Medicare Program; Strengthening Oversight of Accrediting Organizations (AOs) and Preventing AO Conflict of Interest, and Related Provisions, 11996-12064 [2024-02137]
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11996
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 32 / Thursday, February 15, 2024 / Proposed Rules
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid
Services
42 CFR Parts 488 and 489
[CMS–3367–P]
RIN 0938–AU88
Medicare Program; Strengthening
Oversight of Accrediting Organizations
(AOs) and Preventing AO Conflict of
Interest, and Related Provisions
Centers for Medicare &
Medicaid Services (CMS), HHS.
ACTION: Proposed rule.
AGENCY:
This proposed rule would set
forth a number of provisions to
strengthen the oversight of accrediting
organizations (AOs) by addressing
conflicts of interest, establishing
consistent standards, processes and
definitions, and updating the validation
and performance standards systems.
Additionally, this proposed rule would
revise the psychiatric hospital survey
process, add a limitation on terminated
deemed providers and suppliers when
reentering the program, and provides
technical corrections for End-Stage
Renal Disease facilities and Kidney
Transplant Programs. This proposed
rule also solicits comments from
stakeholders and AOs to refine and
revise the AO oversight standards and
processes. In addition, this proposed
rule includes a request for information
on the timeframes and expectations for
the submission of AO applications.
DATES: To be assured consideration,
comments must be received at one of
the addresses provided below, no later
than 5 p.m. on April 15, 2024.
ADDRESSES: In commenting, refer to file
code CMS–3367–P.
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 submit
electronic comments on this regulation
to https://www.regulations.gov. Follow
the ‘‘Submit a comment’’ instructions.
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–3367–P, P.O. Box 8010, Baltimore,
MD 21244–8010.
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 to the
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SUMMARY:
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following address ONLY: Centers for
Medicare & Medicaid Services,
Department of Health and Human
Services, Attention: CMS–3367–P, Mail
Stop C4–26–05, 7500 Security
Boulevard, Baltimore, MD 21244–1850.
For information on viewing public
comments, see the beginning of the
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Caroline Gallaher, (410) 786–8705 or
Beth Chalick-Kaplan, (410) 786–6550.
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. CMS will not post on
Regulations.gov public comments that
make threats to individuals or
institutions or suggest that the
commenter will take actions to harm an
individual. CMS continues to encourage
individuals not to submit duplicative
comments. We will post acceptable
comments from multiple unique
commenters even if the content is
identical or nearly identical to other
comments.
Plain Language Summary: In
accordance with 5 U.S.C. 553(b)(4), a
plain language summary of this rule
may be found at https://
www.regulations.gov/.
Severability of Provisions
To the extent a court may enjoin any
part of the rule as finalized, the
Department intends that other
provisions or parts of provisions should
remain in effect. Any provision of the
rule as finalized held to be invalid or
unenforceable by its terms, or as applied
to any person or circumstance, shall be
construed so as to continue to give
maximum effect to the provision
permitted by law, unless such holding
shall be one of utter invalidity or
unenforceability, in which event the
provision shall be severable from this
section and shall not affect the
remainder thereof or the application of
the provision to persons not similarly
situated or to dissimilar circumstances.
Table of Contents
I. Executive Summary
A. Purpose
B. Summary of the Major Provisions
II. Background
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A. Legislative History
B. Regulatory Overview of CMS’s Rules
Regarding AO Programs
C. Congressional Report on the Oversight
of National AOs and CMS Approved
Accreditation Programs
D. CMS Validation Survey Pilot
E. Overview of Transparency and
Oversight of Accrediting Organizations
F. Prior Rulemaking—Accrediting
Organizations Conflict of Interest
Request for Information (RFI)
G. Conflict of Interest—The AO Owner’s,
Surveyor’s and Other Employee’s
Interest in or Relationship With a Health
Care Facility That the AO Accredits
III. Request for Public Comment on Whether
It Is a Conflict of Interest for AO Board
Members or Advisors To Have an
Interest in or Relationship With a Health
Care Facility That the AO Accredits
IV. Provisions of the Proposed Rule
A. Proposal To Add Definition of
‘‘Unannounced Surveys’’ to § 488.1
B. Conflict of Interest
C. Proposal To Require the AOs That
Accredit Medicare-Certified Providers
and Suppliers To Use the Medicare
Conditions; and Strengthened Survey
Process Comparability (Proposed
§ 488.4(a)(1) and (2))
D. Proposal To Revise the AO Crosswalk
Requirements at § 488.5(a)(3)
E. Proposal To Strengthen the
Comparability of the Survey Process
Between the AOs and the States
F. Proposal To Revise the AO Application
Documentation Requirements Related to
the Survey Processes (§ 488.5(a)(4);
§ 488.5(a)(4)(iii); § 488.5(a)(4)(v);
§ 488.5(a)(4)(vii); § 488.5(a)(4)(xi);
§ 488.5(a)(5); § 488.5(a)(6); § 488.5(a)(12);
§ 488.5(a)(13))
G. Proposal To Require AOs To Provide
CMS With Survey Findings
(§ 488.5(a)(4)(viii))
H. Proposal To Require That AO Surveyors
Must Take the CMS Online Surveyor
Basic Training
(§ 488.5(a)(8)(ii)
I. Proposal To Establish Criteria for
‘‘National in Scope’’ to § 488.1
J. Proposal To Revise the Definition of
‘‘Rate of Disparity’’ and To Use the
Process and Outcome Disparity Rates as
Performance Measures (§ 488.1)
K. Proposal To Require AOs To Submit a
Publicly Reportable Plan of Correction
for Unacceptable Performance Measure
Scores (§ 488.8(a)(2))
L. Proposal To Revise the AO Survey
Validation Program (§ 489.9)
M. Proposal To Revise the Psychiatric
Hospital Survey Process
N. Limitation on Terminated Deemed
Providers/Suppliers Seeking Re-Entry
Into Medicare/Medicaid (§ 489.57,
§ 488.4(b) & § 488.5(a)(21))
O. Proposal for Technical Correction for
End-Stage Renal Disease (ESRD)
Facilities and Kidney Transplant
Programs (§ 488.4(a)(4))
V. Request for Information Regarding
Timeframes and Expectation for the
Submission of AO Applications
VI. Collection of Information Requirements
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A. ICR Related to Conflict of Interest
Proposals
B. ICRs Associated With the Requirement
That AOs Incorporate the Medicare
Conditions
C. ICRs Associated With the Requirement
That AOs Use Survey Processes That Are
Comparable to That Used by CMS and
the SAs
D. ICR Related to Requirement That the AO
Surveyors Take the CMS Online
Surveyor Training
E. ICR Associated With the Establishment
of a Definition for ‘‘National in Scope’’
F. ICR Associated With the Proposed
Revision of the AO Performance
Measures and To Require a Publically
Reportable Plan of Correction
G. ICR Associated With the Revision of the
Definition of ‘‘Disparity Rate
H. Burden Reduction Associated With the
Revision of the AO Validation Program
I. ICR Associated With the Revision of the
Psychiatric Hospital Accreditation
Process
J. Burden Associated With Limitations to
Terminated Deemed Providers Seeking
Re-Enrollment and Certification in
Medicare/Medicaid Programs
K. Summary of Estimated Burden
VII. Response to Comments
VIII. Regulatory Impact Analysis
A. Statement of Need
B. Overall Impact
C. Detailed Economic Analysis
D. Alternatives Considered
E. Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)
F. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
(UMRA)
G. Federalism
Regulations Text
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I. Executive Summary
A. Purpose
The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid
Services (CMS) seeks to protect the
health and safety of patients that receive
services from Medicare and Medicaidparticipating providers that are
accredited by CMS-approved
accrediting organizations (AOs). We
continue to review and revise our health
and safety requirements and survey
processes to ensure that they are
effective in driving quality of care for
beneficiaries receiving services from
these accredited providers and
suppliers.
In 2015, we published a final rule in
the Federal Register entitled, ‘‘Medicare
and Medicaid Programs: Revisions to
Deeming Authority Survey,
Certification, and Enforcement
Procedures’’ (80 FR 29795), hereinafter
referred to as the ‘‘2015 AO final rule’’
to clarify and strengthen the oversight of
AOs, specifically to provide additional
criteria for AOs that apply for, and are
granted, recognition and approval of an
accreditation program (see section II
‘‘Background’’ of this proposed rule for
additional background information).
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Over the past 5 years, CMS has
continued to evaluate the effectiveness
of these regulatory changes and the
performance of AOs. This proposed rule
proposes multiple provisions to further
strengthen our oversight and
enforcement capabilities of the AOs.
The need for these provisions is based
on multiple factors, which include: (1)
direct observation and review of the
AOs’ accreditation programs for those
AOs with CMS-approved deeming
programs; (2) media reports and
complaints against facilities that are
deemed; (3) the CMS validation program
and analysis of disparity rates between
state survey agency (SAs) and the AOs;
and (4) our performance evaluations of
AOs. The preamble discusses each of
the proposed provisions (see section IV
‘‘Provisions of the Proposed Rule’’) in
this proposed rule. More specifically,
the preamble provides background and
analysis of why CMS is proposing
additional provisions and revisions to
existing requirements. CMS is
responsible for the oversight of the
national AOs’ Medicare accreditation
programs, and for ensuring that
providers or suppliers under CMSapproved deeming programs by the AOs
meet the minimum quality and patient
safety standards required by the
Medicare conditions (refer to section II
of this proposed rule for additional
information). Based on several years’
experience and data analysis, we are
proposing the following provisions as
described in the preamble to strengthen
our oversight of AOs.
B. Summary of the Major Provisions
• We propose at § 488.1 to add the
definitions of ‘‘geographic regions’’,
‘‘national in scope,’’ ‘‘outcome disparity
rate,’’ ‘‘process disparity rate,’’ and
‘‘unannounced survey’’. In addition, we
propose to revise the definition of
‘‘national accrediting organization,’’ and
remove the definition of ‘‘rate of
disparity.’’
• We propose to establish a new
requirement at § 488.4(a)(1) that would
require the AOs that accredit Medicarecertified providers and suppliers to
incorporate the language of the
applicable Medicare Conditions of
Participation (CoPs), Conditions for
Coverage (CfCs), conditions for
certification, or requirements
(collectively referred to as ‘‘Medicare
conditions’’) set forth in the applicable
CMS regulations for each provider and
supplier type as their minimum
accreditation requirements. However,
the AOs would be free to establish
additional accreditation requirements
that exceed Medicare conditions, as
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permitted by section 1865(a)(1) of the
Social Security Act (the Act).
• We propose to add language at
§ 488.4(a)(2) regarding use of a
comparable survey process approved by
CMS, as outlined and contemplated in
§ 488.5.
• We propose to add a new regulation
at § 488.4(b) that would state that if
Medicare terminates the participation
agreement of a Medicare-certified
provider or supplier, then CMS would
no longer recognize the facility’s AO
accreditation for deemed compliance.
At proposed § 488.4(b)(2), we would
require a terminated provider or
supplier to meet all requirements set
forth at § 489.57 before their new
agreement for participation in the
Medicare/Medicaid program can be
approved.
• We propose to require AOs to
develop a crosswalk between their
accreditation standards and the
Medicare conditions, at proposed
§ 488.5(a)(3).
• We propose to revise the existing
language at § 488.4(a)(4) to strengthen
our process of evaluating the
comparability of survey processes of
AOs that accredit Medicare-certified
providers and suppliers with the SAs’
survey processes.
• We propose to strengthen the
requirements at § 488.5(a)(4),
§ 488.5(a)(4)(iii), § 488.5(a)(4)(v),
§ 488.5(a)(4)(vii), § 488.5(a)(4)(xi),
§ 488.5(a)(5) and § 488.5(a)(6) related to
the comparability of survey processes as
mentioned above. We also propose
changes under § 488.5(a)(5)(viii) related
to survey reports. These strengthened
requirements would be applicable to
their initial and renewal applications
provided to CMS one year after the
effective date of the rule.
• We propose at § 488.5(a)(8)(i)
through § 488.5(a)(8)(iv) to require AOs
that accredit Medicare-certified
providers and suppliers have their
surveyors complete the CMS online
surveyor training.
• We propose to add a requirement at
§ 488.5(a)(10) that the AOs must
provide, as part of their initial and
renewal applications, specific policies
and procedures that would address how
the AOs prevent and address conflicts of
interest. We propose that AOs provide
information on a number of specific
policies and procedures.
• We propose to also revise
requirements under § 488.5(a)(12)
related to the AO procedures for
investigating and responding to
complaints against accredited facilities.
• We propose revisions to
§ 488.5(a)(13) related to the AO’s
accreditation status decision-making
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process, in order to strengthen the
comparability of the survey processes.
• We propose to add a new
requirement at § 488.5(a)(21) that would
require the AOs to submit a statement
with its initial or renewal application
certifying that, in response to a written
notice from CMS notifying the AO that
one of its accredited providers or
suppliers has been involuntarily
terminated from the Medicare/Medicaid
program, the AO agrees to terminate or
revoke its accreditation of the
terminated provider or supplier within
5-business days from receipt of said
written notice.
• We propose at § 488.5(a)(22) to
require the AOs to submit a declaration
from each surveyor disclosing any
interests or relationships the surveyor
may have in or with another survey
agency or health care facility the AO
accredits (as defined in § 488.5(a)(10)).
• We propose at § 488.8(a)(2) to
expand the types of validation activities
included in the performance review.
• We propose at § 488.8(a)(4) to
require AOs to submit a plan of
correction that would be subject to a
public reporting requirement, when the
AO’s performance on survey activities
identify disparity concerns, either
through the outcome disparity rates or
process disparity rates.
• We propose at new subsection
§ 488.8(i) to place restrictions on the feebased consulting services provided by
AOs to the health care providers and
suppliers they accredit. At § 488.8(i)(1),
we propose that an accrediting
organization or its associated fee-based
consulting division or company may not
provide fee-based consulting services to
any health care provider or supplier
prior to an initial accreditation survey.
At § 488.5(i)(2), we propose to prohibit
AOs from providing fee-based
consulting services to health care
providers and suppliers they accredit
within 12 months prior to the next
scheduled re-accreditation survey of
that provider or supplier. At
§ 488.5(i)(3), we propose that AOs may
not provide fee-based consulting
services to a health care provider or
supplier in response to a complaint
received by the AO regarding that
provider or supplier.
• At § 488.8(i)(4), we set forth
circumstances in which the restrictions
to the provision of AO fee-based
consulting services would not apply.
• We propose at § 488.8(i)(5) to
require AOs to provide specific
information to CMS on a bi-annual basis
about the fee-based consulting services
they provide.
• We propose at § 488.8(i)(6) to
impose penalties on AOs for the
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provision of prohibited fee-based
consulting services.
• We propose at § 488.8(k) that when
an AO owner, surveyor, or other
employee, currently or within the
previous 2 years, has an interest in or
relationship with a health care facility
that the AO accredits, the AO would be
required to take steps to prevent the
surveyor from having any involvement
with the survey of that facility, having
input into the results of the survey and
accreditation for that facility; having
involvement with the pre and post
survey activities for that facility; or
having contact with or access to the
records for the survey of that health care
facility.
• We propose at § 488.9(b) to revise
the types of validation programs by
adding a new type of validation survey
to be conducted by SA or CMS
surveyors.
• We propose a new paragraph (z) at
§ 489.20 to require as a basic
commitment of the provider if they are
terminated and then seek a new
provider agreement, they would follow
the terms of proposed new § 489.57(b)
noted below.
• We propose to add a new paragraph
(b) at § 489.57, to require that Medicarecertified providers or suppliers that
have been involuntarily terminated from
the Medicare and/or Medicaid program
must meet several requirements before
their new agreement for Medicare
participation will be approved.
Proposed § 489.57(b)(1) would require
the terminated provider or supplier to
be under the oversight of the SA for a
reasonable assurance period for a length
of time to be determined by CMS for the
purpose of demonstrating compliance
with the Medicare conditions. Proposed
§ 489.57(b)(2) would require the
provider or supplier to remain under the
exclusive oversight of the SA until the
SA has certified and/or CMS has
determined its full compliance with all
Medicare conditions and the new
agreement for participation in the
Medicare/Medicaid program has been
approved. Proposed § 489.57(b)(3)
would require that during the time
period in which a provider or supplier
is terminated from the Medicare
program, is under the oversight of the
SA, and during the time the new
agreement for Medicare participation is
pending, CMS will not accept or
recognize deeming accreditation from a
CMS-approved accrediting organization.
• We also propose to remove the
reference at § 488.4(a)(4) that currently
excludes ESRD facilities from the
opportunity for accreditation, to reflect
a change included in the Bipartisan
Budget Act of 2018 (Pub. L. 115–123).
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Consistent with this same provision, we
also propose to remove the reference
restricting transplant programs from an
accreditation option.
• We are soliciting comments on
whether CMS should limit the number
of times an AO can submit an
incomplete initial application for a new
accreditation program. We seek
comment on this question because we
recently received several incomplete
applications which required multiple
pass backs due to the applicant’s failure
to provide information about issues,
such as their financial viability, survey
processes which appeared not to be
operationalized, or similar concerns.
II. Background
A. Legislative History
To participate in the Medicare
program, providers and suppliers of
health care services must, among other
things, be in substantial compliance
with the applicable statutory
requirements of the Social Security Act
(the Act), as well as CMS’ regulatory
requirements related to the health and
safety of patients. These health and
safety requirements are generally called
Conditions of Participation (CoPs) for
most providers; Requirements for
Participation for skilled nursing
facilities (SNFs) and Medicaid Nursing
Facilities (NFs) (collectively, long-term
care facilities); and Conditions for
Coverage or Conditions for Certification
(CfCs) for Ambulatory Surgical Centers
(ASCs), Rural Health Clinics (RHCs),
Federally Qualified Health Centers
(FQHCs), dialysis facilities (or EndStage Renal Disease [ESRD] facilities),
and some types of suppliers
(collectively referred herein as Medicare
conditions). A Medicare-certified
provider or supplier that does not
comply with the Medicare conditions
risks having its Medicare provider or
supplier agreement terminated.
Medicaid service providers or suppliers
that are required by CMS or the State to
have Medicare approval would also be
affected.
In accordance with section 1864 of
the Act, the SAs or other appropriate
local agencies, under an agreement with
the Secretary of the Department of
Health and Human Services (the
Secretary), perform surveys of health
care providers and suppliers to assess
their compliance with the applicable
Medicare conditions for the purpose of
certification for participation in the
Medicare/Medicaid program. There are
several types of surveys conducted,
including initial certification,
recertification, and complaint surveys.
The SAs and CMS also perform surveys
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in certain circumstances for the
providers and suppliers that are
accredited by an AO and deemed to
meet Medicare requirements. For
example, the SA performs complaint
surveys for health care providers that
are accredited by an AO, if the
complaint was received by the SA
directly. The SA also performs surveys
of AO-accredited health care providers
that have had their participation in the
Medicare program terminated, that wish
to be surveyed by the SA instead of an
AO, and for the purpose of validation of
the results of an AO’s surveys. Rules,
regulations, and guidance for the
certification process performed by the
Sas are discussed in the CMS State
Operations Manual (SOM) 1 or
communicated via Quality, Safety &
Oversight (QSO) policy memorandums.2
Some provider types may only be
surveyed by the SA and cannot use AOs
while others cannot be surveyed by SAs
pursuant to statute but can only be
accredited by a CMS-approved AO. We
refer readers to section IV, ‘‘Provisions
of this Proposed Rule’’ for additional
information. Based on the SA’s
certification of a provider’s compliance
or noncompliance and recommendation,
CMS determines whether the provider
or supplier qualifies, or continues to
qualify, for participation in the
Medicare program. Additionally, section
1865(a) of the Act allows most health
care facilities to demonstrate their
compliance with the Medicare
conditions through accreditation by a
CMS-approved program of an AO, in
lieu of being surveyed by SAs for
certification. This is referred to as
‘‘deeming’’ accreditation. This is
because CMS-approved AOs are
recognized by the Secretary as having
accreditation programs with
accreditation standards that meet or
exceed those of Medicare. Therefore,
any provider or supplier that is
accredited by an AO under a CMS
approved accreditation program is
deemed by CMS to have also complied
with the applicable Medicare conditions
or requirements. The AOs perform
initial, re-accreditation, follow-up, and
certain complaint surveys.
In December, 2020, Division CC,
section 407 of the Consolidated
Appropriations Act of 2021 (CAA 2021),
amended Part A of Title XVIII of Act to
add a new section 1822 to the Act, and
amended sections 1864(a) and 1865(b)
1 CMS Internet Only Manual, Pub. 100–07,
available at https://www.cms.gov/Regulations-andGuidance/Guidance/Manuals/Internet-OnlyManuals-IOMs-Items/CMS1201984.
2 https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/ProviderEnrollment-and-Certification/SurveyCertification
GenInfo/Policy-and-Memos-to-States-and-Regions.
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of the Act, establishing new hospice
program survey and enforcement
requirements. CMS issued
implementing regulations for SAs and
AOs in the CY 2022 Home Health
Prospective Payment System Rate
Update (HH PPS) final rule (86 FR
62240). The HH PPS rule finalized
changes to increase and improve
transparency, oversight, and
enforcement for hospice programs under
SA and AO oversight. Additionally, the
HH PPS final rule in part requires
hospice programs to measure and
reduce inconsistency in the application
of survey results among all surveyors.
The HH PPS final rule requires: (1) AOs
with CMS-approved hospice programs
to use the same survey deficiency
reports as the SAs (Form CMS–2567,
‘‘Statement of Deficiencies’’ or a
successor form) to report survey
findings; (2) comprehensive training
and testing of SA and AO hospice
program surveyors; and (3) prohibits SA
and AO surveyors from surveying
hospice programs for which they have
worked in the last 2 years from which
they would have a perceived or actual
conflict of interest.
CMS is responsible for: (1) providing
ongoing oversight of the AOs’
accreditation programs to ensure that
providers or suppliers accredited by the
AOs meet the required Medicare
conditions; (2) ensuring that the AOs
have formalized procedures to
determine whether the health care
facilities deemed under their
accreditation programs meet the AO’s
accreditation standards (which must
meet or exceed the applicable Medicare
program requirements); and (3) ensuring
that the AO’s accreditation standards
and practices for surveying providers
and suppliers meet or exceed the
Medicare conditions and practices for
granting approval.
For some provider and supplier types,
accreditation is voluntary and seeking
deemed status through an accreditation
organization is an option, not a
requirement for these Medicare-certified
providers and suppliers. A provider or
supplier has the choice to seek deeming
status and accreditation from an AO
with a CMS-approved program or
certification through the SA survey
process. A nationally-recognized AO
may have accreditation services which
are not specifically related to Medicareparticipation or Medicare conditions
and an AO may offer accreditation
services to a provider or supplier which
Medicare does not recognize for
deeming status, such as long-term care
facilities. The AO may also provide
accreditation with a deeming option,
which is that their deemed program is
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recognized and approved by CMS to
meet or exceed the Medicare program
requirements. We refer readers to
section IV.C ‘‘Proposal to Require the
AOs that Accredit Medicare-Certified
Providers and Suppliers to Use
Medicare Conditions; and Strengthened
Survey Process Comparability’’ of this
proposed rule for additional context.
AOs typically charge health care
facilities a fee for the accreditation
services they provide. AOs generally
offer at least two accreditation options,
which include non-CMS approved
accreditation, and accreditation for the
purpose of participating in the Medicare
program. By ‘‘non-CMS approved
accreditation’’ we mean accreditation
that is offered by the AOs with an
accreditation program that is not
approved by Medicare and which is not
used for Medicare purposes. Such
accreditation could be used for
individual State accreditation purposes
or additional professional accreditations
that a provider or supplier seeks for
business purposes, such as the Joint
Commission’s (TJC’s) Nursing Care
Center accreditation for skilled nursing
facilities, which is not recognized by
CMS as an option for deemed status.
This proposed rule would apply only
to the AOs with CMS-approved
programs that accredit Medicarecertified providers and suppliers and
those entities they accredit. The
provisions of this proposed rule would
not apply to the following parties: (1)
health care providers and suppliers that
are not accredited by AOs, such as but
not limited to, nursing homes and
comprehensive outpatient rehabilitation
facilities (CORFs); (2) health care
providers and suppliers that are
certified by the SAs, such as those who
elect not to be deemed through an AO;
(3) AOs that accredit non-certified
suppliers; (4) non-certified suppliers;
and (5) AOs that accredit laboratories
(under the Clinical Laboratory
Improvement Amendments of 1988
(CLIA)).
B. Regulatory Overview of CMS’s Rules
Regarding AO Programs
The current regulations at 42 CFR
488.4 set forth the general provisions for
CMS approved accreditation programs
for Medicare-certified providers and
suppliers. Section 488.5 sets out
application and re-application
procedures for national AOs that seek to
obtain CMS approval of their
accreditation programs, often called
‘‘deeming authority.’’
The AO application and reapplication procedures set forth at
§ 488.5 for Medicare-certified providers
and suppliers task CMS with the
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responsibilities of approval and
oversight of the AOs’ accreditation
programs while ensuring that the
accredited providers and suppliers meet
or exceed the Medicare conditions.
CMS conducts a thorough review of
each accreditation program application
that is submitted by an AO for CMS
approval. This review establishes the
‘‘comparability’’ of the AOs
accreditation standards with Medicare,
to determine whether the AO’s
standards meet or exceed the Medicare
conditions. The application review
process also includes a review of the
AO’s survey processes and procedures,
the AO’s surveyor training, and their
policies and procedures for the
oversight and enforcement of provider
or supplier entities they accredit. The
application review team also reviews
the qualifications of the AO surveyor
staff. In addition, CMS reviews the AO’s
financial status, to determine their
solvency and potential for longevity of
operations.
Section 488.5(e)(1) requires that we
publish a notice in the Federal Register
when we receive a complete initial or
renewal application from a national AO
seeking CMS approval of its
accreditation program. The Federal
Register notice identifies the
organization and the type of providers
or suppliers to be covered by the
accreditation program and provides a
30-day public comment period. CMS
has 210 days from the receipt of a
complete application to publish notice
of approval or denial of the application.
Upon approval, any provider or supplier
subsequently accredited by the AO’s
approved program would be deemed by
CMS to have met the applicable
Medicare conditions and would be
referred to as having ‘‘deemed status.’’
C. Congressional Report on the
Oversight of National AOs and CMS
Approved Accreditation Programs
We are required by section 1875(b) of
the Act to submit an annual Report to
Congress 3 on CMS’ oversight of national
AOs and their CMS-approved
accreditation programs. This report
contains information related to the AOs’
activities in a fiscal year (FY) and
provides a comparison of these
activities to the activities of previous
years. Within this report, we also
measure the ‘‘disparity rate,’’ which is a
comparison rate based on AO findings
of non-compliance during an
accreditation survey and the SA
findings of non-compliance for the same
3 The most recent Report to Congress may be
accessed at: https://www.cms.gov/files/document/
qso-22-06-ao-clia.pdf.
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facilities found during a look-back
validation survey.
There are three levels of adverse
findings on a SA survey, which include
immediate jeopardy (IJ), condition-level
and standard-level deficiencies.
Sections 488.1 and 489.3 define
immediate jeopardy as a situation in
which the provider’s or supplier’s noncompliance with one or more of
Medicare requirements, conditions of
participation, conditions of coverage or
certification ‘‘has caused or is likely to
cause, serious injury, harm, impairment,
or death to a resident or patient.’’ When
investigating a potential immediate
jeopardy situation, surveyors must find
that there is non-compliance by the
provider or supplier, that serious harm
has occurred or is likely to occur, and
that immediate action needs to be taken
by the provider/supplier. (See Appendix
Q of the SOM for additional guidance.)
A condition-level deficiency means that
for that particular Medicare condition of
participation, also known as a CoP, the
facility’s noncompliance is such that it
substantially limits the provider or
supplier’s capacity to furnish adequate
care or which adversely affects the
health and safety of patients (§ 488.24).
There can be noncompliance with a
Medicare condition at a regulatory
standard level that does not rise to the
level of noncompliance with the
condition. For example, a hospital may
fail to have written policies and
procedures regarding the evacuation of
patients during an emergency (as
required at § 482.15(b)(3)) but complies
with the remaining standards set forth at
§ 482.15 (a) through (f) such as having
policies and procedures for alternate
source power, provisions, tracking of
patients and staff and has a
communication plan and training and
testing program. In this situation, the
hospital generally would not be cited at
a condition-level deficiency for the
entire Emergency Preparedness
Medicare condition (at § 482.15). The
manner and degree of the
noncompliance is considered to
determine whether there is substantial
compliance or not. A standard-level
deficiency means that the provider may
be out of compliance with one or more
aspects of a regulatory condition or
requirement, but is considered less
severe than a condition-level deficiency.
A condition-level deficiency, however,
is considered more serious in nature
and could lead to a facility being
terminated from the Medicare and
Medicaid programs for non-compliance.
Immediate jeopardy citations are
condition-level deficiencies that pose
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immediate jeopardy to patient health
and safety.
On a validation survey, when the SA
cites a condition-level deficiency for
which the AO has not cited a
comparable deficiency, the deficiency is
considered by CMS to have been missed
by the AO and is a factor in determining
the AO’s ‘‘disparity rate’’ for each
facility type. The identification of one
missed condition-level deficiency by the
AO results in the entire survey being
counted toward the disparity rate. The
number of disparate surveys is divided
by the total number of validation
surveys performed with respect to that
AO by various States’ SAs, in order to
determine the AO’s disparity rate.
According to the most recent report,
the FY 2020 Report to Congress,4
disparity rates for all CMS approved AO
programs for the following facility types
for the most recent year in the report
(FY 2019) are: Hospitals (42 percent);
Psychiatric hospitals (45 percent);
Critical Access Hospitals (46 percent);
Home Health Agencies (8 percent);
Hospices (19 percent) and Ambulatory
Surgical Centers (34 percent). From FY
2018 to FY 2019, hospitals, HHAs and
ASCs had the only decreases in
disparity rates, with a decrease of 5percentage points, 11-percentage points,
and 7-percentage points, respectively.
The disparity rates for psychiatric
hospitals increased by seven percentage
points from FY 2018 to FY 2019. The
disparity rates for CAHs and hospices
increased by five percentage points and
three percentage points respectively
from FY 2018 to FY 2019. The findings
and other information are consistent
with previous reports, and no notable
changes were observed in the FY 2020
RTC covering the FY 2019 period of
activities.
D. CMS Validation Survey Pilot
As part of our ongoing efforts to
enhance transparency and our oversight
of the AOs, in 2018, CMS began a pilot
for integrated validation surveys for
accredited hospitals, known as the
Validation Redesign Program (VRP)
pilot. In a VRP pilot survey, the SA
teams accompany the AO survey teams
on a reaccreditation survey for an
accredited facility for the purpose of
evaluating the AO surveyors’
competency at performing surveys and
overall effectiveness during the survey
process. The initial findings of the VRP
pilot will be discussed further later in
this preamble at sections IV.J and IV.L.3.
CMS plans to continue to refine the
4 https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/ProviderEnrollment-and-Certification/SurveyCertificatio
nGenInfo/Downloads/QSO-19-17-AO-CLIA.pdf.
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validation process over the next several
years in an effort to enhance AO
oversight, and verify that providers/
suppliers under deemed status are in
compliance with the Medicare
conditions, and focus surveys on key
quality concerns while reducing
provider burden.
A national AO seeking approval of its
accreditation programs in accordance
with section 1865(a) of the Act must
apply for and be approved by CMS for
a period not to exceed 6 years. (See
§ 488.5(e)(2)(i)). An AO must submit a
renewal application seeking re-approval
of its accreditation program(s) before the
expiration date of its current CMS
approval. Review of the AO’s renewal
application in a timely manner allows
CMS to ensure that there would not be
a lapse in accreditation for the providers
and suppliers accredited by the AO.
Requiring the AO to submit a renewal
application periodically allows CMS to
ensure that the accreditation provided
by the AO continues to ensure that the
providers or suppliers accredited by that
AO meet or exceed the Medicare
conditions.
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E. Overview of Transparency and
Oversight of Accrediting Organizations
In September 2017, an article in the
Wall Street Journal 5 raised concerns
regarding the performance and
transparency of AO surveys, and noted
potential conflicts of interest between
an AO’s accreditation services and its
consulting services. As a result of this
article, CMS initiated an investigation
into these allegations.
F. Prior Rulemaking—Accrediting
Organizations Conflict of Interest
Request for Information (RFI)
CMS is aware, from the information
submitted with their applications, that
some AOs with CMS-approved
accreditation programs are also
providing fee-based consultative
services to Medicare-participating
health care facilities. Our understanding
is that typical AO fee-based consultative
services include, but are not limited to
the following:
• Assistance for clinical and nonclinical leaders (including
administrators) in understanding the
AO and Medicare conditions for
compliance;
• Review of facility standards and
promised early intervention and action
through simulation of a real survey,
5 The Wall Street Journal, ‘‘Watchdog Awards
Hospitals Seal of Approval Even After Problems
Emerge’’ Stephanie Armour (September 8, 2017)
https://www.wsj.com/articles/watchdog-awardshospitals-seal-of-approval-even-after-problemsemerge-1504889146.
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such as a mock survey with
comprehensive written reports of
findings;
• Review of a facility’s processes,
policies and functions;
• Identification of and technical
assistance for changing and sustaining
areas in need of improvement; and,
• Educational consultative services.
CMS acknowledges that independent
fee-based consulting is a valuable
resource that can help providers and
suppliers improve the quality and safety
of the care they provide. This does not
mean that the providers or suppliers
who elect not to receive fee-based
consulting from an AO that offers it, or
that providers or suppliers that are
accredited by an AO that does not offer
this service would not provide safe,
quality care.
There are many third-party
consultants that offer fee-based
consulting across all provider and
supplier types. The availability of thirdparty fee-based consultants give
providers and suppliers access to this
educational service, if their AO does not
provide fee-based consulting. If a
provider’s/supplier’s AO already offers
fee-based consulting, third-party
consultants can offer such providers and
suppliers, with an alternative, allowing
providers and suppliers to compare the
effectiveness and quality of consultants
to address their needs within their cost
limitations. The provider or supplier
may also be able to negotiate a price for
educational services provided by a
third-party consultant, while this may
not be an option with the AOs that offer
fee-based consulting. It is important to
note there would be no conflict of
interest associated with the use of thirdparty fee-based consultants because
these consultants do not also make
compliance determinations about the
provider or supplier.
Fee-based consulting services are not
prohibited by law or regulation.
However, CMS is concerned that an
AO’s provision of such fee-based
consulting results in perceived or actual
conflicts of interests because of the
contractual and financial relationship
that exists between the health care
provider and the AO, which is a private
entity that profits from the performance
of the inherently governmental function
of regulating health care providers
through accreditation.
Because of this, on December 20,
2018, we published a Request for
Information (RFI) in the Federal
Register entitled, ‘‘Medicare Program:
Accrediting Organizations Conflict of
Interest and Consulting Services;
Request for Information’’ (83 FR 65331)
hereinafter referred to as ‘‘2018 AO
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Conflict of Interest RFI’’, in response to
increasing concern about potential
conflicts of interest created by the
accreditation and consultative activities
of the AOs. Specifically, we solicited
public comments to determine whether
offering consultative services to the
same entities an AO accredits may
create actual or perceived conflicts of
interest between an AO’s accreditation
program and its consultative program.
We stated that this dual function may
undermine, or appear to undermine, the
integrity of the accreditation programs
and could erode public trust in the
safety of providers and suppliers that
have been accredited by CMS-approved
AOs. We further acknowledged that
certain consulting services offered by
some of the AOs, such as quality
improvement work and training of
facility staff, may be beneficial to some
facilities and result in improvements in
operations or the quality of care
furnished and may be provided with the
best of intentions. We stated that
circumstances could arise where an AO
has recommended a facility for deemed
status through their accreditation
service, while the consultancy service of
the AO was generating revenue assisting
the same facility in passing the AO’s
own accreditation surveys. Some AOs
have indicated that they establish
firewalls between the arms of their
businesses, but we stated that these
firewalls may not be sufficient to ensure
that no conflicts of interest result from
these activities.
We further stated that, similar to
quality improvement organization (QIO)
and external quality review organization
(EQRO) programs, any AO with a
Medicare-approved accreditation
program has assumed a position of
public trust and is responsible for acting
on behalf of the public, because the AO
is performing a function that assists in
the federal government’s enforcement
programs. We also expressed our view
that AOs voluntarily take on this
position and responsibility when they
seek accreditation approval from CMS
to accredit providers and suppliers for
participation in Medicare. Because of
the responsibility to maintain public
trust and public health, we continually
ensure that all entities and programs,
including AOs and their accreditation
programs that require CMS approval, be
held to high standards of ethical
conduct so that everyone can have
complete confidence in the integrity of
federal government certification. We
stated that the AOs’ decisions to
accredit facilities must be made without
regard to any additional services that a
Medicare provider or supplier might
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obtain through the AO or its
subsidiaries. We stated that this policy
would ensure and maintain public trust
in the Medicare certification program.
In the 2018 AO Conflict of Interest
RFI, we solicited public comments to
gather information for potential future
rulemaking and to obtain insight on
mechanisms to address this potential
conflict of interest. We were specifically
interested in ways to potentially modify
§ 488.5(a), which sets out the required
information to be submitted with an
AO’s application. For example,
§ 488.5(a)(10) states that the application
information from the AO include the
organization’s policies and procedures
to avoid conflicts of interest, including
the appearance of conflicts of interest,
involving individuals who conduct
surveys or participate in accreditation
decisions.
We stated that potentially expanding
§ 488.5(a)(10) by adding provisions that
would require the AOs to disclose
information about any consultative
services they offer to facilities could
further enhance our oversight of AOs.
In addition, we solicited comments on
the following issues:
• With respect to fee-based
consultative services provided by AOs
to the facilities they accredit—
++ How are these services provided
and communicated to the facilities?
++ Are potential conflicts of interest
disclosed?
• Are there other entities that could
provide this training besides the AOs?
• Whether commenters perceive a
conflict of interest in AOs providing feebased consultative services to the
facilities they accredit.
• Whether the ability of an AO to
collect fees for consultation services
from entities they accredit could
degrade the public trust inherent in an
AO’s CMS approved accreditation
programs.
• What the appropriate consequences
or impacts should be, if a conflict does
exist.
• What firewalls may exist within an
AO between accreditation and
consultation services, or what firewalls
would be prudent, to avoid potential
and actual conflicts of interest.
• Examples of positive and negative
effects which may be as a result of a
conflict of interest.
• What the potential impact,
financially and overall would be if CMS
were to finalize rulemaking which
would restrict certain activities that
might give rise to a real or perceived
conflict of interest.
• When and/or under what
circumstances it would be appropriate
for AOs to provide fee-based
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consultative services to the facilities
which they accredit.
• Whether, and if so, under what
specific circumstances CMS should
review a potential conflict of interest,
and what factors CMS should look at to
determine if a conflict of interest exists.
• A list describing under what
circumstances the AOs or stakeholders
would believe there to be a conflict; and
under which circumstances conflict
does not exist.
• The type of information which
would be considered necessary, useful
and/or appropriate in proving or
refuting our hypothesis of a connection
between the use of consultative services
and preferential treatment of accredited
providers and suppliers. (See 83 FR
65336.)
We received approximately 128
public comments in response to the
2018 AO Conflict of Interest RFI.
Approximately half of the commenters,
(consisting primarily of AOs and health
care facilities that use consulting
services) supported the use of AO
consulting services and stated that there
is no conflict of interest associated with
fee-based consulting. The other half of
commenters (consisting of individuals,
provider associations, medical advocacy
groups and one AO) stated that the
provision of fee-based consulting by the
AOs creates a conflict of interest.
Several commenters stated that the
benefits derived from AO fee-based
consulting far outweighs any potential
or actual conflict of interest that may
result. Many commenters believe that
AO consulting services allow the facility
to seek information and guidance that
helps them understand, interpret and
comply with the Medicare conditions
and regulatory requirements. These
commenters stated that use of the AO’s
fee-based consulting services helped to
improve the safety and quality of the
care provided by the health care facility.
Many commenters stated that there
are already-implemented checks and
balances between CMS and the AOs that
are sufficient to ensure that no conflicts
of interest occur between the AOs and
their accredited facilities. These
commenters stated that the AOs have
robust firewall policies and procedures
in place to prevent conflicts of interest
related to fee-based consulting. Many
commenters also stated that CMS has a
specific AO fee-based consulting
firewall policy in place and that this
policy is adequate to prevent any
conflicts of interest. However, CMS does
not currently have such a policy.6
6 In section IV.B.6 of this rule, we propose to
require any AO that provides fee-based consulting
services or its associated fee-based consulting
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Several commenters stated that AOs
are commissioned to ensure compliance
with the Medicare conditions. These
commenters stated that a big part of
compliance is not only being punitive
but informational/educational. One
commenter suggested that AOs are in a
unique position to provide this
education and technical assistance
because they understand the complexity
of the Medicare conditions. One
commenter stated that if AO fee-based
consulting services were not provided,
facilities could see additional
deficiencies cited due to
misinterpretation of requirements and
multiple rounds of surveys, generating
still more cost to the facility.
Several commenters stated that the
financial benefit derived by the AOs
from providing fee-based education is
not significant. Some of these
commenters also stated that the AOs
gained no benefit from the success or
results of accreditation whether they
had assisted the provider to deliver
better services or not.
One commenter stated that they were
are not aware of other organizations
who would be capable of educating and
advising health care providers in a
similar fashion as the AOs’ consulting
services. Several other commenters
expressed concern about having feebased consulting services provided by
an independent third-party. These
commenters stated that, while there are
other entities beside the AOs, such as
QIOs that could provide training, the
focus would solely be on quality rather
than the outcome of an accreditation.
Many commenters stated that the
integrity of the accreditation process is
of utmost concern for regulators,
providers and patients alike and that
AOs should position themselves to be
above reproach in regard to overseeing
patient care and quality of services that
health care facilities provide, so as to
retain the trust of patients and the
public. Several commenters suggested
that anything that may undermine the
integrity of accreditation programs or
the public trust in CMS accredited
providers and suppliers be considered
and addressed. One commenter stated
that the ability of AOs to provide both
survey services and consulting services
is a conflict of interest, which results in
a decreased level of trust among
providers, Medicare, and the public.
Many commenters expressed concern
about the financial and contractual
relationship that exists between AOs
and the health care facilities they
accredit. These commenters expressed
division or company to have written fee-based
consulting ‘‘firewall’’ policies and procedures.
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concern that the existence of a financial
relationship between AOs and health
care providers casts a veil of doubt over
the entire CMS hospital accreditation
process, eroding the public trust in CMS
to maintain the standard of care at our
nation’s hospitals and to ensure that
Medicare patients are receiving safe,
therapeutic care. One commenter stated
the belief that the business connection
between the provider and the AO
creates a relationship that the AO could
have an incentive to manipulate.
In addition, several commenters
expressed concern about the significant
financial interest the AOs have in the
provision of fee-based consulting. One
commenter stated that since AOs are
being paid by the health care facilities
for both accreditation services as well as
consulting services, it is obviously in
their financial interest to keep the
health care facilities accredited and not
to create too much dissatisfaction to
incite the organization to seek another
AO. Several commenters expressed
concern that this financial relationship
might provide the incentive for the AOs
to ignore or downplay deficiencies
during the survey of a consultative
client in order to increase the apparent
efficacy of its consulting services. Or,
perhaps more undetectably, an AO
could exaggerate the deficiencies on
surveys in order to increase the
apparent value of the consulting
services to providers. Because of the
above-stated concerns, several
commenters suggested that CMS
prohibit the AOs from providing feebased consulting to the health care
providers and suppliers they accredit.
G. Conflict of Interest—The AO
Owner’s, Surveyor’s and Other
Employee’s Interest in or Relationship
With a Health Care Facility That the AO
Accredits
It is typical for an individual health
care professional, such as a physician or
nurse, to have concurrent employment
relationships with more than one health
care provider. Many health care
professionals, such as physicians,
physician assistants, and nurse
practitioners have multi-setting
practices or are employed at more than
one health care facility. For example, a
registered nurse (RN) may work on staff
at a hospital but also work at other
hospitals through a medical staffing
agency. In addition, as employees of a
health care facility, these health care
professionals could possibly gain a
financial interest in the health care
facility through means such as being a
contributor to the construction costs of
a new wing of the facility or buying
stock in the facility or its parent
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corporation. Management employees
could be awarded stock or stock options
for the facility or its parent corporation
as part of their compensation and
benefits package.
AOs frequently hire surveyors that are
also employed at one or more outside
health care settings because the
professional associations, expertise,
knowledge and skills held by these
health care practitioners make them an
asset as a surveyor. This might include,
for example, a RN who is employed by
a hospital and also works as a surveyor
for an AO. This employment scenario
does not generally violate CMS policy or
regulations. Furthermore, an AO
surveyor having other employment does
not, in and of itself, necessarily create
a conflict of interest. However, if the AO
provides accreditation services to the
health care facility that employs the AO
surveyor, this would cause a conflict of
interest if that surveyor is permitted to
have any involvement in the survey
process for that health care facility.
CMS has recently encountered two
situations in which an AO’s surveyor
was also employed by the health care
facility that was being accredited by the
AO. In one of these situations, an AO
surveyor was also employed in an
administrative position at a
rehabilitation facility that was being
surveyed by the AO. This situation was
not disclosed to CMS by the AO.
Currently CMS has no specific
regulations that would prohibit a
conflict of interest related to an AO
surveyor’s relationship with a health
care facility that the AO accredits,
except for home health agencies and
hospice programs.
Section 488.5(a)(10) of our regulations
requires that an AO provide, with its
application seeking CMS approval of its
accreditation program, ‘‘the
organization’s policies and procedures
to avoid conflicts of interest, including
the appearance of conflicts of interest,
involving individuals who conduct
surveys or participate in accreditation
decisions.’’ However, § 488.5(a)(10) does
not provide requirements for specific
types of information or requirements
that should be contained in the AO’s
conflict of interest policy and
procedures. This regulation does not
specifically prohibit or define conflicts
of interest and, based on the comments
to the 2018 AO Conflict of Interest RFI,
CMS proposes to revise this regulation
to more specifically address situations
that should be included in the AO’s
conflict of interest policy.
As noted above, the SAs and AOs
perform similar work. Section 4008 of
the SOM describes examples of
scenarios that would be conflicts of
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interest for SA surveyors who have an
outside relationship with a facility that
is surveyed by the SA.7 Currently,
section 4008 of the SOM applies only to
the SA surveyors and not AO surveyors.
Scenarios in which an AO surveyor
has a relationship with a health care
facility that their AO accredits could
represent a conflict of interest. As CMS
has no specific regulations that would
proactively address such conflicts of
interest for AOs that accredit healthcare
providers other than home health
agencies and hospice programs, we
propose to establish several
requirements to help mitigate such
conflicts of interest in section IV.B.7 of
this proposed rule.
III. Request for Public Comment on
Whether It Is a Conflict of Interest for
AO Board Members or Advisors To
Have an Interest in or Relationship
With a Health Care Facility That the
AO Accredits
As previously stated, it could be a
conflict of interest when an AO
surveyor is involved with the survey of
a facility with which that surveyor has
an employment, financial, business or
other interest or relationship. We note
that in most cases, the AO board
members do have interests in or
relationships with the health care
facilities the AO accredits. In many
cases, the board members of the AOs
frequently hold upper management
positions of a health care facility the AO
accredits, such as chief executive officer
(CEO), director, or President. In an
article published in the Wall Street
Journal on September 8, 2017,8 it was
stated that ‘‘[t]wenty of the Joint
Commission’s 32 board members are
executives at health systems it accredits
or else work at parent organizations of
such health systems. Some other board
members are named by healthcare
lobbying groups, such as the American
Hospital Association and the American
Medical Association. This article
compared this situation to ‘‘Big Pharma
setting up its own accrediting
organization’’ and stated that ‘‘if you
look beneath the surface, there are
conflicts and problems.’’
We seek public comment as to
whether it would be a conflict of
interest for an AO board member, AO
advisor, or CEO or other executive team
members to also have a relationship
with a health care organization
accredited by such AO. An AO advisor
7 https://www.cms.gov/Regulations-andGuidance/Guidance/Manuals/Downloads/
som107c04pdf.pdf.
8 S. Armour, Hospital Watchdog Gives Seal of
Approval, Even After Problems Emerge, Wall Street
Journal, September 8, 2017.
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would be an advisory committee
member, advisor to the CEO, or an
advisor to the board of directors. We
refer readers to proposals related to an
AO owner’s, surveyor’s, or other
employee’s interest in or relationship
with a health care facility the AO
accredits in section IV.B.7 of this
proposed rule.
IV. Provisions of the Proposed Rule
We establish health and safety
standards, known as the Conditions of
Participation, Conditions for Coverage,
or Requirements for Participation for
different types of health care providers
and suppliers, and these standards are
based on specific statutory authorities
for the different provider and supplier
types. Pursuant to such authorities, each
specific type of Medicare-certified
provider and supplier must meet our
health and safety standards. As part of
the CMS certification process,
compliance with these standards is
evaluated by SAs under agreement at
section 1864 of the Act, through the
survey and certification process.
However, CMS makes the final
Medicare certification determination. In
the alternative, we can deem these
providers and suppliers to have met
those standards if they are accredited by
the CMS-approved AOs that are the
subject of this proposed rule.
