2023.
Finally, section 4139(c) of the CAA, 2023 authorizes the Secretary
to implement the provisions of this section by program instruction or
otherwise. Given that the PHE for COVID-19 ended on May 11, 2023, which
is prior to when the proposed changes to the regulations would be
finalized, we intend to issue program instructions or other
subregulatory guidance to effectuate the changes, as previously
described. We believe this approach will serve to ensure a smooth
transition after the end of the PHE for COVID-19.
B. Scope of the Benefit and Payment for Lymphedema Compression
Treatment Items
1. Statutory Authority
Effective for items furnished on or after January 1, 2024, section
4133(a)(1)
[[Page 43768]]
of Division FF, Title V, Subtitle D of the CAA, 2023 amends section
1861 of the Act, adding subparagraph (JJ) to subsection (s)(2) and
coverage under a new benefit category under Medicare Part B for
lymphedema compression treatment items as defined in new subsection
(mmm) of section 1861 of the Act. Section 4133(a)(2) of the CAA, 2023
amends section 1833(a)(1) of the Act, adding subparagraph (GG) to
indicate that the amount paid for lymphedema compression treatment
items defined in section 1861(mmm) of the Act shall be equal to 80
percent of the lesser of the actual charge or the amount determined
using the payment basis established by the Secretary under paragraph
(1) of new subsection (z) of section 1834 of the Act. Paragraph (2) of
new subsection (z) of section 1834 of the Act prohibits payments under
Part B for lymphedema compression treatment items furnished other than
at such frequency as the Secretary may establish. Paragraph (3) of new
subsection (z) of section 1834 of the Act specifies that in the case of
lymphedema compression treatment items that are included in a
competitive bidding program under section 1847(a) of the Act, the
payment basis under section 1847(a) of the Act shall be the payment
basis determined under the competitive bidding program, and the
Secretary may use information on the payment determined under the
competitive bidding program to adjust the payment amount otherwise
determined under section 1834(z) of the Act for an area that is not a
competitive bidding area under section 1847 of the Act. Section
4133(a)(3) of the CAA, 2023 amends section 1847(a)(2) of the Act,
adding lymphedema compression treatment items to the competitive
bidding program under subparagraph (D) of section 1847(a)(2) of the
Act. Finally, section 4133(b)(3) of the CAA, 2023 amends section 1834
of the Act under subsections (a)(20)(D) and (j)(5) to mandate
application of the DMEPOS quality standards and accreditation and
DMEPOS supplier enrollment and supplier standards requirements,
respectively, to suppliers of lymphedema compression treatment items.
2. Background
Currently, Medicare Part B does not include coverage for lymphedema
compression treatment items other than compression pumps and
accessories that meet the definition of DME covered under the DME
benefit category under section 1861(n) of the Act. Section 4133 of the
CAA, 2023 amends the Act to establish a new Part B benefit category for
lymphedema compression treatment items.
The lymphatic system is an integral component of the human
circulatory system and consists of lymphatic vessels, lymph nodes and
associated lymphoid organs.146 147 The International Society
of Lymphology defines lymphedema as ``an external (and/or internal)
manifestation of lymphatic system insufficiency and deranged lymph
transport'' and is ``a symptom or sign resulting from underlying
lymphatic disease.\148\ '' The Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention (CDC) defines lymphedema as swelling due to a buildup of
lymph fluid in the body.\149\ According to the National Institutes of
Health (NIH) National Library of Medicine, lymphedema is a chronic
disorder characterized by swelling under the skin caused by the
inability of protein rich lymph fluid to drain, usually due to a
blockage or damage to the lymph system.\150\ Additionally, according to
the National Lymphedema Network, this swelling commonly occurs in the
arm or leg, but it may also occur in other body areas including the
breast, chest, head and neck, and genitals.\151\ Lymphedema develops
when a body region, where lymphatic vessels and lymph nodes are missing
or impaired, becomes overloaded with lymphatic fluid. Lymphedema is a
chronic condition with no definitive curative treatment that can become
progressive, so early detection and institution of decompressive
measures are essential in avoiding its potentially disabling
sequela.152 153 154 155 The gradual accumulation of plasma
and cellular components into the interstitial tissue space leads to a
chronic inflammatory process that can result in long-term tissue
changes and permanent structural damage to the affected anatomical site
and its overlying skin layer.156 157 158 These changes also
make the patient more susceptible to skin and potentially disabling or
life-threatening soft tissue infections.159 160 The physical
manifestations of lymphedema are tissue swelling, pain, heaviness and
difficulty using the affected body part.\161\
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\146\ Aspelund A, Robciuc MR, Karaman S, Makinen T, Alitalo K.
Lymphatic System in Cardiovascular Medicine. Circulation Research.
2016. Volume 118(3). 515-530.
\147\ Suamia H, Scaglioni MF. Anatomy of the Lymphatic System
and the Lymphosome Concept with Reference to Lymphedema. Seminars in
Plastic Surgery. 2018 Feb; 32(1): 5-11.
\148\ International Society of Lymphology Executive Committee.
The Diagnosis and Treatment of Peripheral Lymphedema. Lymphology 28
(1995).
\149\ Lymphedema CDC.gov. https://www.cdc.gov/cancer/survivors/patients/lymphedema.htm.
\150\ Lymphedema. Bryan C. Sleigh; Biagio Manna, September 2018.
Found at https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK537239/.
\151\ https://lymphnet.org/what-is-lymphedema.
\152\ Korpan MI, Crevenna R, Fialka-Moser V. Lymphedema a
Therapeutic Approach in the Treatment and Rehabilitation of Cancer
Patients. American Journal of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation.
2011. May. 90(suppl). S69-S75.
\153\ Preston NJ, Seers K, Mortimer PS. Physical therapies for
reducing and controlling lymphoedema of the limbs. Cochrane Database
of Systematic Reviews 2004, Issue 4. Art. No.: CD003141.
\154\ The International Society of Lymphology. The Diagnosis and
Treatment of Peripheral Lymphedema: 2020 Consensus Document of the
International Society of Lymphology. Lymphology. 2020. 53: 3-19.
\155\ King M, Deveaux A, White H, Rayson. Compression garments
versus compression bandaging in decongestive lymphatic therapy for
breast cancer-related lymphedema: a randomized controlled trial.
Support Care Cancer. 2012; 20: 1031-1036.
\156\ Korpan MI, Crevenna R, Fialka-Moser V. Lymphedema a
Therapeutic Approach in the Treatment and Rehabilitation of Cancer
Patients. American Journal of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation.
2011. May. 90(suppl). S69-S75.
\157\ Warren AG, Brorson H, Borud LJ, Slavin SA. Lymphedema A
Comprehensive Review. Annals of Plastic Surgery. 2007. Vol 59, No.
4. 464-472.
\158\ Ly CL, Kataru RO, Mehrara B. Inflammatory Manifestations
of Lymphedema. Int J Mol Scie. 2017. Jan; 18(1): 171.
\159\ Grada AA, Phillips TJ. Lymphedema, Pathophysiology and
clinical manifestations. J Am Academ Dermatol. 2017;77: 1009-20.
\160\ Bakar Y, Tugral A. Lower Extremity Lymphedema Management
after Gynecologic Cancer Surgery: A Review of Current Management
Strategies. Ann of Vasc Surg. 2017. Vol. 44; 442-450.
\161\ Warren AG, Brorson H, Borud LJ, Slavin SA. Lymphedema A
Comprehensive Review. Annals of Plastic Surgery. 2007. Vol 59, No.
4. 464-472.
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Lymphedema occurs in four stages. Stage one may have no outward
signs or symptoms but is evidenced by abnormal flow through the
lymphatic system. When stage two is reached, there is some swelling
that may be alleviated by elevation or compression. Stage three is
diagnosed by swelling of an area that does not resolve with elevation
and there may be skin thickening and scarring. The fourth stage is
characterized by severe swelling and skin abnormalities.\162\
Infections such as cellulitis and sepsis may result from lymphedema due
to the dense protein rich nature of the lymphatic fluid and requires
treatment with antibiotics.\163\ Studies have shown that gradient
compression garments are effective in reducing and/or preventing
progression
[[Page 43769]]
of lymphedema in the arm and leg.\164\ They have also shown to be
effective in maintaining limb circumference.
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\162\ The Johns Hopkins Hospital https://www.hopkinsmedicine.org/health/treatment-tests-and-therapies/treating-lymphedema.
\163\ https://www.cancerresearchuk.org/about-cancer/coping/
physically/lymphoedema-and-cancer/infection-
lymphoedema#:~:text=Infection%20in%20people%20with%20lymphoedema,and%
20will%20need%20antibiotic%20treatment.
\164\ Yasuhara H, Shigematsu H, Muto T. A study of the
advantages of elastic stockings for leg lymphedema. Int Angiol. 1996
Sep;15(3):272-7. PMID: 8971591. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/8971591/.
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Gradient compression garments designed for daytime use, while an
individual is awake, are different than those for nighttime use, when
an individual is asleep. Gradient compression garments meant for
daytime (waking) provide a higher level of compression, and use of them
while sleeping could cause new or additional damage to the affected
tissue.\165\ Additionally, gradient compression garments appropriate
for daytime use can inadvertently become repositioned at night while
the individual is sleeping and cause a tourniquet effect, essentially
cutting off circulation to the limb and resulting in further
swelling.\165\ In contrast, gradient compression garments made for
nighttime use or times of low activity offer milder compression and are
less snug against the skin.\166\ Wearing gradient compression garments
designed for nighttime use may also help with skin abnormalities
resulting from lymphedema and can help prevent a phenomenon called
``creeping refill,'' where swelling reoccurs during sleep.\167\
Generally, more serious cases require gradient compression garments for
both daytime and nighttime use. Various types of nighttime garments
have been designed as alternatives to the day time compression system
garments. Nighttime garments apply gentle gradient pressure to the limb
through a garment with a foam liner and a series of adjustable straps.
The garments are non-elastic and provide low resting pressure on the
limb, making them safe to wear while sleeping at night.\168\ Many of
these garments are custom-made, but there are ready-to-wear options
available as well. The elastic fibers of daytime compression garments
will break down with wear. Because nighttime garments are made of
inelastic components, compared to the day-time garments, they do not
commonly break down with wear and last longer. While proper care will
increase the lifespan of garments, they will need to be replaced
sometime within 1 to 3 years if used daily. Studies showed if the
garments are used with aftercare regimen, that is, they are in minimum
contact with moisturizer during use, they could last longer.\169\ In
meetings with CMS, some clinicians and lymphologists indicated that
they believe that the nighttime garments are quite durable and can last
for 2 to 3 years because the materials are more durable than the
materials used with the daytime garments. They also indicated that
previous versions used strapping in addition to more durable foam
materials and could last for up to 5 years. In comparison, daytime
garments are elastic garments that are typically made of breathable
elastic fabrics such as nylon, cotton, spandex or natural rubber to
provide compression and therefore have a much shorter lifespan of
approximately 6 months.\170\
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\165\ Lymphedema Products, LLC. (2019, September 11). Day
Compression vs Night Compression. Lymphedemaproducts.com. https://www.lymphedemaproducts.com/blog/day-vs-night-compression-wear/.
\166\ Caring Touch Medical, Inc. Can You Sleep in a Lymphedema
Sleeve? Caringtouchmed.com. https://www.caringtouchmed.com/can-you-sleep-in-a-lymphedema-sleeve/.
\167\ Mastectomy Shop. Can You Sleep in a Lymphedema Sleeve?
Mastectomyshop.com. https://www.mastectomyshop.com/blogs/can-you-sleep-in-a-lymphedema-sleeve/.
\168\ McNeely, M. L. et al. Nighttime compression supports
improved self[hyphen]management of breast cancer related lymphedema:
A multicenter randomized controlled trial. Cancer 128, 587-596
(2021).
\169\ Macintyre, Lisa Ph.D.; Gilmartin, Sian BSc; Rae, Michelle
BSc; Journal of Burn Care & Research: September/October 2007--Volume
28--Issue 5--pp 725-733.
\170\ Mukhopadhyay, A., & Shaw, V. P. (2022). Reliability
analysis of stretchable workwear fabric under abrasive damage:
Influence of stretch yarn composition. Journal of Natural Fibers,
20(1).
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Gradient compression garments are either standard fit or custom-
fit. Standard compression garments are also referred to as ready-made
or ready-to-wear and are widely available pre-made, off-the-shelf and
in a range of standard sizes. Individuals with mild or moderate
lymphedema can often use standard fit garments. Standard gradient
compression garments are easier to measure and are readily available at
retailers without requiring a prescription, but they do not conform as
well to limbs or provide homogenous compression. Standard fit
compression wear for all gradient compression garments come in
different compression classification ranges specified in mmHg. While
there are no national standards for gradient compression hosiery,\171\
the most common compression classification ranges for hosiery in the
U.S. include: 8-15 mmHg (mild), 15-20 mmHg (medium or over the
counter), 20-30 mmHg (firm or medical class 1), 30-40 mmHg (extra firm
or medical class 2), and 40-50 mmHg (medical class 3).\172\ For all
compression ranges, the highest compression is at the ankle or wrist,
and compression slowly decreases as it moves up the extremity. Some
manufacturers' compression class pressure ranges for hosiery may be
different from the compression class ranges used for upper limb
gradient compression garment.\173\
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\171\ Lymphedema Framework. Best Practice for the Management of
Lymphoedema. International Consensus. London. MEP Ltd, 2006. https://www.woundsme.com/uploads/resources/content_11160.pdf.
\172\ Lymphedema Products, LLC. Determining Compression Levels.
Lymphedemaproducts.com. https://www.lymphedemaproducts.com/blog/how-to-determine-compression-levels-for-your-garments/.
\173\ Lympoedema Framework. Best Practice for the Management of
Lymphoedema. International Consensus. London. MEP Ltd, 2006. https://www.woundsme.com/uploads/resources/content_11160.pdf.
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Alternatively, custom-fit gradient compression garments are
garments that are uniquely sized, shaped, and custom-made to fit the
exact dimensions of the affected extremity (circumferential
measurements are every one and a half to two inches) and provide more
accurate and consistent gradient compression to manage the individual's
symptoms.\174\ The type of gradient compression garment prescribed is
influenced by the site and extent of the swelling, together with the
individual's comfort, lifestyle, preferences, and ability to apply and
remove garments. Poorly fitting gradient compression garments may not
contain or resolve the lymphedema, can cause tissue damage, may be
uncomfortable, and can dissuade a patient from long-term usage.\175\
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\174\ https://www.forwardhealth.wi.gov/kw/html/3485_Compression_Garments.html.
\175\ Doherty DC, Morgan PA, & Moffatt CJ (2009). Hosiery in
Lower Limb Lymphedema. J Lymphoedema, 4(1), 30-37. https://www.woundsme.com/uploads/resources/content_11160.pdf.
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Custom-fit gradient compression garments are typically required
when an individual has severe shape distortion and/or short, long, or
bulky limbs.\176\ In addition, individuals with complex lower limb and
torso lymphedema often require custom-fit gradient compression
garments, as do those who need special adaptations or when there is
need for varying levels of pressure within the same garment.\177\ Some
studies indicate that approximately 50 percent of lymphedema patients
require custom-fit gradient compression garments versus standard fit
gradient compression
[[Page 43770]]
garments for effective treatment, although estimates
vary.178 179 Patients requiring custom-fit gradient
compression garments must be properly evaluated and fitted by a
qualified practitioner with appropriate training and specialized skills
in the evaluation of gradient compression, such as a physical or
occupational therapist, or a physician.
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\176\ Chang M-H, Chang DW, & Patel KM (2022). ``Lymphedema Risk
Reduction and Management'' in Principles and Practice of Lymphedema
Surgery, 2nd Ed., 78-90. https://www.sciencedirect.com/topics/medicine-and-dentistry/compression-garment.
\177\ Doherty DC, Morgan PA, & Moffatt CJ (2009). Hosiery in
Lower Limb Lymphedema. J Lymphoedema, 4(1), 30-37. https://www.woundsme.com/uploads/resources/content_11160.pdf.
\178\ Lymphedema Advocacy Group (2021 Apr). ``Cost and
Utilization of Lymphedema Compression Garments.'' https://lymphedematreatmentact.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/04/Cost-and-Utilization-of-Lymphedema-Compression-Garments.pdf.
\179\ Boyages J, Xu Y, Kalfa S, Koelmeyer L, Parkinson B, Mackie
H, Viveros H, Gollan P, & Taksa L (2017). Financial cost of
lymphedema borne by women with breast cancer. Psychooncology, 26(6),
849-855. doi: 10.1002/pon.4239. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5484300/.
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3. Current Issues: Scope of the Benefit for Lymphedema Compression
Treatment Items
This proposed rule would implement a new benefit category
established at section 1861(s)(2)(JJ) of the Act for ``lymphedema
compression treatment items'' defined at section 1861(mmm) of the Act
as standard and custom fitted gradient compression garments and other
items determined by the Secretary that are--
Furnished on or after January 1, 2024, to an individual
with a diagnosis of lymphedema for the treatment of such condition;
Primarily and customarily used to serve a medical purpose
and for the treatment of lymphedema, as determined by the Secretary;
and
Prescribed by a physician (or a physician assistant, nurse
practitioner, or a clinical nurse specialist (as these terms are
defined in section 1861(aa)(5)) to the extent authorized under State
law).
We are proposing that any other items covered under this new
benefit category in addition to gradient compression garments must also
use compression in treating lymphedema since the specific category of
medical items to be covered under section 1861(s)(2) of the Act are
``lymphedema compression treatment items.'' Similarly, we are proposing
that this benefit category is limited to compression treatment items
and does not include professional lymphedema treatment services or
other services not directly related to the furnishing of the lymphedema
compression treatment items. Payment for any covered professional
service related to these items would be made under the Medicare
Physician Fee Schedule. The statute limits the benefit to items used
for the treatment of lymphedema as determined by the Secretary, and we
are proposing that this includes items used to treat all types or
diagnoses of lymphedema, but does not include the same items when used
to treat injuries or illnesses other than lymphedema. In other words,
if a gradient compression garment or other lymphedema compression
treatment item is furnished to treat an injury or illness other than
lymphedema, those items would not be classified under the Medicare
benefit category for lymphedema compression treatment items.
We are proposing that other compression items used to treat
lymphedema that would be covered under this benefit category in
addition to gradient compression garments would include ready-to-wear,
non-elastic, gradient compression wraps with adjustable straps such as
the items described by HCPCS code A6545. In addition, we are proposing
that compression bandaging systems applied in a clinical setting as
part of phase one decongestive therapy would also be items covered
under the new benefit category for lymphedema compression treatment
items if this rule is finalized. However, as discussed in section
VII.B.6. of this rule, section 1834(j) of the Act, as amended by
section 4133(b)(2) of the CAA, 2023, requires the therapists that
furnish these items to become enrolled and accredited DMEPOS suppliers
in order to bill for these items as lymphedema compression treatment
items per section 1834(j)(5) of the Act or payment for the items
applied during phase one of decongestive therapy would not be allowed.
We also note that while these items may be covered under the new Part B
benefit for lymphedema compression treatment items, the professional
services of applying these items would not and would need to be covered
under a different Medicare benefit category in order for Medicare
payments to be made for these services. We are specifically soliciting
comments on the topic of coverage of compression bandaging items under
the new benefit for lymphedema compression treatment items. We are also
soliciting comments on whether the professional services of applying
these bandages could be covered under another Medicare benefit
category, such as outpatient physical therapy services under section
1861(p) of the Act or physician services under section 1861(s) of the
Act.
With regard to custom garments, we understand that therapists often
take measurements of affected body areas and perform other fitting
services related to the furnishing of these items. Since these
measurements are necessary for the furnishing of the custom garments
and are part of what makes the garments custom garments rather than
standard garments, these measurements are an integral part of
furnishing the custom garments and the suppliers of the garments are
responsible for fitting the garments they furnish. Typically, DMEPOS
suppliers are responsible for all aspects of furnishing the item.
Following that approach, a supplier receiving payment for furnishing a
lymphedema compression treatment item to a beneficiary has
responsibility for ensuring that any necessary fitting, training (how
to appropriately don/doff and maintain), and adjustment services are
provided as part of furnishing the item. Payment for all services
necessary for furnishing a gradient compression garment are included in
the rates paid by the Medicaid State agencies and we are proposing to
use the average Medicaid payment rate plus twenty percent as the
payment basis for Medicare (when such Medicaid rates are available).
Therefore, the Medicare payments would likewise include payment for all
services necessary for furnishing the gradient compression garment;
this is consistent with how Medicare payment is made for DMEPOS. We
understand that in many cases a therapist may take measurements and
provide other fitting services necessary for furnishing a gradient
compression garment that is then furnished by a separate supplier.
Under this scenario, the supplier receiving payment for the garment
would be responsible for paying the therapist for the fitting component
that is an integral part of furnishing the item. An alternative option,
which we are not proposing but are seeking comment on, would be to pay
separately for the fitting component furnished by the therapist and
then back this payment out of the payment for the garment. If a
separate Medicare payment amount was made to an entity other than the
supplier of the garment for fitting services necessary for furnishing
the garment, this amount would have to be subtracted from the payment
to the supplier of the garment in order to avoid paying twice for these
services. For example, if code Axxx1 describes a ``Gradient compression
arm sleeve and glove combination, custom, each,'' with a payment amount
of $350 established for each garment, a supplier furnishing two of
these garments to a beneficiary for daytime use would receive $700 if
the garments are furnished on an assignment basis, and part of this
payment would cover the cost of the fitting of the garment that is
furnished by the supplier or a separate
[[Page 43771]]
therapist that is then paid by the supplier for the cost of taking the
fitting measurements. Alternatively, a separate allowance and code
could be established for the fitting component, such as $80 for Axxx2
for ``Fitting of gradient compression arm sleeve and glove combination,
custom, per two garments.'' Under this scenario, it would be necessary
to back out the payment for the cost of the separate fitting component
from the payment for the two garments ($700-$80 = $620), since the
payment for the garments already includes payment for all services
necessary for furnishing the garment. As a result, the supplier
furnishing the garments would be paid $310 for each garment rather than
$350 since they did not conduct the fitting component that is paid for
separately. We are not proposing this alternative because of many
complexities. For example, the therapist providing the fitting
component would be required to become an enrolled DMEPOS supplier,
accredited for furnishing the garment fitting component, and
responsible for meeting all of the requirements for being a DMEPOS
supplier, such as meeting the DMEPOS supplier standards and quality
standards, obtaining a surety bond, and submitting claims to the
appropriate DME MAC. As part of the DMEPOS supplier standards, a
supplier must accept return of substandard items. In cases where a
mistake is made in measuring and fitting the beneficiary for two custom
gradient compression garments, resulting in the furnishing and payment
for custom gradient compression garments that do not properly fit the
patient, the risk would be assumed by the fitter and not the supplier
to accept return of the garments and cover the cost of two replacement
garments. Again, we are not proposing to make separate payment for the
fitting services under this benefit when furnished by a supplier other
than the supplier of the garments; however, we are specifically
soliciting comments on the topic and comments on options to resolve the
issues we outlined previously. We recognize that there is not
necessarily a standard industry practice for the fitting and training
components for furnishing lymphedema compression garments and seek
comment on whether there are best practices in this space that CMS
should consider further in the future. We also welcome comment on
whether any HCPCS level I (Current Procedural Terminology or
CPT[supreg]) codes may describe the services of the therapist in these
scenarios.
Finally, there are accessories such as zippers in garments, liners
worn under garments or wraps with adjustable straps, and padding or
fillers that are not compression garments but may be necessary for the
effective use of a gradient compression garment or wraps with
adjustable straps. There are also accessories like donning and doffing
aids for different body parts such as lower limb butlers or foot
slippers that allow the patients to put on the compression stockings
with minimum effort and are not used with compression bandaging systems
or supplies. We are proposing that accessories necessary for the
effective use of gradient compression garments and gradient compression
wraps with adjustable straps would also fall under this new benefit for
lymphedema compression treatment items. For example, a liner that is
used with a garment because it is needed to prevent skin breakdown
could be covered under the new benefit because it is necessary for the
effective use of the garment. We are specifically soliciting comments
on the topic of coverage of accessories necessary for the effective use
of gradient compression garment or wraps with adjustable straps,
including what HCPCS codes should be established to describe these
items, as well as comments on whether there are additional items other
than the gradient compression garments, gradient compression wraps with
adjustable straps, and compression bandaging supplies that could
potentially fall under the new benefit category for lymphedema
compression treatment items.
4. Healthcare Common Procedure Coding System (HCPCS) Codes for
Lymphedema Compression Treatment Items
HCPCS codes are divided into two principal subsystems, referred to
as Level I and Level II of the HCPCS. Level I of the HCPCS is comprised
of Current Procedural Terminology (CPT), a numeric coding system
maintained by the American Medical Association (AMA). HCPCS Level II is
a standardized coding system that is used primarily to identify drugs,
biologicals and non-drug and non-biological items, supplies, and
services not included in the CPT codes, such as ambulance services and
DMEPOS when used outside a physician's office. As shown in Table FF-A
1, there are currently Level II HCPCS codes for compression garments
(stockings, sleeves, gloves, and gauntlets) and compression wraps with
adjustable straps that may be used in the treatment of lymphedema and
other conditions.
[[Page 43772]]
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TP10JY23.079
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TP10JY23.080
The items described by HCPCS codes A6531, A6532, and A6545 are
covered by Medicare under the Part B benefit for surgical dressings at
section 1861(s)(5) of the Act, when used in the treatment of an open
venous stasis ulcer. Total allowed charges for these three codes in
2022 was approximately $2.5 million, with around $1.9 million for the
non-elastic, below knee, gradient compression wrap with adjustable
straps described by code A6545, $500,000 for the below knee, gradient
compression stocking code A6531, and $100,000 for the below knee,
gradient compression stocking code A6532. We are not proposing to
change this policy with this rule, but we must address the codes for
items when they are covered under Medicare Part B as surgical dressing
versus when they are covered under Medicare Part B as lymphedema
compression treatment for billing and claims processing purposes. We
are therefore proposing to add three new HCPCS codes for use when
billing for A6531, A6532, and A6545 items used as surgical dressings.
The proposed codes are as follows:
A--Gradient compression stocking, below knee, 30-40 mmhg, used
as surgical dressing in treatment of open venous stasis ulcer, each
A--Gradient compression stocking, below knee, 40-50 mmhg, used
as surgical dressing in treatment of open venous stasis ulcer, each
A--Gradient compression wrap with adjustable straps, non-
elastic, below knee, 30-50 mmhg, used as surgical dressing in treatment
of open venous stasis ulcer, each
The surgical dressing fee schedule amounts for codes A6531, A6532,
and A6545 would be applied to the three new codes. The remaining
discussion in this section addresses the coding for the lymphedema
compression treatment items.
For gradient compression stockings, we are proposing to use
existing codes A6530 through A6541, and code A6549 from Table FFA-1.
