Medicaid Program; Ensuring Access to Medicaid Services, 40542-40874 [2024-08363]
Download as PDF
40542
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid
Services
42 CFR Parts 431, 438, 441, and 447
[CMS–2442–F]
RIN 0938–AU68
Medicaid Program; Ensuring Access to
Medicaid Services
Centers for Medicare &
Medicaid Services (CMS), Department
of Health and Human Services (HHS).
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
This final rule takes a
comprehensive approach to improving
access to care, quality and health
outcomes, and better addressing health
equity issues in the Medicaid program
across fee-for-service (FFS), managed
care delivery systems, and in home and
community-based services (HCBS)
programs. These improvements increase
transparency and accountability,
standardize data and monitoring, and
create opportunities for States to
promote active beneficiary engagement
in their Medicaid programs, with the
goal of improving access to care.
DATES: These regulations are effective
on July 9, 2024.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Karen LLanos, (410) 786–9071, for
Medicaid Advisory Committee.
Jennifer Bowdoin, (410) 786–8551, for
Home and Community-Based Services.
Jeremy Silanskis, (410) 786–1592, for
Fee-for-Service Payment.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
SUMMARY:
I. Background
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
A. Overview
Title XIX of the Social Security Act
(the Act) established the Medicaid
program as a joint Federal and State
program to provide medical assistance
to eligible individuals, including many
with low incomes. Under the Medicaid
program, each State that chooses to
participate in the program and receive
Federal financial participation (FFP) for
program expenditures must establish
eligibility standards, benefits packages,
and payment rates, and undertake
program administration in accordance
with Federal statutory and regulatory
requirements. The provisions of each
State’s Medicaid program are described
in the Medicaid ‘‘State plan’’ and, as
applicable, related authorities, such as
demonstration projects and waivers of
State plan requirements. Among other
responsibilities, CMS approves State
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
plans, State plan amendments (SPAs),
demonstration projects authorized
under section 1115 of the Act, and
waivers authorized under section 1915
of the Act; and reviews expenditures for
compliance with Federal Medicaid law,
including the requirements of section
1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act relating to
efficiency, economy, quality of care, and
access to ensure that all applicable
Federal requirements are met.
The Medicaid program provides
essential health coverage to tens of
millions of people, covering a broad
array of health benefits and services
critical to underserved populations,1
including low-income adults, children,
parents, pregnant individuals, older
adults, and people with disabilities. For
example, Medicaid pays for
approximately 41 percent of all births in
the U.S.2 and is the largest payer of
long-term services and supports
(LTSS),3 the largest, single payer of
services to treat substance use
disorders,4 and services to prevent and
treat the Human Immunodeficiency
Virus.5
On January 28, 2021, the President
signed Executive Order (E.O.) 14009,6
‘‘Strengthening Medicaid and the
Affordable Care Act,’’ which established
the policy objective to protect and
strengthen Medicaid and the Affordable
Care Act and to make high-quality
health care accessible and affordable for
every American. The E.O. also directed
executive departments and agencies to
review existing regulations, orders,
guidance documents, and policies to
determine whether such agency actions
are inconsistent with this policy. On
1 Executive Order 13985: https://
www.whitehouse.gov/briefing-room/presidentialactions/2021/01/20/executive-order-advancingracial-equity-and-support-for-underservedcommunities-through-the-federal-government/.
2 National Center for Health Statistics. Key Birth
Statistics. Accessed at https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/
nvss/births.htm.
3 Colello, Kirsten J. Who Pays for Long-Term
Services and Supports? Congressional Research
Service. Updated September 2023. Accessed at
https://crsreports.congress.gov/product/pdf/IF/
IF10343.
4 Soni, Anita. Health Care Expenditures for
Treatment of Mental Disorders: Estimates for Adults
Ages 18 and Older, U.S. Civilian
Noninstitutionalized Population, 2019. Statistical
Brief #539, pg 12. February 2022. Agency for
Healthcare Research and Quality, Rockville, MD.
Accessed at https://meps.ahrq.gov/data_files/
publications/st539/stat539.pdf.
5 Dawson, L. and Kates, J. Insurance Coverage and
Viral Suppression Among People with HIV, 2018.
September 2020. Kaiser Family Foundation.
Accessed at https://www.kff.org/hivaids/issue-brief/
insurance-coverage-and-viral-suppression-amongpeople-with-hiv-2018/.
6 Executive Order 14009: https://
www.federalregister.gov/documents/2021/02/02/
2021-02252/strengthening-medicaid-and-theaffordable-care-act.
PO 00000
Frm 00002
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
April 5, 2022, E.O. 14070,7 ‘‘Continuing
To Strengthen Americans’ Access to
Affordable, Quality Health Coverage,’’
directed Federal agencies with
responsibilities related to Americans’
access to health coverage to review
agency actions to identify ways to
continue to expand the availability of
affordable health coverage, to improve
the quality of coverage, to strengthen
benefits, and to help more Americans
enroll in quality health coverage.
Consistent with CMS’ authorities under
the Act, this final rule implements E.O.s
14009 and 14070 by helping States to
strengthen Medicaid and improve
access to and quality of care provided.
Ensuring that beneficiaries can access
covered services is necessary to the
basic operation of the Medicaid
program. Depending on the State and its
Medicaid program structure,
beneficiaries access their health care
services using a variety of care delivery
systems (for example, FFS, fullycapitated managed care, partially
capitated managed care, etc.), including
through demonstrations and waiver
programs. The volume of Medicaid
beneficiaries enrolled in a managed care
program in Medicaid has grown from 81
percent in 2016 to 85 percent in 2021,
with 74.6 percent of Medicaid
beneficiaries enrolled in comprehensive
managed care organizations.8 9 The
remaining individuals received all of
their care or some services that have
been carved out of managed care
through FFS.
Current access regulations are neither
comprehensive nor consistent across
delivery systems or coverage authority
(for example, State plan and
demonstration authority). For example,
regulations at 42 CFR 447.203 and
447.204 relating to access to care,
service payment rates, and Medicaid
provider participation in rate setting
apply only to Medicaid FFS delivery
systems and focus on ensuring that
payment rates are consistent with the
statutory requirements in section
1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act. The
regulations do not apply to services
7 Executive Order 14070: https://
www.federalregister.gov/documents/2022/04/08/
2022-07716/continuing-to-strengthen-americansaccess-to-affordable-quality-health-coverage.
8 Medicaid Managed Care Enrollment Report.
https://www.medicaid.gov/medicaid/managedcare/enrollment-report/.
9 Throughout this document, the use of the term
‘‘managed care plan’’ includes managed care
organizations (MCOs), prepaid inpatient health
plans (PIHPs), and prepaid ambulatory health plans
(PAHPs) [as defined in 42 CFR 438.2] and is used
only when the provision under discussion applies
to all three arrangements. An explicit reference is
used in the preamble if the provision applies to
primary care case managers (PCCMs) or primary
care case management entities (PCCM entities).
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
delivered under managed care. These
regulations are also largely procedural
in nature and rely heavily on States to
form an analysis and reach conclusions
on the sufficiency of their own payment
rates.
With a program as large and complex
as Medicaid, access regulations need to
be multi-factorial to promote consistent
access to health care for all beneficiaries
across all types of care delivery systems
in accordance with statutory
requirements. Strategies to enhance
access to health care services should
reflect how people move through and
interact with the health care system. We
view the continuum of health care
access across three dimensions of a
person-centered framework: (1)
enrollment in coverage; (2) maintenance
of coverage; and (3) access to services
and supports. Within each of these
dimensions, accompanying regulatory,
monitoring, and/or compliance actions
may be needed to ensure access to
health care is achieved and maintained.
In the spring of 2022, we released a
request for information (RFI) 10 to
collect feedback on a broad range of
questions that examined topics such as:
challenges with eligibility and
enrollment; ways we can use data
available to measure, monitor, and
support improvement efforts related to
access to services; strategies we can
implement to support equitable and
timely access to providers and services;
and opportunities to use existing and
new access standards to help ensure
that Medicaid and Children’s Health
Insurance Program (CHIP) payments are
sufficient to enlist enough providers.
Some of the most common feedback
we received through the RFI related to
ways that we can promote health equity
through cultural competency.
Commenters shared the importance that
cultural competency plays in how
beneficiaries access health care and in
the quality of health services received
by beneficiaries. The RFI respondents
shared examples of actions that we
could take, including collecting and
analyzing health outcomes data by
sociodemographic categories;
establishing minimum standards for
how States serve communities in ways
that address cultural competency and
language preferences; and reducing
barriers to enrollment and retention for
racial and ethnic minority groups.
In addition to the topic of cultural
competency, commenters also
commonly shared that they viewed
10 CMS Request for Information: Access to
Coverage and Care in Medicaid & CHIP. February
2022. For a full list of question from the RFI, see
https://www.medicaid.gov/medicaid/access-care/
downloads/access-rfi-2022-questions.pdf.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
reimbursement rates as a key driver of
provider participation in Medicaid and
CHIP programs. Further, commenters
noted that aligning payment approaches
and setting minimum standards for
payment regulations and compliance
across Medicaid and CHIP delivery
systems, services, and benefits could
help ensure that beneficiaries’ access to
services is as similar as possible across
beneficiary groups, delivery systems,
and programs.