CMS is using the authority
established by Congress under section
1865 of the Act to establish certain
requirements for AOs in this proposed
rule. Section 1865(a)(2) of the Act
establishes a process for the Secretary to
make a finding with respect to approval
of an accrediting organization. In
making this finding, the Secretary must
consider, among other factors, the AO’s
requirements for accreditation, its
survey procedures, its ability to provide
adequate resources for conducting
required surveys and supplying
information for use in enforcement
activities, its monitoring procedures for
provider entities found out of
compliance with the conditions or
requirements, and its ability to provide
the Secretary with necessary data for
validation.
In addition, ‘‘Non-certified’’ suppliers
are a statutory category for which CMS
does not set health and safety standards,
even though they must obtain
accreditation in accordance with statute.
Because we have not set health and
safety standards for these facility types,
we are not applying these provisions to
non-certified supplier types at this time.
These suppliers include (1) Advanced
Diagnostic Imaging (ADI) suppliers; (2)
home infusion therapy (HIT) suppliers;
(3) diabetes self-management training
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(DSMT) suppliers; and (4) durable
medical equipment prosthetics,
orthotics supplies (DMEPOS). We are
also not proposing to extend any of the
provisions set forth in this proposed
rule to AOs that accredit non-certified
suppliers.
Non-certified suppliers are those
suppliers that are required to be
accredited by a CMS-approved AO for
Medicare payment, do not enter into a
Medicare agreement but are enrolled in
the Medicare program, and do not
receive a CMS certification number
(CCN). These non-certified suppliers are
a smaller, discrete group that are not
under the jurisdiction of the SAs and do
not undergo validation surveys. For
example, there are no health and safety
regulations for advanced diagnostic
imaging (ADI) suppliers and only
minimal such standards for DMST
suppliers. Also, many ADI suppliers are
physician’s practices that provide an
ADI service, such as computerized
tomography (CT) scans in their office.
CMS has not yet developed a survey
process and health and safety
requirements for these supplier types,
however we reserve the right to do so
in the future. CMS does a review of the
applications for AOs that accredit noncertified programs. The provisions
proposed in this rule would not align to
these programs at this time.
As stated in section I ‘‘Executive
Summary’’ and section II ‘‘Background’’
of this proposed rule, since issuing the
2015 AO final rule, there are several
provisions related to oversight of AOs
that require strengthening. Throughout
the last several years, we have worked
closely with the AOs, provided
guidance and instituted an AO Liaison
program in which CMS meets with each
AO at least on a quarterly basis. These
meetings and discussions have provided
an avenue for CMS to also receive
feedback on existing Medicare
conditions, our interpretive guidelines
and allowed for an opportunity for CMS
to clarify expectations for the AOs. This
experience has helped us to identify
areas of our regulations in need of
revision to more clearly articulate the
requirements for all AOs with a CMSapproved accreditation program.
Furthermore, as we have taken actions
to exercise more oversight of existing
CMS-approved AO programs, we have
become aware of the need to clarify,
reorganize, and amend our regulations
to support a more efficient and effective
oversight process.
The below proposal outlines the
background behind each proposal and
what led to CMS’ development of this
proposed rule.
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A. Proposal To Add Definition of
‘‘Unannounced Survey’’ to § 488.1
We propose to add a new definition
of ‘‘unannounced survey’’ to § 488.1.
The definition of ‘‘unannounced
survey’’ would be consistent with the
definition of ‘‘unannounced’’ contained
in the Merriam-Webster dictionary,
which is ‘‘without previous notice or
arrangement and therefore unexpected.’’
Adding this definition of ‘‘unannounced
survey’’ would support the existing
requirements set out at § 488.5(a)(4)(i)
and in our sub-regulatory guidance.
This proposal clarifies and codifies
existing requirements under
§ 488.5(a)(4)(i), which requires that
surveys must be unannounced, which
means that the facility must be unaware
of the survey until the time that the
survey team arrives, and that the
provider or supplier would not receive
notice of the survey until the survey
team arrives at the facility. Our long
standing policy behind the term
‘‘unannounced survey’’ has been within
section 2700A, chapter 2 of the SOM,
outlining the expectation that all
surveys of providers and suppliers
(other than clinical laboratories) must be
unannounced to the provider or
supplier being surveyed. This means
that the provider or supplier to be
surveyed would not receive notice of
the survey until the survey team arrived
at the facility for the survey, as is also
currently the AO’s process for
complaint surveys. The proposed
definition for ‘‘unannounced survey’’
would also state that unannounced
surveys must be scheduled by the AO in
a manner so that their timing and
occurance will not be predictable to the
healthcare facility being surveyed.
One of the primary reasons surveys
conducted by either the SA or the AO
are required to be unannounced is to
prevent the provider or supplier from
making unusual preparations for the
survey that would not represent the
ongoing typical condition of the
provider and true nature and quality of
care provided. Examples of these
activities would include unusual
cleaning activities, painting, clearing
obstructions from halls and entrances,
denying leave to staff during that time
or calling staff back to inflate staffing
availability, and re-reviewing medical
records outside of what is normally
done. If a provider or supplier knows
the exact time a surveyor will be onsite,
it may temporarily adjust its typical
practices such as staffing, which would
provide an unrepresentative picture to
surveyors of the quality of care typically
provided to patients or residents. A
notice to facility leadership via
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organizational websites, emails, or
phone calls prior to surveyors arriving
onsite is considered a violation with
CMS regulations.
In 2009, CMS clarified this
expectation in the Survey &
Certification Policy Memorandum 09–
41,9 to advise that announcing of
surveys was in conflict with CMS
regulations. In the effort to align AO
survey processes with CMS survey
processes (which are followed by the SA
surveyors), as outlined in section IV.C of
this proposed rule, additional clarity
regarding this prohibition is needed.
Defining the term ‘‘unannounced
survey’’ within the regulation as
opposed to our SOM (subregulatory
guidance) would provide clarity
regarding our expectations, and would
mirror the processes used by our SAs,
who do not announce their surveys
(except for clinical laboratories); as
noted, any AO practice of announcing
surveys could undermine the integrity
of the survey process. While we
recognize AOs may have provided up to
a 60-minute advance notice of the
survey team arriving onsite for initial
and reaccreditation survey activities,
this is inconsistent with the processes
followed by our SAs, and is inconsistent
with the AOs’ own survey processes for
complaint surveys (which are always
unannounced).
Therefore, in accordance with
§ 488.5(a)(4)(i), which requires
unannounced surveys, as well as our
long-standing policy in section 2700A,
chapter 2 of the SOM, we propose that
all surveys of providers and suppliers
(other than clinical laboratories) must be
unannounced and any advance notice to
facilities would be prohibited. This
proposed requirement would apply to
AOs as well as SAs and further support
our initiative to bring consistency to
survey practices as outlined in section
IV.C of this proposed rule.
Furthermore, the definition of
‘‘unannounced survey’’ must ensure
that the recertification surveys are
unpredictable. AOs generally complete
comprehensive re-accreditation surveys
of their client providers and suppliers
every 32 to 36 months. However, some
providers or suppliers have informed us
that they know when an AO is
scheduled to survey the facility—the
AO may schedule the facility for survey
within the same week or month every
survey cycle, or has narrowed its
schedule via the use of blackout days,
or informed the facility close to the time
9 https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/ProviderEnrollment-and-Certification/SurveyCertification
GenInfo/Policy-and-Memos-to-States-and-RegionsItems/CMS1223113.
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of the survey via administrative contact
from the AO, such as payment
collection, confirmation or change of
address notification or other facility-AO
specific information. All of these
practices undermine the integrity of the
unannounced survey process.
B. Conflict of Interest
1. Proposal for Information To Be
Submitted With the AOs’ Conflict of
Interest Policies and Procedures
(Proposed Revisions to § 488.5(a)(10))
Section 488.5(a)(10) currently requires
that the AO submit ‘‘the organization’s
policies and procedures to avoid
conflicts of interest, including the
appearance of conflicts of interest,
involving individuals who conduct
surveys or participate in decisions.’’
This requirement does not require the
AO to address any specific areas or
issues in their conflict of interest
policies and procedures. In addition, the
AOs only need to submit this
information to CMS with their initial
and renewal applications, which is
currently every 6 years or less, as
established by CMS.
We propose to revise § 488.5(a)(10) by
adding a requirement that AOs must
provide CMS with more specific conflict
of interest policies and procedures. We
propose at § 488.5(a)(10)(i) to require the
AOs to provide CMS with their policies
and procedures for separation of their
fee-based consulting services from their
accreditation services (that is, fee-based
consulting ‘‘firewall’’ policies and
procedures). We propose at
§ 488.5(a)(10)(ii) to require the AOs to
provide their policies and procedures
for protecting the integrity of the AOs’
accreditation program, including the
requirements of proposed § 488.8(i) and
(j) noted below. Section 488.8(i) pertains
to restrictions on certain fee-based
consulting services provided by AOs,
and § 488.8(k) pertains to conflicts of
interest which arise due to AO owners,
surveyors, and other employees having
a business, employment, financial or
other type of relationship with a health
care facility accredited by the AO.
At § 488.5(a)(10)(iii), we propose to
require the AOs to provide policies and
procedures for the prevention and
handling potential or actual conflicts of
interest that could arise from situations
in which an AO owner, surveyor, or
other employee has a business,
employment or financial interest in or
relationship with another survey agency
or health care facility to which the AO
provides accreditation services.
Proposed § 488.5(a)(10)(iii) would
further state that such interests or
relationships would include but not be
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limited to: (1) being employed as a SA
surveyor; (2) being employed in a health
care facility that is accredited by the
AO; (3) having an ownership, financial
or investment interest in a health care
facility that is accredited by the AO; (4)
serving as a director of or trustee for a
health care facility that is accredited by
the AO; (5) serving on a utilization
review committee of a health care
facility that is accredited by the AO; (6)
accepting fees or payments from a
health facility or group of health
facilities that is/are accredited by the
AO; (7) accepting fees for personal
services, contract services, referral
services, or for furnishing supplies to a
health care facility that is accredited by
the AO; (8) providing consulting
services to a health care facility that the
AO accredits; (9) having members of
their immediate family engaged in any
of the stated activities, other than being
a non-managerial employee of a health
facility that is accredited by the AO; and
(10) engaging in any activities during
the course of the survey of the facility
that would be or cause a conflict of
interest.
In proposed § 488.5(a)(10)(iii)(I), we
have defined the term ‘‘immediate
family member’’ as a husband or wife,
birth or adoptive parent, child, or
sibling; stepparent, stepchild,
stepbrother, or stepsister; father-in-law,
mother-in-law, son-in-law, daughter-inlaw, brother-in-law, or sister-in-law;
grandparent or grandchild; and spouse
of a grandparent or grandchild. This is
also consistent with the definition of
‘‘immediate family member’’ used for
the hospice program conflict of interest
regulations at § 488.1115.
We further propose at
§ 488.5(a)(10)(iv) to require AOs to
provide policies and procedures for
providing notification to CMS when
such a conflict of interest is discovered.
We propose at § 488.5(a)(10)(v) to
define ‘‘conflict of interest’’ as a
situation in which an AO, its owner(s),
surveyors, or other employees, or the
AO’s successors, transferees, or assigns,
or the immediate family members of the
AO owners(s), surveyors and other
employees have an employment,
business, financial or other type of
interest in or relationship with a health
care facility the AO accredits. We would
deem a conflict of interest to have
occurred if one of the above-stated
parties either knowingly or
unknowingly exploited their interest in
or relationship with that provider or
supplier. We remind readers that in the
CY 2022 Home Health Prospective
Payment System Rate Update (86 FR
62368) that we finalized similar conflict
of interest regulations for hospice
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programs at § 488.1115(b). The proposed
requirements of this rule for accrediting
organizations are consistent with, and
build upon, the current conflict of
interest regulation for hospice programs
at § 488.1115(b). For additional
discussion on the Hospice final rule see
86 FR 62368.
We are proposing changes to
§ 488.5(a)(10) to require the AO to have
policies and procedures for the
prevention, handling of and notification
of CMS when conflicts of interest arise,
because on several occasions, AOs have
failed to notify CMS of such conflicts of
interest. These changes would broaden
our oversight of the AOs’ handling and
reporting of conflicts of interests.
Additionally, by requiring the AOs to
provide CMS with more specific
information about their conflict-ofinterest policies and procedures, CMS
would be afforded a more
comprehensive look at how the AOs
plan to handle specific scenarios that
CMS would deem to be conflicts of
interest. These proposed requirements
would require those AOs that did not
have policies and procedures to prevent,
address and handle conflicts of interests
to develop and use them.
The proposed requirements at
§ 488.5(a)(10)(iii), for the conflict of
interest and information that must be
submitted with the AOs’ conflict of
interest policies and procedures, are
more detailed than the requirements
currently set forth in section 4008 of the
SOM, which provide examples of
possible scenarios that could be
conflicts of interest for the SA
surveyors. Section 4008 of the SOM
leaves it to the discretion of the SA
management to decide how to identify
and address these conflicts of interest.
A more detailed conflict of interest
requirement is not necessary for the SA
surveyors because SA surveyors, who
are state employees, are generally
required to report incidences of
conflicts of interest to the SA
management, who is tasked with taking
the appropriate action.
Unlike the SAs, the AOs are more
likely to encounter scenarios with
conflicts of interest. For example, AO
owners, board members, surveyors and
other employees might also be
employed by health care facilities that
are surveyed and accredited by that AO.
Therefore, the proposed requirements
for AOs must be more detailed and
prescriptive than SAs because of the
likelihood of them encountering
conflicts of interest.
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2. Proposal To Require AOs To Obtain
and Submit Surveyor Declarations of
Any Interest in and Relationships With
Health Care Providers the AO Accredits
to CMS on an Annual Basis (Proposed
§ 488.5(a)(22))
A conflict of interest may exist when
an AO surveyor has interest(s) in or
relationship(s) with a health care facility
the AO accredits. Requiring AOs to
obtain and submit declarations detailing
such interests and relationships would
ensure that CMS is notified of potential
or actual conflicts of interest AO
surveyors might have with the providers
and suppliers the AO accredits. Such
notice would allow CMS to be aware of
the existence of these potential or actual
conflicts of interest, some of which
would preclude a surveyor from
participating in survey activities (see
§ 488.8(j) discussion at section IV.B.6 of
this proposed rule) and some of which
would not.
We propose to add a new provision at
§ 488.5(a)(22) that would require the AO
to obtain declarations from all surveyors
employed or contracted to the AO
regarding any employment, business,
financial or other interests in or
relationships they have with the health
care facilities the AO accredits. We
propose that AOs would initially be
required to submit the surveyor
declarations with their initial
application for CMS approval of their
accreditation programs. We further
propose to require the AOs to update
the surveyor declarations on an annual
basis, and that the information from the
annual updated surveyor declarations
be submitted to CMS no later than
December 31st each year. Annual
updates would be necessary because a
surveyor’s interests in and relationships
with health care facilities the AO
accredits could change over time. This
requirement would ensure that the
information contained in the surveyor
declarations remains up-to-date and
accurate. This provision at paragraph
(a)(22) would be implemented 1 year
after the effective date of the final rule
(which would be 60 days after
publication of the final rule). We further
propose to require the AOs to begin
submitting their surveyor declaration
information on or before the December
31st that occurs after the
implementation date of this
requirement.
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3. Proposal To Place Restrictions on
Fee-Based Consulting Services Provided
by AOs to the Medicare-Certified
Providers and Suppliers They Accredit
(Proposed § 488.8(i))
CMS recognizes the value of fee-based
consulting by independent, third-party
consultants who provide insight or
expertise to assist facilities in achieving
or maintaining compliance with AO
and/or Medicare’s health and safety
standards. These interventions are
beneficial and often tailored to meet a
facility’s specific compliance needs.
Consulting services also may assist a
provider or supplier in identifying
quality concerns, whether based on a
Medicare requirement or standards of
practice, and therefore these services
may improve the safety of patient care.
AO fee-based consulting activities are
not prohibited by federal law and there
are no current CMS regulations
prohibiting AOs from providing feebased consulting services.
However, AOs assume a public trust
role when voluntarily applying to CMS
for deeming authority. This authority,
once granted, conveys Medicare
certification for those entities accredited
by the AO and it is essential that the
integrity of their oversight process be
above question. A number of AOs with
CMS-approved accreditation programs
currently provide AO fee-based
consulting services to the Medicareparticipating health care facilities they
accredit. When an AO provides feebased consulting services to a provider
or supplier it accredits it could create a
conflict of interest for several reasons.
First, AOs provide deeming surveys to
providers or suppliers on behalf of CMS.
AOs are required to use accreditation
standards that are comparable to or
exceed the Medicare standards and
survey processes in the performance of
deeming surveys. A potential or actual
conflict of interest arises from allowing
a CMS-approved AO with deeming
authority, the ability to charge a
provider or supplier to conduct a
deeming survey to identify noncompliance (for Medicare participation),
and also charge for providing AO feebased consulting services to help the
provider meet Medicare requirements.
Second, providers and suppliers often
choose AO fee-based consulting
specifically for the additional resources
and assistance provided. Some AOs
publicly advertise the ability of their
fee-based consulting to simulate what to
expect from the actual AO survey. It is
possible that Providers and suppliers
found to be non-compliant by their AO
may assume that the most direct path to
compliance is to hire the AO’s fee-based
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consulting services. Such an assumption
would provide AOs with fee-based
consulting services with an unfair
advantage over other, third-party
consulting services.
Finally, by charging for accreditation
services (for example, deeming surveys)
and also for the subsequent fee-based
consulting services, for the purpose of
remediating deficiencies identified by
the same AO, there may be an
expectation from providers and
suppliers that the AO demonstrate the
effectiveness their consulting services
on subsequent compliance surveys. In
other words, the provider or supplier
may expect to receive a favorable survey
report because they have paid the AO
not only for accreditation but also for
fee-based consulting services which are
promoted by the AOs to help the
provider or supplier do well on their
survey. In addition, this expectation
may push AOs to ignore significant
deficiencies found during survey of its
fee-based consulting clients in order to
demonstrate the efficacy of its fee-based
consulting and promote these services.
In short, an AO’s business model is
geared toward retention of its accredited
providers and suppliers. AOs that
provide both regulatory oversight
through Medicare deeming surveys and
also fee-based consulting services,
which are geared towards assisting
clients comply with the requirements
required to pass the surveys, invites
concerns about the integrity of their
final compliance determinations.
CMS issued an AO Conflict of Interest
RFI (83 FR 65331) in 2018 to gather
feedback related to AO conflict of
interest practices. We received 128
public comments in response to the RFI.
Many commenters stated that fee-based
consulting provided by an AO or its
associated consulting division or
company to the health care facilities it
accredits is a conflict of interest. These
commenters stated that this conflict of
interest arises from granting the
inherently governmental function of
monitoring patient safety, by regulating
health care providers through
accreditation, to a private entity,
especially when that private entity
profits from those who are regulated.
Several commenters alleged that AOs
that provide fee-based consulting may
have the incentive to ignore deficiencies
detected during the accreditation
survey, in order to provide a ‘‘good’’
survey report to demonstrate the
apparent efficacy of their AO fee-based
consulting services and also to keep the
paying customer(s) happy. Many
commenters also suggested that if an AO
provides poor survey results to a health
care facility that has paid a significant
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fee for accreditation, it is unlikely that
the facility would continue to retain that
AO as a service provider.
After careful review and analysis of
the public comments received in
response to the RFI, we agree that a
conflict of interest arises from the
contractual and financial relationship
between the health care provider and
the AO, which is a private entity that
profits from the performance of
regulating health care providers through
accreditation. AOs that provide feebased consulting services generate
additional revenue beyond the fees
realized for accreditation services by
providing fee-based consulting services
to the same facilities they accredit.
We propose at § 488.8(i) several
restrictions on fee-based consulting
provided by these AOs, their consulting
divisions, or separate business entities.
By ‘‘fee-based consulting division,’’ we
mean a separate division within the AO
that provides fee-based consulting
services. This division of the AO would
have a separate manager and staff. By
‘‘separate business entity,’’ we mean a
business entity, such as a company or
corporation, that is separate and apart
from the AO and that has been
established by the AO, either under a
similar or different name, for the
purpose of the providing fee-based
consulting services.
The proposed regulation at § 488.5(i)
would still allow AOs to provide feebased consulting services to the
providers and suppliers they accredit
with restrictions that address the
conflict of interest issues associated
with this service.
We propose at § 488.8(i)(1) that,
unless excepted under proposed
§ 488.8(i)(4), AOs and their associated
consulting divisions or companies
would be prohibited from providing feebased consulting services to any health
care provider or supplier to which the
AO provides accreditation services prior
to an initial accreditation survey.
However, the health care provider or
supplier may seek fee-based consulting
services from an entity entirely
uninvolved in that provider or
supplier’s accreditation process. This
option allows these providers and
suppliers support they may believe
necessary to meet Medicare standards
and requirements prior to serving
patients while eliminating any conflict
of interest for their AO.
For purposes of proposed
§ 488.8(i)(1), the term ‘‘initial survey’’
would mean the first accreditation
survey of a health care provider or
supplier performed by an AO. The term
‘‘prior to the initial accreditation
survey’’ would mean the time period
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beginning on the day the provider or
supplier enters into a contract with the
AO to provide accreditation services
and continuing until the date that the
initial accreditation survey is
completed. The survey completion date
would include the completion of any
required plans of correction by the
provider or supplier. In addition, if a
health care provider or supplier was
terminated or withdrew from the AO’s
accreditation and later retained the
services of that AO, the first survey of
the returning health care provider or
supplier performed by the AO would be
considered an initial accreditation
survey.
The requirement of proposed
§ 488.8(i)(1), which would prohibit an
AO from providing fee-based consulting
or coaching to a health care provider or
supplier prior to the initial accreditation
survey, would provide a more accurate
assessment of the provider’s or
supplier’s baseline operating conditions
and deficiencies on the initial survey.
Such a raw assessment would not be
possible if the provider or supplier
receives AO fee-based consulting prior
to the initial accreditation survey.
In addition, such a baseline
assessment of deficiencies would be
useful to the AO in assessing areas
needing improvement, developing a
plan of correction and areas of focus for
the fee-based consulting. This proposed
restriction would also remove the
financial incentive on the part of the AO
to ignore deficiencies during the initial
survey of providers and suppliers that
paid for fee-based consulting prior to an
initial survey.
We note that this proposal only
restricts an AO with deeming authority
and a fee-based consulting practice from
providing fee-based consulting services
to its accredited providers and suppliers
prior to the initial accreditation survey.
It does not prohibit providers and
suppliers from hiring third-party feebased consulting services prior to their
initial AO survey, in other words, this
proposal does not prohibit other
consulting services from being used
during this period.
We do not anticipate that this
proposal would cause a negative impact
on the patient care provided by the
provider or supplier for several reasons.
First, providers or suppliers would be
able to obtain AO fee-based consulting
during the first 24 months of the 36month reaccreditation cycle which
occurs after the initial survey. This
education could be tailored to address
the deficiencies found during the initial
survey. If the AO were to provide feebased consulting prior to the initial
survey, the AO would not know what
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deficiencies exist and would only be
able to provide generalized fee-based
education to the provider or supplier.
Second, the provider and supplier could
always seek fee-based education prior to
the initial survey from a third -party
consultant. The purpose of our proposal
to prohibit AO fee-based consulting
prior to the initial survey and during the
12-month period prior to each
reaccreditation survey is to reduce or
remove any potential or actual conflict
of interest. However, if a provider or
supplier were to seek fee-based
consulting from a third-party
consultant, that has no relationship to
the AO that accredits that provider or
supplier, no conflict of interest would
exist.
We also propose at § 488.8(i)(2) to
prohibit AOs from providing fee-based
consulting services to a health care
provider or supplier it accredits within
12 months prior to the next scheduled
re-accreditation survey of that provider
or supplier. For purposes of proposed
§ 488.8(i)(2), the term ‘‘re-accreditation
survey’’ would mean any subsequent
accreditation surveys performed by the
AO after the initial survey.
The accreditation cycle for most
Medicare-certified providers and
suppliers is 36 months (3 years), which
means that the AOs perform an
accreditation survey of these providers
and suppliers no less than every 36
months. The proposed language at
§ 488.8(i)(2) would allow AOs to
provide fee-based consulting during the
first 24 months (2 years) of the
accreditation cycle, but not during the
12-month (1-year) period preceding the
re-accreditation survey. For example,
with this proposal, if the initial survey
was completed on June 1, 2025, the
provider’s or supplier’s reaccreditation
survey would be due by June 2, 2028.
The AO could provide fee-based
consulting to the provider or supplier
from June 2, 2025, to June 2, 2027. The
AO would be prohibited from providing
AO fee-based consulting to the provider
or supplier from June 2, 2027, to June
2, 2028. An accredited provider or
supplier would retain the ability to use
consultants not affiliated with their AO
at any time, including any timeframe
prior to or after an accreditation survey
for Medicare compliance.
The proposed requirement would
provide the accredited provider or
supplier ample time to obtain the
education they need in order to
understand the CMS requirement, the
AO’s accreditation standards and survey
process, and 1-year period, prior to their
next accreditation survey, in which to
implement the AO’s accreditation
standards and CMS standards (CoPs) in
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their facility and rectify any deficiencies
found during the initial survey.
The proposed requirement at
§ 488.8(i)(2) would address the actual or
potential conflicts of interest associated
with AO fee-based consulting because it
creates a 1-year time period prior to the
re-accreditation survey in which the AO
is prohibited from providing any type of
additional teaching or ‘‘coaching’’ that
would help the provider or supplier
‘‘pass’’ or obtain better scores on the
upcoming accreditation survey.
We further propose at § 488.8(i)(3)
that the AOs or their associated
consulting divisions or companies be
prohibited from providing fee-based
consulting services to a health care
provider or supplier in response to a
complaint received by the AO regarding
that provider or supplier. Our rationale
for this requirement is that AOs are
required by CMS regulation to
investigate and resolve complaints
received regarding their accredited
providers and suppliers (that is, 42 CFR
488.5(a)(4)(ix); 42 CFR 488.5(a)(12)).
This regulatory requirement includes
investigating the complaint and working
with the accredited provider or supplier
to help them resolve any deficient
practices identified in the complaint.
AOs charge a significant fee for their
fee-based consulting. AOs should not
profit by providing fee-based consulting
to a provider and supplier in response
to a complaint that they are regulatorily
required to investigate and resolve. This
proposed regulation would prevent this
from occurring.
We propose at § 488.8(i)(4)(i) to (iv)
that the restrictions upon AO fee-based
consulting would not apply to the
following situations: (1) AO fee-based
consulting services provided during the
24-month period after the date the
initial or re-accreditation survey is
performed (proposed § 488.8(i)(4)(i)); (2)
AO fee-based consulting services
provided to address complaints received
and investigated by the SA regarding an
AO’s accredited provider or supplier in
which one or more condition-level or
immediate jeopardy deficiencies are
identified, provided however that, the
fee-based consulting must occur after
the complaint investigation and survey
has been completed and must only
address those issues identified by the
complaint survey (proposed
§ 488.8(i)(4)(ii)); (3) AO fee-based
consulting services provided to health
care providers or suppliers to which the
AO has never provided accreditation
services (proposed § 488.8(i)(4)(iii)); and
(4) no-cost consulting or general
education provided by the AO about
their accreditation program (proposed
§ 488.8(i)(4)(iv)).
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Proposed § 488.8(i)(4)(ii) would allow
AOs to provide AO fee-based consulting
services in response to complaints
received by the SA regarding an AO’s
accredited provider or supplier.
However, this fee-based consulting must
be provided by the AO after completion
of the SA investigation and complaint
survey. We would permit AO fee-based
consulting services after a complaint is
received by the SA, because the SA, not
the AO, would perform an
investigational survey. Therefore, the
affected provider or supplier should be
permitted to seek fee-based consulting
from its AO, in accordance with the
restrictions stated above, to address the
issues identified in the SA complaint
and complaint survey, if appropriate.
It is important to note that AO feebased consulting should only be
provided when serious deficiencies
have been identified in the SAs
complaint investigation report. By
serious deficiencies, we mean
deficiencies that would be considered
condition level by the SA and the AO.
However, the AO should first work
directly with the provider or supplier,
as part of their accreditation services
package, to resolve the issues identified
in the SAs complaint investigation
report and only provide AO fee-based
consulting if these issues cannot be
resolved successfully, through other
methods. It has always been the duty of
the AOs to address and resolve
complaints received regarding its
accredited providers and suppliers,
whether said complaint is received by
the AO or the SA. An AO receives a
significant fee for the accreditation
services provided. We believe that the
investigation and resolution of
complaints falls squarely under these
paid accreditation services. We do not
believe it appropriate for AOs to offer
fee-based consulting/educational
services in response to each and every
complaint received regarding one of its
accredited providers or suppliers. In
other words, the AOs should not realize
additional profit from its paying
customers, when it has already been
paid to perform the task at hand.
More specifically, we would expect
that an AO not offer fee-based
consulting to an accredited provider or
supplier in response to a complaint,
unless the deficiency(ies) identified in
the complaint are substantiated by the
investigation, and found to be systemic,
widespread, and ingrained in the
culture of the organization. We would
also expect to find that the AO first
attempted to work with the provider or
supplier, as part of the accreditation
services provided, to resolve the
deficiencies identified in the complaint,
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before resorting to fee-based consulting.
Finally, we would expect to find that if
an AO offers fee-based consulting/
educational services to the provider or
supplier, they do so after trying all noncost options available, and that the feebased consulting/education was
reasonably expected to resolve the
deficiencies identified in the compliant.
Proposed § 488.8(i)(4)(ii) requires that
the AO fee-based consulting cannot be
provided until after completion of the
SA’s investigation and complaint
survey. By ‘‘completion of the SA’s
investigation’’, we mean the date upon
which the SA has completed all work
required to investigate the complaint
and has issued its findings. This
restriction is necessary because if the
affected provider or supplier were to
receive fee-based consulting from the
AO prior to the completion of the SA’s
investigation and complaint survey, the
affected provider or supplier potentially
could alter processes, operations or
documentation, all of which could
compromise the SAs investigation of the
complaint. In such a scenario, the
investigation and complaint survey
report would not be an accurate
reflection of the issues identified in the
complaint. While it may seem counterproductive for the affected provider or
supplier to obtain AO-fee-based
consulting after completion of the SA’s
investigation and complaint survey, we
believe that it would actually be helpful
to the affected provider or supplier.
After completion of the SA’s complaint
survey and investigation, the affected
provider or supplier will receive a
complaint investigation report, which
will allow the AO to tailor the fee-based
consulting services or other educational
activities to address any deficiencies
identified in said report. Also, through
AO fee-based consulting services, the
AO could work with the affected
provider or supplier, at their own pace,
to implement long-lasting and
sustainable changes that address the
deficiencies identified, as opposed to
the implementation of quick temporary
solutions or corrective action prior to
completion of the complaint
investigation. A quick temporary
solution would be one that the provider
or supplier implements on a short-term
basis, typically only during the time that
the surveyors are present. By contrast, a
long-lasting and sustainable solution
would be one in which the provider or
supplier implements the solution,
orients the staff to its requirements,
regularly monitors for compliance with
the requirements and corrects noncompliance on a continual basis.
Proposed § 488.8(i)(4)(iii) would
further allow AOs to provide fee-based
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consulting services to health care
providers or suppliers the AO does not
accredit at the time the consulting
services are furnished. If the AO has not
provided accreditation services to a
provider or supplier at the time feebased consulting services are provided,
the AO would not have a preexisting
financial relationship with that provider
or supplier. Thus, no conflict of interest
would exist.
Proposed § 488.8(i)(5) would require
AOs to report information about the feebased consulting provided to the
providers and suppliers they accredit to
CMS. See section IV.B.4 for information
about this proposed rule.
Proposed § 488.8(i)(6) provides for
penalties for AOs that provide fee-based
consulting in violation of the
restrictions set forth on proposed
§ 488.8(i)(1) to § 488.8(i)(3). See section
IV.B.5 of this proposed rule for a
discussion of this proposed section.
We propose at § 488.8(i)(7) that the
requirements at § 488.8(i) would become
applicable 1 year from the effective date
of the final rule to allow for an
appropriate time of transition. We
believe that this would provide ample
time for the AOs to prepare for and
implement the proposed requirements
at § 488.8(i).
The conflict inherent in AO fee-based
consulting on accreditation standards
while an AO is also performing surveys
to determine compliance with those
same standards is what the proposed
restrictions on AO fee-based consulting
seek to address. An entity that collects
fees to remedy findings or prepare for a
survey performed by another arm of the
same entity creates a perceived conflict
of interest that undermines the integrity
of the health and safety oversight
process. These proposals seek to allow
continuance of independent consulting
activities while addressing concerns
related to fee-based consulting
performed by the AOs, themselves.
We note that this proposed restriction
on AO fee-based consulting services at
§§ 488.8(i)(1), 488.8(i)(2), and
§ 488.8(i)(3) would not prohibit the AOs
from providing no-cost education, such
as general education about the AO’s
accreditation and survey process and
mock surveys. The restrictions on AO
fee-based consulting would also not
prohibit AOs from providing education
about the Medicare conditions, AO
standards, or survey process, to its
accredited health care providers and
suppliers, as long as this education is
provided completely free of charge. This
means that the AO would not be
allowed to raise the price of their
accreditation services because of the
provision of this education, or do
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anything else that would cause the
provider or supplier to incur any
additional costs for the education
provided by the AO, its consulting
division or separate consulting company
to the providers or suppliers it has
contracted with to provide accreditation
services. We believe that it is important
that health care providers and suppliers
receive education that would assist
them in compliance, so long as it is not
provided on a fee basis, which would
introduce another financial relationship
between the AO and the provider or
supplier that could cause a conflict of
interest.
We also note that other CMS programs
have established similar conflict of
interest and independence provisions
for organizations that have a public trust
role in assessing the quality of services
provided. For example, in the Medicaid
program, CMS has established
regulatory standards with respect to the
independent judgment of any External
Quality Review Organization that
reviews the quality of the Medicaid
managed care organization for the state
(42 CFR 438.354). These regulations
establish, among other requirements,
that an External Quality Review
Organization may not review any
managed care entity for which that
organization has also conducted a
private accreditation review within the
previous 3 years.
Our proposal to place restrictions on
the provision of fee-based consulting by
AOs to their current accredited
providers and suppliers is authorized by
section 1865(a)(2) of the Act, which
gives CMS the broad power of oversight
over the activities of AOs. The provision
of AO fee-based consulting is one of the
factors in section 1865(a)(2) of the Act
that should be considered in
determining whether a national
accreditation body demonstrates that all
of the applicable conditions or
requirements of this title are met or
exceeded.
4. Proposal To Require AOs To Provide
CMS With Information About the FeeBased Consulting They Provide
(Proposed § 488.8(i)(5))
We proposed at § 488.8(i)(1),
§ 488.8(i)(2), and § 488.8(i)(3) to place
restrictions on the fee-based consulting
services provided by AOs. In order to
enforce our proposals, we propose at
§ 488.8(i)(5) to require the AOs that
provide fee-based consulting services to
submit information to CMS, on a
calendar year bi-annual basis, about the
fee-based consulting services they
provide.
We propose to add a requirement at
§ 488.8(i)(5) that would require the AOs
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that accredit Medicare-certified
providers and suppliers to provide CMS
with information regarding the feebased consulting services no later than
15 days after the end of each calendar
year bi-annual (6-month) period.
More specifically, this proposal
would require these AOs to submit a
document which contains the following
information to CMS:
• Whether the AO or an associated
consulting division or company
established by the AO provides feebased consulting services.
• The names and CMS Certification
Number (CCN) numbers of all health
care providers and suppliers to which
the AO or its associated consulting
division or company has provided feebased consulting services during the
previous calendar year quarter.
• The dates the AO fee-based
consulting services were provided to
each provider and supplier listed.
• Whether the accrediting
organization has, at any time in the past
provided, or is currently providing
accreditation services to each health
care provider or supplier listed in said
document, and if so, the date the
accreditation services were provided.
• The date of the most recent
accreditation survey performed, and the
date the next re-accreditation survey is
due to be performed for each health care
provider and supplier listed in said
document.
• A description of the AO fee-based
consulting services provided to each
health care provider or supplier listed in
said document.
We are further proposing that the two
bi-annual reporting periods would
consist of January 1st to June 30th and
July 1st to December 31st each year. The
submission deadline for the first period
would be July 15th each year. The
submission deadline for the second
period would be January 15th each year.
This would ensure that AOs are not
providing fee-based consulting services
to providers and suppliers prior to an
initial survey, within 12 months prior to
a re-accreditation survey, or in response
to a complaint received regarding an
accredited provider or supplier. In
addition, this information would also
allow CMS to see the number of
providers and suppliers to which the
AOs are providing fee-based consulting
services.
We propose that these provisions
would become applicable 1 year from
the effective date of final rule to allow
for an appropriate time of transition. We
believe that this would provide the AOs
with ample time to prepare for and
implement this requirement.
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5. Proposal for Penalties for AOs Found
To Be Providing AO Fee-Based
Consulting Services to the Health Care
Providers or Suppliers They Accredit in
Violation of the Restrictions in 42 CFR
488.5(i)(1) Through § 488.5(i)(3)
(Proposed § 488.8(i)(6))
In section IV.B.3 of this proposed
rule, we propose to implement
regulations that place restrictions on the
fee-based consulting services AOs
provide to the health care providers and
suppliers that they accredit. In order to
enforce these regulations, we propose at
§ 488.8(i)(6) to implement penalties for
the violation of the restrictions on AO
fee-based consulting.
We propose at § 488.8(i)(6)(i) that if an
AO is found to be in violation of the
restrictions set forth in paragraphs
§ 488.8(i)(1), (2) and (3), CMS may
initiate penalties against the AO. These
penalties are set forth in proposed
§ 488.8(i)(6)(i) and § 488.8(i)(6)(ii) and
include placing the AO on a program
review, and involuntary termination of
the CMS-approved AO’s accreditation
program(s).
Whether or not we impose the
penalties provided in § 488.8(i)(6)(i) and
(ii) would depend on the severity of the
violation and the facts and
circumstances surrounding the
violation. Such facts might include the
number of providers and suppliers that
contracted for prohibited AO fee-based
consulting services, the number of times
the AO violated the restrictions of
§ 488.8(i).
The purpose of these proposed
provisions is to discourage AOs from
violating the proposed restrictions on
the provision of fee-based consulting to
the providers and suppliers they
accredit.
We propose that these provisions
would become applicable 1 year from
the effective date of the final rule. We
believe that this would provide ample
time for the AOs to prepare for the
implementation of the requirements of
this rule.
6. Proposal To Require Accrediting
Organizations To Have Written FeeBased Consulting Firewall Policies and
Procedures (§ 488.8(j))
We propose at § 488.8(j) to require any
AO that provides fee-based consulting
services or its associated fee-based
consulting division or company to have
written fee-based consulting ‘‘firewall’’
policies and procedures. We have
defined the terms ‘‘consulting division’’
and ‘‘associated company’’ in section
IX.B.3 of this proposed rule. We define
the term ‘‘firewall’’ as the complete and
total separation between the AO’s
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accreditation activities and its fee-based
consulting services.
We propose that these firewall
policies and procedures must, at a
minimum, include the following
provisions: at paragraph (j)(1)(i) the
AO’s fee-based consulting services must
be provided by a separate division of the
AO or separate business entity (that is
company or corporation) from the AO;
at paragraph (j)(1)(ii) the AO’s fee-based
consulting division or separate company
must maintain separate staff from that of
the AO’s accreditation division(s) to
ensure that the fee-based consulting
division staff do not perform AO’s
accreditation division functions and
that the AO’s accreditation division staff
do not perform fee-based consulting
division functions; and at paragraph
(j)(1)(iii), the AO’s accreditation staff
and surveyors would be prohibited from
marketing the AO’s fee-based consulting
services to the AO’s accreditation
clients.
The purpose of the provisions of
proposed § 488.8(j) is to ensure that the
AO maintains a complete division
between their fee-based consulting
program and their accreditation
program. In other words, we seek to
require the AOs to prevent any comingling of fee-based consulting
activities and staff with their
accreditation activities and staff. These
requirements are necessary because
several commenters to our 2018 AO
Conflict of Interest RFI, noted concern
that while some AOs that provide feebased consulting have such firewall
policies in place, they have been
breached. For example, one commenter
stated that one AO’s accreditation staff
aggressively marketed that AO’s feebased consulting services to his health
care facility. In addition, during a CMS
validation pilot joint survey with an
AO, a SA surveyor witnessed the AO’s
surveyors providing detailed education
about the survey process to the
healthcare facility staff prior to the start
of the survey. This is inappropriate
because surveys are to be unannounced
to prevent the facility from preparing for
the survey. At the beginning of a survey,
a brief entrance conference is held for
the purpose of introducing the survey
team, providing the survey agenda to
the facility staff, and telling the facility
what records the surveyors will be
reviewing during the survey. However,
providing detailed information about
the survey process and what areas the
AO is going to focus on during the
survey gives the facility an advantage
and time to prepare for the survey. This
negates the purpose of requiring surveys
to be unannounced and could allow the
facility staff time to clean up and
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remove deficiencies that would
normally be present. In addition,
providing such education to a health
care facility prior to a survey could
assist that facility in getting a better
survey report.
We do not currently have any
regulations that provide oversight of the
fee-based consulting services provided
by AOs or their separate divisions or
companies. Likewise, we do not
currently have any regulations that
specifically require AOs that provide
fee-based consulting services to have
written firewall policies or regulations
that provide requirements for such
policies. Regulations are needed so that
CMS may ensure that an AO’s fee-based
consulting remains separate from an
AO’s accreditation activities. This
division is necessary to reduce the
conflict on interest associated with the
provision of AO fee-based consulting
services.
7. Proposal To Prohibit AO Owners,
Surveyors, and Other Employees From
Involvement With the Survey and
Accreditation Process for Health Care
Facilities With Which They Have an
Interest or Relationship (Proposed
§ 488.8(k))
Surveyors must rely on their
professional judgment, in addition to
federal rules and guidelines, to
determine compliance. An AO surveyor,
owner, or other employees’ interest in or
relationship with a health care facility
that the AO accredits could present a
conflict of interest that could affect the
results of a survey in several ways. For
example, an AO owner, surveyor, or
other AO employee involved in the
survey of a healthcare facility with
which the individual has an interest or
relationship could have compromised
judgment, consciously or
unconsciously, regarding that facility.
For example, a surveyor with an interest
in or relationship with the health care
facility being surveyed could be
inclined to minimize or ignore
deficiencies, possibly because he or she
believes these deficiencies are not
representative of the facility. A surveyor
who has an interest in or relationship
with the facility being surveyed could
possibly influence the findings made by
other members of the survey team by
asking them to give the facility credit for
things not observed, since he or she can
‘‘vouch’’ for the facility.
Even if the AO employee with the
interest in or relationship with the
facility being surveyed is not part of the
survey team for the facility, he or she
could still potentially influence the
members of the survey team prior to or
after the survey. For example,
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attempting to influence the survey
decision making process, or the AO’s
survey follow-up activities by
attempting to discuss the facility with
the survey team, such as explaining the
facility’s policies and procedures to the
survey team, or even actively advocating
on the facility’s behalf, potentially
influencing their analysis of observed
survey results.
An AO surveyor, owner, or other
employee that has an interest in or
relationship with a health care facility
the AO accredits might have additional
motivation to improperly give that
health care facility notice about the
survey ahead of the scheduled survey
date. Surveys are required to be
unannounced to prevent the facility
from preparing for the survey by
activities such as unusual cleaning
activities, painting, clearing
obstructions from halls and entrances,
covering up and hiding deficiencies,
coaching staff, and otherwise preparing
in advance for the survey. If the survey
is unannounced, the health care facility
is not able to make advance
preparations so that the survey team is
able to assess the facility in its usual
condition and observe the typical
standard of care provided.
We propose to add a new requirement
at § 488.8(k)(1) to prohibit AOs from
allowing AO owners, surveyors, or other
employees from participating in the
survey and accreditation process for
health care facilities with which they
have had an interest or relationship
within the previous 2 years. At
proposed § 488.8(k)(1) we would require
that if an AO owner, surveyor or other
employee has an interest in or
relationship with a health care facility
accredited by the AO, they would be
prohibited from: (1) participating in the
survey of that health care facility
(proposed § 488.8(k)(1)(i)); (2) having
input into the results of the survey and
accreditation for that health care facility
(proposed § 488.8(k)(1)(ii)); (3) having
involvement with the pre- or postsurvey activities for that health care
facility (proposed § 488.8(k)(1)(iii)); or
(4) having contact with or access to the
records for the survey and accreditation
of that health care facility (proposed
§ 488.8(k)(iv)). Proposed
§ 488.5(a)(10)(iii) lists proposed
prohibited interests in or relationships
with a health care facility accredited by
the AO, which would include, but not
be limited to, the following situations:
(1) being employed as a SA surveyor; (2)
being employed in a health care facility
that is accredited by the AO; (3) having
an ownership interest in a health care
facility that is accredited by the AO; (4)
serving as a director of or trustee for a
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health care facility that is accredited by
the AO; (5) serving on a utilization
review committee of a health care
facility that is accredited by the AO; (6)
accepting any fees or payments from a
health care facility or group of health
care facilities that is/are accredited by
the AO; (7) accepting fees for personal
services, contract services, referral
services, or for furnishing supplies to a
health care facility that is accredited by
the AO; (8) providing consulting
services to a health care facility that the
AO accredits; (9) having members of an
immediate family engaged in any of the
above activities; or (10) engaging in any
activities during the course of the
survey of the facility that would be or
cause a conflict of interest.
We propose at § 488.8(k)(2) to define
the term ‘‘immediate family member’’ as
any person that has a lineal familial or
marital relationship with the AO owner,
surveyor or other employee. Immediate
family members would include a
husband or wife, birth or adoptive
parent, child, or sibling; stepparent,
stepchild, stepbrother, or stepsister;
father-in-law, mother-in-law, son-inlaw, daughter-in-law, brother-in-law, or
sister-in-law; grandparent or grandchild;
and spouse of a grandparent or
grandchild. This definition is consistent
with the definition used for the home
health and hospice conflict of interest
requirements. This definition is
required for the purposes of
§ 488.8(k)(1), which states that a conflict
of interest can also exist when an AO
owner, surveyor or other employee has
an interest in or relationship with a
health care facility the AO accredits.
Allowing an AO owner, surveyor or
other employee that has an interest in or
relationship with a health care facility
the AO accredits would not only be
inappropriate but could result in
inaccurate survey results and/or
preferential treatment of the facility.
C. Proposal To Require the AOs That
Accredit Medicare-Certified Providers
and Suppliers To Use Medicare
Conditions; and Strengthened Survey
Process Comparability (Proposed
§ 488.4(a)(1) and (2))
Section 1865(a)(1) of the Act requires
that if the Secretary finds that the
requirements for accreditation from an
accreditation organization demonstrates
that a provider entity meets or exceeds
all applicable conditions, the Secretary
must deem such requirements to be met
by the provider entity. However, the
statutory language of ‘‘meets or
exceeds’’ currently allows AOs to
develop standards that are more
stringent than those of Medicare. When
an AO applies for ‘‘deeming authority’’,
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we determine whether those standards
meet or exceed ours. In accordance with
§ 488.5(e), CMS publishes a proposed
rule when CMS receives a complete
application from a national accrediting
organization seeking CMS’s approval of
an accreditation program. The proposed
notice identifies the organization and
the type of providers or suppliers to be
covered by the accreditation program
and provides 30 calendar days for the
public to submit comments to CMS.
CMS subsequently publishes a final
notice, rendering its decision to either
approve or disapprove a national
accrediting organization’s application,
within 210 calendar days from the date
CMS determines the AO’s application
was complete. The final notice outlines
a summary of the findings of CMS’s
review and any corrective action which
was required to be taken by the AO in
order to be considered to meet or exceed
our standards, or comparable survey
processes. When CMS approves or
reapproves an accrediting organization
for deemed status, the approval may not
exceed 6 years.
We are concerned that the current
application review processes under
§ 488.5 does not go far enough. Some of
our concerns with the efficacy of the AO
application review process are based on
the results of the initial and renewal
applications and the SA findings, as
noted below:
• AO Application Reviews: Between
2017 to September 2021, we received a
total of 22 AO applications for review.
After review of these applications, we
returned all 22 applications to the AOs
because we found that the AOs’
standards were not comparable to ours.
AO most common standards requiring
revisions to meet or exceed Medicare
conditions included: governing body,
physical environment, emergency
preparedness patient rights, medical/
clinical records and care planning.
Additionally, AO standards regarding
coordination of services; skilled
professional services; infection control;
staff responsibilities and quality
improvement assessment programs
(QAPI) all required revisions by the
AOs.