For codes A6530
[[Page 43773]]
through A6541, we are soliciting comments on whether we should maintain
the three pressure level differentiations in the codes and whether
these differentiations should be something other than 18-30, 30-40, and
40-50 mmHg. We are also soliciting comments on whether there is a
better way to describe the body areas these garments cover rather than
``below knee,'' ``thigh-length,'' ``full-length/chap style,'' and
``waist-length.'' For each code, we propose to add a matching code for
the custom version of the garment. For example, if we continue to use
codes A6530 through A6532 for below knee stockings with the current
descriptions, we would add corresponding codes for the custom versions
of these garments, such as the following:
A--Gradient compression stocking, below knee, 18-30 mmhg,
custom, each
A--Gradient compression stocking, below knee, 30-40 mmhg,
custom, each
A--Gradient compression stocking, below knee, 40-50 mmhg,
custom, each
For gradient compression garments for the upper extremities and
areas of the body, we propose to use existing codes A6549 and S8420
through S8428. We propose renumbering codes S8420 through S8428 as
``A'' codes rather than S codes. We also propose removing the words
``ready-made'' and revising ``custom made'' to ``custom'' for the codes
for the upper extremity gradient compression garments and replacing the
word ``pressure'' with ``compression,'' in order to be consistent with
the wording for the codes for the lower extremity garments. We propose
to add the word ``arm'' in front of the word ``sleeve'' for the upper
extremity garments. We also propose to add a code for a custom
gauntlet. Finally, we propose to add the word ``each'' to the
description for each code. If no other changes are made, the new codes
would be as follows:
--Gradient compression arm sleeve and glove combination, each
A--Gradient compression arm sleeve and glove combination,
custom, each
A--Gradient compression arm sleeve, each
A--Gradient compression arm sleeve, custom, medium weight,
each
A--Gradient compression arm sleeve, custom, heavy weight, each
A--Gradient compression glove, each
A--Gradient compression glove, custom, medium weight, each
A--Gradient compression glove, custom, heavy weight, each
A--Gradient compression gauntlet, each
A--Gradient compression gauntlet, custom, each
We are soliciting comment on whether separate codes are needed for
mastectomy sleeves or whether these items can be grouped together under
the same codes used for other arm sleeves (S8422 thru S8424). We are
soliciting comments on whether there is a need to retain codes S8420
through S8428, in addition to the renumbered A code versions, for use
by other payers other than Medicare. If these codes are retained, they
would be invalid for Medicare use, but could be used by other payers in
lieu of the new A codes.
We are also proposing to add the following new codes for other
upper body areas:
A--Gradient compression garment, neck/head, each
A--Gradient compression garment, neck/head, custom, each
A--Gradient compression garment, torso and shoulder, each
A--Gradient compression garment, torso/shoulder, custom, each
A--Gradient compression garment, genital region, each
A--Gradient compression garment, genital region, custom, each
For all of the codes for the upper extremities and upper body
areas, we are soliciting comments on whether we should establish codes
for pressure level differentiations similar to the pressure level
differentiations in codes A6530 through A6541, possibly replacing the
words medium and heavy weight, as well as whether codes are needed for
additional upper body areas.
We are proposing the following new codes for nighttime garments:
A--Gradient compression garment, glove, padded, for nighttime
use, each
A--Gradient compression garment, arm, padded, for nighttime
use, each
A--Gradient compression garment, lower leg and foot, padded,
for nighttime use, each
A--Gradient compression garment, full leg and foot, padded,
for nighttime use, each
For gradient compression wraps with adjustable straps, we are
proposing to use code A6545 in Table FF-A 1 for below knee wraps and
solicit comments on whether additional codes or coding revisions are
needed for the purpose of submitting claims for gradient compression
wraps with adjustable straps. Regarding HCPCS codes for compression
bandaging systems, we believe more codes are needed than existing codes
S8430 (Padding for compression bandage, roll) and S8431 (Padding for
compression bandage, roll), for example, to describe the supplies used
in a compression bandaging system consisting of more than two layers.
We also believe that specific base sizes should be added to the code,
for example ``10cm by 2.9m'' rather than the vague unit of ``roll'' and
are soliciting comments on HCPCS coding changes needed to adequately
describe the various compression bandaging systems used for the
treatment of lymphedema. Finally, as noted in section VII.B.3. of this
rule, we are soliciting comments on HCPCS codes needed to describe
accessories necessary for the effective use of gradient compression
garments or wraps with adjustable straps.
5. Procedures for Making Benefit Category Determinations and Payment
Determinations for New Lymphedema Compression Treatment Items
We are proposing to implement the new Part B benefit for lymphedema
compression treatment items and the initial set of HCPCS codes to
identify these items for claims processing purposes, effective January
1, 2024. In the future, as new products come on the market and
refinements are made to existing technology, there will be a need to
determine whether these newer technology items are lymphedema
compression treatment items covered under this new benefit and what
changes to the HCPCS are needed to identify these items for claims
processing purposes. There will also be a need to establish payment
amounts for the newer items in accordance with the payment rules
established as part of this rulemaking.
Currently, CMS uses the procedures at 42 CFR 414.114 to make
benefit category determinations and payment determinations for new
splints and casts, parenteral and enteral nutrition (PEN) items and
services covered under the prosthetic device benefit, and intraocular
lenses (IOLs) inserted in a physician's office covered under the
prosthetic device benefit. CMS uses the same procedures at 42 CFR
414.240 to make benefit category determinations and payment
determinations for new DME items and services, prosthetics and
orthotics, surgical dressings, therapeutic shoes and inserts, and other
prosthetic devices other than PEN items and services and IOLs inserted
in a physician's office. These procedures involve the use of the HCPCS
public meetings where consultation from the public is obtained on
preliminary HCPCS coding determinations for new items and services.
Public consultation is also obtained at these meetings on
[[Page 43774]]
preliminary benefit category determinations and preliminary payment
determinations for the new items and services. To ensure appropriate
and timely consideration of future items that may qualify as lymphedema
compression treatment items, we are proposing to use these same
procedures to make benefit category determinations and payment
determinations for new lymphedema compression treatment items. Future
changes to the HCPCS codes established in section 2 of this rule for
lymphedema compression treatment items would also be made using this
public meeting process.
We are proposing to use the same process described in Sec. 414.240
to obtain public consultation on preliminary coding, benefit category,
and payment determinations for new lymphedema compression treatment
items. That is, when a request is received for a new HCPCS code or
change to an existing HCPCS code(s) for a lymphedema compression
treatment item, CMS would perform an analysis to determine if a new
code or other coding change is warranted and if the item meets the
definition of lymphedema compression treatment item at section
1861(mmm) of the Act. A preliminary payment determination would also be
developed for items determined to be lymphedema compression treatment
items and are implemented in April or October of each year. The
preliminary determinations would be posted on CMS.gov approximately 2
weeks prior to a public meeting. As part of this coding and payment
determination process, it may be necessary to combine or divide
existing codes; in this situation, we are proposing to follow the same
process as outlined in 42 CFR 414.236. After consideration of public
input on the preliminary determinations, CMS would post final HCPCS
coding decisions, benefit category determinations, and payment
determinations on CMS.gov, and then issue program instructions to
implement the changes.
In addition to these proposals for initial payment determinations
for lymphedema treatment items and the proposed process for addressing
new lymphedema treatment items, as required by the Act, we also propose
to revise the DMEPOS regulations to include lymphedema treatment items
in the competitive bidding process. We are proposing changes to 42 CFR
414.402 to add lymphedema treatment items to the definition of
``items'' for competitive bidding, Sec. 414.408 to include lymphedema
treatment items in the list of items for which payment would be made on
a lump sum purchase basis under the competitive bidding program in
accordance with any frequency limitations established under proposed
subpart Q in accordance with section 1834(z)(2) of the Act, and Sec.
414.412 to add reference to the proposed subpart Q to the bid rules.
6. Enrollment, Quality Standards, and Accreditation Requirements for
Suppliers of Lymphedema Compression Treatment Items and Medicare Claims
Processing Contractors for These Items
Section 1834(a)(20) of the Act requires the establishment of
quality standards for suppliers of DMEPOS that are applied by
independent accreditation organizations. Section 4133(b)(1) of the CAA,
2023 amends section 1834(a)(20)(D) of the Act to apply these
requirements to lymphedema compression treatment items as medical
equipment and supplies.
Section 1834(j) of the Act requires that suppliers of medical
equipment and supplies obtain and continue to periodically renew a
supplier number in order to be allowed to submit claims and receive
payment for furnishing DMEPOS items and services. The suppliers must
meet certain supplier standards in order to possess a supplier number
and are also subject to other requirements specified in section 1834(j)
of the Act. Section 4133(b)(2) of the CAA, 2023 amends section
1834(j)(5) of the Act to include lymphedema compression treatment items
as medical equipment and supplies subject to the requirements of
section 1834(j) of the Act.
Suppliers of DMEPOS meeting the requirements of sections
1834(a)(20) and 1834(j) of the Act, and related implementing
regulations at 42 CFR 424.57 must enroll in Medicare or change their
enrollment using the paper application Medicare Enrollment Application
for DMEPOS Suppliers (CMS-855S) or through the Medicare Provider
Enrollment, Chain, and Ownership System (PECOS). For more information
on supplier enrollment, go to: https://www.cms.gov/medicare/provider-enrollment-and-certification/become-a-medicare-provider-or-supplier.
Regulations at 42 CFR 421.210 establish regional contractors to
process Medicare claims for DMEPOS items and services. These
contractors are known as Durable Medical Equipment Medicare
Administrative Contractors (DME MACs). We are proposing to include
lymphedema compression treatment items as DMEPOS items that fall within
the general text of section 421.210(b)(7) for other items or services
which are designated by CMS. Thus, claims for these items would be
processed by the DME MACs.
7. Payment Basis and Frequency Limitations for Lymphedema Compression
Treatment Items
Section 1834(z)(1) of the Act mandates an appropriate payment basis
for lymphedema compression treatment items defined in section 1861(mmm)
of the Act and specifically identifies payment rates from other
government and private sector payers that may be taken into account in
establishing the payment basis for these items. These sources include
payment rates used by Medicaid state plans, the Veterans Health
Administration (VHA), group health plans, and health insurance coverage
(as defined in section 2791 of the Public Health Service Act). Section
1834(z)(1) of the Act also indicates that other information determined
to be appropriate may be taken into account in establishing the payment
basis for lymphedema compression treatment items.
Based on our research, Medicaid state plans generally classify and
provide lymphedema compression treatment items in the same manner as
other durable medical equipment and supplies for home health. While
State Medicaid Director Letter #18-001 focuses on how states may
demonstrate compliance with the restriction on claiming federal
financial participation for ``excess'' durable medical equipment
spending, it describes how Medicaid state plan payment for the broader
category of such items (outside of a managed care contract) is usually
made either through established fee schedules, a competitive bidding
process of the state's design, or through a manual pricing methodology
based on the invoice submitted with each claim.\180\ For the purpose of
this proposed rule, we took into account the average Medicaid fee
schedule payment amounts across all states that have published fee
schedule amounts for these items in developing, in part, an appropriate
payment basis for lymphedema compression treatment items under
Medicare.
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\180\ Available at https://www.medicaid.gov/federal-policy-guidance/downloads/smd18001.pdf
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The VHA does not have established fee schedules for lymphedema
compression treatment items, but rather follows a policy of paying for
these items based on the reasonableness of vendor pricing. Based on our
conversations with the VHA, we understand that for these items, vendor
prices at or below acquisition cost plus 50 percent is typically
considered
[[Page 43775]]
reasonable, while Medicaid state plans typically pay for DMEPOS items
that do not have fee schedule amounts at acquisition cost plus 20 to 30
percent. Given this difference in the allowed supplier margin, the
amounts determined to be reasonable payment rates for these items by
the VHA may be approximated by increasing the average Medicaid payment
rate by 20 to 30 percent. While the VHA may not have fee schedule
amounts for these items, the Department of Defense's TRICARE system
maintains fee schedule amounts for lower-extremity lymphedema
compression garments. These amounts are approximately equal to the
average Medicaid fee schedule amount plus 20 percent. We therefore
believe that the average Medicaid fee schedule amount plus 20 percent
represents what other government payers such as the VHA and TRICARE
consider an appropriate payment basis for these items and a slightly
higher payment basis than the average payment rates established by
Medicaid state plans that have fee schedule amounts for these items; we
are specifically soliciting comments on this. We also conducted a
search of internet prices for lymphedema compression treatment items
and found these prices to be in line with the TRICARE fee schedule
amounts and average Medicaid fee schedule amounts plus 20 percent. We
believe that appropriate payment amounts for Medicare for lymphedema
compression treatment items would be payment amounts that approximate
the payment rates determined to be reasonable by other government
payers such as TRICARE, State Medicaid agencies, and, as previously
explained, estimates of the payment rates determined to be reasonable
by the VHA based on 120 percent of the average Medicaid state plan
rates. Because these rates are in line with internet retail prices, we
have not closely examined non-government payers.
Having taken into account the payment amounts from the various
sources, as previously described, as required by Act, we propose to set
payment amounts for lymphedema compression treatment items using the
following methodology. Where Medicaid state plan payment amounts are
available for a lymphedema compression treatment item, we propose to
set payment amounts at 120 percent of the average of the Medicaid
payment amounts for the lymphedema compression treatment item. Where
Medicaid payment amounts are not available for an item, we propose to
set payment amounts at 100 percent of the average of internet retail
prices and payment amounts for that item from TRICARE. Where payment
amounts are not available from Medicaid state plans or TRICARE for a
given lymphedema compression treatment item, we propose to base payment
amounts based on 100 percent of average internet retail prices for that
item. We seek comment on these payment methodologies and whether
further adjustments are appropriate.
As previously noted, payment rates for the supply of these items
includes payment for fitting services and any other services necessary
for furnishing the item. As noted earlier, taking measurements of
affected body areas and other fitting services necessary for furnishing
lymphedema compression treatment items are an integral part of
furnishing the items and the suppliers receiving payment for furnishing
lymphedema compression treatment items are responsible for ensuring
that any necessary fitting services are provided as part of furnishing
the items.
The following table presents a preliminary example of what payment
amounts may be, based on the proposed methodology described, as
previously detailed, and certain HCPCS codes that we are proposing to
be classified under the Medicare Part B benefit category for lymphedema
treatment items.
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TP10JY23.081
[[Page 43776]]
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TP10JY23.082
Where new items are added to this benefit category, following the
process outlined in section 3 of this section of this rule, the data
sources (Medicaid, TRICARE, VHA, or internet prices) may not initially
be available for establishing an appropriate payment amount. We are
proposing that in this situation, until the data necessary for
establishing the payment amount becomes available, the DME MACs would
consider what an appropriate payment amount would be for each item on
an individual, claim-by-claim basis and may consider using pricing for
similar items that already have established payment amounts.
Section 1834(z)(2) of the Act authorizes the establishment of
frequency limitations for lymphedema compression treatment items and
specifies that no payment may be made for lymphedema compression
treatment items furnished other than at a frequency established in
accordance with this provision of the Act. Gradient compression
garments are designed differently depending on whether for daytime or
nighttime use. Those meant for daytime provide a higher level of
compression while those for nighttime offer milder compression and are
less snug against the skin. We are seeking comment on our proposal to
cover and make payment for two garments or wraps with adjustable straps
for daytime use (one to wear while another is being washed), per
affected extremity, or part of the body, to be replaced every 6 months
or when the items is lost, stolen, or irreparably damaged, or if needed
based on a change in the beneficiary's medical or physical condition
such as an amputation, complicating injury or illness, or a significant
change in body weight. In order to maintain mobility, patients may
require separate garments or wraps above and below the joint of the
affected extremity or part of the body. As discussed in section B of
this section of this rule, nighttime garments are inelastic and more
durable than the elastic daytime garments and we believe it would be
appropriate to replace these garments once per year. We are proposing
to cover one nighttime garment per affected extremity or part of the
body to be replaced once a year or when the garment is lost, stolen, or
irreparably damaged, or if needed based on a change in the
beneficiary's medical or physical condition such as an amputation,
complicating injury or illness, or a significant change in body weight.
Lymphedema is a chronic condition that can be stabilized if properly
treated. It may also worsen as the result of infection, radiation and
chemotherapy, or progression of comorbid conditions such as obesity. At
this point, patients may require changes in their garment prescription.
Such changes due to medical necessity will not be subject to the
frequency limitations, as previously described. In addition, as with
other DMEPOS items, payment could be made for replacement of garments
and other items when they are lost, stolen, or irreparably damaged.
Examples of lost items include items left behind after evacuating due
to a disaster like a hurricane or tornado. Examples of irreparably
damaged items include items that burn in a fire, are exposed to toxic
chemicals, or are damaged by some other event and does not include
items that wear out over time.
With regard to replacement frequencies for compression bandaging
systems and supplies, the weekly frequency and overall length of phase
one (active) treatment is dependent on the severity of lymphedema. Some
patients may require treatment 4 to 5 days per week in phase one while
others may only need treatment 2 to 3 days per week. Bandages are used
following some form of hands-on decompression to maintain the
reduction. Therefore, we are not proposing specific replacement
frequencies for the compression bandaging systems and supplies. We are
proposing that the DME MACs would make determinations regarding whether
the quantities of compression bandaging supplies furnished and billed
during phase one of treatment of the beneficiary's lymphedema are
reasonable and necessary.
As previously discussed, section 4133(a)(3) of the CAA, 2023 adds
subparagraph D to section 1847(a)(2) of the Act to add lymphedema
compression treatment items to the DMEPOS competitive bidding program.
Section 1834(z)(3)(A) of the Act specifies that the payment basis under
section 1847(a) of the Act becomes the payment basis for lymphedema
compression treatment items furnished under the competitive bidding
program. Section 1834(z)(3)(B) of the Act provides authority to use
information on the payment determined for these items under the
competitive bidding program to adjust the payment amounts otherwise
determined under section 1834(z) for an area that is not a competitive
bidding area under section 1847 of the Act, and in the case of such
adjustment, section 1842(b)(8) and (9) of the Act shall not be applied.
8. Proposed Changes
We are proposing to amend 42 CFR 410.36 to add paragraph (a)(4) for
lymphedema compression treatment items as a new category of medical
supplies, appliances, and devices covered and payable under Medicare
Part B, including: standard and custom fitted gradient compression
garments; gradient compression wraps with adjustable straps;
compression bandaging systems; other items determined to be lymphedema
compression treatment items under the process established under Sec.
414.1670; and accessories such as zippers in garments, liners worn
under garments or wraps with adjustable straps, and padding or fillers
that are necessary for the effective use of a gradient compression
garment or wrap with adjustable straps. In order to maintain mobility,
patients may require separate garments or wraps above and below the
joint of the affected extremity or part of the body, and we are
proposing that payment may be made in these circumstances. We are
proposing that payment may be made for multiple garments used on
different parts of the body when the multiple garments are determined
to be reasonable and necessary for the treatment of lymphedema. For
example, if it is determined that a beneficiary needs three daytime
garments to cover one
[[Page 43777]]
affected area for the treatment of lymphedema, Medicare would pay for
two sets of those three garments for that specific affected area, as
well as any other areas of the body affected by lymphedema. For the
purpose of establishing the scope of the benefit for these items, we
are seeking comment on the following definitions we are proposing to
add to 42 CFR 410.2 as they apply to lymphedema compression treatment
items:
Gradient compression means the ability to apply a higher level of
compression or pressure to the distal (farther) end of the limb or body
part affected by lymphedema with lower, decreasing compression or
pressure at the proximal (closer) end of the limb or body part affected
by lymphedema.
Custom fitted gradient compression garment means a garment that is
uniquely sized and shaped to fit the exact dimensions of the affected
extremity or part of the body of an individual to provide accurate
gradient compression to treat lymphedema.
The proposed definition of ``gradient compression'' would apply to
all lymphedema compression treatment items (garments, wraps, etc.) that
utilize gradient compression in treating lymphedema. The proposed
definition of ``custom fitted gradient compression garment'' would
apply to custom fitted gradient compression garments covered under the
new benefit category for lymphedema compression treatment items. We
believe these definitions are necessary for establishing the scope of
this new benefit.
Lymphedema compression treatment item means standard and custom
fitted gradient compression garments and other items specified under
Sec. 410.36(a)(4) that are--
Furnished on or after January 1, 2024, to an individual
with a diagnosis of lymphedema for treatment of such condition;
Primarily and customarily used to serve a medical purpose
and for the treatment of lymphedema; and
Prescribed by a physician (or a physician assistant, nurse
practitioner, or a clinical nurse specialist (as those terms are
defined in section 1861(aa)(5) of the Social Security Act) to the
extent authorized under State law.
We are proposing to modify and add to the existing HCPCS codes for
surgical dressings and lymphedema compression treatment items as
explained in section VII.B.4. of this rule. We are proposing that
future changes to the HCPCS codes for these items based on external
requests for changes to the HCPCS or internal CMS changes would be made
through the HCPCS public meeting process described at: https://www.cms.gov/medicare/coding/medhcpcsgeninfo/hcpcspublicmeetings.
We are proposing to add Sec. 414.1670 under new subpart Q and use
the same process described in Sec. 414.240 to obtain public
consultation on preliminary benefit category determinations and payment
determinations for new lymphedema compression treatment items. The
preliminary determinations would be posted on CMS.gov in advance of a
public meeting. After consideration of public input on the preliminary
determinations, CMS would post final HCPCS coding decisions, benefit
category determinations, and payment determinations on CMS.gov, and
then issue program instructions to implement the changes.
We are proposing to add a new subpart Q under the regulations at 42
CFR part 414 titled, ``Payment for Lymphedema Compression Treatment
Items'' to implement the provisions of section 1834(z) of the Act. We
are proposing to add Sec. 414.1600 to our regulations explaining the
purpose and definitions under the new subpart Q. We are proposing to
add Sec. 414.1650 and paragraph (a) to establish the payment basis
equal to 80 percent of the lesser of the actual charge for the item or
the payment amounts established for the item under paragraph (b). We
are proposing under Sec. 414.1650(b) to establish the payment amounts
for lymphedema compression treatment items based on the average of
state Medicaid fee schedule amounts plus 20 percent. Where Medicaid
rates are not available, we are proposing to use the average of average
internet retail prices and payment amounts established by TRICARE (or,
where there is no TRICARE fee schedule rate, the average of internet
retail prices alone). We propose under Sec. 414.1650(c) that,
beginning January 1, 2025, and on January 1 of each subsequent year,
the Medicare payment rates established for these items in accordance
with section 1834(z)(1) of the Act and Sec. 414.1650(b) would be
increased by the percentage change in the Consumer Price Index for All
Urban Consumers (CPI-U) for the 12-month period ending June of the
preceding year. For example, effective beginning January 1, 2025, the
payment rates that were in effect on January 1, 2024 would be increased
by the percentage change in the CPI-U from June 2023 to June 2024.
We are also proposing to add Sec. 414.1660 to address continuity
of pricing when HCPCS codes for lymphedema compression treatment items
are divided or combined. Similar to current regulations at 42 CFR
414.110 and 414.236, we propose that when there is a single HCPCS code
that describes two or more distinct complete items (for example, two
different but related or similar items), and separate codes are
subsequently established for each item, the payment amounts that
applied to the single code continue to apply to each of the items
described by the new codes. We propose that when the HCPCS codes for
several different items are combined into a single code, the payment
amounts for the new code are established using the average (arithmetic
mean), weighted by allowed services, of the payment amounts for the
formerly separate codes.
We are proposing to add Sec. 414.1680 and the following frequency
limitations for lymphedema compression treatment items established in
accordance with section 1834(z)(2) of the Act under new subpart Q:
Two daytime garments or wraps with adjustable straps for
each affected limb or area of the body, replaced every 6 months.
One nighttime garment for each affected limb or area of
the body, replaced once a year.
We are soliciting comments on whether two nighttime garments should
be allowed, with both garments being replaced once every 2 years, to
allow for more than 1 day for washing and drying of the garment(s). We
are also proposing to cover replacements of garments or wraps that are
lost, stolen, irreparably damaged, or when needed due to a change in
the patient's medical or physical condition. We are not proposing
specific replacement frequencies for compression bandaging systems or
supplies. We are proposing that determinations regarding the quantity
of compression bandaging supplies covered for each beneficiary during
phase one of decongestive therapy would be made by the DME MAC that
processes the claims for the supplies.
We are proposing to revise the regulations for competitive bidding
under subpart F at 42 CFR 414 to include lymphedema compression
treatment items under the competitive bidding program as mandated by
section 1847(a)(2)(D) of the Act. We propose to modify the list of
items that may be included in competitive bidding described in Sec.
414.402 to include lymphedema treatment items and revise Sec. 414.408
to include lymphedema treatment items in the list of items for which
payment would be made on a lump sum purchase basis under the
competitive bidding program in accordance with any frequency
limitations established under proposed
[[Page 43778]]
subpart Q in accordance with section 1834(z)(2) of the Act. Finally, we
propose to add reference the proposed subpart Q to the bid rules
described at Sec. 414.412.
The methodologies for adjusting DMEPOS payment amounts for items
included in the DMEPOS Competitive Bidding Program (CBP) that are
furnished in non-CBAs based on the payments determined under the DMEPOS
CBP are set forth at Sec. 414.210(g). Section 4133(a)(3) of the CAA,
2023 amended section 1847(a)(2) of the Act to include lymphedema
compression treatment items under the DMEPOS CBP, and section
4133(a)(2) of the CAA, 2023 amended section 1834 of the Act to provide
authority to adjust the payment amounts established for lymphedema
compression treatment items in accordance with new subsection z based
on the payments determined for these items under the DMEPOS CBP. We
believe the methodologies for adjusting DMEPOS payment amounts at Sec.
414.210(g) should also be used to adjust the payment amounts for
lymphedema compression treatment items included in the DMEPOS CBP that
are furnished in non-CBAs. We see no reason why different methodologies
for adjusting payment amounts based on payments determined under the
DMEOPS CBP would need to be established for lymphedema compression
treatment items. We are therefore proposing to add Sec. 414.1690
indicating that the payment amounts established under Sec. 414.1650(b)
for lymphedema compression treatment items may be adjusted using
information on the payment determined for lymphedema compression
treatment items as part of implementation of the DMEPOS CBP under
subpart F using the methodologies set forth at Sec. 414.210(g).
C. Definition of Brace
1. Background
The Social Security Act of 1965 (the Act) defines the scope of
benefits available to eligible Medicare beneficiaries under Medicare
Part B, the voluntary supplementary medical insurance program defined
by section 1832 of the Act. Section 1832(a)(1) of the Act establishes
the Medicare Part B benefit for ``medical and other health services.''
Section 1861(s) of the Act further defines ``medical and other health
services'' to include under paragraph (9) leg, arm, back, and neck
braces, and artificial legs, arms, and eyes. Artificial legs, arms, and
eyes are artificial replacements for missing legs, arms, and eyes and
this rule does not address the scope of the Medicare benefit for these
items. Section 1834(h)(4)(C) of the Act details the payment rules for
particular items and services including specifying that ``the term
`orthotics and prosthetics' has the meaning given to such term in
section 1861(s)(9).'' Regulations at 42 CFR 410.36(a)(3) include leg,
arm, back, and neck braces under the list of medical supplies,
appliances, and devices in the scope of items paid for under Part B of
Medicare. However, the term ``brace'' is not defined in the Act or in
regulation. Specifically, the term brace is not defined in 42 CFR 410.2
Definitions for supplementary medical insurance benefits for Medicare.
The Medicare program instruction that defines the term brace is
located at CMS Pub. 100-02, Chapter 15, Sec. 130 of the Medicare
Benefit Policy Manual for Part B coverage of ``Leg, Arm, Back, and Neck
Braces, Trusses, and Artificial Legs, Arms, and Eyes.'' Within this
instruction, braces are defined as ``rigid and semi-rigid devices which
are used for the purpose of supporting a weak or deformed body member
or restricting or eliminating motion in a diseased or injured part of
the body.'' The Medicare definition of brace in program instructions
dates back to the 1970s and was previously located in the Medicare
Carriers Manual, HCFA Pub. 14, Part III, Chapter 2, Sec. 2133. This
longstanding definition of brace in our program instructions is used
for the purpose of making benefit category determinations in accordance
with the procedures located at 42 CFR 414.240 (86 FR 73911) regarding
when a device constitutes or does not constitute a leg, arm, back, or
neck brace for Medicare program purposes.