As mentioned previously in this final
rule, the first dimension of access
focuses on ensuring that eligible people
are able to enroll in the Medicaid
program. Access to Medicaid enrollment
requires that a potential beneficiary
know if they are or may be eligible for
Medicaid, be aware of Medicaid
coverage options, and be able to easily
apply for and enroll in coverage. The
second dimension of access in this
continuum relates to maintaining
coverage once the beneficiary is
enrolled in the Medicaid program
initially. Maintaining coverage requires
that eligible beneficiaries are able to stay
enrolled in the program without
interruption, or that they know how to
and can smoothly transition to other
health coverage, such as CHIP,
Exchange coverage, or Medicare, when
they are no longer eligible for Medicaid
coverage but have become eligible for
other health coverage programs. In
September 2022, we published a
proposed rule, Streamlining the
Medicaid, Children’s Health Insurance
Program, and Basic Health Program
Application, Eligibility, Determination,
Enrollment, and Renewal Processes to
simplify the processes for eligible
individuals to enroll and retain
eligibility in Medicaid, CHIP, and the
Basic Health Program (BHP) (87 FR
54760). This proposed rule was
finalized in two parts, the Streamlining
Medicaid; Medicare Savings Program
Eligibility Determination and
Enrollment Final Rule (88 FR 65230)
and the Streamlining Eligibility &
Enrollment final rule (89 FR 22780).
The third dimension, which is the
focus of this final rule, is access to
services and supports. This rule
addresses additional critical elements of
access: (1) potential access, which refers
to a beneficiary’s access to providers
and services, whether or not the
providers or services are used; (2)
beneficiary utilization, which refers to
beneficiaries’ actual use of the providers
and services available to them; and (3)
beneficiaries’ perceptions and
experiences with the care they did or
were not able to receive. These terms
and definitions build upon previous
PO 00000
Frm 00003
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40543
efforts to examine how best to monitor
access.11
We completed an array of regulatory
activities, including three rules: the
aforementioned Streamlining Eligibility
& Enrollment final rules and a final rule
entitled Medicaid and Children’s Health
Insurance Program (CHIP) Managed
Care Access, Finance, and Quality (as
published elsewhere in this issue of the
Federal Register, Managed Care final
rule), on managed care including
matters of access, and this final rule on
access. Additionally, we are taking nonregulatory actions to improve
beneficiary access to care (for example,
best practices toolkits and technical
assistance to States) to improve access
to health care services across Medicaid
delivery systems.
As noted earlier, we issued the
Streamlining Eligibility & Enrollment
final rules to address the first two
dimensions of access to health care: (1)
enrollment in coverage and (2)
maintenance of coverage. Through those
final rules, we streamline Medicaid,
CHIP and BHP eligibility and
enrollment processes, reduce
administrative burden on States and
applicants/enrollees toward a more
seamless eligibility and enrollment
process, and increase the enrollment
and retention of eligible individuals.
The Managed Care final rule improves
access to care and quality outcomes for
Medicaid and CHIP beneficiaries
enrolled in managed care by: creating
standards for timely access to care and
States’ monitoring and enforcement
efforts; reducing burden for some State
directed payments and certain quality
reporting requirements; adding new
standards that will apply when States
use in lieu of services and settings
(ILOSs) to promote effective utilization,
and specifying the scope and nature of
ILOS; specifying medical loss ratio
(MLR) requirements, and establishing a
quality rating system for Medicaid and
CHIP managed care plans.
Through the Managed Care final rule
and this final rule (Ensuring Access to
Medicaid Services), we finalize
additional requirements to address the
third dimension of the health care
access continuum: access to services.
The requirements outlined later in this
section focus on improving access to
services in Medicaid by utilizing tools
such as FFS rate transparency,
11 Kenney, Genevieve M., Kathy Gifford, Jane
Wishner, Vanessa Forsberg, Amanda I. Napoles, and
Danielle Pavliv. ‘‘Proposed Medicaid Access
Measurement and Monitoring Plan.’’ Washington,
DC: The Urban Institute. August 2016. Accessed at
https://www.urban.org/sites/default/files/
publication/88081/2001143-medicaid-accessmeasurement-and-monitoring-plan_0.pdf.
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
40544
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
standardized reporting for HCBS, and
improving the process for interested
parties, especially Medicaid
beneficiaries, to provide feedback to
State Medicaid agencies and for
Medicaid agencies to respond to the
feedback (also known as a feedback
loop).
Through a combination of these four
final rules, we address a range of accessrelated challenges that impact how
beneficiaries are served by Medicaid
across all of its delivery systems. FFP
will be available for expenditures that
are necessary to implement the
activities States will need to undertake
to comply with the provisions of these
final rules.
Finally, we also believe it is important
to acknowledge the role of health equity
within this final rule. Medicaid plays a
disproportionately large role in covering
health care for people from underserved
communities in this country.12
Consistent with E.O. 13985 on
‘‘Advancing Racial Equity and Support
for Underserved Communities Through
the Federal Government (January 20,
2021),’’ 13 which calls for advancing
equity for underserved populations, we
are working to ensure our programs
consistently provide high-quality care to
all beneficiaries, and thus advance
health equity, consistent with the goals
and objectives we have outlined in the
CMS Framework for Health Equity
2022–2032 14 and the HHS Equity
Action Plan.15 That effort includes
increasing our understanding of the
needs of those we serve to ensure that
all individuals have access to equitable
coverage and care.
We recognize that each State faces a
unique set of challenges related to the
resumption of its normal program
activities after the end of the COVID–19
public health emergency (PHE). More
specifically, the expiration of the
Medicaid continuous enrollment
condition authorized by the Families
First Coronavirus Response Act
(FFCRA) presents the single largest
health coverage transition event since
the first open enrollment period of the
Affordable Care Act. As a condition of
12 Guth, M and Artiga, S. Medicaid and Racial
Health Equity March 2022. Accessed at https://
www.kff.org/medicaid/issue-brief/medicaid-andracial-health-equity/.
13 Executive Order 13985: https://
www.whitehouse.gov/briefing-room/presidentialactions/2021/01/20/executive-order-advancingracial-equity-and-support-for-underservedcommunities-through-the-federal-government/.
14 CMS Framework for Health Equity 2022–2032:
https://www.cms.gov/files/document/cmsframework-health-equity.pdf.
15 HHS Equity Action Plan. April 2022. Accessed
at https://www.hhs.gov/sites/default/files/hhsequity-action-plan.pdf.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
receiving a temporary 6.2 percentage
point Federal Medical Assistance
Percentage (FMAP) increase under the
FFCRA, States were required to
maintain enrollment of nearly all
Medicaid enrollees. This continuous
enrollment condition expired on March
31, 2023, after which States began
completing renewals for all individuals
enrolled in Medicaid, CHIP, and the
BHP. Additionally, many other
temporary authorities adopted by States
during the COVID–19 PHE expired at
the end of the PHE, and States are
returning to regular operations across
their programs. The resumption of
normal Medicaid operations is generally
referred to as ‘‘unwinding’’ and the
period for States to initiate all
outstanding eligibility actions that were
delayed because of the FFCRA
continuous enrollment condition is
called the ‘‘unwinding period.’’ We
considered States’ unwinding
responsibilities when finalizing the
dates for States to begin complying with
the requirements being finalized in this
rule, but, as noted in the Ensuring
Access to Medicaid Services proposed
rule, we solicited State feedback on
whether our proposals struck the correct
balance.
We considered adopting an effective
date of 60 days following publication of
this final rule and separate compliance
dates for various provisions, which we
note where relevant in our discussion of
specific proposals in this final rule. We
solicited comment on whether an
effective date of 60 days following
publication would be appropriate when
combined with later dates for
compliance for some provisions.
We also solicited comment on the
timeframe that would be most
achievable and appropriate for
compliance with each proposed
provision and whether the compliance
date should vary by provision.
B. Medical Care Advisory Committees
(MCAC)
We obtained feedback during various
public engagement activities conducted
with States and other interested parties,
which supports research findings that
the beneficiary perspective and lived
Medicaid experience 16 should be
16 Lived experience refers to ‘‘representation and
understanding of an individual’s human
experiences, choices, and options and how those
factors influence one’s perception of knowledge’’
based on one’s own life. In this context, we refer
to people who have been enrolled in Medicaid
currently or in the past. Accessed at https://
aspe.hhs.gov/lived-experience#:∼:text=In%20the
%20context%20of%20ASPE%E2%80%99s
%20research%2C%20people%20with,
programs%20that%20aim%20to%20address%20
the%20issue%20%28s%29.
PO 00000
Frm 00004
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
considered when making policy
decisions related to Medicaid
programs.17 18 A 2022 report from the
HHS Assistant Secretary of Planning
and Evaluation (ASPE) noted that
including people with lived experience
in the policy-making process can lead to
a deeper understanding of the
conditions affecting certain populations,
facilitate identification of possible
solutions, and avoid unintended
consequences of potential policy or
program changes that could negatively
impact the people the program aims to
serve.19 We have concluded that
beneficiary perspectives need to be
central to operating a high-quality
health coverage program that
consistently meets the needs of all its
beneficiaries.