• SA Findings: In FY 2019, CMS
conducted 119 hospital surveys
(including psychiatric hospitals) and
196 non-hospital surveys totaling 315
validation surveys. In FY 2019, the SAs
found serious ‘‘condition-level’’
instances of non-compliance 60 times in
accredited hospitals (including
psychiatric hospitals), and 51 instances
in which the AO missed the
deficiencies. In these instances, even
though the AOs did not find comparable
levels of non-compliance, this non-
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compliance was sufficient to start
enforcement proceedings against the
subject hospitals. These results
demonstrated that the AOs may have
failed to ensure their facilities were
meeting Medicare’s minimum
standards. In total, between FY 2017
and FY 2019, CMS conducted 363
hospital (including psychiatric
hospitals) validation surveys, with SAs
identifying condition-level noncompliance a total of 185 times and 158
instances in which the AOs missed
comparable deficiencies. Between FY
2017 and FY 2019, CMS also conducted
a total of 369 validation surveys for
HHAs and Hospices, with SAs
identifying condition-level noncompliance a total of 57 times and 50
instances in which the AOs missed
comparable deficiencies.10 This data has
amplified CMS’ concerns related to the
comparability of survey processes as
well as the need for increased AO
oversight.
Therefore, under the statutory
authority granted to us under section
1865(a)(1) of the Act, we propose
revisions at § 488.4(a)(1) to require that
the AOs that accredit Medicare-certified
providers and suppliers use the
applicable Medicare conditions as their
minimum accreditation standards. This
means that the AOs must incorporate
the Medicare conditions identical to our
regulations within their accreditation
standards for their deeming programs.
However, AOs would be allowed to use
additional accreditation standards that
exceed the Medicare conditions, as
permitted under section 1865(a)(1) of
the Act. We would, however, require the
AOs’ to clearly delineate their
additional accreditation standards that
exceed the Medicare conditions when
seeking CMS approval for deeming
authority.
The requirement that the AOs identify
the Medicare conditions as their
accreditation standards would also
allow providers and suppliers to know
what the minimum Medicare deeming
standards are and where the AO
standards exceed these standards
through its accreditation program, as
permitted under section 1865(a)(1) of
the Act. Facilities are expected to
comply with regulatory requirements of
CMS and the accreditation standards of
the AO, however we have found that in
certain circumstances, the facilities
were more familiar with AO standards
and did not fully understand the AO
10 FY 2020 Report to Congress (RTC): Review of
Medicare’s Program Oversight of Accrediting
Organizations (AOs) and the Clinical Laboratory
Improvement Amendments of 1988 (CLIA)
Validation Program https://www.cms.gov/files/
document/qso-22-06-ao-clia.pdf.
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standards are more stringent than the
Medicare conditions. There were several
instances in which our comparability
review of AO standards under § 488.5
resulted in the need for AOs to correct
deficiencies in their survey standards
and processes, because we determined
that the minimum Medicare conditions
would have not been adhered to.
Despite these frequent reviews, the
regulations only require AO standards
to be comparable, not exact to the
Medicare conditions, therefore
increasing the likelihood of gaps in
interpretation.
This proposed requirement would
increase the likelihood that AO
standards and processes would meet or
exceed our regulatory requirements and
transparency for providers to
understand when the AO has more
stringent standards, further explained in
sections IV.D of this proposed rule.
We also propose to strengthen our
process for comparability review of the
AOs survey processes at proposed
§ 488.4(a)(2), further explained in
sections IV.E and IV.F of this proposed
rule. More specifically, we propose to
re-designate existing paragraph (a)(1) as
(a)(3) and re-designate existing
paragraph (a)(2) as (a)(4) with revisions,
and add a new requirement at
§ 488.4(a)(1). This provision would
require the AOs that accredit Medicarecertified providers and suppliers to use
the exact text of the applicable Medicare
conditions set forth in the applicable
CMS regulations for each provider and
supplier type as their minimum
accreditation requirements. However,
the AOs would be free to establish
additional accreditation requirements
that exceed Medicare conditions as
permitted by section 1865(a)(1) of the
Act. We propose to add language at
§ 488.4(a)(2) that AOs use a survey
process comparable to the processes set
out for SAs in the SOM and approved
by CMS, as outlined throughout
§ 488.5(a)(4). We also propose that these
requirements and changes at paragraphs
(a)(1) and (2) would be applicable
beginning 1 year from the effective date
of the final rule.
These proposed changes to
§ 488.4(a)(1) and § 488.4 (a)(2) would
align national health and safety
standards across all AOs and strengthen
the survey processes used by the AOs.
We further believe that our proposal
would ensure uniformity and
transparency of the surveys performed
by the AOs for deeming purposes and
improve CMS’ ability to accurately
evaluate an AO’s performance.
We propose to re-designate the
current § 488.4(a)(1) and (a)(2) to
§ 488.4(a)(3) and (a)(4). We also propose
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D. Proposal To Revise the Crosswalk
Requirements at § 488.5(a)(3)
As a result of our proposal at
§ 488.4(a)(1) to require the AOs to
incorporate the Medicare conditions (as
defined in § 488.1) into their
accreditation standards for their
deeming programs, we would also
modify the regulations at § 488.5 that
would be affected by this requirement.
Section 488.5(a)(3) requires the AOs to
submit with their initial and renewal
application, ‘‘[a] detailed crosswalk (in
table format) that identifies, for each of
the applicable Medicare conditions or
requirements, the exact language of the
organization’s comparable accreditation
requirements and standards.’’ Because
section 1865(a) of the Act allows AOs to
have accreditation standards for their
deeming programs that meet or exceed
the Medicare conditions, the content,
format, and wording of AOs’
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§ 482.ll(c)
Medicare conditions Language
The hospital must assure that personnel
are licensed or meet other applicable
standards that are required by State or
local laws.
As seen in this example, the AO
standard number identification may
vary from CMS’ CFR regulatory citation.
Additionally, as previously described,
CMS is not restricting AOs from
exceeding the Medicare conditions.
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accreditation standards frequently differ
significantly from that of the Medicare
conditions. Therefore, we require the
AOs to provide a crosswalk which
identifies the applicable Medicare
conditions that corresponds to each of
the AO’s accreditation standards. The
purpose of this crosswalk is to help us
determine to which Medicare condition
each AO accreditation standard
corresponds.
Since we proposed at § 488.4(a)(1) to
require the AOs to incorporate the
Medicare conditions into their
accreditation standards, it would no
longer be necessary to require the AOs
to submit a crosswalk that provides
‘‘comparable’’ standards. Instead, we
propose that AOs would need to
provide a crosswalk which
demonstrates that the AO has
incorporated the language of the
Medicare conditions, as well as provide
the AO standards which exceed the
Medicare conditions (see Table 2 in
section VI.B.I of this proposed rule for
an example). Similar to the existing
process for submission of the AO’s
crosswalk during an application, we
propose to revise § 488.5(a)(3) to require
a crosswalk that demonstrates the AO’s
use of CMS’s requirements and
standards. AOs would provide
additional or exceeding standards under
their use of the required exact language
and annotate the exceeding standards.
This would further allow providers and
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AO
Standard
Number
XX.000
AO Standards Language
For hospitals under CMS deeming
authority: The hospital must assure that
personnel are licensed or meet other
applicable standards that are required by
state or local laws.
Therefore, if an AO believes that
additional accreditation standards
would need to apply to their deemed
facilities, an AO would submit the
exceeding requirements under the
particular standard. Using the same
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suppliers to know what the minimum
Medicare deeming standards are and
where the AO standards exceed these
standards through its accreditation
program.
We propose to revise § 488.5(a)(3) to
first remove the requirement that the
AO provide a ‘‘comparable’’ standard
for each of the applicable Medicare
conditions or requirements and replace
it with the ’’ incorporation of the CMS
requirements in the AO accreditation
standards for any deeming program.’’
Second, in the application that is
submitted to CMS for review, the AO
would have to submit a detailed
crosswalk. We would not expect the
AOs to use the same survey tags (a
letter/number identifier, for example,
A–0001) as used by SA surveyors. For
example, CMS’ regulatory requirement
at § 482.11(c) requires hospitals to
‘‘assure that personnel are licensed or
meet other applicable standards that are
required by State or local laws.’’ In this
example and aligned with our proposed
provisions, the AO would be required to
have an accreditation standard for its
hospital deeming program which would
state ‘‘The hospital must assure that
personnel are licensed or meet other
applicable standards that are required
by State or local laws,’’ with the AOs
applicable standard number. Using
Table 2 in section VI.B.1 of this
proposed rule for this example, the
crosswalk would appear as follows:
example, the AO would submit a
crosswalk similar to the example below.
As seen, AO Standard Number XX.001
would be exceeding the Medicare
conditions.
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to add requirements at paragraphs (a)(1)
and (a)(2) that AOs incorporate the
Medicare conditions and use survey
processes comparable to those of the
SA. We also refer readers to additional
proposed changes made to § 488.4(a)(4)
in section VI.O of this proposed rule.
The proposal to require AOs to
incorporate the Medicare conditions (as
defined in § 488.1) as their minimum
accreditation standards would become
applicable 1 year after the effective date
of the final rule.
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§ 482.1 l(c)
Medicare conditions Language
The hospital must assure that personnel
are licensed or meet other applicable
standards that are required by State or
local laws.
Establishing a consistent standard
across all AOs would bring transparency
to the accreditation process. This would
allow providers and suppliers to know
what the minimum Medicare deeming
conditions are and where the AO
standards exceed these Medicare
conditions through its accreditation
program. It would also provide greater
uniformity between an AO certification
survey at a facility and a state survey
that may be subsequently performed at
that same facility, which could include
a complaint survey or a validation
survey.
Additionally, from CMS’ oversight
perspective of the AO applications for
deeming authority and review of the
crosswalks over the last several years,
we have also identified that AOs have
inadvertently omitted certain standards
in their crosswalk submissions.
Therefore, while the impression that
requiring a crosswalk for AOs may seem
unnecessary as we would be requiring
AOs to incorporate the Medicare
conditions into their accreditation
standards, it is imperative that CMS be
able to ensure the AO has standards for
each Medicare condition. The review of
the exceeding standards is also critical
for CMS to ensure that any additional
requirements established under
accreditation for deemed providers or
suppliers do not conflict with the
Medicare conditions.
We propose that the proposed
provision would be applicable 1 year
after the effective date of the final rule.
E. Proposal To Strengthen the
Comparability of the Survey Process
Between the AOs and the States
An AO must demonstrate to CMS that
it has the ability to effectively evaluate
a health care facility’s compliance with
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AO
Standard
Number
AO Standards Language
XX.000
For hospitals under CMS deeming
authority: The hospital must assure that
personnel are licensed or meet other
applicable standards that are required by
state or local laws.
XX.001
Hospitals must verify credentials of all
providers including all contracted staff
or individuals under arrangement. The
verification must be completed prior to
the official hiring of the staff
the Medicare conditions using survey
processes that are comparable to those
survey methods, procedures, and forms
required by CMS and as implemented
by the SAs. A general description of
SAs’ survey processes are set out at
§ 488.26 and specified in the SOM.
As part of the application process as
set out at § 488.5, CMS is required to
complete a survey processes review as
part of the AO application review
process. The purpose of the survey
processes review is to determine
whether the AO’s survey processes are
comparable to the CMS survey
processes. The survey process
comparability review is done by
reviewing information in the
application, such as, the AO’s survey
activity guides, organizational
procedures for surveyors, surveyor
training materials and AO survey
requirements. CMS also conducts an inperson observation of an AO survey
(carried out by a CMS survey
observation team) as part of CMS’
review of an AO’s application. The
purpose of the survey observation is to
ensure that the AO surveyors follow the
processes set out in the application and
to ensure that the AO surveyors evaluate
all Medicare requirements.
Sections 1865(a)(1) and 1865(a)(2) of
the Act require us, when making this
finding, to consider a national AO’s
‘‘survey procedures’’ and ‘‘. . . its
ability to provide adequate resources for
conducting required surveys and
supplying information for use in
enforcement activities, its monitoring
procedures for provider entities found
out of compliance with the conditions
or requirements. . . .’’ Our
longstanding requirements at
§ 488.4(a)(3) implemented this statutory
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provision by requiring AOs to provide
us with detailed information on their
survey processes, and our regulations at
§ 488.5 and § 488.8 set out the
procedures for comparability review.
We further discussed AO survey
procedures’ comparability to our SA
survey processes and the SOM in the
May 22, 2015 final rule published in the
Federal Register, entitled ‘‘Medicare
and Medicaid Programs: Revisions to
Deeming Authority Survey,
Certification, and Enforcement
Procedures’’ (80 FR 29795) (hereinafter
referred to as the ‘‘2015 AO final rule’’).
We assess comparability by reviewing
the information in the AO’s application
in light of the SOM survey process
requirements for SAs, which
implements the survey process
requirements found in parts 488 and
489 of our regulations. The role of the
SOM is to provide explicit guidance on
the process to assess providers’ and
suppliers’ compliance with our
regulatory requirements. We do
however note, that the AOs are already
required to submit the documentation
and that most AOs provide this within
their applications, therefore we do not
believe this imposes any additional
burden on the AOs, as this has been a
long-standing expectation as described
in the preamble of this proposed rule
and the 2015 AO final rule (80 FR
29795) which stated that while the
explicit reference to the SOM was
removed, ‘‘this will not change our
practice of assessing comparability in
light of the SOM survey process
requirements for SAs, which implement
survey process requirements found in
parts 488 and 489 of our regulations
governing certification and provider
agreements.
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As previously noted, CMS received 22
AO applications between January 2017
and August 2021. Of those 22
applications, 14 were returned to the
AO for revisions to the AO’s survey
processes and policies, distinct from the
finding that all 22 AO’s standards were
not initially comparable with the
Medicare conditions. These required
survey process revisions included
ensuring all surveys were unannounced
in accordance with § 488.5(a)(1)(i),
which we discuss in section IV.A of this
proposed rule. Other applications were
returned for inconsistencies with our
patient or representative complaint
processing guidance set out in chapter
5 of the SOM. Additionally, among
these 22 applications, we identified
concerns within the AO survey
processes during the on-site survey
observations, as authorized under
§ 488.8(h). The following concerns were
noted during the survey observations for
these 22 applications:
• The survey citations and rationales
for citing or not citing ‘‘Governing
Body’’ Medicare condition violations
(for example, 42 CFR 482.12) were
inconsistent with CMS’ SA survey
methodologies;
• The AO’s failure to enforce the
deadlines by which facilities must come
into compliance after receiving adverse
survey results;
• Conflicting timeframe(s), such as
the required number of days required to
conduct follow-up activities, including
follow-up surveys, for facilities that
have previously demonstrated noncompliance at the condition-level; and
• Incorrect number of medical
records reviews during a survey. (CMS
requires that AO surveyors review a
specific number of medical records,
based on the facilities’ patient volume,
to ensure the surveyor have an accurate
picture of patient care services provided
within the facility).
CMS’ concerns about the failures of
AOs to conduct in-depth investigations;
the lack of consistency and
comparability exhibited by our having
to return all received AO applications
for corrections in survey standards and
processes; the excessive frequency of
disparate findings between AOs and
SAs, as further explained in section IV.I
of this proposed rule; and the failure to
review medical records, as required by
SA procedures, all strengthen our
resolve to ensure consistency in AO
performance. Our initial and renewal
application reviews are the foundation
for our oversight of AOs to determine
the AO’s ability to ensure facilities
adhere to minimum Medicare
conditions.
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Because of these disparities, we
propose to strengthen our requirements
under § 488.5. We refer readers to our
discussion of these proposals found in
section IV.F of this proposed rule, that
would require AOs that accredit
Medicare-certified providers and
suppliers to use a survey process that is
comparable to the survey processes and
procedures used by CMS and the SA.
We note that this has been the
expectation under the existing
requirements, as a condition of
obtaining and retaining deeming
authority. We propose to increase the
specificity of our application and
reapplication requirements for national
AOs to improve documentation that
would demonstrate this comparability.
F. Proposal To Revise the AO
Application Documentation
Requirements Related to the Survey
Processes (§ 488.5(a)(4);
§ 488.5(a)(4)(iii); § 488.5(a)(4)(v);
§ 488.5(a)(4)(vii); § 488.5(a)(4)(xi);
§ 488.5(a)(5); § 488.5(a)(6);
§ 488.5(a)(12); § 488.5(a)(13))
To achieve our goal to require the
AOs to use a survey process that is
comparable to that used by CMS and the
SAs (and in alignment with our
proposal at § 488.4(a)(2) regarding
comparable survey processes), we
propose the following revisions and
additions to the existing AO application
regulation requirements.
1. Proposed Revisions to
§ 488.5(a)(4)(Description of Survey
Process)
At § 488.5(a)(4), we propose to add
language which includes what we
believe to be the core fundamental
activities of the survey process, such as
pre survey preparation; offsite
preparation; entrance interview and
activities; information gathering and
investigation, analysis of information;
exit conference; post-survey activities;
and statement of deficiencies-related
activities. These are processes used by
the SA which are needed to ensure that
a Medicare-participating provider or
supplier receives an unbiased,
independent survey.
We have observed, both in our on-site
observation of AOs during the existing
process set out at § 488.8(h), as well as
during the VRP pilot conducted 2018
through 2019, that AOs often provided
daily briefings to and had frequent
discussions with the management of the
surveyed facility whose purpose was
not clearly described in the AO’s
applications. We noted that these
‘‘meetings’’ with facility management
impeded or did not allow for sufficient
time for the survey team to complete
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survey activities, such as direct
observations or interviews.
Therefore, the proposal to add the
core activities, as well as the revisions
outlined below, would further
strengthen comparability between SAs
and AOs, while continuing to allow for
flexibilities in the survey processes used
by AOs. These requirements, as revised,
shall become applicable beginning [date
1 year after the effective date of the final
rule].
2. Proposed Revisions to
§ 488.5(a)(4)(iii) (Documentation of
Surveyor Forms and Guidance)
Section 488.5(a)(4)(iii) currently
requires that AOs applying for deeming
authority provide, among other
documentation, copies of the
organizations survey forms, guidelines
and instructions to surveyors. We
propose to be more specific about the
level of detail we require from the
survey instructions and guidance the
AO provides to us when seeking our
approval. Specifically, we propose to
require detailed information regarding
how the AO surveys for facility
compliance with the following core
activities or standards within the
Medicare Conditions, such as:
Governing Body; Patient Rights;
Emergency Preparedness; Quality
Assessment and Performance
Improvement; Medical Staff; Nursing
Services; Medical Records Services; and
Infection Control. These core activities
and standards are part of every state
survey and based on Medicare
Conditions. With respect to each of
these survey subject areas, we would
require the applying AO to provide
documentation on the instructions it
provides for surveying these Medicare
conditions, including survey probes,
interview questions, and methods for
their own review of facility
documentation pertaining to these
Medicare conditions.
It has become evident through our
validation and comparability reviews of
AOs that the documentation we
currently request from them no longer
suffices to adequately determine
whether the AO surveyors are
investigating these Medicare conditions
sufficiently to ensure the health and
safety of Medicare beneficiaries and
other patients. AOs have failed to
survey adequately for facility
compliance with their respective
documentation requirements, including
specific standards or survey processes.
We also propose that AOs submit their
patient and staff interview questions. By
having access to these questionnaires,
we would be able to determine whether
there are gaps in the survey processes
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which are leading to the disparity
findings, as we have seen in our
validation surveys.
3. Proposed Revisions to § 488.5(a)(4)(v)
(Survey Review Process)
At § 488.5(a)(4)(v), we propose to add
additional areas clarifying and
strengthening the requirement that AOs
provide a description of their document
review processes in their approval
applications. We propose to add that
AOs must describe processes and
surveyor procedures related to the
review of medical records, medical staff
credentialing procedures; personnel
files (including staff competency); and
the number of patient observations,
patient interviews and staff and facility
interviews.
We have noticed that many AOs fail
to review adequate numbers of records
for the provider/supplier type involved.
In the review of the 22 AO applications
received between 2017 and September
2021, a total of nine AOs were identified
to have not reviewed the adequate
number or records. Additionally, we
have observed that some AO survey
practices, such as interviewing patients
in non-confidential settings, and
deficient complaint investigations,
undermine the integrity and accuracy of
AO surveys. We are concerned that staff
or patients may not be honest and
candid if another facility staff member
or supervisor is present during
interviews. The expectations are that
interviews are conducted privately with
staff. For example, in Appendix A of the
SOM, we explicitly require surveyors to
‘‘Explain that all interviews will be
conducted privately with patients, staff,
and visitors, unless requested otherwise
by the interviewee.’’ Privacy in
interviews with staff is important and
encourages the likelihood of honest
feedback about an organization.
Additionally, we also identified a few
(three of 22 applications) during our
survey observations of AOs onsite,
instances in which the AO did not
observe actual performance of
medication administration, wound care
or other services provided by the
accredited facility, and most
observations within the hospital setting
were surgical time-outs (part of the
Universal Protocol and performed in the
operating room, immediately before the
planned procedure is initiated). In one
instance, the AO failed to ask the
facility for any patient/representative
complaint information, which indicates
that the AO failed to conduct any
investigation as to how the facility
manages complaints and grievances.
These specific examples raise concern
in that the AO survey process does not
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sufficiently ensure safe practices for
patients.
Furthermore, as noted in our
discussion of proposed § 488.5(a)(4)(iii),
we have also identified multiple
instances in which the AOs have
conducted limited review of facilities’
staff credentialing and competency
testing activities. For instance, in one
survey observation, we observed that
the AO reviewed the personnel files of
only one licensed practical nurse (LPN)
and one phlebotomist, and did not
review any personnel files for RNs,
pharmacists, or dietitians, as outlined in
Appendix A of the SOM, which we
consider to be critical staff for this
provider setting. In another survey, the
AO determined that nursing staff were
not documenting chains of custody of
narcotic medications, but failed to
review the facility’s pharmaceutical
policies and procedures, and conducted
no interviews of pharmacy staff. In such
circumstances where a category of
documentation was missing from the
facility’s record, we would mandate that
the AO or SA conduct further
investigations to determine the reason
for the lapse.
4. Proposed Revision to § 488.5(a)(4)(vii)
(Correction of Identified NonCompliance)
At § 488.5(a)(4)(vii), we propose to
add additional language to the existing
requirement that the AO must provide
us with descriptions of their procedures
and timelines for monitoring the
provider’s or supplier’s correction of
identified non-compliance with the
accreditation program’s standards. We
believe this requirement is not specific
enough for enforcement; we have
regularly had to request revisions of
documents submitted by AOs during
our review of applications and reapplications over the years. We propose
to clarify this language by adding the
requirement that AOs must also include
documentation related to dates
established by the AO and how those
accreditation dates are determined by
the AO when deficiencies may be found
during initial and reaccreditation
surveys, as well as the AOs process for
accreditation decisions based on survey
findings. We also propose to require the
AOs to provide as part of this standard,
their investigative and organizational
process which the AO uses to make
determinations on accreditation or the
removal of accreditation and
recommendation to the Survey
Operations Group (based out of the
various CMS Survey and Enforcement
Division Locations) to remove deemed
status of the non-compliant facility. We
have also proposed additional changes
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at § 488.5(a)(4)(viii) and refer readers to
section IV.G ‘‘Proposal to Require AOs
to Provide CMS with Survey Findings’’,
of this proposed rule.
5. Proposed Revisions to
§ 488.5(a)(4)(xi) (AO Training and
Education Programs)
At § 488.5(a)(4)(xi), we propose to add
a new requirement to require AOs to
provide CMS with documentation
summarizing their staff training
programs, whether web-based or via
methods such as Power Point
presentations or hard-copy materials,
which would provide an overview of
how they train surveyors to follow their
survey processes, and, where
applicable, highlight differences from
CMS survey processes. Currently, CMS
receives limited training materials the
AO provides to its surveyors; therefore,
when conducting survey observations as
under our authority at § 488.8(h), it is
often challenging to understand
differences in survey processes. We may
receive an AO’s printed materials for
training and/or downloaded versions of
electronic surveyor training platforms;
however, these materials vary. These
materials indicate that some AOs collect
employees’ oral evidence for a survey,
as opposed to a more document-focused
review done by the SAs. AOs’
applications do not always provide us
with the entire scope of surveyor
education the AO provides to its
surveyors, therefore challenging our
review of comparability. The current
regulation at § 488.5(a)(8) only requires
the AO to give us ‘‘[a] description of the
content and frequency of the
organization’s in-service training it
provides to survey personnel.’’ CMS
frequently asks AOs to submit
additional training and education
materials during the application review
processes. Requesting the AOs’ staff
training programs and documentation as
outlined in the proposal will provide
CMS with greater enforcement
capabilities and allow CMS to assess the
AOs’ consistency in training against
those of required by the SAs.
Additionally, because we review AO
applications for comparability to CMS
survey processes, this additional
information would be invaluable to
CMS’ better understanding of the AOs’
survey processes prior to conducting a
survey or during the validation or
proposed direct observation process, as
discussed in sections II.D and IV.K.3 of
this proposed rule.
6. Proposed Revisions to § 488.5(a)(5)
(Composition of Survey Team)
At § 488.5(a)(5), we propose to add
requirements which describe the AOs’
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minimum criteria for determining the
size and composition of survey teams
for the facilities they accredit. We
propose to require the AO to provide us
with documentation describing the
criteria or process by which the AOs
determines the makeup of their survey
teams, based on: (1) the size of the
facility to be surveyed, based on average
daily census; (2) the complexity of
services offered, including outpatient
services; (3) the type of survey to be
conducted; (4) Whether the facility has
special care units or off-site clinics or
locations; (5) Whether the facility has a
historical pattern of serious deficiencies
or complaints; and, (6) Whether new
surveyors are to accompany a team as
part of their training.
Our on-site survey observation of AO
surveyors has found some concerning
practices. For example, we understand
some AOs use time limits on the length
of their investigations, which can limit
the depth and accuracy of the
investigation. One AO also only
permitted a 2-day period in which to
conduct a survey of a critical access
hospital (CAH), whereas the policy of
the SA is based on the scope of services
provided by the provider, type of survey
to be conducted, complexity of services
offered and whether the facility has offsite locations. The AO’s policies did not
allow for flexibility to have the survey
exceed 2 days, which would likely not
allow for all departments to be
surveyed, or in the event of an
immediate jeopardy or condition-level
non-compliance finding, for an
investigation to be conducted. While
fortunately no condition-level nocompliance was identified, the strict AO
policy on timeframe of survey conflicts
with the intent to complete the
investigative process and did not allow
for flexibility in survey length. It
appears based on this example that at
least one AO may not be giving
considerations to the size and number of
outpatient departments or providerbased locations per facility and the need
to investigate immediate jeopardy or
condition-level non-compliance when
deciding on time limits for surveys.
Additionally, some AOs have not
always ensured surveys are conducted
on all off-site locations that are still
certified under the main campus or
facility CCN as is required for SAs in
accordance with Appendix A of the
SOM—Survey Protocol, Regulations and
Interpretive Guidelines for Hospitals,
Survey Protocol, Task 3 (‘‘Information
Gathering/Investigation’’). This
proposed provision would be effective
one year following the publication of
the final rule.
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Clarifying these minimum
expectations would help AOs meet
Medicare conditions and create more
consistency between the approaches
used by AOs and the SAs.
7. Proposed Revisions to § 488.5(a)(6)
(Adequate Number of Surveyors for Size
of Facility)
At § 488.5(a)(6), we propose to add
language to the existing requirement
that requires the AO to provide
documentation demonstrating the
overall adequacy of the number of the
organization’s surveyors, including how
the organization will increase the size of
the overall survey staff to match growth
in the number of accredited facilities
while maintaining regular reaccreditation intervals for existing
accredited facilities. We propose to add
language demonstrating that the AO has
enough surveyors to ensure that a
sufficient amount of time can be allotted
to its clients to complete all survey
activities.
Through our direct observations as
part of the application process, we
identified several instances in which the
scope of document reviews was limited
and the content of medical records was
not thoroughly reviewed, because it
seems the AO surveyors did not have
enough time to review records. This
may be a systemic issue across AOs.
This proposed provision would be
effective 1 year following the
publication of the final rule.
8. Proposed Revisions to § 488.5(a)(12)
(Complaint Survey Documentation
Requirements)
At § 488.5(a)(12), we propose to add
additional elements critical to the AOs’
effective investigation of complaints
about their client facilities. Specifically,
we propose that the AO in its
application documents for CMS
approval of its deeming authority would
also have to include: (1) a description of
its process for triaging and categorizing
complaints about the surveyed facility;
(2) timeframes for responding to
complaints and a method to track and
trend complaints (for example,
frequency of similar complaints,
complaint type, etc.) received with
respect to the AOs accredited facilities;
(3) procedures and persons responsible
for the review of plans of corrections;
and procedures for follow up if the
plans of corrections are not adequate; (4)
AO requirements for plans of
corrections for standard level
deficiencies; (5) follow up survey
procedures and monitoring of
condition-level findings; (6) procedures
for addressing immediate jeopardy
deficiencies; and (7) sharing of previous
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deficiency findings or complaints with
survey teams. The existing regulatory
requirement for the AO to provide
procedures for responding to, and
investigating, complaints against
accredited facilities, including policies
and procedures regarding referrals is
insufficient. Of our 19 AO initial and
renewal applications received in the
past years, CMS has requested
additional AO documentation for this
particular standard in order to
adequately assess the comparability of
survey processes. Strengthening the
language will bring greater clarity as to
the expectations for documents to the
AO submitting an initial or renewal
application.
9. Proposed Revisions to Accreditation
Decision-Making Policies and Reporting
§ 488.5(a)(13)
At § 488.5(a)(13), we propose to redesignate existing paragraph (ii) to (iii)
and add two new paragraphs at (ii) and
(iv). The section currently requires an
AO applying or re-applying for deeming
authority to provide CMS with a
description of its processes for
accreditation status decision making.
The proposed revision would require
the AO to document its specific policies
and procedures for reporting
accreditation decisions to CMS,
including timeframes for notification.
Additionally, we propose to require the
AO to submit specific documentation
describing how it will inform us when
one of the facilities they accredit
withdraws from accreditation. This
communication is necessary since it
alerts us that such facility will need to
be surveyed by the SA next time. By
requesting this additional information
related to accreditation decisions made
by the AOs, as well as reviewing
documentation on how the AO notifies
their facilities and CMS and our SAs of
a facility withdrawing from the AO,
CMS will strengthen the existing
requirements and would create a more
consistent, uniform review of the AO
survey process for comparability. We
also believe by requiring this
information, we will be able to review
the AOs’ processes for reporting.
Additionally, we will also be able to
identify under what circumstances an
AO maintains accreditation of a facility
versus the potential CMS decision to
drop deeming authority. We have found
in several instances that even in light of
serious health and safety deficiencies
and CMS’s removal of deeming
authority, a facility can still remain
accredited, which may provide an
untrustworthy perception to the public
that the facility has no health and safety
concerns. When CMS provides deeming
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authority to an AO, the expectation is
that its standards meet or exceed
Medicare conditions and that surveys
are comparable to those of the SAs,
which is not the case for accreditation
versus deeming. Facilities may
voluntarily end their deeming and
accreditation from an AO or be
involuntarily removed from deeming
authority. When this occurs under the
deeming process, the facility is placed
under the SA’s jurisdiction, meaning the
SA will survey and monitor the facility
for compliance with federal
requirements. However, in situations
where the facility’s deemed status is
removed involuntarily for noncompliance, yet the AO continues to
accredit the provider, CMS believes the
public perception is that these facilities
are still meeting or exceeding the
requirements for Medicare, which may
not be true.
Through the establishment of a more
rigorous and comprehensive survey
process review during the required
application and renewal process, our
concerns regarding insufficient
compliance would be addressed. The
proposed additional and revised
requirements would ensure a more
uniform assessment and improve our
evaluation of AO performance to ensure
that surveys conducted by AOs are
comprehensive and fully examine all
Medicare conditions. We also believe
that codifying these detailed
documentation requirements in
regulation would establish a consistent
standard across all AOs and would
bring uniformity and transparency to
the accreditation process.
We propose that the provisions
clarifying the existing requirements to
require AOs that accredit Medicarecertified providers and suppliers to
provide us with more detailed
descriptions of their survey processes
and procedures would become
applicable 1 year from the effective date
of final rule.
G. Proposal To Require AOs To Provide
CMS With Survey Findings
(§ 488.5(a)(4)(viii))
General AO survey findings are
entered into a CMS database known as
the Accrediting Organization System for
Storing User Recorded Experiences
(ASSURE). This database collects
general information about the
accreditation survey, such as, date,
survey findings and severity of
problems indicated by the findings. It
generally does not include actual survey
reports. Currently AOs provide a limited
set of data for surveys within the
ASSURE database. We use this
information in addressing
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administrative program elements, and in
assessing AO performance. While we
have the authority to request this
information from the AO, we generally
do so only when we determine that it is
necessary for follow-up. To date, we
have not consistently required the AOs
to submit copies of their survey reports
and related information.
We propose to modify
§ 488.5(a)(4)(viii) to require that AOs
provide all survey reports to CMS,
which would not be disclosed except as
permissible by statute, pursuant to
subsection 1865(b) of the Act. AOs
would be required to submit a statement
that organization agrees to provide with
a copy of all survey reports, including
but not limited to, initial, re-survey, and
complaint survey reports, and/or any
other information related to survey
activities as CMS may require
(including corrective action plans) as
part of its initial and renewal
applications, or upon CMS request. The
proposed revision to § 488.5(a)(4)(viii)
would expand the requirement from the
current requirement that AOs provide
survey reports from applicants seeking
initial participation in Medicare (with
other surveys only upon request). Under
our proposal, we would have access to
any survey reports, including initial,
reaccreditation, complaint surveys, and
corrective action plans that CMS may
require. These reports, like those of
survey agencies, would assist CMS in
program analysis of tracking citations
issued to accredited facilities to
determine whether there is a concern
with an AO’s performance. Similarly,
these reports would assist in reviewing
disparate findings in which the SA may
have cited a deficiency within an
accredited facility that the AO failed to
recognize.
Current §§ 488.5(a)(4)(viii) and
488.5(a)(11)(ii) allow CMS to receive
copies of the AOs’ survey reports.
However, CMS is prohibited by section
1865(b) of the Act as well as § 488.7(b)
from disclosing these surveys to the
public, with the exception that CMS
may disclose such a survey and related
information to the extent that they are
from home health agencies, or hospice
programs, or pertain to an enforcement
action taken by CMS. Furthermore, the
stem statement of § 488.7 requires that
a Medicare participating provider or
supplier, in accordance with § 488.4,
must authorize its respective AO to
release to CMS a copy of its most
current accreditation survey including
corrective action plans and any
information related to the survey that
CMS may require.’’ Section 488.7(b)
further provides that CMS may publicly
disclose an accreditation survey and
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information related to the survey, upon
written request, but only to the extent
that the accreditation survey and survey
information are related to an
enforcement action taken by CMS.
CMS has the authority under section
1875(b) of the Act as well as regulations
at § 488.8(a)(1) to evaluate the
performance of the AOs through review
of the organizations’ survey activity.
Through consistent access to AO survey
findings CMS would enhance our ability
to analyze survey findings and process,
identify emerging quality of care issues
and patterns in AO survey findings,
and, ultimately, improve care for our
beneficiaries.
As the proposal for revision to
§ 488.5(a)(4)(viii) is being made in
connection with our proposal to require
the AOs that accredit Medicare-certified
providers and suppliers to use the
proposed revised comparable survey
processes and procedures, we propose
that the revisions to § 488.5(a)(4)(viii)
become applicable 1 year from the
effective date of the final rule.
H. Proposal To Require That AO
Surveyors Must Take the CMS Online
Surveyor Basic Training
Prior to 2006, CMS offered basic
surveyor training courses in a
traditional in-person classroom setting.
Over time, we began providing online
basic surveyor training courses for each
provider and supplier type (ambulatory
surgical centers (ASCs), hospitals, home
health agencies (HHAs), etc.), as well as
training specific to writing skills for
surveyor documentation.
Basic training online courses are
designed to provide surveyors with the
basic knowledge and skills needed to
survey the respective provider or
supplier type for compliance with the
Medicare conditions. The online
courses also help develop and refine
surveying skills, foster an understanding
of the survey process, and enhance
surveyors’ overall ability to conduct and
document surveys. Courses are selfpaced web-based training. Users may
access the online courses at any time
and have ongoing access to the course.
This affords surveyors the opportunity
to refresh knowledge regarding
Medicare conditions and processes
whenever necessary. The numbers of
learners trained in online courses have
been steadily increasing since their
inception.
Currently, the trainings are publicly
available through the CMS Quality,
Safety & Education Portal (QSEP)
website at https://qsep.cms.gov. These
trainings are free of charge for AO
surveyors and the public at large.
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SA surveyors are required to take
CMS program-specific trainings along
with SA-led orientation, field survey
observations, and mentoring as part of a
comprehensive training and education
program to assure an adequately trained,
effective surveyor workforce.
SAs perform validation surveys on a
sample of providers and suppliers (such
as hospitals, CAHs, ASCs, and HHAs)
accredited by the AOs. Validation
surveys compare the survey findings of
the AO to those of the SA to see if there
are any disparities. The disparities
found between an AO’s surveys and an
SA’s surveys is used in a performance
measure called the ‘‘disparity rate’’ and
is tracked by CMS as an indication of
the quality of the surveys performed by
the AO as described earlier in this
proposed rule.
The disparity findings between AO
surveyors and SA surveyors may, in
part, be attributed to differences in
surveyor training and education, which
varies from AO to AO, and may be
inconsistent with the CMS-provided SA
surveyor training discussed earlier in
this proposed rule.11 We further believe
that uniform surveyor training would
increase the consistency between the
results of the surveys performed by SAs
and AOs, and have a positive impact on
the historically high disparity rates. The
Fiscal Year 2020 ‘‘Report to Congress:
Review of Medicare’s Program Oversight
of Accrediting Organizations (AOs) and
the Clinical Laboratory Improvement
Amendments of 1988 (CLIA) Validation
Program,’’ 12 showed variation in overall
disparity rates, by provider type, as well
as by the AO. For example, the disparity
rate from FY 2018 to FY 2019, hospitals,
HHAs and ASCs had the only decreases
in disparity rates of all the program
types, with a 5-percentage point, 11percentage point and 7-percentage point
decrease respectively. The disparity
rates for psychiatric hospitals increased
by 7-percentage points from FYs 2018 to
2019. The disparity rates for CAHs and
hospices increased by 5-percentage
points and 3-percentage points
respectively from FY 2018 to FY 2019.
On November 4, 2021, we published a
final rule in the Federal Register,
entitled, ‘‘Medicare and Medicaid
Programs; CY 2022 Home Health
Prospective Payment System Rate
Update’’ (86 FR 62240). In that final
rule, we finalized implementing
regulations to require AO surveyors to
have successfully completed the
relevant CMS–sponsored basic hospice
11 https://qsep.cms.gov.
12 The most recent Report to Congress may be
accessed at: https://www.cms.gov/files/document/
qso-22-06-ao-clia.pdf.
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surveyor training prior to conducting
any hospice program surveys in
accordance with Division CC, section
407 of the Consolidated Appropriations
Act of 2021 (CAA 2021) .
In addition to the recent hospice
program surveyor training requirements,
we propose to amend the provision at
§ 488.5(a)(8) by adding new paragraphs
(a)(8)(i) to (a)(8)(iv), which would
impose a new training requirement on
those surveyors working for AOs that
accredit Medicare-certified provider and
suppliers. We note that we had
previously made a similar proposal in
the calendar year (CY) 2019 Home
Health Prospective Payment System
Rate Update proposed rule (83 FR
32470, July 12, 2018). However, we did
not finalize this proposal, due to
commenters’ concerns with course
enrollment access and the amount of
time we estimated it would require for
an AO surveyor to complete the course.
CMS believes the concerns raised by
interested parties during the previous
proposed rule comment period have
been addressed by narrowing the scope
of the required training and providing
additional details regarding
implementation. Therefore, we are again
making this proposal to address the
consistency of surveyor knowledge and
interpretation, since we propose to
require the AOs to use Medicare
conditions and survey processes. We
describe the courses required as well as
the estimated time for each in section VI
of this proposed rule. We propose at
§ 488.5(a)(8) a description of the content
and frequency of the organization’s inservice training it provides to survey
personnel and we would also require
AOs to submit their training materials to
CMS as part of the application process.
We additionally propose at
§ 488.5(a)(8)(i) to require that all AO
surveyors complete two CMS mandatory
courses which instruct surveyors, for all
facility types, how to document their
findings in the standardized survey
materials. We would also require AO
surveyors to complete all relevant CMS
online program-specific basic surveyor
training, which we have already
established for state and federal
surveyors. For example, AO hospital
surveyors would be required to take the
following CMS online courses: (1)
Principles of Documentation for NonLong-Term Care; (2) Basic Writing Skills
for Surveyor Staff; (3) and, Hospital
Basic Training. A hospice surveyor
would take the Principles of
Documentation for Non-Long-Term
Care; Basic Writing Skills for Surveyor
Staff; and Hospice Basic Training
courses. If an AO surveyor participates
in both hospital and hospice surveys
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they would take the two documentation
courses and the two basic training
courses. These courses would be the
minimum mandatory requirements for
AO surveyors. In addition, we would
also require that all AO surveyors would
be required to take any updates to the
CMS online surveyor courses when
necessary. Any training above and
beyond the minimum CMS online
surveyor courses would be at the AO’s
discretion.
We propose at § 488.5(a)(8)(ii), that
AO surveyors hired after the date of
implementation of this provision would
be required to complete the required
CMS online surveyor training courses
prior to serving on a survey team
(except as a trainee). A time requirement
is necessary to ensure that the AO
surveyors take the CMS online surveyor
training in a timely manner and is
consistent with the existing hospice
program surveyor training requirements
at 42 CFR 488.1115(a).
We propose at § 488.5(a)(8)(iii) that
AOs would also be required to
document that the CMS online surveyor
training courses were completed and the
date of completion in the surveyor’s
staff personnel records. The purpose of
this requirement would be to allow the
AO and CMS to have records that
document that the requirements had
been met by each surveyor. We would
review these training records during our
onsite visit to the AO’s office that is
performed as part of the initial and
renewal application process. We further
propose at § 488.5(a)(8)(iii) to require
that the AOs maintain this
documentation of course completion by
each surveyor for no less than one
accreditation cycle, so we can verify
that AO surveyors had completed the
online courses as part of the AO’s next
renewal application process. One
accreditation cycle would be defined as
the period of time during which the
AOs’ CMS approval is in effect, starting
from the date of application approval
and continuing until the date of
approval of the next renewal
application.
This proposed requirement aligns
with and expands upon recent
regulations that require hospice program
AO surveyors to successfully complete
the CMS online Basic Hospice Surveyor
Training prior to performing any
hospice program surveys.
In addition, we propose at
§ 488.5(a)(8)(iv) that the provisions
proposed at §§ 488.5(a)(8)(i) through
(a)(8)(iv) would be applicable beginning
1 year after the effective date of the final
rule.
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I. Proposal To Establish Criteria for
‘‘National in Scope’’ (§ 488.1)
On April 5, 2013, we published a
proposed rule in the Federal Register
entitled, ‘‘Medicare and Medicaid
Programs; Survey, Certification, and
Enforcement Procedures’’ (78 FR
20564), hereinafter referred to as ‘‘2013
AO oversight proposed rule’’, which
proposed modifications to the CMS AO
oversight regulations. In the 2013 AO
oversight proposed rule, we stated that
the demonstration of ‘‘national in
scope’’ by an AO must be specific to
each accrediting program for which new
or renewed CMS approval is sought. We
also proposed to define ‘‘national
accreditation organization’’ in § 488.1 to
specify that CMS requires an AO
program seeking initial approval to
‘‘already be fully implemented and
operational nationally’’ (78 FR 20566).
However, in the 2015 AO final rule (80
FR 29796), we finalized the policy that
we would not require an AO to reach
facility minimums or meet specific
geographic distribution requirements to
be deemed ‘‘national in scope’’ (80 FR
29802). We did this because we believed
AOs should be able to demonstrate the
ability to scale over time.
Currently, we require that an AO’s
accreditation program be national in
scope in order to receive CMS approval.
However, we have never specified
objective criteria for ‘‘national in scope’’
in regulations. Therefore, as the number
of AOs (and the number of applications
from AOs) grow, it is in the best interest
of CMS and the AOs to establish
specific criteria to define ‘‘national in
scope.’’ Establishing a specific
definition and criteria for what CMS
would consider to constitute widely
located geographically across the United
States (U.S.) would ensure that CMS is
objective and consistent during the AO
application review process when
making a determination as to whether
an AO’s accreditation program is, in
fact, national in scope. This would
further ensure that new AOs, submitting
applications for deeming authority, are
represented across the nation and not
clustered within one area of the country.
Furthermore, this also provides an
opportunity for facilities to choose any
AO with a CMS-recognized
accreditation program for its provider/
supplier type, versus only having one
AO to choose.
Therefore, we propose to add a
definition for ‘‘National in scope,’’ to
the CMS regulations at § 488.1 to
establish criteria for determining when
an AO’s accreditation program meets
the requirement. We propose that the
definition, ‘‘National in scope’’ would
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mean that the providers and suppliers
accredited by an AO under a specific
accreditation program, must be widely
located geographically across the U.S.
The proposed requirement for ‘‘national
in scope’’ would have two components.
First, the AO would be required to have
accredited at least five providers or
suppliers under the accreditation
program in question. Second, the five
providers or suppliers accredited by the
AO under that accreditation program
would have to be geographically located
in at least five out of the six geographic
regions.
The addition of the proposed
definition of ‘‘National in scope’’,
requires that we also define the term
‘‘geographic regions of the U.S.’’,
because this is a component of the
definition of ‘‘National in scope.’’
Therefore, we propose to add a
definition for ‘‘Geographic regions’’ at
§ 488.1.
The proposed six geographic regions
consist of six groups of states that cover
the northeast, southeast, mid-west,
central, south, and western areas of the
United States which provide six
possible areas in which an AO could
accredit a provider or supplier to meet
the second part of the ‘‘national in
scope’’ test. In contrast, the use of a
simple north, south, east and west
geographical division of the U.S. would
only provide four possible regions in
which an AO have accredited providers
and suppliers.
We believe that use of these six
geographic regions as the geographical
test for ‘‘national in scope’’ would
provide a standard by which CMS could
measure whether an AO has accredited
the required number of health care
providers or suppliers in varying
geographical areas of the U.S. We
further believe the requirement that an
AO have one provider or supplier in at
least five of the six geographic regions
would demonstrate the AO’s ability to
scale up and develop a national
presence over time and align with CMS’
current consortiums or regions.13 AOs
would need to be able to demonstrate
this standard in their initial applications
for deeming authority, as well as
continue to meet this definition, which
would be evaluated within their
renewal applications.
We also believe that this proposed
definition of ‘‘Geographic regions’’
would ensure that we are impartial and
consistent during the application review
process. We also believe that this
13 CMS Organizational Chart, Page 17, Survey
Operations Group https://www.cms.gov/AboutCMS/Agency-Information/CMSLeadership/
Downloads/CMS_Organizational_Chart.pdf.
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proposed definition would provide the
AOs with objective criteria for the
definition of ‘‘national in scope’’ that
they can strive to meet prior to
submitting an application, especially for
possible new accrediting programs.
We note that § 488.1 currently defines
‘‘national accrediting organization’’ as
‘‘an organization that accredits provider
entities (as that term is defined in
section 1865(a)(4) of the Act) under a
specific program and whose accredited
providers and suppliers are widely
located geographically across the U.S.’’
Because we proposed to add a specific
definition for ‘‘National in scope’’ to
§ 488.1, that requires a two-part test, it
is also necessary to update the
definition of ‘‘National accrediting
organization’’ to add the requirement
that the AO must be national in scope.
This would ensure that new AOs
submitting applications for Medicare
approval of their accreditation
programs, would be required to show
that they have the ability to provide
accreditation services to providers and
suppliers across the nation and not just
those clustered within one area of the
country. Making it a requirement that
AOs be capable of providing
accreditation services throughout the
U.S. provides the opportunity to health
care providers and suppliers in all
regions of the U.S. to obtain deeming
accreditation from the AO of their
choice.
Therefore, we propose to revise the
existing definition of ‘‘National
accrediting organization’’ at § 488.1. The
proposed new definition of ‘‘National
accrediting organization’’ would read as
follows ‘‘National accrediting
organization means an accrediting
organization that is national in scope
and accredits provider or suppliers,
under a specific accreditation program.’’
We propose to add the new definition
for ‘‘National accrediting organization’’
so that we can include the phrase ‘‘is
national in scope’’ within the said
definition. The purpose for revising the
definition of ‘‘National accrediting
organization’’ is to enforce national in
scope requirement for AOs.
J. Proposal To Revise the Definition of
‘‘Rate of Disparity’’ and To Use the
Process and Outcome Disparity Rates
and Performance Measures (§ 488.1)
In section IV.L of this proposed rule,
we propose to revise the validation
program by using two different types of
validation surveys, which are: (1) the
60-day ‘‘look-back’’ validation survey
and, (2) and a direct survey observation
approach, to evaluate the performance
of the AOs. Validation surveys are full
surveys performed for a representative
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sample of accredited facilities. Lookback validation surveys are completed
by the SA within 60 days of an AO’s full
accreditation survey for the same
facility. In some cases, representative
sample ‘‘mid-cycle validation surveys’’
may be conducted whether or not there
has been a preceding AO survey.
The analysis of the validation survey
findings are reported as a ‘‘disparity
rate.’’ As previously discussed in
section II.C of this proposed rule, this
rate of disparity is currently defined at
§ 488.1 as the percentage of all sample
validation surveys for which a SA finds
noncompliance with one or more
Medicare conditions and where no
comparable condition-level deficiency
was cited by the AO and it is reasonable
to conclude that the deficiencies were
present at the time of the AO’s most
recent survey of that provider or
supplier. The goal of the validation
process is to determine whether the
findings of the two surveys are
comparable.