2. Current Issues
We believe that adding the definition of brace to the regulations
at 42 CFR 410.2 is necessary for describing the scope of the Medicare
Part B benefit for leg, arm, back, and neck braces. We believe that
codifying the definition that is currently located in Medicare program
instructions would continue the efficiency of the administration of the
Medicare program by providing clarity and transparency regarding the
scope of the benefit, for example, whether a specific device is a leg,
arm, back, or neck brace as defined in section 1861(s)(9) of the Act,
and consequently, payment determinations for such items. We also
believe that adding the definition of brace to the regulations would
support our benefit category determination process described in 42 CFR
414.240 (86 FR 73911).
The orthopedic industry has long established the attributes of a
``brace.'' We believe the definition of a brace in CMS Pub 100-02,
Chapter 15, Sec. 130 adequately captures the attributes of a brace.
The words ``rigid'' and ``semi-rigid'' are used to describe the
stiffness of a material. Rigid materials are used to eliminate motion
but also to support underload. Components of a brace can use semi-rigid
materials, which intentionally allow some amount of motion as compared
to materials that completely immobilize a part of the body. Braces are
typically prescribed to patients during the process of recovery and
rehabilitation in order to stop limbs, joints, or specific body
segments from moving for a pre-determined period. Braces may also be
prescribed for ongoing medical problems that require restriction or
limitation of joint movement; removal of weight or pressure from
healing or injured joints, muscles, or body parts; or reduction of
misalignment and function to reduce pain and facilitate improved
mobility. 181 182
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\181\ Webster, J., Murphy, D., 2019, Atlas of Orthoses and
Assistive Devices, 5th Edition, Elsevier, Philadelphia, PA. (Chapter
1) https://www.sciencedirect.com/book/9780323483230/atlas-of-orthoses-and-assistive-devices
\182\ CHAMPVA OPERATIONAL POLICY MANUAL: CHAPTER: 2, SECTION:
17.4. https://www.vha.cc.va.gov/system/templates/selfservice/va_ssnew/help/customer/locale/en-US/portal/554400000001036/content/554400000008979/021704-ORTHOTICS
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In order for a brace to properly function, it must utilize a three-
point pressure system to provide angular control over anatomical
joints.183 184 185 A three-point pressure system places a
single force at the area of the deformity, while two counter forces act
in the opposing direction. This pressure system requires that a brace
be rigid or semi-rigid in structure to apply sufficient relevant force
to support, restrict, or eliminate motion of the joint or specific body
part. The rigidity level of a brace is dependent on the body part and
purpose for which the brace is used. For example, a fully rigid brace
is used to eliminate motion and support underload. We believe the
definition of brace in CMS Pub 100-02, Chapter 15, Sec. 130, and our
proposed definition of
[[Page 43779]]
brace, adequately captures the various attributes of a brace.
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\183\ Webster, J., Murphy, D., 2019, Atlas of Orthoses and
Assistive Devices, 5th Edition, Elsevier, Philadelphia, PA. (Chapter
18). https://www.sciencedirect.com/book/9780323483230/atlas-of-orthoses-and-assistive-devices
\184\ Chalmers, D. D., & Hamer, G. P. (1985). Three-point
dynamic orthosis. Prosthetics and Orthotics International, 9(2),
115-116. https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/pdf/10.3109/03093648509164718. https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/pdf/10.3109/03093648509164718. https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/pdf/10.3109/03093648509164718. https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/pdf/10.3109/03093648509164718.
\185\ Article--Spinal Orthoses: TLSO and LSO--Policy Article
(A52500) (cms.gov).
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It is important to note that a rigid or semi-rigid device may look
like a brace in that it has metal struts, joints, and cuffs that go
over a limb, but may be used for purposes other than bracing the limb.
We believe that devices used for purposes other than supporting a weak
or deformed body member or restricting or eliminating motion of a
diseased or injured part of the body do not fall within the definition
of a brace in accordance with Pub 100-02, Chapter 15, Sec. 130
Medicare Benefit Policy Manual, and would not fall within our proposed
definition of brace. However, items that are not braces may meet the
Medicare Part B definition for durable medical equipment (DME) at 42
CFR 414.202. For example, continuous passive motion devices are covered
as DME in accordance with CMS Pub 100-03, Chapter 1, Part 4, Sec.
280.1 of the Medicare National Coverage Determinations Manual to
rehabilitate the knee to increase range of motion following surgery.
During continuous passive motion therapy, the joint area is secured to
the device, which then moves the affected joint through a prescribed
range of motion for an extended period of time. Continuous passive
motion devices have metal struts, joints, and cuffs that go over a limb
but are not used for the purpose of restricting or eliminating motion
in a diseased or injured part of the body or to support a weak or
deformed body member. While these devices do not meet the definition of
a brace in accordance with Pub 100-02, Chapter 15, Sec. 130 of the
Medicare Benefit Policy Manual, they are covered by Medicare as DME.
Similarly, dynamic adjustable extension/flexion devices and static
progressive stretch devices are used to stretch an arm or leg or other
part of the body to treat contractures and increase range of motion.
While these devices may look similar to a brace, they are used for the
purpose of treating contractures and are not used for the purpose of
supporting a weak or deformed body member or restricting or eliminating
motion in a diseased or injured part of the body. As a result, dynamic
adjustable extension/flexion devices and static progressive stretch
devices do not fall under the definition of brace in accordance with
CMS Pub 100-02, Chapter 15, Sec. 130, but are covered by Medicare as
DME.
It is also important to note that although braces in the past have
typically not included powered devices or devices with power features,
technology has evolved to include newer technology devices with power
features designed to assist with traditional bracing functions. For
example, effective January 1, 2020, code L2006 was added to the HCPCS
for a knee ankle foot device, any material, single or double upright,
swing and stance phase microprocessor control with adjustability,
includes all components (for example, sensors, batteries, charger), any
type activation, with or without ankle joint(s), custom fabricated).
CMS classified this device as a brace because it supports a weak or
deformed knee by preventing it from buckling under the patient. This
brace includes a microprocessor controlled hydraulic swing and stance
control knee joint that restricts/affects knee joint kinematics during
the swing and stance phases of the gait cycle. There are also powered
brace exoskeleton devices that support a patient's weak arms or legs
and have been classified as DME in the past. We determined that these
devices should be classified as braces due to their use in stabilizing,
positioning, supporting and restoring the function of a patient's weak
limbs. In addition, upper extremity powered exoskeleton devices used by
patients with chronic arm weakness such as from complications of stroke
or other neurological/neuromuscular injury and illness to support and
assist movement of weak arms were recently introduced to the market.
HCPCS codes L8701 (Powered upper extremity range of motion assist
device, elbow, wrist, hand with single or double upright(s), includes
microprocessor, sensors, all components and accessories, custom
fabricated) and L8702 (Powered upper extremity range of motion assist
device, elbow, wrist, hand, finger, single or double upright(s),
includes microprocessor, sensors, all components and accessories,
custom fabricated)) were added to the HCPCS effective January 1, 2019
to describe two categories of these items. These devices support the
arm of the patient and allows them to use volitional, intact
electromyographic signals in weak muscles to control the device through
a normal range of motion. A lower extremity powered exoskeleton device
that supports the weak legs of a patient with spinal cord injury (SCI)
at levels T7 to L5 to enable the patient to perform ambulatory
functions was also recently introduced to the market. Code K1007
(Bilateral hip, knee, ankle, foot device, powered, includes pelvic
component, single or double upright(s), knee joints any type, with or
without ankle joints any type, includes all components and accessories,
motors, microprocessors, sensors)) was added to the HCPCS effective
January 1, 2020 to describe this category of items. The device uses
motion sensors with an exoskeleton frame and onboard computer system.
Patients using all of the devices, as previously described, are better
able to elongate and flex their limbs using the respective device,
sometimes in a braced manner and sometimes in a controlled manner of
motion, thus improving the functioning of the malformed body member and
supporting the weak limbs. Additional information on the items, as
previously discussed, can be found at: www.cms.gov/files/document/2022-hcpcs-application-summary-biannual-1-2022-non-drug-and-non-biological-items-and-services.pdf.
One additional issue related to leg braces with shoes that are an
integral part of the brace. Section 1862(a)(8) of the Act generally
excludes orthopedic shoes or other supportive devices for the feet from
coverage under the Medicare program. However, longstanding policy at
CMS Pub 100-02, Chapter 15, Sec. 290 of the Medicare Benefit Policy
Manual indicates that this exclusion does not apply to such a shoe if
it is an integral part of a leg brace, and if that shoe or other
supportive device for the feet is an integral part of a leg brace, then
the cost of that shoe or device is included as part of the cost of the
brace. We are proposing to include this exception in the proposed
definition of a brace at Sec. 410.2.
3. Proposed Regulation Changes
We are proposing to amend the regulations at 42 CFR 410.2 to add
the definition of brace to improve clarity and transparency regarding
coverage and payment for the term brace as defined in section
1861(s)(9) of the Act. Also, we believe adding the definition in
regulations will improve the efficiency of the administration of the
Medicare program when considering whether a new device is a leg, arm,
back, or neck brace for benefit category and payment determinations
under our review procedures at Sec. 414.240. In addition, we believe
that adding the definition of a brace in regulation would expedite
coverage and payment for newer technology and powered devices,
potentially providing faster access to these new healthcare
technologies for Medicare beneficiaries.
We are proposing that the definition of brace at 42 CFR 410.2 would
be consistent with CMS's longstanding brace policy and information at
section 130 of chapter 15 of the Medicare Benefit Policy Manual (CMS
Pub 100-02). Thus, we are proposing to specify in the definition that a
brace is rigid or
[[Page 43780]]
semi-rigid and that the stiffness of the material used in making the
device is essential to the definition of a brace for purposes of the
scope of this Medicare benefit. Rigid refers to material used to
eliminate motion but also to support underload. Components of a brace
will use semi-rigid materials, which intentionally allow some amount of
motion as compared to materials that completely immobilize. Also, we
are proposing at 42 CFR 410.2 to specify in the definition that a brace
is used for the purpose of supporting a weak or deformed body member or
restricting or eliminating motion in a diseased or injured part of the
body. In addition, we are proposing to specify at Sec.
410.36(a)(3)(i)(A) that a brace may include a shoe if it is an integral
part of a leg brace and its expense is included as part of the cost of
the brace.
We note three HCPCS codes were established to permit billing of the
powered upper extremity devices and powered lower extremity exoskeleton
devices. Two HCPCS codes were established effective October 1, 2019
which are: L8701 (Powered upper extremity range of motion assist
device, elbow, wrist, hand with single or double upright(s), includes
microprocessor, sensors, all components and accessories, custom
fabricated) and L8702 (Powered upper extremity range of motion assist
device, elbow, wrist, hand, finger, single or double upright(s),
includes microprocessor, sensors, all components and accessories,
custom fabricated). One HCPCS was established effective October 1, 2020
which is K1007 (Bilateral hip, knee, ankle, foot device, powered,
includes pelvic component, single or double upright(s), knee joints any
type, with or without ankle joints any type, includes all components
and accessories, motors, microprocessors, sensors). However,
corresponding Medicare benefit category and Medicare payment
determinations were not finalized for these HCPCS codes to permit more
time for evaluation. As a result of the proposal to amend the
regulations at 42 CFR 410.2 to add the definition of brace, if
finalized, these codes would be classified under the definition of
brace. Using the processes outlined in regulations at 42 CFR 414.240,
we intend to obtain public consultation on the payment determinations
for these codes at an upcoming HCPCS Level II public meeting.
Additional information on these HCPCS codes can be found in the HCPCS
Level II Final Coding, Benefit Category and Payment Determinations
First Biannual (B1), 2022 HCPCS Coding Cycle at www.cms.gov/files/document/2022-hcpcs-application-summary-biannual-1-2022-non-drug-and-non-biological-items-and-services.pdf. The agenda and dates for a
public meeting will be available on the CMS HCPCS website: https://
www.cms.gov/Medicare/Coding/MedHCPCSGenInfo/HCPCSPublicMeetings.
D. Documentation Requirements for Durable Medical Equipment,
Prosthetics, Orthotics, and Supplies Products Supplied as Refills to
the Original Order
1. Background
Durable medical equipment (DME) is covered as a benefit category
under Part B under medical or other health services as described in
section1861(s)(6) of the Act and defined under section 1861(n) of the
Act. We further defined DME in regulations at Sec. 414.202 as
equipment that can withstand repeated use, is primarily and customarily
used to serve a medical purpose, is not generally useful to a person in
the absence of an illness or injury, is appropriate for use in the
home, and effective with respect to items classified as DME after
January 1, 2012, has an expected life of at least 3 years. Certain
items of DME require supplies for effective use. Supplies include, but
are not limited to, drugs and biologicals that must be put directly
into the equipment to achieve the therapeutic benefit or to assure the
proper functioning of the equipment. Examples include oxygen, tumor
chemotherapy agents transfused via an infusion pump, or diabetic test
strips used with a home glucose monitor.
Prosthetics and orthotics are defined under section 1861(s)(9) of
the Act and include leg, arm, back, and neck braces and artificial
legs, arms, and eyes--including replacements if required because of a
change in the patient's physical condition. These items are referred to
collectively as Durable Medical Equipment, Prosthetics, Orthotics, and
Supplies (DMEPOS).
DMEPOS items and supplies may be furnished on a recurring basis to
beneficiaries with chronic or longer-term conditions. For such items,
the practitioner may be able to forecast and prescribe, at the time of
the beneficiary's initial need or during later clinical interaction,
the ongoing medical need for DMEPOS items and/or supplies. In other
words, the practitioner may be able to determine the beneficiary's
expected, ongoing medical need both at the time of the interaction and
as anticipated need for later dates of service. In such cases, the
practitioner may write an order for immediate use and refills for later
dates of service.
Section 1893(a) of the Act authorized the Secretary to promote the
program integrity of the Medicare program by entering into contracts
with eligible entities to carry out activities specified in subsection
(b) of such section. Section 1893(b)(1) of the Act, authorizes
``[r]eview of activities of providers of services or other individuals
and entities furnishing items and services for which payment may be
made under this title . . . including medical and utilization review
[emphasis added] . . .''. In response to concerns related to auto-
shipments and delivery of DMEPOS supplies that may no longer be needed
or not needed at the same level of frequency/volume (for example,
stockpiling), CMS instituted policies to require suppliers to contact
the beneficiary prior to dispensing DMEPOS refills. In CY 2004, we
updated our Medicare Program Integrity Manual to include timeframes
related to refillable DMEPOS items.\186\ This was done to ensure that
the refilled item was necessary and to confirm any changes/
modifications to the order. At that time, CMS stated that contact with
the beneficiary or designee regarding refills should take place no
sooner than 7 days prior to the delivery/shipping date. CMS further
stated that subsequent deliveries of refills of DMEPOS products should
occur no sooner than 5 days prior to the end of the usage for the
current product. This change intended to allow for shipping of refills
on ``approximately'' the 25th day of the month in the case of a month's
supply, as later clarified and emphasized in preamble discussion in the
CY 2005 Physician Fee Schedule final rule (69 FR 66235).
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\186\ internet Only Manual 100-08, Program Integrity Manual
(2004), available at: https://www.cms.gov/Regulations-and-Guidance/Guidance/Transmittals/downloads/R61PI.pdf.
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In 2011, due to stakeholder concerns related to burden, we amended
the Medicare Program Integrity Manual to state that contact with the
beneficiary or designee regarding refills must take place no sooner
than 14 calendar days prior to the delivery/shipping date, and that
delivery of the DMEPOS product occur no sooner than 10 calendar days
prior to the end of usage for the current product.\187\ This is the
current policy on DMEPOS refills as described in the Medicare Program
Integrity Manual.\188\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\187\ internet Only Manual 100-08, Program Integrity Manual
(2011), available at: https://www.cms.gov/Regulations-and-Guidance/Guidance/Transmittals/Downloads/R378PI.pdf.
\188\ internet Only Manual 100-08, Program Integrity Manual,
Chapter 5, Section 5.2.6--Refills of DMEPOS Items Provided on a
Recurring Basis (2022), available at: https://www.cms.gov/Regulations-and-Guidance/Guidance/Manuals/Downloads/pim83c05.pdf.
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[[Page 43781]]
We note that while the timeframes are applicable to all refillable
items, they are most pertinent to the mail/delivery model because those
beneficiaries could potentially be most at risk for receiving
unnecessary or unsolicited items and supplies. For beneficiaries
calling, texting, or otherwise contacting their pharmacy or retail
store and picking up their refills, we note the decreased potential for
providing supplies that may not be medically necessary or for which the
beneficiary has sufficient supply. For items that the beneficiary
obtains in-person at a retail store, the signed delivery slip or a copy
of the itemized sales receipt is sufficient documentation of a request
for refill.
Both delivery models are intended to allow for uninterrupted supply
of the necessary item(s), and allow for the processing of claims for
refills delivered/shipped prior to the beneficiary's complete
exhaustion of their supply. We note that prior guidance related to this
policy referred to this sort of permissible overlap as refills for
items ``pending exhaustion''.
Despite the long-standing programmatic safeguards, compliance with
refill procedures continues to cause concerns. As recently as 2019, the
HHS Office of Inspector General (HHS OIG) did a national study
demonstrating that suppliers did not maintain sufficient refill
documentation.\189\ In fact, one national DMEPOS supplier was recently
revoked from the Medicare program due to billing for refills for
beneficiaries that were deceased.\190\
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\189\ Medicare Improperly Paid Suppliers an Estimated $92.5
Million for Inhalation Drugs, (October 2019), https://oig.hhs.gov/oas/reports/region9/91803018.pdf.
\190\ Press Release: Mail-Order Diabetic Testing Supplier and
Parent Company Agree to Pay $160 Million to Resolve Alleged False
Claims to Medicare (August 2, 2021), available at: https://www.justice.gov/opa/pr/mail-order-diabetic-testing-supplier-and-parent-company-agree-pay-160-million-resolve-alleged.
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Due to ongoing compliance concerns, and in efforts to promote
transparency, we propose to codify our refill documentation
requirements. At the same time, we are continuing our efforts to reduce
administrative burden. We have worked to identify many obsolete and
burdensome regulations that could be eliminated or reformed to improve
effectiveness. We have also examined our longstanding policies and
practices that are not codified in regulations but could be changed or
streamlined to achieve better outcomes and reduce provider and supplier
burden. Additionally, we are requesting comment on whether there are
ways to reduce burden for certain beneficiary populations for future
rulemaking.
Our refill policy has primarily been maintained in the Medicare
Program Integrity Manual, Local Coverage Determinations, and related
articles. We propose to codify and update our refill policy, in this
proposed rule, to maintain program integrity controls while being
mindful of supplier burden.
2. Provisions of the Proposed Regulations
a. Overview
At this time, we believe it is appropriate to codify policies
related to refills of DMEPOS items; taking into consideration the need
to balance program integrity concerns (for example, stockpiling)
against supplier burden concerns. While we continue to believe it
appropriate to confirm the medical need for the refill prior to
disbursement, we have found that minor deviations in timing are not
always reflective of medical need. Therefore, we are proposing to
strengthen our program integrity requirements to not only require
beneficiary contact, but to specify that such contact must result in
affirmative response from the beneficiary or designee. We propose to
eliminate the 14-day timeframe, for beneficiary contact, and to rather
rely upon a single 30-day timeframe for contact and confirmation of the
need for refill. That is, beneficiary contact and confirmation of need
for the refill must occur within the 30-day period prior to the end of
the current supply. We propose to remove the term ``pending
exhaustion'', which may be subject to interpretation, and instead use
the phrase ``the expected end of the current supply.''
We note that documentation of the need for refill, as obtained from
the Medicare beneficiary or designee, is not expected to require
specific quantities remaining--but rather to simply confirm their need
for the next refillable item. Suppliers contacting the beneficiaries to
confirm their need for the refill, shall confirm both that the
beneficiary is using the item and requires the refill, as evidenced by
the supplier documentation of an affirmative need for the refill. We
believe this type of generalized affirmation, in conjunction with our
claims processing controls, will provide sufficient program integrity
controls.
We believe the refill policy ensures that beneficiaries are
participating in their health care to confirm they get the DMEPOS
item(s) ordered and needed, which prevents individuals from receiving
unnecessary supplies. It also protects the Trust Fund from the
unnecessary provision of DMEPOS. We elongated the timeframe to 30-days
and clarified that the beneficiary need not provide specific remaining
quantities to comply. We believe this helps mitigate potential burden.
However, we are seeking comment on if, due to beneficiary burdens,
there are certain diagnosis/device combinations that a beneficiary
should not need to confirm the need for a refill or confirm the need
for refill with the same frequency. In other words, are there
beneficiary populations for which we would not expect any fluctuations
in the type or quantity of device, due to a permanent disability or
health condition, for which the supplier verification of need would
prove burdensome? Are there ways that Medicare could better balance the
beneficiary burden of responding to supplier outreach (for example,
text messaging, phone call to affirm need for recurring supply) when
contrasted with the burden of receiving potentially unnecessary items
(e.g., co-insurance payments)? We would take these comments into
consideration for potential future policy changes to our DMEPOS refill
policies.
We propose to codify our longstanding requirement that delivery of
DMEPOS items (that is, date of service) be no sooner than 10 calendar
days before the expected end of the current supply. We note that the
shipping timeframes have been relied upon for approximately 20 years--
to help both suppliers and Medicare Fee-for-Service contractors prevent
overlapping billings and unnecessary refills. For example, contractors
may use this timeframe to set up claims processing edits and alert
suppliers when an item is being rendered/billed that was previously
rendered and is not yet eligible for refill. We propose that date of
service may be defined as either the date of delivery of the DMEPOS
item, or for items rendered via delivery or shipping service, the
supplier may use the shipping date as the date of delivery. We propose
the shipping date may be defined as either the date the delivery/
shipping service label is created or the date the item is retrieved for
shipment by the mail carrier/delivering party; however, such dates
should not demonstrate significant variation.
b. Documentation To Support Refill
We propose to revise Sec. 410.38, paragraph (d), by adding
paragraph (d)(4) which outlines the documentation needed to support
refill requirements. In paragraph (d)(4)(i), we define refills, date of
service, and shipping date for purposes of this section. In paragraph
(d)(4)(ii), we propose that
[[Page 43782]]
documentation must include the following:
Evidence of the beneficiary or their representative's
affirmative response of the need for supplies, which should be obtained
as close to the expected end of the current supply as possible; Contact
and affirmative response shall be within 30 calendar days from the
expected end of the current supply.
For shipped items, the beneficiary name, date of contact,
the item requested, and an affirmative response from the beneficiary,
indicative of the need for refill, prior to dispensing the product.
For items obtained in-person from a retail store, the
delivery slip signed by the beneficiary or their representative or a
copy of the itemized sales receipt is sufficient documentation of a
request for refill.
In paragraph (d)(4)(iii), we propose the date of service for DMEPOS
items provided on a recurring basis be no sooner than 10 calendar days
prior to the expected end of the current supply.
VIII. Proposed Changes to the Provider and Supplier Enrollment
Requirements
A. Background
1. Overview of Medicare Provider Enrollment
Section 1866(j)(1)(A) of the Act requires the Secretary to
establish a process for the enrollment of providers and suppliers into
the Medicare program. The overarching purpose of the enrollment process
is to help confirm that providers and suppliers seeking to bill
Medicare for services and items furnished to Medicare beneficiaries
meet all applicable federal and state requirements to do so. The
process is, to an extent, a ``gatekeeper'' that prevents unqualified
and potentially fraudulent individuals and entities from entering and
inappropriately billing Medicare. Since 2006, we have undertaken
rulemaking efforts to outline our enrollment procedures. These
regulations are generally codified in 42 CFR part 424, subpart P
(currently Sec. Sec. 424.500 through 424.575 and hereafter
occasionally referenced as subpart P). They address, among other
things, requirements that providers and suppliers must meet to obtain
and maintain Medicare billing privileges.
As outlined in Sec. 424.510, one such requirement is that the
provider or supplier must complete, sign, and submit to its assigned
Medicare Administrative Contractor (MAC) the appropriate enrollment
form, typically the Form CMS-855 (OMB Control No. 0938-0685). The Form
CMS-855, which can be submitted via paper or electronically through the
internet-based Provider Enrollment, Chain, and Ownership System (PECOS)
process (SORN: 09-70-0532, PECOS), collects important information about
the provider or supplier. Such data includes, but is not limited to,
general identifying information (for example, legal business name),
licensure and/or certification data, and practice locations. The
application is used for a variety of provider enrollment transactions,
including the following:
Initial enrollment--The provider or supplier is--(1)
enrolling in Medicare for the first time; (2) enrolling in another
Medicare contractor's jurisdiction; or (3) seeking to enroll in
Medicare after having previously been enrolled.
Change of ownership--The provider or supplier is reporting
a change in its ownership.
Revalidation--The provider or supplier is revalidating its
Medicare enrollment information in accordance with Sec. 424.515.
(Suppliers of durable medical equipment, prosthetics, orthotics, and
supplies (DMEPOS) must revalidate their enrollment every 3 years); all
other providers and suppliers must do so every 5 years.)
Reactivation--The provider or supplier is seeking to
reactivate its Medicare billing privileges after it was deactivated in
accordance with Sec. 424.540.
Change of information--The provider or supplier is
reporting a change in its existing enrollment information in accordance
with Sec. 424.516.
After receiving the provider's or supplier's initial enrollment
application, CMS or the MAC reviews and confirms the information
thereon and determines whether the provider or supplier meets all
applicable Medicare requirements. We believe this screening process has
greatly assisted CMS in executing its responsibility to prevent
Medicare fraud, waste, and abuse.
As previously discussed, over the years we have issued various
final rules pertaining to provider enrollment. These rules were
intended not only to clarify or strengthen certain components of the
enrollment process but also to enable us to take action against
providers and suppliers: (1) engaging (or potentially engaging) in
fraudulent or abusive behavior; (2) presenting a risk of harm to
Medicare beneficiaries or the Medicare Trust Funds; or (3) that are
otherwise unqualified to furnish Medicare services or items. Consistent
with this, and as we discuss in section VIII.B. of this proposed rule,
we propose several changes to our existing Medicare provider enrollment
regulations.
2. Legal Authorities
There are two principal categories of legal authorities for our
proposed Medicare provider enrollment provisions:
Section 1866(j) of the Act furnishes specific authority
regarding the enrollment process for providers and suppliers.
Sections 1102 and 1871 of the Act provide general
authority for the Secretary to prescribe regulations for the efficient
administration of the Medicare program.
B. Proposed Provisions
1. Provisional Period of Enhanced Oversight
Section 1866(j)(3)(A) of the Act states that the Secretary shall
establish procedures to provide for a provisional period of between 30
days and 1 year during which new providers and suppliers--as the
Secretary determines appropriate, including categories of providers or
suppliers--would be subject to enhanced oversight. (Per section
1866(j)(3)(A) of the Act, such oversight can include, but is not
limited to, prepayment review and payment caps). As authorized by
section 1866(j)(3)(B) of the Act, CMS previously implemented such
procedures through sub-regulatory guidance with respect to newly
enrolling HHAs' requests for anticipated payments (RAP). RAPs were
upfront payments that HHAs received from Medicare before the beginning
of a 30-day period of home health services. ``New'' HHAs were subject
to a suppression of RAPs for a period between 30 days to 1 year (as
determined by CMS) during the timeframe they were in the provisional
period of enhanced oversight (PPEO). Each new HHA received notice of
the length of time for which it was to be in the PPEO with RAP
suppression. (CMS eliminated the use of RAPs for HHAs; beginning
January 1, 2022, CMS replaced RAP submissions with a Notice of
Admission.)