However, effective community
engagement is not as simple as planning
a meeting and requesting feedback. To
create opportunities that facilitate true
engagement, it is important to
understand and honor strengths and
assets that exist within communities;
recognize and solicit the inclusion of
diverse voices; dedicate resources to
ensuring that engagement is done in
culturally meaningful ways; ensure
timelines, planning processes, and
resources that support equitable
participation; and follow up with
communities to let them know how
their input was utilized. Ensuring
optimal health outcomes for all
beneficiaries served by a program
through the design, implementation,
and operationalization of policies and
programs requires intentional and
continuous effort to engage people who
have historically been excluded from
the process.
Section 1902(a)(4) of the Act is a
longstanding statutory provision that, as
implemented in part in regulations
currently codified at 42 CFR 431.12,20
requires States to have a Medical Care
17 Zhu JM, Rowland R, Gunn R, Gollust S, Grande
DT. Engaging Consumers in Medicaid Program
Design: Strategies from the States. Milbank Q. 2021
Mar;99(1):99–125. doi: 10.1111/1468–0009.12492.
Epub 2020 Dec 15. PMID: 33320389; PMCID:
PMC7984666. Accessed at https://www.ncbi.
nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7984666/.
18 Key Findings from the Medicaid MCO Learning
Hub Discussion Group Series and Roundtable—
Focus on Member Engagement and the Consumer
Voice. NORC at the University of Chicago. Jan 2021.
Accessed at https://www.norc.org/PDFs/
Medicaid%20Managed%20Care%20Organization
%20Learning%20Hub/MMCOLearningHub_
MemberEngagement.pdf.
19 Syreeta Skelton-Wilson et al., ‘‘Methods and
Emerging Strategies to Engage People with Lived
Experience,’’ Office of the Assistant Secretary for
Planning and Evaluation (ASPE), U.S. Department
of Health and Human Services, January 4, 2022,
https://aspe.hhs.gov/reports/lived-experience-brief.
20 The regulatory provision was originally
established in 36 FR 3793 at 3870.
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
Advisory Committee (MCAC) in place to
advise the State Medicaid agency about
health and medical care services. Under
section 1903(a)(7) of the Act,
expenditures made by the State agency
to operate the MCAC are eligible for
Federal administrative match.
The current MCAC regulations at
§ 431.12 require States to establish such
a committee and describe high-level
requirements related to the composition
of the committee, the scope of topics to
be discussed, and the support the
Committee can receive from the State in
its administration. Due to the lack of
specificity in the current regulations,
these regulations have not been
consistently implemented across States.
For example, there is no mention of how
States should approach meeting
periodicity or meeting structure in ways
that are conducive to including a variety
of Medicaid interested parties. There is
also no mention in the regulations about
how States can build accountability
through transparency with their
interested parties by publicly sharing
meeting dates, membership lists, and
the outcomes of these meetings. The
regulations also limit the required
MCAC discussions to topics about
health and medical care services—
which in turn limits the benefits of
using the MCAC as a vehicle that can
provide States with varied ideas,
suggestions, and experiences on a range
of issues related to the effective
administration of the Medicaid program.
As such, we have determined the
requirements governing MCACs need to
be more robust to ensure all States are
using these committees optimally to
realize a more effective and efficient
Medicaid program that is informed by
the experiences of beneficiaries, their
caretakers, and other interested parties.
The current regulations have been in
place without change for over 40
years.21 Over the last four decades, we
have learned that the current MCAC
requirements are insufficient in
ensuring that the beneficiary
perspective is meaningfully represented
on the MCAC. Recent research regarding
soliciting input from individuals with
lived experience, including our recent
discussions with States about their
MCAC, provide a unique opportunity to
re-examine the purpose of this
committee and update the policies to
reflect four decades of program
experience.
In 2022, we gathered feedback from
various public engagement activities
conducted with States, other interested
parties, and directly from a subset of
State Medicaid agencies that described
21 43
FR 45091 at 45189.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
a wide variation in how States are
operating MCACs today. The feedback
suggested that some MCACs operate
simply to meet the broad Federal
requirements. As discussed previously
in this section, we have discovered that
our current regulations do not further
the statutory goal of meaningfully
engaging Medicaid beneficiaries and
other low-income people in matters
related to the operation of the Medicaid
program. Meaningful engagement can
help develop relationships and establish
trust between the communities served
and the Medicaid agency to ensure
States receive important information
concerning how to best provide health
coverage to their beneficiary
populations. The current MCAC
regulations establish the importance of
broad feedback from interested parties,
but they lack the specificity that can
ensure States use MCACs in ways that
facilitate that feedback.
The current regulations require that
MCACs must include Medicaid
beneficiaries as committee members.
However, the regulations do not
mention or account for the reality that
other interested parties can stifle
beneficiary contribution in a group
setting. For example, when there are a
small number of beneficiary
representatives in large committees with
providers, health plans, and
professional advocates, it can be
uncomfortable and intimidating for
beneficiaries to share their perspective
and experience. Based on these reasons,
several States already use beneficiaryonly groups that feed into larger
MCACs.
Improvements to the MCACs are
critical to ensuring a robust and
accurate understanding of beneficiaries’
challenges to health care access. The
current regulations value State Medicaid
agencies having a way to get feedback
from interested parties on issues related
to the Medicaid program. However, the
current regulations lack specificity
related to how MCACs can be used to
benefit the Medicaid program more
expressly by more fully promoting the
beneficiary voice. MCACs need to
provide a forum for beneficiaries and
people with lived experience with the
Medicaid program to share their
experiences and challenges with
accessing health care, and to assist
States in understanding and better
addressing those challenges. These
committees also represent unique
opportunities for States to include
representation by members that reflect
the demographics of their Medicaid
program to ensure that the program is
best serving the needs of all
PO 00000
Frm 00005
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40545
beneficiaries, but not all States are
utilizing that opportunity.
This final rule strikes a balance that
reflects how States currently use
advisory committees (such as MCACs or
standalone beneficiary groups). We
know that some States approach these
committees as a way to meet a Federal
requirement while other States are using
them in much more innovative ways. As
a middle ground, this final rule seeks to:
(1) address the gaps in the current
regulations described previously in this
section; and (2) establish requirements
to implement more effective advisory
committees. States will select members
in a way that reflects a wide range of
Medicaid interested parties (covering a
diverse set of populations and interests
relevant to the Medicaid program), place
a special emphasis on the inclusion of
the beneficiary perspective, and create a
meeting environment where each voice
is empowered to participate equally.
The changes we are making in this
rule are rooted in best practices learned
from States’ experiences implementing
the existing MCAC provisions and from
other State examples of community
engagement that support getting the
type of feedback and experiences from
beneficiaries, their caretakers, providers,
and other interested parties that can
then be used to positively impact care
delivered through the Medicaid
program.
Accordingly, this final rule includes
changes that will support the
implementation of the principles of bidirectional feedback, transparency, and
accountability. We are making changes
to the features of the new committee
that can most effectively ensure member
engagement, including the staff and
logistical support that is required for
beneficiaries and individuals
representing beneficiaries to
meaningfully participate in these
committees. We are also making
changes to expand the scope of topics to
be addressed by the committee, address
committee membership composition,
prescribe the features of administration
of the committee, establish requirements
of an annual report, and underscore the
importance of beneficiary engagement
through the addition of a related
beneficiary-only group.
C. Home and Community-Based
Services (HCBS)
While Medicaid programs are
required to provide medically necessary
nursing facility services for most eligible
individuals age 21 or older, coverage for
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
40546
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
HCBS is a State option.22 As a result of
this ‘‘institutional bias’’ in the statute,
Medicaid reimbursement for LTSS was
primarily spent on institutional care,
historically, with very little spending for
HCBS.23 However, over the past several
decades, States have used several
Medicaid authorities,24 as well as CMSfunded grant programs,25 to develop a
broad range of HCBS to provide
alternatives to institutionalization for
eligible Medicaid beneficiaries and to
advance person-centered care.
Consistent with many beneficiaries’
preferences for where they would like to
receive their care, HCBS have become a
critical component of the Medicaid
program and are part of a larger
framework of progress toward
community integration of older adults
and people with disabilities that spans
efforts across the Federal government. In
fact, total Medicaid HCBS expenditures
surpassed the long-standing benchmark
of 50 percent of LTSS expenditures in
FY 2013 and has remained higher than
50 percent since then, reaching 55.4
percent in FY 2017 and 62.5 percent in
FY 2020.26 A total of 35 States spent at
22 Murray, Caitlin, Alena Tourtellotte, Debra
Lipson, and Andrea Wysocki. ‘‘Medicaid Long
Term Services and Supports Annual Expenditures
Report: Federal Fiscal Year 2019.’’ Chicago, IL:
Mathematica, December 2021. Accessed at https://
www.medicaid.gov/medicaid/long-term-servicessupports/downloads/ltssexpenditures2019.pdf.
23 Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services.