In calculating the current rate of
disparity, the numerator is the number
of surveys in which the AO missed at
least one condition-level deficiency
found by the SA and the denominator
is the number of surveys in the
validation sample. The result is the
percentage of validation surveys where
the AO missed finding a significant
deficiency identified by the SA. If the
AO missed at least one serious
deficiency in a third of the validation
surveys, the disparity rate would be 33
percent. A lower disparity rate indicates
better AO performance.
The existing definition of ‘‘rate of
disparity’’ is not applicable to the direct
observation validation survey because it
focuses on the survey process as
opposed to outcome of the survey.
Therefore, we propose to revise the
current definition of ‘‘rate of disparity’’
located at § 488.1 and replace this
definition with two new definitions,
which are ‘‘outcome disparity rate’’ and
‘‘process disparity rate.’’
The outcome disparity rate would be
applicable to the look-back validation
survey, which is the current method of
validation. We propose that the new
definition of ‘‘outcome disparity rate’’
would generally remain as the existing
definition of ‘‘rate of disparity’’ at
§ 488.1, but would be revised and
retitled as ‘‘outcome disparity rate’’ to
distinguish it from the ‘‘process
disparity rate.’’
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When calculating the process
disparity rate, the numerator for one
provider or supplier for which the direct
observation validation survey is done
would be the number of observed
survey process findings and the
denominator would be the number of
expected survey process findings for all
direct observation validation surveys.
The observed survey process findings
are the actual number of Medicare
conditions that were observed being
surveyed for by the AO. The expected
survey process findings are the total
number of Medicare conditions that the
AO should have surveyed for during the
survey observation. The result would be
reported as a percentage. A high
percentage indicates greater disparity
between the expected AO performance
on direct observation validation survey
and the actual AO performance on the
direct observation validation survey. For
example, a direct observation validation
survey with 75 observed process
findings out of 100 expected process
findings would yield a process disparity
rate of 25 percent [((100¥75) ÷ 100) *
100], indicating a 25 percent difference
between what is observed and what is
expected (See Figure 1).
Figure 1:
The proposed process disparity rate
would be applicable to the direct
observation validation survey and
would be defined as the difference
between the observed survey process
findings and the expected survey
process findings.
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Number of
observed survey
process findings
-
The overall process disparity rate for
a particular AO would be calculated by
taking the average of the process
disparity rate for each direct observation
validation survey performed for an
accreditation program of an AO.
Preliminary results obtained from the
VRP pilot during the period of June
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2018 to July 2019 are shown in Figure
2. While we will analyze and explain
the pilot data when more is available,
we share preliminary data here as a
sample of how the process disparity rate
would be calculated if this proposed
rule is finalized as proposed.
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Figure 2:
Ambulatory Surgery Center
8
19%
Home Health Agency
3
1%
Hospital
11
10%
Psych Hospital
3
7%
Hospice
1
NIA
NOTE: Caution should be used in drawing broader inferences from the data in Figure 2 of this proposed
rule because the sample size is very small.
The outcome disparity rate measure
would also be a component of
evaluating AO performance. We have
been measuring the outcome disparity
rate as a performance measure for years
and have historical data to share. This
measure would comprise any look-back
validation survey condition level
findings made by the SA that had not
been identified by the AO during their
reaccreditation survey, where it is
reasonable to conclude that these
deficiencies were present when the AO
performed the survey (see Figure 3).
Figure 3:
Number of AO
surveys with missed
comparable
deficiencies
validation surveys performed for
hospitals, the AO did not cite a
comparable deficiency to those cited by
the SA. The proposed definition of new
process disparity rate would showcase
the average percent difference between
the observed survey process findings
and the expected survey process
findings, by provider type.
Figure 4 provides the FY 2020
outcome disparity rate for Medicare
provider types as reported in the
January 2021 Report to Congress.
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In addition to reporting the overall
disparity between the outcomes found
by both the AO and SA, the differences
between the observed and expected
survey processes would also be reported
as the process disparity rate.
In FY 2019, we found that 42 percent
of the state validation look-back
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+ --
Outcome
Disparity
Rate
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60-Day Validation Sample Surveys
67
SA Surveys with Condition Level Deficiencies
26
AO Surveys with Missed Comparable Deficiencies
23
Disparity Rate
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34%
We note that the average disparity rate
across all Medicare provider types is 32
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percent, based on the most recent data,
with the largest disparity rate being
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Figure 4:
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CAHs’ accreditation surveys, at 46
percent. By continuing to monitor
outcome disparities, and further
investment in our methodologies for
measuring process disparities would
help to bring AOs up to the standards
of SAs.
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K. Proposal To Require AOs To Submit
a Publicly Reportable Plan of Correction
for Unacceptable Performance Measure
Scores (§ 488.8(a)(2))
In section IV.J of this proposed rule,
we proposed to revise the definition of
‘‘disparity rate’’ to include a process and
outcome disparity rates. We noted that
the proposed definition of outcome
disparity rate generally remains the
same as the currently defined definition
of disparity rate. We further noted that
we have been measuring the outcome
disparity rate as a performance measure
for years. We would note that we would
use the new process disparity rate as a
performance measure.
To monitor an AO’s ongoing
performance as provided by section
1875(b) of the Act and § 488.8, we
propose in paragraph (a)(2) to expand
the types of validation activities
included in the performance review. We
also propose in paragraph (a)(4) to
require AOs to submit a plan of
correction that would be publicly
reported, when the AO’s performance
on survey activities identify disparity
concerns either through the outcome
disparity rates or process disparity rates.
We propose to revise § 488.8(a)(2) to
broaden activities that CMS would
evaluate in our ongoing review of AOs.
Specifically, we would monitor the
results of our outcome disparity rate, the
look-back validation surveys, complaint
surveys and the process disparity rate as
determined by the direct observation
survey.
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We propose to revise § 488.8(a)(4) to
require that when an AO’s outcome
disparity or process disparity
performance measure scores, as
determined from look-back and direct
observation validation surveys, reveal
that the AO’s accreditation survey
activities do not meet an acceptable
performance threshold established by
CMS, the AO would be required to
submit an acceptable plan of correction
to CMS which identified corrective
action the AO proposed to take to
correct their performance.
We propose at § 488.8(a)(4)(i), to
require that the plan of correction be
submitted to CMS for review within 10
business days the AO being notified by
CMS of not meeting the acceptable
performance threshold. We also propose
that in order to be acceptable, the AO’s
plan of correction would have to: (1)
document specific actions being taken
by the AO to address improving
performance (proposed
§ 488.8(a)(4)(i)(A); (2) document the
timeframe for implementation of the
plan (proposed § 488.8(a)(4)(i)(B)); (3)
plan for ongoing monitoring of the plan
of correction toward achieving an
acceptable level of performance
(proposed § 488.8(a)(4)(i)(C); and, (4)
identify the individual responsible for
implementation and monitoring of the
acceptable plan of correction
(§ 488.8(a)(4)(i)(D)).
CMS would subsequently
communicate with the AO on the
acceptability of the plan of correction
and would provide oversight of
implementation. We propose at
§ 488.8(a)(4)(ii) that upon review and
approval of the submitted plan of
correction, CMS would provide ongoing
evaluation of the progress of plan
implementation.
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Finally, we propose at
§ 488.8(a)(4)(iii) that the AO’s plan of
correction be made subject to public
reporting by CMS. Once approved, the
plan of correction would be publicly
available for review. This means that the
acceptable plan of correction would be
displayed publicly by CMS once
approved. This plan of correction would
be utilized to increase an AO’s
accountability for maintaining
performance standards.
The purpose of this oversight is to
improve AO survey activity outcome
and processes with the presumption
that improvements toward acceptable
performance would improve the health
and safety of patients receiving services
in Medicare-participating facilities. This
is an effort to strengthen AO oversight
by requiring AOs to address issues and
take corrective action to improve to an
acceptable level of performance.
Previously, this was handled verbally or
through written correspondence
between the AO and CMS staff without
a specific plan of correction.
The proposed publicly reportable
plan of correction would be based on
both an analysis of data to identify the
outcome and process disparity
performance measure(s) for which the
AO did not meet acceptable
performance as well as significant
instances of disparity. An analysis
matrix would outline both outcome
performance and process performance
areas of successful achievement and
those areas for which achievement was
less than acceptable as demonstrated by
the outcome and process disparity rate
data. An example of what a plan of
correction matrix might look like is
indicated in Figure 5.
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12025
Figure 5:
Overall Condition Citation Performance
•
•
•
•
•
•
Nursing SeIVices **
Discharge Planning
Patient's Rights
Infection Control
Medical record requirement for
psychiatric hospitals *
•
•
•
•
ASC- Patient's Rights
ASC - Governing Body and
Management*
Physical Environment
ASC - Environment *
ASC - Infection Control**
Medical record setVices *
Organ, tissue and eye procurement
Emergency
SeIVices**
•
• ASC - Emergency Preparedness**
Medical
Staff**
•
• ASC-QAPI*
Emergency
Preparedness**
•
• Food and Dietetic SeIVices **
Radiologic
SeIVices**
•
• Respiratory Care SeIVices **
Utilization
Review**
•
* Includes condition citations matched from validation suIVeys only.
** Includes condition-level citations matched from complaint suIVeys only.
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The matrix in Figure 5 is
representative of FY 2018 data collected
during the direct observation validation
surveys, look-back validation surveys,
and complaint surveys (which
investigates specific allegations)
conducted by the SA at AO facilities. If
deficiencies were cited first by the AO
and validated by the SA during a lookback or complaint survey this is
considered an outcomes match. If the
AO survey process under direct
observation by the SA did not raise
concerns, this indicates a positive
outcome and positive process, which
are represented in the top left box. The
top right and bottom left boxes indicate
where improvements need to be made
in either the process or outcome of the
respective Medicare condition, also
known as CoP, while the bottom right
box shows where improvements in both
measures should be made.
The AO would be able to use this
matrix to identify if the less than
acceptable performance is either
outcome-focused, process-focused, or
both. The proposed plan of correction
would be required to be submitted to
CMS within 10-business days following
CMS’ notification to the AO of less than
acceptable performance, and would
have to address the areas of
improvement and the specific actions to
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be taken by the AO to improve those
areas on a sustainable basis.
L. Proposal To Revise the AO Survey
Validation Program (§ 488.9)
Prior to discussing our proposed
changes below, the following provides
(1) background on validation surveys,
(2) background on look-back validation
surveys, and (3) background on
additional approaches to conduct
validation surveys, before (4)
introducing CMS’ proposed changes.
1. Background on Validation Surveys
Section 1864(c) of the Act permits the
SAs to perform validation surveys of
provider and supplier types deemed for
Medicare participation under section
1865(a) of the Act as a means of
validating the AOs’ accreditation
processes. The accreditation validation
program is one component of CMS’
oversight of AOs with approved
Medicare accreditation programs, and
consists of two types of validation
surveys:
• Complaint surveys—focused
surveys based on complaints, which, if
substantiated, could indicate serious
non-compliance with one or more
Medicare conditions; and
• Validation surveys—full surveys,
which are routinely performed for a
representative sample of deemed
facilities as part of the annual CMS–AO
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representative sample validation survey
program. These surveys are completed
by the SA within 60 days of an AO full
accreditation survey for the same
facility.
Prior to 2007, section 1875 of the Act
required CMS to report to Congress
annually only on the Joint
Commission’s (TJC’s) hospital
accreditation program.14 In FY 2007, we
expanded this oversight and began
conducting 60-day representative
sample validation surveys for selected
non-hospital facility types (CAHs, HHAs
and ASCs), in addition to those already
being performed for deemed status
hospitals. In FY 2010, hospice look-back
validation surveys were added, and in
FY 2011, psychiatric hospital 60-day
validation surveys were added. In FY
2019, we conducted a total of 315
representative sample look-back
validation surveys for six facility types
across AOs.15 This total comprised of
119 hospital surveys (including 20
psychiatric hospitals) and 196 nonhospital validation surveys. (See Graph
1.)
14 Section 125(b)(4) of Public Law 110–275
(2008), which was subsequently revised to apply to
all AOs.
15 Outpatient physical therapy and rural health
clinics were not part of the validation sample.
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Graph 1: Number of Sample Validation Surveys for Hospital and Non-Hospital Providers
Performed from FY2007 to 2019
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350
300
250
200
150
100
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These numbers represent a 250
percent increase in the overall number
of validation surveys conducted, from
90 in FY 2007 to 315 in FY 2019. During
the same time period, the number of
non-hospital validation surveys
conducted increased by 460 percent,
from 35 surveys in FY 2007 to 196
surveys in FY 2019. The number of
hospital validation surveys conducted
increased by 116 percent, from 55
surveys in FY 2007 to 119 surveys in FY
2019.
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2. Background on Look-Back Validation
Surveys
The purpose of look-back validation
surveys of deemed providers or
suppliers is to assess the AO’s ability to
ensure compliance with Medicare
conditions. These surveys are on-site
full surveys completed by SA surveyors
no later than 60 days after the end date
of an AO’s Medicare accreditation
program full survey. The SA performs
these surveys without any knowledge of
the findings of the AO’s accreditation
survey. CMS determines the number of
look-back validation surveys to perform
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Since 2007, CMS has worked to
strengthen its oversight of AOs and
increase the number of validation
surveys. The recent history of validation
survey samples is as follows:
2015: 118 hospital and 240 nonhospital surveys totaling 358 surveys.
2016: 119 hospital and 254 nonhospital surveys totaling 373 surveys.
2017: 116 hospital and 244 nonhospital surveys totaling 360 surveys.
2018: 128 hospital and 188 nonhospital surveys totaling 316 surveys.
2019: 119 hospital and 196 nonhospital surveys totaling 315 surveys.
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• In FY 2010: The non-hospital total of 191 includes 72 mid-cycle ASC validation surveys.
**In FY 2011: The hospital total of 106 includes 33 mid-cycle L TCH validation surveys.
***In FY 2015: The hospital total of 118 includes 16 psychiatric hospital validation surveys.
****In FY 2016: The hospital total of 119 includes 21 psychiatric hospital validation surveys.
*****In FY 2017: The hospital total of 116 includes 21 psychiatric hospital validation surveys.
******In FY 2018: The hospital total of 128 includes 21 psychiatric hospital validation surveys.
*******In FY 2019: The hospital total of 119 includes 20 psychiatric hospital validation surveys.
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for each AO based on its total number
of facilities, as well as the overall
budgeted validation survey targets, by
state and facility type.
The proportion of look-back surveys
completed for deemed facilities is
calculated by dividing the number of
look-back validation surveys conducted
by the total number of deemed facilities.
The proportion of deemed facilities that
received a look-back validation survey
in FY 2019 is as follows:
• Hospitals: Three percent of deemed
hospitals received a validation survey in
FY 2019 (99 validation surveys
conducted out of 3,332 deemed
facilities).
• Psychiatric Hospitals: Four percent
of deemed psychiatric hospitals
received a validation survey in FY 2019
(20 validation surveys conducted out of
466 deemed facilities).
• CAHs: Three percent of deemed
CAHs received a validation survey in
FY 2019 (13 validation surveys
conducted out of 449 deemed facilities).
• HHAs: Two percent of deemed
HHAs received a validation survey in
FY 2019 (84 validation surveys
conducted out of 4,034 deemed
facilities).
• Hospices: One percent of deemed
hospices received a validation survey in
FY 2019 (32 validation surveys
conducted out of 2,458 deemed
facilities).
• ASCs: Four percent of deemed
ASCs received a validation survey in FY
2019 (67 validation surveys conducted
out of 1,803 deemed facilities).
3. Background on Additional
Approaches To Conducting Validation
Surveys
Over the years, we have looked for
ways to improve the validation survey
process and the disparity rate
methodology. As discussed earlier in
this proposed rule, the disparity rate for
various provider types ranged between
8 percent for HHAs and 46 percent for
CAHs.
To address concerns about high
disparity rates, CMS has been testing a
VRP pilot since 2018. In the VRP pilot,
instead of the separate look-back
validation survey, a direct observation
of the AOs survey by is performed.
During the direct observation validation
survey, the SA surveyors are present
when the AO surveyors perform an
accreditation survey, so that they can
directly observe and evaluate the ability
to the AO surveyors to assess
compliance with the Medicare
conditions. The purpose of this direct
observation is to evaluate, in real time,
the AO performance on the survey
process. The real time observation of the
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survey allows the SA surveyors to make
suggested improvements and address
any concerns with AOs immediately.
From June 2018 through August 2019,
CMS conducted a total of 30 VRP pilot
surveys in 17 states in the acute care
hospital program (11), ASC program
(10), psychiatric hospital program (3),
HHA program (5) and hospice program
(1). This proposed direct observation
validation process has yielded
additional information about the extent
to which the AO’s process meets or
exceeds the survey process used by the
SA surveyors. Our preliminary findings
from our VRP pilot surveys include the
following:
• Certain AOs have rigid survey
schedules that prove to be burdensome
to the SA observers while onsite.
• AOs have strict timeframes for each
section of the survey to which they
adhere, regardless of the findings or
need to further investigate an issue
within a facility.
• Not all AOs survey offsite locations
consistently for all portions of the
survey.
• Certain AO survey methodology
favored a ‘‘yes/no,’’ ‘‘have/don’t have’’
format versus a more in-depth
investigative approach.
• Verbal assertion was considered
adequate evidence of compliance
without verification via observations
and/or document review.
4. Proposal To Revise the Existing AO
Survey Validation Program (Proposed
Revisions to § 488.9)
We propose to revise the validation
program by using two different types of
validation surveys, which are: (1) the
look-back validation survey and, (2) and
a direct observation validation survey
approach, to evaluate the performance
of the AOs. We propose that direct
observation surveys can be performed
by the SA or CMS surveyors.
We will also be looking at
programmatic adjustments to the lookback validation survey to address some
of the concerns stakeholders have
raised, to focus on key quality concerns,
and to reduce provider burden. These
programmatic changes do not require a
regulatory change and are under
development.
Specifically, we propose at § 488.9(b)
to revise the types of validations
surveys. We will continue using the
existing look-back validation survey,
through use of a sample of facilities in
each program type, which would take
place within 60 days following the AO
surveys. These 60-day validation
surveys are referred to as look-backvalidation surveys. As discussed above,
we are planning to make additional
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programmatic adjustments to the
existing look-back validation survey
process to address the scope of the
review and provider burden. Those
adjustments would not require a
regulatory change and are under
development.
We propose at § 488.9(b)(2) to require
validation using the direct observation
validation survey, which focuses on
real-time observation and evaluation of
the AOs survey process. At § 488.9(c)
we propose the rules for look-back
validation surveys. At § 488.9(d) we
propose the rules for selection for lookback validation surveys. More
specifically, proposed § 488.9(d)(1)
would provide that ‘‘a provider or
supplier selected for a look-back
validation survey must cooperate with
the SA that performs the look-back
validation survey.’’ We propose at
§ 488.9(d)(2) that ‘‘if a provider or
supplier selected for a look-back
validation survey fails to cooperate with
the SA, it will no longer be deemed to
meet the Medicare conditions or
requirements, will be subject to a review
in accordance with paragraph (a) of this
section, and may be subject to
termination of its provider agreement
under § 489.53 of this chapter.’’
At § 488.9(e), we propose the rules for
the direct observation validation
surveys. These rules would include the
following: (1) All direct observation
validation surveys will be unannounced
to the AO and the facility being
surveyed (proposed § 488.9(e)(1)); (2)
The SA or CMS surveyors will generally
be assigned to the AO surveyors on a 1:1
basis, matching the experience of the
accreditation surveyor where possible,
and using the CMS approved standards
and processes to determine compliance
with the Medicare conditions (proposed
§ 488.9(e)(2)); (3) the SA surveyors will
observe the AO survey in accordance
with CMS established policies and
procedures and will report the findings
directly to CMS (proposed § 488.9(e)(3));
and, (4) where the SA or CMS surveyors
disagree with the findings of the AO
surveyors, and these differences cannot
be reconciled, CMS will render a final
decision (proposed § 488.9(e)(4)). This
finding would not be appealable
pursuant to 42 CFR 498.3(d)(1), which
provides that administrative actions that
are not initial determination (and
therefore not subject to appeal under
this part) are not appealable.
Specifically, the findings that a provider
or supplier determined to be in
compliance with the conditions or
requirements for participation or for
coverage has deficiencies is such a nonappealable administrative action.
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At proposed § 488.9(f), we propose
circumstances in which an accredited
provider or supplier would be deemed
to have not met the applicable Medicare
conditions or requirements, such as if:
(1) the provider or supplier refuses to
authorize its AO to release a copy of
their current accreditation survey to
CMS (proposed § 488.9(f)(1)); (2) the
provider or supplier refuses to allow a
validation survey (for either look-back
or direct observation validation surveys)
(proposed § 488.9(f)(2)); or (3) CMS
finds that the provider or supplier does
not meet the applicable Medicare
condition (also known as CoP, CfC,
conditions of certification, or
requirements) (proposed § 488.9(f)(3)).
At § 488.9(g), we propose the
consequences for non-compliance. At
§ 488.9(g)(1), we propose that if a CMS
validation look-back or direct
observation validation survey results in
a finding that the provider or supplier
is out of compliance with one or more
Medicare conditions, deemed status
may be removed by CMS and the
provider or supplier will be subject to
ongoing review by the SA or CMS (in
accordance with § 488.10(d)) until the
provider or supplier demonstrates
compliance. At proposed § 488.9(g)(2),
we propose that CMS may take actions
for the deficiencies identified in the in
accordance with § 488.24, or may first
direct the SA or CMS surveyors to
conduct another survey of the provider’s
or supplier’s compliance with specified
Medicare conditions or requirements
before taking the enforcement actions
provided for at § 488.24. At proposed
§ 488.9(g)(3), we propose that if CMS
determines that a provider or supplier is
not in compliance with applicable
Medicare conditions or requirements,
the provider may be subject to
termination of the provider agreement
and any other applicable intermediate
sanctions and remedies.
At proposed § 488.9(h), we propose
the re-instatement of the deemed status
of a provider or supplier. An accredited
provider or supplier would be deemed
to meet the applicable Medicare
conditions or requirements in
accordance with this section if any of
the requirements are met, as applicable:
• It withdraws any prior refusal to
authorize its AO to release a copy of the
provider’s or supplier’s current
accreditation survey (proposed
§ 488.9(h)(1)).
• It withdraws any prior refusal to
allow a look-back or direct observation
validation survey, if applicable
(proposed § 488.9(h)(2)).
• CMS finds that the provider or
supplier meets all applicable Medicare
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CoP, CfC, conditions of certification, or
requirements (proposed § 488.9(h)(3)).
At proposed § 488.9(i), we propose
that the existence of any performance
review, comparability review, deemed
status review, probationary period, or
any other action by CMS, does not affect
or limit CMS in conducting any
subsequent validation survey.
By providing a flexible approach to
the validation process, this could reduce
provider burden by reducing the
frequency with which CMS would
perform validation using the look-back
validation survey method in which CMS
performs a look-back validation survey
within 60 days of the end date of the
AOs accreditation survey. This would
reduce the number of times that health
care providers would have to undergo
two full surveys within a 60-day period.
We further believe this approach
broadens the validation program
activities and would be welcomed by
both the AOs and the providers and
suppliers.
We propose that our proposals to
revise the validation process by adding
direct observation validation surveys
and our proposed revisions to § 488.9
would be applicable 60 days after the
effective date of the final rule.
We also propose that the direct
observation surveys may be performed
by not only the SA but also by CMS
surveyors. This allows for flexibility and
expediency in the performance of these
validation surveys.
The proposal to revise the validation
process by adding look-back and direct
observation validation surveys and our
proposed revisions to § 488.9 would not
apply to laboratories, as they are subject
to the provisions under part 493.
M. Proposal To Revise the Psychiatric
Hospital Survey Process
Under section 1861(f) of the Act,
psychiatric hospitals are a defined
provider type. This statutory provision
requires psychiatric hospitals to comply
with most hospital Medicare conditions,
known as CoPs, but includes a few
provisions applicable exclusively to
them. In 1986, special Medicare
conditions for psychiatric hospitals
were published and included, as part of
the hospital Medicare conditions, as
provisions of 42 CFR part 482. At that
time, psychiatric hospital surveys were
performed by either SA personnel or
Health Care Financing Administration 16
(HCFA) mental health surveyors (boardcertified psychiatrists, masters prepared
psychiatric nurses, masters prepared
16 Health Care Financing Administration was the
former name for CMS, which was changed on June
14, 2001.
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psychiatric social workers, doctorally
prepared clinical psychologists, and
doctorally prepared clinical
psychopharmacologists) who were
under contract with HCFA. This
extensive experience requirement was
beyond what is required for other types
of hospital services. This requirement
limited the number of SAs with
qualified surveyors. Therefore, a CMS
contractor with specially-trained and/or
experienced psychiatric surveyors
assisted the SAs in performing such
surveys. This has resulted in a
bifurcated survey process, as most
psychiatric hospitals were subjected to
two survey teams for each accreditation
survey: the hospital survey team and the
psychiatric component survey team.
However, in the FY 2014 QSOG
Mission and Priority Document, the
restrictive requirement for extensive
education and/or experience for
psychiatric surveyors was removed.
CMS developed online psychiatric
surveyor training, provided on-site
psychiatric surveyor training through
contractors and offered partnership
training for surveyors who did not have
extensive psychiatric education or
experience. This training became the
standard and expectation for
qualification to survey to the psychiatric
Medicare conditions.
The special Medicare conditions
applying to psychiatric hospitals are set
forth in § 482.60 through § 482.62. The
special provisions at § 482.60 require
the following: (a) that the hospital be
primarily engaged in providing, by or
under the supervision of a doctor of
medicine or osteopathy, psychiatric
services for the diagnosis and treatment
of mentally ill persons; (b) meet the
conditions of participation specified in
§§ 482.1 through 482.23 and §§ 482.25
through 482.57; (c) maintain clinical
records on all patients, including
records sufficient to permit CMS to
determine the degree and intensity of
treatment furnished to Medicare
beneficiaries, as specified in § 482.61;
and (d) meet the staffing requirements
specified in § 482.62. As noted earlier,
participating psychiatric hospitals must
also meet the Medicare conditions for
acute-care hospitals.
In March 2020, we eliminated the
contract for separate psychiatric
hospital surveyors and provided
comprehensive online training for all
SAs. This training focused on the
specific psychiatric hospital Medicare
conditions so that the SA surveyors
would be fully trained to conduct all
aspects of a complete psychiatric
hospital inspection. At this time, we
also combined the interpretive guidance
at Appendix AA for psychiatric hospital
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surveys into the Appendix A for
hospital surveys to provide a single
location for all of the Medicare
conditions during a full psychiatric
survey.
At this time, TJC and DNV are the
only AOs that have CMS-approved
psychiatric hospital accreditation
programs. They conduct one complete
survey of the entire psychiatric hospital,
to include inspection of the regular
hospital Medicare conditions and the
psychiatric hospital Medicare
conditions. Any AO is eligible to submit
an application for consideration for
accreditation to survey psychiatric
hospitals.
We propose to integrate the acute care
hospital and psychiatric hospital survey
processes for SAs to ensure that there is
a systematic, and integrated look at
psychiatric hospital quality. Therefore,
AOs that currently survey only hospitals
would need to expand their hospital
accreditation programs to include
Medicare conditions to survey for
psychiatric hospitals as well.
We believe that consolidating
psychiatric and acute-care hospital
Medicare condition oversight will
improve the overall quality of the care
by ensuring that systemic issues are
more easily identified. With a single
survey team conducting the survey for
the entire facility, inconsistencies,
trends, and subtle discrepancies can be
connected more easily and provide a
more comprehensive overview of
underlying systemic issues. We believe
that this comprehensive approach to
survey both the psychiatric and acutecare hospital will enhance patient
health and safety by ensuring the system
as a whole is evaluated to meet the
applicable Medicare requirements.
Moreover, a single survey team
decreases the team’s physical imprint
on the facility which minimizes any
facility disruption resulting from the
survey. When revisits are required
related to deficiencies in the psychiatric
Medicare conditions, only one survey
team will return for re-inspection,
which will reduce coordination time
and resources as well as impact on
individual facilities. Finally, we have
determined that combining the survey
process for psychiatric hospital
Medicare conditions into the hospital
program would improve the cost
efficiency of CMS’s survey and
certification activities and simplify the
survey process for SAs and AOs alike.
For SAs, we would consolidate the
deficiency report from psychiatric
hospital survey activity into one Form
CMS–2567, reporting on compliance
with both the hospital Medicare
conditions as well as the psychiatric
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services Medicare conditions. The
survey process for inpatient psychiatric
units located in acute care hospitals
would not change, and this change
would not require any revisions to our
regulations.
To ensure that surveys of psychiatric
hospitals and units located in hospitals
are performed properly by the SA
surveyors, they have been provided
online training on the psychiatric
hospital Medicare conditions. CMS
developed this online training and
released it in March 2020. It is now
available to all SA and AO surveyors at
https://qsep.cms.gov/.
We would expand the acute care
hospital accreditation program for AOs
to include current psychiatric hospital
accreditation standards. As per
§ 488.8(b), CMS assesses the
equivalency of the AOs programs to the
CMS-approved program requirements,
and, as such, this proposal to combine
acute care and psychiatric hospital
surveys necessarily required that we
also propose to revise the hospital
accreditation program application
process for AOs that have an approved
hospital program, so as to include
psychiatric hospital accreditation in
their hospital programs. Those AOs who
currently have an approved hospital
program would be required to resubmit
their standards, survey process and
surveyor training (which may include as
part of CMS’ training) to include review
of the psychiatric Medicare conditions
for psychiatric hospitals for CMS
approval. This means that an AO that is
seeking approval of a hospital
accreditation program would be
required to file one application that
includes how they will assess for the
two special Medicare conditions for
psychiatric hospitals within their
hospital accreditation program, whether
or not they are currently accrediting
psychiatric hospitals or have plans do to
so in the future.
As part of this proposal, we would
also require that the AOs that already
have an existing CMS-approved hospital
program expand their existing hospital
programs to include survey activities of
psychiatric services in psychiatric
hospitals. Those AOs who currently
have an approved hospital program
would be required to resubmit their
standards, survey process and surveyor
training for CMS approval in accordance
with § 488.8(b) by no later than 30calendar days from CMS notice to the
hospital AOs using the existing process
described in § 488.5(a)(19)(i). That
process also permits CMS to give due
consideration to a request for extension.
We hope that this would encourage
additional AOs to participate in
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deeming psychiatric hospitals. Overall,
the intent of these proposals is to ensure
that psychiatric services are evaluated
in the context of the larger hospital
program evaluation so that systemic
quality issues are not missed. A single,
comprehensive and focused survey team
will be able to identify and connect
individual issues and trends which may
be occurring under two separate
programs. Combining the two programs
provides a more global view of the
facility’s potential deficiencies and is
more likely to ensure the overall safety
and quality of care delivered. For
example, if there were significant issues
with staff supervision of patients, one
team of surveyors would be
investigating areas which now cross the
two sets of requirements and survey
teams including patient-specific care
planning, staff training, patient rights,
and potentially governing body.
Integrating the survey activities for
hospital and psychiatric standards
would also provide an avenue for
additional AOs to participate in
deeming psychiatric hospitals, which
would produce more competition and
provide facilities with more options for
surveying authorities.
N. Limitation on Terminated Deemed
Providers/Suppliers Seeking Re-Entry
Into Medicare/Medicaid (§ 489.57,
§ 488.4(b) & § 488.5(a)(21))
Involuntary termination of the
Medicare provider agreement is the
ultimate sanction for non-compliance
with Medicare’s basic health and safety
requirements. On average, less than ten
involuntary terminations occur each
year. From January 2015 through
September 2023, a total of fifty-eight
accredited providers and suppliers,
including ASCs, ESRD facilities, HHAs,
Hospices, Hospitals, RHCs, and OPTs,
were involuntarily terminated from the
Medicare program for unresolved health
and safety concerns. These providers
currently have the option of seeking reapproval to participate in Medicare/
Medicaid through an AO with a CMSapproved program. We remain
concerned that providers who have been
involuntarily terminated from the
Medicare program may continue to
remain accredited by an AO, and hold
their continued accreditation out to the
public as a marker of high-quality care.
Most consumers, due to branding and
advertising by the accredited
community, associate quality of care
with accreditation, rather than CMS
certification. Therefore, involuntarily
terminated providers who retain their
AO accreditation status convey that they
continue to meet high quality of care
standards, despite their termination
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from Medicare. This situation could
weaken public trust in accreditation as
a marker of patient quality and safety.
Since AO standards are required to meet
or exceed those of Medicare, we are
proposing at § 488.5(a)(21)) that
termination by Medicare represents a
prima facie case that the facility
similarly fails to meet accreditation
standards.
These concerns were highlighted in
media reports that noted psychiatric
hospitals whose provider agreements
under Medicare were terminated for
harm to patients. These psychiatric
hospitals nonetheless retained their
accreditation despite serious health and
safety concerns.17 18 An article
published in the Wall Street Journal
(WSJ) on September 8, 2017 19 discussed
patient-safety problems at a hospital
accredited by one of the AOs that
provides fee-based consulting. These
safety issues were so severe that
Medicare considered terminating the
hospital’s Medicare participation
agreement. The AO that accredited the
hospital made no changes in the
hospital’s accreditation status and
allowed it to continue promoting itself
as fully accredited, despite being out of
compliance with the Medicare safety
requirements.
The WSJ article reinforced concerns
CMS had previously identified
regarding the very small number of
facilities which we terminated for
failing to meet our basic health and
safety regulations, but which
nonetheless retained their AO
accreditation. Continued accreditation
of these outlier facilities which receive
the ultimate sanction CMS may impose
based on their ongoing failure to meet
basic health and safety requirements
raises serious concerns about the survey
integrity and public trust attached to AO
accreditation. Therefore, we would
propose to explicitly prohibit AOs from
allowing terminated facilities to retain
their accreditation, in order to reduce
confusion for patients and families
about the continued health and safety of
terminated entities.
To address the issue of terminated
providers or suppliers remaining
accredited by an AO, we propose to add
a new regulatory requirement at
§ 488.4(b) (currently reserved). More
17 S. Armour, Psychiatric Hospitals With Safety
Violations Still Get Accreditation, Wall Street
Journal, December 26, 2018.
18 D. Gilbert Behind Joint Commission’s ‘Gold
Seal of Approval,’ a history of missed safety
violations at psychiatric hospitals, Seattle Times,
October 9, 2019.
19 S. Armour, Hospital Watchdog Gives Seal of
Approval, Even After Problems Emerge, Wall Street
Journal, September 8, 2017.
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specifically, proposed § 488.4(b)(1)
would provide that if CMS terminates
the participation agreement of a
Medicare-certified provider or supplier,
under our authority at section 1865(c) of
the Act, we would no longer recognize
the accreditation provided by an AO as
evidence that Medicare standards had
been met or exceeded for that
terminated provider or supplier.
In support of the proposed
requirements at § 488.4(b), we also
propose to add a new requirement at
§ 488.5(a)(21) that would require AOs to
provide, with their initial and
subsequent renewal applications, a
statement certifying that, in response to
a written notice from CMS notifying the
AO that one of its accredited providers
or suppliers has been terminated from
the Medicare/Medicaid program, the AO
agrees to terminate or revoke its
accreditation of the terminated provider
or supplier within 5-business days from
receipt of said written notice.
The Medicare-approved deeming
accreditation provided to Medicarecertified providers and suppliers by
AOs permits Medicare participation in
lieu of certification by the SA.
Therefore, if a Medicare-certified
provider or supplier chooses to obtain
deeming accreditation from an AO, and
then their Medicare participation is
involuntarily terminated after failing to
meet the Medicare conditions, we
would no longer recognize the validity
of the AO’s accreditation with respect to
that provider/supplier under our
oversight authority at section 1865 of
the Act. We do not believe that it is
appropriate for a terminated provider or
supplier’s AO deeming accreditation to
remain effective for CMS purposes after
we have terminated this provider or
supplier for significant deficiencies that
the AO may not have cited, discovered,
or fully recognized. A terminated
provider or supplier may attempt to use
the AO’s accreditation as a quality
marker, when in fact their practices are
severely deficient, unsafe and noncompliant with the CMS conditions.
Under section 1865 of the Act, we
may involuntarily terminate CMS
approval of an AO’s overall deeming
authority if they miss egregious
deficiencies in one of their accredited
providers or suppliers’ practices.
However, we would prefer to withdraw
our recognition of the individual
provider’s or supplier’s deeming
accreditation instead, and separately
work with the AO to determine why
such deficiencies went undiscovered.
Proposed § 488.4(b)(2) would provide
that if CMS terminates the participation
agreement of a Medicare certified
provider or supplier, that terminated
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provider or supplier would be required
to meet the requirements set forth at
§ 489.57 before a new agreement for
Medicare participation will be
approved. We also propose a new
paragraph at § 489.20(z) that
reinstatement of a terminated provider
or certified supplier agreement is
subject to the proposed revision to
§ 489.57.
The introductory text to § 489.57
states that when CMS has terminated a
provider agreement under § 489.53, or
by the OIG under § 489.54, a new
agreement with that provider will not be
accepted unless CMS or the OIG, as
appropriate, finds that said provider or
supplier meets the requirements set
forth in sections § 489.57(a) and (b). We
propose to redesignate § 489.57(a) and
(b) as § 489.57(a)(1) and § 489.57(a)(2)
without any change to the text.
Redesignated § 489.57(a)(1) requires a
provider or supplier that has been
terminated from the Medicare program
to demonstrate that the reason for
termination of the previous Medicare
provider agreement has been removed
and provide reasonable assurance that it
will not recur. Redesignated
§ 489.57(a)(2) requires the terminated
provider or supplier to fulfill, or make
satisfactory arrangements to fulfill, all of
the statutory and regulatory
responsibilities of its previous
agreement.
We also propose to add a new
paragraph (b) at § 489.57. Proposed
§ 489.57(b) would provide that before a
new agreement for Medicare
participation of the terminated provider
or supplier is approved, such
terminated provider or supplier would
have to meet the requirements of
proposed § 489.57(b)(1) through (b)(3).
Proposed § 489.57(b)(1) would require
that the terminated provider or supplier
be under the exclusive oversight of the
SA for the purposes of the initial
certification survey, initial certification
and demonstration of compliance with
the Medicare conditions. Proposed
§ 489.57(b)(2) would require that the
terminated provider or supplier remain
under the exclusive oversight of the SA
until the SA had certified the
provider’s/supplier’s full compliance
with all applicable Medicare conditions
and their application for participation in
the Medicare/Medicaid program had
been approved. Finally, proposed
§ 489.57(b)(3) would provide that CMS
would not recognize accreditation from
a CMS-approved accrediting
organization for deeming purposes
while the terminated provider or
supplier was under the oversight of the
SA and its new agreement for Medicare
participation was pending.
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Our intent for proposing the new
requirements at § 489.57(b) is to ensure
that the SA would have the initial
survey and certification oversight
authority over terminated providers and
suppliers seeking re-entry into the
program about which we had significant
health and safety concerns. The
terminated provider or supplier would
remain under the oversight of the SA for
a reasonable assurance (RA) period of a
duration to be determined by CMS.
During the RA period, the terminated
provider or supplier would be required
to provide reasonable assurance to the
SA and CMS that the deficiencies that
caused the termination have been
rectified and that they are not likely to
recur. This means that a terminated
provider or supplier would have to use
the SA, as opposed to an accrediting
organization, to perform their initial
participation survey and assessment of
compliance before a new agreement for
Medicare participation is approved. If,
after completion of the reasonable
assurance period, the SA found that the
provider or supplier met all of the
applicable Medicare conditions, it
would certify said provider or supplier’s
compliance and notify CMS of its
findings. CMS would consider the SA’s
survey findings (certification) in
deciding whether to approve or deny
the provider’s or supplier’s new initial
certification request for participation in
the Medicare program. However, if the
SA were to find deficiencies and
determine that the provider or supplier
did not meet the CMS conditions, the
SA could take several courses of action,
depending on the severity of the
deficiencies. The SA could require the
provider or supplier to submit a plan of
correction and give the provider or
supplier time to correct the deficiencies.
The SA would then perform a
subsequent survey to see if the
deficiencies have been removed and
compliance with all requirements has
been achieved. If the deficiencies found
during the initial SA survey were
significant or egregious, the SA may not
approve a plan of correction, notify
CMS of its findings and
recommendation, and CMS may deny
the provider’s or supplier’s request for
new participation in the Medicare
program.
The SA cannot recommend
certification of a previously terminated
provider or supplier that has significant
condition or immediate jeopardy level
deficiencies, unless these deficiencies
are properly and promptly addressed
and removed by the provider or
supplier. Therefore, the proposed new
requirements at § 489.57(b) would help
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to provide reasonable assurance to CMS
that the significant health and safety
concerns that warranted termination of
the provider or supplier’s Medicare
agreement have been corrected and
compliance with all applicable
requirements and conditions have been
achieved before a new agreement for
participation in the Medicare program is
approved. We believe that SA oversight
during a reasonable assurance period of
a length to be determined by CMS, and
survey and certification that the
terminated provider or supplier now
meets the Medicare conditions is a safer
alternative to accepting AO deeming of
that terminated provider or supplier.
This is because in the majority of cases
of terminated providers and suppliers,
the SA discovered the egregious
deficiencies that caused terminations
during a validation or complaint survey
that took place within 60 days of an AO
reaccreditation survey. The AOs that
accredited the terminated providers and
suppliers had not detected or cited these
deficiencies during their surveys.
Section 1865(b) of the Act prohibits
public disclosure of surveys performed
by AOs (with the exception of HHAs,
hospice programs, and surveys that
relate to an enforcement action taken by
the Secretary). However, the proposed
new requirements at § 489.57(b) will
allow the findings from the compliance
surveys performed by the SA to be made
publicly available under our authority at
subpart B, 42 CFR 401.133(a) and
section 1864(a) of the Act states:
‘‘within 90 days following the
completion of each survey of any health
care facility, ambulatory surgical center,
rural health clinic, comprehensive
outpatient rehabilitation facility,
laboratory, clinic, agency, or
organization by the appropriate State or
local agency described in the first
sentence of this subsection, the
Secretary shall make public in readily
available form and place, and require (in
the case of skilled nursing facilities) the
posting in a place readily accessible to
patients (and patients’ representatives),
the pertinent findings of each such
survey relating to the compliance of
each such health care facility,
ambulatory surgical center, rural health
clinic, comprehensive outpatient
rehabilitation facility, laboratory, clinic,
agency, or organization with (1) the
statutory conditions of participation
imposed under this title and (2) the
major additional conditions which the
Secretary finds necessary in the interest
of health and safety of individuals who
are furnished care or services by any
such health care facility, ambulatory
surgical center, rural health clinic,
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12031
comprehensive outpatient rehabilitation
facility, laboratory, clinic, agency, or
organization.’’
Thus, the proposed new requirements
at § 489.57(b) would allow for greater
transparency regarding the current
compliance of terminated health care
providers and suppliers seeking re-entry
into the program.
O. Proposal for Technical Correction for
End-Stage Renal Disease (ESRD)
Facilities and Kidney Transplant
Programs (§ 488.4(a)(4))
Section 1865(a)(1) of the Act had
historically excluded dialysis facilities
from participating in Medicare via a
CMS-approved accreditation program;
however, section 50403 of the
Bipartisan Budget Act of 2018 amended
section 1865(a) of the Act to include
renal dialysis facilities as provider
entities allowed to participate in
Medicare through a CMS-approved
accreditation program. In addition, the
Bipartisan Budget Act of 2018 also
amended section 1865(a) of the Act to
remove a reference to section 1881(b) of
the Act, which had prevented kidney
transplant programs from being
accredited via CMS-approved
accreditation programs. CMS’ existing
regulations at § 488.4(a)(4), requires that
when a national AO has applied for and
has received CMS-approval of a
provider or supplier accreditation
program, then when a provider or
supplier demonstrates full compliance
with all of the accreditation program
requirements of the accrediting
organization’s CMS-approved
accreditation program, the accrediting
organization may recommend that CMS
grant deemed status to the provider or
supplier. Further, the regulation at
§ 488.4(a)(4) states that ‘‘CMS may deem
the provider or supplier, excluding
kidney transplant centers within a
hospital and ESRD facilities, to be in
compliance with the applicable
Medicare conditions or requirements.’’
The CMS regulatory language of
‘‘excluding kidney transplant’’ programs
is therefore in direct conflict with the
Bipartisan Budget Act of 2018
amendment. We therefore propose to
remove the exclusion specifically in our
accreditation regulations under
§ 488.4(a)(4) to align with the statutory
changes implemented the Bipartisan
Budget Act of 2018.
V. Request for Information Regarding
Timeframes and Expectation for the
Submission of AO Applications
We are requesting public comments
on the timeframes and expectation for
the submission of applications
submitted by AOs, because our existing
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AO oversight regulations do not restrict
how many times an AO may submit an
initial application to CMS for review.
Based on our initial review of an
application for completeness, which
verifies the AO has submitted all
required elements under § 488.5, we
often find the application to be
incomplete and must return it to the AO
for additional clarifications, missing
items or revisions. CMS also receives
applications, which require multiple
pass backs due to the applicant’s failure
to provide information about issues,
such as their financial viability, survey
processes which appeared not to be
operationalized, or similar concerns.
However, our existing regulations do
not limit the number of times an AO
may submit an application for review by
CMS. Therefore, it is possible that
incomplete application could be
submitted an unlimited number of
times.
Therefore, we are soliciting public
comments on the following possible
future limitations to the submission of
applications by the AOs that accredit
Medicare-certified providers and
suppliers:
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• An AO may only re-submit an
application for CMS re-review two
additional times after CMS initially
deems the application to be
‘‘incomplete’’.
• If the AO’s application is found by
CMS to be incomplete after the third
submission, the AO must wait a
minimum of 2 years before resubmitting
the entire application for CMS
consideration.
VI. Collection of Information
Requirements
Under the Paperwork Reduction Act
of 1995, we are required to provide 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.
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• The quality, utility, and clarity of
the information to be collected.
• Recommendations to minimize the
information collection burden on the
affected public, including the use of
automated collection techniques.
We are soliciting public comment on
each of these issues stated in sections III
and IV of this proposed rule.
If you comment on these information
collections, that is, reporting,
recordkeeping or third-party disclosure
requirements, please submit your
comments electronically as specified in
the ADDRESSES section of this proposed
rule.
Comments must be received on April
15, 2024.
Wage Data
To derive average costs, we used data
from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics’
May 2021 National Occupational
Employment and Wage Estimates for all
salary estimates (https://www.bls.gov/
oes/current/oes_nat.htm). In this regard,
Table 1 presents the mean hourly wage,
the cost of fringe benefits and overhead
(calculated at 100 percent of salary), and
the adjusted hourly wage.
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TABLE 1: U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics 2021 Wages Rates
Registered Nurse*
29-1141
$39.78
$39.78
$79.56
Medical or Health Services
Manager**
11-9111
$57.61
$57.61
$115.22
Medical Secretaries***
43-6013
$19.11
$19.11
$38.22
General and Operations
Managers****
11-1021
$60.45
$60.45
$120.90
Physicians*****
29-1228
$105.22
$105.22
$210.44
Radiologic Technologists******
29-2034
$31.97
$31.97
$63.94
Medical Records and Health
Information Technicians*******
29-2071
$23.21
$23.21
$46.42
Chief Executive Officer********
11-1011
$102.41
$102.41
$204.82
Health care Support
Occupations*********
31-0000
$16.02
$16.02
$32.04
* https://www.bls.gov/oes/current/oes291141.htin
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A. ICRs Related to Conflict of Interest
Proposals
In this proposed rule, we made
several proposals related to AO and AO
surveyor conflicts of interest. We will
address the cost and time burden
associated with each of these proposals
separately below.
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1. ICR Related to Proposed Conflict of
Interest Policies & Procedures AOs Must
Submit to CMS (§ 488.5(a)(10))
We proposed to modify § 488.5(a)(10)
to add a requirement that the AOs must
provide specific information with their
conflict of interest policies and
procedures with the application they
submit to CMS. Specifically, the AO
must submit the following policies and
procedures: (1) the AO’s policies and
procedures for separation of its fee-
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based consulting services from its
accreditation services; (2) policies and
procedures for protecting the integrity of
the AO’s accreditation program,
including the requirements of
§ 488.8(k)(3) policies and procedures for
the prevention and handling potential
or actual conflicts of interest that could
arise from situations in which an AO
owner, surveyor, or other employee has
a direct interest in or relationship with
another survey agency or health care
facility to which the AO provides
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** https://www.bls.gov/oes/current/oes119111.htin
*** https://www.bls.gov/oes/current/oes436013.htin
**** https://www.bls.gov/oes/current/oes111021.htin
***** https://www.bls.gov/oes/current/oes291228.htin
****** https://www.bls.gov/oes/current/oes292034.htin
******* https://www.bls.gov/oes/current/oes292071.htin
******** https://www.bls.gov/oes/current/oesl 11011.htin
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accreditation services, including being
employed as a SA surveyor or having an
ownership interest in a health care
facility, etc., and (4) policies and
procedures for notification of CMS
when a conflict of interest is discovered.