During this prior PPEO, CMS received inquiries regarding the scope
of the term ``new HHA'' as well as when the provisional period
commenced. Although section 1866(j)(3)(B) of the Act states that we may
implement procedures by program instruction, we believe in this
particular instance (and based partly on our experience with the
aforementioned HHA PPEO) that rulemaking is appropriate, though not
statutorily required. This would help clarify: (1) what constitutes a
``new''
[[Page 43783]]
provider or supplier for purposes of section 1866(j)(3) of the Act; and
(2) when the PPEO begins. Such elucidation is important because we may,
in the future, elect to apply our PPEO statutory authority to other
categories of providers or suppliers per section 1866(j)(3)(A) of the
Act. Accordingly, we propose the following provisions, both of which,
we emphasize, would apply to PPEOs irrespective of the provider or
supplier type involved.
First, we propose in new Sec. 424.527(a) to define a ``new''
provider or supplier (exclusively for purposes of our PPEO authority
under section 1866(j)(3) of the Act) as any of the following:
++ A newly enrolling Medicare provider or supplier. (This includes
providers that must enroll as a new provider in accordance with the
change in majority ownership provisions in Sec. 424.550(b).)
++ A certified provider or certified supplier undergoing a change
of ownership consistent with the principles of 42 CFR 489.18. (This
includes providers that qualify under Sec. 424.550(b)(2) for an
exception from the change in majority ownership requirements in Sec.
424.550(b)(1) but which are undergoing a change of ownership under 42
CFR 489.18).
++ A provider or supplier (including an HHA or hospice) undergoing
a 100 percent change of ownership via a change of information request
under Sec. 424.516.
We are including these transactions within our proposed definition
because they have historically and generally involved the effective
establishment of a new provider or supplier for purposes of Medicare
enrollment. (To illustrate, CMS typically treats suppliers such as
ambulance companies that are undergoing 100 percent ownership changes
as new suppliers because of our uncertainty about the new owner's
compliance with enrollment regulations, its billing behavior, etc.)
Including such situations within proposed Sec. 424.527(a) is therefore
necessary for CMS to exercise enhanced oversight, when warranted, of
such entities. CMS would rely on the codified version of this policy
once it becomes effective.
Second, we propose in Sec. 424.527(b) that the effective date of
the PPEO's commencement is the date on which the new provider or
supplier submits its first claim (rather than, for example, the date
the first service was performed or the effective date of the ownership
change). There are two reasons for this proposal. One is that Sec.
424.527(b) would align with our current practice as outlined in sub-
regulatory guidance. Also, we found during the previously-referenced
HHA PPEO that certain affected HHAs refrained from billing after their
placement in the PPEO to circumvent the enhanced oversight mechanism;
then, once their PPEO lapsed, the HHA engaged in improper billing
without the intended oversight. We believe Sec. 424.527(b) would help
stem this practice via the PPEO's commencement upon the provider's or
supplier's first claim submission. The provider or supplier would be
unable to avoid the PPEO by delaying billing until the PPEO's
expiration, as was the case with the HHA PPEO.
Although we have elected to address the issues in proposed Sec.
424.527 via rulemaking, we note that we retain the authority under
section 1866(j)(3)(B) of the Act to establish and implement PPEO
procedures via sub-regulatory guidance.
2. Retroactive Provider Agreement Terminations
Under section 1866(a)(1) of the Act, all Medicare providers (as
that term is defined in section 1866(e) of the Act) must enter into a
provider agreement with the Secretary. Subparts A, B, and E of 42 CFR
part 489 contain regulations concerning provider agreements. In
accordance with Sec. 489.52, a provider may voluntarily terminate its
provider agreement and thus depart the Medicare program. In doing so,
and under existing sub-regulatory policy, the provider may request a
retroactive termination effective date (for example, retroactive to the
date the provider's facility closed). To incorporate this practice into
regulation, we propose in new Sec. 489.52(b)(4) that a provider may
request a retroactive termination date, but only if no Medicare
beneficiary received services from the facility on or after the
requested termination date. This latter caveat would financially
protect beneficiaries by helping to ensure that Medicare may still
cover the services furnished to them near the end of the provider's
operations.
3. Hospice-Specific Provisions
a. Categorical Risk Screening
(1) Background
Under the authority granted to us by section 6401(a) of the
Affordable Care Act (which amended section 1866(j) to the Act), Sec.
424.518 outlines levels of screening by which CMS and its MACs review
initial applications, revalidation applications, applications to add a
practice location, and applications to report any new owner. These
screening categories and requirements are based on a CMS assessment of
the level of risk of fraud, waste, and abuse posed by a particular type
of provider or supplier. In general, the higher the level of risk a
certain provider or supplier type poses, the greater the level of
scrutiny with which CMS will screen and review providers or suppliers
within that category.
There are three levels of screening in Sec. 424.518: high,
moderate, and limited. Irrespective of which level a provider or
supplier type falls within, the MAC performs the following screening
functions upon receipt of an initial enrollment application, a
revalidation application, an application to add a new location, or an
application to report a new owner:
Verifies that the provider or supplier meets all
applicable federal regulations and state requirements for their
provider or supplier type.
Conducts state license verifications.
Conducts database checks on a pre- and post-enrollment
basis to ensure that providers and suppliers continue to meet the
enrollment criteria for their provider or supplier type.
Providers and suppliers at the moderate and high categorical risk
levels must also undergo a site visit. Furthermore, for those at the
high screening level, the MAC performs two additional functions under
Sec. 424.518(c)(2). First, the MAC requires the submission of a set of
fingerprints for a national background check from all individuals who
have a 5 percent or greater direct or indirect ownership interest in
the provider or supplier. Second, it conducts a fingerprint-based
criminal history record check of the Federal Bureau of Investigation's
Integrated Automated Fingerprint Identification System on these 5
percent or greater owners. These additional verification activities are
meant to correspond to the heightened risk involved.
There currently are only five provider and supplier types that fall
within the high categorical risk level under Sec. 424.518(c)(1):
newly/initially enrolling OTPs that have not been fully and
continuously certified by SAMHSA since October 23, 2018 (hereafter
collectively referenced as simply ``OTPs'' unless specified otherwise);
newly/initially enrolling HHAs; newly/initially enrolling DMEPOS
suppliers; newly/initially enrolling Medicare diabetes prevention
program (MDPP) suppliers; and newly/initially enrolling skilled nursing
facilities (SNFs). These five provider and supplier types are also
subject to high-risk level screening if, as previously indicated, they
are submitting a change of ownership
[[Page 43784]]
application under 42 CFR 489.18 or reporting any new owner (regardless
of ownership percentage) in accordance with a change of information or
other enrollment transaction under Title 42. They are subject to
moderate level screening (rather than high) if they are revalidating
their enrollment under Sec. 424.518.
(2) Categorical Risk Designation--Hospices
Hospices are currently in the moderate-risk screening category
under Sec. 424.518. However, CMS in recent years has become
increasingly concerned about program integrity issues within the
hospice community, particularly (though not exclusively) potential and
actual criminal behavior, fraud schemes, and improper billing. There
have been a number of criminal and False Claims Act cases involving
hospice owners and overseers that have arisen since our initial
designation of hospices as moderate risk in 2011. These include, but
are by no means limited to, the following:
In May 2014, a Pennsylvania hospice owner was sentenced to
176 months in prison for organizing a scheme to defraud Medicare via
his home hospice business. He had been found guilty of conspiracy to
commit health care fraud, 21 counts of health care fraud, 11 counts of
money laundering, and two counts of mail fraud. The owner's hospice had
submitted to Medicare approximately $16.2 million in false claims for
patients who were ineligible for hospice services and/or never received
the level of hospice services for which the hospice billed. Other
activities included the owner and co-owner: (1) directing staff to
alter patient files and rewrite nursing documentation to make patients
appear sicker than they actually were; and (2) paying doctors and other
health care professionals for referring patients to the hospice even
when the patients were neither eligible nor appropriate for hospice
care.\191\
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\191\ https://www.justice.gov/usao-edpa/pr/hospice-owner-sentenced-more-14-years-health-care-fraud-scheme.
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In 2020, the owner and the chief executive officer (CEO)
of a Texas-based group of hospices and HHAs were sentenced to 20 and 15
years in prison, respectively. Both had falsely told thousands of
patients with long-term incurable illnesses that they had under 6
months left to live so as to enroll them in hospice programs for which
they did not qualify.\192\ The OIG Dallas Region's special agent in
charge stated that the owner's scheme, which involved over $150 million
in false and fraudulent claims, included ``paying kickbacks to
physicians and fraudulently enrolling vulnerable beneficiaries in
hospice care that prevented them from accessing curative care--all done
to steal millions of dollars from Medicare to fund lavish personal
spending.'' \193\
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\192\ https://www.justice.gov/opa/pr/ceo-sentenced-150-million-health-care-fraud-and-money-laundering-scheme; https://www.justice.gov/opa/pr/owner-texas-chain-hospice-companies-sentenced-150-million-health-care-fraud-and-money.
\193\ https://www.justice.gov/opa/pr/owner-texas-chain-hospice-companies-sentenced-150-million-health-care-fraud-and-money.
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A California hospice administrator in February 2021 was
sentenced to 30 months in prison for his part in a multimillion-dollar
Medicare fraud scheme. The administrator and others paid illegal
kickbacks to patient recruiters for referring beneficiaries to the
hospice. When hospice staff informed the administrator that these
referred individuals did not qualify for hospice care, the
administrator overruled them and caused the beneficiaries to receive
hospice services.\194\
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\194\ https://www.justice.gov/opa/pr/hospice-administrator-sentenced-role-hospice-fraud-scheme.
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In 2015, an Oklahoma hospice owner was convicted of
Medicare fraud for submitting millions of dollars in fraudulent claims
to Medicare. This included directing that certain medical documents be
changed or written in a manner to: (1) give the appearance that nurses
had visited patients or conducted assessments when they had not; and
(2) make it appear that patients were sicker than they actually
were.\195\
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\195\ https://www.fbi.gov/news/stories/hospice-owner-falsified-numerous-claims.
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A Georgia hospice owner in December 2021 pled guilty to
one felony count of Medicaid fraud. State investigators found that the
owner ``frequently took flights out of the country on dates that the
defendant claimed she had personally provided hospice care here in
Georgia.'' \196\
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\196\ https://law.georgia.gov/press-releases/2021-12-22/carr-medicaid-fraud-control-unit-secures-guilty-plea-dekalb-county.
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In August 2020, a New York hospice agreed to pay the
United States $4,850,000 to resolve civil allegations that it billed
Medicare and Medicaid for services furnished to hospice beneficiaries
at heightened levels of care for which the patients did not
qualify.\197\
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\197\ https://www.justice.gov/usao-edny/pr/new-york-hospice-provider-settles-civil-healthcare-fraud-allegations.
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A Florida hospice in July 2020 agreed to pay the United
States $3.2 million to resolve allegations that it knowingly submitted
false claims to Medicare, Medicaid, and TRICARE for hospice care
furnished to patients who did not qualify for it. According to the
Department of Justice, the hospice ``billed Medicare for four or more
years of hospice care for certain patients who were not terminally ill
for at least a portion of their greater than four-year hospice stay.''
\198\
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\198\ https://www.justice.gov/usao-mdfl/pr/hope-hospice-agrees-pay-32-million-settle-false-claims-act-liability.
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A multi-state hospice provider in December 2021 agreed to
pay $5.5 million to the federal government to resolve allegations that
it knowingly violated the False Claims Act by submitting claims to
Medicare for hospice services furnished to beneficiaries who were not
terminally ill.\199\
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\199\ https://www.justice.gov/usao-wdtn/pr/crossroads-hospice-agrees-pay-55-million-settle-false-claims-act-liability.
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In December 2018, a Pennsylvania hospice agreed to pay
over $5.8 million to the federal government to resolve allegations that
it violated the False Claims Act by submitting Medicare claims for
hospice services that were medically unnecessary or lacked
documentation.\200\
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\200\ https://www.justice.gov/usao-edpa/pr/hospice-care-provider-pays-nearly-6-million-resolve-false-claims-act-allegations.
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Another Pennsylvania hospice and its owner and CEO agreed
in February 2018 to pay the United States $1.24 million to resolve
allegations that the hospice: (1) fraudulently billed Medicare and
Medicaid for hospice services furnished to beneficiaries who were not
eligible for them; and (2) falsified records to support the false
claims.\201\
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\201\ https://www.justice.gov/usao-wdpa/pr/hospice-company-and-owner-agree-pay-124-million-settle-two-false-claims-act.
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The founders of a Texas hospice and related HHA in January
2021 paid over $1.8 million following an investigation into improper
payments to physicians for referrals.\202\
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\202\ https://www.justic.gov/usao-sdtx/pr/hospice-home-health-agency-and-owners-pay-over-18m-resolve-claims-concerning-physician.
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A Florida-headquartered hospice in December 2021 agreed to
pay the federal government over $5 million to resolve allegations that
it knowingly billed Medicare and Medicaid for medically unnecessary and
undocumented hospice services, including for at least 63 patients who
had lengths of stays of more than 3 years. According to the government,
for the 63 patients in question, the hospice either knowingly or
recklessly did not document a
[[Page 43785]]
legitimate reason for the initial commencement of hospice care and/or
subsequent hospice coverage. The government added that ``(m)any
patients failed to demonstrate objective indications of decline
throughout their time in the company's care, despite some being in
hospice for nearly six years. Some patients had their hospice diagnoses
changed after several years when they did not show decline under their
original `terminal' diagnosis.'' \203\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\203\ https://www.justice.gov/usao-mdfl/pr/united-states-settles-false-claims-allegations-against-haven-hospice-more-5-million.
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A Minnesota-based hospice in July 2016 agreed to pay $18
million to resolve False Claims Act allegations that it billed Medicare
for services for non-terminally ill patients. The federal government
alleged that the hospice aimed to maximize the number of its Medicare
patients ``without regard to whether the patients were eligible for and
needed hospice. These business practices allegedly included
discouraging doctors from recommending that ineligible patients be
discharged from hospice.'' \204\
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\204\ https://www.justice.gov/opa/pr/minnesota-based-hospice-provider-pay-18-million-alleged-false-claims-medicare-patients-who.
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In February 2015, a multi-state hospice company agreed to
pay $4 million to resolve allegations that it knowingly submitted or
caused to be submitted false claims for hospice beneficiaries who were
not terminally ill. The federal government contended that the company
``engaged in certain business practices that contributed to claims
being submitted for patients who did not have a terminal prognosis of
six months or less by. . . paying bonuses to staff, including hospice
marketers, admission nurses and executive directors, based on the
number of patients enrolled.'' \205\ The government also alleged that
the hospice ``hired medical directors based on their ability to refer
patients, focusing particularly on medical directors with ties to
nursing homes, which were seen as an easy source of patient
referrals.'' \206\
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\205\ https://www.justice.gov/opa/pr/united-states-settles-false-claims-act-suit-against-good-shepherd-hospice-inc-and-related.
\206\ Ibid.
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A Mississippi-based hospice chain in September 2015 agreed
to pay the United States over $5.8 million to resolve False Claims Act
allegations that it submitted false claims for continuous home care
hospice services to beneficiaries who were not eligible to receive
them.\207\
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\207\ https://www.justice.gov/usao-sdms/pr/hospice-facility-and-its-managermajority-owner-pay-approximately-586-million-resolve.
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One recent and especially disturbing case involved the sentencing
in January 2022 of the CEO of a Texas hospice agency to over 13 years
in prison after pleading guilty to conspiracy to commit Medicare and
Medicaid fraud. The CEO admitted that he: (1) billed Medicare and
Medicaid for hospice services that were not provided, not directed by a
medical professional, or provided to patients who were ineligible for
hospice care; and (2) used blank, pre-signed controlled substance
prescriptions to prescribe potent drugs even though the CEO was not a
medical professional.\208\ The CEO's scheme involved other individuals,
thirteen of whom (including physicians) also pled guilty to crimes such
as conspiracy to commit health care fraud.\209\ The acting United
States Attorney for the case stated that the CEO ``scammed federal
healthcare programs out of millions of dollars, and worse yet, denied
vulnerable patients the medical oversight they deserved, writing pain
prescriptions without physician input and allowing terminally ill
patients to go unexamined.'' \210\ The Federal Bureau of Investigation
special agent in charge added: ``In addition to causing fraudulent
billing for tens of millions of dollars, [the CEO] preyed upon patients
and families that did not have a true understanding of [the company]
and hospice services. The core of the company was rooted in deception,
and the lack of physician oversight allowed [the defendant] to make
medical decisions for his own financial benefit.'' \211\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\208\ https://www.justice.gov/usao-ndtx/pr/novus-hospice-ceo-sentenced-13-years-healthcare-fraud.
\209\ https://www.justice.gov/usao-ndtx/pr/13-novus-healthcare-
fraud-defendants-sentenced-combined-84-years-
prison#:~:text=Bradley%20Harris%2C%20Novus%20CEO%2C%20pleaded,Dr.
\210\ https://www.justice.gov/usao-ndtx/pr/novus-hospice-ceo-pleads-guilty-healthcare-fraud.
\211\ Ibid.
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The OIG, too, has noted the prevalence of hospice fraud schemes,
issuing a July 2018 study titled ``Vulnerabilities in the Medicare
Hospice Program Affect Quality Care and Program Integrity'' (OEI-02-16-
00570). According to this report, Medicare in 2016 spent about $16.7
billion for hospice care for 1.4 million beneficiaries, an increase
from $9.2 billion for less than 1 million beneficiaries in 2006; with
this growth, the OIG stated that ``significant vulnerabilities'' have
arisen, one of which involves improper activity.\212\ The report noted
that some such schemes involved: (1) paying recruiters to target
beneficiaries who were ineligible for hospice services; and (2)
physicians falsely certifying beneficiaries as terminally ill when they
were not. The OIG cited several of the cases discussed in this section
VIII.B.3.a.(2) of this proposed rule as examples of this behavior.\213\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\212\ https://oig.hhs.gov/oei/reports/oei-02-16-00570.pdf, p. 1.
\213\ Ibid.
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Given all of the foregoing, we believe that certain provider
enrollment measures are necessary to help address these issues. One of
these measures involves closer screening of the owners of hospices. We
previously cited criminal convictions of hospice owners and overseers.
Although not every case of hospice fraud involves or can be
attributable to the hospice's owner, we believe the owner can set the
tone for the hospice's operations as a whole. If, accordingly, an owner
has a criminal background involving fraud or patient abuse, this could
lead to similar activity within the hospice. We believe that the
increasing number of fraud cases warrants a revisiting of our original
assignment of hospices to the moderate risk category. With our
obligation to protect the Trust Funds and vulnerable Medicare
beneficiaries, we believe more thorough scrutiny of hospice owners is
required.
To this end, we propose to revise Sec. 424.518 to move initially
enrolling hospices and those submitting applications to report any new
owner (as described in Sec. 424.518's opening paragraph) into the
``high'' level of categorical screening; revalidating hospices would be
subject to moderate risk-level screening. Requiring all hospice owners
with 5 percent or greater direct or indirect ownership to submit
fingerprints for a criminal background check would help us detect
parties potentially posing a risk of fraud, waste, or abuse before it
begins. Indeed, we have found our fingerprint-based criminal background
checks to be of great assistance in detecting felonious behavior by the
owners of high-risk providers and suppliers.
We note that there is precedent for performing criminal background
reviews on hospice personnel. Under the hospice conditions of
participation at 42 CFR 418.114(d): (1) the hospice must obtain a
criminal background check on all hospice employees who have direct
patient contact or access to patient records; and (2) hospice contracts
must require that all contracted entities obtain criminal background
checks on contracted employees who have direct patient contact or
access to patient records. Considering that hospice owners generally
have oversight authority or
[[Page 43786]]
responsibility for all the hospice's operations, we believe it is
important that the owner be subject to similar scrutiny.
Initially enrolling hospices would be incorporated within revised
paragraph (c)(1)(vi). The current language in paragraph (c)(1)(vi)
would be included within new proposed paragraph (c)(1)(vii), to which
would be added hospices disclosing a new owner.
b. 36-Month Rule
The general purpose of a state survey or accreditation review for
any Medicare provider or supplier type subject thereto is to determine
whether the provider or supplier is in compliance with its regulatorily
prescribed conditions of participation or conditions of coverage
(hereafter collectively referenced as CoPs). CoPs are federal
requirements that a provider or supplier must meet to participate in
the Medicare program, and they generally focus on health and safety
protections. Although they can vary by provider and supplier type, they
address matters such as, but not limited to, the following:
Personnel qualifications
Infection prevention and control
Emergency preparedness
Staffing ratios
Patient safety
Patients' bill of rights
Licensure
Fire prevention
Adherence to federal, state, and local requirements
CoPs are critical to ensuring that providers and suppliers are
legitimate, bona fide entities capable of furnishing quality care and
following safety requirements.
Though it is a provider enrollment provision, Sec. 424.550(b)(1)
recognizes the importance of the HHA survey and accreditation processes
(hereafter sometimes collectively referenced as the ``survey
process''), which help confirm the HHA's compliance with the CoPs and
the quality and safety requirements they entail. Section 424.550(b)(1)
states if an HHA undergoes a change in majority ownership (occasionally
referenced as a ``CIMO'') by sale within 36 months after the effective
date of the HHA's initial enrollment in Medicare or within 36 months
after the HHA's most recent CIMO, the provider agreement and Medicare
billing privileges do not convey to the HHA's new owner. The
prospective provider/owner of the HHA must instead: (1) enroll in
Medicare as a new (initial) HHA; and (2) obtain a state survey or an
accreditation from an approved accreditation organization. As defined
in 42 CFR 424.502, a ``change in majority ownership'' occurs when an
individual or organization acquires more than a 50 percent direct
ownership interest in an HHA during the 36 months following the HHA's
initial enrollment or most recent CIMO; this includes an acquisition of
majority ownership through the cumulative effect of asset sales, stock
transfers, consolidations, or mergers. Under Sec. 424.550(b)(1), a 42
CFR 489.18-level change of ownership and/or 100 percent ownership
transfer is not necessary to trigger this ``36-month rule.'' Only
crossing the 50 percent ownership threshold is required.
Section 424.550(b)(1) was promulgated in 2009 and modified in 2010.
There were two principal objectives behind its establishment.
First, there was a trend in the HHA community whereby an HHA
applied for Medicare certification, underwent a survey, and became
enrolled in Medicare, but then immediately sold the HHA without having
seen a Medicare beneficiary or hired an employee. These brokers, in
other words, enrolled in Medicare exclusively to sell the HHA rather
than to provide services to beneficiaries. This practice enabled a
purchaser of an HHA from the broker to enter Medicare with no survey,
which, in turn, sometimes led that owner to soon sell the business to
another party. The ``flipping'' or ``turn-key'' mechanism, in short,
was used to circumvent the survey process.
Second, we were more broadly concerned about the lack of scrutiny
of new owners as a whole, not merely in cases of flipping. We made
clear in the CY 2010 HH PPS final rule (74 FR 58078), in which we
promulgated Sec. 424.550(b)(1), that the intent of Sec. 424.550(b)(1)
goes beyond the issue of ''turn-key'' operations.\214\ We explained
that if an HHA undergoes a change of ownership, CMS--at the current
time--generally does not perform a survey pursuant thereto.
Consequently, CMS has no sure way of knowing whether the HHA, under its
new ownership and management, is in compliance with the HHA CoPs.
Unless CMS can make this determination, there is a risk that the newly-
purchased HHA, without having been appropriately vetted, will bill for
services when it is out of compliance with the CoPs.\215\ We added that
in light of a GAO report we cited in the CY 2010 HH PPS proposed rule
that outlined problematic activities involving HHAs, we believed it was
imperative that we ensure that a newly-purchased HHA be subjected to an
appropriate level of review.\216\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\214\ 74 FR 58118.
\215\ Ibid.
\216\ 74 FR 58118-58119; ``Improvements Needed to Address
Improper Payments in Home Health'' (GAO-09-185).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We previously outlined in this section VIII.B.3.a.(2). of this
proposed rule our growing concerns about improper behavior within the
hospice community. Yet, we are equally concerned about the quality of
care furnished in some of these facilities. Indeed, we have seen an
increase in the number of hospice changes of ownership (including the
types of CIMOs described in 42 CFR 424.550(b)(1)) in recent years, and
a number of these ownership changes have occurred within the applicable
36-month timeframe. In fact, some such changes have taken place within
only a few months after enrollment or the previous CIMO, akin to what
we saw with the ``flipping'' practice outlined in the CY 2010 HH PPS
proposed and final rules; specifically, we have received reports that
hospices are being sold quickly after enrollment or purchase so that
the new owner can avoid any survey. This is because, as had been our
concern with HHAs, hospice ownership changes generally do not result in
a state survey or accreditation review.
Aside from the July 2018 OIG report referenced earlier, which, as
noted by its title, stated that vulnerabilities in the Medicare hospice
program impact quality care, the Government Accountability Office (GAO)
in October 2019 issued a report titled, ``Medicare Hospice Care:
Opportunities Exist to Strengthen CMS Oversight of Hospice Providers''
(GAO-20-10).\217\ The GAO observed therein that the number of: (1)
Medicare hospice beneficiaries had almost tripled from 2000 to nearly
1.5 million by 2017; and (2) Medicare hospice providers had
doubled.\218\ The GAO stated that in light of this growth: ``It is
imperative that CMS's oversight of the quality of Medicare hospice care
keeps pace with changes so that the agency can ensure the health and
safety of these terminally ill beneficiaries.'' \219\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\217\ https://www.gao.gov/assets/gao-20-10.pdf.
\218\ Ibid., p. 25.
\219\ Ibid.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In sum, hundreds of hospice ownership changes have occurred since
2018 for which CMS may not know whether the facility under its new
ownership and leadership is compliant with the hospice CoPs. This is a
significant vulnerability. Many millions of dollars could be improperly
paid to newly purchased hospices that are not adhering to Medicare
requirements. More crucially, it is unknown whether
[[Page 43787]]
newly purchased hospices are furnishing quality care to the facility's
beneficiaries, which, if they are not, can put patients' lives in
danger; we previously saw in this section VIII.B.3.a.(2). of this
proposed rule the great risks associated with uncommitted ownership. We
believe that a comprehensive survey would be the most effective means
of confirming that newly purchased hospices are meeting the CoPs and
are positioned to provide quality care and protect beneficiaries.
Consequently, we are proposing to expand the scope of Sec.
424.550(b)(1) to include hospice CIMOs within its purview. (The
aforementioned definition of ``change in majority ownership'' in Sec.
424.502 would also be expanded to incorporate hospices therein.) We
believe that our previously detailed concerns about hospices, such as
fraud schemes, patient abuse, and improper billing, require the level
of scrutiny that a survey can furnish. Although surveys cannot by
themselves entirely halt all of these issues, we are confident that a
survey's thoroughness can greatly assist the vetting of the new owner
to help ensure the latter's commitment to quality care.
We note that Sec. 424.550(b)(2) contains several exceptions to the
36-month rule. Specifically, even if an HHA undergoes a CIMO, the
requirement in Sec. 424.550(b)(1) that the HHA enroll as a new HHA and
undergo a survey or accreditation does not apply if any of the
following four exceptions are implicated:
The HHA submitted 2 consecutive years of full cost reports
since initial enrollment or the last CIMO, whichever is later.