November 2020. Long-Term Services and Supports
Rebalancing Toolkit. Accessed at https://
www.medicaid.gov/medicaid/long-term-servicessupports/downloads/ltss-rebalancing-toolkit.pdf.
24 These authorities include Medicaid State plan
personal care services and Social Security Act (the
Act) section 1915(c) waivers, section 1915(i) State
plan HCBS, section 1915(j) self-directed personal
assistant services, and section 1915(k) Community
First Choice. See https://www.medicaid.gov/
medicaid/home-community-based-services/homecommunity-based-services-authorities/
for more information on these authorities. Some
States also use demonstration authority under
section 1115(a) of the Act to cover and test home
and community-based service strategies. See
https://www.medicaid.gov/medicaid/section-1115demonstrations/ for more information.
25 Federally funded grant programs include the
Money Follows the Person (MFP) demonstration
program, which was initially authorized by the
Deficit Reduction Act of 2005 (Pub. L. 109–171).
The MFP program was recently extended under the
Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2021 (Pub. L.
116–260), which allowed new States to join the
demonstration and made statutory changes affecting
MFP participant eligibility criteria, allowing
grantees to provide community transition services
under MFP earlier in an eligible individual’s
inpatient stay.
26 Murray, Caitlin, Michelle Eckstein, Debra
Lipson, and Andrea Wysocki. ‘‘Medicaid Long
Term Services and Supports Annual Expenditures
Report: Federal Fiscal Year 2020.’’ Chicago, IL:
Mathematica, December 9, 2021. Accessed at
https://www.medicaid.gov/medicaid/long-termservices-supports/downloads/ltssexpenditures2020.
pdf.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
least 50 percent of Medicaid LTSS
expenditures on HCBS in FY 2020.
Furthermore, HCBS play an important
role in States’ efforts to achieve
compliance with Title II of the
Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA)
of 1990, section 504 of the
Rehabilitation Act of 1973 (section
504),27 section 1557 of the Affordable
Care Act, and the Supreme Court’s
decision in Olmstead v. L.C.,28 in which
the Court held that unjustified
segregation of persons with disabilities
is a form of unlawful discrimination
under the ADA 29 and States must
ensure that persons with disabilities are
served in the most integrated setting
appropriate to their needs.30 Section
9817 of the American Rescue Plan Act
of 2021 (ARP) (Pub. L. 117–2) recently
made a historic investment in Medicaid
HCBS by providing qualifying States
with a temporary 10 percentage point
increase to the FMAP for certain
Medicaid expenditures for HCBS that
States must use to implement or
supplement the implementation of one
or more activities to enhance, expand,
or strengthen HCBS under the Medicaid
program.31
Medicaid coverage of HCBS varies by
State and can include a combination of
medical and non-medical services, such
as case management, homemaker,
personal care, adult day health,
habilitation (both day and residential),
and respite care services. HCBS
programs serve a variety of targeted
population groups, such as older adults,
and children and adults with
intellectual or developmental
disabilities, physical disabilities, mental
health/substance use disorders, and
complex medical needs. HCBS programs
provide opportunities for Medicaid
beneficiaries to receive services in their
own homes and communities rather
than in institutions.
CMS and States have worked for
decades to support the increased
availability and provision of high27 HHS interprets section 504 and Title II of the
ADA similarly regarding the integration mandate
and the Department of Justice generally interprets
the requirements under section 504 consistently
with those under Title II of the ADA.
28 527 U.S. 581 (1999).
29 Medicaid and the Olmstead Decision. Accessed
at https://www.medicaid.gov/about-us/programhistory/medicaid-50th-anniversary/entry/47688.
30 Medicaid and the Olmstead Decision. Accessed
at https://www.medicaid.gov/about-us/programhistory/medicaid-50th-anniversary/entry/47688.
31 Information on State activities to expand,
enhance, or strengthen HCBS under ARP section
9817 can be found on Medicaid.gov at https://
www.medicaid.gov/medicaid/home-communitybased-services/guidance/strengthening-andinvesting-home-and-community-based-services-formedicaid-beneficiaries-american-rescue-plan-actof-2021-section-9817/.
PO 00000
Frm 00006
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
quality HCBS for Medicaid
beneficiaries. While there are quality
and reporting requirements for
Medicaid HCBS, the requirements vary
across authorities and are often
inadequate to provide the necessary
information for ensuring that HCBS are
provided in a high-quality manner that
best protects the health and welfare of
beneficiaries. Consequently, quality
measurement and reporting
expectations are not consistent across
and within services, but instead vary
depending on the authorities under
which States are delivering services.
Additionally, States have flexibility to
determine the quality measures they use
in their HCBS programs. While we
support State flexibility, a lack of
standardization has resulted in
thousands of metrics and measures
currently in use across States, with
different metrics and measures often
used for different HCBS programs
within the same State. As a result, CMS
and States are limited in the ability to
compare HCBS quality and outcomes
within and across States or to compare
the performance of HCBS programs for
different populations.
In addition, although there are
differences in rates of disability among
demographic groups, there are very
limited data currently available to assess
disparities in HCBS access, utilization,
quality, and outcomes. Few States have
the data infrastructure to systematically
or routinely report data that can be used
to assess whether disparities exist in
HCBS programs. This lack of available
data also prevents CMS and States from
implementing interventions to make
improvements in HCBS programs
designed to consistently meet the needs
of all beneficiaries. Compounding these
concerns have been notable and highprofile instances of abuse and neglect in
recent years, which have been shown to
result from poor quality care and
inadequate oversight of HCBS in
Medicaid. For example, a 2018 report,
‘‘Ensuring Beneficiary Health and Safety
in Group Homes Through State
Implementation of Comprehensive
Compliance Oversight,’’ 32 (‘‘Joint
Report’’), which was jointly developed
by the U.S. Department of Health
Human Services’ Administration for
Community Living (ACL), Office for
Civil Rights (OCR), and the Office of
32 Ensuring Beneficiary Health and Safety in
Group Homes Through State Implementation of
Comprehensive Compliance Oversight. US
Department of Health and Human Services, Office
of the Inspector General, Administration for
Community Living, and Office for Civil Rights.
January 2018. Accessed at https://oig.hhs.gov/
reports-and-publications/featured-topics/grouphomes/group-homes-joint-report.pdf.
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Inspector General (OIG), found systemic
problems with health and safety policies
and procedures being followed in group
homes and that failure to comply with
these policies and procedures left
beneficiaries in group homes at risk of
serious harm. In addition, while existing
regulations provide safeguards for all
Medicaid beneficiaries in the event of a
denial of Medicaid eligibility or an
adverse benefit determination by the
State Medicaid agency and, where
applicable, by the beneficiary’s managed
care plan, there are no safeguards
related to other issues that HCBS
beneficiaries may experience, such as
the failure of a provider to comply with
the HCBS settings requirements or
difficulty accessing the services in the
person-centered service plan unless the
individual is receiving those services
through a Medicaid managed care
arrangement.
Finally, through our regular
interactions with State Medicaid
agencies, provider groups, and
beneficiary advocates, we observed that
all these interested parties routinely cite
a shortage of direct care workers and
high rates of turnover in direct care
workers among the greatest challenges
in ensuring access to high-quality, costeffective HCBS for people with
disabilities and older adults. Some
States have also indicated that a lack of
direct care workers is preventing them
from transitioning individuals from
institutions to home and communitybased settings. While workforce
shortages have existed for years, they
have been exacerbated by the COVID–19
pandemic, which has resulted in higher
rates of direct care worker turnover (for
instance, due to higher rates of workerreported stress), an inability of some
direct care workers to return to their
positions prior to the pandemic (for
instance, due to difficulty accessing
child care or concerns about contracting
COVID–19 for people with higher risk of
severe illness), workforce shortages
across the health care sector, and wage
increases in types of retail and other
jobs that tend to draw from the same
pool of workers.33 34 35
33 MACPAC Issue Brief. State Efforts to Address
Medicaid Home- and Community-Based Services
Workforce Shortages. March 2022. Accessed at
https://www.macpac.gov/wp-content/uploads/
2022/03/MACPAC-brief-on-HCBS-workforce.pdf.
34 Campbell, S., A. Del Rio Drake, R. Espinoza, K.
Scales. 2021. Caring for the future: The power and
potential of America’s direct care workforce. Bronx,
NY: PHI https://phinational.org/wp-content/
uploads/2021/01/Caring-for-the-Future-2021PHI.pdf.
35 American Network of Community Options and
Resources (ANCOR). 2021. The state of America’s
direct support workforce 2021. Alexandria, VA:
ANCOR. Accessed at https://www.ancor.org/sites/
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
To address the list of challenges
outlined in this section, we proposed
Federal requirements to improve access
to care, quality of care, and health and
quality of life outcomes; promote health
equity for people receiving Medicaidcovered HCBS; and ensure that there are
safeguards in place for beneficiaries
who receive HCBS through FFS delivery
systems. We solicited comment on other
areas for rulemaking consideration. The
requirements we are finalizing in this
rule are intended, individually and as a
whole, to promote public transparency
related to the administration of
Medicaid HCBS programs.