The AO would need to modify their
current conflict of interest policy and
procedures to include the above-stated
information required under the
proposed revisions to § 488.5(a)(10). We
estimate that this task would be
performed by a team of at least two AO
staff members. The AO staff that would
most likely perform this task would be
a person whose background is a RN or
a health or medical services manager.
According to the U.S Bureau of Labor
statistics, the mean hourly wages for an
RN is $39.78. This wage adjusted for the
employer’s fringe benefits and overhead
would be $79.56. According to the U.S
Bureau of Labor statistics, the mean
hourly wages for a medical or health
services manager is $57.61. This wage
adjusted for the employer’s fringe
benefits and overhead would be
$115.22.
We estimate that it would that at least
two persons working in a full-time basis
for 3 days for the AO staff to revise their
conflict of interest policies and
procedures to add the required
information. Therefore, we estimate that
the total time required for the two team
members to perform this task would be
48 hours (8 hours × 3 days = 24 hours
per each person) + (24 hours per person
× 2 persons = 48 hours).
As of February 4, 2020, there are 11
AOs, that accredit Medicare-certified
providers and suppliers. We estimate
that the total time burden across these
11 AOs would be 528 hours (48 hours
× 11 AOs).
We estimate that the cost burden
related to the work performed by the
RNs on the team would be $1,909.44 (24
hours × $79.56). We estimate that the
cost burden related to the work
performed by the medical or health
services manager on the team would be
$2,765.28 (24 hours × $115.22). Finally,
we estimate that the total burden costs
related to the requirements for proposed
§ 488.8(i)(1) would be $4,674.72 per AO
($1,909.44 + $2,765.28). The total cost
across the 11 AOs that accredit
Medicare-certified providers and
suppliers is $51,421.92 (11 AOs ×
$4,674.72).
We believe that the stated burden
would be incurred by the AO once prior
to the time that they submit their first
application after this requirement
becomes effective. However, we believe
that after the AOs have made required
modifications to their conflict of interest
policies, they will not have to revise
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them again, but will submit the same
revised conflict of interest policies every
6 years with their renewal applications,
so this burden would not be incurred
again. We do not count the burden
related to the submission of the
application because the AO would be
required to submit the application every
6 years to renew the CMS approval for
their accreditation programs.
2. ICR Related to Requirement That the
AOs Submit Surveyor Declarations to
CMS on an Annual Basis (§ 488.5(a)(22))
We propose to add a new paragraph
(22) to § 488.5(a), which would require
that the AO submit a declaration by
each surveyor of any outside interests or
relationships with the health care
facilities that the AO accredits. This
section would also require that the
surveyor declarations must be updated
on an annual basis and submitted to
CMS no later than December 31st each
year.
There would be a time and cost
burden to the AO for having to collect
declarations from each of their
surveyors annually. There would also be
a time and cost burden to the AO for the
submission of the surveyor declarations
to CMS.
We estimate that it would take at least
two persons working on a full-time basis
for 3 days (8 hours per day) to prepare
the surveyor declarations, get each AO
surveyor to complete a declaration and
submit them to CMS. This would equate
to 24 hours per person or 48 hours
across both staff performing this task.
We believe that the AO staff that
would be performing these tasks would
be an RN and a management staff
person, whose job duties meets the
description of the U.S. Bureau of Labor
Statistics job of category of health and
medical services manager. As stated
previously, the adjusted mean hourly
wage for an RN is $79.56. The adjusted
mean hourly wage for a medical and
health services manager is $115.22.
We estimate that the time burden for
this task per each AO would be 48 hours
(24 hours × 2 staff persons). We further
estimate that the total time burden
across all 11 AOs that accredit
Medicare-certified providers and
supplier would be 528 hours (48 hours
× 11 AOs).
We estimate that the cost burden
related to the work performed by the RN
would be $1,909.44 (24 hours × $79.56).
We estimate that the cost burden related
to the work performed by the medical or
health services manager would be
$2,765.28 (24 hours × $115.22).
Finally, we estimate that the cost
burden associated with the
requirements for proposed § 488.5(a)(22)
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per each AO would be $4,674.72
($1,909.44 + $2,765.28. The total annual
cost burden across the 11 AOs that
accredit Medicare-certified providers
and supplier is estimated to be
$51,421.92 (11 AOs × $4,674.72).
3. ICRs Related to Proposal To Place
Restrictions on AO Fee-Based
Consulting Services Provided by AOs to
the Medicare-Certified Providers and
Suppliers They Accredit (Proposed
§ 488.8(i)(1) through (3))
In section IV.B.3 of this proposed
rule, we propose restrictions on AO feebased consulting provided by
accrediting organizations or their
associated consulting divisions or
companies. We believe the proposed
regulations at § 488.5(i) would still
allow AOs to provide fee-based
consulting services to the providers and
suppliers they accredit with restrictions
that address the conflict of interest
issues associated with this service.
This proposal would require the AOs
that provide fee-based consulting to
modify their fee-based consulting to
revise their fee-based consulting
business documents, such as their
business charter, business documents,
employee training information,
informational documents that are
distributed to prospective clients, and
their as policies and procedures.
We believe that the AO staff that
would be performing these tasks would
be an RN and a management staff person
that has a job that meets the U.S. Bureau
of Labor Statistics job of category of
health and medical services manager.
The adjusted mean hourly wage for an
RN is $79.56. The adjusted mean hourly
wage for a medical and health services
manager is $115.22.
We estimate that this proposal would
require the above-stated two AO staff
member to work on a full-time basis for
1 week (that is, 40 hours per person) to
complete the required revisions to the
AO’s fee-based consulting business
documents. Therefore, we estimate that
the time burden per each AO for the two
AO staff members to perform the
required tasks would be 80 hours (2
team members × 40 hours).
At this time, there are only four AOs
that provide fee-based consulting.
Therefore, the total annual time burden
would be 320 hours (80 hours × 4 AOs).
The cost burden related to the work
performed by the RN on this task would
be $3,182.40 (40 hours × $79.56). The
cost burden related to the work
performed by the medical or health
services manager on this task would be
$4,608.80 (40 hours × $115.22).
Finally, we estimate that the annual
cost burden per each AO related to the
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requirements for proposed § 488.8(i)(1)
would be $7,791.20 ($3,182.40 +
$4,608.80). We estimate that the total
annual cost burden to the four AOs that
provide fee-based consulting would be
$31,164.80 ($7,791.20 × 4 AOs).
4. ICR Related to Proposed Requirement
for Submission of Information About
AO Fee-Based Consulting Services
Provided (§ 488(i)(5))
We propose to add a requirement at
§ 488.8(i)(5) that would require the AOs
to provide CMS with the following
information about the fee-based
consulting services they provide to CMS
on a bi-annual basis: (1) whether the AO
or its fee-based consulting division or
separate business entity (such as a
company or corporation, that provides
fee-based consulting) provides fee-based
consulting services; (2) the names and
CCN numbers of all health care
providers and suppliers to which the
accrediting organization or its
associated consulting division or
company has provided fee-based
consulting services during the previous
6-month period; (3) the dates the AO
fee-based consulting services were
provided to each provider and supplier;
(4) whether the accrediting organization
has, at any time in the past provided, or
is currently providing accreditation
services to each health care provider or
supplier listed in said document; (5) for
each health care provider and supplier
listed in said document, the date of the
most recent accreditation survey
performed, and the date the next reaccreditation survey is due to be
performed; and, (6) a description of the
AO fee-based consulting services
provided to each health care provider or
supplier listed in said document.
This proposed regulation further
requires that statement containing the
information require by § 488.8(i)(5)(i)
through (i)(5)(iv) must be submitted to
CMS every 6 months. We proposed that
the document containing this
information must be submitted to CMS
by no later than 15 days after the end
of each calendar bi-annual period which
consist of January 1st to June 30th and
July 1st (period #1) through December
31st (period #2) each year. This means
that the submission deadline for period
#1 would be July 15th and the
submission deadline for period #2
would be January 15th each year.
We estimate that the burden
associated with this proposed
requirement would include the time and
costs associated with the gathering of
the information necessary to prepare the
required document, the time required to
prepare the document and the time
required to send the document to CMS.
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This burden would occur on a
continuing bi-annual basis.
We believe that the burden would be
greater for the preparation of the first
report. Thereafter, the AOs would have
already prepared and formatted this
report and would simply have to update
the information every 6 months.
We estimate that it would that at least
two persons working on a full-time basis
for 3 days to prepare and submit the
first required statement to be submitted
CMS. We further estimate that this team
would consist of one RN and one
Medical or Health Service Manager.
Therefore, we estimate that the total
hourly time burden for each team
member would be 24 hours (3 days × 8
hours per).
We estimate that the time burden per
each AO per for the work performed by
the two AO staff members to prepare
each report would be 48 hours (2 team
members × 8 hours × 3 days). The total
annual time burden per each AO would
be 96 hours (2 reports × 48 hours).
There are four AOs that provide feebased consulting. However, we propose
that this provision would apply to all 11
AOs that accredit Medicare-certified
providers and suppliers because it
would require each AO to, at a
minimum, respond to question #1
which asks whether the AO or an
associated consulting division or
company established by the AO
provides fee-based consulting services.
Those AOs that do not provide feebased consulting would simply respond
in the negative to this question and
would not have to provide any further
information.
The time and cost burden to the AOs
that do not provide fee-based consulting
would be negligible because they would
send this notice to CMS via email. This
task would take an AO staff member less
than a minute to complete every 6
months. Therefore, as this task is so
minimal, we have not assessed burden
for this task for the AOs that do not
provide fee-based consulting.
The estimated total annual time
burden across all AOs that do provide
fee-based consulting would be 384
hours (96 hours per 2 reports annually
× 4 AOs). The estimated total time
burden across these 11 AOs would be
384 hours (96 hours × 4 AOs).
The cost burden related to the work
performed by RNs on the team would be
$1,909.44 (24 hours × $79.56 per hour).
The cost burden for the work performed
by the medical or health services
manager would be $2,765.28 per each
AO (24 hours × $115.22). The total
estimated cost burden per each AO
would be $4,674.72. ($1,909.44 +
$2,765.28) The total estimated cost
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burden across the 4 AOs that provide
fee-based consulting services would be
$18,698.88 ($4,674.72 × 4 AOs).
We believe that the above stated time
and cost burdens would be incurred by
the AOs that provide fee-based
consulting only the first time that they
prepare the required document and
send it to CMS. We believe that after the
AO has prepared their first report, they
would have this report in an electronic
format on their computers. Therefore,
for the second and all subsequent
report, we estimate that the related to
the preparation and submission of this
report would be reduced by at least twothirds. This means that it would take
only one RN a period of 8 hours to
prepare the required statement and
submit it to CMS. We estimate that the
total time burden across the four AOs
that provide fee-based consulting,
would be 32 hours (8 hours × 4 AOs).
We estimate that the cost burden per
each AO related to the work performed
by an RN to prepare the second or
subsequent report would be $636.48 (8
hours × $79.56). The total cost burden
across the four AOs that provide feebased consulting would be $2,545.92
($636.48 × 4 AOs).
We are requesting comments from the
public on our estimated burden for this
activity and whether the frequency of
bi-annual (every six months) is
appropriate.
5. ICR Related to Proposed Requirement
That Accrediting Organization Establish
Fee-Based Consulting Firewall Policies
and Procedures (Proposed § 488.8(j))
We propose at § 488.8(j) to require any
AO that provides fee-based consulting
services or its associated fee-based
consulting division or company to have
robust, written AO fee-based consulting
firewall policies and procedures. These
firewall polices and procedure must, at
a minimum, include the following
provisions: (1) the AO’s fee-based
consulting services must be provided by
a separate division or company from the
AO’s accreditation division; (2) the AO’s
fee-based consulting division or
separate company must maintain
separate staff from that of the AO’s
accreditation divisions to ensure that
the fee-based consulting division staff
do not perform AO’s accreditation
division functions and that the AO’s
accreditation division staff do not
perform fee-based consulting division
functions; and, (3) the AO’s
accreditation staff and surveyors are
prohibited from marketing the AO’s feebased consulting services to the AO’s
accreditation clients.
This proposed requirement would
only apply to the AOs that provide fee-
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based consulting and would require
these AOs that establish new fee-based
consulting firewall policies or revise
their policies and procedures to meet
the proposed requirements. It is our
understanding, from review of the
comments received on the submitted by
the AOs in response to the AO Conflict
of Interest RFI, that these AOs already
have such fee-based consulting firewall
policies in place. If this is the case, then
the time and cost burden associated
with revising these policies and
procedures would not be extensive.
In section VI.A.5 of this proposed
rule, we estimated that it would take
each AOs that provide fee-based
consulting services 80 hours to revise
their fee-based consulting business
documents, such as their business
charter, business documents, employee
training information, informational
documents that are distributed to
prospective clients, and their as policies
and procedures.
We have included the burden
associated with the revision of AO feebased consulting firewall policies and
procedures. We believe that the burden
associated with the revision of the AO’s
fee-based consulting policies and
procedures would fall under the time
and cost burden estimated in section
VI.A.5 of this proposed rule. As such,
we will not assess a separate burden
here.
6. ICR Related to Proposed Regulation
To Prevent Conflicts of Interest Caused
by AO Owners, Surveyors or Other
Employees Interest In or Relationship
With a Health Care Facility Accredited
by the AO (Proposed § 488.8(k))
We propose to avoid conflicts of
interest related to employment
relationships between AO surveyors and
health care facilities that are accredited
by the AO, the AO’s shall do the
following: (1) AOs shall not allow its
surveyors to participate in the survey of
facilities with which they have a
relationship; (2) AOs shall not allow its
surveyors to have any input into or
influence the outcome of any survey
performed for facilities with which they
have a relationship; (3) AOs shall not
allow its surveyors to have any
involvement with the pre or post survey
activities for the health care facilities
with which they have a relationship;
and, (4) AOs shall not allow its
surveyors to have any contact with the
records from the surveys for any health
care facilities with which they have a
relationship.
We believe that this in exempt from
the PRA in accordance with 5 CFR
1320.3(b)(2). We believe that this should
already be a usual and customary
practice of the AOs.
B. ICRs Associated With the
Requirement That AOs Incorporate the
Medicare Conditions
1. ICRs Associated With the
Requirement That the AOs Provide
Detailed Crosswalks Identifying
Incorporation of the CMS Standards
As proposed under § 488.5(a)(3), we
would require AOs to incorporate the
language of the CMS’ Medicare
conditions and provide CMS with a
detailed crosswalk. While AOs are
required to provide a similar crosswalk
under the existing process, CMS
previously only required a
‘‘comparable’’ standard, therefore
through this proposal, AOs would need
to recreate their AO standards to
incorporate the Medicare condition
language into their accreditation
standards for their deemed programs.
We also note that this proposal would
require a one-time overhaul of AO
standards and burden would be
imposed for the first year following the
effective date of this rule and not be a
reoccurring annual burden. Burden
costs subsequent to changes would
remain as current practice with updates
required to be reviewed and approved
as outlined in existing § 488.5.
We would expect that the AOs use the
existing CFR language they are required
to crosswalk currently and assign an AO
standard number or realign their
existing AO standards in a manner
which would allow for a one-to-one
comparison to ensure their accreditation
standards incorporate the CFR language.
Aforementioned, CMS is not restricting
the AOs from exceeding the Medicare
conditions, however if exceeded the AO
would need to provide additional
language or clearly delineate the
exceeding language. For example, we
would only anticipate that the format
used be similar to the one seen in Table
2.
CFR
Citation
Medicare conditions Language
§482.B(h)
Patient visitation rights. A hospital must
have written policies and procedures
regarding the visitation rights of patients,
including those setting forth any clinically
necessary or reasonable restriction or
limitation that the hospital may need to
place on such rights and the reasons for the
clinical restriction or limitation.
AO
Standard
Number
XX.000
XX.0001
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AO Standards Language
Same as CMS.
Patient visitation rights. A hospital
must have written policies and
procedures regarding the visitation
rights of patients, including those
setting forth any clinically necessary
or reasonable restriction or limitation
that the hospital may need to place
on such rights and the reasons for the
clinical restriction or limitation.
Exceeds: The hospital must update
these written policies on an annual
basis with Governing body aooroval.
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We anticipate that the AOs for each
program type (that is, hospice, home
health, outpatient physical therapy,
hospitals, ESRD facilities, RHC, CAH,
ASCs, psychiatric hospitals) for which
the AO has deeming authority would be
required to review and revise their
existing crosswalk and standards into
the required format. We further
anticipate that the review and updating
of AO standards crosswalk would be
done by AO staff consisting of at least
one RNs and a medical secretary.
We estimate that the RN would spend
2 hours performing this task. We further
estimate that a medical secretary would
spend 198 hours performing this task.
Therefore, the total time burden per
each AO for this task would be 200
hours. (2 hours per 1 RN + 198 hours
per 1 medical secretary).
This requirement applies only to
those AOs that accredit Medicarecertified providers and suppliers. There
are 11 AOs that accredit Medicarecertified providers and suppliers.
Therefore, the total time burden for this
task would be 2,200 hours (200 hours ×
11 AOs).
The adjusted mean hourly wage for an
RN is $79.56. We estimate that the cost
for the work performed by the RN to
perform the work on this task would be
$159.12 (2 hours × $79.56 per hour).
The adjusted mean hourly wage for a
medical secretary is $38.22. We estimate
that the cost burden for the work
performed by the medical secretary on
this task would be $7,567.56 (198 hours
× $38.22 per hour). The total estimated
cost burden for all work performed on
this task would be $7,726.68 ($159.12 +
$7,567.56).
There are currently 11 AOs that
accredit Medicare-certified providers
and suppliers. Therefore the annual
burden cost for all 11 AOs for one
program only would be $84,993.48
($7,726.68 × 11 AOs).
However, the majority of our AOs
have multiple accreditation programs,
therefore this cost would increase based
on the number of programs. For
example, one of the AOs has deeming
authority for six program types,
therefore this AO would be subject to a
burden cost of $46,360.08 ($7,726.68 ×
6 programs).
CMS has 24 approved accreditation
programs across 11 AOs (as of February
15, 2022) which are accredited, and so
the total cost across all AOs and their
programs would be $185,440.32
($7,726.68 × 24).
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2. ICRs Related to AO Providing Their
New Accreditation Standards to Their
Accredited Providers and Suppliers
In addition to changing the survey
standards as proposed under
§ 488.5(a)(3), the AOs would be required
to provide the newly revised AO
standards to the facilities they accredit.
There are approximately 14,904
accredited facilities across the program
types. We anticipate that a Medical
Secretary (see Table 1 in section VI of
this proposed rule for wage estimates)
would provide all accredited facilities a
copy of the revised standards for
accreditation. We believe that the
majority of AOs have a website portal
which standards are available to their
facilities, therefore we anticipate the
estimated time to upload and notify
facilities of the revisions to take 2 hours
per program type. Between the 11 AOs
we have 24 programs which are
accredited.
As noted above, we estimate that this
task would take approximately 2 hours
to complete per each program. We also
estimate that the total burden hours for
this task would be 48 hours (2 hours ×
24 programs).
We estimate that the cost burden per
each program would be $76.22 ($38.22
× 2 hours). We further estimate that the
total cost associated with uploading the
AOs revised standards across the 24
accreditation programs would be
$1,829.28 ($76.22 × 24 AO programs).
In addition, we believe the AOs
would also notify their individual
facilities impacted. We believe this
would be done by an AO staff person
with a job that falls under the U.S.
Bureau of Labor Statistics job category
of medical secretary. The adjusted mean
hourly wage for a medical secretary is
$38.22.
We estimate this task would take 15
minutes per each facility notified. There
are 14,904 facilities that must be
notified. Therefore, the total time
required to notify all of these facilities
would be 3,726 hours (.25 hours ×
14,904 facilities).
We estimate that the annual cost
burden per each AO for notifying the
facility would be $9.55 per each facility
(60 minutes divided by 15 minutes = 4)
and ($38.22 divided by 4 = $9.55). We
estimate that the total annual cost across
all of these facilities would be
$142,333.20 ($9.55 × 14,904 facilities).
3. ICRs Related to Education to
Providers and Suppliers Regarding New
Standards
We believe the AOs would be
required to provide education to their
deemed facilities related to the new
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standards (standards incorporating the
CMS Medicare condition language). As
part of this education, the AOs would
provide an overview of the changes in
the AOs accreditation standards to the
healthcare facilities accredited by the
AO. We further believe that the
regulations to persons from the health
care facility that would take this
training would be staff such as a
regulatory compliance specialist
(general manager) at the health care
facilities the AO accredits. We further
believe the AO would generally send an
education specialist or RN to provide
this overview of the revised standards,
or have an online platform of training
for the facilities to use.
The adjusted mean hourly wage for a
general and operations manager is
$60.45. This wage adjusted for the
employer’s fringe benefits and overhead
would be $120.90 (see Table 1).
According to the U.S Bureau of Labor
Statistics, the mean hourly wage for a
RN is $39.78. This wage adjusted for the
employer’s fringe benefits and overhead
would be $79.56 (see Table 1).
We anticipate that the training to be
provided by the AOs about the new
regulations would take approximately 1
hour to complete. We believe that each
facility would send at least two persons
to this training. We believe that the
persons that would be likely to attend
this training would be a general or
services operation manager at the
facility and an RN, who is a regulatory
compliance manager.
There are approximately 14,904
deemed facilities. Therefore, we
estimate that the total time burden to
each health care facility for the
completion of the AO training would be
2 hours. The total estimated time
burden for the accredited facilities
would be 29,808 hours (2 hours ×
14,904 facilities).
We estimate that the cost burden for
the time spent for the RN to attend the
training would be $79.56. RN (1 hour ×
$79.56 per hour). We further estimate
that the cost burden for the general or
services manager from the facility to
attend the training would be $120.90 (1
hour × $120.90 per hour). We estimate
that the total cost burden per each
accredited facility for the completion of
this training by the two facility staff
persons would be $200.46 ($79.56 per
RN + $120.90 per general or services
manager). We further estimate that the
total annual cost burden across all
14,904 accredited facilities would be
$2,987,655.84 ($200.46 × 14,904
facilities).
The burden associated with these
requirements will be submitted to OMB
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NEW).
C. ICRs Associated With the
Requirement That AOs Use Survey
Processes That are Comparable to That
Used by CMS and the SAs
Our proposal to § 488.5(a)(4) through
(13), would require the AOs to submit
revised initial and renewal application
information supporting comparability in
the survey processes and guidance
established by CMS and used by the SA.
However, we note that while additional
regulatory language changes are being
made under § 488.5(a)(4) through (13),
AOs are already required to submit this
type of documentation. Our intent is to
clarify in regulation the minimum
standards and required documentation
that AOs show comparability to CMS
survey process, forms, guidelines and
instructions to surveyors.
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1. ICR Related to Revised
Documentation Submission
Requirements Imposed by Requirements
That AOs Use Comparable Survey
Process at § 488.5(a)(4), § 488.5(a)(4)(iii),
§ 488.5(a)(4)(v), and § 488.5(a)(4)(vii)
The requirements under(§ 488.5(a)(4),
§ 488.5(a)(4)(iii), § 488.5(a)(4)(v), and
§ 488.5(a)(4)(vii)) would require AOs to
ensure that with the submission for an
initial or renewal application for
deeming authority, in addition to what
is required in the existing regulations,
that the AO includes: (1) core principals
of the survey process; (2) comparable
survey guidance and instructions,
including specific processes for certain
survey activities; and, (3) description of
the organizations survey review process,
including the accreditation decisions
and investigative and organizational
processes used to make determinations
of non-compliance. We do however
note, that the AOs are already required
to submit the documentation and that
most AOs provide this within their
applications, therefore we do not
believe this imposes any additional
burden on the AOs, as this has been a
long-standing expectation as described
in the preamble of this proposed rule
and the 2015 AO Final Rule, (80 FR
29795, May 22, 2015), which stated that
while the explicit reference to the SOM
was removed, ‘‘this will not change our
practice of assessing comparability in
light of the SOM survey process
requirements for Sas, which implement
survey process requirements found in
parts 488 and 489 of our regulations
governing certification and provider
agreements. Therefore, we believe no
additional burden is imposed through
these proposed provisions.
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2. ICR Related to Revised
Documentation Submission
Requirements Imposed by Requirements
That AOs Use Comparable Survey
Process at § 488.5(a)(5), § 488.5(a)(6),
and § 488.5(a)(12)).
As described above related to the
clarified and strengthened proposed
requirements under § 488.5(a)(4),
§ 488.5(a)(4)(iii), § 488.5(a)(4)(v), and
§ 488.5(a)(4)(vii), we further propose to
require additional information under
§ 488.5(a)(5), § 488.5(a)(6), and
§ 488.5(a)(12). As also mentioned above,
we believe that the AOs currently
submit this information with their
initial and renewal applications,
however by codifying the requirements
within regulation, we are clarifying the
requirements which are instrumental to
maintaining the integrity of the survey
process, whether conducted by the SA
or the AO. Therefore, we do not believe
these clarifications to what our
expectations are within regard to the
survey process documentation would
impose any additional burden on the
AOs.
3. ICR Related to Revised
Documentation Submission
Requirements Imposed by Requirements
That AOs Use Comparable Survey
Process at § 488.5(a)(13)
The proposed requirements under
§ 488.5(a)(13) would require AOs to
submit specific information on the AOs’
notification procedures, including
timeframes for notification, to CMS in
regards to a facility which the AO
accredits if the facility fails to meet
accreditation standards or its
accreditation status is affected, as part of
the documentation currently required
under § 488.5(a)(13). Furthermore, the
existing requirements currently require
the AOs to have: (1) procedures for
responding and investigating
complaints; and (2) a process for
decision-making as it relates to
accrediting status. In addition to the
above added proposed requirement, we
also propose to add that AOs must
submit documentation regarding the
AO’s process for facilities that withdraw
from accreditation, including
notification procedures.
We believe this review and revision
would be conducted by a one RN, one
general health care support member,
one medical secretary and the CEO to
develop these procedures, review and
approve all changes. The adjusted mean
hourly wage for an RN is $79.56. The
adjusted mean hourly wage for a health
care support staff person is $32.04. The
adjusted mean hourly wage for a
medical secretary is $38.22. The
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adjusted mean hourly wage for a CEO is
$204.82.
We anticipate it would take
approximately 5 hours for the AO staff
to review the new requirements set forth
in the final rule and to determine what
changes need to be made to their
standards, policies and procedures. We
also estimate that it would take an
additional 5 hours for the AO staff to
make the revisions required to align
their accreditation standards and
policies and procedures with our
proposed revisions. Therefore, the total
estimated time burden per each AO
would be 10 hours.
This requirement applies to the 11
AOs (as of February 15, 2022) that
accredit Medicare-certified providers
and suppliers. Therefore, the total time
burden across these 11 AOs would be
110 hours (10 hours × 11 AOs).
As stated above, we believe that the
AO staff that would perform this task
would consist of an RN, a health care
support staff person, a medical secretary
and the AO’s CEO to review and
approve all changes. We estimated that
the cost burden for the work performed
by the RN would be $198.90 (2.5 hours
× $79.56 per hour). We estimate that the
cost burden for the work performed by
the health care support staff person
would be $80.10 (2.5 hours × $32.04).
We estimate that the cost burden for the
work performed by the medical
secretary would be $95.55 (2.5 hours ×
$38.22). We estimate that the cost
burden for the work performed by the
CEO would be $512.05 (2.5 hours ×
$204.82).
We estimate that the total cost burden
per each AO for this task would be
$886.60 ($198.90 + $80.10 + $95.55 +
$512.05). The burden across the 11 AOs
that accredit Medicare-certified
providers and suppliers would be
$9,752.60 ($886.60 × 11 AOs).
4. ICR Associated With the Requirement
That the AOs Prepare a Training for
CMS About Its Revised Survey Process
(Proposed § 488.5(a)(4)(xi))
The proposed requirement at
§ 488.5(a)(4)(xi) would require the AOs
to submit a presentation or web-based
training materials to CMS, in a format to
be chosen at the discretion of the AO,
which would provide CMS with an
overview of the AOs survey process and
demonstrate how the AO’s survey
process is comparable to that of CMS.
We would require the AOs to provide
this presentation to CMS prior to the
performance of any direct observation
surveys as provided for at § 488.8(h).
As the AOs currently have existing
training for its surveyors on the survey
process, we believe that the preparation
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of this presentation would only require
the AOs to extrapolate what they
believed are the core differences within
CMS survey process and that of their
organization.
We believe it would take
approximately 5 hours for the review of
the current AO processes and
approximately 25 hours to develop an
abbreviated course of their survey
processes for their accredited programs.
We believe that the persons at the AO
who would perform these tasks would
be two RNs and a medical secretary. We
estimate that each RN would spend
approximately 25 hours performing the
required work. We further estimate that
the medical secretary would spend 5
hours performing work on this task. The
adjusted mean hourly wage for an RN is
$79.56. The adjusted mean hourly wage
for a medical secretary is $38.22.
We estimate that the total time burden
per each AO would be 55 hours. This
provision would apply to all 11 AOs
that accredit Medicare-certified
providers and suppliers. Therefore, the
estimated total annual time burden for
these tasks would be 605 hours (55
hours × 11 AOs).
We estimate that the cost burden to
each AO for the work performed by the
RNs would be $3,978 ($79.56 × 50
hours). We further estimate that the cost
burden to each AO for the work
performed by the medical secretary
would be $191.10 ($38.22 × 5 hours).
The total estimated cost burden per each
AO for this task would be $4,169.10
($3,978 + $191.10).
This requirement would apply to all
11 AOs that accredit Medicare-certified
providers and suppliers. Therefore, we
estimate that the total cost would be
$45,860.10 ($4,169.10 × 11).
Across these 11 AOs there are 24
different types of accreditation
programs. We estimate that the burden
associated with this task would be
$100,058.40 ($4,169.10 × 24
accreditation programs).
5. ICR Related to Requirement for AO
To Submit Survey Findings/Reports
As mentioned in section IV.C of this
proposed rule, we also propose to
require the AOs as part of their
application under § 488.5(a)(4)(viii) to
acknowledge that it will submit any
requested survey findings and reports,
to include complaint survey reports to
CMS for internal use.
This requirement would not cause the
AOs to incur any new additional burden
as the submission of this information is
already required by this regulation and
is therefore a usual and customary
component of initial and renewal
applications. AOs are also already
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required to submit the deficiencies and
facility non-compliance in a roll up
format. Therefore, this proposed
requirement for a full survey report
could potentially be seen as a burden
reduction as CMS would not require a
specific new entry or format and reduce
time spent by the AO summarizing the
survey activity.
6. ICR Related to Documentation
Requirements for Submission to CMS
for Approval of the AOs’ Revised
Accreditation Standards and Survey
Process as Required by § 488.8(b)
The AOs would be required to
resubmit their new survey processes
and standards for a comparability
review as required by § 488.8(b)(1).
We believe that the AO staff that
would work on this task would be a
medical secretary. We believe that the
medical secretary would gather all
required documents, complete the
compilation of documents and
verification. The adjusted mean hourly
wage for a medical secretary is $38.22.
We anticipate the total burden hours
for each AOs to compile each
accrediting program and the revisions as
proposed within § 488.4(a)(1) and
§ 488.4(a)(2) for a resubmission to CMS
for review and approval would be 80
hours.
This requirement would apply to the
11 AOs that accredit Medicare-certified
providers and suppliers. Therefore, we
estimate that the total annual would be
880 hours (80 hours × 11 AOs).
The total estimated cost burden for
each AO is $3,057.60 (80 hours ×
$38.22). The total annual cost burden s
is $33,633.60 ($3,057.60 × 11 AOs).
There are 24 accreditation programs
across the 11 AOs that accredit
Medicare-certified providers and
suppliers. We estimate that the total
annual cost burden across all 24
accreditation programs would be
$73,382.40 ($3,057.60 × 24 accredited
programs).
As mentioned in section IV.C of this
proposed rule, the proposed changes
would not implement a reoccuring
annual burden, but rather have a onetime burden on the AOs until the survey
processes and activities are aligned with
our proposed changes. CMS would
resume the current process for approval
and re-approval of AOs and their
accrediting programs as outlined within
the revised proposed § 488.5.
We note, there is no direct burden
associated with these changes to the
deemed provider or supplier, and there
is no cost burden or reporting burden
associated with the proposed addition
of the definition of unannounced under
§ 488.1.
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D. ICR Related to Requirement That the
AO Surveyors Take the CMS Online
Surveyor Training
We proposed at § 488.5(a)(8), to add a
new requirement that would require
AOs to state in their application for
CMS approval, that all AO surveyors
have completed or will complete two
CMS mandatory documentation courses
and the relevant program specific CMS
online trainings established for SA
surveyors, initially, and thereafter.
There are a total of 163 online training
programs that are available to SA
surveyors on the CMS QSEP website.
These courses are self-paced and the
person taking the course can take the
courses over a period of time. The
amount of time required to complete
each of these training course varies
depending on the pace at which the
surveyor completes the training. The
basic surveyor training courses for
specific programs range in time from
16–82 hours for completion. We
estimate the average time it takes for
completion of one of the basic surveyor
courses is 27 hours. This could be more
or less depending upon the specific
program that AO surveyors need to take.
We propose that each AO surveyor
take the two mandatory documentation
courses (that is ‘‘Principles of
Documentation for Non-Long-Term
Care’’ and ‘‘Basic Writing Skills for
Surveyor Staff’’) and the basic surveyor
course for the care setting for which
they perform surveys. We further
estimate that it would take
approximately 4 hours to complete each
of the documentation courses, however,
these courses are self-paced and could
take less or longer. Therefore, an AO
surveyor would incur a time burden of
approximately 35 hours for the
completion of these CMS surveyor
training courses (27 hours for the basic
surveyor course + 4 hours for
‘‘Principles of Documentation for NonLong-Term Care’’ course + 4 hours for
‘‘Basic Writing Skills for Surveyor Staff’’
course).
Each AO had different numbers of
surveyors, depending on its size and the
number of accreditation programs it has.
Therefore, for the purposes of this
burden estimate, we will estimate that
each AO has an average of 75 surveyors.
This would equate to an estimated time
burden to each AO associated with this
requirement would be 2,625 hours. (35
hours × 75 surveyors).
As of February 15, 2022, there are 11
AOs that accredit Medicare-certified
providers and suppliers. We estimate
that the time burden across all of these
AOs associated with the requirement
that their surveyors take the CMS online
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surveyor training would be 28,875 hours
(2,625 hours × 11 AOs).
The adjusted mean hourly wage for an
RN is $79.56. We estimate that each AO
would incur wages in the amount of
$2,784.60 per each surveyor that
completes the CMS online surveyor
training (35 hours × $79.56). Each AO
would incur a total cost burden in the
amount of $208.845 for all 75 surveyors
that take the CMS online surveyor
training (75 surveyors × $2,784.60).
The estimated cost burden across all
AOs (that accredits Medicare-certified
providers and supplies) associated with
this requirement would be $2,297,295.
($208.845 × 11 AOs). The burden
associated with this requirement will be
submitted to OMB under OMB control
number 0938–NEW.
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E. ICR Associated With the
Establishment of a Definition for
‘‘National in Scope’’
As proposed at § 488.1, we would
require the AO to provide
documentation for meeting the
definition of ‘‘national in scope’’ within
their initial and reapplication process.
As currently required by § 488.1, the AO
must provide documentation that
demonstrates the organization meets the
definition of a ‘‘national accrediting
organization’’ as it relates to the
accreditation program. Therefore, we
estimate the burden on AOs to be
minimal as they are already required to
provide documentation to this effect.
Therefore, we estimate the following:
1. ICR Related to Documentation
Requirements for ‘‘National in Scope’’
We anticipate that a CEO of an AO
would compile and verify that the AO
meets the proposed definition of
‘‘national in scope’’.
Since CMS is not requiring a specific
format for this documentation, but
suggests the AO provide a list which
identifies the accredited facilities
meeting the definition, we anticipate the
compiling of this information would
take approximately 40 minutes (0.66
hour) per each AO. For existing CMS
approved AOs, the general reapplication cycle is not to exceed 6
years. Therefore, we anticipate this
burden to be applicable every 4 to 6
years. Therefore, we estimate that the
total time burden across all 11 AOs
would be 7.33 hours (or 7 hours & 20
minutes) every 4 to 6 years.
The average hourly wage of the AOs
CEO is $204.82. Therefore, we estimate
that the total cost burden for this task
per each AO would be is $136.52
($204.82 divided by 60 minutes =
$3.413 per min.) and ($3.413 × 40 min.
= $136.52 per 40 min.)). We further
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estimate that the total cost burden
across the 11 AOs that accredit
Medicare-certified providers and
suppliers would be $1,501.72 ($136.52 ×
11 AOs).
2. ICR Related to Incorporation of the
‘‘National in Scope’’ Requirements Into
the AO’s Application
We anticipate that a medical secretary
would finalize and package/send the
application for CMS approval.
We believe this additional document
of meeting ‘‘national in scope’’ would
take approximately 5 minutes (0.083
hours) per each AO to be included in
the package which is already required
under § 488.5. This requirement would
apply only to the 11 AOs that accredit
Medicare-certified providers and
suppliers. We estimate that the total
time burden associated with this task
across these 11 AOs would be 55
minutes (0.91 hour) (5 minutes per each
AO × 11 AOs).
The adjusted mean hourly wage for a
medical secretary is $38.22. Therefore,
we estimate that the cost burden per
each AO for this task would be $3.18 (5
minutes (0.083 hour) × $38.22). We
further estimate that the total cost
burden would be $35.03 ($38.22/60
min. per hour = $0.637 per min.) and
($0.637 per min. × 55 min. = $35.03 per
55 min.) or ($3.185 × 11 AOs = $35.03).
We would anticipate that this burden
would be imposed to ensure AOs
submit verification of meeting the new
definition. However, this burden would
only be incurred by the AOs during the
submission of their initial or renewal
applications which would only take
place every 4 to 6 years. The burden
associated with these requirements will
be submitted to OMB under OMB
control number 0938–NEW.
We do note, there is no direct burden
associated with these changes to the
deemed provider or supplier.
F. ICR Associated With the Proposed
Revision of the AO Performance
Measures and To Require a Publically
Reportable Plan of Correction
SAs perform validation surveys on a
sample of providers and suppliers (such
as hospitals, CAHs, ASCs, and HHAs)
accredited by the AOs. Validation
surveys compare the survey findings of
the AO to those of the SA to see if there
are any disparities. The disparities
found between an AO’s surveys and an
SA’s surveys is used in a performance
measure called the ‘‘disparity rate’’ and
is tracked by CMS as an indication of
the quality of the surveys performed by
the AO as described earlier in this
proposed rule.
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We proposed to revise the validation
process for Medicare-certified providers
and suppliers by adding a new type of
validation survey know as direct
observation validation survey. As a
result of the revisions made to the
validation process, we have necessarily
been required to propose a new two-part
definition for ‘‘disparity rate’’ to revise
the definition of disparity rate.
At § 488.8(a)(4), we propose that the
AO submit a publicly reportable plan of
correction for performance that is less
than an acceptable threshold for
established performance measures.
This is a new requirement and
therefore would be a new burden for
AOs to complete. The plan of correction
will be completed and submitted to
CMS within 10-business days following
the notification of the AO of their less
than acceptable performance. It will
address the areas of improvement and
the specific actions to be taken to
improve those areas on a sustainable
basis, the process for ongoing
monitoring of progress of the toward
acceptable performance, as well as the
individuals responsible for overseeing
the plan of correction and the
anticipated implementation dates of the
proposed actions.
We believe that this task would be
performed by the AO’s CEO. We also
anticipate that each AO would prepare
approximately 123 plans of correction
per year. We further estimate that it
would take 80 hours of time by the AO’s
CEO to prepare each plan of correction.
This is using the overall average
disparity rate of 33 percent. There are
approximately 374 annual validation
surveys performed across all provider
types (374 × 0.33 total plans of
correction). We further estimate that the
total annual time burden per each AO
for the completion of POCs would be
9,840 hours (80 hours × 123). We further
estimate that the total annual time
burden for the completion of all POCs
across all 11 AOs that accredit
Medicare-certified providers and
suppliers would be 108,240 hours
(9,840 hours × 11 AOs).
We estimate that the cost burden to
each AO for the completion of each POC
would be $16,385.60 (80 hours ×
$204.82). We further estimate that the
annual cost burden per each AO for the
completion of the estimated 123 POCs
per year would be $2,015,428.80 (9,840
hours × $204.82). We further estimate
that the total annual cost burden across
all 11 AOs that accredit Medicarecertified providers and suppliers for the
completion of all POCs annually would
be $22,169,716.80 ($2,015,428.80 × 11
AOs).
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G. ICR Associated With the Revision of
the Definition of ‘‘Disparity Rate’’
In the proposal for the definition of
disparity rate as dicussed in section IV.I
of this proposed rule, there is no
associated burden as look-back
validation surveys are a usual and
customary part of the existing
validations program. Direct observation
validation surveys are already being
performed under current regulatory
authority § 488.8(a)(2) and are a usual
and customary part of the VRP. AO will
continue to perform survey activities as
required, the revised and expanded
definition of disparity would impact
data collection by CMS, but no
additional burden to the AO or
provider.
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with PROPOSALS2
H. Burden Reduction Associated With
the Revision of the AO Validation
Program
At § 488.9, we propose to revise the
AO validation program to include the
additional component of a direct
observation of the AO’s survey process
by SA or CMS surveyors. This would be
called a direct observation validation
survey. There is no associated burden to
the AO or SA. Currently, CMS funds
validation surveys. We do not anticipate
additional costs.
However, there are associated burden
reductions to the provider community
since half of the traditional validation
survey will be replaced by direct
observation validation surveys. To
determine the amount of burden
reduction on the provider community, it
would be assumed that providers
undergoing a traditoinal validation
survey assign facility liaison staff to
accompany and assist SA surveyors
during their on-site validation survey.
We believe that this task would be
performed by RNs and other medical
administrative staff. We estimate that
the time burden for this task would be
8 hours per day for an average of 3 days.
Therefore, we estimate that the time
burden per each direct observation
surveys would be 24 hours.
We anticipate a burden reduction
based on our proposed changes because
the implementation of the direct
observation validation surveys would
decrease the number of look-back
validation validation surveys to be
performed by at least 50 percent.
The anticipated annual burden
reduction calcualtions are based on our
FY 2019 look-back validation survey
data collection. In FY 2019, we
conducted approximately 315 surveys.
We estimate that at least a 50 percent
reduction in the look-back validation
surveys would reduce the provider and
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supplier burden by 144 hours per
survey (3 days × 8 hours × 6 liaison
staff) for a total of 25,920 hours (144
hours × 180 look-back validation
surveys) across all programs that receive
validation surveys. This figure assumes
on average a look-back validation onsite survey of 3 days with three SA
surveyors and a total of six provider
facility staff as provider liaisons. Total
annual burden reduction to providers
and supplier nationwide would be
¥$2,062,195.20 (25,920 hours ×
$79.56).
I. ICR Associated With the Revision of
the Psychiatric Hospital Accreditation
Process
As discussed in section IV.L of this
proposed rule, we propose to require
AOs which have a CMS-approved
hospital accreditation program to
expand their programs to include the
three special conditions for psychiatric
hospitals and provide CMS with a
detailed crosswalk which identifies the
inclusion of the psychiatric standards
that meet or exceed CMS psychiatric
Medicare conditions. While these AOs
already have approved hospital
programs, we note that this proposal
would require a one-time overhaul of
the AO’s hospital program standards to
be expanded to include the psychiatric
standards and burden would be
imposed for the first year following the
effective date of this rule and not be a
reoccurring annual burden. Burden
costs subsequent to changes would
remain as current practice with updates
required to be reviewed and approved
as outlined in existing § 488.5. As
proposed in multiple sections of this
proposed rule, we propose to require the
AOs to use Medicare conditions, more
comparable survey processes through
clarifications of what CMS considers
‘‘core survey processes’’ with the ability
to delineate where they exceed and take
the CMS online surveyor training
courses. Therefore, we believe burden
would be minimal and most of the
burden would be in areas in which the
AO would ‘‘exceed’’ Medicare
requirements.
As of December 7, 2022, there are four
CMS-approved AOs which have
established hospital accreditation
programs. Two of these four AOs
already have an established CMS
approved psychiatric accreditation
program.
We anticipate that this requirement
would be of moderate burden for AOs,
however we anticipate the burden to be
a one-time burden for two of four
hospital AOs, because two of these AOs
already have a CMS-approved
psychiatric accreditation program and,
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12041
therefore, would not be required to
submit a new application to CMS. This
requirement would be part of the initial
and renewal application process as
defined in § 488.5, therefore would not
impose annual reoccurring burden to
any AOs initially applying or
reapplying. We would expect that the
AOs use the existing CFR language they
are required to crosswalk currently in
the regular hospital program and
expand it to assign an AO standard
number to the psychiatric standards
with language which meets or exceeds
the Medicare conditions.
1. ICR Associated With the Requirement
That AOs Develop a Psychiatric
Hospital Accreditation Program
We anticipate that the AOs would be
required to review and revise their
existing hospital program crosswalk and
standards to include the psychiatric
standards. We believe this review and
revision would be conducted by a cadre
of AO professionals consisting of two
RNs, one physician, one medical
secretary and the CEO to review and
approve all changes.
We believe the two RNs would
develop the initial psychiatric standards
incorporated under the AOs hospital
program. We estimate that this task
would take approximately 150 hours to
complete. The adjusted mean hourly
wage for an RN is $79.56.
We believe the AO’s CEO would
review and approve the revised
standards and that this task would take
approximately 45 hours. The adjusted
mean hourly wage for a CEO is $204.82.
We believe the medical secretary
would process the AO’s revised
application and send it to CMS. We
estimate that this task would take 5
hours. The adjusted mean hourly wage
for a medical secretary is $38.22.
We estimate that the time burden for
each AO would be 200 hours (150 hours
for the two RNs + 45 hours by the CEO
and 5 hours by the medical secretary).
There are currently three AOs that
would need to revise their hospital
programs to incorporate the three
psychiatric special standards. We
estimate that the total time burden
across these three AOs would be 600
hours (200 hours × 3 AOs).
We estimate that the cost burden for
the work performed by the RNs would
be $11,934 ($79.56 × 150 hours), the
CEO would be $9,216.90 ($204.82 × 45
hours), the medical secretary would be
$191.10 ($38.22 × 5 hours). Therefore,
the total estimated cost burden per AO
for these tasks would be $21,342
($11,934 + $9,216.90 + $191.10).
We further estimate that the total cost
burden across the three AOs which
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Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 32 / Thursday, February 15, 2024 / Proposed Rules
would need to revise their hospital
programs to incorporate the three
psychiatric special standards into their
hospital accreditation programs would
be $64,026 ($21,342 × 3 AOs).
2. ICR Associated With Accrediting
Facilities Under the Revised Psychiatric
Hospital Accreditation Program
As aforementioned, there are four
existing AOs which have a CMS
approved hospital accreditation
program; however, two of four AOs
would need to resubmit their
applications for CMS-approval based on
the proposed provisions for the
psychiatric standards as well as meeting
the definition and criteria of national in
scope. The scope of the CMS approved
hospital programs would not change
with this proposed expansion of the
program to include the psychiatric
special conditions. Once the hospital
program is approved as national in
scope, the addition of the three special
conditions does not change the overall
scope of the entire program. Therefore,
there would be no additional burden
associated with this requirement.
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with PROPOSALS2
J. Burden Associated With Limitations
to Terminated Providers Seeking ReEnrollment and Certification in
Medicare/Medicaid Programs
We propose to add a new policy at
§ 488.4(b) which would withdraw CMS
recognition of the ‘‘deeming authority’’
accreditation of any Medicare certified
provider or supplier that is
involuntarily terminated from the
Medicare/Medicaid program, if such
provider/supplier subsequently applies
to re-enter the Medicare program. We
also propose adding a new requirement
at § 488.4(b)(2) that would require a
terminated provider or supplier to have
to meet all of the requirements of
§ 489.57 before a new agreement with
that provider or supplier into the
Medicare program will be approved.
In support of proposed § 488.4(b), we
also propose to add a new requirement
at § 488.5(a)(21) that would require AOs
to provide, with their initial and
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subsequent renewal applications, a
statement certifying that, in response to
a written notice from CMS notifying the
AO that one of its accredited providers
or suppliers has been terminated from
the Medicare/Medicaid program, the AO
agrees to terminate or revoke its
accreditation of the terminated provider
or supplier within 5-business days from
receipt of said written notice.
We have also made revisions and
added proposed new requirements at
§ 489.57(b) that would require a
terminated provider or supplier to meet
the requirements set forth at
§§ 489.57(b)(1) to (b)(3) before their new
agreement for Medicare participation
will be approved.
Proposed new § 489.57(b)(1) would
require that a terminated provider or
supplier must be under the exclusive
oversight of the SA for the purpose of
the initial survey, certification and
demonstration of compliance with the
Medicare conditions before their new
agreement for Medicare participation
can be approved. Proposed new
§ 489.57(b)(2) would require that the
previously terminated provider or
supplier must remain under the
exclusive oversight of the SA until the
SA or the applicable CMS Location
(formerly called CMS Regional Office)
has performed a reasonable assurance
survey, determined that the terminated
provider or supplier has corrected the
deficiencies that caused the termination
and that they are unlikely to recur and
has certified its full compliance with all
applicable Medicare conditions. The
previously terminated provider’s or
supplier’s new agreement for
participation in the Medicare/Medicaid
program may not be approved until
such certification has been provided by
the SA or CMS Location. Finally, our
proposal at new § 489.57(b)(3) would
require that during the time period in
which the terminated provider or
supplier is under the exclusive
oversight of the SA and while the new
agreement for Medicare participation is
pending, CMS will not accept or
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recognize accreditation from a CMSapproved accrediting organization.