An HHA's parent company is undergoing an internal
corporate restructuring, such as a merger or consolidation.
The owners of an existing HHA are changing the HHA's
existing business structure (for example, from a corporation to a
partnership (general or limited)), and the owners remain the same.
An individual owner of an HHA dies.
These exceptions were added to Sec. 424.550(b) in a final rule
published in the Federal Register on November 17, 2010 titled,
``Medicare Program; Home Health Prospective Payment System Rate Update
for Calendar Year 2011; Changes in Certification Requirements for Home
Health Agencies and Hospices'' (75 FR 70372). We promulgated them
because the HHA community had expressed concerns that the 36-month rule
could inhibit bona fide HHA ownership transactions; for example,
prospective new owners may not wish to have to enroll as a new HHA and
will therefore decline to purchase the entity. We believed that our
exceptions struck a solid balance between the need for more scrutiny of
new owners via the survey process while not inadvertently obstructing
legitimate transactions involving legitimate parties. As an
illustration, a CIMO resulting from an internal restructuring can
frequently pose less of a risk of ``flipping'' than an HHA that--2
months after initial enrollment--is sold to another party strictly to
circumvent the survey process. These exceptions, in our view, still
soundly balance the two aforementioned considerations, and we therefore
are not proposing to exempt hospices from them.
c. Additional Hospice Ownership Matters
CMS is taking additional provider enrollment steps to address
(either wholly or in part) hospice ownership and program integrity. To
illustrate, we proposed in a December 15, 2022 Paperwork Reduction Act
submission (87 FR 76626) to revise the Form CMS-855A Medicare provider
enrollment application (Medicare Enrollment Application--Institutional
Providers; OMB Control No. 0938-0685) to collect from providers/
suppliers (including hospices) that complete this form important data
such as, but not limited to:
Requiring the provider/supplier/hospice to specifically
identify via a checkbox whether a reported organizational owner is
itself owned by another organization or individual.
Requiring the provider/supplier/hospice to explicitly
identify whether a listed organizational owner/manager does or does not
fall within the categories of entities listed on the application (for
example, holding company, investment firm, etc.), with ``private-equity
company'' and ``real estate investment trust'' being added to this list
of organization types.
This information will assist CMS in better understanding the
provider/supplier/hospice's indirect ownership relationships and the
types of entities that own it.
In addition, in a proposed rule published in the Federal Register
on April 4, 2023 titled ``Medicare Program; FY 2024 Hospice Wage Index
and Payment Rate Update, Hospice Conditions of Participation Updates,
Hospice Quality Reporting Program Requirements, and Hospice Certifying
Physician Provider Enrollment Requirements'' (88 FR 20022), we proposed
to require physicians who order or certify hospice services for
Medicare beneficiaries to be enrolled in or validly opted-out of
Medicare as a prerequisite for the payment of the hospice service in
question. We stated therein our belief that the careful screening the
enrollment process entails would help us determine whether the
physician meets all federal and state requirements (such as licensure)
or presents any program integrity risks (for example, final adverse
actions).
Our aforementioned hospice high-risk screening and 36-month rule
proposals represent further steps towards addressing hospice ownership
and payment safeguard issues, and we are considering additional
measures regarding these topics.
4. Deactivation for 12-Months of Non-Billing
Regulatory policies regarding the provider enrollment concept of
deactivation are addressed in Sec. 424.540. Deactivation means that
the provider's or supplier's billing privileges are stopped but can be
restored (or ``reactivated'') upon the submission of information
required under Sec. 424.540. A deactivated provider or supplier is not
revoked from Medicare and remains enrolled. Also, per Sec. 424.540(c),
deactivation does not impact the provider's or supplier's existing
provider or supplier agreement; the deactivated provider or supplier
may also file a rebuttal to the action in accordance with Sec.
424.546. Nonetheless, the provider's or supplier's ability to bill
Medicare is halted pending its compliance with Sec. 424.540's
requirements for reactivation.
To reactivate its billing privileges, the affected provider or
supplier per Sec. 424.540(b) must recertify that its current
enrollment information on file with Medicare is correct, furnish any
missing information as appropriate, and be in compliance with all
applicable enrollment requirements in Title 42. CMS reserves the right,
though, to require the submission of a complete Form CMS-855
application prior to any reactivation. The reactivation process is
designed to confirm that the deactivated provider or supplier is
adherent to all applicable Title 42 provider enrollment provisions.
There are currently eight reasons under Sec. 424.540(a) for which
CMS can deactivate a provider or supplier, one of which is that the
provider or supplier has not submitted any Medicare claims for 12
consecutive months. (The 12-month period begins the first day of the
first month without a claims submission through the last day of the
12th month
[[Page 43788]]
without a submitted claim.) This particular deactivation ground was
established via a final rule published in the Federal Register on April
21, 2006 titled ``Medicare Program; Requirements for Providers and
Suppliers to Establish and Maintain Medicare Enrollment'' (71 FR
20754). In the April 25, 2003 proposed rule associated with this final
rule, we proposed to have the authority to deactivate a provider or
supplier after 6 months of Medicare non-billing.\220\ Although, at the
time per subregulatory guidance, our policy was to permit deactivation
after 12 months, we proposed 6 months due to several program integrity
issues related to inactive billing numbers. We outlined in that
proposed rule our desire to prevent, for instance: (1) questionable
businesses from deliberately obtaining multiple numbers so they could
keep one `in reserve' [for future use] if their active billing number
is subject to a payment suspension; and (2) fraudulent entities from
obtaining information about discontinued providers or suppliers and
then, for example, using the Medicare billing number of a deceased
physician.\221\
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\220\ Medicare Program; Requirements for Establishing and
Maintaining Medicare Billing Privileges (68 FR 22064).
\221\ Ibid. (68 FR 22072).
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Based on feedback from commenters, we did not finalize our proposed
reduction to 6 months in the April 21, 2006 final rule. Yet we remained
concerned about situations where a provider or supplier does not bill
for 6 months, as this could indicate, for instance, that the provider
or supplier is no longer operational and that its billing number thus
could be accessed by another party intent on improper billing. More
importantly, we have recently detected fraud schemes involving extended
periods of non-billing. A common situation involves a provider that:
(1) establishes multiple enrollments with multiple billing numbers; (2)
abusively or inappropriately bills under one billing number; (3)
receives an overpayment demand letter or becomes the subject of
investigation; (4) voluntary terminates the billing number in question;
and then (5) begins to bill via another of its billing numbers that is
dormant (for example, 6 consecutive months without billing) but
nonetheless active, repeating the same improper conduct as before. The
problem in this case is that we cannot deactivate the dormant billing
number (hence rendering it unusable and inaccessible pending a
reactivation) under Sec. 424.540(a)(1) because the applicable 12-month
period has not yet expired.
This type of ``whack-a-mole'' activity is similar to that which we
cited previously in the April 25, 2003 proposed rule as justification
for the proposed 6-month deactivation threshold therein. The
difference, though, is that these fraud schemes have become
increasingly prevalent in recent years such that we must revisit the
current 12-month timeframe in Sec. 424.540(a)(1). We do not believe we
can or should wait for a year to elapse before taking deactivation
action against these providers and suppliers. To protect the Trust
Funds against improper payments, we must be able to move more promptly
to deactivate these ``spare'' billing numbers so the latter cannot be
inappropriately used or accessed.
However, we emphasize that our concerns are not limited to the
aforementioned scenarios regarding fraudulent activity. A lack of
billing for an extended period can, as previously discussed, indicate
that the provider or supplier has ceased operations without notifying
CMS. Deactivating the number enables CMS to not only prevent it from
being accessed by other parties but also confirm via the deactivation
process whether the provider or supplier is in fact operational--
specifically, whether the provider or supplier responds with a
reactivation application. In other words, action under Sec.
424.540(a)(1) helps protect the Medicare program by deactivating the
number while verifying whether the provider or supplier remains in
existence; if it does, and it subsequently submits a reactivation
application, CMS can validate the data thereon to ensure the provider's
or supplier's continued credentials and compliance with Medicare
requirements. This protective process, we believe, should be available
to us upon the expiration of a 6-month non-billing period, for our
earlier-referenced concerns exist whenever any extensive timeframe of
non-billing occurs. The sooner we can address these non-billing cases,
the better we can protect the Trust Funds. For these reasons, we
propose to revise Sec. 424.540(a)(1) to change the 12-month time
therein to 6 months.
We certainly recognize that there are lengthy periods of non-
billing that do not involve any improper activity. To illustrate, we
know that some providers are required to be enrolled in Medicare in
order to enroll in another health care program; as the provider does
not intend to bill Medicare but only the other program, an extended
period of Medicare non-billing can result. While CMS retains the
discretion, as it always has, to deactivate a provider or supplier if
the contingency in Sec. 424.540(a)(1) is triggered, providers and
suppliers that are not typically deactivated for 12 months of non-
billing should not assume they would be more likely to be so
deactivated under our proposed change to 6 months.
5. Definition of ``Managing Employee''
Consistent with sections 1124 and 1124A of the Act, providers and
suppliers are required to report their managing employees via the
applicable Medicare enrollment application in order to enroll in
Medicare. We currently define a ``managing employee'' in Sec. 424.502
as a ``general manager, business manager, administrator, director, or
other individual that exercises operational or managerial control over,
or who directly or indirectly conducts, the day-to-day operation of the
provider or supplier (either under contract or through some other
arrangement), whether or not the individual is a W-2 employee of the
provider or supplier.'' In a proposed rule published in the Federal
Register on February 15, 2023 titled ``Medicare and Medicaid Programs;
Disclosures of Ownership and Additional Disclosable Parties Information
for Skilled Nursing Facilities and Nursing Facilities'' (88 FR 9820),
we proposed to revise this definition under our proposed implementation
via that rule of section 1124(c) of the Act. We specifically proposed
that, for purposes of 42 CFR 424.516(g) and with respect to a SNF, a
managing employee also includes a general manager, business manager,
administrator, director, or consultant, who directly or indirectly
manages, advises, or supervises any element of the practices, finances,
or operations of the facility. As proposed, this SNF-exclusive
definition would be in a new paragraph (2) of the managing employee
definition in Sec. 424.502; the existing version of the definition
would be included within new paragraph (1).
We are proposing to further revise this definition in the present
proposed rule. We have received questions from the hospice and SNF
communities regarding whether hospice and SNF facility administrators
and medical directors must be disclosed as managing employees on the
enrollment application. It has been our experience in overseeing the
Medicare provider enrollment process that such individuals indeed
exercise managing control over the hospice or SNF, and we have long
required that they be reported as managing employees.
[[Page 43789]]
Accordingly, we propose to further revise the managing employee
definition in Sec. 424.502 by adding the following language
immediately after (and in the same paragraph as) the current
definition: For purposes of this definition, this includes, but is not
limited to, a hospice or skilled nursing facility administrator and a
hospice or skilled nursing facility medical director. This change would
be reflected in the first paragraph of the revised definition of this
term as proposed in the February 15, 2023 proposed rule. That is, the
revision described in this section VIII.(B)(5) would be added to the
end of new paragraph (1) as the latter was proposed in the February 15,
2023 proposed rule.
We stress that this clarification regarding hospice and SNF
facility administrators and medical directors should in no manner be
construed as CMS' establishment of a minimum threshold for reporting
managing employees of hospices, SNFs, or any other provider or supplier
type. Put otherwise, simply because an individual has less managing
control within a particular organization than a facility administrator
or medical director does not mean that the person need not be
disclosed. Any individual who meets the definition of managing employee
in Sec. 424.502 must be reported irrespective of the precise amount of
managing control the person has. The exclusive purpose of our proposed
elucidation is to address specific questions raised by hospices and
SNFs concerning whether the individuals at issue must be reported. It
is not meant to change existing reporting requirements regarding
managing employees and who must be disclosed as such.
6. Previously Waived Fingerprinting of High-Risk Providers and
Suppliers
During the recent COVID-19 public health emergency (PHE), CMS
temporarily waived the requirement for fingerprint-based criminal
background checks (FBCBCs) for 5 percent or greater owners of newly
enrolling providers and suppliers falling within the high-risk
screening category in Sec. 424.518(c). The principal purpose was to
facilitate beneficiary access to services by potentially increasing the
number of health care providers and suppliers. Given the scope of the
emergency, we believed this had to take priority. To reduce the program
integrity risks of this waiver, we continuously monitored criminal
alerts produced via our internal screening mechanism. Nevertheless, we
remained concerned during the waiver period about the lack of FBCBCs
being performed. Although the criminal alerts were useful, we have
found FBCBCs to be the best and surest means of detecting felonious
behavior by the owners of high-risk providers and suppliers.
With this in mind, we wish to perform FBCBCs for high-risk
providers and suppliers that initially enrolled during the PHE upon
their revalidation once the PHE ends. Yet this is not possible under
our existing regulations because the revalidation applications would
only be screened at the moderate-risk level. To remedy this, we propose
to add new Sec. 424.518(c)(1)(viii) that would incorporate within the
high-screening category revalidating DMEPOS suppliers, HHAs, OTPs,
MDPPs, and SNFs for which CMS waived the FBCBC requirement when they
initially enrolled in Medicare. However, given the potential for future
emergencies for which CMS might waive FBCBCs under applicable legal
authority (such as that for the PHE), we more specifically propose in
new Sec. 424.518(c)(1)(viii) that this high-risk category (which would
include hospices with respect to future waivers) would apply to
situations where CMS waived FBCBCs, in accordance with applicable legal
authority, due to a national, state, or local emergency declared under
existing law. We emphasize that our proposal does not obligate CMS to
waive the FBCBC requirement in any such emergency. Any decision to do
so rests with CMS, and such waivers would, if they occur at all in the
future, would be reserved for the most exceptional of circumstances.
Along with adding new Sec. 424.518(c)(1)(viii), we propose to
delete current Sec. 424.518(b)(1)(iv), (ix), (x), (xi), (xiii), and
(xiv), which individually identify the six previously discussed
provider and supplier types (including hospices) as moderate-risk if
they are revalidating their enrollment. We would redesignate existing
paragraphs (b)(1)(v) through (b)(1)(viii) as revised paragraphs
(b)(1)(iv) through (b)(1)(vii). We would also redesignate existing
paragraph (b)(1)(xii) as revised (b)(1)(viii), with the former
paragraph being deleted. Revised paragraph (b)(1)(viii) would include
both prospective and revalidating OTPs that have been fully and
continuously certified by SAMHSA since October 23, 2018. Furthermore,
we would establish a revised paragraph (b)(1)(ix) that would include
within the moderate-risk category revalidating DMEPOS suppliers, HHAs,
OTPs, MDPPs, SNFs, and hospices that underwent FBCBCs: (1) when they
initially enrolled in Medicare; or (2) upon revalidation after CMS
waived the FBCBC requirement (under the circumstances described in
paragraph (c)(1)(viii)) when the provider or supplier initially
enrolled in Medicare. This second provision is to clarify that the
providers and suppliers referenced in paragraph (c)(1)(viii) do not
remain in the high-screening category in perpetuity solely because they
were not fingerprinted upon initial enrollment. Once the provider or
supplier is fingerprinted upon revalidation, it would move to the
moderate-risk category unless another basis exists under paragraph (c)
for retaining it within the high-risk category.
As indicated previously, DMEPOS suppliers are required to
revalidate their Medicare enrollment every 3 years; HHAs, OTPs, MDPPs,
SNFs, and hospices must do so every 5 years. We note, though, that CMS
under Sec. 424.515(d) can perform off-cycle revalidations; that is, we
can revalidate a provider or supplier at any time and need not wait
until the arrival of their 5-year (or, for DMEPOS suppliers, 3-year)
revalidation cycle. Should this proposed rule be finalized, CMS would
accordingly reserve the right to conduct off-cycle revalidations of the
previously discussed FBCBC-waived high-risk providers and suppliers.
7. Expansion of Reapplication Bar
Section 424.530(f) permits CMS to prohibit a prospective provider
or supplier from enrolling in Medicare for up to 3 years if its
enrollment application is denied because the provider or supplier
submitted false or misleading information on or with (or omitted
information from) its application in order to enroll. The purpose of
Sec. 424.530(f) is to prevent dishonest providers and suppliers from
submitting false information on their initial application and, after
being denied enrollment on this ground under Sec. 424.530(a)(4),
simply submitting a new application with correct data.
The existing maximum length of a reapplication bar under Sec.
424.530(f) is 3 years. We propose to expand this to 10 years to account
for provider or supplier conduct of particular severity. We must be
able to prevent such problematic parties from repeatedly submitting
applications over many years with the goal of somehow getting into the
program. We note that there is precedent for this 10-year period.
Section 424.530(a)(3)(ii) states that a denial based on a felony
conviction is for a period not less than 10 years from the date of
conviction if the individual has been convicted on one previous
occasion of one or more offenses. Too, reenrollment bars under
[[Page 43790]]
Sec. 424.535(c)(1)(i) are for a maximum 10-year timeframe. Although
reenrollment bars are different from reapplication bars in terms of how
and when they are applied, the aim of both is to protect Medicare and
its beneficiaries. We believe it is largely immaterial from a program
integrity standpoint whether a denial or revocation and subsequent bar
stemming from the submission of false or misleading data involved a
prospective or an enrolled provider, for the underlying conduct in
either case is the same.
8. Ordering, Referring, Certifying, and Prescribing Restrictions
We discussed previously: (1) the need to increase the maximum
reapplication bar to keep dishonest providers and suppliers out of
Medicare for longer than 3 years; and (2) our concerns about felonious
provider and supplier activity. We believe such provider and supplier
behavior should result in restrictions regarding the ordering,
referring, certifying, or prescribing of Medicare services, items, and
drugs, too. Indeed, such ordering, referring, certifying, or
prescribing can involve improper conduct that is as harmful to Medicare
beneficiaries as the actual furnishing of services; this includes, for
example, the over-prescribing of opioids and the unnecessary ordering
of potentially dangerous tests. Consequently, and using our general
rulemaking authority under sections 1102 and 1871 of the Act, we
propose the following two provisions.
First, we propose to add a new paragraph (3) to Sec. 424.530(f)
stating that a provider or supplier that is currently subject to a
reapplication bar under paragraph (f) may not order, refer, certify, or
prescribe Medicare-covered services, items, or drugs. To enforce this
policy, we would further state in proposed Sec. 424.530(f)(3) that
Medicare does not pay for any otherwise covered service, item, or drug
that is ordered, referred, certified, or prescribed by a provider or
supplier that is currently under a reapplication bar.
Second, we propose in paragraph (a) of new Sec. 424.542 that a
physician or other eligible professional (regardless of whether he or
she is or was enrolled in Medicare) who has had a felony conviction
within the previous 10 years that CMS determines is detrimental to the
best interests of the Medicare program and its beneficiaries may not
order, refer, certify, or prescribe Medicare-covered services, items,
or drugs. Akin to proposed Sec. 424.530(f)(3), we would state in Sec.
424.542(b) that Medicare does not pay for any otherwise covered
service, item, or drug that is ordered, referred, certified, or
prescribed by a physician or other eligible professional (as that term
is defined in section 1848(k)(3)(B) of the Act) who has had a felony
conviction within the previous 10 years that CMS determines is
detrimental to the best interests of the Medicare program and its
beneficiaries.
These provisions would apply regardless of whether the provider or
supplier has opted-out of Medicare. This is because the conduct
associated with a reapplication bar and a felony conviction presents a
risk irrespective of the provider's or supplier's opt-out status.
IX. Collection of Information Requirements
A. Statutory Requirement for Solicitation of Comments
Under the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995, we are required to
provide a 60-day notice in the Federal Register and solicit public
comment before a collection of information requirement is submitted to
the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) for review and approval. In
order to fairly evaluate whether an information collection should be
approved by OMB, section 3506(c)(2)(A) of the Paperwork Reduction Act
of 1995 requires that we solicit comment on the following issues:
The need for the information collection and its usefulness
in carrying out the proper functions of our agency.
The accuracy of our estimate of the information collection
burden.
The quality, utility, and clarity of the information to be
collected.
Recommendations to minimize the information collection
burden on the affected public, including automated collection
techniques.
B. Information Collection Requirements (ICRs)
In the CY 2023 HH PPS rule, we solicited public comment on each of
these issues for the following sections of this document that contain
information collection requirements (ICRs).
1. ICRs for HH QRP
As discussed in section III. of this proposed rule, we propose that
HHAs would collect data on one new quality measure, the Discharge
Function Score (DC Function) measure, beginning with assessments
completed on January 1, 2024. However, the DC Function measure utilizes
data items that HHAs already report to CMS for quality reporting
purposes, and therefore, the burden is accounted for in the PRA package
approved under OMB control number 0938-1279 (expiration November 30,
2025).
As discussed in section III.C.2. of this proposed rule, we propose
to remove a measure from the HH QRP, the Application of Percent of
Long-Term Care Hospital Patients with an Admission and Discharge
Functional Assessment and a Care Plan That Addresses Function
(Application of Functional Assessment/Care Plan) measure, beginning
with admission assessments completed on January 1, 2025. We have also
proposed to remove OASIS items for Self-Care Discharge Goals (that is,
GG0130, Column 2) and Mobility Discharge Goals (that is, GG0170, Column
2) at the start of care and resumption of care timepoints with the next
release of the OASIS in 2025. This amounts to a net reduction in 2 data
elements. We assume that each data element requires 0.3 minutes of
clinician time to complete. Therefore, we estimate that there would be
a reduction in clinician burden per OASIS assessment of 0.3 minutes at
start of care and 0.3 minutes at resumption of care.
As stated in section III.C.3. of this proposed rule, we propose to
adopt the COVID-19 Vaccine: Percent of Patients/Residents Who Are Up to
Date (Patient/Resident COVID-19 Vaccine) measure beginning with the CY
2025 HH QRP. This proposed assessment-based quality measure would be
collected using the OASIS. The OASIS-E is currently approved under OMB
control number 0938-1279 (CMS-10387). One data element would need to be
added to the OASIS at the transfer of care, death at home, and
discharge time points in order to allow for the collection of the
Patient/Resident COVID-19 Vaccine measure. We assume this would result
in an increase 0.3 minutes of clinician staff time at the transfer of
care, death at home, and discharge time points starting with the CY
2025 HH QRP.
As stated in section III.E.3. of this proposed rule, we propose to
remove the M0110--Episode Timing and M2220- Therapy Needs OASIS items,
effective January 1, 2025. These items are no longer used by the HH
QRP, nor are they intended for use by CMS payment, survey or the
expanded HHVBP model. The removal of these two items would result in
the removal of two data elements at start of care, two at resumption of
care, and one data element at follow-up for a total reduction of five
data elements.
The net effect of the proposals outlined in this proposed rule is a
reduction in four data elements collected across all time points for
the OASIS implemented on January 1, 2025.
[[Page 43791]]
Table G1 outlines the net change in data elements.
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TP10JY23.083
The OASIS is completed by RNs or PTs, or very occasionally by
occupational therapists (OT) or speech language pathologists (SLP/ST).
Data from 2021 show that the SOC/ROC OASIS is completed by RNs
(approximately 77.14 percent of the time), PTs (approximately 22.16
percent of the time), and other therapists, including OTs and SLP/STs
(approximately 0.7 percent of the time). Based on this analysis, we
estimated a weighted clinician average hourly wage of $87.52, inclusive
of fringe benefits, using the hourly wage data in Table G1. Individual
providers determine the staffing resources necessary.
For purposes of calculating the costs associated with the
information collection requirements, we obtained mean hourly wages for
these from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics' May 2022 National
Occupational Employment and Wage Estimates (https://www.bls.gov/oes/current/oes_nat.htm). To account for other indirect costs such as
overhead and fringe benefits (100 percent), we have doubled the hourly
wage. These amounts are detailed in Table G2.
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TP10JY23.084
For purposes of estimating burden, we utilize item-level burden
estimates for OASIS-E that will be released on January 1, 2025 compared
to the OASIS-E as currently implemented as of January 1, 2023. Table G3
shows the total number of OASIS assessments that HHAs actually
completed in CY 2021, as well as how those numbers would have decreased
if non-Medicare and non-Medicaid OASIS assessments had been required at
that time.
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TP10JY23.085
Table G4 summarizes the estimated clinician hourly burden for the
current OASIS and the OASIS in 2025 with the net removal of four data
elements for each OASIS assessment type using CY 2021 assessment
totals. We estimate a
[[Page 43792]]
net reduction of 58,540.1 hours of clinician burden across all HHAs or
5 hours for each of the 11,700 active HHAs.
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TP10JY23.086
Table G5 summarizes the estimated clinician costs for the current
OASIS and the OASIS in 2025 with the net removal of four data elements
for each OASIS assessment type using CY 2021 assessment totals. We
estimate a reduction in costs of $5,123,429.55 related to the
implementation of the proposals outlined in this proposed rule across
all HHAs or a $437 reduction for each of the 11,700 active HHAs. This
reduction in burden would begin with January 1, 2025 HHA discharges.
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TP10JY23.087
2. ICRs for HHVBP
The proposals for the expanded HHVBP Model included in this
proposed rule do not result in an increase in costs to HHAs. Section
1115A(d)(3) of the Act exempts Innovation Center model tests and
expansions, which include the expanded HHVBP Model, from the provisions
of the PRA. Specifically, this section provides that the provisions of
the PRA do not apply to the testing and evaluation of Innovation Center
models or to the expansion of such models.
3. ICRs for Hospice Information Dispute Resolution (IDR) and Hospice
Special Focus Program (SFP)
In accordance with 5 CFR 1320.4(a)(2) and (c), the following
information collection activities are exempt from the requirements of
the Paperwork Reduction Act since they are associated with
administrative actions: (1) proposed Sec. 488.1130 Hospice IDR; and
(2) proposed Sec. 488.1135 Hospice SFP.
4. ICRs for DMEPOS Refills
In section VII.E. of this proposed rule, we are proposing to codify
our refill policy, with some changes. The policy originally arose in
response to concerns related to auto-shipments and delivery of DMEPOS
products that may no longer be needed or not needed at the same level
of frequency/volume. The policy has been historically maintained in the
Medicare Program Integrity Manual, sporadically mentioned in certain
Local Coverage Determinations (LCDs), and detailed in articles. We
propose to require documentation indicating that the beneficiary
confirmed the need for the refill within the 30-day period prior to the
end of the current supply. We propose to codify our requirement that
delivery of DMEPOS items (that is, date of service) must be no sooner
than 10 calendar days before the expected end of the current supply.
5. ICRs for Provider Enrollment Provisions
Except as explained in this section IX. of this proposed rule, we
do not anticipate that any of our proposed provider enrollment
provisions would implicate an ICR burden.
a. High-Risk Screening and Fingerprinting
We are proposing to revise Sec. 424.518 to: (1) move initially
enrolling hospices (and those undergoing an ownership change as
described in Sec. 424.518) into the high-risk screening category; and
(2) include within the high-risk screening category revalidating DMEPOS
suppliers, HHAs, OTPs, MDPPs, and SNFs for whom CMS legally waived the
fingerprint-based criminal background check requirement in Sec.