D. Fee-For-Service (FFS) Payment
Section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act
requires States to ‘‘assure that payments
are consistent with efficiency, economy,
and quality of care and are sufficient to
enlist enough providers so that care and
services are available under the plan at
least to the extent that such care and
services are available to the general
population in the geographic area.’’
Regulations at § 447.203 require States
to develop and submit to CMS an access
monitoring review plan (AMRP) for a
core set of services. Currently, the
regulations rely on available State data
to support a determination that the
State’s payment rates are sufficient to
ensure access to care in Medicaid FFS
that is at least as great for beneficiaries
as is generally available to the general
population in the geographic area, as
required under section 1902(a)(30)(A) of
the Act.
In the May 6, 2011, Federal Register,
we published the Medicaid Program;
Methods for Assuring Access to Covered
Medicaid Services proposed rule (76 FR
26341; hereinafter ‘‘2011 proposed
rule’’), which outlined a data-driven
process for States with Medicaid
services paid through a State plan under
FFS to follow in order to document their
compliance with section 1902(a)(30)(A)
of the Act. We finalized the 2011
proposed rule in the November 2, 2015,
Federal Register when we published the
‘‘Medicaid Program; Methods for
Assuring Access to Covered Medicaid
Services’’ final rule with comment
period (80 FR 67576; hereinafter ‘‘2015
final rule with comment period’’).
Among other requirements, the 2015
final rule with comment period required
States to develop and submit to CMS an
AMRP for certain Medicaid services that
is updated at least every 3 years.
Additionally, the rule required that
when States submit a SPA to reduce or
restructure provider payment rates, they
default/files/the_state_of_americas_direct_support_
workforce_crisis_2021.pdf.
PO 00000
Frm 00007
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40547
must consider the data collected
through the AMRP and undertake a
public process that solicits input on the
potential impact of the proposed
reduction or restructuring of Medicaid
FFS payment rates on beneficiary access
to care. We published the ‘‘Medicaid
Program; Deadline for Access
Monitoring Review Plan Submissions’’
final rule in the April 12, 2016 Federal
Register (81 FR 21479; hereinafter
‘‘2016 final rule’’) with a revised
deadline for States’ AMRPs to be
submitted to us.
Following the implementation of the
AMRP process, numerous States have
expressed concern regarding the
administrative burden associated with
the 2015 final rule with comment period
requirements, especially those States
with high rates of beneficiary
enrollment in managed care. In an
attempt to address some of the States’
concerns regarding unnecessary
administrative burden, we issued a State
Medicaid Director letter (SMDL) on
November 16, 2017 (SMDL #17–004),
which clarified the circumstances in
which provider payment reductions or
restructurings would likely not result in
diminished access to care, and
therefore, would not require additional
analysis and monitoring procedures
described in the 2015 final rule with
comment period.36 Subsequently, in the
March 23, 2018 Federal Register, we
published the ‘‘Medicaid Program;
Methods for Assuring Access to Covered
Medicaid Services-Exemptions for
States With High Managed Care
Penetration Rates and Rate Reduction
Threshold’’ proposed rule (83 FR 12696;
hereinafter ‘‘2018 proposed rule’’),
which would have exempted States
from requirements to analyze certain
data or monitor access when the vast
majority of their covered beneficiaries
receive services through managed care
plans. That proposed rule, if it had been
finalized, would have provided similar
flexibility to all States when they make
nominal rate reductions or
restructurings to FFS payment rates.
Based on the responses received during
the public comment period, we decided
not to finalize the proposed exemptions.
In the July 15, 2019, Federal Register,
we published the ‘‘Medicaid Program;
Methods for Assuring Access to Covered
Medicaid Services-Rescission’’
proposed rule (84 FR 33722; hereinafter
‘‘2019 proposed rule’’) to rescind the
regulatory access requirements at
§§ 447.203(b) and 447.204, and
36 State Medicaid Director Letter #17–0004 Re:
Medicaid Access to Care Implementation Guidance.
Accessed at https://www.medicaid.gov/federalpolicy-guidance/downloads/smd17004.pdf
(November 2017).
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
40548
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
concurrently issued a CMCS
Informational Bulletin (CIB) 37 stating
the agency’s intention to establish a new
access strategy. Based on the responses
we received during the public comment
period, we decided not to finalize the
2019 proposed rule, and instead
continue our efforts and commitment to
develop a data-driven strategy to
understand access to care in the
Medicaid program.
States have continued to question
whether the AMRP process is the most
effective or accurate reflection of access
to care in a State’s Medicaid program,
and requested we provide additional
clarity on the data necessary to support
compliance with section 1902(a)(30)(A)
of the Act. In reviewing the information
that States presented through the
AMRPs, we also have questioned
whether the data and analysis
consistently address the primary accessrelated question posed by section
1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act—namely,
whether rates are sufficient to ensure
access to care at least as great as that
enjoyed by the general population in
geographic areas. The unstandardized
nature of the AMRPs, which largely
defer to States to determine appropriate
data measures to review and monitor
when documenting access to care, have
made it difficult to assess whether any
single State’s analysis demonstrates
compliance with section 1902(a)(30)(A)
of the Act.
While the AMRPs were intended to be
a useful guide to States in the overall
process to monitor beneficiary access,
they are generally limited to access in
FFS delivery systems and focus on
targeted payment rate changes rather
than the availability of care more
generally or population health outcomes
(which may be indicative of the
population’s ability to access care).
Moreover, the AMRP processes are
largely procedural in nature and not
targeted to specific services for which
access may be of particular concern,
requiring States to engage in triennial
reviews of access to care for certain
broad categories of Medicaid services—
primary care services, physician
specialist services, behavioral health
services, pre- and post-natal obstetric
services, and home health services.
Although the 2016 final rule discussed
that the selected service categories were
intended to be indicators for available
access in the overall Medicaid FFS
system, these categories do not directly
translate to the services authorized
37 CMCS Informational Bulletin: Comprehensive
Strategy for Monitoring Access in Medicaid,
Accessed at https://www.medicaid.gov/federalpolicy-guidance/downloads/CIB071119.pdf (July
2019).
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
under section 1905(a) of the Act,
granting States deference as to how
broadly or narrowly to apply the AMRP
analysis to services within their
programs. For example, the category
‘‘primary care services’’ could
encompass several of the Medicaid
service categories described within
section 1905(a) of the Act and, without
clear guidance on which section 1905(a)
services categories, qualified providers,
or procedures we intended States to
include within the AMRP analyses,
States were left to make their own
interpretations in analyzing access to
care under the 2016 final rule.
Similarly, a number of the AMRP data
elements, both required and suggested
within the 2016 final rule, may be
overly broad, subject to interpretation,
or difficult to obtain. Specifically, under
the 2016 final rule provisions, States are
required to review: the extent to which
beneficiary needs are fully met; the
availability of care through enrolled
providers to beneficiaries in each
geographic area, by provider type and
site of service; changes in beneficiary
utilization of covered services in each
geographic area; the characteristics of
the beneficiary population (including
considerations for care, service and
payment variations for pediatric and
adult populations and for individuals
with disabilities); and actual or
estimated levels of provider payment
available from other payers, including
other public and private payers, by
provider type and site of service.
Although service utilization and
provider participation are relatively
easy measures to source and track using
existing Medicaid program data, an
analysis of whether beneficiary needs
are fully met is at least somewhat
subjective and could require States to
engage in a survey process to complete.
Additionally, while most Medicaid
services have some level of equivalent
payment data that can be compared to
other available public payer data, such
as Medicare, private payer information
may be proprietary and difficult to
obtain. Therefore, many States struggled
to meet the regulatory requirement to
compare Medicaid program rates to
private payer rates because of their
inability to obtain private payer data.
Due to these issues, States produced
varied AMRPs through the triennial
process that were, as a whole, difficult
to interpret or to use in assessing
compliance with section 1902(a)(30)(A)
of the Act. In isolation, a State’s specific
AMRP most often presented data that
could be meaningful as a benchmark
against changes within a State’s
Medicaid program, but did not present
a case for Medicaid access consistent
PO 00000
Frm 00008
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
with the general population in
geographic areas. Frequently, the data
and information within the AMRPs
were presented without a formal
determination or attestation from the
State that the information presented
established compliance with section
1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act. Because the
States’ AMRPs generally varied to such
a great degree, there was also little to
glean in making State-to-State
comparisons of performance on access
measures, even for States with
geographic and demographic
similarities.
Based on results of the triennial
AMRPs, we were uncertain of how to
make use of the information presented
within them other than to make them
publicly available. We published the
AMRPs on Medicaid.gov but had little
engagement with States on the content
or results of the AMRPs since much of
the information within the plans could
not meaningfully answer whether access
in Medicaid programs satisfied the
requirements of section 1902(a)(30)(A)
of the Act. Additionally, we received
little feedback from providers,
beneficiaries, or advocates on whether
or how interested parties made use of
the triennial AMRPs. However, portions
of the 2016 final rule related to public
awareness and feedback on changes to
Medicaid payment rates and the
analysis that we received from
individual States proposing to make rate
changes was of great benefit in
determining approvals of State payment
change proposals. Specifically, the
portion of the AMRP process where
States update their plans to describe
data and measures to serve as a baseline
against which they monitor after
reducing or restructuring Medicaid
payments allows States to document
consistency with section 1902(a)(30)(A)
of the Act at the time of SPA
submission, usually as an assessment of
how closely rates align with Medicare
rates, and to understand the impact of
reductions through data monitoring
after SPA approval.