We believe that there would be no
additional cost or time burden
associated these proposed requirements
for several reasons. First, the terminated
providers and suppliers would have to
undergo periodic, unannounced surveys
performed by the SA or CMS. We
believe that this is exempt from the PRA
in accordance with 5 CFR 1320.3(b)(2)
because these surveys are a usual and
customary practice of accreditation.
Therefore, the terminated provider or
supplier would incur no additional time
or cost burden related to the SA survey
process.
Also, considering that as a result of
the above-stated proposals, CMS would
not recognize deeming accreditation
from an AO while a provider or supplier
is terminated from the Medicare
program, the AOs would be required to
terminate or revoke accreditation for
terminated providers and suppliers; and
that during the time that a new
agreement for Medicare participation is
pending, would be under the exclusive
oversight of the SA, they would not
incur any fees for SA’s services. If they
remained accredited by the AO, they
would pay fees for this accreditation.
In addition, all prospective providers
and suppliers, including those that were
terminated and seeking re-entry into the
Medicare/Medicaid program are already
required to submit an initial Form
CMS–855 provider enrollment
application to CMS. The provider or
supplier would therefore not incur any
new time or cost burden related to the
submission of this application.
The burden associated with all
requirements stated above will be
submitted to OMB for approval under
OMB control number (0938–NEW).
K. Summary of Estimated Burden
The Table 3 provides a summary of
the estimated burden related to the
proposals being made in this proposed
rule.
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12043
TABLE 3: Summary of Cost Burden
Requirement that the AOs provide
information about the fee-based consulting
services they provide.(§ 488.5(a)(10))
•
48 hours per each AO
•
$4,674.72 per each AO for 1st report
•
528 hours across 11 AOs
•
$51,421.92 across all 11 AOs
2.
Requirement that AO surveyors submit
conflict of interest declarations to CMS on
an annual basis (§ 488.5(a)(22))
•
48 hours per each AO
•
$4,674.72 per each AO
80 hours per each AO
•
•
$51,421.92 across all 11 AOs
Restrictions on AO fee-based consulting
services (§ 488.8(i))
•
•
528 hours across 11 AOs
3.
4.
Submission about information about the
fee-based consulting provided by the AO
•
320 hours across 4 AOs that provide
fee-based consulting
•
$31,164.80 across the 4 AOs that
provide fee-based consulting.
•
96 hours per each of the 4 AOs that
provide fee-based consulting for the
1st year of annual reports
•
$4,674.72 per each AO for 1st report
•
384 hours across the 4 AOs that
provide fee-based consulting for 1st set
of annual reports
$18,698.88 across the all 4 AOs that
provide fee-based consulting for 1st
report
•
$636.48 per AO for the 2nd yearly
reports & all subsequent yearly reports
•
48 hours per each AO for 2nd yearly
reports & all subsequent yearly reports
•
•
192 hours per each AO for 2nd year &
orts
a11 subse uent 'earl
O hours
(The time burden associated with this
requirement is included with burden
calculation for proposed 488.8(i)
above)
•
$2,545.92 across the all 4 AOs that
provide fee-based consulting for the
znd yearly reports & all subsequent
rts
'earl
$0
(The cost burden associated with tlris
requirement is included with burden
calculation for proposed 488. 8(i)
above)
•
$0 - because this should be a usual
and customary practice of the AOs.
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with PROPOSALS2
•
5.
Requirement that Accrediting Organization
Establish Fee-Based Consulting Firewall
Policies and Procedures (Proposed
§ 488.8G))
•
6.
Requirement to Prevent Conflicts of Interest
Caused By AO Surveyor Relationship with
A Health Care Facility Accredited by the
AO (Proposed§ 488.8(k))
•
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$7,791.20 per each AO
0 hours
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1.
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B. Reguirement that the AO IncoIDQrate the
CMS standards to ensure imI!roved
evaluation of AO uerformance
1.
2.
3.
4.
•
200 hours per each AO
•
$7,726.68 pereachAO
•
2,200 hours across the 11 AO that
accredit Medicare-certified providers
& suppliers
•
•
$84,993.48
across the 11 AOs that accredit
Medicare-certified providers &
suppliers$185,440.32 across 24
accreditation programs
•
I-hour training per each health care
facility personnel
•
$76.22 per each accreditation program
•
2 hours per each accreditation
program type
•
$1,829.28 across all 24 accreditation
programs
•
•
48 hours across all 24 program types
0.25 hour per each facility
•
$9.55 per each facility
•
3,726 hours across all 14,904 facilities
•
$142,333.20 across all 14,904
facilities
•
2 hours across each facility
•
$200.46 per facility
•
29,808 hours across all 14,904
facilities
•
$2,987,655.84 across all 14,904
facilities
•
O hours
•
$0 - because the AOs are already
required to submit this information
•
O hours
•
$0 - because the AOs are already
required to submit this infonnation
•
10 hours per each AO
•
$886.60 per each AO
•
110 hours across the 11 AOs that
accredit Medicare-certified providers
& suppliers
•
$9,752.60 across 11 AOs
•
55 hours per each AO
•
$4,169.10 per each AO
•
605 hours across the 11 AOs that
accredit Medicare-certified providers
& suppliers
•
$45,860.10 across 11 AOs
•
$100,058 across all 24 accreditation
program types
Requirement that the AOs provide a
detailed crosswalk identifying
equivalent standards
Burden related to AO providing copies of
their revised accreditation standards to their
accredited providers and suppliers
Burden to AO related to providing notice to
the accredited pro,;ders and suppliers
impacted
Burden to providers and suppliers related to
taking education about the AOs revised
accreditation standards
1. Burden associated with requirement that
AOs must submit documentation about their
survey processes as required by
§ 488.5(a)(4), § 488.5(a)(4)(iii),
§ 488.5(a)(4)(v), and§ 488.5(a)(4)(vii).
2. Burden associated with new documentation
requirements created by requirement that
AOs must use a comparable survey process
(§ 488.5(a)(5), § 488.5(a)(6), and
§ 488.5(a)(l2))
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with PROPOSALS2
3. Burden Related to Documentation
Requirements Imposed By Requirement
that AOs Use Comparable Survey Process
(§ 488.5(a)(l3) ICR Related to Requirement
for AO to Submit Survey Findings/Reports)
4. Burden associated with the preparation of a
presentation that AOs must prepare and
provide to CMS to demonstrate how their
survey processes are comparable to that of
CMS
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C. Burden Related to Reguirement that AOs
Must Use ComI!arable Smvey Processes to
That Used by CMS and the SAs
5. ICR Related to Requirement for AO to
Submit Survey Findings/Reports
•
0 hours
•
$0 - because the AOs are already
required to do this.
6. Burden Related to Submission of Revised
Accreditation Standards and Survey
Processes for review and approval by CMS
as required by § 488.8(b)
•
80 hours per each accreditation
program type
•
$3,057.60 per each accreditation
program type
•
880 hours across the 11 AOs that
accredit Medicare-certified providers
and suppliers
•
$33,633.60 across the 11 AOs that
accredit Medicare-certified providers
and suppliers
•
1,920 hours across the 24
accreditation program types
•
$73,382.40 across all 24 accreditation
program types
Burden Related to Addition of the
Dcfmition of"Unannounccd Surveys"
•
0 hours
•
$0
D. ProUQsal to Reguire AO Surveyors to Take
CMS Online Surve:tor Training
•
35 hours per each surveyor
•
$2,784.60 per each surveyor that takes
the training
•
2,625 hours per 75 surveyors per each
AO
•
$208.845 per AO per 75 surveyors
•
28,875 hours (per 75 surveyors per
each AO) across the 11 AOs that
accredit Medicare-certified providers
& suppliers
•
$2,297,295 across the 11 AOs that
accredit Medicare-certified providers
& suppliers
•
0.66 hour every 4-6 years
•
$136.52 per each AO
•
7.33 hours across the 11 AOs that
accredit Medicare-certified providers
& suppliers
•
$1,501.72 across the 11 AOs that
accredit Medicare-certified providers
& suppliers.
7.
E. Burden Related to Documentation
Reguircments for "National in Scoue
1.
Documentation requirement for "National
in Scope"
2.
ICR related to incorporation of the
"National in Scope" requirements into the
AO's application
•
0.083 hourpereachAO
•
$3,185 per each AO
•
0.91 hour across the 11 AOs that
accredit Medicare-certified providers
& suppliers
•
$35.03 across the 11 AOs that accredit
Medicare-certified providers &
suppliers
Burden Related to AO Performance
Measures, and Plans of Correction
•
80 hours per each POC
•
$16,385.60 per each POC
•
9,840 hours per each AO annually for
completion of 123 POCs per year
•
$2,015,428.80 per each AO for
completion of 123 POCs per year.
•
108,240 hours annually across all 11
AOs that accredit Medicare-certified
roviders and su liers,
•
$22,169,716.80 across all 11 AOs that
accredit Medicare-certified providers
andsu liers,
•
O hours
•
$0
•
-144 hours per each validation survey
•
-$2,062,195.20
•
-25,920 hours (144 hours x 180 lookback validation surveys) across all
programs that receive validation
surve s
F.
G. Burden Related to Revision of the
Definition of "Disuarity Rate"
H. Burden Reduction Associated with the
Revised AO Validation Surv!;Y Progmm
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1. ICR Associated With the Requirement lbat
The AOs Develop a Psychiatric Hospital
Accreditation Program
•
200 hours per each AO
•
\
$21,342 per AO
•
600 hours across the 3 AOs that would
need to modify their accreditation
progrnms
•
$64,026 across the 3 affected AOs
2. ICR Associated With Accrediting Facilities
nnder the Revised Psychiatric Hospital
Accreditation Pro
J. Limitation on Deeming Qr!tion for
Terminated Providers
•
0 hours
•
$0
•
0 hours
•
$0
67,334 total burden across all AOs/prograrn types /or accreditation programs
$24,859,522
$3,129,989
$1,829
$27,991,340
-$2,062,195
BILLING CODE 4120–01–C
VII. Response to Comments
Because of the large number of public
comments, we normally receive on
Federal Register documents, we are not
able to acknowledge or respond to them
individually. We will consider all
comments we receive by the date and
time specified in the DATES section of
this preamble, and, when we proceed
with a subsequent document, we will
respond to the comments in the
preamble to that document.
VIII. Regulatory Impact Analysis
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with PROPOSALS2
A. Statement of Need
We seek to strengthen the public trust
in CMS-approved AOs’ findings and to
protect the health and safety of patients
that seek services from Medicare and
Medicaid-participating providers that
are accredited by CMS-approved AOs.
We believe that AOs that voluntarily
seek approval for ‘‘deeming purposes’’
are taking on a critical quality assurance
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role for the American people. Patients
need to be able to rely on the strength
of that accreditation to be assured that
their health care services will be safe
and of high quality. Where there are
gaps in that accreditation process, or
where quality issues are not fully
identified or investigated by the AO, it
means that current and future patients
may experience unnecessary harm or
quality issues. Therefore, we are seeking
to strengthen our oversight of AOs by
revising existing regulations or
implementing new regulations that
would address the following issues: (1)
place limitations on the fee-based
consulting services AOs offer to the
providers and suppliers they accredit;
(2) implement penalties for violation of
the prohibition against AO fee-based
consulting; (3) require AOs to report
information to CMS on a bi-annual basis
about the fee-based consulting services
they provide; (4) require AOs to report
specific conflict of interest information
to CMS with their initial and renewal
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applications; (5) require AOs to submit
surveyor conflict of interest declarations
to CMS on an annual basis; (6) prohibit
AO owners, surveyors and other
employees, that currently or within the
previous 2 years have had an interest in
or relationship with a health care
facility the AO accredits from doing the
following: (a) participating in the survey
of that health care facility; (b) having
input into the results of the survey and
accreditation for that health care
facility; (c) having involvement with the
pre- or post-survey activities for that
health care facility, or (d) having contact
with or access to the records for the
survey and accreditation of that health
care facility; (7) require AOs to
incorporate the CMS conditions into
their accreditation standards for its
deeming programs; (8) use a comparable
survey processes; (9) revise the
validation process, implement new
performance measures and the use of
plans of correction for unacceptable
performance measure scores; (10) revise
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the hospital application process for AOs
that have an approved hospital
accreditation program to incorporate
surveys of psychiatric hospitals into
their hospital programs; (11) add new
definitions for the terms ‘‘unannounced
survey’’, ‘‘national in scope’’,
‘‘geographic regions’’, ‘‘process disparity
rate’’, and ‘‘outcome disparity rate’’; and
(12) place limitations on terminated
providers or suppliers seeking re-entry
into the Medicare program. In addition,
we are soliciting comments from the
public on whether CMS should limit the
number of times an AO can submit an
incomplete initial application for a new
accreditation program and soliciting
comments regarding other opportunities
to improve the public transparency of
quality of care findings at facilities
surveyed by AOs; recognizing that
under section 1865(b) of the Act,
surveys performed by AOs may not be
disclosed except for hospices, home
health agencies, and surveys related to
enforcement activity.
We continue to review and revise our
health and safety requirements and
survey processes to ensure they are
effective in driving quality of care for
our accredited providers and suppliers.
B. Overall Impact
We have examined the impact 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 entitled
‘‘Modernizing Regulatory Review’’
(April 6, 2023), the Regulatory
Flexibility Act (RFA) (September 19,
1980, Pub. L. 96–354), section 1102(b) of
the Social Security Act, section 202 of
the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of
1995 (March 22, 1995; Pub. L. 104–4),
Executive Order 13132 on Federalism
(August 4, 1999).
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). The Executive Order 14094
entitled ‘‘Modernizing Regulatory
Review’’ (hereinafter, the Modernizing
E.O) amends section 3(f)(1) of Executive
Order 12866 (Regulatory Planning and
Review). The amended section 3(f) of
Executive Order 12866 defines a
‘‘significant regulatory action’’ as an
action that is likely to result in a rule:
(1) having an annual effect on the
economy of $200 million or more in any
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1 year (adjusted every 3 years by the
Administrator of OIRA for changes in
gross domestic product), or adversely
affect in a material way the economy, a
sector of the economy, productivity,
competition, jobs, the environment,
public health or safety, or State, local,
territorial, 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) raise legal or policy issues
for which centralized review would
meaningfully further the President’s
priorities or the principles set forth in
this Executive Order as specifically
authorized in a timely manner by the
Administrator of OIRA in each case.
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 Executive Order 12866 ($200
million or more in any 1 year). Based on
our estimates, OMB’s Office of
Information and Regulatory Affairs has
determined that this rulemaking is
‘‘significant’’.
C. Detailed Economic Analysis
1. Benefits
In developing this proposed
regulation, we carefully considered its
potential effects including both costs
and benefits. The overall benefit of this
rule would be to improve CMS’
oversight of the AOs and to improve the
overall quality and safety of healthcare.
More specifically, the benefits of this
rule include the prevention and removal
of potential and actual conflicts of
interest, the improvement of the
validation process and anticipated
reductions in the validation disparity
rate, the additional performance
measure and the implementation of
plans of correction that would help AOs
that have low performance measure
scores to prepare a plan for how to
improve their performance. We note
that the generation of benefits is
contingent upon behavior change,
which entails costs; provisions that are
discussed, below, as having negligible
costs would therefore be anticipated to
have minimal benefits.
2. Provision-Specific Costs, Benefits and
Transfers
We have identified the direct costs
associated with this proposed rule as
the costs associated with reporting,
recordkeeping, and other costs. These
costs are discussed below.
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a. Impact Related to Conflict of Interest
Proposals
In this proposed rule, we have made
several proposals related to AO and AO
surveyor conflicts of interest. In the
2018 AO Conflict of Interest RFI, many
commenters stated that AOs tend to
ignore deficiencies during surveys in
order to promote the efficacy of their
consulting services. These commenters
also stated the belief that the AOs may
ignore deficiencies to avoid giving poor
survey results to their clients, who have
paid substantial fees for both
accreditation and AO fee-based
consulting services. These commenters
further stated the belief that the
financial relationship between the AO
and the health care facilities they
accredit causes a conflict of interest. We
believe that the proposed restrictions on
AO fee-based consulting would reduce
this conflict of interest and hopefully
remove the incentive for AOs to ignore
deficiencies during surveys. We further
believe that the conflict of interest
proposals we have made would prevent
potential and new conflicts of interests
from occurring. We will address the
financial impacts associated with each
of these proposals separately below.
(1) Impact Related to Proposed Conflict
of Interest Policies & Procedures AOs
Must Submit to CMS (Proposed
Revisions to § 488.5(a)(10))
We proposed to modify § 488.5(a)(10)
to add a requirement that the AOs must
provide specific information with their
conflict of interest policies and
procedures with the application they
submit to CMS. Specifically, the AO
must submit the following policies and
procedures: (1) for separation of its feebased consulting services from its
accreditation services; (2) policies and
procedures for protecting the integrity of
the AO’s accreditation program,
including the requirements of § 488.8(j);
and, (3) for the prevention and handling
potential or actual conflicts of interest
that could arise from situations in
which an AO owner, surveyor, or other
employee has a direct interest in or
relationship with another survey agency
or health care facility to which the AO
provides accreditation services,
including a surveyor’s outside interest,
abuse of influence or disclosures of
privileged information, etc.
The AO would need to modify their
current conflict of interest policy and
procedures to include the above-stated
information required under the
proposed revisions to § 488.5(a)(10). We
estimate that this task would be
performed by a team of at least two AO
staff members which would be a RN and
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a health services manager. We estimate
that the total burden costs related to the
requirements for proposed § 488.8(i)(1)
would be $4,674.72. We estimate that
the cost across all AOs would be
$51,421.92.
We believe that the above stated
burden impact would be incurred by the
AO once prior to the time that they
submit their first application after this
requirement becomes effective.
However, we believe that after the AOs
have made required modifications to
their conflict of interest policies, they
will not have to revise them again, but
will submit the same revised conflict of
interest policies every 6 years with their
renewal applications, so this burden
would not be incurred again. We do not
count the burden related to the
submission of the application because
the AO would be required to submit the
application every 6 years to renew the
CMS approval for their accreditation
programs.
(2) Impact Related to Requirement That
the AOs Submit Surveyor Conflict of
Interest Declarations to CMS on an
Annual Basis (Proposed § 488.5(a)(22))
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We proposed to add a new paragraph
(a)(22) to § 488.5, which would require
that the AO must submit a declaration
by each surveyor of any outside
interests or relationships with the health
care facilities that the AO accredits.
This section would also require that the
surveyor declarations must be updated
on an annual basis and submitted to
CMS by no later than December 31st
each year.
We believe that the AOs would incur
time and cost burdens for having to
collect declarations from each of their
surveyors annually. There would also be
a time and cost burden to the AO for the
submission of the surveyor declarations
to CMS.
We estimate that the total burden
costs related to the requirements for
proposed § 488.8(i)(1) would be
$4,674.72. We further estimate that the
total cost across the 11 AOs that accredit
Medicare-certified providers and
supplier, would be $51,421.92.
(3) Impacts Related to Proposed
Restrictions on Fee-Based Consulting
Provided by AOs to the Health Care
Providers and Suppliers They Accredit
(§ 488.8(i)(1), § 488.8(i)(2), and
§ 488.8(i)(4)
In this proposed rule, we propose to
modify the AO oversight regulations
§ 488.8(i) by adding a new provision
which would add restrictions on the feebased consulting services provided by
the AOs to the same health care
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providers and suppliers they accredit
for Medicare deeming purposes.
At proposed § 488.8(i)(1), an AO or its
associated fee-based consulting division
or company would not be permitted to
provide fee-based consulting services to
any health care provider or supplier
prior to an initial accreditation survey.
For purposes of this requirement, the
term ‘‘initial survey’’ means the first
accreditation survey performed of a
health care provider or supplier by an
accrediting organization. If a health care
provider or supplier is terminated or
withdraws from the services of an
accrediting organization and then, a
later time, again retains the services of
that accrediting organization, the first
survey performed by the accrediting
organization of the returning health care
provider or supplier would be
considered an initial accreditation
survey.
At proposed § 488.8(i)(2), an AO or its
associated fee-based consulting division
or company may not provide fee-based
consulting services to a health care
provider or supplier the accrediting
organization accredits within 12 months
prior to the next scheduled reaccreditation survey of that provider or
supplier. For purposes of this
paragraph, the term ‘‘re-accreditation
survey’’ means the any subsequent
accreditation surveys performed by the
accrediting organization following the
initial survey.
At proposed § 488.8(i)(4), an AO or its
associated fee-based consulting division
or company may not provide fee-based
consulting services to a health care
provider or supplier, to which the
accrediting organization provides
accreditation services, in response to a
complaint received by the AO regarding
that provider or supplier.
At proposed § 488.8(i)(4)(i) through
§ 488.8(i)(4)(iv) the restriction upon AO
fee-based consulting shall not apply to
the following situations: AO fee-based
consulting services provided during the
24-month period after an initial or reaccreditation survey is performed; AO
fee-based consulting services provided
to address complaints received and
investigated by the SA regarding an
accrediting organization’s accredited
provider or supplier in which one or
more condition-level or immediate
jeopardy deficiencies are identified,
provided however that, the AO feebased consulting must occur after the
complaint investigation and survey has
been completed and must only address
those issues identified by the complaint
survey; AO fee-based consulting
services provided to health care
providers or suppliers to which the
accrediting organization has never
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provided accreditation services; no-cost
consulting or general education
provided by the accrediting. Also, as we
stated in the preamble, the proposed
restriction on AO fee-based consulting
services at § 488.8(i)(1) through (3)
would not prohibit the AOs from
providing fee-based consulting services
to health care providers and suppliers
the AO is accrediting such as mock
surveys, education about the Medicare
conditions or the survey process. This
proposal would also not prohibit the
general education provided by the AO
about their accreditation program. This
proposal would apply only to the four
AOs that provide fee-based
accreditation,
We believe that there would be two
types of impact related to the proposals
for § 488.8(i). First, the AOs would incur
time and cost burden to the AOs related
to having to make changes to their feebased consulting program standards and
policies. Second, we recognize that
there would be a financial impact to the
AOs due to the loss of revenue that
would have been realized from the feebased consulting services they currently
provide that would now be prohibited.
We will address these two burdens
separately below.
As a result of our proposals at
§ 488.8(i)(1) through (3), the AOs will no
longer be allowed to provide fee-based
consulting services to a health care
provider or supplier prior to an initial
survey, within 12-months prior to a
provider’s or supplier’s re-accreditation
survey or in response to a complaint
received in response to an accredited
provider or supplier. We believe that
this limitation on the AOs’ fee-based
consulting model will require the AOs
to revise their fee-based consulting
business documents, such as their
business charter, business documents,
employee training information,
informational documents that are
distributed to prospective clients, and
their policies and procedures as well as
potentially restructure their staffing.
We estimate that these changes would
cause each AO to incur a total time
burden of 80 hours and a total cost
burden of $7,791.20. We further
estimate that the total impact across the
four AOs that provide fee-basedconsulting would be a time burden of
320 hours and a cost burden of
$31,164.80. (See section VI.A.3 of this
proposed rule for the details of how
these time and cost burdens were
calculated.)
We also believe that there will be a
financial impact to the four AOs that
provide fee-based consulting from the
proposed restrictions on of fee-based
consulting. Although the 2018 AO
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Conflict of Interest RFI gathered
information about the nature of these
relationships, they did not provide
enough information for us to accurately
calculate the financial impact that the
requirements of proposed § 488.8(i)(1)
would have on the AO. We do estimate
that the AOs would have a decrease in
approximately 25 percent of the feebased consulting business due to the
restriction on providing fee-based
consulting prior to initial surveys. We
say this because AOs perform
accreditation on a 3-year cycle,
following the initial survey. We estimate
that 25 percent of the fee-based
consulting performed by an AO on an
annual basis would be for new clients
prior to their initial survey. We further
estimate that the remaining 75 percent
of the AOs fee-based consulting
business would be provided to
providers and suppliers prior to a
reaccreditation survey.
According to IRS financial disclosure
statements filed by the AO that provides
the most fee-based consulting through
an associated fee-based consulting, this
AO realized gross revenue from feebased consulting services in the amount
of $44,960,143 in 2020 and $55,970,543
in 2021.20 This equates to an average
annual revenue of $50,465,298 from feebased consulting.
We estimate that new accreditation
clients make up approximately 33
percent of an AOs client base and that
the remaining 66 percent consist of
existing clients that require
reaccreditation surveys. We further
estimate that, currently, only 25 percent
(out of the 33 percent) of an AO’s new
clients elect to have fee-based
consulting prior to the initial survey.
Therefore, if the AOs are restricted from
performing fee-based consulting prior to
the initial survey of new clients, they
would lose 25 percent of the revenue
they receive from their fee-based
consulting business. We estimate that
the proposed restrictions on fee-based
consulting would cause the AO that
provides the most fee-based consulting
services to incur lost revenue in the
amount of $12,616,324 per year
($50,465,298 divided by 4).
While we do not have any
independent information about the
amount of profits the other AOs realize
from their fee-based consulting services,
we presume that these three AOs do not
realize as much revenue from the
provision of fee-based consulting as this
large AO. We say this for several
reasons. First, the other AOs are smaller
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businesses and have a smaller client
base than does this large AO. It is our
understanding that these AOs provide
fee-based consulting on a smaller scale
because they have less clients and some
that are smaller businesses that may not
have the funds to pay for fee-based
consulting services. Therefore, we are
not able to provide an accurate estimate
of how much loss in revenue will result
from the restrictions in AO fee-based
consulting.
We estimate that the AOs charge
between $100,000 and $500,000 for the
fee-based consulting they provide to
each healthcare provider or supplier.
We do not know how many providers or
suppliers currently use the fee-based
consulting services of their AO prior to
their initial survey. Therefore, we are
not able to provide an accurate estimate
of the total amount of consulting
services shifting to new consultants and
away from AOs no longer permitted to
provide such services to the providers
and suppliers for whom they conduct
initial surveys.
(4) Impact Related to Proposed
Requirement for Submission of
Information About AO Fee-Based
Consulting Services Provided (Proposed
§ 488(i)(5))
We propose to add a requirement at
§ 488.8(i)(5) that would require the AOs
to provide CMS with the following
information about the fee-based
consulting services they provide to CMS
on a bi-annual basis: (1) whether the AO
or an associated consulting division or
company established by the AO
provides fee-based consulting services;
(2) a list which contains the names and
CCN numbers of all health care
providers and suppliers to which the
AO or its associated consulting division
or company has provided fee-based
consulting services during the previous
6 months; (3) whether the AO has
provided accreditation services to each
health care provider or supplier on said
list, and if so, the date the accreditation
services were provided; and (4) a
general description of the AO fee-based
consulting services provided to each
health care provider or supplier on said
list. This proposed regulation further
requires that statement containing the
above-stated information must be
submitted to CMS no later than 15 days
after the end of each 6-month period.
We estimate that the impact
associated with this proposed
requirement would include the time and
costs associated with the gathering of
the information necessary to prepare the
required statement, the time required to
prepare the statement and the time
required to send the statement to CMS.
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This impact would occur on a bi-annual
basis, although, we believe that the
burden would be greater for the
preparation of the first report.
Thereafter, the AOs would have already
prepared and formatted this report and
would simply have to update the
information on a quarterly basis.
We estimate that the total hourly time
burden per each AO for these tasks
would be 96 hours and the total
estimated cost burden would be
$4,674.72. The impact across the four
AOs that provide fee-based consulting
would be 96 hours and $18,698.88.
We believe that the above stated
burden would be incurred only the first
time that the AO would be required to
prepare the required statement and send
it to CMS. We believe that after the AO
has prepared their first report, they
would have this report in an electronic
format on their computers. Therefore,
for the second and all subsequent
reports, we estimate that the cost related
to the preparation and submission of
this report would be reduced by at least
25 percent.
We estimate that the financial impact
to each AO for preparation of the second
or subsequent report would be $636.48
and to all AOs that provide fee-based
consulting would be $2,545.92.
(5) Impact Related to Proposed
Requirement That Accrediting
Organization Establish Fee-Based
Consulting Firewall Policies and
Procedures (Proposed § 488.8(j))
At § 488.8(j) we proposed to require
any AO that provides fee-based
consulting services or its associated feebased consulting division or company to
have robust, written fee-based
consulting firewall policies and
procedures. We would require that these
firewall polices and procedure at a
minimum, include the following
provisions: (1) the AO’s fee-based
consulting services must be provided by
a separate division or company from the
AO’s accreditation division; (2) the AO’s
fee-based consulting division or
separate company must maintain
separate staff from that of the AO’s
accreditation divisions to ensure that
the fee-based consulting division staff
do not perform AO’s accreditation
division functions and that the AO’s
accreditation division staff do not
perform fee-based consulting division
functions; and, (3) the AO’s
accreditation staff and surveyors are
prohibited from marketing the AO’s feebased consulting services to the AO’s
accreditation clients.
This proposed requirement would
only apply to the AOs that provide feebased consulting and would require
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these AOs that establish new fee-based
consulting firewall policies or revise
their policies and procedures to meet
the proposed requirements.
We believe that the burden associated
with the revision of the AO’s fee-based
consulting policies and procedures
would fall under the time and cost
burden estimated in section VI.A.5 of
this proposed rule. As such, we will not
assess a separate burden here.
(6) Impact Related to Proposed
Regulation To Prevent AO Owners,
Surveyors or Other Employees That
Have an Interest In or Relationship With
a Health Care Facility Accredited by the
AO From Participating in Survey
Activities for That Facility (Proposed
§ 488.8(k))
We propose to avoid conflicts of
interest related to employment
relationships between AO surveyors and
health care facilities that are accredited
by the AO. At proposed § 488.8(k) we
would require the AO’s to prohibit their
owners, surveyors and other employees
from doing the following: (1)
participating in the survey of facilities
with which they have a relationship; (2)
having input into or influence the
outcome of any survey performed for
facilities with which they have a
relationship; (3) having any
involvement with the pre or post survey
activities for the health care facilities
with which they have a relationship; or,
(4) having any contact with the records
from the surveys for any health care
facilities with which they have a
relationship. We believe that this should
already be a usual and customary
practice of the AOs and therefore there
should be no additional burden to the
AOs to comply with the requirements of
this section.
b. Impacts Associated With the
Requirement That AOs Incorporate the
Medicare Conditions (§ 488.4(a)(1))
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(1) Impacts Associated With the
Requirement That the AOs Provide
Detailed Crosswalks Identifying the
Incorporation of CMS Standards
We propose at § 488.4(a)(1) to require
AOs to incorporate the CMS’ health and
safety standards. Currently, the AOs are
required to provide a similar crosswalk
under the existing process, CMS
previously only required a
‘‘comparable’’ standard. Therefore, we
propose to revise § 488.5(a)(3) to require
the AOs to submit ‘‘A detailed
crosswalk (in table format, as specified
by CMS) that identifies each of the
applicable Medicare conditions (as
defined in § 488.1) incorporating the
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language of CMS requirements and
standards.’’
As a result of this proposal, AOs
would need to recreate their AO
standards to match CMS’. We also note
that this proposal would require a onetime overhaul of AO standards and
burden would be imposed for the first
year following the effective date of this
rule and not be a reoccurring annual
burden. Incremental costs subsequent to
changes would be minimal, as our
proposal reflect current practice) with
updates required to be reviewed and
approved as outlined in existing
§ 488.5).
We anticipate the impact to AOs for
the revision of their existing crosswalk
and standards into the required format
would be $159.12 per AO. We estimate
that the total cost impact across the 11
AOs that accredit Medicare-certified
providers and suppliers would be
$84,993.48 for one accreditation
program each.
However, the majority of our AOs
have multiple accreditation programs,
therefore this cost impact would
increase based on the number of
programs. CMS has 24 approved
accreditation programs across the 11
AOs that accredit Medicare-certified
providers and suppliers. We estimate
that the total financial impact across all
of these accreditation programs would
be $185,440.32.
(2) Impacts Related to AO Providing
Notice of the Revised Accreditation
Standards to Their Accredited Providers
and Suppliers Via Their Website
In addition to changing the survey
standards as proposed under
§ 488.4(a)(1), the AOs would be required
to provide the newly revised AO
standards to the facilities they accredit.
There are approximately 14,904
accredited facilities across all program
types. We believe that the majority of
AOs have a website portal on which
they make their standards available to
their accredited providers and
suppliers.
We estimated that the total impact
across the 11 AOs that accredit
Medicare-certified providers and
suppliers for providing notice of their
revised accreditation standards on their
website would be $1,829.28.
(3) Impact Related to Providing Notice
of the Revised Accreditation Standards
to the Accredited Providers and
Suppliers via Email
We also believe the AOs would
provide notice of their revised
accreditation standards to their
accredited providers and suppliers
directly via email. We believe this
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would be a group email that would be
sent out via group text to all of the AOs
accredited providers and suppliers. We
estimate that it would take only 15
minutes to prepare this email and there
are approximately 14,904 accredited
providers and suppliers across all 11
AOs that accredit Medicare-certified
providers and suppliers. Therefore, the
total estimated financial impact across
all these 11 AOs for providing notice of
the AOs revised accreditation standards
via email would $142,333.20.
(4) Impacts Related to Education of
Providers and Suppliers Regarding New
Standards
We believe that the AOs that accredit
Medicare-certified providers and
suppliers would be required to provide
education to their accredited providers
and suppliers about their new Medicare
accreditation standards, which must be
revised to be the same as the CMS
standards, or more stringent. We believe
that this training would most likely be
provided by webinar.
There are approximately 14,904
deemed facilities. We estimate that the
cost impact to each facility would be
$200.46 ($79.56 per RN + $120.90 per
general or services manager). We further
estimate that the total annual cost
burden across all 14,904 accredited
facilities would be $2,987,655.84.
c. Impacts Associated With the
Requirement That AOs Use a Survey
Process That Is Comparable to That
Used by CMS and the SAs
We propose to require the AOs to use
the strengthened and revised
requirements for initial and renewal
applications for deeming authority,
which includes revisions specifically to
the documentation submitted related to
the AO survey processes and guidance
and its comparability to those survey
processes used by the SA. We also
propose to require the AOs to state in
their survey reports, to identify the
specific Medicare condition that
corresponds with each finding of noncompliance.
(1) Impact Related to Documentation
Associated With Requirements That
AOs Use Comparable Survey Processes
(§ 488.5(a)(4), § 488.5(a)(4)(iii),
§ 488.5(a)(4)(v), and § 488.5(a)(4)(vii))
We believe that impact of the changes
to the require specific information
related AOs’ survey processes; surveyor
guidance and instructions; survey forms
and survey review process would vary
depending on the AO because there are
three out of the eleven AOs that accredit
Medicare-certified providers and
suppliers that already use survey
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processes and guidance that are very
similar to that used by the SA.
Therefore, the impact to these three AOs
would be much less than the impact to
the remaining AOs, which use a
different survey process which are
causing more concern related to the
comparability of survey activities and
the ability to maintain the integrity of
the survey process. For the purposes of
this impact analysis we have provided
our estimates based on an AO that
would require the most changes to their
existing documentation provided to
show AO comparability to CMS survey
processes, guidance and documentation.
The requirements under § 488.5(a)(4),
§ 488.5(a)(4)(iii), § 488.5(a)(4)(v), and
§ 488.5(a)(4)(vii)) would require AOs to
ensure documentation submitted
supported the already existing
expectations under the regulatory
requirements and only added additional
clarity within these proposed
provisions. Therefore, we estimate that
there is no impact on each AO for
providing these requirements, as further
explained in section VI.C.1 of this
proposed rule, that AOs Use
Comparable Survey Process
(§ 488.5(a)(4), § 488.5(a)(4)(iii),
§ 488.5(a)(4)(v), and § 488.5(a)(4)(vii)).
(2) Impact Related to Documentation
Requirements Imposed by Requirement
That AOs Submit a Training for CMS
About Its Revised Survey Process
(§ 488.5(a)(4)(xi))
The proposed requirements under
§ 488.5(a)(4)(xi) would require the
development of a presentation, such as
an abbreviated web-based training or
related training materials, for CMS
about the AOs revised survey processes,
specifically highlighting areas which
vary from the survey processes and
activities used by the SA. We believe
while this would require development
of new material, the content of such
material is already available and would
be extrapolated from the AOs training to
new surveyors.
We believe that development of the
training would be $4,169.10 per AO and
$45,860.10 across all 11 AOs. However,
we further determined that we would
consider the total across all 24
accredited programs to be $100,058.40
as survey processes used by the AO may
vary based on the provider or supplier.
(3) Impact Related to Documentation
Related to Requirements That AOs Use
Comparable Survey Process
(§ 488.5(a)(5), § 488.5(a)(6), and
§ 488.5(a)(12))
Aforementioned in the Impact Related
to Documentation Imposed by
Requirements that AOs Use Comparable
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Survey Process (§ 488.5(a)(4),
§ 488.5(a)(4)(iii), § 488.5(a)(4)(v), and
§ 488.5(a)(4)(vii)), the proposed
requirements under § 488.5(a)(5),
§ 488.5(a)(6), and § 488.5(a)(12) also
clarify existing and longstanding
standard practices on the survey
processes and do not impose additional
burden to the AOs. Therefore, we
estimate these proposed requirements
would have no financial impact on the
AOs.
(4) Impact Related to Documentation
Requirements Imposed by Requirement
That AOs Use Comparable Survey
Process (§ 488.5(a)(13))
The requirements at § 488.5(a)(13)
currently require the AOs to have: (1)
procedures for responding and
investigating complaints and, (2) a
process for decision-making as it relates
to accrediting status. We propose to add
two new requirements which would
require the AO to provide CMS with its
organizational policies and procedures
related to the AOs notification
procedures, including timeframes for
notification, to CMS in regards to a
facility which the AO accredits when
the facility fails to meet accreditation
standards or its accreditation status is
affected, as well as its processes and
timelines for notification to CMS when
one of its accredited facilities withdraws
from accreditation. We estimate the total
burden to be $886.60 per AO or
$9,752.60 across all 11 AOs.
We estimate that the total financial
impact for these tasks would be
$109,650.20 across all 11 AOs and the
24 programs currently recognized under
AO deeming authority.
(5) Impact Related to the Requirement
for AO To Submit Survey Findings/
Reports
As mentioned in the preamble, we
also propose to require the AOs as part
of their application under
§ 488.5(a)(4)(viii) to acknowledge that it
will submit any requested survey
findings and reports, to include
complaint survey reports to CMS for
internal use.
This requirement would not cause the
AOs to incur any new additional burden
as the submission of this information is
already required by this regulation and
is therefore is a usual and customary
part requirement for initial and renewal
applications. AOs are also already
required to submit the deficiencies and
facility non-compliance in a roll up
format. Therefore, this proposed
requirement for a full survey report
would not cause any additional burden
as CMS would not require a specific
new entry or format and reduce time
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spent by the AO summarizing the
survey activity.
(6) Impact Related to the Requirement
That the AOs Submit Their Revised
Accreditation Standards and Survey
Processes to CMS for Review and
Approval
Finally, in addition to the burden
estimates above, the AOs would be
required to resubmit their new survey
processes and standards for CMS review
as required under § 488.8(b)(2). We
anticipate the total financial impact
associated with the requirement at
§ 488.8(b)(2) that an AO submit any
proposed changes in its accreditation
requirements or survey process to CMS
for review and approval would be
$3,057.60 per AO per accrediting
program type. We estimate that the
financial impact across the 11 AOs
would be $33,633.60. Finally, we
estimate that the total financial impact
across the 24 accredited programs is
estimated at $73,382.40.
As mentioned within the preamble,
the proposed changes would not
implement a reoccuring annual burden,
but rather have a one-time burden on
the AOs until the survey processes and
activities are aligned with our proposed
changes. CMS would resume the current
process for approval and re-approval of
AOs and their accrediting programs as
outlined within the new proposed
§ 488.5.
We do note, there is no direct burden
associated with these changes to the
deemed provider or supplier.
d. Impact Related to the Requirement
That the AO Surveyors Take the CMS
Online Surveyor Training
We proposed at § 488.5(a)(8), to add a
new requirement that would require AO
to state in their application for CMS
approval, that AOs that who accredit
Medicare-certified providers and
suppliers must include a statement
acknowledging that all AO surveyors
have completed or will complete two
CMS mandatory documentation courses
and the relevant program specific CMS
online trainings established for SA
surveyors, initially, and thereafter.
CMS provides a number of online
surveyor training modules that are
available to the SA surveyors. We
proposed to require the AO surveyors to
take this training in an attempt to
decrease the historically high disparity
rate between the AOs survey results and
those of the validation surveys
performed by the SA surveyors.
There are a total of 163 online training
programs that are available the SA
surveyors on the CMS Quality, Safety
and Education Portal (QSEP) website.
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This website provides courses that are
general in nature such as ‘‘Principles of
Documentation for Non-Long Term
Care’’ and ‘‘Basic Writing Skills for
Surveyor Staff’’, infection control,
patient safety, Emergency Preparedness.
The CMS QSEP website also offers
courses related to specific health care
settings such as hospitals, CAHs, ASCs,
Laboratories, Community Mental Health
Centers, EMTALA, Federally Qualified
Health Centers (FQHCs), Home Health
Agencies and OASIS, Hospices, Nursing
Homes and the MDS, Outpatient
Physical Therapy/Outpatient Speech
Therapy. These courses are self-paced
and the person taking the course can
take the courses over a period of time.
The amount of time required to
complete each of these training course
varies depending on the pace at which
the trainee completes the training. The
basic surveyor training courses for
specific programs range in time from
16–82 hours for completion. We
estimate the average time it takes to take
one of the basic surveyor courses is 27
hours. This could be more or less
depending upon the specific program
that AO surveyors need to take.
We would require that each AO
surveyor takes the 2 mandatory
documentation courses (that is
‘‘Principles of Documentation for NonLong-Term Care’’ and ‘‘Basic Writing
Skills for Surveyor Staff’’) and the basic
surveyor course for the care setting for
which they perform surveys. We further
estimate that it would take
approximately 4 hours to complete each
of these courses, however, these courses
are self-paced and could take less or
longer. Therefore, an AO surveyor
would incur a time burden of
approximately 35 hours for the
completion of all of the required CMS
surveyor training courses.
Based upon this information we
estimate that the financial impact to the
AOs that accredit Medicare-certified
providers and suppliers would
$2,784.60 per each surveyor that
completes the CMS online surveyor
training.
We are not able to accurately estimate
to total time and cost burden to each AO
for the wages incurred for the time spent
by all surveyors from each AO to take
the CMS online surveyor training
courses, because we do not know
exactly how many surveyors each AO
has. However, if we estimate that each
AO has 75 surveyors, the estimated
financial impact to each AO associated
with this requirement would be
$208.845.
As of February 4, 2020, there are
currently 11 AOs that accredit
Medicare-certified providers and
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suppliers. We estimate that the total
estimated financial impact across these
11 AOs would be $2,297,295.
(2) Impact Related to Incorporation of
the ‘‘National in Scope’’ Requirements
Into the AO’s Application
e. Impact Associated With the
Establishment of a Definition for
‘‘National in Scope’’
When preparing an initial application
of CMS approval of its accreditation
programs, an AO must include
documentation that their accreditation
programs meet the definition of
‘‘national in scope.’’ We anticipate that
would be performed by a Medical
Secretary with an hourly wage of $38.22
and would take 5 minutes (0.083 hour)
to complete. We estimate that the
financial impact for this requirement
would be a $3.18.
There are 11 AOs. We estimate that
the total financial impact for this work
across all AOs would be $35.03.
We do note, there is no direct burden
associated with these changes to the
deemed provider or supplier.
As proposed under § 488.1, we would
require the AO to provide
documentation for meeting the
definition of ‘‘national in scope’’ within
their initial and reapplication process.
As currently required under
§ 488.5(a)(1), the AO must provide
documentation that demonstrates the
organization meets the definition of a
‘‘national accrediting organization’’
under § 488.1 as it relates to the
accreditation program. Therefore, we
estimate the burden on AOs to be
minimal as they are already required to
provide documentation to this effect.
Therefore, we estimate the following:
(1) Impact Related to the Documentation
Requirements for ‘‘National in Scope’’
We anticipate that a CEO of an AO
would compile and verify that the AO
meets the proposed definition of
‘‘national in scope’’. According to the
U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, the
mean hourly wage for a CEO is $102.41.
This wage adjusted for the employer’s
fringe benefits and overhead would be
$204.82. (See Table 1 in section IV
‘‘Collection of Information
Requirements’’ of this proposed rule.)
CMS is not requiring to use a specific
format for the documentation they
submit to show that their accreditation
program is national in scope. However,
we suggest that the AO provides a list,
which lists the accredited facilities and
which would show the geographic
locations for these accredited facilities.
For existing CMS-approved AOs, the
general re-application cycle is not to
exceed 6 years. Therefore, we anticipate
this below burden to apply every 4 to
6 years.
We anticipate the compiling of this
information would take approximately
40 minutes (0.66 hours). Currently,
there are 11 approved AOs and we
anticipate no more than two new AOs
per year to apply for deeming authority.
We estimate that the total financial
impact to each AO for completion of
this task would be $136.55 every 6 years
($204.82 per hour × 0.66 hours). We
further estimate that the financial
impact across the 11 AOs that accredit
Medicare-certified providers and
suppliers would be $1,501.72.
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f. Impact Associated With the Proposed
Revision of the AO Performance
Measures
As proposed in this rule, we are
requiring that AO submit a publicly
reportable plan of correction for
performance measure scores that are
under an acceptable threshold for
established performance.
This is a new requirement and
therefore would be a new burden for
AOs to complete. The plan of correction
must be completed and submitted to
CMS within 10-business days follow the
notification of the AO of their less than
acceptable performance. The plan of
correction must address the areas of
improvement and the specific actions to
be taken to improve those areas on a
sustainable basis, the process for
ongoing monitoring of progress of the
toward acceptable performance, as well
as the individuals responsible for
overseeing the plan of correction and
the anticipated implementation dates of
the proposed actions.
We estimate that it would take 80
hours for the AO staff to prepare each
plan of correction. We believe that the
financial impact to the AO for this task
would be $15,395, based on the
preparation of 123 plans of correction
per year. We estimate the the total
annual impact per each AO for the
complation of 123 POCs per year would
be $2,015,428.80 per each AO for
completion of 123 POCs per year. The
total financial impact across all 11 AOs
that accredit Medicare providers and
suppliers would be $22,169,716.80.
g. Impact Associated With the Revision
of the Definition of ‘‘Disparity Rate’’
In the proposed definition of disparity
rate there is no associated burden as
look-behind validation surveys are a
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usual and customary part of the existing
validations program. Direct observation
validation surveys are already being
performed under current regulatory
authority § 488.8(a)(2) and have become
a usual and customary part of the
validation program. AO will continue to
perform survey activities as required,
the revised and expanded definition of
disparity will impact data collection by
CMS, but no additional burden to the
AO or provider.
h. Impact for the Revision of the AO
Validation Program
In the proposed revision and
expansion of § 488.9, we propose to
revise the validation program to include
the additional component of a direct
observation of the AO’s survey process
by the SA or CMS surveyors. There
would be no associated impact to the
AO or SA as a result of the additional
validation method. Currently, CMS
funds validation surveys. We do not
anticipate additional costs. However,
there are associated burden reductions
to the provider community since half of
the traditional validation survey will be
replaced by direct observation
validation surveys.
We anticipate a burden reduction
based on our proposed changes. The
anticipated annual burden reduction to
providers and suppliers is based on our
FY 2019 look-behind validation survey
data collection. In FY 2019, we
conducted approximately 315 surveys.
The anticipated burden reduction with
our new proposed changes are based on
the look-behind validation surveys,
which allows a reduction by at least 50
percent (180 look-back surveys) through
replacing them with the direct
observation validation survey. This
burden reduction occurs because during
direct observation surveys, the SA
surveyors observe the AO surveyors
during the performance of a
reaccreditation survey instead of
performing a separate validation survey
within 60 days of the AO’s
reaccreditation survey. As only one
survey is performed, the burden to
providers and suppliers undergoing
validation using the direct observation
validation method is reduced by at least
50 percent. We determined that the use
of the direct observation validation
surveys would reduce the burden
related to the look-back validation
surveys to providers and supplier by at
least 50 percent because with direct
observation validation surveys, the SA
surveyors observe the AO surveyors
during the performance of their survey.
This requires only one survey to be
performed. Whereas, with 60-day lookback validation surveys, the SA
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surveyors perform a validation survey
within 60 days of the AO’s
reaccreditation survey. This requires the
provider or supplier selected for
validation to undergo two surveys
within a 60-day period. Half of the
validation surveys to be performed with
the revised validation program will use
the direct observation method.