424.518 when they initially enrolled in Medicare. These changes would
result in an increase in the annual number of providers and suppliers
that must submit the fingerprints for a national
[[Page 43793]]
criminal background check (via FBI Applicant Fingerprint Card FD-258)
of all individuals with a 5 percent or greater direct or indirect
ownership interest in the provider or supplier. The burden is currently
approved by OMB under control number 1110-0046. We are not scoring the
burden under this ICR section since the fingerprint card is not owned
by CMS. However, an analysis of the impact of this requirement can be
found in the RIA section of this proposed rule.
b. Hospice 36-Month Rule
We are proposing to expand Sec. 424.550(b) to apply the 36-month
rule provisions therein to hospices. This would require a hospice
undergoing a change in majority ownership (as defined in Sec. 424.502
and assuming no exceptions apply) to: (1) enroll in Medicare as a new
hospice; and (2) undergo a state survey or accreditation. The principal
ICR burden of this requirement would involve the completion of an
initial Form CMS-855A application rather than a Form CMS-855A change of
ownership (CHOW) application or a Form CMS-855A change of information
application. Consistent with the general time estimates for these three
categories of applications, it typically takes a provider approximately
4 hours to complete an initial Form CMS-855A, 4 hours for a CHOW
application, and 1 hour for a change of information application. The
key ICR burden difference, therefore, would be between submitting an
initial application and submitting a change of information (since there
is no burden difference between an initial application and a CHOW
application).
Based on internal CMS data, we estimate that each year
approximately 50 hospices would be required to initially enroll in
Medicare due to a change in majority ownership as opposed to simply
reporting the sale via a change of information. This would result in an
additional Form CMS-855A hour burden of 150 hours (50 x 3 hours), with
the 3-hour figure reflecting the difference between initial
applications and changes of information. In terms of cost, it has been
our experience that Form CMS-855A applications are completed by the
provider's office staff. Consequently, we will use the following wage
category and hourly rate from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics'
(BLS) May 2022 National Occupational Employment and Wage Estimates for
all salary estimates (https://www.bls.gov/oes/current/oes_nat.htm):
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TP10JY23.088
This results in an additional Form CMS-855A annual cost burden of
$6,225 (150 hours x $41.50).
We anticipate the following additional costs associated with our
36-month rule expansion:
Fingerprinting: As we proposed that hospices would be
subject to high-risk level screening under Sec. 424.518, hospices that
must initially enroll under Sec. 424.550(b) would have to submit a set
of fingerprints for a national criminal background check (via FBI
Applicant Fingerprint Card FD-258) from each individual with a 5
percent or greater direct or indirect ownership interest in the
hospice. An analysis of the impact of this requirement can be found in
section X.C.8.of this proposed rule.
Application Fee: Under Sec. 424.514, an institutional
provider (as that term is defined in Sec. 424.502) that is initially
enrolling in Medicare must pay the required application fee. Hospices
that are initially enrolling in accordance with the 36-month rule would
accordingly have to pay this fee. The application fee does not meet the
definition of a ``collection of information'' and, as such, is not
subject to the requirements of the PRA. However, the cost is scored
under section X.C.8. of this proposed rule.
Provider Agreement: A hospice that is initially enrolling
in Medicare (which would include those doing so in accordance with
Sec. 424.550(b)) must also sign a provider agreement per 42 CFR part
489 (Health Insurance Benefits Agreement--CMS Form 1561 (OMB control
number 0938-0832)). The applicable May 2022 BLS categories and hourly
wage rates for completing this form are as follows:
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TP10JY23.089
We anticipate that 100 hospices per year would have to sign this
provider agreement due to our revision to Sec. 424.550(b): the 50
previously referenced hospices that would otherwise have reported the
ownership
[[Page 43794]]
change via a Form CMS-855A change of information and another 50 that
would have done so via a Form CMS-855A CHOW application. We anticipate
that it would take the hospice 5 minutes at $236.96/hr for a chief
executive to review and sign the Form CMS-1561 and an additional 5
minutes at $39.68/hr for a medical secretary to file the document when
fully executed. This results in an annual hour burden of 17 hours (100
x 0.166 hours) and a cost of $2,305 (or (($236.96 x 0.0833) + ($39.68 x
0.0833)) x 100).
Combining these initial enrollment application and provider
agreement ICR costs associated with a hospice's change in majority
ownership results in an annual burden of 167 hours (150 + 17) and a
cost of $8,530 ($6,225 + $2,305).
We solicit comment from stakeholders, including hospices, regarding
any other ICR costs that may be associated with our proposed expansion
of the 36-month rule to incorporate hospices. This could include ICR
costs incurred during the survey, accreditation, or certification
processes.
c. Remaining Provider Enrollment Provisions
With one exception, we do not believe our other provider enrollment
proposals would result in an information collection burden. Concerning
the proposal in revised Sec. 424.540(a)(1) to reduce the timeframe in
which CMS can deactivate a provider or supplier for non-billing from 12
months to 6 months, an increase in the number of deactivations on this
basis could result. However, we are unable to establish an estimate of
this number or any associated burden for two reasons. First, fraud
schemes change and fluctuate, meaning that CMS cannot predict the
number of instances in which it would apply Sec. 424.540(a)(1) to
address such situations. Second, a deactivation is a purely
discretionary action by CMS; that is, CMS can, but is not required to,
impose a deactivation if a basis for doing so exists. Accordingly, we
are unable to quantify the increase, if any, of cases where we would
invoke revised Sec. 424.540(a)(1).
C. Submission of PRA-Related Comments
We have submitted a copy of this final rule to OMB for its review
of the rule's information collection requirements. The requirements are
not effective until they have been approved by OMB.
To obtain copies of the supporting statement and any related forms
for the proposed collections, as previously discussed, please visit the
CMS website at https://www.cms.hhs.gov/PaperworkReductionActof1995, or
call the Reports Clearance Office at 410-786-1326.
We invite public comments on these potential information collection
requirements.
X. Regulatory Impact Analysis
A. Statement of Need
1. HH PPS
Section 1895(b)(1) of the Act requires the Secretary to establish a
HH PPS for all costs of home health services paid under Medicare. In
addition, section 1895(b) of the Act requires: (1) the computation of a
standard prospective payment amount include all costs for home health
services covered and paid for on a reasonable cost basis and that such
amounts be initially based on the most recent audited cost report data
available to the Secretary; (2) the prospective payment amount under
the HH PPS to be an appropriate unit of service based on the number,
type, and duration of visits provided within that unit; and (3) the
standardized prospective payment amount be adjusted to account for the
effects of case-mix and wage levels among HHAs. Section 1895(b)(3)(B)
of the Act addresses the annual update to the standard prospective
payment amounts by the home health applicable percentage increase.
Section 1895(b)(4) of the Act governs the payment computation. Sections
1895(b)(4)(A)(i) and (b)(4)(A)(ii) of the Act requires the standard
prospective payment amount be adjusted for case-mix and geographic
differences in wage levels. Section 1895(b)(4)(B) of the Act requires
the establishment of appropriate case-mix adjustment factors for
significant variation in costs among different units of services.
Lastly, section 1895(b)(4)(C) of the Act requires the establishment of
wage adjustment factors that reflect the relative level of wages, and
wage-related costs applicable to home health services furnished in a
geographic area compared to the applicable national average level.
Section 1895(b)(3)(B)(iv) of the Act provides the Secretary with
the authority to implement adjustments to the standard prospective
payment amount (or amounts) for subsequent years to eliminate the
effect of changes in aggregate payments during a previous year or years
that were the result of changes in the coding or classification of
different units of services that do not reflect real changes in case-
mix. Section 1895(b)(5) of the Act provides the Secretary with the
option to make changes to the payment amount otherwise paid in the case
of outliers because of unusual variations in the type or amount of
medically necessary care. Section 1895(b)(3)(B)(v) of the Act requires
HHAs to submit data for purposes of measuring health care quality, and
links the quality data submission to the annual applicable percentage
increase.
Sections 1895(b)(2) and 1895(b)(3)(A) of the Act, as amended by
section 51001(a)(1) and 51001(a)(2) of the BBA of 2018 respectively,
required the Secretary to implement a 30-day unit of service, for 30-
day periods beginning on and after January 1, 2020. Section
1895(b)(3)(D)(i) of the Act, as added by section 51001(a)(2)(B) of the
BBA of 2018, requires the Secretary to annually determine the impact of
differences between assumed behavior changes, as described in section
1895(b)(3)(A)(iv) of the Act, and actual behavior changes on estimated
aggregate expenditures under the HH PPS with respect to years beginning
with 2020 and ending with 2026. Section 1895(b)(3)(D)(ii) of the Act
requires the Secretary, at a time and in a manner determined
appropriate, through notice and comment rulemaking, to provide for one
or more permanent increases or decreases to the standard prospective
payment amount (or amounts) for applicable years, on a prospective
basis, to offset for such increases or decreases in estimated aggregate
expenditures, as determined under section 1895(b)(3)(D)(i) of the Act.
Additionally, 1895(b)(3)(D)(iii) of the Act requires the Secretary, at
a time and in a manner determined appropriate, through notice and
comment rulemaking, to provide for one or more temporary increases or
decreases to the payment amount for a unit of home health services for
applicable years, on a prospective basis, to offset for such increases
or decreases in estimated aggregate expenditures, as determined under
section 1895(b)(3)(D)(i) of the Act. The HH PPS wage index utilizes the
wage adjustment factors used by the Secretary for purposes of sections
1895(b)(4)(A)(ii) and (b)(4)(C) of the Act for hospital wage
adjustments.
2. HH QRP
Section 1895(b)(3)(B)(v) of the Act authorizes the HH QRP, which
requires HHAs to submit data in accordance with the requirements
specified by CMS. Failure to submit data required under section
1895(b)(3)(B)(v) of the Act with respect to a program year will result
in the reduction of the annual home health market basket percentage
increase otherwise applicable to an HHA for the corresponding calendar
year by 2 percentage points.
[[Page 43795]]
3. Expanded HHVBP Model
In the CY 2022 HH PPS final rule (86 FR 62292 through 62336) and
codified at 42 CFR part 484 subpart F, we finalized our policy to
expand the HHVBP Model to all Medicare certified HHAs in the 50 States,
territories, and District of Columbia beginning January 1, 2022. CY
2022 was a pre-implementation year. CY 2023 is the first performance
year in which HHAs individual performance on the applicable measures
will affect their Medicare payments in CY 2025. In this proposed rule,
we are proposing to remove five quality measures from the current
applicable measure set and add three quality measures to the applicable
measure set. Along with the proposed revisions to the current measure
set, we propose to revise the weights of the individual measures within
the OASIS-based measure category and within the claims-based measure
category starting in the CY 2025 performance year. In addition, we are
proposing to update the Model baseline year from CY 2022 to CY 2023
starting in the CY 2025 performance year to enable CMS to measure
competing HHAs performance on benchmarks and achievement thresholds
that are more current for the proposed applicable measure set.
Additionally, we are amending the appeals process such that
reconsideration decisions may be reviewed by the Administrator. We are
including an update to the RFI, Future Approaches to Health Equity in
the Expanded HHVBP Model, that was published in the CY 2023 HH PPS
rule. We will also include an update that reminds interested parties
that we will begin public reporting of HHVBP performance data on or
after December 1, 2024.
4. Home IVIG Items and Services
Division FF, section 4134 of the CAA, 2023 (CAA, 2023) (Pub. L.
117-328) mandated that CMS establish a permanent, bundled payment for
items and services related to administration of IVIG in a patient's
home. The permanent, bundled home IVIG items and services payment is
effective for home IVIG infusions furnished on or after January 1,
2024. Payment for these items and services is required to be a separate
bundled payment made to a supplier for all items and services furnished
in the home during a calendar day. This payment amount may be based on
the amount established under the Demonstration. The standard Part B
coinsurance and the Part B deductible apply. The separate bundled
payment does not apply for individuals receiving services under the
Medicare home health benefit. The CAA, 2023 provision clarifies that a
supplier who furnishes these services meet the requirements of a
supplier of medical equipment and supplies.
5. Informal Dispute Resolution (IDR) and Hospice Special Focus Program
(SFP)
The proposed hospice IDR would be an administrative process offered
to hospice programs that is conducted by CMS, the SAs, or the
accrediting organizations (AOs) as applicable, as part of their survey
activities to provide an informal opportunity to address survey
findings. The proposed Hospice SFP would be implementing a part of the
hospice provisions required under the CAA 2021 directing the Secretary
to create an SFP for poor-performing hospice programs.
6. DMEPOS CAA, 2023-Related Requirements
a. Conforming Changes to Regulations To Codify Change Mandated by
Section 4139 of the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2023
The purpose of the provision related to adjusted fees is to extend
the 75/25 blend in non-rural, non-CBAs as described in 42 CFR
414.210(g)(9)(v). The statutory language for this provision is found in
section 4139 of the CAA, 2023.
b. Scope of the Benefit and Payment for Lymphedema Compression
Treatment Items
The purpose of the provision related to lymphedema compression
treatment items is to define in regulation section 4133 of the CAA,
2023 that adds section 1861(s)(2)(JJ) to the Act establishing a
Medicare Part B benefit for lymphedema compression treatment item. This
provision would address the scope of the new benefit by defining what
constitutes a standard or custom fitted gradient compression garment
and determining what other compression items may exist that are used
for the treatment of lymphedema and would fall under the new benefit.
This rule would also implement section 1834(z) of the Act in
establishing payment amounts for items covered under the new benefit
and frequency limitations for lymphedema compression treatment items.
c. Definition of Brace
The purpose of the provision related to the definition of a brace
is to codify in regulations the longstanding definition of brace that
exists in Medicare program instructions.
7. Requirements for Refillable DMEPOS
This provision is needed to require documentation indicating that
the beneficiary confirmed the need for the refill within the 30-day
period prior to the end of the current supply and to codify our
requirement that the delivery of DMEPOS items (that is, date of
service) must be no sooner than 10 calendar days before the expected
end of the current supply.
8. Provider Enrollment Provisions
This proposed rule is needed to make regulatory enhancements to our
provider enrollment policies. These provisions focus on, but are not
limited to: (1) subjecting a greater number of providers and suppliers,
such as hospices, to the highest level of screening, which includes
fingerprinting all 5 percent or greater owners of these providers and
suppliers; and (2) applying the change in majority ownership (CIMO)
provisions in 42 CFR 424.550(b) to hospices. These changes are
necessary to help ensure that payments are made only to qualified
providers and suppliers and that owners of these entities are carefully
screened. As explained in section VIII. of this proposed rule, we
believe that fulfilling both of these objectives would assist in
protecting the Trust Funds and Medicare beneficiaries.
B. Overall Impact
We have examined the impacts of this rule as required by Executive
Order 12866 on Regulatory Planning and Review (September 30, 1993),
Executive Order 13563 on Improving Regulation and Regulatory Review
(January 18, 2011), Executive Order 14094 on Modernizing Regulatory
Review (April 6, 2023), the Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA) (September
19, 1980, Pub. L. 96 354), section 1102(b) of the Act, section 202 of
the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995 (March 22, 1995; Pub. L. 104-
4), Executive Order 13132 on Federalism (August 4, 1999), and the
Congressional Review Act (5 U.S.C. 804(2)).
Executive Orders 12866 and 13563 direct agencies to assess all
costs and benefits of available regulatory alternatives and, if
regulation is necessary, to select regulatory approaches that maximize
net benefits (including potential economic, environmental, public
health and safety effects, distributive impacts, and equity). Executive
Order 14094 amends section 3(f) of Executive Order 12866 to define a
``significant regulatory action'' as an action that is likely to result
in a rule: (1) having an annual effect on the
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economy of $200 million or more in any 1 year, or adversely affect in a
material way the economy, productivity, competition, jobs, the
environment, public health or safety, or State, local or tribal
governments or communities; (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 legal or policy issues for which
centralized review would meaningfully further the President's
priorities or the principles set forth in this Executive Order.
A regulatory impact analysis (RIA) must be prepared for major rules
with significant regulatory action/s and/or with significant effects as
per section 3(f)(1) of $200 million or more in any 1 year. Based on our
estimates, OMB'S Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs has
determined this rulemaking is significant per section 3(f)(1) as
measured by the $200 million or more in any 1 year. According 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 this proposed rule, and the Departments have provided the
following assessment of their impact. We solicit comments on the
regulatory impact analysis provided.
C. Detailed Economic Analysis
1. Effects of the Proposed Changes for the CY 2024 HH PPS
This rule proposes to update Medicare payments under the HH PPS for
CY 2024. The net transfer impact related to the changes in payments
under the HH PPS for CY 2024 is estimated to be -$375 million (-2.2
percent). The $375 million decrease in estimated payments for CY 2024
reflects the effects of the proposed CY 2024 home health payment update
percentage of 2.7 percent ($460 million increase), an estimated 5.1
percent decrease that reflects the effects of the permanent behavior
adjustment ($870 million decrease) and an estimated 0.2 percent
increase that reflects the effects of an updated FDL ($35 million
increase).
We use the latest data and analysis available. However, we do not
adjust for future changes in such variables as number of visits or
case-mix. This analysis incorporates the latest estimates of growth in
service use and payments under the Medicare home health benefit, based
primarily on Medicare claims data for periods that ended on or before
December 31, 2022. We note that certain events may combine to limit the
scope or accuracy of our impact analysis, because such an analysis is
future-oriented and, thus, susceptible to errors resulting from other
changes in the impact time period assessed. Some examples of such
possible events are newly-legislated general Medicare program funding
changes made by the Congress or changes specifically related to HHAs.
In addition, changes to the Medicare program may continue to be made as
a result of new statutory provisions. Although these changes may not be
specific to the HH PPS, the nature of the Medicare program is such that
the changes may interact, and the complexity of the interaction of
these changes could make it difficult to predict accurately the full
scope of the impact upon HHAs.
Table GG 1 represents how HHA revenues are likely to be affected by
the finalized policy changes for CY 2024. For this analysis, we used an
analytic file with linked CY 2022 OASIS assessments and home health
claims data for dates of service that ended on or before December 31,
2022. The first column of Table GG 1 classifies HHAs according to a
number of characteristics including provider type, geographic region,
and urban and rural locations. The second column shows the number of
facilities in the impact analysis. The third column shows the payment
effects of the permanent behavior assumption adjustment on all
payments. The aggregate impact of the permanent BA adjustment reflected
in the third column does not equal the proposed -5.653 percent
permanent BA adjustment because the adjustment only applies to the
national, standardized 30-day period payments and does not impact
payments for 30-day periods which are LUPAs. The fourth column shows
the payment effects of the recalibration of the case-mix weights offset
by the case-mix weights budget neutrality factor. The fifth column
shows the payment effects of updating the CY 2024 wage index with a 5-
percent cap on wage index decreases. The sixth column shows the effect
of the proposed CY 2024 labor-related share. The aggregate impact of
the changes in the fifth and sixth columns is zero percent, due to the
wage index budget neutrality factor and the labor-related share budget
neutrality factor. The seventh column shows the payment effects of the
proposed CY 2024 home health payment update percentage. The eighth
column shows the payment effects of the revised FDL, and the last
column shows the combined effects of all the proposed provisions.
Overall, it is projected that aggregate payments in CY 2024 would
decrease by 2.2 percent which reflects the 5.1 percent decrease from
the permanent behavior adjustment, the 2.7 payment update percentage
increase, and the 0.2 percent increase from decreasing the FDL. As
illustrated in Table GG 1, the combined effects of all of the changes
vary by specific types of providers and by location. We note that some
individual HHAs within the same group may experience different impacts
on payments than others due to the distributional impact of the CY 2024
wage index, the percentage of total HH PPS payments that were subject
to the LUPA or paid as outlier payments, and the degree of Medicare
utilization.
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2. Effects of the Proposed Changes for the HH QRP for CY 2024
Failure to submit HH QRP data required under section
1895(b)(3)(B)(v) of the Act with respect to a program year will result
in the reduction of the annual home health market basket percentage
increase otherwise applicable to an HHA for the corresponding calendar
year by 2 percentage points. For the CY 2023 program year, 820 of the
11,549 active Medicare-certified HHAs, or approximately 7.1 percent,
did not receive the full annual percentage increase because they did
not meet assessment submission requirements. The 820 HHAs that did not
satisfy the reporting requirements of the HH QRP for the CY 2023
program year represent $149 million in home health claims payment
dollars during the reporting period out of a total $16.4 billion for
all HHAs.
This proposed rule proposes the adoption of the ``COVID-19 Vaccine:
Percent of Patients/Residents Who Are Up to Date'' (Patient/Resident
COVID-19 Vaccine) measure to the HH QRP beginning with the CY 2025 HH
QRP. CMS also proposes to adopt the ``Functional Discharge Score'' (DC
Function) measure to the HH QRP beginning with the CY 2025 HH QRP. With
the addition of the Discharge Function measure, we propose to remove
the ``Application of Percent of Long-Term Care Hospital (LTCH) Patients
with an Admission and Discharge Functional Assessment and a Care Plan
That Addresses Function'' (Application of Functional Assessment/Care
Plan) measure from the HH QRP beginning with the CY 2025 HH QRP. CMS
additionally propose the removal of two OASIS items no longer necessary
for collection, the M0110--``Episode Timing'' and M2220--``Therapy
Needs'' items. The net effect of these proposals is a reduction of four
data elements across all OASIS data collection time points and a net
reduction in burden.
Section IX.B.1. of this proposed rule provides a detailed
description of the net decrease in burdens associated with the proposed
changes. We proposed that additions and removal of data elements
associated with the HH QRP proposals would begin with January 1, 2025
discharges. The cost impact of this proposed changes was estimated to
be a net decrease of $5,123,429 in annualized cost to HHAs, discounted
at 7 percent relative to year 2021, over a perpetual time horizon
beginning in CY 2025. We described the estimated burden and cost
reductions for these measures in section IX of this proposed rule. In
summary, the implementation of proposals outlined in this proposed rule
for the HH QRP is estimated to decrease the burden on HHAs by $437 per
HHA annually, or $5,123,429 for all HHAs annually.
3. Effects of the Proposed Changes for the Expanded HHVBP Model
In the CY 2023 HH PPS final rule (87 FR 66883), we estimated that
the expanded HHVBP Model would generate a total projected 5-year gross
FFS savings for CYs 2023 through 2027 of $3,376,000,000. The proposed
changes to the applicable measure set and the Model baseline year in
this proposed rule will not change those estimates because they do not
change the number of HHAs in the Model or the payment methodology.
Based on proposed policies discussed in this proposed rule, Tables
GG2A and GG2B display the distribution of possible payment adjustments
using CY 2021 data as the performance year and CY 2019 for the baseline
year. Note that due to limited data availability, this impact analysis
does not account for improvement points for the PPH measure because
this measure is not available based on CY 2022 data at the time of the
release of this proposed rule.
Table GG2A and GG2B shows the value-based incentive payment
adjustments for the estimated 6,750 HHAs that would qualify to compete
in the expanded Model based on CY 2021 performance data stratified by
volume-based cohort, as defined in section III.F. of the CY 2022 HH PPS
final rule (86 FR 62312). This impact analysis used CY 2019 to
determine HHA size instead of the calendar year prior to the
performance year (that is, CY 2020) to avoid using data impacted by the
Public Health Emergency (PHE). Using CY 2021 performance year data and
the finalized payment adjustment of 5 percent, based on the 10 proposed
quality measures, the 6,504 HHAs in the larger-volume cohort would have
an average payment adjustment of positive 0.164 percent (+0.164
percent). Furthermore, 246 HHAs have fewer than 60 unique beneficiaries
in CY 2019 and are, therefore, included in the smaller-volume cohort.
Overall, smaller-volume HHAs would have an average payment adjustment
of negative 0.114 percent (-0.114 percent). Twenty-four states/
territories do not have any HHAs in the smaller-volume cohort,
including
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Alabama, District of Columbia, and Georgia. The remaining states/
territories have HHAs in both volume-based cohorts. Florida, for
example, has 622 HHAs in the larger-volume cohort with an average
payment adjustment of positive 1.154 percent (+1.154 percent) and 17
HHAs in the smaller-volume cohort with an average payment adjustment of
positive 0.102 percent (+0.102 percent). The next columns provide the
distribution of payment adjustment by percentile. Specifically, 10
percent of HHAs in the larger-volume cohort would receive downward
payment adjustments of more than negative 3.851 percent (-3.851
percent). Among smaller-volume HHAs, 10 percent of HHAs would receive
downward payment adjustments of more than negative 4.120 percent (-
4.120 percent). For larger-volume HHAs in Florida, the payment
adjustments range from negative 3.161 percent (-3.161 percent) at the
10th percentile to positive 5.000 percent (+5.000 percent) at the 90th
percentile, while the median (50th percentile) payment adjustment is
positive 1.160 percent (+1.160 percent).
Table GG3 provides the payment adjustment distribution based on the
proportion of dual-eligible beneficiaries, average case mix using
Hierarchical Condition Category (HCC) scores, proportion of
beneficiaries that reside in rural areas, and HHA organizational
status. To define cutoffs for the ``percentage of dual eligible
beneficiaries,'' low through high percentage dual-eligible are based on
the 20th, 40th, 60th, and 80th percentiles of percent dual eligible
beneficiaries, respectively, across HHAs in CY 2021. To define case mix
cutoffs, low, medium, or high acuity are based on less than the 25th
percentile, between the 25th and 75th percentiles, and greater than the
75th percentile of average HCC scores, respectively, across HHAs in CY
2021. To define cutoffs for percentage of rural beneficiaries, all non-
rural, up to 50 percent rural, and over 50 percent rural are based on
the home health beneficiaries' core-based statistical area (CBSA) urban
versus rural designation. Based on CY 2021 data, HHAs with the highest
proportion of dual-eligible beneficiaries served have a positive
average payment adjustment (+0.035 percent). In addition, a higher
proportion of rural beneficiaries served is associated with better
performance. Specifically, HHAs serving over 50 percent rural
beneficiaries have an average payment adjustment of positive 0.728
percent (+0.728 percent), compared to HHAs serving only rural
beneficiaries or HHAs serving up to 50 percent rural beneficiaries.
Among organizational type, proprietary HHAs have a slightly negative
average payment adjustment of 0.092, whereas HHAs in other
organizational type categories have a positive average payment
adjustment.
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4. Impacts of Home IVIG Items and Services
The following analysis applies to the home IVIG items and services
payment rate as set forth in section V.D.1. of this rule as added by
section 4134 of the CAA, 2023 and accordingly, describes the impact for
CY 2024 only. Table GG 5 represents the estimated costs of home IVIG
users for CY 2024. We used CY 2022 data to identify beneficiaries
actively enrolled in the IVIG demonstration (that is, beneficiaries
with Part B claims that contain the Q2052 HCPCS code) to estimate the
number of potential CY 2024 active enrollees in the new benefit, which
are shown in column 2. In column 3, CY 2022 claims for IVIG visits
under the Demonstration were again used to estimate potential
utilization under the new benefit in CY 2024. Column 4 shows the
proposed CY 2024 home IVIG items and services rate. The fifth column
estimates the cost to Medicare for CY 2024 ($8,779,095). The estimated
cost for CY 2023 under the Demonstration is $8,543,520 (not shown in
chart) resulting in an increase of $235,575 in payments to providers
under the permanent benefit. Table GG 6 represents the estimated
impacts of the home IVIG items and services payment for CY 2024 by
census region.
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5. Effects of the Proposed Changes for Hospice IDR and SFP
The proposed hospice IDR is an administrative process to be
conducted by CMS, SAs, or AOs as part of their survey activities, and
is separate from the SFP. SAs and AOs may already have existing IDR
processes in place for the HHA IDR requirements. The hospice IDR
requirements will align with HHA. The Congress has already allocated
$10 million annually to CMS to implement the CAA 2021 hospice survey
and enforcement provisions, which includes the SFP. Additionally, CMS
obligates monies to the SAs to carry out survey and certification
responsibilities under their agreement with the Secretary under section
1864 of the Act. Therefore, no additional burden will be incurred by
CMS, SAs, or AOs.