Under this final rule, we balance
elimination of unnecessary Federal and
State administrative burden with robust
implementation of the Federal and State
shared obligation to ensure that
Medicaid payment rates are set at levels
sufficient to ensure access to care for
beneficiaries consistent with section
1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act. The
provisions of this final rule, as
discussed in more detail later, will
better achieve this balance through
improved transparency of Medicaid FFS
payment rates, through publication of a
comparative payment rate analysis to
Medicare and payment rate disclosures,
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
and through a more targeted and
defined approach to evaluating data and
information when States propose to
reduce or restructure their Medicaid
payment rates. Payment rate
transparency is a critical component of
assessing compliance with section
1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act. In addition,
payment rate transparency helps to
ensure that interested parties have basic
information available to them to
understand Medicaid payment levels
and the associated effects of payment
rates on access to care so that they may
raise concerns to State Medicaid
agencies via the various forms of public
processes discussed within this final
rule. Along with improved payment rate
transparency and disclosures as well as
comparative payment rate analyses, we
are finalizing a more efficient process
for States to undertake when submitting
rate reduction or restructuring SPAs to
CMS for review. As we move toward
aligning our Medicaid access to care
strategy across FFS and managed care
delivery systems, we will consider
additional rulemaking to help ensure
that Medicaid payment rate information
is appropriately transparent and rates
are fully consistent with broad access to
care across delivery systems, so that
interested parties have a more complete
understanding of Medicaid payment
rate levels and resulting access to care
for beneficiaries.
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
II. Summary of the Proposed Provisions
and Analysis of and Responses to the
Public Comments
We received 2,123 public comments
from individuals and organizations,
including, but not limited to,
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
individuals, State government agencies,
non-profit health care organizations,
advocacy groups, associations, law
firms, managed care plans, academic
groups, and tribal organizations. We
thank and appreciate the commenters
for their consideration of the proposed
requirements for ensuring access to care,
quality and health outcomes, and better
addressing health equity issues in the
Medicaid program across FFS and
managed care delivery systems, and in
HCBS programs. In general, commenters
supported the proposed rule. In this
section, arranged by subject area, we
summarize the proposed provisions, the
public comments received, and our
responses. For a complete and full
description of the proposed
requirements, see the 2023 proposed
rule, ‘‘Medicaid Program; Ensuring
Access to Medicaid Services’’ (88 FR
27960, May 5, 2023) hereafter referred to
as the ‘‘proposed rule.’’
We also received a number of out-ofscope comments that are not addressed
in this final rule. In addition, we
received some comments which were s
solely applicable to the Managed Care
proposed rule. Please see the Managed
Care final rule for a for a summary of the
comments CMS received pertaining to
that proposed rule.
We are clarifying and emphasizing
our intent that if any provision of this
final rule is held to be invalid or
unenforceable by its terms, or as applied
to any person or circumstance, or stayed
pending further action, it shall be
severable from this final rule, and from
rules and regulations currently in effect,
and not affect the remainder thereof or
the application of the provision to other
PO 00000
Frm 00009
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40549
persons not similarly situated or to
other, dissimilar circumstances. If any
provision is held to be invalid or
unenforceable, the remaining provisions
which could function independently,
should take effect and be given the
maximum effect permitted by law.
Through this rule, we adopt provisions
that are intended to and will operate
independently of each other, even if
each serves the same general purpose or
policy goal. Where a provision is
necessarily dependent on another, the
context generally makes that clear.
Finally, we note that we are finalizing
with modification several of the dates
for when we expect States to begin
complying with the requirements being
finalized in this rule, instead of what we
proposed. Generally, we are finalizing
that this rule, including the proposals
being finalized herein, will be effective
60 days after publication of this final
rule. However, we are finalizing that
States are not required to begin
compliance with most requirements
being finalized in this rule until a
specified applicability date, which we
have specified for each such individual
proposal being finalized. We discuss in
detail the applicability date we are
finalizing for each proposal being
finalized in this rule in the respective
section of this preamble. We encourage
States, providers, and interested parties
to confirm the applicability dates
indicated in this final rule for any
changes from the proposed. To assist,
we are including Table 1 with the
provisions and relevant timing
information and dates.
BILLING CODE 4120–01–P
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
40550
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
TABLE 1: Provisions and Relevant Timing Information and Dates*
Annlicability Dates**
Establishment ofMAC and BAC: 1 year after the effective date
of the final rule.
Re1mlation Section(s) in Title 42 of the CFR
BAC crossover on MAC: For the period from the effective date
of the final rule through 1 year after the effective date, 10
percent; for the period from year 1 plus one day through year 2
after the effective date of the final rule, 20 percent; and
thereafter, 25 percent of committee members must be from the
BAC
Annual report: States have 2 years from the effective date of
the final rule to finalize the first annual report. After the report
has been fmalized, States will have 30 days to post the annual
report.
Beginning 3 years after the effective date of the final rule***
Medicaid Advisory Committee (MAC) & Beneficiary
Advisory Council (BAC) § 431.12
Person-Centered Service Plans§§ 441.301(c)(l) and (3),
441.450(c), 441.540(c), and 441.725(c)
Grievance Systems§§ 441.301(c)(7), 441.464(d)(5),
441.555(e), and 441.745(a)(l)(iii)
Beginning 2 years after the effective date of the final rule
Incident Management System §§ 441.302(a)(6), 441.464(e),
441.570(e), 441.745(a)(l)(v), and (b)(l)(i)
HCBS Payment Adequacy§§ 441.302(k), 441.464(t),
441.570ffl. and 441.745(a)(l )(vi)
Reporting Requirements§§ 441.311, 441.474(c), 441.580(i),
and 441.745(a)(l)(vii)
HCBS Quality Measure Set§§ 441.312, 441.474(c),
441.585(d), and 441.745(b)(l)(v)
Website Transparency §§ 441.313, 441.486, 441.595, and
441.750
Beginning 3 years after the effective date of the fmal rule***;
except for the requirement at§ 441.302(a)(6)(i)(B) (electronic
incident management system), which begins 5 years after the
effective date of the final rule***
Beginning 6 years after the effective date of the fmal rule***
Beginning 3 years after the effective date of the final rule*** for
§ 441.31 l(b) (compliance reporting) and§ 441.3 ll(d) (access
reporting)
Beginning 4 years after the effective date of the final rule*** for
§ 441.31 l(c) (reporting on the HCBS Quality Measure Set) and
(e) (HCBS pavment adeauacv reporting)
HHS Secretary begins identifying quality measures no later than
December 31, 2026, and no more frequently than every other
year.
HHS Secretary shall make technical updates and corrections to
the HCBS Quality Measure Set annually as appropriate.
Beginning 3 years after the effective date of the fmal rule***
July 1, 2026, then updated within 3 0 days of a payment rate
change.
July 1, 2026, then every 2 years
Payment Rate Transparency Publication§ 447.203(b)(l)
Comparative Payment Rate Analysis Publication §
447.203(b)(2) to (4)
Payment Rate Disclosure§ 447.203(b)(2) to (4)
July 1, 2026, then everv 2 years
The first meeting must be held within 2 years after effective
date of the final rule (then at least eveiy 2 years).
Effective date of the final rule
Interested Parties Advisory Group§ 447.203(b)(6)
Rate Reduction and Restructuring SPA procedures §
447.203(c)(l) and (2)
* Regulatory provisions in this table are applicable at the time this rule becomes effective.
** In this final rule, including the regulations being finalized herein, we use the term "applicability date" to
indicate when a new regulatory requirement will be applicable and when States must begin compliance with
the requirements as specified in that regulation.
In the case of the State that implements a managed care delivery system under the authority of sections
1915{a), 1915{b), 1932(a), or 1115{a) of the Act and includes HCBS in the managed care organization's {MCO),
prepaid inpatient health plan's {PIHP), or prepaid ambulatory health plan's {PAHP) contract, the applicability
date is the first rating period for contracts with the MCO, PIHP or PAHP beginning on or after the applicability
date specified in the chart.
BILLING CODE 4120–01–C
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
PO 00000
Frm 00010
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
ER10MY24.023
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
***
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
A. Medicaid Advisory Committee and
Beneficiary Advisory Council (§ 431.12)
The current regulations at § 431.12
require States to have a Medical Care
Advisory Committee (MCAC) to advise
the State Medicaid agency about health
and medical care services. The
regulations are intended to ensure that
State Medicaid agencies had a way to
receive feedback regarding health and
medical care services from interested
parties. However, these regulations
lacked specificity related to how these
committees can be used to ensure the
proper and efficient administration of
the Medicaid program more expressly
by more fully promoting beneficiary
perspectives.