Therefore, we estimate that provider/
supplier burden would be reduced by
50 at least percent. We believe this, in
turn, would reduce the financial impact
of the validation program to provider
and supplier burden or in other words
result in a cost savings of $2,062,195.20.
i. Impact Associated With the Revision
of the Psychiatric Hospital
Accreditation Process
As discussed in this proposed rule,
we propose to require AOs which have
a CMS-approved hospital accreditation
program to expand their programs to
include the three special conditions for
psychiatric hospitals and provide CMS
with a detailed crosswalk which
identifies the inclusion of the
psychiatric standards which meet or
exceed CMS psychiatric Medicare
conditions. While these AOs already
have approved hospital programs, we
note that this proposal would require a
one-time overhaul of the hospital
program standards to expand the
program to include the psychiatric
standards and burden would be
imposed for the first year following the
effective date of this rule and not be a
reoccurring annual burden. Burden
costs subsequent to changes would
remain as current practice with updates
required to be reviewed and approved
as outlined in existing § 488.5. As
proposed in multiple sections of this
proposed rule, we propose to require the
AOs to use Medicare conditions, more
comparable survey processes with the
ability to delineate where they exceed
and take the CMS online surveyor
training courses. Therefore, we believe
burden would be minimal and most of
the burden would be in areas in which
the AO would ‘‘exceed’’ Medicare
requirements.
Currently, there are four CMSapproved AOs which have established
hospital accreditation programs. One of
these four AOs which already has an
established CMS-approved psychiatric
accreditation program.
We anticipate that this requirement be
of moderate burden for AOs, however
we anticipate the burden to be a onetime burden for 3 of 4 hospital AOs.
Once effective by the date of the final
rule, or as specified by CMS, this would
be part of the initial and renewal
application process as defined in
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§ 488.5, therefore would not imposed
annual reoccurring burden to any AOs
initially applying or reapplying. We
would expect that the AOs use the
existing CFR language they are required
to crosswalk currently in the regular
hospital program and expand it to
assign an AO standard number to the
psychiatric standards with language
which meets or exceeds the Medicare
standards.
(1) Impact Associated With the
Requirement That the AOs Develop a
Psychiatric Hospital Accreditation
Program
We anticipate the burden for AOs to
review and revise their existing hospital
program crosswalk and standards to
include the psychiatric standards would
cause a financial impact to each affected
AO in the amount of $21,342.
There are currently three AOs which
would need to revise their hospital
programs to incorporate these standards.
We estimate that the total financial
impact across these 3 AOs would be
$64,026.
(2) Impact Associated With Accrediting
Facilities Under the Revised Psychiatric
Hospital Accreditation Program
As aforementioned, there are four
existing AOs which have a CMSapproved hospital accreditation
program, however three of four AOs
would need to resubmit their
applications for CMS-approval based on
the proposed provisions for the
psychiatric standards as well as meeting
the definition and criteria of national in
scope. The scope of the CMS-approved
hospital programs would not change
with this proposed expansion of the
program to include the psychiatric
special conditions. Once the hospital
program is approved as national in
scope, the addition of the three special
conditions does not change the overall
scope of the entire program. Therefore,
we believe this burden would be
incorporated into the burden required
with the new proposed changes of this
rule. Therefore, please see the impact
section for comparability to the CMS
survey processes as required by
§ 488.4(a)(2).
j. Impact Associated With Limitations to
Terminated Deemed Providers and
Suppliers Seeking Re-Approval Into
Medicare/Medicaid
We proposed to add a new policy at
§ 488.4(b) which would withdraw CMS
recognition of the ‘‘deeming authority’’
accreditation of any Medicare certified
provider or supplier that is terminated
from the Medicare/Medicaid program, if
such terminated provider/supplier
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subsequently applies to re-enter
Medicare and seek initial certification.
We also proposed to add new
requirement at § 488.4(b)(2) that would
require that before a terminated
provider or supplier would be eligible
for participation in the Medicare
program, they would have to meet all of
the requirements of § 489.57.
In support of our proposal at
§ 488.4(b), we also propose to add a new
requirement at § 488.5(a)(21) that would
require AOs to provide, with their
initial and renewal applications, a
statement certifying that, in response to
a written notice from CMS notifying the
AO that one of its accredited providers
or suppliers has been terminated from
the Medicare/Medicaid program, the AO
agrees to terminate or revoke its
accreditation of the terminated provider
or supplier within 5-business days from
receipt of that written notice.
Section 1865(c) of the Act states that
if the Secretary finds that a provider or
supplier has significant deficiencies,
then it is no longer deemed to meet the
requirements the entity has been treated
as meeting pursuant to subsection (a)(1)
for such period as may be prescribed in
regulations. As further explained below,
our proposed revised regulations at
§ 489.57 governs the process that
terminated providers and suppliers
must follow to be allowed to submit a
new request for Medicare participation.
Specifically, § 489.57, as revised, would
require that when a provider agreement
has been terminated by CMS or OIG, a
new agreement with that provider
would not be accepted unless CMS or
the OIG finds the following: (1) that the
reason for termination of the previous
agreement has been removed and there
was reasonable assurance that it would
not recur; and (2) that the provider has
fulfilled, or has made satisfactory
arrangements to fulfill, all of the
statutory and regulatory responsibilities
of its previous agreement. Also, the
terminated provider or supplier would
have to meet the following requirements
before a new agreement with that
provider or supplier could be approved:
(1) the terminated provider or supplier
would have to submit to, and remain
under, the exclusive oversight of the
state survey agency for a reasonable
assurance period of a length of time to
be determined by CMS, for the purposes
of the initial survey, certification and
demonstration of compliance with the
Medicare conditions; (2) the terminated
provider or supplier would have to
remain under the exclusive oversight of
the SA until the SA or CMS certified
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that the provider or supplier was in
compliance with all applicable
Medicare conditions, and CMS
approved the new agreement for
participation in the Medicare/Medicaid
program; and (3) during the time period
in which a terminated provider or
supplier was not certified to participate
in the Medicare program, while the
prospective provider or supplier was
under the oversight of the SA, and while
the new agreement for Medicare
participation was pending, CMS could
not deem the provider to have met CMS
standards via accreditation until the SA
determined that the applicable Medicare
requirements have been met or
exceeded, as described in § 488.4.
The intended purpose of these
proposed new and revised regulations is
to further clarify the existing process for
terminated providers and suppliers and
also prevent providers and suppliers
that have been terminated from the
Medicare/Medicaid program from
mischaracterizing their continued AO
accreditation as proof that they meet the
Medicare standards and provide safe
and effective care, when in fact they
were terminated from the Medicare
program for egregious deficiencies that
had, in many instances, not been
detected by the AO. Currently CMS does
not have explicit regulatory authority to
withdraw recognition of an AO’s
deeming accreditation when a provider
or supplier has been terminated from
the Medicare/Medicaid program. Nor
does CMS currently have a regulation
requiring AOs to withdraw or revoke
their accreditation of providers or
suppliers that have been terminated
from the Medicare/Medicaid programs.
These proposed new and revised
regulations will provide this regulatory
authority for CMS. We are also
proposing additional requirements at
§ 489.57(b) that would require that if a
terminated provider or supplier filed a
new application for participation in the
Medicare/Medicaid program, said
terminated provider or supplier would
have to meet the requirements set forth
at § 489.57(b)(1) to (b)(3) before their
new agreement for Medicare
participation could be approved.
Proposed new § 489.57(b)(1) would
require that a terminated provider or
supplier be under the exclusive
oversight of the SA for the purpose of
the initial survey, certification and
demonstration of compliance with the
Medicare conditions. Proposed new
§ 489.57(b)(2) would require that the
terminated provider or supplier seeking
re-entry must remain under the
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exclusive oversight of the SA until the
SA has certified its full compliance with
all applicable Medicare conditions and
the agreement for participation in the
Medicare/Medicaid program has been
approved. Finally, proposed new
§ 489.57(b)(3) would require that during
the time period in which the terminated
provider or supplier was under the
oversight of the SA and while the new
agreement for Medicare participation
was pending, CMS would not accept or
recognize accreditation from a CMSapproved accrediting organization.
We believe that there would be no
additional cost or time burden
associated with these proposed
requirements because the terminated
providers and suppliers would have to
undergo periodic, unannounced surveys
performed by the SA. If these providers
and suppliers had not been terminated,
they would have had to undergo surveys
by the AO. Therefore, the provider or
supplier would incur no additional time
or cost burden related to the SA survey
process. Also, there would be no
increase in the time required for survey
of these terminated providers or
suppliers to become newly certified or
participate in the Medicare program.
Also, considering that as a result of
the above-stated proposals, CMS would
not recognize accreditation from an AO
while a provider or supplier is
terminated from the Medicare program,
the AOs would be required to terminate
or revoke accreditation for terminated
providers and suppliers; and that during
the time that a new agreement for
Medicare participation is pending, the
prospective Medicare provider or
supplier would be under the exclusive
oversight of the SA, they would not
incur any fees for SA’s services.
In addition, terminated providers
seeking re-entry into the Medicare/
Medicaid program would be required to
submit an initial enrollment application
to CMS. The provider or supplier would
not incur any new time or cost burden
related to the preparation and
submission of the application because
the preparation and submission of this
application is a usual and customary
requirement for any entity seeking
initial certification as a provider or
supplier in the Medicare/Medicaid
program.
Summary of Financial Impact Caused
by the Proposals in This Proposed Rule
Table 4 summarizes the financial
impact of the proposals that we are
making in this proposed rule.
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TABLE 4: Summary oflmpact
A. Conflict of Interest Proposals:
1.
Restrictions on AO fee-based consulting sen,ices (§ 488.8(i))
•
$31,164.80 across all 11 AOs
2.
Loss of revenue to AOs due to prohibition of fee-based consulting
•
$12,616,324 million dollars annually ( the AO that
provides the most fee-based consulting services)
•
$100,000 to $500,000 annually for other AOs
3.
Requirement that the AOs provide information about the fee-based
consulting services they provide(§ 488.5(a)(l0))
•
$51,421.92 across all 11 AOs for 1st report
4.
Requirement that AO sUIVeyors submit conflict of interest declarations to
CMS on an annual basis(§ 488.5(a)(l0))
•
$51,421.92 across all l l AOs
5.
Requirement that Accrediting Organization Establish Fee-Based
Consulting Firewall Policies and Procedures ((Proposed§ 488.8G))
•
$0
(The cost burden associated with this requirement
is included with burden calculation for proposed
§ 488.8(i) above)
6.
Requirement to Prevent Conflicts of Interest Caused By AO SUIVeyor
Relationship with A Health Care Facility Accredited by the AO
(Proposed § 488.8(k))
•
$0 - because this should be a usual and customary
practice of the AOs.
•
$84,993.48 across the 11 AOs that accredit
Medicare-certified providers/suppliers.
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1.
Requirement that the AOs provide detailed crosswalks identifying
equivalent standards
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B. Requirement that the AO Incorporate the Medicare standards to ensure
improved evaluation of AO performance.
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2.
Burden related to AO providing copies of their revised accreditation
standards to their accredited providers and suppliers
•
$1,829.28 across all 24 accreditation programs.
3.
Burden to AO related to providing education to its accredited providers
and suppliers about the new accreditation standards
•
$142,333.20 for all 14,904 facilities
4.
Burden to providers and suppliers related to ta1cing education about the
AOs revised accreditation standards
•
$2,987,655.84 across all facilities
C. Burden Related to R~uirement that AOs Must Use Com:(!arable Survex
Processes
1.
Burden associated with requirement that AOs must submit
documentation about their survey processes as required by
(§ 488.5(a)(4), § 488.5(a)(4)(iii), § 488.5(a)(4)(v), and§ 488.5(a)(4)(vii))
•
$0 - because the AOs are already required to
submit this information
2.
Burden associated with new documentation requirements created by
requirement that AOs must use a comparable survey process (§ 488.5(a)(5), § 488.5(a)(6), and§ 488.5(a)(l2))
•
$0 - because the AOs are already required to
submit this information
3.
Burden Related to Documentation Requirements Imposed By
Requirement that AOs Use Comparable Survey Process - § 488.5(a)(l3)
ICR Related to Requirement for AO to Submit Survey Findings/Reports
•
$9,752.60 across 11 AOs
4.
Burden associated with the preparation of a presentation that A Os must
prepare and provide to CMS to demonstrate how their survey processes
are comparable to that of CMS
•
$45,860.10 across 11 AOs
5.
ICR Related to Requirement for AO to Submit Survey Findings/Reports
•
$0 - because the AOs are already required to do
tlris.
6.
Burden Related to Submission of Revised Accreditation Standards and
Survey Processes for review and approval by CMS as required by
§ 488.8(b)
•
$33,633.60 across the 11 AOs that accredit
Medicare-certified providers and suppliers
7.
Burden Related to the Addition of the Definition of "Unannounced"
•
$0
D. Proposal to Require AO Surveyors to Take CMS Surveyor Training
•
$208.845 per each AO per 75 surveyors
•
$2,297,295 across 11 AOs
1.
Burden Related to Documentation Requirements for "National in Scope"
•
$1,501.72 across 11 AOs
2.
Burden Related to Incorporation of the "National in Scope"
Requirements into tl1e AO's Application
•
$35.03 across 11 AOs
F.
Burden Related to AO Performance Measures, and Plans of Correction
•
$2,015,428.80 per each AO per 123 POCs anually
•
$22,169,716.80 across 11 AOs anually
•
$0
G. Burden Related to Revision of the Definition of "Disparity Rate"
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H. Revised Validation Survey Program
•
-$2, 062, 195 .20 (burden reduction to
providers/suppliers)
I.
Accreditation of Psychiatric Hospitals
•
$64,026 across the three affected AOs
J.
Limitation on Deeming Option for Terminated Providers
•
$0
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3. Regulatory Review Cost Estimation
If regulations impose administrative
costs on private entities, such as the
time needed to read and interpret this
proposed 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 to the 2018 AO Conflict of
Interest Request for Information
(December 20, 2018, 83 FR 65331) 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 the 2018 AO
Conflict of Interest Request for
Information in detail, and it is also
possible that some reviewers chose not
to comment on the published 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 welcome any comments
on the approach in estimating the
number of entities which will review
this proposed rule.
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We believe that persons reviewing
this rule would consist of AO
management staff, healthcare
association management staff, and
health care facility management staff.
We believe all of these persons would
have positions that fall under the U.S.
Bureau of Labor Statistics job category
of medical and health services manager.
Assuming an average reading speed, we
estimate that it would take
approximately 2 hours for the staff to
review this proposed rule. 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 $230.44
($115.22 per hour × 2 hours).21
D. Alternatives Considered
1. Proposed Changes to AO Fee-Based
Consulting
We considered proposing a complete
ban on AO fee-based consulting because
of the conflict of interest associated with
the provisions of this service by the AOs
to the health care providers and
suppliers they accredit. However, we
presume the financial impact to the AOs
21 https://www.bls.gov/oes/current/
oes119111.htm.
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associated with a complete ban on feebased consulting would be larger. For
example, the AO that provides the most
fee-based consulting realized over $50
million dollars annually from providing
these services. A complete or almost
complete ban on the provision of AO
fee-based consulting services would
eliminate or severely limit this revenue
source.
Therefore, we decided to propose
more limited restrictions on AO feebased consulting services that would
address the conflicts of interest.
2. Proposed Changes to the Validation
Program
We considered several alternatives for
changes to the validation program. First,
we considered making no changes to the
validations program, which would mean
that we would continue performing only
look-back surveys. We also considered
performing only direct observation
surveys. After considering the
alternative, we decided to propose
performing a combination of both lookback and direct observation surveys
because this would result in a cost
savings to providers and suppliers. If we
were to continue the validation program
as is, there would be no change in
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provider burden. If we modify the
validation program by performing only
direct observation validation surveys,
burden to providers and suppliers
would be reduced significantly,
however, the workload on the SAs
would be increased significantly. The
SAs have indicated during the pilot
program that they would not be able to
handle such an increased workload.
Therefore by using the direct
observation method for at least 50
percent of the validation surveys
performed annually this would provide
a significant decrease in provider and
supplier burden while placing a
manageable and acceptable workload on
the SAs.
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E. Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)
The RFA requires agencies to analyze
options for regulatory relief of small
entities. For purposes of the RFA, small
entities include small businesses,
nonprofit organizations, and small
governmental jurisdictions. Most
hospitals and most other providers and
suppliers are small entities, either by
nonprofit status or by having revenues
of less than $8.0 million to $41.5
million in any 1 year. Individuals and
states are not included in the definition
of a small entity. We are not preparing
an analysis for the RFA because we have
determined, and the Secretary certifies,
that this proposed rule would not have
a significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities.
(See the Table 2 in section VI.B.1 of this
proposed rule.)
In addition, section 1102(b) of the Act
requires us to prepare a regulatory
impact analysis 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 the
RFA. For purposes of section 1102(b) of
the Act, we define a small rural hospital
as a hospital that is located outside of
a metropolitan statistical area and has
fewer than 100 beds. We are not
preparing an analysis for section 1102(b)
of the Act because we have determined,
and the Secretary certifies, that this
proposed rule would not have a
significant impact on the operations of
a substantial number of small rural
hospitals.
F. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
(UMRA)
Section 202 of the Unfunded
Mandates Reform Act 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
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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 1 year.
G. 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.
Since this regulation does not impose
any costs on State or local governments,
the requirements of Executive Order
13132 are not applicable.
Chiquita Brooks-LaSure,
Administrator of the Centers for
Medicare & Medicaid Services,
approved this document on May 23,
2023.
List of Subjects
42 CFR Part 488
Administrative practice and
procedure, Health facilities, Medicare,
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.
42 CFR Part 489
Health facilities, Medicare, and
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.
For the reasons set forth in the
preamble, the Centers for Medicare and
Medicaid Services proposes to amend
42 CFR chapter IV, as set forth below:
PART 488 SURVEY, CERTIFICATION,
AND ENFORCEMENT PROCEDURES
1. The authority citation for part 488
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 1302; and 1395hh.
2. Section 488.1 is amended by—
a. Adding the definition of
‘‘Geographic regions’’;
■ b. Revising the definition of ‘‘National
accrediting organization’’;
■ c. Adding the definitions of ‘‘National
in scope’’, ‘‘Outcome disparity rate’’ and
‘‘Process disparity rate’’;
■ d. Removing the definition of ‘‘Rate of
disparity’’; and
■ e. Adding the definition of
‘‘Unannounced survey’’.
The additions and revisions read as
follows:
■
■
§ 488.1
Definitions.
*
*
*
*
*
Geographic regions—CMS uses
specified geographic regions of the
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Unites States to measure whether an
accrediting organization’s accreditation
program meets the definition of
‘‘national in scope.’’ For this purpose,
the United States is divided into the
following five geographic regions:
(1) Northeast: Delaware, District of
Columbia, Maryland, Pennsylvania,
Virginia, West Virginia, New York, New
Jersey, Puerto Rico, Virgin Islands,
Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts,
New Hampshire, Rhode Island, and
Vermont;
(2) Southeast: Alabama, Florida,
Georgia, Kentucky, Mississippi, North
Carolina, South Carolina, and
Tennessee;
(3) Midwest: Illinois, Indiana,
Michigan, Minnesota, Ohio, Wisconsin;
(4) Central: Iowa, Kansas, Missouri,
and Nebraska; Colorado, Montana,
North Dakota, South Dakota, Utah,
Wyoming;
(5) South: Arkansas, Louisiana, New
Mexico, Oklahoma, and Texas;
(6) Western: American Samoa,
Arizona, California, Hawaii,
Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana
Islands, Guam, Alaska, Idaho, Nevada,
Oregon, Washington
*
*
*
*
*
National accrediting organization
means an accrediting organization that
is national in scope and accredits
provider or suppliers, under a specific
accreditation program.
National in scope means that the
providers and suppliers accredited by
an accrediting organization under a
specific accreditation program, are
widely located geographically across the
United States. The requirement for
‘‘national in scope’’ has two
components. First, the accrediting
organization must have accredited at
least five providers or suppliers under
the accreditation program in question.
Second, the five providers or suppliers
accredited by the accrediting
organization under that accreditation
program must be geographically located
in at least five out of the six geographic
regions.
Outcome disparity rate means the
percentage of all look-back validation
surveys for an accrediting organization’s
program for which the state survey
agency finds noncompliance with one
or more Medicare conditions and no
comparable condition level deficiency
was cited by the accrediting
organization, where it is reasonable to
conclude that the deficiencies were
present at the time of the accrediting
organization’s most recent survey of that
provider or supplier.
Process disparity rate means, for a
direct observation validation survey, the
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difference between the observed survey
process findings and the expected
survey process findings expressed as a
percentage.
*
*
*
*
*
Unannounced survey means a survey
that is conducted without any prior
notice of any type, through any means
of communication or forums, to the
facility to be surveyed, and therefore, is
unexpected to the facility until the
arrival onsite by surveyors. This also
means that the accrediting organizations
must schedule their surveys so that the
facility is unable to predict when they
will be performed.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 3. Revise § 488.4 to read as follows:
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§ 488.4 General rules for a CMS approved
accreditation program for providers and
suppliers.
(a) The following requirements apply
when a national accrediting
organization has applied for CMS
approval of a provider or supplier
accreditation program and CMS has
found that the program provides
reasonable assurance to providers or
suppliers accredited under the program:
(1) The accrediting organizations that
accredit Medicare-certified providers
and suppliers shall incorporate the
applicable Medicare conditions
language as their minimum
accreditation standards, which are
applicable beginning [date 1 year after
the effective date of the final rule].
(2) The accrediting organizations that
accredit Medicare-certified providers
and suppliers shall use a survey process
comparable to the processes set out in
the State Operations Manual, or as
issued via policy memorandums, and
approved by CMS, as defined in § 488.5,
applicable beginning [date 1 year from
the effective date of the final rule].
(3) When a provider or supplier
demonstrates full compliance with all of
the accreditation program requirements
of the accrediting organization’s CMSapproved accreditation program, the
accrediting organization may
recommend that CMS grant deemed
status to the provider or supplier.
(4) CMS may deem the provider or
supplier to be in compliance with the
applicable Medicare conditions or
requirements. The deemed status
provider or supplier is subject to
validation surveys as provided at
§ 488.9.
(b) The following requirements apply
for termination of a provider’s or
supplier’s Medicare participation
agreement on CMS recognition of its
accreditation provider by an Accrediting
Organization:
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(1) If CMS terminates the
participation agreement of a provider or
supplier, CMS will no longer recognize
or accept the accreditation provided by
an accreditation organization to that
provider or supplier as demonstrating
that the Medicare requirements have
been met by such provider or supplier;
and,
(2) If CMS terminates the
participation agreement of a provider or
supplier, the terminated provider or
supplier must meet all requirements set
forth at 42 CFR 489.57 before a new
agreement with that provider or
supplier for Medicare participation will
be approved.
■ 4. Section 488.5 is amended by—
■ a. Revising paragraphs (a)(3), (4), (5),
(6), (8), (10), (12) and (13); and
■ b. Adding paragraphs (a)(21) and (22)
The revisions and additions read as
follows:
§ 488.5 Application and re-application
procedures for national accrediting
organizations. (a) * * *
(3) A detailed crosswalk (in table
format, as specified by CMS) that
identifies each of the applicable
Medicare conditions (as defined in
§ 488.1) incorporating the language of
the CMS requirements and standards,
and those accreditation standards that
exceed the CMS conditions. This
requirement, as revised, shall become
applicable beginning [DATE 1 YEAR
AFTER THE EFFECTIVE DATE OF THE
FINAL RULE].
(4) A detailed description of the
organization’s survey process including,
but not limited to, the core activities of
the survey process such as, but not
limited to, documentation supporting
Pre Survey Preparation/Offsite
Preparation, Entrance Interview/
Activities, Information Gathering/
Investigation, Analysis of Information,
Exit Conference, Post Survey Activities/
Statement of Deficiencies activities, to
confirm that a provider or supplier
meets or exceeds the Medicare program
requirements, and maintains the
integrity of the survey process, which is
intended to be a non-biased evaluation
of a facility’s ability to provide safe care
and protect the health and safety of
patients. This description must include
all of the following information:
(i) Frequency of surveys performed
and an agreement by the organization to
re-survey every accredited provider or
supplier, through unannounced surveys,
no later than 36 months after the prior
accreditation effective date, including
an explanation of how the accrediting
organization will maintain the schedule
it proposes. If there is a statutorily
mandated survey interval of less than 36
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12059
months, the organization must indicate
how it will adhere to the statutory
schedule.
(ii) Documentation demonstrating the
comparability of the organization’s
survey process and surveyor guidance to
those required for state survey agencies
conducting federal Medicare surveys for
the same provider or supplier type, in
accordance with the applicable
requirements or conditions of
participation or conditions for coverage
or certification.
(iii) Copies of the organization’s
survey forms, guidelines, and
instructions to surveyors, including but
not limited to specific processes of how
surveyors’ survey facilities for the core
survey activities: Governing Body,
Patient Rights, Emergency Preparedness,
Quality Assessment and Performance
Improvement, Medical Staff, Nursing
Services, Medical Records Services, and
Infection Control. This would also
include interpretive guidelines and
survey probes, including patient and
staff interview questions, and processes
used by surveyors when interviewing
facilities for compliance based on each
of the specific survey standards,
comparable to those instructions
required for state survey agencies.
(iv) Documentation demonstrating
that the organization’s survey reports
identify, for each finding of noncompliance with accreditation
standards, the comparable Medicare
CoP, CfC, conditions for certification, or
requirements.
(v) Description of the organization’s
accreditation survey review process, to
include but not limited to processes for
review of medical records, medical staff
credentialing procedures based on
services provided; staff record review to
review for competency and personnel
files; adequate number of patient
observations; and confidential patient
interviews and staff interviews.
(vi) Description of the organization’s
procedures and timelines for notifying
surveyed facilities of non-compliance
with the accreditation program’s
standards.
(vii) Description of the organization’s
procedures and timelines for monitoring
the provider’s or supplier’s correction of
identified non-compliance with the
accreditation program’s standards,
including the deadlines for initial and
reaccreditation surveys, accreditation
decisions, as well as the investigative
and organizational process which the
accrediting organization uses to make
these determinations.
(viii) A statement acknowledging that,
as a condition for CMS approval of a
national accrediting organization’s
accreditation program, the organization
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agrees to provide CMS with the
following information as part of its
initial and renewal applications and,
upon request from CMS, and as part of
the data submissions required under
paragraph (a)(11)(ii) of this section:
(A) a copy of all survey reports,
including but not limited to, initial, resurvey, and complaint survey reports,
and
(B) any other information related to
survey activities as CMS may require
(including corrective action plans).
(ix) A statement acknowledging that
the accrediting organization will
provide timely notification to CMS
when an accreditation survey or
complaint investigation identifies an
immediate jeopardy as that term is
defined at § 498.3 of this chapter. Using
the format specified by CMS, the
accrediting organization must notify
CMS within 2-business days from the
date the accrediting organization
identifies the immediate jeopardy.
(x) For accrediting organizations
applying for approval or re-approval of
CMS-approved hospice programs, a
statement acknowledging that the
accrediting organization (AO) will
include a statement of deficiencies (that
is, the Form CMS-2567 or a successor
form) to document findings of the
hospice Medicare conditions of
participation in accordance with section
1822(a)(2)(A)(ii) of the Act and will
submit such in a manner specified by
CMS.
(xi) Documentation summarizing the
AOs staff training programs, whether
web-based electronic or hard-copy
materials, on how the AO provides
training or education to surveyors on
the AOs survey processes, and, where
applicable, highlight differences from
CMS survey processes.
(xii) The requirements of paragraph
(a)(4), shall become applicable
beginning [DATE 1 YEAR AFTER THE
EFFECTIVE DATE OF THE FINAL
RULE].
(5) Beginning [DATE 1 YEAR AFTER
THE EFFECTIVE DATE OF THE FINAL
RULE], the criteria the accrediting
organization uses in determining the
size and composition of the
organization’s survey teams for the type
of provider or supplier to be accredited,
these criteria at a minimum should
address survey team size and
composition based on:
(i) The size of the facility to be
surveyed, based on average daily
census;
(ii) The complexity of services
offered, including outpatient services;
(iii) The type of survey to be
conducted;
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(iv) Whether the facility has special
care units or off-site clinics or locations;
(v) Whether the facility has a
historical pattern of serious deficiencies
or complaints; and
(vi) Whether new surveyors are to
accompany a team as part of their
training.
(6) Beginning [DATE 1 YEAR AFTER
THE EFFECTIVE DATE OF THE FINAL
RULE], the overall adequacy of the
number of the organization’s surveyors
to ensure sufficient amount of time is
allotted to complete all survey activities,
including how the organization will
increase the size of the survey staff to
match growth in the number of
accredited facilities while maintaining
re-accreditation intervals for existing
accredited facilities.
*
*
*
*
*
(8) A description of the content and
frequency of the organization’s inservice training it provides to survey
personnel, including the training
materials provided, and, with respect to
CMS training, a statement
acknowledging that:
(i) The accrediting organization will
ensure all of its surveyors complete two
mandatory CMS online documentation
courses and the relevant programspecific CMS online basic surveyor
training course (established for state
survey agency surveyors), initially, and
thereafter when updates are necessary;
(ii) The required CMS online surveyor
training will be completed by each
existing surveyor before serving on a
survey team (except as a trainee); and
(iii) The accrediting organization must
document in the staff personnel records
for each surveyor, that the CMS online
surveyor documentation and basic
training courses were completed and the
date of completion. The statement must
acknowledge that the accrediting
organization will maintain this
documentation for no less than one
accreditation cycle.
(iv) These requirements shall become
applicable beginning [DATE 1 YEAR
AFTER THE EFFECTIVE DATE OF THE
FINAL RULE].
*
*
*
*
*
(10) The organization’s policies and
procedures to avoid conflicts of interest,
(as defined in paragraph (a)(10)(v) of
this section) including the appearance
of conflicts of interest, involving
individuals who conduct surveys or
participate in accreditation decisions.
These policies and procedures will
include the following:
(i) The accrediting organization’s
policies and procedures for separation
of its fee-based consulting services from
its accreditation services;
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(ii) The accrediting organization’s
policies and procedures for protecting
the integrity of the accrediting
organization’s accreditation program,
including the requirements of § 488.8(i)
and (k),
(iii) The accrediting organization’s
policies and procedures for the
prevention and handling potential or
actual conflicts of interest that could
arise from situations in which an
accrediting organization owner,
surveyor, or other employee has an
interest in or relationship with another
state survey agency or health care
facility to which the accrediting
organization provides accreditation
services. Such interests or relationships
include but are not limited to:
(A) Being employed as a state survey
agency surveyor;
(B) Being employed in a health care
facility that is accredited by the
accrediting organization;
(C) Having an ownership, financial or
investment interest in a health care
facility that is accredited by the
accrediting organization;
(D) Serving as a director of or trustee
for a health care facility that is
accredited by the accrediting
organization;
(E) Serving on a utilization review
committee of a health care facility that
is accredited by the accrediting
organization;
(F) Accepting fees or payments from
a health facility or group of health
facilities that is/are accredited by the
accrediting organization;
(G) Accepting fees for personal
services, contract services, referral
services, or for furnishing supplies to a
health care facility that is accredited by
the accrediting organization;
(H) Providing consulting services to a
health care facility that the accrediting
organization accredits;
(I) Having members of their
immediate family engaged in any of the
above stated activities. The term
‘‘immediate family member’’ is defined
as any person with which the
accrediting organization owner(s),
surveyors or other employees have a
lineal or immediate familial or marital
relationship, including a husband or
wife, birth or adoptive parent, child, or
sibling; stepparent, stepchild,
stepbrother, or stepsister; father-in-law,
mother-in-law, son-in-law, daughter-inlaw, brother-in-law, or sister-in-law;
grandparent or grandchild; and spouse
of a grandparent or grandchild.
(J) Engaging in any activities during
the course of the survey of the facility
that would be or cause a conflict of
interest.
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(iv) The accrediting organization’s
policies and procedures for notification
of CMS when a conflict of interest is
discovered.
(v) For the purposes of this section, a
conflict of interest exists when an
accrediting organization, the accrediting
organization’s successors, transferees, or
assigns, the accrediting organization
owner(s), surveyors, or other employees,
or the immediate family members of the
accrediting organization owners(s),
surveyors and other employees have an
employment, business, financial or
other type of interest in or relationship
with a health care facility the
accrediting organization accredits.
*
*
*
*
*
(12) Beginning [DATE 1 YEAR AFTER
THE EFFECTIVE DATE OF THE FINAL
RULE], the organization’s procedures for
responding to, and investigating,
complaints against accredited facilities,
including policies and procedures
regarding referrals to appropriate
licensing bodies and ombudsman
programs, when applicable. This would
also include:
(i) Accrediting organization’s process
for triaging and categorizing complaints
about the surveyed facility;
(ii) Timeframes for responding to
complaints and a method to track and
trend complaints received with respect
to the accrediting organization’s
accredited facilities;
(iii) Procedures and persons
responsible for the review of plans of
corrections and procedures for follow
up if the plans of corrections are not
adequate;
(iv) Accrediting organization
requirements for plans of corrections for
standard level deficiencies;
(v) Follow up survey procedures and
monitoring of condition-level findings;
(vi) Procedures for addressing
immediate jeopardy deficiencies and,
(vii) Sharing of previous deficiency
findings or complaints with survey
teams.
(13) The organization’s accreditation
status decision-making process,
including its policies and procedures for
granting, withholding, or removing
accreditation status for facilities that fail
to meet the accrediting organization’s
standards or requirements, assignment
of less than full accreditation status or
other actions taken by the organization
in response to non-compliance with its
standards and requirements. The
organization must furnish the following:
(i) A description of all types and
categories of accreditation decisions
associated with the program for which
approval is sought, including the
duration of each.
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(ii) The accrediting organization’s
general notification procedures to notify
CMS, including the timeframes for
notification of any decision to revoke,
withdraw, or revise the accreditation
status of a specific deemed status
provider or supplier. Such notification
must be made within three business
days from the date the organization
takes an action.
(iii) A statement acknowledging that
the organization agrees to notify CMS
(in a manner CMS specifies) of any
decision to revoke, withdraw, or revise
the accreditation status of a specific
deemed status provider or supplier,
within three business days from the date
the organization takes an action.
(iv) The organizations process for
facilities that withdraw from
accreditation, to include timeframes for
notification to CMS and include the
process for surveying facilities which
may require an upcoming survey.
(v) These requirements of this
paragraph (a)(13) become applicable
beginning [DATE 1 YEAR AFTER THE
EFFECTIVE DATE OF THE FINAL
RULE].
*
*
*
*
*
(21) A statement certifying that, in
response to a written notice from CMS
notifying the organization that one of its
accredited providers or suppliers has
been terminated from the Medicare/
Medicaid program, the accrediting
organization agrees to terminate or
revoke its accreditation of the
terminated provider or supplier within
5-business days from receipt of said
written notice, and not re-accredit the
provider until CMS has approved the
provider or supplier for participation in
Medicare.
(22) A declaration by each surveyor of
any employment, business, financial or
other interests in or relationships with
a State Survey Agency or a health care
facility the accrediting organization
accredits as described in paragraph
(a)(10)(iii) of this section, which must be
updated on an annual basis and
submitted to CMS no later than
December 31st each year. This provision
will become applicable beginning
[DATE 1 YEAR AFTER THE EFFECTIVE
DATE OF THE FINAL RULE].
*
*
*
*
*
■ 5. Section 488.8 is amended by—
■ a. Revising paragraph (a)(2); and
■ b. Adding new paragraphs (a)(4), (i),
(j) and (k).
The revision and additions read as
follows:
§ 488.8 Ongoing review of accrediting
organizations.
(a) * * *
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(2) Analysis of the results of the
validation surveys under § 488.8(a)(4),
including the outcome disparity rate as
determined from look-back validation
surveys, surveys from substantial
allegations of noncompliance, and the
process disparity rate as determined
from direct observation validation
surveys.
*
*
*
*
*
(4) When an accrediting
organization’s performance measure
scores as determined from look-back
and direct observation validation
surveys, reveal that the accrediting
organization’s accreditation survey
activities do not meet an acceptable
performance threshold established by
CMS, the accrediting organization will
be required to submit an acceptable plan
of correction that meets the
requirements set forth below:
(i) The accrediting organization’s
acceptable plan of correction must be
submitted to CMS for review within 10
business days of CMS notification of not
meeting acceptable performance. An
acceptable plan of correction must:
(A) Document specific actions being
taken by the accrediting organization to
address improving performance.
(B) Document the timeframe for
implementation of this plan.
(C) Plan for ongoing monitoring of the
plan of correction toward achieving an
acceptable level of performance.
(D) Identify the individual responsible
for implementation and monitoring of
the acceptable plan of correction.
(ii) Upon review and approval of the
plan of correction, CMS will provide
ongoing evaluation of the progress of
plan implementation.
(iii) The accrediting organization’s
plan of correction is subject to public
reporting by CMS.
*
*
*
*
*
(i) Restrictions on fee-based
consulting provided by accrediting
organizations or their fee-based
consulting divisions or separate feebased business entities. (1) Except as
provided in paragraph (i)(4) of this
section, an accrediting organization or
its fee-based consulting division or
separate business entity (such as a
company or corporation, that provides
fee-based consulting), may not provide
fee-based consulting services to any new
health care provider or supplier before
the initial accreditation survey has been
completed. For purposes of this
paragraph, the term ‘‘initial survey’’
means the first accreditation survey
performed of a health care provider or
supplier by an accrediting organization
that has not previously received
accreditation services from that
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accrediting organization. If a health care
provider or supplier is terminated or
withdraws from the services of an
accrediting organization and later
retains the services of the same or a new
accrediting organization, the first survey
performed by the same or new
accrediting organization of that health
care provider or supplier would be
considered an initial accreditation
survey;
(2) Except as provided in paragraph
(i)(4) of this section, an accrediting
organization, its fee-based consulting
division or separate business entity,
such as a company or corporation, that
provides fee-based consulting, may not
provide fee-based consulting services to
a health care provider or supplier the
accrediting organization accredits
within 12 months prior to the next
scheduled re-accreditation survey of
that provider or supplier. For purposes
of this paragraph, the term ‘‘reaccreditation survey’’ means the any
subsequent accreditation surveys
performed by the accrediting
organization following the initial
survey;
(3) Except as provided in paragraph
(i)(4), an accrediting organization, its
fee-based consulting division, or
separate business entity, such as
company or corporation that provides
fee-based consulting, may not provide
fee-based consulting services to a health
care provider or supplier, to which the
accrediting organization provides
accreditation services, in response to a
complaint received by the accrediting
organization regarding that provider or
supplier.
(4) An accrediting organization, its
fee-based consulting division, or
separate business entity, such as a
company or corporation that provides
fee-based consulting, may provide feebased consulting to the health care
providers and suppliers it accredits only
under the following circumstances:
(i) During the 24-month period after
an initial or re-accreditation survey is
performed.
(ii) To address complaints received
and investigated by the State Survey
Agency regarding an accrediting
organization’s accredited provider or
supplier in which one or more
condition level or immediate jeopardy
deficiencies are identified. Such feebased consulting by an accrediting
organization may occur only after the
State Survey Agency complaint
investigation and survey has been
completed and must only address those
issues identified by the complaint
survey.
(iii) Fee-based consulting services
provided to health care providers or
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suppliers the accrediting organization
does not accredit at the time the
consulting services are furnished.
(iv) Non fee-based consulting or
general education provided by the
accrediting organization about their
accreditation program.
(5) The accrediting organization must
provide to CMS, on a biannual basis, a
document which contains the following
information:
(i) Whether the accrediting
organization or an associated consulting
division or company established by the
accrediting organization provides feebased consulting services;
(ii) The names and CCN numbers of
all health care providers and suppliers
to which the accrediting organization or
its associated consulting division or
company has provided fee-based
consulting services during the previous
6-month period;
(iii) The dates the fee-based
consulting services were provided to
each provider and supplier;
(iv) Whether the accrediting
organization has, at any time in the past
provided, or is currently providing
accreditation services to each health
care provider or supplier listed in said
document; and
(v) For each health care provider and
supplier listed in said document, the
date of the most recent accreditation
survey performed, and the date the next
re-accreditation survey is due to be
performed; and
(vi) A description of the fee-based
consulting services provided to each
health care provider or supplier listed in
said document.
(6) If an accrediting organization
provides fee-based consulting services
to a health care provider or supplier it
accredits, in violation of the restrictions
set forth in paragraphs (i)(1), (2) and (3)
of this section, CMS may take the
following actions:
(i) CMS may place the accrediting
organization on a CMS approved
accreditation program review in
accordance with paragraph (c) of this
section; or
(ii) CMS may involuntarily terminate
the CMS approval for the accreditation
programs in accordance with paragraph
(g) of this section.
(7) The provisions at paragraph (i) of
this section will become applicable
beginning [DATE 1 YEAR FROM THE
EFFECTIVE DATE OF THE FINAL].
(j) Accrediting organization fee-based
consulting firewall policies and
procedures. (1) An accrediting
organization, its fee-based consulting
division, or separate business entity,
such as a company or corporation that
provides fee-based consulting services
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to the health care providers and
suppliers the accrediting organization
accredits, must have written fee-based
consulting firewall policies and
procedures, which, at a minimum,
include the following provisions:
(i) The accrediting organization’s feebased consulting services must be
provided by a separate division of the
accrediting organization or separate
business entity, such as a company or
corporation, that is separate from the
accrediting organization’s accreditation
division;
(ii) An accrediting organization’s feebased consulting division or separate
business entity must maintain separate
staff from that of the accrediting
organization’s accreditation divisions to
ensure that the fee-based consulting
division staff do not perform accrediting
organization’s accreditation division
functions and that the accrediting
organization’s accreditation division
staff do not perform fee-based
consulting division functions; and
(iii) An accrediting organization’s
accreditation staff and surveyors are
prohibited from marketing the
accrediting organization’s fee-based
consulting services to the accrediting
organizations accreditation clients.
(2) An accrediting organization that
provides fee-based consulting must
submit its written fee-based consulting
firewall policies and procedures to CMS
by a date specified by CMS and with
each application submitted seeking
renewal of the CMS approval for their
accreditation programs.
(k) Conflict of interest due to
accrediting organization owner,
surveyor or other accrediting
organization employee relationship with
a health care facility accredited by the
accrediting organization. (1) If an
accrediting organization owner,
surveyor or other employee, currently or
within the previous 2 years, has an
interest in or relationship (as defined in
§ 488.5(a)(10)(iii)(B) to
488.5(a)(10)(iii)(J)) with a health care
facility, accredited by the accrediting
organization, the accrediting
organization owner, surveyor or other
employee shall not be permitted to:
(i) Participate in the survey of that
health care facility,
(ii) Have input into the results of the
survey and accreditation for that health
care facility,
(iii) Have involvement with the pre-or
post-survey activities for that health
care facility, or
(iv) Have contact with or access to the
records for the survey and accreditation
of that health care facility.
(2) For the purposes of this section,
‘‘immediate family member’’ is defined
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as any person that has a lineal familial
or marital relationship with the
accrediting organization owner,
surveyor or other employee. Immediate
family members would include a
husband or wife, birth or adoptive
parent, child, or sibling; stepparent,
stepchild, stepbrother, or stepsister;
father-in-law, mother-in-law, son-inlaw, daughter-in-law, brother-in-law, or
sister-in-law; grandparent or grandchild;
and spouse of a grandparent or
grandchild.
■ 6. Revise § 488.9 to read as follows:
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§ 488.9
Validation surveys.
(a) Basis for survey. CMS may require
a survey of an accredited provider or
supplier to validate the accrediting
organization’s CMS-approved
accreditation process. These surveys are
conducted on a representative sample
basis, or in response to substantial
allegations of non-compliance.
(1) For a representative sample, the
survey may be comprehensive and
address all Medicare conditions or
requirements, or it may be focused on a
specific condition(s) as determined by
CMS.
(2) For a substantial allegation of
noncompliance, the SA surveys for any
condition(s) or requirement(s) that CMS
determines is related to the allegations.
(b) Types of validation surveys. (1)
Look-back Validation Surveys are
performed by the state survey agency on
a sample of health care facilities
accredited by CMS approved accrediting
organization that are scheduled for
survey by the accrediting organization,
and are performed within 60 days after
the accrediting organization has
performed its survey.
(2) Direct observation validation
surveys are performed on a sample of
the accrediting organization’s surveys
and are performed concurrently by the
accrediting organization and the state
survey agency or CMS. The state survey
agency or CMS surveyors are present to
observe the accrediting organization’s
survey process.
(c) Rules for state look-back
validation surveys. (1) All look-back
validation surveys will be unannounced
to the accrediting organization and the
facility being surveyed.
(2) The look-back validation survey
may address compliance with all
Medicare conditions or requirements, or
it may be focused on a specific
condition(s) or requirement(s) as
determined by CMS.
(3) For a look-back validation survey
that addresses a substantial allegation of
non-compliance, the state survey agency
surveys for any condition(s) or
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requirement(s) that CMS determines is
related to the allegations.
(d) Selection for look-back validation
survey. (1) A provider or supplier
selected for a look-back validation
survey must cooperate with the state
survey agency that performs the lookback validation survey.
(2) If a provider or supplier selected
for a look-back validation survey fails to
cooperate with the state survey agency,
it will no longer be deemed to meet the
Medicare conditions or requirements,
will be subject to a review in accordance
with paragraph (a) of this section, and
may be subject to termination of its
provider agreement under § 489.53 of
this chapter.
(e) Rules for direct observation
validation surveys. (1) All direct
observation validation surveys will be
unannounced to the accrediting
organization and the facility being
surveyed.
(2) The state survey agency or CMS
surveyors will generally be assigned to
the accrediting organization surveyors
on a 1:1 basis, matching the experience
of the accreditation surveyor where
possible, and using the CMS approved
standards and processes to determine
compliance with the Medicare
conditions.
(3) The state survey agency or CMS
surveyors will observe the accrediting
organization survey in accordance with
CMS established policies and
procedures and will report the findings
directly to CMS.
(4) Where the state survey agency or
CMS surveyors disagree with the
findings of the accrediting organization
surveyors, and these differences cannot
be reconciled, CMS will render a final
decision. Such decision would not be
appealable under part 498 of this
chapter.
(f) Provider or supplier not in
compliance. A provider or supplier will
be deemed non-compliant with the
validation process, in accordance with
this section, if any of the following
conditions are present:
(1) The provider or supplier refuses to
authorize its accrediting organization to
release a copy of their current
accreditation survey to CMS;
(2) The provider or supplier refuses to
allow a validation survey (for either
look-back or direct observation
validation surveys); or,
(3) CMS finds that the provider or
supplier does not meet the applicable
Medicare Conditions of Participation,
Conditions for Coverage, conditions of
certification, or requirements.
(g) Consequences for a finding of noncompliance. (1) If a CMS validation
look-back or direct observation
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12063
validation survey results in a finding
that the provider or supplier is out of
compliance with one or more Medicare
conditions or requirements, deemed
status may be removed by CMS and the
provider or supplier will be subject to
ongoing review by the state survey
agency (in accordance with § 488.10(d))
until the provider or supplier
demonstrates compliance.
(2) CMS may take actions for the
deficiencies identified in the look-back
validation survey or direct observation
survey in accordance with § 488.24, or
may first direct the state survey agency
to, or CMS may, conduct another survey
of the provider’s or supplier’s
compliance with specified Medicare
conditions or requirements before taking
the enforcement actions provided for at
§ 488.24.
(3) If CMS determines that a provider
or supplier is not in compliance with
applicable Medicare conditions or
requirements, they may be subject to
termination of their provider agreement
with CMS under § 489.53 of this chapter
and any other applicable intermediate
sanctions and remedies.
(h) Re-instating deemed status. An
accredited provider or supplier will be
deemed to meet the applicable Medicare
conditions or requirements in
accordance with this section, if the
following requirements are met, as
applicable:
(1) It withdraws any prior refusal to
authorize its accrediting organization to
release a copy of the provider’s or
supplier’s current accreditation survey.
(2) It withdraws any prior refusal to
allow a look-back or direct observation
validation survey, if applicable.
(3) CMS finds that the provider or
supplier meets all applicable Medicare
Conditions of Participation, Conditions
for Coverage, conditions of certification,
or other requirements.
(i) Impact of adverse actions. The
existence of any performance review,
comparability review, deemed status
review, probationary period, or any
other action by CMS, does not affect or
limit conducting any validation survey.
PART 489—PROVIDER AGREEMENTS
AND SUPPLIER APPROVAL
7. 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).
8. Section 489.20 is amended by
adding paragraph (z) to read as follows:
■
§ 489.20
Basic commitments.
*
*
*
*
*
(z) In the case of a provider that has
been involuntarily terminated by CMS
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under § 489.53, or by the OIG under
§ 489.54, reinstatement of the provider
agreement is subject to § 489.57(b).
■ 9. Revise § 489.57 to read as follows:
§ 489.57
Reinstatement after termination.
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When a provider agreement has been
terminated by CMS under § 489.53, or
by the OIG under § 489.54, a new
agreement with that provider will not be
accepted unless:
(a) CMS or the OIG, as appropriate,
finds—
(1) That the reason for termination of
the previous agreement has been
removed and
there is reasonable assurance that it
will not recur; and
(2) That the provider has fulfilled, or
has made satisfactory arrangements to
fulfill, all of the statutory and regulatory
responsibilities of its previous
agreement.