6. Effects of the Proposed Changes for DMEPOS CAA, 2023-Related
Provisions
a. Conforming Changes to Regulations To Codify Change Mandated by
Section 4139 of the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2023
One benefit of this provision is that it provides additional
revenue to DMEPOS suppliers. One cost of this provision is that it
increases the copayments of the Medicare beneficiaries. The transfer
from the Medicare program to the DMEPOS suppliers of $100 million for
CY 2023 paid in CY 2023 and CY 2024. The amount of copayments from
Medicare beneficiaries over the same period is expected to be $30
million. The Federal share of Medicaid for the copayments for dual
eligibles is expected to be $5 million and the State share of the
Medicare payments for this populations is expected to be $4 million.
b. Scope of the Benefit and Payment for Lymphedema Compression
Treatment Items
The benefits of this provision are that Medicare enrollees
suffering from lymphedema will have Medicare pay 80 percent off the
cost of the lymphedema compression treatment items. This Medicare
payment should enable more Medicare enrollees suffering from lymphedema
to access treatment items in the home, reducing both the financial
burden of lymphedema and, by encouraging earlier treatment, the
frequency of institutional care for infections or other complications
of lymphedema. The transfer from the Medicare program to the lymphedema
compression treatment suppliers is estimated to be $230 million from CY
[[Page 43806]]
2024 to CY 2028. The amount of copayments from Medicare beneficiaries
over the same period is expected to be $50 million. The Federal share
of Medicaid expenditures for the copayments of dual eligibles is
expected to be $9 million and the State share for this population is
expected to be $6 million.
c. Definition of Brace
The benefit of this provision is to add the definition of brace in
regulation to more clearly identify what is included in the definition
of a brace. This is purely an administrative effort with no impact on
Medicare coverage or expenditure, and, for this reason, has no cost or
transfer associated with it.
7. Effects of the Proposed Changes to the Requirements for Refillable
DMEPOS
This rule proposes to codify and clarify our requirements for
refillable DMEPOS items. The fiscal impact of these requirements cannot
be estimated as claims often deny for multiple reasons, which may
include non-compliance with our refill requirements; creating an
inability for us to accurately demonstrate a causal relationship. In
addition, to demonstrate impacts we would have to be able to predict
behaviors and anticipated non-compliance in future claim submissions,
which are unknown variables to us.
8. Effects of the Proposed Changes Regarding for Provider Enrollment
Requirements
There are four principal impacts of our provider enrollment
proposals outlined in section VIII. of this proposed rule.
The first was addressed in section IX. and involves the ICR burden
associated with a hospice's completion of an initial Form CMS-855A
application and Form CMS-1561 provider agreement in accordance with a
Sec. 424.550(b) change in majority ownership for which an exception
does not apply. The combined annual burden was estimated to be 167
hours at a cost of $8,530.
The second involves moving hospices from the moderate-risk
screening category to the high-risk screening level.
The third involves incorporating within the high-risk screening
category revalidating DMEPOS suppliers, HHAs, OTPs, MDPP suppliers, and
SNFs for which CMS waived the fingerprint-based criminal background
check requirement when they initially enrolled in Medicare.
The fourth involves the fingerprinting and application fee
requirements (referenced in section IX. of this proposed rule)
associated with a Sec. 424.550(b) change in majority ownership.
We address the second, third, and fourth impacts as follows:
a. Moving Hospices to High-Risk
With this change to Sec. 424.518, hospices that are initially
enrolling in Medicare or reporting any new owner would have to submit
the fingerprints of their 5 percent or greater direct or indirect
owners for a Federal Bureau of Investigation criminal background check.
Based on enrollment statistics and our experience, we project that
1,782 hospices per year (425 initially enrolling + 1,357 reporting a
new 5 percent or greater owner) would be required to submit these
fingerprints. (This figure does not include hospices initially
enrolling pursuant to Sec. 424.550(b); this matter is addressed in
section X.C.8.d. of this proposed rule). Using an estimate of one owner
per hospice (which aligns with previous fingerprinting projections we
have made), 1,782 sets of fingerprints per year would be submitted.
Consistent with prior burden estimates, we project that it would
take each owner approximately 2 hours to be fingerprinted. According to
the most recent BLS wage data for May 2022, the mean hourly wage for
the general category of ``Top Executives'' (the most appropriate BLS
category for owners) is $62.04. With fringe benefits and overhead, the
figure is $124.08. This would result in an estimated annual burden of
this proposed change of 3,564 hours (1,782 x 2) at a cost of $442,221
(3,564 x $124.08).
b. Providers and Suppliers Previously Waived From Fingerprinting
Approximately 6,388 high-risk level providers and suppliers were
waived from fingerprinting when they initially enrolled in Medicare
during the PHE. We are proposing that these providers and suppliers,
upon their revalidation, be subject to high-risk category screening
and, consequently, fingerprinting. Using our estimates from section
X.C.8.a. of this proposed rule, we project the total burden of this
proposal to be 12,776 hours (6,388 x 2 hr) and $1,585,246 (12,776 x
$124.08). Calculated as annual figures over a 3-year period, this
results in a burden of 4,259 hours and $528,415.
c. Hospice Changes in Majority Ownership
Hospices that are initially enrolling in Medicare due to a change
in majority ownership under Sec. 424.550(b) would be subject to
fingerprinting and must pay an application fee in accordance with Sec.
424.514. Using the fingerprinting estimates already referenced in
section X.C.8. of this proposed rule, we estimate an annual
fingerprinting burden to hospices per Sec. 424.550(b) of 200 hours
(100 x 2 hr) at a cost of $24,816 (200 hr x $124.08).
The application fees for each of the past 3 calendar years were or
are $599 (CY 2021), $631 (CY 2022), and $688 (CY 2023). Consistent with
Sec. 424.514, the differing fee amounts were predicated on changes/
increases in the CPI for all urban consumers (all items; United States
city average, CPI-U) for the 12-month period ending on June 30 of the
previous year. While we cannot predict future changes to the CPI, the
fee amounts between 2021 and 2023 increased by an average of $45 per
year. We believe this is a reasonable barometer with which to establish
estimates (strictly for purposes of this proposed rule) of the fee
amounts in the first 3 calendar years of the proposed provision (that
is, 2024, 2025, and 2026). Thus, we project a fee amount of $733 in
2024, $778 for 2025, and $823 for 2026.
Applying these prospective fee amounts to the annual number of
projected hospices impacted by our change in majority ownership
proposal, this results in a cost of $73,300 (or 100 x $733) in the
first year, $77,800 in the second year, and $82,300 in the third year.
Applying these prospective fee amounts to the annual number of
projected hospices impacted by our change in majority ownership
proposal, this results in a cost of $73,300 (or 100 x $733) in the
first year, $77,800 in the second year, and $82,300 in the third year.
d. Totals
The following table outlines the total annual costs associated with
the proposals addressed in section X.C.8. of this proposed rule for
each of the first 3 years.
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We solicit comment from stakeholders, including hospices, regarding
any other RIA costs that may be associated with our proposed expansion
of the 36-month rule to incorporate hospices. This could include costs
incurred during the survey, accreditation, and/or certification
processes.
D. Regulatory Review Cost Estimation
If regulations impose administrative costs on private entities,
such as the time needed to read and interpret this proposed or final
rule, we should estimate the cost associated with regulatory review.
Due to the uncertainty involved with accurately quantifying the number
of entities that will review the rule, we assume that the total number
of unique commenters on last year's proposed rule will be the number of
reviewers of this proposed rule. We acknowledge that this assumption
may understate or overstate the costs of reviewing this rule. It is
possible that not all commenters reviewed last year's rule in detail,
and it is also possible that some reviewers chose not to comment on the
proposed rule. For these reasons we thought that the number of past
commenters would be a fair estimate of the number of reviewers of this
rule. We seek comments on the approach used in estimating the number of
entities reviewing this proposed rule. We also recognize that different
types of entities are in many cases affected by mutually exclusive
sections of this proposed rule, and therefore for the purposes of our
estimate we assume that each reviewer reads approximately 50 percent of
the rule. We seek comments on this assumption.
Using the wage information from the BLS for medical and health
service managers (Code 11-9111), we estimate that the cost of reviewing
this rule is $115.22 per hour, including overhead and fringe benefits
https://www.bls.gov/oes/current/oes_nat.htm. Assuming an average
reading speed, we estimate that it would take approximately 1.98 hours
for the staff to review half of this proposed rule. For each entity
that reviews the rule, the estimated cost is $228.14 (1.98 hours x
$115.22). Therefore, we estimate that the total cost of reviewing this
regulation is $205,554.14 ($228.14 x 901) [901 is the number of
estimated reviewers, which is based on the total number of unique
commenters from last year's proposed rule].
E. Alternatives Considered
1. HH PPS
For the CY 2024 HH PPS proposed rule, we considered alternatives to
the provisions articulated in section II.C. of this proposed rule. As
described in section II.C.1.g. of this rule, to help prevent future
over or underpayments, we calculated a permanent prospective adjustment
by determining what the 30-day base payment amount should have been in
CYs 2020, 2021, and 2022 in order to achieve the same estimated
aggregate expenditures as obtained from the simulated 60-day episodes.
One alternative to the proposed -5.653 percent permanent payment
adjustment included halving the proposed adjustment similar to how we
finalized the permanent adjustment for CY 2023. Another alternative
would be a phase-in approach, where we could reduce the permanent
adjustment, by spreading out the CY 2024 permanent adjustment over a
specified period of years, rather than halving the adjustment in CY
2024 and adjusting the CY 2025 rate by the rest of that amount. Another
alternative would be to delay the permanent adjustment to a future
year. However, we believe that a reduction, a phase-in approach, or
delay in the permanent adjustment would not be appropriate, as
reducing, phasing in, or delaying the permanent adjustment would
further impact budget neutrality and likely lead to a compounding
effect creating the need for a larger reduction to the payment rate in
future years.
We also considered proposing to implement the one-time temporary
adjustment to reconcile retrospective overpayments in CYs 2020, 2021,
and 2022. However, as stated previously in this rule, we believe that
implementing both the permanent and temporary adjustments to the CY
2024 payment rate may adversely affect HHAs given the magnitude of the
adjustment to the payment rate in a single year. Likewise, section
1895(b)(3)(D)(iii) of the Act gives CMS the authority to make any
temporary adjustment in a time and manner appropriate though notice and
comment rulemaking. Therefore, we believe it is best to propose only
the implementation of the permanent decrease of 5.653 percent to the CY
2024 base payment rate.
2. HH QRP
We considered alternative measures to the Discharge Function
measure and determined this measure was the strongest. No appropriate
alternative was available for the COVID-19 Patient Vaccination measure.
3. Expanded HHVBP Model
We discuss the alternatives we considered to the proposed weights
of the individual measures within the OASIS-based measure category and
within the claims-based measure category starting in the CY 2025
performance year for the expanded HHVBP Model in section IV.B.2. of
this proposed rule.
4. Home IVIG Items and Services
For the CY 2024 HH PPS proposed rule, we did not consider
alternatives to implementing the home IVIG items and services payment
for CY 2024 because section 1842(o)(8) of the Act requires the
Secretary to establish a separate bundled payment to the supplier for
all items and services related to the administration of intravenous
immune globulin to an individual in the patient's home during a
calendar day effective January 1, 2024. We did consider alternatives to
annually updating this payment rate, as articulated in section II.V.D.
of this proposed rule. We considered updating the annual rate using the
LUPA rate for skilled nursing in accordance with the demonstration
[[Page 43808]]
program update. However, as the IVIG services payment is not
geographically wage adjusted, and the LUPA rate incorporates a wage
index budget neutrality factor, we believe it is more appropriate to
annually adjust the IVIG items and services payment rate only by the
home health payment update percentage. We also considered annually
updating the rate by the CPI-U percentage increase in accordance with
the annual update to the home infusion therapy services payment rate.
However, the Demonstration has never used the CPI-U percentage increase
to update the payment rate, and we believe it is more beneficial to
keep the permanent payment as closely aligned with the Demonstration
rate as possible.
5. IDR and Hospice SFP
We did not consider any alternatives in this proposed rule for
either proposal. An initial alternative proposal was published in CY 22
Home Health PPS proposed rule (86 FR 35874) but was not finalized due
to public comments and requests that CMS establish a Technical Expert
Panel (TEP) to inform the development of the SFP. We believe the new
proposed methodology, based on feedback provided by the TEP, is the
best way to identify and remedy the issue of poor-performing hospices.
6. DMEPOS CAA, 2023-Related Provisions
a. Scope of the Benefit and Payment for Lymphedema Compression
Treatment Items
As this provision is statutorily mandated, CMS needed to consider
no alternatives for implementation. Similarly, the statutory language
provided a definition for the lymphedema compression treatment items to
be covered by this benefit, so CMS did not consider any alternative to
coverage of a list of items meeting the statutory requirements.
Regarding the payment methodology, CMS considered numerous sources for
prices as suggested in statute. Different combinations of internet and
insurer prices were alternatives considered. Ultimately, CMS decided on
a payment methodology that CMS considered reasonable given the market
for these items.
b. Conforming Changes to Regulations To Codify Change Mandated by
Section 4139 of the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2023
This is a conforming change to a statutory mandate and therefore
required no alternatives be considered.
c. Definition of Brace
This is a codification of an existing definition and therefore
required no alternatives be considered.
7. Refillable DMEPOS
At this time, we did not consider alternatives as this is existing
policy that is being codified with additional leniencies based on prior
experiences. We welcome the submission of comments.
8. Provider Enrollment Provisions
We considered several alternatives for addressing our provider
enrollment-related concerns regarding hospice program integrity and
quality of care. We concluded that moving hospices to the high-risk
screening category and expanding Sec. 424.550(b) to include hospices
were the most appropriate provider enrollment regulatory means of
addressing these issues.
F. Accounting Statements and Tables
1. HH PPS
As required by OMB Circular A-4 (available at https://www.whitehouse.gov/wp-content/uploads/legacy_drupal_files/omb/circulars/A4/a-4.pdf, in Table GG 8, we have prepared an accounting
statement showing the classification of the transfers and benefits
associated with the CY 2024 HH PPS provisions of this rule.
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TP10JY23.100
2. HH QRP
As required by OMB Circular A-4 (available at https://www.whitehouse.gov/sites/whitehouse.gov/files/omb/circulars/A4/a-4.pdf), in Table GG 9, we have prepared an accounting statement showing
the classification of the expenditures associated with this final rule
as they relate to HHAs. Table GG 9 provides our best estimate of the
increase in burden for OASIS submission.
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TP10JY23.101
[[Page 43809]]
3. Expanded HHVBP Model
As required by OMB Circular A-4 (available at https://www.whitehouse.gov/sites/whitehouse.gov/files/omb/circulars/A4/a-4.pdf), in Table GG 10 we have prepared an accounting statement. Table
GG 10 provides our best estimate of the decrease in Medicare payments
under the expanded HHVBP Model.
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TP10JY23.102
4. Home IVIG Items and Services
As required by OMB Circular A-4 (available at https://www.whitehouse.gov/wp-content/uploads/legacy_drupal_files/omb/circulars/A4/a-4.pdf, in Table GG 11, we have prepared an accounting
statement showing the classification of the transfers and benefits
associated with the CY 2024 IVIG provisions of this rule.
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TP10JY23.103
5. DMEPOS
a. Conforming Changes to Regulations To Codify Change Mandated by
Section 4139 of the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2023
As required by OMB Circular A-4 (available at https://www.whitehouse.gov/sites/whitehouse.gov/files/omb/circulars/A4/a-4.pdf), in Table GG 12, we have prepared an accounting statement
showing the classification of the expenditures associated with this
provision. Table GG 12 provides our best estimate of the transfers.
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TP10JY23.104
b. Scope of the Benefit and Payment for Lymphedema Compression
Treatment Items
As required by OMB Circular A-4 (available at https://www.whitehouse.gov/sites/whitehouse.gov/files/omb/circulars/A4/a-4.pdf), in Table GG 13, we have prepared an accounting statement
showing the classification of the expenditures associated with this
provision. Table GG 13 provides our best estimate of the transfers.
[[Page 43810]]
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TP10JY23.105
G. Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)
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, small entities
include small businesses, nonprofit organizations, and small
governmental jurisdictions. In addition, HHAs are small entities, as
that is the term used in the RFA. Individuals and States are not
included in the definition of a small entity.
The NAICS was adopted in 1997 and is the current standard used by
the Federal statistical agencies related to the U.S. business economy.
We utilized the NAICS U.S. industry title ``Home Health Care Services''
and corresponding NAICS code 621610 in determining impacts for small
entities. The NAICS code 621610 has a size standard of $19 million
\222\ and approximately 96 percent of HHAs are considered small
entities. Table GG 14 shows the number of firms, revenue, and estimated
impact per home health care service category.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\222\ https://www.sba.gov/sites/sbagov/files/2023-03/Table%20of%20Size%20Standards_Effective%20March%2017%2C%202023.xlsx.
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TP10JY23.106
The economic impact assessment is based on estimated Medicare
payments (revenues) and HHS's practice in interpreting the RFA is to
consider effects economically ``significant'' only if greater than 5
percent of providers reach a threshold of 3 to 5 percent or more of
total revenue or total costs. The majority of HHAs' visits are Medicare
paid visits and therefore the majority of HHAs' revenue consists of
Medicare payments. Based on our analysis, we conclude that the policies
finalized in this rule would result in an estimated total impact of 3
to 5 percent or more on Medicare revenue for greater than 5 percent of
HHAs. Therefore, the Secretary has determined that this HH PPS final
rule will have significant economic impact on a substantial number of
small entities. We estimate that the net impact of the policies in this
rule is approximately $375 million in decreased payments to HHAs in CY
2024. The $375 million in decreased payments are reflected in the last
column of the first row in Table GG 14
[[Page 43811]]
as a 2.2 percent decrease in expenditures when comparing CY 2024
payments to estimated CY 2023 payments. The 2.2 percent decrease is
mostly driven by the impact of the permanent behavior assumption
adjustment reflected in the third column of Table GG 1. Further detail
is presented in Table GG 1, by HHA type and location.
With regards to options for regulatory relief, we note that section
1895(b)(3)(D)(i) of the Act requires CMS to annually determine the
impact of differences between the assumed behavior changes finalized in
the CY 2019 HH PPS final rule with comment period (83 FR 56455) and
actual behavior changes on estimated aggregate expenditures under the
HH PPS with respect to years beginning with 2020 and ending with 2026.
Additionally, section 1895(b)(3)(D)(ii) and (iii) of the Act requires
us to make permanent and temporary adjustments to the payment rate to
offset for such increases or decreases in estimated aggregate
expenditures through notice and comment rulemaking. While we find that
the -5.653 percent permanent payment adjustment, described in section
II.C.1.g. of this proposed rule, is necessary to offset the increase in
estimated aggregate expenditures for CYs 2020 through 2022 based on the
impact of the differences between assumed behavior changes and actual
behavior changes, we will also continue to reprice claims, per the
finalized methodology, and make any additional adjustments at a time
and manner deemed appropriate in future rulemaking. As discussed
previously, we also explored alternatives to the proposed -5.653
percent permanent payment adjustment including a phase-in approach,
where we could reduce the permanent adjustment, by spreading out the CY
2024 permanent adjustment over a period of years. Another alternative
would be to delay the permanent adjustment to a future year. However,
we believe that a reduction to the permanent adjustment, a phase-in
approach, or delay in the permanent adjustment would not be
appropriate, as reducing, phasing in, or delaying the permanent
adjustment would further impact budget neutrality and likely lead to a
compounding effect creating the need for a larger reduction to the
payment rate in future years. We also considered proposing to implement
the one-time temporary adjustment to reconcile retrospective
overpayments in CYs 2020, 2021, and 2022. However, as stated previously
in this rule, we recognize that applying the full permanent and
temporary adjustments to the CY 2024 payment rate may adversely affect
HHAs, including small entities. We are soliciting comments on the
overall HH PPS RFA analysis.
Guidance issued by HHS interpreting the Regulatory Flexibility Act
considers the effects economically `significant' only if greater than 5
percent of providers reach a threshold of 3 to 5 percent or more of
total revenue or total costs. Among the over 7,500 HHAs that are
estimated to qualify to compete in the expanded HHVBP Model, we
estimate that the percent payment adjustment resulting from this rule
would be larger than 3 percent, in magnitude, for about 28 percent of
competing HHAs (estimated by applying the proposed 5-percent maximum
payment adjustment under the expanded Model to CY 2019 data). As a
result, more than the RFA threshold of 5-percent of HHA providers
nationally would be significantly impacted. We refer readers to Tables
43 and 44 in the CY 2022 HH PPS final rule (86 FR 62407 through 62410)
for our analysis of payment adjustment distributions by State, HHA
characteristics, HHA size, and percentiles.
Thus, the Secretary has certified that this final rule would have a
significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities.
Though the RFA requires consideration of alternatives to avoid economic
impacts on small entities, the intent of the rule, itself, is to
encourage quality improvement by HHAs through the use of economic
incentives. As a result, alternatives to mitigate the payment
reductions would be contrary to the intent of the rule, which is to
test the effect on quality and costs of care of applying payment
adjustments based on HHAs' performance on quality measures.
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 603 of 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 and has fewer
than 100 beds. This rule is not applicable to hospitals. Therefore, the
Secretary has certified that this proposed rule would not have a
significant economic impact on the operations of small rural hospitals.
H. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act (UMRA)
Section 202 of UMRA of 1995 UMRA also requires that agencies assess
anticipated costs and benefits before issuing any rule whose mandates
require spending in any 1 year of $100 million in 1995 dollars, updated
annually for inflation. In 2023, that threshold is approximately $177
million. This proposed 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 $177 million in any
one year.
I. Federalism
Executive Order 13132 establishes certain requirements that an
agency must meet when it promulgates a proposed rule (and subsequent
final rule) that imposes substantial direct requirement costs on State
and local governments, preempts State law, or otherwise has Federalism
implications. We have reviewed this final rule under these criteria of
Executive Order 13132 and have determined that it would not impose
substantial direct costs on State or local governments.
J. Conclusion
In conclusion, we estimate that the provisions in this proposed
rule will result in an estimated net decrease in home health payments
of 2.2 percent for CY 2024 (-$375 million). The $375 million decrease
in estimated payments for CY 2024 reflects the effects of the CY 2024
home health payment update percentage increase of 2.7 percent ($460
million increase), a 0.2 percent increase in payments due to the new
lower FDL ratio, which will increase outlier payments in order to
target to pay no more than 2.5 percent of total payments as outlier
payments ($35 million increase) and an estimated 5.1 percent decrease
in payments that reflects the effects of the permanent behavior
adjustment ($870 million decrease).
Chiquita Brooks-LaSure, Administrator of the Centers for Medicare &
Medicaid Services, approved this document on June 26, 2023.
List of Subjects
42 CFR Part 409
Health facilities, Medicare.
42 CFR Part 410
Diseases, Health facilities, Health professions, Laboratories,
Medicare, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements, Rural areas, X-
rays.
42 CFR Part 414
Administrative practice and procedure, Health facilities, Health
professions, Kidney diseases, Medicare,
[[Page 43812]]
Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
42 CFR Part 424
Emergency medical services, Health facilities, Health professions,
Medicare, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
42 CFR Part 484
Administrative practice and procedure, Grant programs-health,
Health facilities, Health professions, Home health care, Medicare,
Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
42 CFR Part 488
Administrative practice and procedure, Health facilities, Health
professions, Medicare, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
42 CFR Part 489
Health facilities, Medicare, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.
For the reasons stated in the preamble, the Centers for Medicare &
Medicaid Services proposes to amend 42 CFR Chapter IV as follows:
PART 409--HOSPITAL INSURANCE BENEFITS
0
1. The authority citation for part 409 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 1302 and 1395hh.
Sec. 409.50 [Amended]
0
2. In Sec. 409.50 amend paragraph (b) by removing the phrase ``for
furnishing the Negative Pressure Wound Therapy (NPWT) using a
disposable device'' and adding in its place the phrase ``for the
disposable Negative Pressure Wound Therapy (NPWT) device''.
PART 410--SUPPLEMENTARY MEDICAL INSURANCE (SMI) BENEFITS
0
3. The authority citation for part 410 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 1302, 1395m, 1395hh, 1395rr, and 1395ddd.
0
4. Amend Sec. 410.2 by adding the definitions of ``Brace'', ``Custom
fitted gradient compression garment'', ``gradient compression'', and
``lymphedema compression treatment item'' in alphabetical order to read
as follows:
Sec. 410.2 Definitions
* * * * *
Brace means a rigid or semi-rigid device used for the purpose of
supporting a weak or deformed body member or restricting or eliminating
motion in a diseased or injured part of the body.
* * * * *
Custom fitted gradient compression garment means a garment that is
uniquely sized and shaped to fit the exact dimensions of the affected
extremity or part of the body, of an individual to provide accurate
gradient compression to treat lymphedema.
* * * * *
Gradient compression means the ability to apply a higher level of
compression or pressure to the distal (farther) end of the limb or body
part affected by lymphedema with lower, decreasing compression or
pressure at the proximal (closer) end of the limb or body part affected
by lymphedema.
Lymphedema compression treatment item means standard and custom
fitted gradient compression garments and other items specified under
Sec. 410.36(a)(4) that are--
(1) Furnished on or after January 1, 2024, to an individual with a
diagnosis of lymphedema for treatment of such condition;
(2) Primarily and customarily used to serve a medical purpose and
for the treatment of lymphedema; and
(3) Prescribed by a physician (or a physician assistant, nurse
practitioner, or a clinical nurse specialist (as those terms are
defined in section 1861(aa)(5) of the Act) to the extent authorized
under State law.
* * * * *
Sec. 410.10 [Amended]
0
5. In Sec. 410.10 amend paragraph (y) by removing the phrase
``globulin administered'' and adding in its place the phrase
``globulin, including items and services, administered''.
0
6. Amend Sec. 410.36 by revising paragraph (a)(3) and adding paragraph
(a)(4) to read as follows:
Sec. 410.36 Medical supplies, appliances, and devices: Scope.
* * * * *
(a) * * *
(3)(i) Leg, arm, back, and neck braces.
(A) A leg brace may include a shoe if it is an integral part of the
brace (necessary for the leg brace to function properly) and its
expense is included as part of the cost of the brace.
(ii) Artificial legs, arms, and eyes; and
(iii) Replacements for the devices specified in paragraphs
(a)(3)(i) and (ii) if required because of a change in the individual's
physical condition.
(4) Lymphedema compression treatment items, including the
following:
(i) Standard and custom fitted gradient compression garments.
(ii) Gradient compression wraps with adjustable straps.
(iii) Compression bandaging systems.
(iv) Other items determined to be lymphedema compression treatment
items under the process established under Sec. 414.1670.
(v) For the purposes of paragraphs (i) and (ii) of this paragraph,
the scope of the benefit for lymphedema compression treatment items
includes accessories such as zippers in garments, liners worn under
garments or wraps with adjustable straps, and padding or fillers that
are necessary for the effective use of a gradient compression garment
or wrap with adjustable straps.
* * * * *
0
7. Section 410.38 is amended by adding paragraph (d)(4) to read as
follows:
Sec. 410.38 Durable medical equipment, prosthetics, orthotics and
supplies (DMEPOS): Scope and conditions.
* * * * *
(d) * * *
(4) Refills--(i) Definitions. As used in this paragraph (d):
Date of service (for refilled items) means either--
(1) The date of delivery for the DMEPOS item; or
(2) For items rendered via delivery or shipping service, the
shipping date.
Refills mean DMEPOS products that are provided on a recurring basis
secondary to a medically necessary DMEPOS order.