Under the authority of section
1902(a)(4) of the Act, section 1902(a)(19)
of the Act, and our general rulemaking
authority in section 1102 of the Act, we
are finalizing proposals to § 431.12 to
replace the current MCAC requirements
with a committee framework designed
to ensure the proper and efficient
administration of the Medicaid program
and to better ensure that services under
the Medicaid program will be provided
in a manner consistent with the best
interests of the beneficiaries. States will
be required to establish and operate the
newly named Medicaid Advisory
Committee (MAC) and a Beneficiary
Advisory Council (BAC). Please note
that in the proposed rule, the BAC was
referred to as the Beneficiary Advisory
Group, or BAG. The MAC and its
corresponding BAC will serve as
vehicles for bi-directional feedback
between interested parties and the State
on matters related to the effective
administration of the Medicaid program
as determined by the State and MAC.
With the changes in this final rule FFP,
or Federal match, for Medicaid
administrative activities will remain
available to States for expenditures
related to MAC and BAC activities in
the same manner as the former MCAC.
The proposed and finalized
requirements of the MAC amend
previous and add new Federal
requirements to: (1) expand the scope
and use of States’ MACs; (2) rename the
Medicaid Advisory Committee, which
will advise the State on a range of issues
including medical and non-medical
services; (3) require States to establish a
BAC; (4) establish minimum
requirements for Medicaid beneficiary
representation on the MAC,
membership, meetings materials, and
attendance; and (5) promote
transparency and accountability
between the State and interested parties
by making information on the MAC and
BAC activities publicly available. The
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
finalized requirements aimed at
promoting transparency and
accountability also include a
requirement for States to create and
publicly post an annual report
summarizing the MAC and BAC
activities.
We note that some commenters
expressed general support for all of the
provisions in section II.A. of this rule,
as well as for this rule in its entirety. In
response to commenters who supported
some, but not all, of the policies and
regulations we proposed in the
proposed rule, we are clarifying and
emphasizing our intent that each final
policy and regulation is distinct and
severable to the extent it does not rely
on another final policy or regulation
that we proposed.
While the provisions in section II.A.
of this final rule are intended to present
a comprehensive approach to
implementing Medicaid Advisory
Committees and Beneficiary Advisory
Councils, and these provisions
complement the goals expressed and
policies and regulations being finalized
in sections II.B. (Home and CommunityBased Services) and
II.C.(Documentation of Access to Care
and Service Payment Rates) of this final
rule, we intend that each of them is a
distinct, severable provision, as
finalized. Unless otherwise noted in this
rule, each policy and regulation being
finalized under this section II.A is
distinct and severable from other final
policies and regulations being finalized
in this section or in sections II.B. or II.C
of this final rule, as well as from rules
and regulations currently in effect.
Consistent with our previous
discussion earlier in section II. of this
final rule regarding severability, we are
clarifying and emphasizing our intent
that if any provision of this final rule is
held to be invalid or unenforceable by
its terms, or as applied to any person or
circumstance, or stayed pending further
State action, it shall be severable from
this final rule, and from rules and
regulations currently in effect, and not
affect the remainder thereof or the
application of the provision to other
persons not similarly situated or to
other, dissimilar circumstances. For
example, we intend that the policies
and regulations we are finalizing related
to the State Plan requirement (section
II.A.2 of this final rule) are distinct and
severable from the policies and
regulations we are finalizing related to
the MAC Membership and Composition
requirement and the Annual Report
requirement (sections II.A.4 and II.A.9
of this final rule, which we further
intend are severable from each other).
PO 00000
Frm 00011
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40551
1. Basis and Purpose (§ 431.12(a))
Under § 431.12 of the current
regulation, paragraph (a) Basis and
Purpose, sets forth a State plan
requirement for the establishment of a
committee (Medical Care Advisory
Committee) to advise the Medicaid
agency about health and medical care
services. In the proposed rule, we
proposed to amend the title of § 431.12
and paragraph (a) to update the name of
the existing MCAC to the Medicaid
Advisory Committee (MAC), and to add
the requirement for States to establish
and operate a dedicated advisory
council comprised of Medicaid
beneficiaries, the Beneficiary Advisory
Group. In this final rule, we are
changing the name from the Beneficiary
Advisory Group to the Beneficiary
Advisory Committee (BAC).
In the proposed rule, we stated that
our goal was for the committee and its
corresponding advisory council to serve
in an advisory role to the State on issues
related to health and medical services,
as the MCAC did, as well as on other
matters related to policy development
and to the effective administration of
the Medicaid program consistent with
the language of section 1902(a)(4)(B) of
the Act, which requires a State plan to
meaningfully engage Medicaid
beneficiaries and other low-income
people in the administration of the
plan.38 The Medicaid program covers
medical services and is increasingly also
covering services designed to address
beneficiaries’ social determinants of
health and their health-related social
needs more generally. Therefore, we
believe that the MAC should discuss
topics directly related to covered
services as well as the potential need for
the coverage of additional services that
may be necessary to ensure that
beneficiaries are able to meaningfully
access these services. Expanding the
scope of the current committee is
necessary in order to align with the
expanding scope of the Medicaid
program. These changes are consistent
with section 1902(a)(4)(B) of the Act
because the MAC creates a formalized
way for interested parties and
beneficiary representatives to provide
feedback to the State about issues
related to the Medicaid program and the
services it covers. The feedback from the
MAC and BAC will be used by the State
to ensure that the program operates
efficiently and as it was designed to
operate.
We received public comments on
these proposals. The following is a
38 Medicaid Program; Ensuring Access to
Medicaid Services,’’ (88 FR 27967).
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
40552
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
summary of the comments we received
and our responses.
Comment: We received a large
number of comments in support of the
proposed changes to the MCAC
regulation and structure as proposed in
§ 431.12(a). The commenters expressed
broad support for creation of the dual
structure of the MAC and BAC. They
noted that the creation of the BAC was
a positive and welcome step to better
capturing the lived experiences of
people enrolled in Medicaid.
Commenters also noted that having the
BAC advise the MAC on policy
development was a way to prioritize
beneficiaries’ perspectives. Commenters
noted that the improvements proposed
to the existing MCAC structure had the
potential to be transformative and make
the State more attuned to the needs and
priorities of Medicaid beneficiaries.
Response: We thank commenters for
their support of our overhaul of the
MCAC. We are finalizing as proposed,
with minor technical changes, the
creation of the MAC and BAC.
Comment: We also received
comments in opposition to the creation
of a BAC. Generally, opposing
commenters wanted CMS to be less
prescriptive and allow States to engage
Medicaid beneficiaries in other ways
(for example, using existing State
committees to serve as the BAC,
conducting focus groups, and fielding
surveys). Other commenters noted that
States would need resources to
implement the BAC, citing the
additional administrative burden and
layering of meetings for certain
members.
Response: We encourage States to
engage with their Medicaid beneficiaries
in a variety of ways, and we understand
that many States may already operate
groups or committees comprised of
Medicaid beneficiaries. However,
having a formalized structure to work
directly with Medicaid beneficiaries
will help to ensure a level and manner
of engagement across all State programs.
For the commenters concerned with the
BAC adding administrative burden, we
acknowledge that implementing these
changes will create administrative
burden. We discuss administrative
burden to States in the Regulatory
Impact Analysis section of this rule.
However, in an effort to minimize
administrative burden for States, we
note that existing committees can be
used to fulfill the BAC requirement as
long as the committees meet the
membership requirements specified in
§ 431.12(e). Later in this section, we also
note that States do not have to use the
same BAC members to join all MAC
meetings. While it may not be an ideal
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
way to create long-term consistency of
the MAC membership, States could, in
an effort to lessen the time commitment
of BAC members, choose to rotate which
members attend the quarterly MAC
meetings.
Comment: We received several
comments asking for the BAG name to
be changed. The commenters cited
potentially negative connotations that
could be associated with the acronym
BAG. Additionally, a few commenters
requested that States with existing
beneficiary groups be able to maintain
their names.
Response: We have changed the name
of the BAG to the BAC, as noted earlier
in this final rule. For commenters
concerned with duplicative efforts, we
noted in the proposed rule that States
with existing BAC-like committees can
use those committees to fulfil the BAC
requirement as long as they meet the
membership requirements specified
§ 431.12(e). States are not required to
change their existing group names to
match the BAC name as long as
interested parties understand what
existing group or committee is being
used to fulfill regulatory requirement of
the BAC. To clarify this for interested
parties, States must note in their
publicly posted by-laws (§ 431.12 (f)(1))
that the group is being used to fulfill the
regulatory requirements of § 431.12.
Comment: Several commenters asked
CMS to clarify the role of the MAC and
BAC, citing that in the proposals, the
language varies from ‘‘advisory’’ to
‘‘providing feedback.’’ Other
commenters expressed that they do not
want the MAC and BACs to be approval
bodies that lack the ability to make
decisions.
Response: The primary role of the
MAC and BAC is to advise the State
Medicaid agency on policy development
and on matters related to the effective
administration of the Medicaid program.
It is our intention that the MAC and
BAC serve in an advisory capacity to the
State. However, serving in an advisory
capacity does not preclude the MAC
and BAC members from sharing
experiential feedback. We did not
propose to give the MAC or BAC a
decision-making role because we want
to allow States the freedom to
administer their Medicaid programs in
the manner they see fit, but be guided
by these two entities’ recommendations
and experiences with the Medicaid
program.