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(b) The terminated provider or
supplier that had deemed status meets
the following requirements before a new
agreement with that provider or
supplier may be approved:
(1) The terminated provider or
supplier must become and remain under
the exclusive oversight of the state
survey agency for a reasonable
assurance period of a length of time to
be determined by CMS, for the purposes
of the initial survey, certification and
demonstration of compliance with the
Medicare conditions.
(2) The terminated provider or
supplier must remain under the
exclusive oversight of the state survey
agency until the state survey agency or
CMS has certified that the provider or
supplier is in compliance with all
applicable Medicare conditions and the
agreement for participation in the
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Medicare/Medicaid program has been
approved.
(3) During the time period in which
a terminated provider or supplier is not
certified to participate in the Medicare
program, while the prospective provider
or supplier is under the oversight of the
state survey agency, and while the new
agreement for Medicare participation is
pending, CMS will not accept or
recognize deeming accreditation from a
CMS-approved accrediting organization
until the applicable Medicare
requirements have been met or
exceeded, as described in § 488.4 of this
chapter.
Xavier Becerra,
Secretary, Department of Health and Human
Services.
[FR Doc. 2024–02137 Filed 2–8–24; 4:15 pm]
BILLING CODE 4120–01–P
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 89, Number 32 (Thursday, February 15, 2024)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 11996-12064]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2024-02137]
[[Page 11995]]
Vol. 89
Thursday,
No. 32
February 15, 2024
Part III
Department of Health and Human Services
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Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services
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42 CFR Parts 488 and 489
Medicare Program; Strengthening Oversight of Accrediting Organizations
(AOs) and Preventing AO Conflict of Interest, and Related Provisions;
Proposed Rule
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 32 / Thursday, February 15, 2024 /
Proposed Rules
[[Page 11996]]
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DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services
42 CFR Parts 488 and 489
[CMS-3367-P]
RIN 0938-AU88
Medicare Program; Strengthening Oversight of Accrediting
Organizations (AOs) and Preventing AO Conflict of Interest, and Related
Provisions
AGENCY: Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS), HHS.
ACTION: Proposed rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: This proposed rule would set forth a number of provisions to
strengthen the oversight of accrediting organizations (AOs) by
addressing conflicts of interest, establishing consistent standards,
processes and definitions, and updating the validation and performance
standards systems. Additionally, this proposed rule would revise the
psychiatric hospital survey process, add a limitation on terminated
deemed providers and suppliers when reentering the program, and
provides technical corrections for End-Stage Renal Disease facilities
and Kidney Transplant Programs. This proposed rule also solicits
comments from stakeholders and AOs to refine and revise the AO
oversight standards and processes. In addition, this proposed rule
includes a request for information on the timeframes and expectations
for the submission of AO applications.
DATES: To be assured consideration, comments must be received at one of
the addresses provided below, no later than 5 p.m. on April 15, 2024.
ADDRESSES: In commenting, refer to file code CMS-3367-P.
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 submit electronic comments on this
regulation to https://www.regulations.gov. Follow the ``Submit a
comment'' instructions.
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-3367-P, P.O. Box 8010,
Baltimore, MD 21244-8010.
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 to
the following address ONLY: Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services,
Department of Health and Human Services, Attention: CMS-3367-P, Mail
Stop C4-26-05, 7500 Security Boulevard, Baltimore, MD 21244-1850.
For information on viewing public comments, see the beginning of
the SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Caroline Gallaher, (410) 786-8705 or
Beth Chalick-Kaplan, (410) 786-6550.
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Plain Language Summary: In accordance with 5 U.S.C. 553(b)(4), a
plain language summary of this rule may be found at https://www.regulations.gov/.
Severability of Provisions
To the extent a court may enjoin any part of the rule as finalized,
the Department intends that other provisions or parts of provisions
should remain in effect. Any provision of the rule as finalized held to
be invalid or unenforceable by its terms, or as applied to any person
or circumstance, shall be construed so as to continue to give maximum
effect to the provision permitted by law, unless such holding shall be
one of utter invalidity or unenforceability, in which event the
provision shall be severable from this section and shall not affect the
remainder thereof or the application of the provision to persons not
similarly situated or to dissimilar circumstances.
Table of Contents
I. Executive Summary
A. Purpose
B. Summary of the Major Provisions
II. Background
A. Legislative History
B. Regulatory Overview of CMS's Rules Regarding AO Programs
C. Congressional Report on the Oversight of National AOs and CMS
Approved Accreditation Programs
D. CMS Validation Survey Pilot
E. Overview of Transparency and Oversight of Accrediting
Organizations
F. Prior Rulemaking--Accrediting Organizations Conflict of
Interest Request for Information (RFI)
G. Conflict of Interest--The AO Owner's, Surveyor's and Other
Employee's Interest in or Relationship With a Health Care Facility
That the AO Accredits
III. Request for Public Comment on Whether It Is a Conflict of
Interest for AO Board Members or Advisors To Have an Interest in or
Relationship With a Health Care Facility That the AO Accredits
IV. Provisions of the Proposed Rule
A. Proposal To Add Definition of ``Unannounced Surveys'' to
Sec. 488.1
B. Conflict of Interest
C. Proposal To Require the AOs That Accredit Medicare-Certified
Providers and Suppliers To Use the Medicare Conditions; and
Strengthened Survey Process Comparability (Proposed Sec.
488.4(a)(1) and (2))
D. Proposal To Revise the AO Crosswalk Requirements at Sec.
488.5(a)(3)
E. Proposal To Strengthen the Comparability of the Survey
Process Between the AOs and the States
F. Proposal To Revise the AO Application Documentation
Requirements Related to the Survey Processes (Sec. 488.5(a)(4);
Sec. 488.5(a)(4)(iii); Sec. 488.5(a)(4)(v); Sec.
488.5(a)(4)(vii); Sec. 488.5(a)(4)(xi); Sec. 488.5(a)(5); Sec.
488.5(a)(6); Sec. 488.5(a)(12); Sec. 488.5(a)(13))
G. Proposal To Require AOs To Provide CMS With Survey Findings
(Sec. 488.5(a)(4)(viii))
H. Proposal To Require That AO Surveyors Must Take the CMS
Online Surveyor Basic Training
(Sec. 488.5(a)(8)(ii)
I. Proposal To Establish Criteria for ``National in Scope'' to
Sec. 488.1
J. Proposal To Revise the Definition of ``Rate of Disparity''
and To Use the Process and Outcome Disparity Rates as Performance
Measures (Sec. 488.1)
K. Proposal To Require AOs To Submit a Publicly Reportable Plan
of Correction for Unacceptable Performance Measure Scores (Sec.
488.8(a)(2))
L. Proposal To Revise the AO Survey Validation Program (Sec.
489.9)
M. Proposal To Revise the Psychiatric Hospital Survey Process
N. Limitation on Terminated Deemed Providers/Suppliers Seeking
Re-Entry Into Medicare/Medicaid (Sec. 489.57, Sec. 488.4(b) &
Sec. 488.5(a)(21))
O. Proposal for Technical Correction for End-Stage Renal Disease
(ESRD) Facilities and Kidney Transplant Programs (Sec. 488.4(a)(4))
V. Request for Information Regarding Timeframes and Expectation for
the Submission of AO Applications
VI. Collection of Information Requirements
[[Page 11997]]
A. ICR Related to Conflict of Interest Proposals
B. ICRs Associated With the Requirement That AOs Incorporate the
Medicare Conditions
C. ICRs Associated With the Requirement That AOs Use Survey
Processes That Are Comparable to That Used by CMS and the SAs
D. ICR Related to Requirement That the AO Surveyors Take the CMS
Online Surveyor Training
E. ICR Associated With the Establishment of a Definition for
``National in Scope''
F. ICR Associated With the Proposed Revision of the AO
Performance Measures and To Require a Publically Reportable Plan of
Correction
G. ICR Associated With the Revision of the Definition of
``Disparity Rate
H. Burden Reduction Associated With the Revision of the AO
Validation Program
I. ICR Associated With the Revision of the Psychiatric Hospital
Accreditation Process
J. Burden Associated With Limitations to Terminated Deemed
Providers Seeking Re-Enrollment and Certification in Medicare/
Medicaid Programs
K. Summary of Estimated Burden
VII. Response to Comments
VIII. Regulatory Impact Analysis
A. Statement of Need
B. Overall Impact
C. Detailed Economic Analysis
D. Alternatives Considered
E. Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)
F. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act (UMRA)
G. Federalism
Regulations Text
I. Executive Summary
A. Purpose
The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) seeks to protect
the health and safety of patients that receive services from Medicare
and Medicaid-participating providers that are accredited by CMS-
approved accrediting organizations (AOs). We continue to review and
revise our health and safety requirements and survey processes to
ensure that they are effective in driving quality of care for
beneficiaries receiving services from these accredited providers and
suppliers.
In 2015, we published a final rule in the Federal Register
entitled, ``Medicare and Medicaid Programs: Revisions to Deeming
Authority Survey, Certification, and Enforcement Procedures'' (80 FR
29795), hereinafter referred to as the ``2015 AO final rule'' to
clarify and strengthen the oversight of AOs, specifically to provide
additional criteria for AOs that apply for, and are granted,
recognition and approval of an accreditation program (see section II
``Background'' of this proposed rule for additional background
information). Over the past 5 years, CMS has continued to evaluate the
effectiveness of these regulatory changes and the performance of AOs.
This proposed rule proposes multiple provisions to further strengthen
our oversight and enforcement capabilities of the AOs. The need for
these provisions is based on multiple factors, which include: (1)
direct observation and review of the AOs' accreditation programs for
those AOs with CMS-approved deeming programs; (2) media reports and
complaints against facilities that are deemed; (3) the CMS validation
program and analysis of disparity rates between state survey agency
(SAs) and the AOs; and (4) our performance evaluations of AOs. The
preamble discusses each of the proposed provisions (see section IV
``Provisions of the Proposed Rule'') in this proposed rule. More
specifically, the preamble provides background and analysis of why CMS
is proposing additional provisions and revisions to existing
requirements. CMS is responsible for the oversight of the national AOs'
Medicare accreditation programs, and for ensuring that providers or
suppliers under CMS-approved deeming programs by the AOs meet the
minimum quality and patient safety standards required by the Medicare
conditions (refer to section II of this proposed rule for additional
information). Based on several years' experience and data analysis, we
are proposing the following provisions as described in the preamble to
strengthen our oversight of AOs.
B. Summary of the Major Provisions
We propose at Sec. 488.1 to add the definitions of
``geographic regions'', ``national in scope,'' ``outcome disparity
rate,'' ``process disparity rate,'' and ``unannounced survey''. In
addition, we propose to revise the definition of ``national accrediting
organization,'' and remove the definition of ``rate of disparity.''
We propose to establish a new requirement at Sec.
488.4(a)(1) that would require the AOs that accredit Medicare-certified
providers and suppliers to incorporate the language of the applicable
Medicare Conditions of Participation (CoPs), Conditions for Coverage
(CfCs), conditions for certification, or requirements (collectively
referred to as ``Medicare conditions'') set forth in the applicable CMS
regulations for each provider and supplier type as their minimum
accreditation requirements. However, the AOs would be free to establish
additional accreditation requirements that exceed Medicare conditions,
as permitted by section 1865(a)(1) of the Social Security Act (the
Act).
We propose to add language at Sec. 488.4(a)(2) regarding
use of a comparable survey process approved by CMS, as outlined and
contemplated in Sec. 488.5.
We propose to add a new regulation at Sec. 488.4(b) that
would state that if Medicare terminates the participation agreement of
a Medicare-certified provider or supplier, then CMS would no longer
recognize the facility's AO accreditation for deemed compliance. At
proposed Sec. 488.4(b)(2), we would require a terminated provider or
supplier to meet all requirements set forth at Sec. 489.57 before
their new agreement for participation in the Medicare/Medicaid program
can be approved.
We propose to require AOs to develop a crosswalk between
their accreditation standards and the Medicare conditions, at proposed
Sec. 488.5(a)(3).
We propose to revise the existing language at Sec.
488.4(a)(4) to strengthen our process of evaluating the comparability
of survey processes of AOs that accredit Medicare-certified providers
and suppliers with the SAs' survey processes.
We propose to strengthen the requirements at Sec.
488.5(a)(4), Sec. 488.5(a)(4)(iii), Sec. 488.5(a)(4)(v), Sec.
488.5(a)(4)(vii), Sec. 488.5(a)(4)(xi), Sec. 488.5(a)(5) and Sec.
488.5(a)(6) related to the comparability of survey processes as
mentioned above. We also propose changes under Sec. 488.5(a)(5)(viii)
related to survey reports. These strengthened requirements would be
applicable to their initial and renewal applications provided to CMS
one year after the effective date of the rule.
We propose at Sec. 488.5(a)(8)(i) through Sec.
488.5(a)(8)(iv) to require AOs that accredit Medicare-certified
providers and suppliers have their surveyors complete the CMS online
surveyor training.
We propose to add a requirement at Sec. 488.5(a)(10) that
the AOs must provide, as part of their initial and renewal
applications, specific policies and procedures that would address how
the AOs prevent and address conflicts of interest. We propose that AOs
provide information on a number of specific policies and procedures.
We propose to also revise requirements under Sec.
488.5(a)(12) related to the AO procedures for investigating and
responding to complaints against accredited facilities.
We propose revisions to Sec. 488.5(a)(13) related to the
AO's accreditation status decision-making
[[Page 11998]]
process, in order to strengthen the comparability of the survey
processes.
We propose to add a new requirement at Sec. 488.5(a)(21)
that would require the AOs to submit a statement with its initial or
renewal application certifying that, in response to a written notice
from CMS notifying the AO that one of its accredited providers or
suppliers has been involuntarily terminated from the Medicare/Medicaid
program, the AO agrees to terminate or revoke its accreditation of the
terminated provider or supplier within 5-business days from receipt of
said written notice.
We propose at Sec. 488.5(a)(22) to require the AOs to
submit a declaration from each surveyor disclosing any interests or
relationships the surveyor may have in or with another survey agency or
health care facility the AO accredits (as defined in Sec.
488.5(a)(10)).
We propose at Sec. 488.8(a)(2) to expand the types of
validation activities included in the performance review.
We propose at Sec. 488.8(a)(4) to require AOs to submit a
plan of correction that would be subject to a public reporting
requirement, when the AO's performance on survey activities identify
disparity concerns, either through the outcome disparity rates or
process disparity rates.
We propose at new subsection Sec. 488.8(i) to place
restrictions on the fee-based consulting services provided by AOs to
the health care providers and suppliers they accredit. At Sec.
488.8(i)(1), we propose that an accrediting organization or its
associated fee-based consulting division or company may not provide
fee-based consulting services to any health care provider or supplier
prior to an initial accreditation survey. At Sec. 488.5(i)(2), we
propose to prohibit AOs from providing fee-based consulting services to
health care providers and suppliers they accredit within 12 months
prior to the next scheduled re-accreditation survey of that provider or
supplier. At Sec. 488.5(i)(3), we propose that AOs may not provide
fee-based consulting services to a health care provider or supplier in
response to a complaint received by the AO regarding that provider or
supplier.
At Sec. 488.8(i)(4), we set forth circumstances in which
the restrictions to the provision of AO fee-based consulting services
would not apply.
We propose at Sec. 488.8(i)(5) to require AOs to provide
specific information to CMS on a bi-annual basis about the fee-based
consulting services they provide.
We propose at Sec. 488.8(i)(6) to impose penalties on AOs
for the provision of prohibited fee-based consulting services.
We propose at Sec. 488.8(k) that when an AO owner,
surveyor, or other employee, currently or within the previous 2 years,
has an interest in or relationship with a health care facility that the
AO accredits, the AO would be required to take steps to prevent the
surveyor from having any involvement with the survey of that facility,
having input into the results of the survey and accreditation for that
facility; having involvement with the pre and post survey activities
for that facility; or having contact with or access to the records for
the survey of that health care facility.
We propose at Sec. 488.9(b) to revise the types of
validation programs by adding a new type of validation survey to be
conducted by SA or CMS surveyors.
We propose a new paragraph (z) at Sec. 489.20 to require
as a basic commitment of the provider if they are terminated and then
seek a new provider agreement, they would follow the terms of proposed
new Sec. 489.57(b) noted below.
We propose to add a new paragraph (b) at Sec. 489.57, to
require that Medicare-certified providers or suppliers that have been
involuntarily terminated from the Medicare and/or Medicaid program must
meet several requirements before their new agreement for Medicare
participation will be approved. Proposed Sec. 489.57(b)(1) would
require the terminated provider or supplier to be under the oversight
of the SA for a reasonable assurance period for a length of time to be
determined by CMS for the purpose of demonstrating compliance with the
Medicare conditions. Proposed Sec. 489.57(b)(2) would require the
provider or supplier to remain under the exclusive oversight of the SA
until the SA has certified and/or CMS has determined its full
compliance with all Medicare conditions and the new agreement for
participation in the Medicare/Medicaid program has been approved.
Proposed Sec. 489.57(b)(3) would require that during the time period
in which a provider or supplier is terminated from the Medicare
program, is under the oversight of the SA, and during the time the new
agreement for Medicare participation is pending, CMS will not accept or
recognize deeming accreditation from a CMS-approved accrediting
organization.
We also propose to remove the reference at Sec.
488.4(a)(4) that currently excludes ESRD facilities from the
opportunity for accreditation, to reflect a change included in the
Bipartisan Budget Act of 2018 (Pub. L. 115-123). Consistent with this
same provision, we also propose to remove the reference restricting
transplant programs from an accreditation option.
We are soliciting comments on whether CMS should limit the
number of times an AO can submit an incomplete initial application for
a new accreditation program. We seek comment on this question because
we recently received several incomplete applications which required
multiple pass backs due to the applicant's failure to provide
information about issues, such as their financial viability, survey
processes which appeared not to be operationalized, or similar
concerns.
II. Background
A. Legislative History
To participate in the Medicare program, providers and suppliers of
health care services must, among other things, be in substantial
compliance with the applicable statutory requirements of the Social
Security Act (the Act), as well as CMS' regulatory requirements related
to the health and safety of patients. These health and safety
requirements are generally called Conditions of Participation (CoPs)
for most providers; Requirements for Participation for skilled nursing
facilities (SNFs) and Medicaid Nursing Facilities (NFs) (collectively,
long-term care facilities); and Conditions for Coverage or Conditions
for Certification (CfCs) for Ambulatory Surgical Centers (ASCs), Rural
Health Clinics (RHCs), Federally Qualified Health Centers (FQHCs),
dialysis facilities (or End-Stage Renal Disease [ESRD] facilities), and
some types of suppliers (collectively referred herein as Medicare
conditions). A Medicare-certified provider or supplier that does not
comply with the Medicare conditions risks having its Medicare provider
or supplier agreement terminated. Medicaid service providers or
suppliers that are required by CMS or the State to have Medicare
approval would also be affected.
In accordance with section 1864 of the Act, the SAs or other
appropriate local agencies, under an agreement with the Secretary of
the Department of Health and Human Services (the Secretary), perform
surveys of health care providers and suppliers to assess their
compliance with the applicable Medicare conditions for the purpose of
certification for participation in the Medicare/Medicaid program. There
are several types of surveys conducted, including initial
certification, recertification, and complaint surveys. The SAs and CMS
also perform surveys
[[Page 11999]]
in certain circumstances for the providers and suppliers that are
accredited by an AO and deemed to meet Medicare requirements. For
example, the SA performs complaint surveys for health care providers
that are accredited by an AO, if the complaint was received by the SA
directly. The SA also performs surveys of AO-accredited health care
providers that have had their participation in the Medicare program
terminated, that wish to be surveyed by the SA instead of an AO, and
for the purpose of validation of the results of an AO's surveys. Rules,
regulations, and guidance for the certification process performed by
the Sas are discussed in the CMS State Operations Manual (SOM) \1\ or
communicated via Quality, Safety & Oversight (QSO) policy
memorandums.\2\
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\1\ CMS Internet Only Manual, Pub. 100-07, available at https://www.cms.gov/Regulations-and-Guidance/Guidance/Manuals/Internet-Only-Manuals-IOMs-Items/CMS1201984.
\2\ https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Provider-Enrollment-and-Certification/SurveyCertificationGenInfo/Policy-and-Memos-to-States-and-Regions.
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Some provider types may only be surveyed by the SA and cannot use
AOs while others cannot be surveyed by SAs pursuant to statute but can
only be accredited by a CMS-approved AO. We refer readers to section
IV, ``Provisions of this Proposed Rule'' for additional information.
Based on the SA's certification of a provider's compliance or
noncompliance and recommendation, CMS determines whether the provider
or supplier qualifies, or continues to qualify, for participation in
the Medicare program. Additionally, section 1865(a) of the Act allows
most health care facilities to demonstrate their compliance with the
Medicare conditions through accreditation by a CMS-approved program of
an AO, in lieu of being surveyed by SAs for certification. This is
referred to as ``deeming'' accreditation. This is because CMS-approved
AOs are recognized by the Secretary as having accreditation programs
with accreditation standards that meet or exceed those of Medicare.
Therefore, any provider or supplier that is accredited by an AO under a
CMS approved accreditation program is deemed by CMS to have also
complied with the applicable Medicare conditions or requirements. The
AOs perform initial, re-accreditation, follow-up, and certain complaint
surveys.
In December, 2020, Division CC, section 407 of the Consolidated
Appropriations Act of 2021 (CAA 2021), amended Part A of Title XVIII of
Act to add a new section 1822 to the Act, and amended sections 1864(a)
and 1865(b) of the Act, establishing new hospice program survey and
enforcement requirements. CMS issued implementing regulations for SAs
and AOs in the CY 2022 Home Health Prospective Payment System Rate
Update (HH PPS) final rule (86 FR 62240). The HH PPS rule finalized
changes to increase and improve transparency, oversight, and
enforcement for hospice programs under SA and AO oversight.
Additionally, the HH PPS final rule in part requires hospice programs
to measure and reduce inconsistency in the application of survey
results among all surveyors. The HH PPS final rule requires: (1) AOs
with CMS-approved hospice programs to use the same survey deficiency
reports as the SAs (Form CMS-2567, ``Statement of Deficiencies'' or a
successor form) to report survey findings; (2) comprehensive training
and testing of SA and AO hospice program surveyors; and (3) prohibits
SA and AO surveyors from surveying hospice programs for which they have
worked in the last 2 years from which they would have a perceived or
actual conflict of interest.
CMS is responsible for: (1) providing ongoing oversight of the AOs'
accreditation programs to ensure that providers or suppliers accredited
by the AOs meet the required Medicare conditions; (2) ensuring that the
AOs have formalized procedures to determine whether the health care
facilities deemed under their accreditation programs meet the AO's
accreditation standards (which must meet or exceed the applicable
Medicare program requirements); and (3) ensuring that the AO's
accreditation standards and practices for surveying providers and
suppliers meet or exceed the Medicare conditions and practices for
granting approval.
For some provider and supplier types, accreditation is voluntary
and seeking deemed status through an accreditation organization is an
option, not a requirement for these Medicare-certified providers and
suppliers. A provider or supplier has the choice to seek deeming status
and accreditation from an AO with a CMS-approved program or
certification through the SA survey process. A nationally-recognized AO
may have accreditation services which are not specifically related to
Medicare-participation or Medicare conditions and an AO may offer
accreditation services to a provider or supplier which Medicare does
not recognize for deeming status, such as long-term care facilities.
The AO may also provide accreditation with a deeming option, which is
that their deemed program is recognized and approved by CMS to meet or
exceed the Medicare program requirements. We refer readers to section
IV.C ``Proposal to Require the AOs that Accredit Medicare-Certified
Providers and Suppliers to Use Medicare Conditions; and Strengthened
Survey Process Comparability'' of this proposed rule for additional
context.
AOs typically charge health care facilities a fee for the
accreditation services they provide. AOs generally offer at least two
accreditation options, which include non-CMS approved accreditation,
and accreditation for the purpose of participating in the Medicare
program. By ``non-CMS approved accreditation'' we mean accreditation
that is offered by the AOs with an accreditation program that is not
approved by Medicare and which is not used for Medicare purposes. Such
accreditation could be used for individual State accreditation purposes
or additional professional accreditations that a provider or supplier
seeks for business purposes, such as the Joint Commission's (TJC's)
Nursing Care Center accreditation for skilled nursing facilities, which
is not recognized by CMS as an option for deemed status.
This proposed rule would apply only to the AOs with CMS-approved
programs that accredit Medicare-certified providers and suppliers and
those entities they accredit. The provisions of this proposed rule
would not apply to the following parties: (1) health care providers and
suppliers that are not accredited by AOs, such as but not limited to,
nursing homes and comprehensive outpatient rehabilitation facilities
(CORFs); (2) health care providers and suppliers that are certified by
the SAs, such as those who elect not to be deemed through an AO; (3)
AOs that accredit non-certified suppliers; (4) non-certified suppliers;
and (5) AOs that accredit laboratories (under the Clinical Laboratory
Improvement Amendments of 1988 (CLIA)).
B. Regulatory Overview of CMS's Rules Regarding AO Programs
The current regulations at 42 CFR 488.4 set forth the general
provisions for CMS approved accreditation programs for Medicare-
certified providers and suppliers. Section 488.5 sets out application
and re-application procedures for national AOs that seek to obtain CMS
approval of their accreditation programs, often called ``deeming
authority.''
The AO application and re-application procedures set forth at Sec.
488.5 for Medicare-certified providers and suppliers task CMS with the
[[Page 12000]]
responsibilities of approval and oversight of the AOs' accreditation
programs while ensuring that the accredited providers and suppliers
meet or exceed the Medicare conditions.
CMS conducts a thorough review of each accreditation program
application that is submitted by an AO for CMS approval. This review
establishes the ``comparability'' of the AOs accreditation standards
with Medicare, to determine whether the AO's standards meet or exceed
the Medicare conditions. The application review process also includes a
review of the AO's survey processes and procedures, the AO's surveyor
training, and their policies and procedures for the oversight and
enforcement of provider or supplier entities they accredit. The
application review team also reviews the qualifications of the AO
surveyor staff. In addition, CMS reviews the AO's financial status, to
determine their solvency and potential for longevity of operations.
Section 488.5(e)(1) requires that we publish a notice in the
Federal Register when we receive a complete initial or renewal
application from a national AO seeking CMS approval of its
accreditation program. The Federal Register notice identifies the
organization and the type of providers or suppliers to be covered by
the accreditation program and provides a 30-day public comment period.
CMS has 210 days from the receipt of a complete application to publish
notice of approval or denial of the application. Upon approval, any
provider or supplier subsequently accredited by the AO's approved
program would be deemed by CMS to have met the applicable Medicare
conditions and would be referred to as having ``deemed status.''
C. Congressional Report on the Oversight of National AOs and CMS
Approved Accreditation Programs
We are required by section 1875(b) of the Act to submit an annual
Report to Congress \3\ on CMS' oversight of national AOs and their CMS-
approved accreditation programs. This report contains information
related to the AOs' activities in a fiscal year (FY) and provides a
comparison of these activities to the activities of previous years.
Within this report, we also measure the ``disparity rate,'' which is a
comparison rate based on AO findings of non-compliance during an
accreditation survey and the SA findings of non-compliance for the same
facilities found during a look-back validation survey.
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\3\ The most recent Report to Congress may be accessed at:
https://www.cms.gov/files/document/qso-22-06-ao-clia.pdf.
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There are three levels of adverse findings on a SA survey, which
include immediate jeopardy (IJ), condition-level and standard-level
deficiencies. Sections 488.1 and 489.3 define immediate jeopardy as a
situation in which the provider's or supplier's non-compliance with one
or more of Medicare requirements, conditions of participation,
conditions of coverage or certification ``has caused or is likely to
cause, serious injury, harm, impairment, or death to a resident or
patient.'' When investigating a potential immediate jeopardy situation,
surveyors must find that there is non-compliance by the provider or
supplier, that serious harm has occurred or is likely to occur, and
that immediate action needs to be taken by the provider/supplier. (See
Appendix Q of the SOM for additional guidance.) A condition-level
deficiency means that for that particular Medicare condition of
participation, also known as a CoP, the facility's noncompliance is
such that it substantially limits the provider or supplier's capacity
to furnish adequate care or which adversely affects the health and
safety of patients (Sec. 488.24). There can be noncompliance with a
Medicare condition at a regulatory standard level that does not rise to
the level of noncompliance with the condition. For example, a hospital
may fail to have written policies and procedures regarding the
evacuation of patients during an emergency (as required at Sec.
482.15(b)(3)) but complies with the remaining standards set forth at
Sec. 482.15 (a) through (f) such as having policies and procedures for
alternate source power, provisions, tracking of patients and staff and
has a communication plan and training and testing program. In this
situation, the hospital generally would not be cited at a condition-
level deficiency for the entire Emergency Preparedness Medicare
condition (at Sec. 482.15). The manner and degree of the noncompliance
is considered to determine whether there is substantial compliance or
not. A standard-level deficiency means that the provider may be out of
compliance with one or more aspects of a regulatory condition or
requirement, but is considered less severe than a condition-level
deficiency. A condition-level deficiency, however, is considered more
serious in nature and could lead to a facility being terminated from
the Medicare and Medicaid programs for non-compliance. Immediate
jeopardy citations are condition-level deficiencies that pose immediate
jeopardy to patient health and safety.
On a validation survey, when the SA cites a condition-level
deficiency for which the AO has not cited a comparable deficiency, the
deficiency is considered by CMS to have been missed by the AO and is a
factor in determining the AO's ``disparity rate'' for each facility
type. The identification of one missed condition-level deficiency by
the AO results in the entire survey being counted toward the disparity
rate. The number of disparate surveys is divided by the total number of
validation surveys performed with respect to that AO by various States'
SAs, in order to determine the AO's disparity rate.
According to the most recent report, the FY 2020 Report to
Congress,\4\ disparity rates for all CMS approved AO programs for the
following facility types for the most recent year in the report (FY
2019) are: Hospitals (42 percent); Psychiatric hospitals (45 percent);
Critical Access Hospitals (46 percent); Home Health Agencies (8
percent); Hospices (19 percent) and Ambulatory Surgical Centers (34
percent). From FY 2018 to FY 2019, hospitals, HHAs and ASCs had the
only decreases in disparity rates, with a decrease of 5-percentage
points, 11-percentage points, and 7-percentage points, respectively.
The disparity rates for psychiatric hospitals increased by seven
percentage points from FY 2018 to FY 2019. The disparity rates for CAHs
and hospices increased by five percentage points and three percentage
points respectively from FY 2018 to FY 2019. The findings and other
information are consistent with previous reports, and no notable
changes were observed in the FY 2020 RTC covering the FY 2019 period of
activities.
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\4\ https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Provider-Enrollment-and-Certification/SurveyCertificationGenInfo/Downloads/QSO-19-17-AO-CLIA.pdf.
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D. CMS Validation Survey Pilot
As part of our ongoing efforts to enhance transparency and our
oversight of the AOs, in 2018, CMS began a pilot for integrated
validation surveys for accredited hospitals, known as the Validation
Redesign Program (VRP) pilot. In a VRP pilot survey, the SA teams
accompany the AO survey teams on a reaccreditation survey for an
accredited facility for the purpose of evaluating the AO surveyors'
competency at performing surveys and overall effectiveness during the
survey process. The initial findings of the VRP pilot will be discussed
further later in this preamble at sections IV.J and IV.L.3. CMS plans
to continue to refine the
[[Page 12001]]
validation process over the next several years in an effort to enhance
AO oversight, and verify that providers/suppliers under deemed status
are in compliance with the Medicare conditions, and focus surveys on
key quality concerns while reducing provider burden.
A national AO seeking approval of its accreditation programs in
accordance with section 1865(a) of the Act must apply for and be
approved by CMS for a period not to exceed 6 years. (See Sec.
488.5(e)(2)(i)). An AO must submit a renewal application seeking re-
approval of its accreditation program(s) before the expiration date of
its current CMS approval. Review of the AO's renewal application in a
timely manner allows CMS to ensure that there would not be a lapse in
accreditation for the providers and suppliers accredited by the AO.
Requiring the AO to submit a renewal application periodically allows
CMS to ensure that the accreditation provided by the AO continues to
ensure that the providers or suppliers accredited by that AO meet or
exceed the Medicare conditions.
E. Overview of Transparency and Oversight of Accrediting Organizations
In September 2017, an article in the Wall Street Journal \5\ raised
concerns regarding the performance and transparency of AO surveys, and
noted potential conflicts of interest between an AO's accreditation
services and its consulting services. As a result of this article, CMS
initiated an investigation into these allegations.
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\5\ The Wall Street Journal, ``Watchdog Awards Hospitals Seal of
Approval Even After Problems Emerge'' Stephanie Armour (September 8,
2017) https://www.wsj.com/articles/watchdog-awards-hospitals-seal-of-approval-even-after-problems-emerge-1504889146.
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F. Prior Rulemaking--Accrediting Organizations Conflict of Interest
Request for Information (RFI)
CMS is aware, from the information submitted with their
applications, that some AOs with CMS-approved accreditation programs
are also providing fee-based consultative services to Medicare-
participating health care facilities. Our understanding is that typical
AO fee-based consultative services include, but are not limited to the
following:
Assistance for clinical and non-clinical leaders
(including administrators) in understanding the AO and Medicare
conditions for compliance;
Review of facility standards and promised early
intervention and action through simulation of a real survey, such as a
mock survey with comprehensive written reports of findings;
Review of a facility's processes, policies and functions;
Identification of and technical assistance for changing
and sustaining areas in need of improvement; and,
Educational consultative services.
CMS acknowledges that independent fee-based consulting is a
valuable resource that can help providers and suppliers improve the
quality and safety of the care they provide. This does not mean that
the providers or suppliers who elect not to receive fee-based
consulting from an AO that offers it, or that providers or suppliers
that are accredited by an AO that does not offer this service would not
provide safe, quality care.
There are many third-party consultants that offer fee-based
consulting across all provider and supplier types. The availability of
third-party fee-based consultants give providers and suppliers access
to this educational service, if their AO does not provide fee-based
consulting. If a provider's/supplier's AO already offers fee-based
consulting, third-party consultants can offer such providers and
suppliers, with an alternative, allowing providers and suppliers to
compare the effectiveness and quality of consultants to address their
needs within their cost limitations. The provider or supplier may also
be able to negotiate a price for educational services provided by a
third-party consultant, while this may not be an option with the AOs
that offer fee-based consulting. It is important to note there would be
no conflict of interest associated with the use of third-party fee-
based consultants because these consultants do not also make compliance
determinations about the provider or supplier.
Fee-based consulting services are not prohibited by law or
regulation. However, CMS is concerned that an AO's provision of such
fee-based consulting results in perceived or actual conflicts of
interests because of the contractual and financial relationship that
exists between the health care provider and the AO, which is a private
entity that profits from the performance of the inherently governmental
function of regulating health care providers through accreditation.
Because of this, on December 20, 2018, we published a Request for
Information (RFI) in the Federal Register entitled, ``Medicare Program:
Accrediting Organizations Conflict of Interest and Consulting Services;
Request for Information'' (83 FR 65331) hereinafter referred to as
``2018 AO Conflict of Interest RFI'', in response to increasing concern
about potential conflicts of interest created by the accreditation and
consultative activities of the AOs. Specifically, we solicited public
comments to determine whether offering consultative services to the
same entities an AO accredits may create actual or perceived conflicts
of interest between an AO's accreditation program and its consultative
program. We stated that this dual function may undermine, or appear to
undermine, the integrity of the accreditation programs and could erode
public trust in the safety of providers and suppliers that have been
accredited by CMS-approved AOs. We further acknowledged that certain
consulting services offered by some of the AOs, such as quality
improvement work and training of facility staff, may be beneficial to
some facilities and result in improvements in operations or the quality
of care furnished and may be provided with the best of intentions. We
stated that circumstances could arise where an AO has recommended a
facility for deemed status through their accreditation service, while
the consultancy service of the AO was generating revenue assisting the
same facility in passing the AO's own accreditation surveys. Some AOs
have indicated that they establish firewalls between the arms of their
businesses, but we stated that these firewalls may not be sufficient to
ensure that no conflicts of interest result from these activities.
We further stated that, similar to quality improvement organization
(QIO) and external quality review organization (EQRO) programs, any AO
with a Medicare-approved accreditation program has assumed a position
of public trust and is responsible for acting on behalf of the public,
because the AO is performing a function that assists in the federal
government's enforcement programs. We also expressed our view that AOs
voluntarily take on this position and responsibility when they seek
accreditation approval from CMS to accredit providers and suppliers for
participation in Medicare. Because of the responsibility to maintain
public trust and public health, we continually ensure that all entities
and programs, including AOs and their accreditation programs that
require CMS approval, be held to high standards of ethical conduct so
that everyone can have complete confidence in the integrity of federal
government certification. We stated that the AOs' decisions to accredit
facilities must be made without regard to any additional services that
a Medicare provider or supplier might
[[Page 12002]]
obtain through the AO or its subsidiaries. We stated that this policy
would ensure and maintain public trust in the Medicare certification
program.
In the 2018 AO Conflict of Interest RFI, we solicited public
comments to gather information for potential future rulemaking and to
obtain insight on mechanisms to address this potential conflict of
interest. We were specifically interested in ways to potentially modify
Sec. 488.5(a), which sets out the required information to be submitted
with an AO's application. For example, Sec. 488.5(a)(10) states that
the application information from the AO include the organization's
policies and procedures to avoid conflicts of interest, including the
appearance of conflicts of interest, involving individuals who conduct
surveys or participate in accreditation decisions.
We stated that potentially expanding Sec. 488.5(a)(10) by adding
provisions that would require the AOs to disclose information about any
consultative services they offer to facilities could further enhance
our oversight of AOs.
In addition, we solicited comments on the following issues:
With respect to fee-based consultative services provided
by AOs to the facilities they accredit--
++ How are these services provided and communicated to the
facilities?
++ Are potential conflicts of interest disclosed?
Are there other entities that could provide this training
besides the AOs?
Whether commenters perceive a conflict of interest in AOs
providing fee-based consultative services to the facilities they
accredit.
Whether the ability of an AO to collect fees for
consultation services from entities they accredit could degrade the
public trust inherent in an AO's CMS approved accreditation programs.
What the appropriate consequences or impacts should be, if
a conflict does exist.
What firewalls may exist within an AO between
accreditation and consultation services, or what firewalls would be
prudent, to avoid potential and actual conflicts of interest.
Examples of positive and negative effects which may be as
a result of a conflict of interest.
What the potential impact, financially and overall would
be if CMS were to finalize rulemaking which would restrict certain
activities that might give rise to a real or perceived conflict of
interest.
When and/or under what circumstances it would be
appropriate for AOs to provide fee-based consultative services to the
facilities which they accredit.
Whether, and if so, under what specific circumstances CMS
should review a potential conflict of interest, and what factors CMS
should look at to determine if a conflict of interest exists.
A list describing under what circumstances the AOs or
stakeholders would believe there to be a conflict; and under which
circumstances conflict does not exist.
The type of information which would be considered
necessary, useful and/or appropriate in proving or refuting our
hypothesis of a connection between the use of consultative services and
preferential treatment of accredited providers and suppliers. (See 83
FR 65336.)
We received approximately 128 public comments in response to the
2018 AO Conflict of Interest RFI. Approximately half of the commenters,
(consisting primarily of AOs and health care facilities that use
consulting services) supported the use of AO consulting services and
stated that there is no conflict of interest associated with fee-based
consulting. The other half of commenters (consisting of individuals,
provider associations, medical advocacy groups and one AO) stated that
the provision of fee-based consulting by the AOs creates a conflict of
interest.
Several commenters stated that the benefits derived from AO fee-
based consulting far outweighs any potential or actual conflict of
interest that may result. Many commenters believe that AO consulting
services allow the facility to seek information and guidance that helps
them understand, interpret and comply with the Medicare conditions and
regulatory requirements. These commenters stated that use of the AO's
fee-based consulting services helped to improve the safety and quality
of the care provided by the health care facility.
Many commenters stated that there are already-implemented checks
and balances between CMS and the AOs that are sufficient to ensure that
no conflicts of interest occur between the AOs and their accredited
facilities. These commenters stated that the AOs have robust firewall
policies and procedures in place to prevent conflicts of interest
related to fee-based consulting. Many commenters also stated that CMS
has a specific AO fee-based consulting firewall policy in place and
that this policy is adequate to prevent any conflicts of interest.
However, CMS does not currently have such a policy.\6\
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\6\ In section IV.B.6 of this rule, we propose to require any AO
that provides fee-based consulting services or its associated fee-
based consulting division or company to have written fee-based
consulting ``firewall'' policies and procedures.
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Several commenters stated that AOs are commissioned to ensure
compliance with the Medicare conditions. These commenters stated that a
big part of compliance is not only being punitive but informational/
educational. One commenter suggested that AOs are in a unique position
to provide this education and technical assistance because they
understand the complexity of the Medicare conditions. One commenter
stated that if AO fee-based consulting services were not provided,
facilities could see additional deficiencies cited due to
misinterpretation of requirements and multiple rounds of surveys,
generating still more cost to the facility.
Several commenters stated that the financial benefit derived by the
AOs from providing fee-based education is not significant. Some of
these commenters also stated that the AOs gained no benefit from the
success or results of accreditation whether they had assisted the
provider to deliver better services or not.
One commenter stated that they were are not aware of other
organizations who would be capable of educating and advising health
care providers in a similar fashion as the AOs' consulting services.
Several other commenters expressed concern about having fee-based
consulting services provided by an independent third-party. These
commenters stated that, while there are other entities beside the AOs,
such as QIOs that could provide training, the focus would solely be on
quality rather than the outcome of an accreditation.
Many commenters stated that the integrity of the accreditation
process is of utmost concern for regulators, providers and patients
alike and that AOs should position themselves to be above reproach in
regard to overseeing patient care and quality of services that health
care facilities provide, so as to retain the trust of patients and the
public. Several commenters suggested that anything that may undermine
the integrity of accreditation programs or the public trust in CMS
accredited providers and suppliers be considered and addressed. One
commenter stated that the ability of AOs to provide both survey
services and consulting services is a conflict of interest, which
results in a decreased level of trust among providers, Medicare, and
the public.
Many commenters expressed concern about the financial and
contractual relationship that exists between AOs and the health care
facilities they accredit. These commenters expressed
[[Page 12003]]
concern that the existence of a financial relationship between AOs and
health care providers casts a veil of doubt over the entire CMS
hospital accreditation process, eroding the public trust in CMS to
maintain the standard of care at our nation's hospitals and to ensure
that Medicare patients are receiving safe, therapeutic care. One
commenter stated the belief that the business connection between the
provider and the AO creates a relationship that the AO could have an
incentive to manipulate.
In addition, several commenters expressed concern about the
significant financial interest the AOs have in the provision of fee-
based consulting. One commenter stated that since AOs are being paid by
the health care facilities for both accreditation services as well as
consulting services, it is obviously in their financial interest to
keep the health care facilities accredited and not to create too much
dissatisfaction to incite the organization to seek another AO. Several
commenters expressed concern that this financial relationship might
provide the incentive for the AOs to ignore or downplay deficiencies
during the survey of a consultative client in order to increase the
apparent efficacy of its consulting services. Or, perhaps more
undetectably, an AO could exaggerate the deficiencies on surveys in
order to increase the apparent value of the consulting services to
providers. Because of the above-stated concerns, several commenters
suggested that CMS prohibit the AOs from providing fee-based consulting
to the health care providers and suppliers they accredit.
G. Conflict of Interest--The AO Owner's, Surveyor's and Other
Employee's Interest in or Relationship With a Health Care Facility That
the AO Accredits
It is typical for an individual health care professional, such as a
physician or nurse, to have concurrent employment relationships with
more than one health care provider. Many health care professionals,
such as physicians, physician assistants, and nurse practitioners have
multi-setting practices or are employed at more than one health care
facility. For example, a registered nurse (RN) may work on staff at a
hospital but also work at other hospitals through a medical staffing
agency. In addition, as employees of a health care facility, these
health care professionals could possibly gain a financial interest in
the health care facility through means such as being a contributor to
the construction costs of a new wing of the facility or buying stock in
the facility or its parent corporation. Management employees could be
awarded stock or stock options for the facility or its parent
corporation as part of their compensation and benefits package.
AOs frequently hire surveyors that are also employed at one or more
outside health care settings because the professional associations,
expertise, knowledge and skills held by these health care practitioners
make them an asset as a surveyor. This might include, for example, a RN
who is employed by a hospital and also works as a surveyor for an AO.
This employment scenario does not generally violate CMS policy or
regulations. Furthermore, an AO surveyor having other employment does
not, in and of itself, necessarily create a conflict of interest.
However, if the AO provides accreditation services to the health care
facility that employs the AO surveyor, this would cause a conflict of
interest if that surveyor is permitted to have any involvement in the
survey process for that health care facility.
CMS has recently encountered two situations in which an AO's
surveyor was also employed by the health care facility that was being
accredited by the AO. In one of these situations, an AO surveyor was
also employed in an administrative position at a rehabilitation
facility that was being surveyed by the AO. This situation was not
disclosed to CMS by the AO. Currently CMS has no specific regulations
that would prohibit a conflict of interest related to an AO surveyor's
relationship with a health care facility that the AO accredits, except
for home health agencies and hospice programs.
Section 488.5(a)(10) of our regulations requires that an AO
provide, with its application seeking CMS approval of its accreditation
program, ``the organization's policies and procedures to avoid
conflicts of interest, including the appearance of conflicts of
interest, involving individuals who conduct surveys or participate in
accreditation decisions.'' However, Sec. 488.5(a)(10) does not provide
requirements for specific types of information or requirements that
should be contained in the AO's conflict of interest policy and
procedures. This regulation does not specifically prohibit or define
conflicts of interest and, based on the comments to the 2018 AO
Conflict of Interest RFI, CMS proposes to revise this regulation to
more specifically address situations that should be included in the
AO's conflict of interest policy.
As noted above, the SAs and AOs perform similar work. Section 4008
of the SOM describes examples of scenarios that would be conflicts of
interest for SA surveyors who have an outside relationship with a
facility that is surveyed by the SA.\7\ Currently, section 4008 of the
SOM applies only to the SA surveyors and not AO surveyors.
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\7\ https://www.cms.gov/Regulations-and-Guidance/Guidance/Manuals/Downloads/som107c04pdf.pdf.
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Scenarios in which an AO surveyor has a relationship with a health
care facility that their AO accredits could represent a conflict of
interest. As CMS has no specific regulations that would proactively
address such conflicts of interest for AOs that accredit healthcare
providers other than home health agencies and hospice programs, we
propose to establish several requirements to help mitigate such
conflicts of interest in section IV.B.7 of this proposed rule.
III. Request for Public Comment on Whether It Is a Conflict of Interest
for AO Board Members or Advisors To Have an Interest in or Relationship
With a Health Care Facility That the AO Accredits
As previously stated, it could be a conflict of interest when an AO
surveyor is involved with the survey of a facility with which that
surveyor has an employment, financial, business or other interest or
relationship. We note that in most cases, the AO board members do have
interests in or relationships with the health care facilities the AO
accredits. In many cases, the board members of the AOs frequently hold
upper management positions of a health care facility the AO accredits,
such as chief executive officer (CEO), director, or President. In an
article published in the Wall Street Journal on September 8, 2017,\8\
it was stated that ``[t]wenty of the Joint Commission's 32 board
members are executives at health systems it accredits or else work at
parent organizations of such health systems. Some other board members
are named by healthcare lobbying groups, such as the American Hospital
Association and the American Medical Association. This article compared
this situation to ``Big Pharma setting up its own accrediting
organization'' and stated that ``if you look beneath the surface, there
are conflicts and problems.''
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\8\ S. Armour, Hospital Watchdog Gives Seal of Approval, Even
After Problems Emerge, Wall Street Journal, September 8, 2017.
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We seek public comment as to whether it would be a conflict of
interest for an AO board member, AO advisor, or CEO or other executive
team members to also have a relationship with a health care
organization accredited by such AO. An AO advisor
[[Page 12004]]
would be an advisory committee member, advisor to the CEO, or an
advisor to the board of directors. We refer readers to proposals
related to an AO owner's, surveyor's, or other employee's interest in
or relationship with a health care facility the AO accredits in section
IV.B.7 of this proposed rule.
IV. Provisions of the Proposed Rule
We establish health and safety standards, known as the Conditions
of Participation, Conditions for Coverage, or Requirements for
Participation for different types of health care providers and
suppliers, and these standards are based on specific statutory
authorities for the different provider and supplier types. Pursuant to
such authorities, each specific type of Medicare-certified provider and
supplier must meet our health and safety standards. As part of the CMS
certification process, compliance with these standards is evaluated by
SAs under agreement at section 1864 of the Act, through the survey and
certification process. However, CMS makes the final Medicare
certification determination. In the alternative, we can deem these
providers and suppliers to have met those standards if they are
accredited by the CMS-approved AOs that are the subject of this
proposed rule.
CMS is using the authority established by Congress under section
1865 of the Act to establish certain requirements for AOs in this
proposed rule. Section 1865(a)(2) of the Act establishes a process for
the Secretary to make a finding with respect to approval of an
accrediting organization. In making this finding, the Secretary must
consider, among other factors, the AO's requirements for accreditation,
its survey procedures, its ability to provide adequate resources for
conducting required surveys and supplying information for use in
enforcement activities, its monitoring procedures for provider entities
found out of compliance with the conditions or requirements, and its
ability to provide the Sec