Shipping date means--
(1) The date the delivery/shipping service label is created; or
(2) The date that the item is retrieved for delivery. These dates
must not demonstrate significant variation.
(ii) Documentation. The DMEPOS supplier must document contact with
the beneficiary or their representative to verify the refill is needed.
This documentation must include both of the following:
(A) Evidence of the beneficiary or their representative's
affirmative response of the need for supplies, which should be obtained
as close to the expected end of the current supply as possible. Contact
and affirmative response must be within 30 calendar days from the
expected end of the current supply.
(B)(1) For shipped items, the beneficiary name, date of contact,
the item requested, and an affirmative response from the beneficiary,
indicative of the need for refill, prior to dispensing the product; or
(2) For items obtained in-person from a retail store, the delivery
slip signed by the beneficiary or their representative or
[[Page 43813]]
a copy of the itemized sales receipt is sufficient documentation of a
request for refill.
(iii) Delivery of DMEPOS items provided on a recurring basis. The
date of service for DMEPOS items provided on a recurring basis must be
no earlier than 10 calendar days before the expected end of the current
supply.
* * * * *
PART 414--PAYMENT FOR PART B MEDICAL AND OTHER HEALTH SERVICES
0
8. The authority citation for part 414 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 1302, 1395hh, and 1395rr(b)(l).
0
9. Section 414.210 is amended by--
0
a. In paragraph (g)(2)(ii) introductory text, removing the phrase ``(42
U.S.C. 1320b-5(g)(1)(B)), whichever is later'' and adding in its place
the phrase ``(42 U.S.C. 1320b-5(g)(1)(B)), or December 31, 2023,
whichever is later'';
0
b. In paragraph (g)(2)(iii) introductory text, removing the phrase
``(42 U.S.C. 1320b-5(g)(1)(B)), whichever is later'' and adding in its
place the phrase ``(42 U.S.C. 1320b-5(g)(1)(B)), or December 31, 2023,
whichever is later'';
0
c. In paragraph (g)(9)(iii) removing the phrase ``from June 1, 2018
through December 31, 2020 or through the duration'' and adding in its
place the phrase ``from June 1, 2018 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)) or December 31, 2023'';
0
d. Revising paragraph (g)(9)(v); and
0
e. In paragraph (g)(9)(vi), removing the date ``February 28, 2022'' and
adding in its place the date ``January 1, 2024''.
The revision reads as follows:
Sec. 414.210 General payment rules.
* * * * *
(g) * * *
(9) * * *
(v) 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)) or
December 31, 2023, whichever is later, based on the fee schedule amount
for the area is equal to 75 percent of the adjusted payment amount
established under this section and 25 percent of the unadjusted fee
schedule amount.
* * * * *
0
10. Amend Sec. 414.402 by revising the definition of ``Item'' to read
as follows:
Sec. 414.402 Definitions.
* * * * *
Item means a product included in a competitive bidding program that
is identified by a HCPCS code, which may be specified for competitive
bidding (for example, a product when it is furnished through mail
order), or a combination of codes with or without modifiers, and
includes the services directly related to the furnishing of that
product to the beneficiary. Items that may be included in a competitive
bidding program are as follows:
(1) DME other than class III devices under the Federal Food, Drug
and Cosmetic Act, as defined in Sec. 414.402, group 3 complex
rehabilitative power wheelchairs, complex rehabilitative manual
wheelchairs, manual wheelchairs described by HCPCS codes E1235, E1236,
E1237, E1238, and K0008, and related accessories when furnished in
connection with such wheelchairs, and further classified into the
following categories:
(i) Inexpensive or routinely purchased items, as specified in Sec.
414.220(a).
(ii) Items requiring frequent and substantial servicing, as
specified in Sec. 414.222(a).
(iii) Oxygen and oxygen equipment, as specified in Sec.
414.226(c)(1).
(iv) Other DME (capped rental items), as specified in Sec.
414.229.
(2) Supplies necessary for the effective use of DME other than
inhalation and infusion drugs.
(3) Enteral nutrients, equipment, and supplies.
(4) Off-the-shelf orthotics, which are orthotics described in
section 1861(s)(9) of the Act that require minimal self-adjustment for
appropriate use and do not require expertise in trimming, bending,
molding, assembling or customizing to fit a beneficiary.
(5) Lymphedema compression treatment items.
* * * * *
0
11. Amend Sec. 414.408 by adding paragraph (g)(5) to read as follows:
Sec. 414.408 Payment rules.
* * * * *
(g) * * *
(5) Lymphedema compression treatment items.
* * * * *
0
12. Amend Sec. 414.412 by revising paragraph (b)(2) to read as
follows:
Sec. 414.412 Submission of bids under a competitive bidding program.
* * * * *
(b) * * *
(2) The bid submitted for each lead item and product category
cannot exceed the payment amount that would otherwise apply to the lead
item under--
(i) Subpart C of this part, without the application of Sec.
414.210(g);
(ii) Subpart D of this part, without the application of Sec.
414.105; or
(iii) Subpart Q of this part, without the application of Sec.
414.1690.
* * * * *
0
13. Add subpart Q, consisting of Sec. Sec. 414.1600 through 414.1690,
to read as follows:
Subpart Q--Payment for Lymphedema Compression Treatment Items
Sec.
414.1600 Purpose and definitions.
414.1650 Payment basis for lymphedema compression treatment items.
414.1660 Continuity of pricing when HCPCS codes are divided or
combined.
414.1670 Procedures for making benefit category determinations and
payment determinations for new lymphedema compression treatment
items.
414.1680 Frequency limitations.
414.1690 Application of competitive bidding information.
Subpart Q--Payment for Lymphedema Compression Treatment Items
Sec. 414.1600 Purpose and definitions.
(a) Purpose. This subpart implements section 1834(z) of the Act and
establishes procedures for making benefit category determinations and
payment determinations for lymphedema compression treatment items.
(b) Definitions. For purposes of this subpart the following
definitions apply:
Benefit category determination means a national determination
regarding whether an item or service meets the Medicare definition of
lymphedema compression treatment item at section 1861(mmm) of the Act
and the rules of this subpart and is not otherwise excluded from
coverage by statute.
Lymphedema compression treatment item means an item as described in
Sec. 410.2.
Sec. 414.1650 Payment basis for lymphedema compression treatment
items.
(a) General payment rule. For items furnished on or after January
1, 2024, Medicare pays for lymphedema compression treatment items on
the basis of 80 percent of the lesser of -
(1) The actual charge for the item; or
(2) The payment amount for the item, as determined in accordance
with paragraph (b) of this section.
(b) Payment amounts. The payment amounts for covered lymphedema
compression treatment items paid for under this subpart are established
based on one of the following:
(1) If payment amounts are available from Medicaid state plans,
then 120
[[Page 43814]]
percent of the average of the Medicaid payment amounts.
(2) If payment amounts are not available from Medicaid state plans,
then 100 percent of the average of average internet retail prices and
payment amounts from TRICARE (Department of Defense).
(3) If payment amounts are not available from Medicaid state plans
or TRICARE, then 100 percent of average internet retail prices.
(c) Updates to payment amounts. The payment amounts for covered
lymphedema compression treatment items established in accordance with
paragraph (b) of this section are increased on an annual basis
beginning on January 1 of the year subsequent to the year in which the
payment amounts are initially established based on the percent change
in the Consumer Price Index for all Urban Consumers (CPI-U) for the 12-
month period ending with June of the previous year.
Sec. 414.1660 Continuity of pricing when HCPCS codes are divided or
combined.
(a) General rule. If HCPCS codes for lymphedema compression
treatment items are divided or combined, the payment amounts for the
old codes are mapped to the new codes to ensure continuity of pricing.
(b) Mapping of payment amounts. (1) If there is a single code that
describes two or more distinct complete items (for example, two
different but related or similar items), and separate codes are
subsequently established for each item, then the payment amounts that
applied to the single code continue to apply to each of the items
described by the new codes.
(2) If the codes for several different items are combined into a
single code, then the payment amounts for the new code are established
using the average (arithmetic mean), weighted by allowed services, of
the payment amounts for the formerly separate codes.
Sec. 414.1670 Procedures for making benefit category determinations
and payment determinations for new lymphedema compression treatment
items.
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:
(a) At the start of a HCPCS coding cycle, CMS performs an analysis
to determine if the item is statutorily excluded from coverage under
Medicare under section 1862 of the Act.
(1) If not excluded by statute, then CMS determines whether the
item is a lymphedema compression treatment item as defined under
section 1861(mmm) of the Act.
(2) If excluded by statute, the analysis is concluded.
(b) If a preliminary determination is made that the item is a
lymphedema compression treatment item, CMS makes a preliminary payment
determination for the item or service.
(c) CMS posts preliminary benefit category determinations and
payment determinations on CMS.gov approximately 2 weeks prior to a
public meeting.
(d) After consideration of public consultation provided at a public
meeting on preliminary benefit category determinations and payment
determinations for items, CMS establishes the benefit category
determinations and payment determinations for items through program
instructions.
Sec. 414.1680 Frequency limitations.
(a) General rule. With the exception of replacements of items that
are lost, stolen, or irreparably damaged, or if needed due to a change
in the patient's medical or physical condition, no payment may be made
for gradient compression garments or wraps with adjustable straps
furnished other than at the frequencies established in paragraphs (b)
and (c) of this section.
(b) Initial furnishing of lymphedema compression treatment items.
The following frequency limitations apply to items initially furnished
to the beneficiary if determined to be reasonable and necessary for the
treatment of lymphedema:
(1) Two units of daytime gradient compression garments or wraps
with adjustable straps per affected extremity or part of the body.
(2) One garment for nighttime use per affected extremity or part of
the body.
(c) Replacements of lymphedema compression treatment items. The
following frequency limitations apply to replacements of lymphedema
compression treatment items if determined to be reasonable and
necessary for the treatment of lymphedema:
(1) Payment for the replacement of gradient compression garments or
wraps with adjustable straps per each affected extremity or part of the
body can be made once every 6 months.
(2) Payment for the replacement of nighttime garments per each
affected extremity or part of the body can be made once a year.
(d) Replacements of lymphedema compression bandaging systems or
supplies. Specific frequency limitations are not established for these
items. Determinations regarding the quantity of compression bandaging
supplies needed by each beneficiary during phase one of decongestive
therapy are made by the DME MAC that processes the claims for the
supplies.
Sec. 414.1690 Application of competitive bidding information.
The payment amounts for lymphedema compression treatment items
under Sec. 414.1650(b) may be adjusted using information on the
payment determined as part of implementation of the programs under
subpart F using the methodologies set forth at Sec. 414.210(g).
0
14. Add subpart R, consisting of Sec. 141.1700, to read as follows:
Subpart R--Home Intravenous Immunoglobulin (IVIG) Items and
Services Payment
Sec. 414.1700 Basis of payment.
(a) General rule. For home intravenous immunoglobulin (IVIG) items
or services furnished on or after January 1, 2024, Medicare payment is
made on the basis of 80 percent of the lesser of the following:
(1) The actual charge for the item or service.
(2) The fee schedule amount for the items and services, as
determined in accordance with the provisions of this section.
(b) Per visit amount. A single payment amount is made for items and
services furnished by a DME supplier per visit.
(c) Initial establishment of the payment amount. In establishing
the initial per visit IVIG items and services payment amount for CY
2024, CMS used the CY 2023 bundled payment rate under the IVIG
Demonstration updated by the home health payment percentage update for
CY 2024.
(d) Annual payment adjustment. The per visit payment amount
represents payment in full for all costs associated with the furnishing
of home IVIG items and services and is subject to the following
adjustment:
(1) Beginning in 2025, an annual increase in the per-visit payment
amount from the prior year by the home health update percentage
increase for the current calendar year.
(2) [Reserved]
PART 424--CONDITIONS FOR MEDICARE PAYMENT
0
15. The authority for part 424 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 1302 and 1395hh.
[[Page 43815]]
Subpart P--Requirements for Establishing and Maintaining Medicare
Billing Privileges
0
16. Further amend Sec. 424.502 (as proposed to be amended at 88 FR
9829, February 15, 2023) by--
0
a. In the definition of ``Change in majority ownership'' removing the
term ``HHA'' and in its place the phrase ``HHA or hospice'' wherever it
appears.
0
b. Revising paragraph (1) of the proposed definition of ``Managing
employee''.
The revision reads as follows:
Sec. 424.502 Definitions.
* * * * *
Managing employee means--(1) A general manager, business manager,
administrator, director, or other individual that exercises operational
or managerial control over, or who directly or indirectly conducts, the
day-to-day operation of the provider or supplier, either under contract
or through some other arrangement, whether or not the individual is a
W-2 employee of the provider or supplier. For purposes of this
definition, this includes a hospice or skilled nursing facility
administrator and a hospice or skilled nursing facility medical
director.
* * * * *
0
17. Amend Sec. 424.518 by--
0
a. Removing paragraph (b)(1)(iv);
0
b. Redesignating paragraphs (b)(1)(v) through (b)(1)(viii) as
paragraphs (b)(1)(iv) through (b)(1)(vii);
0
c. Redesignating paragraph (b)(1)(xii) as paragraph (b(1)(viii);
0
d. Revising newly redesignated paragraph (b)(1)(viii) and paragraph
(b)(1)(ix);
0
e. Removing paragraphs (b)(1)(x) through (b)(1)(xiv);
0
f. Revising (c)(1)(vi); and
0
g. Adding paragraphs (c)(1)(vii) and (viii).
The revisions and additions read as follows:
Sec. 424.518 Screening levels for Medicare providers and suppliers.
* * * * *
(b) * * *
(1) * * *
(viii) Prospective (newly enrolling) and revalidating opioid
treatment programs that have been fully and continuously certified by
the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA)
since October 23, 2018.
(ix) Revalidating opioid treatment programs that have not been
fully and continuously certified by SAMHSA since October 23, 2018,
revalidating DMEPOS suppliers, revalidating MDPP suppliers,
revalidating HHAs, revalidating SNFs, and revalidating hospices to
which CMS applied the fingerprinting requirements outlined in paragraph
(c)(2)(ii) of this section upon the provider's or supplier's--
(A) New/initial enrollment; or
(B) Revalidation after CMS waived the fingerprinting requirements,
under the circumstances described in paragraph (c)(1)(viii) of this
section, when the provider or supplier initially enrolled in Medicare.
* * * * *
(c) * * *
(1) * * *
(vi) Prospective (newly enrolling) hospices.
(vii) Enrolled opioid treatment programs that have not been fully
and continuously certified by SAMHSA since October 23, 2018, DMEPOS
suppliers, MDPP suppliers, HHAs, SNFs, and hospices that are submitting
a change of ownership application under 42 CFR 489.18 or reporting any
new owner (regardless of ownership percentage) in accordance with a
change of information or other enrollment transaction under title 42.
(viii) Except as stated in paragraph (b)(1)(ix) of this section,
revalidating opioid treatment programs that have not been fully and
continuously certified by SAMHSA since October 23, 2018, revalidating
DMEPOS suppliers, revalidating MDPP suppliers, revalidating HHAs,
revalidating SNFs, and revalidating hospices for which, upon their new/
initial enrollment, CMS waived the fingerprinting requirements outlined
in paragraph (c)(2)(ii) of this section in accordance with applicable
legal authority due to a national, state, or local emergency declared
under existing law.
* * * * *
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18. Add Sec. 424.527 to read as follows:
Sec. 424.527 Provisional period of oversight.
(a) New provider or supplier. Exclusively for purposes of both
section 1866(j)(3) of the Act and this Sec. 424.527, the term ``new
provider or supplier'' is defined as any of the following:
(1) A newly enrolling Medicare provider or supplier. (This includes
providers that are required to enroll as a new provider in accordance
with the change in majority ownership provisions in Sec. 424.550(b).)
(2) A certified provider or certified supplier undergoing a change
of ownership consistent with the principles of 42 CFR 489.18. (This
includes providers that qualify under Sec. 424.550(b)(2) for an
exception from the change in majority ownership requirements in Sec.
424.550(b)(1) but which are undergoing a change of ownership under 42
CFR 489.18).
(3) A provider or supplier (including an HHA or hospice) undergoing
a 100 percent change of ownership via a change of information request
under Sec. 424.516.
(b) Effective date. The effective date of a provisional period of
enhanced oversight that is commenced under section 1866(j)(3) of the
Act is the date on which the new provider or supplier submits its first
claim.
0
19. Amend Sec. 424.530 by--
0
a. In paragraph (f) introductory text removing the phrase ``3 years''
and adding in its place ``10 years''.
0
b. Adding paragraph (f)(3).
The revision and additions read as follows:
Sec. 424.530 Denial of enrollment in the Medicare program.
* * * * *
(f) * * *
(3)(i) A provider or supplier that is currently subject to a
reapplication bar under paragraph (f) of this section may not order,
refer, certify, or prescribe Medicare-covered services, items, or
drugs.
(ii) Medicare does not pay for any otherwise covered service, item,
or drug that is ordered, referred, certified, or prescribed by a
provider or supplier that is currently under a reapplication bar.
0
20. Section 424.540(a)(1) is amended by removing the number ``12'' and
adding in its place the number ``6'' wherever it appears.
0
21 Add Sec. 424.542 to read as follows:
Sec. 424.542 Prohibition on ordering, certifying, referring, or
prescribing based on felony conviction.
(a) General prohibition. A physician or other eligible professional
(regardless of whether he or she is or was enrolled in Medicare) who
has had a felony conviction within the previous 10 years that CMS
determines is detrimental to the best interests of the Medicare program
and its beneficiaries may not order, refer, certify, or prescribe
Medicare-covered services, items, or drugs.
(b) Payment. Medicare does not pay for any otherwise covered
service, item, or drug that is ordered, referred, certified, or
prescribed by a physician or other eligible professional (as that term
is defined in section 1848(k)(3)(B) of the Act) who has had a felony
conviction within the previous 10 years that CMS determines is
detrimental to the best interests of the Medicare program and its
beneficiaries.
0
22. Amend Sec. 424.550 by--
[[Page 43816]]
0
a. Revising paragraph (b)(1) introductory text;
0
b. In paragraph (b)(1)(i) removing the term ``HHA'' and adding in its
place the phrase ``HHA or hospice'';
0
c. In paragraph (b)(2)(i) removing the phrase ``The HHA submitted two
consecutive years'' and adding in its place the phrase ``The HHA or
hospice submitted 2 consecutive years'';
0
d. In paragraph (b)(2)(ii), removing the term ``HHA's'' and adding in
its place the phrase ``HHA's or hospice's'';
0
e. In paragraph (b)(2)(iii), removing the phrase ``The owners of an
existing HHA are changing the HHA's'' and adding in its place the
phrase ``The owners of an existing HHA or hospice are changing the
HHA's or hospice's'';
0
f. In paragraph (b)(2)(iv) removing the term ``HHA'' and adding in its
place the phrase ``HHA or hospice''.
The revision reads as follows:
Sec. 424.550 Prohibitions on the sale or transfer of billing
privileges.
* * * * *
(b) * * *
(1) Unless an exception in paragraph (b)(2) of this section
applies, if there is a change in majority ownership of a home health
agency (HHA) or hospice by sale (including asset sales, stock
transfers, mergers, and consolidations) within 36 months after the
effective date of the HHA's or hospice's initial enrollment in Medicare
or within 36 months after the HHA's or hospice's most recent change in
majority ownership, the provider agreement and Medicare billing
privileges do not convey to the new owner. The prospective provider/
owner of the HHA or hospice must instead do both of the following:
* * * * *
PART 484--HOME HEALTH SERVICES
0
23. The authority citation for part 484 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 1302 and 1395hh.
0
24. Section 484.202 is amended by revising the definition of
``Furnishing Negative Pressure Wound Therapy (NPWT) using a disposable
device'' to read as follows:
Sec. 484.202 Definitions.
* * * * *
Furnishing Negative Pressure Wound Therapy (NPWT) using a
disposable device means the device is paid separately (specified by the
assigned CPT[supreg] code) and does not include payment for the
professional services. The nursing and therapy services are to be
included as part of the payment under the home health prospective
payment system.
* * * * *
0
25. Section 484.245 is amended by redesignating paragraph (b)(2) as
paragraph (b)(2)(i) and adding paragraph (b)(2)(ii) to read as follows:
Sec. 484.245 Data submission requirements under the home health
quality reporting program.
* * * * *
(b) * * *
(2) * * *
(ii) Data completion thresholds. (A) A home health agency must meet
or exceed the data submission threshold set at 90 percent of all
required OASIS or successor instrument records within 30-days of the
beneficiary's admission or discharge and submitted through the CMS
designated data submission systems.
(B) A home health agency must meet or exceed the data submission
compliance threshold described in paragraph (b)(2)(ii)(A) of this
section to avoid receiving a 2-percentage point reduction to its annual
payment update for a given fiscal year described under Sec.
484.225(b).
* * * * *
0
26. Add Sec. 484.358 to read as follows:
Sec. 484.358 HHVBP Measure removal factors.
CMS may remove a quality measure from the expanded HHVBP Model
based on one or more of the following factors:
(a) Measure performance among HHAs is so high and unvarying that
meaningful distinctions in improvements in performance can no longer be
made (that is, topped out).
(b) Performance or improvement on a measure does not result in
better patient outcomes.
(c) A measure does not align with current clinical guidelines or
practice.
(d) A more broadly applicable measure (across settings,
populations, or conditions) for the particular topic is available.
(e) A measure that is more proximal in time to desired patient
outcomes for the particular topic is available.
(f) A measure that is more strongly associated with desired patient
outcomes for the particular topic is available.
(g) Collection or public reporting of a measure leads to negative
unintended consequences other than patient harm.
(h) The costs associated with a measure outweigh the benefit of its
continued use in the program.
0
27. Amend Sec. 484.375 by revising paragraph (b)(5) to read as
follows:
Sec. 484.375 Appeals process for the Expanded Home Health Value-Based
Purchasing (HHVBP) Model.
* * * * *
(b) * * *
(5) Reconsideration decision. (i) CMS reconsideration officials
issue a written decision that is final and binding upon issuance unless
the CMS Administrator--
(A) Renders a final determination reversing or modifying the
reconsideration decision; or
(B) Does not review the reconsideration decision within 14 days of
the request.
(ii) An HHA may request that the CMS Administrator review the
reconsideration decision within 7 calendar days of the decision.
(iii) If the CMS Administrator receives a request to review, the
CMS Administrator must do one of the following:
(A) Render a final determination based on his or her review of the
reconsideration decision.
(B) Decline to review a reconsideration decision made by CMS.
(C) Choose to take no action.
(iv) If the CMS Administrator does not review an HHA's request
within 14 days (as described in paragraph (b)(5)(iii)(B) or (C) of this
section), the reconsideration official's written reconsideration
decision is final.
PART 488--SURVEY, CERTIFICATION, AND ENFORCEMENT PROCEDURES
0
28. The authority citation for part 488 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 1302 and 1395hh.
Subpart M--Survey and Certification of Hospice Programs
0
29. Amend Sec. 488.1105 by adding the definitions of ``Hospice Special
Focus Program'', ``IDR'', ``SFP status'', and ``SFP survey'' in
alphabetical order to read as follows:
Sec. 488.1105 Definitions.
* * * * *
Hospice Special Focus Program (SFP) means a program conducted by
CMS to identify hospices as poor performers, based on defined quality
indicators, in which CMS selects hospices for increased oversight to
ensure that they meet Medicare requirements. Selected hospices either
successfully complete the SFP program or are terminated from the
Medicare program.
IDR stands for informal dispute resolution.
* * * * *
SFP status means the status of a hospice provider in the SFP with
[[Page 43817]]
respect to the provider's progress in the SFP, which is indicated by
one of the following status levels:
(1) Level 1--in progress.
(2) Level 2--completed successfully.
(3) Level 3--terminated from the Medicare program.
SFP survey means a standard survey as defined in this section that
is applied after a hospice is selected for the SFP. The survey is
conducted every 6 months, up to 3 occurrences.
* * * * *
0
30. Add Sec. 488.1130 to read as follows:
Sec. 488.1130 Informal dispute resolution (IDR).
(a) Opportunity to refute survey findings. Upon the provider's
receipt of an official statement of deficiencies, hospice programs can
request an informal opportunity to dispute condition-level survey
findings.
(b) Failure to conduct IDR timely. Failure of CMS, the State, or
the AO, as appropriate, to complete IDR must not delay the effective
date of any enforcement action.
(c) Revised statement of deficiencies as a result of IDR. If any
findings are revised or removed by CMS, the State, or the AO based on
IDR, the official statement of deficiencies is revised accordingly and
any enforcement actions imposed solely as a result of those cited
deficiencies are adjusted accordingly.
(d) Notification. (1) If the survey findings indicate a condition-
level deficiency, the hospice program is notified in writing of its
opportunity for participating in an IDR process at the time the
official statement of deficiencies is issued.
(2) The request for IDR must--
(i) Be submitted in writing;
(ii) Include the specific deficiencies that are disputed; and
(iii) Be made within the same 10 calendar day period that the
hospice program has for submitting an acceptable plan of correction.
0
31. Add Sec. 488.1135 to read as follows:
Sec. 488.1135 Hospice Special Focus Program (SFP).
(a) Applicability. (1) The provisions of this section are effective
on or after [the effective date of the final rule]; and
(2) SFP selection begins in CY 2024.
(b) Selection criteria. (1) Selection of hospices for the SFP is
made based on the highest aggregate scores based on the algorithm used
by CMS.
(2) Hospice programs with accrediting organization deemed status
placed in the SFP--
(i) Do not retain deemed status; and
(ii) Are placed under CMS or State survey agency jurisdiction until
completion of the SFP or termination.
(c) Survey and enforcement criteria. A hospice in the SFP--
(1) Is surveyed not less than once every 6 months by CMS or the
State agency; and
(2) With condition level deficiencies on any survey is subject to
standard enforcement actions and may be subject to progressive
enforcement remedies at the discretion of CMS.
(d) Completion criteria. A hospice in the SFP that has two SFP
surveys within 18 months with no condition-level deficiencies, and that
has no pending complaint survey triaged at an immediate jeopardy or
condition level, or that has returned to substantial compliance with
all requirements may complete the SFP.
(e) Termination criteria. (1) A hospice in the SFP that does not
meet the SFP completion requirements in paragraph (d) of this section
is considered for termination from the Medicare program in accordance
with 42 CFR 489.53.
(2) CMS may consider termination from the Medicare program in
accordance with Sec. 488.1225 if any survey results in an immediate
jeopardy citation while the hospice is in the SFP.
(f) Public reporting. CMS posts all of the following at least
annually on a CMS public-facing website:
(1) A subset of 10 percent of hospice programs based on the highest
aggregate scores as determined by the algorithm used by CMS.
(2) Hospice SFP selection from the list in paragraph (f)(1) of this
section as determined by CMS.
(3) SFP status as defined in Sec. 488.1105.
PART 489--PROVIDER AGREEMENTS AND SUPPLIER APPROVAL
0
32. The authority citation for part 489 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 1302, 1395i-3, 1395x, 1395aa(m), 1395cc,
1395ff, and 1395(hh).
0
33. Section 489.52 is amended by adding paragraph (b)(4) to read as
follows:
Sec. 489.52 Termination by the provider.
* * * * *
(b) * * *
(4) A provider may request a retroactive termination date if no
Medicare beneficiary received services from the facility on or after
the requested termination date.
* * * * *
Dated: June 28, 2023.
Xavier Becerra,
Secretary, Department of Health and Human Services.
[FR Doc. 2023-14044 Filed 6-30-23; 4:15 pm]
BILLING CODE 4120-01-P