Comment: We received a comment
asking CMS to require that the MAC and
BAC not be used to take the place of a
State’s tribal consultation requirements.
Response: We do not anticipate that
the MAC or BAC could be used to fulfill
PO 00000
Frm 00012
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
tribal consultation requirements under
section 1902(a)(73) of the Act. For States
with one or more Indian Health
Programs or Urban Indian Organizations
that furnish health care services, the
State must consult with such Programs
and Organizations on a regular, ongoing
basis. While the statute specifically
permits representatives of such
Programs and Organizations to be
included on the MCAC [now known as
the MAC], this alone would not meet
the requirement to consult on any State
plan amendments (SPAs), waiver
requests, and proposals for
demonstration projects likely to have a
direct effect on Indians, Indian Health
Programs, or Urban Indian
Organizations prior to submission.
Comment: We received a few
comments requesting that CMS conduct
a study to assess which States already
have MCACs or BACs to ensure they are
no duplicative efforts. Another
commenter asked CMS to solicit
feedback from existing MCAC members
to see how it can be improved before
making beneficiary groups a
requirement.
Response: We clarify that MCACs are
currently required of all States so
conducting an assessment to see which
States already have MCACs would not
necessarily result in a lot of new
information. However, we agree that
understanding which States already
have BAC-like committees in place
would be helpful. In fact, when
developing the proposed rule, we
engaged with interested parties, both
from State Medicaid agencies and the
wider Medicaid community, to
determine what improvements were
needed to the MCACs to allow States
and beneficiaries to obtain the most
benefit from their work. For commenters
concerned with duplicative BAC
activities, we note again that States with
an existing beneficiary group or
beneficiary committee that meets the
requirement of the BAC, as finalized in
this rule at § 431.12(e), do not need to
set up a second beneficiary committee.
Comment: We received a few
comments asking CMS to require the
MAC and BAC to coordinate with other
State advisory committees.
Response: States will vary in how
they run their advisory committees.
Some States may choose to coordinate
across their different advisory
committees, while other States may
have reasons for keeping their advisory
committees and their processes
separate. We do not want to add more
administrative burden by adding a
requirement to § 431.12 for States to
coordinate across State advisory
committees. However, if coordinating
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
across these committees in some
manner would be advantageous for the
Medicaid program, then we encourage
the State to do so.
After consideration of public
comments, we are finalizing § 431.12(a)
as proposed with the following change:
Language modifications to reflect the
new name of the ‘‘Beneficiary Advisory
Council (BAC).’’
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
2. State Plan Requirement (§ 431.12(b))
Under § 431.12 of the current
regulation, paragraph (b) State Plan
Requirement, calls for a State plan to
provide for a MCAC to advise the
Medicaid agency director about health
and medical care services.
We proposed conforming updates to
paragraph (b) regarding the State plan
requirements, to reflect the addition of
the BAC and the expanded scope.
The Interested Parties Advisory
Group, described in a later section of
this final rule (Interested Parties
Advisory Group § 447.203(b)(6)), is
designed to advise States on rate setting
and other matters for certain HCBS and
is not related to the MAC or BAC
specified here. In section II.C.2.c. of this
final rule, under § 447.203(b)(6), we
explain that States will have the option
to use its MAC and BAC to provide
recommendations for payment rates,
thereby satisfying the requirements of
§ 447.203(b)(6). However, the MAC and
BAC requirements finalized here are
wholly separate from the Interested
Parties Advisory Group.
We did not receive public comments
on § 431.12(b). However, we are making
one conforming edit to this paragraph
based on a language change identified in
§ 431.12(c) to replace the term State
Medicaid Director. We are finalizing as
proposed with the following changes:
• Language modifications to reflect
the new name of the ‘‘Beneficiary
Advisory Council (BAC).’’
• Replacing the term Medicaid
Agency Director with the term, ‘‘director
of the single State Agency for the
Medicaid program.’’
3. Selection of Members (§ 431.12(c))
Under § 431.12 of the current
regulation, paragraph (c) Appointment
of members, the agency director, or a
higher State authority, must appoint
members to the advisory committee on
a rotating and continuous basis.
We proposed to revise paragraph (c)
to specify that the members of the MAC
and BAC must be appointed by the
agency director or a higher State
authority on a rotating and continuous
basis. We also proposed to require the
State to create a process for the
recruitment and appointment of
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
members of the MAC and BAC.
Additionally, we proposed to require
the State to post this information on the
State’s website. As discussed in the
proposed rule,39 the website page where
this information is located would be
required to be easily accessible by the
public. These proposed updates align
with how some States’ existing MCACs
are already run, which will facilitate the
transition of these MCACs into MAC/
BACs. Additionally, the proposed
changes are designed to provide
additional details to support States’
operation of the MAC and BAC. Further,
we believe these proposed updates will
facilitate transparency, improving the
current regulations, which did not
mention nor promote transparency of
information related to the MCAC with
the public. We also believe that
transparency of information can lead to
enhanced accountability on the part of
the State in making its MAC and BAC
as effective as possible.
We received public comments on
these proposals. The following is a
summary of the comments we received
and our responses.
Comment: We received several
comments regarding the terms used to
describe who should be given the
authority to appoint members to the
MAC and BAC. Many commenters
supported the proposal of having the
State Medicaid Director appoint the
members. A few commenters suggested
that we make clarifications to the
proposed regulation language so that
only the State Medicaid Director and
not ‘‘a higher State authority’’ is
referenced, since the work of the MAC
and BAC is to advise the State Medicaid
Director. Others noted that the correct
term to use in the regulation when
referring to the State Medicaid Director
is the director of the single State agency
for the Medicaid program. There was
another category of commenters that did
not believe the authority to select MAC
and BAC members should sit with
either the State Medicaid Director or a
higher State Authority. These
commenters instead stated it would be
more equitable if prospective MAC and
BAC members were selected by an
outside company, a computer, at
random, or by a lottery system. They
noted that in their experiences
sometimes parents or family members
are excluded from selection processes.
Finally, other commenters noted that
the term ‘‘appointed’’ implied that the
State did not use any kind of a
‘‘selection process’’ to choose its MAC
and BAC members. These commenters
39 Medicaid Program; Ensuring Access to
Medicaid Services,’’ (88 FR 27960, 27968).
PO 00000
Frm 00013
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40553
may have felt that the term ‘‘appoint’’
means that the State can simply pick
whomever it wants to serve as a member
rather than ‘‘selecting’’ members from a
pool of people who submitted
applications to serve as MAC or BAC
members.
Response: We appreciate the
comments provided on this section and
acknowledge the complicated work that
comes with selecting MAC and BAC
members. Since the MAC and BAC
serve in an advisory role to the
Medicaid program, we believe strongly
that the authority to select should lie
with the director of the State Medicaid
agency. We know that Medicaid
agencies’ names may vary from State to
State, and thus, agree that language in
the regulation can be changed to more
clearly reflect a more commonly used
term for the Medicaid agency (that is,
the single State Agency for the Medicaid
Program). For commenters that
expressed concern that parents or family
members are excluded from the
selection processes, we note that the
BAC regulations require both Medicaid
beneficiaries and individuals with
direct experience supporting Medicaid
beneficiaries, such as family members to
be selected. Finally, we agree that the
word ‘‘appoint’’ in the proposed rule
does not accurately reflect the intention
of the regulation and could be
misinterpreted to mean that the State
did not use a selection process where
interested parties submit an application
and then the State reviews those
applications before selecting its MAC
and BAC members. Based on the
comments we received, we now
understand that the term ‘‘appoint’’ can
be taken to mean that a selection
process did not occur. We want to avoid
any confusion that the requirements are
asking the State to appoint members
without using a selection process,
which was not our intention. For clarity,
we are also amending the regulatory
language in § 431.12(c) to now state that
the ‘‘director of the single State Agency
for the Medicaid program,’’ must
‘‘select’’ members for the MAC and
BAC.
Comment: We received comments on
the proposed changes to § 431.12(c)
related to term limits of the MAC and
BAC members. The commenters were
generally divided across wanting CMS
to require States to have set term limits
for members, not wanting any term
limits, and not wanting short term
limits. Commenters who expressed
support for set term limits noted that
setting term limits ensured that new
perspectives would be added on a
regular basis while others noted that
setting term limits allowed members to
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
40554
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
share recommendations or constructive
criticism without fear of retaliation. The
commenters who opposed term limits
noted that finding people with Medicaid
expertise may be difficult in some
geographic areas and, as a result, the
State would benefit from having the
same members serve without term
limits. Other commenters noted that it
takes time for members to build their
expertise and understanding of the
Medicaid program and setting short
term limits may not take into account
the time needed to accumulate enough
knowledge to contribute fully to the
MAC and BAC. These commenters
suggested term limits with lengths
ranging from 2 to 6 years.
Response: States have the ability to
determine the tenure of members, as
States are best situated to assess their
members’ ability to participate in and
meaningfully contribute to the MAC and
BAC and for what length of time. In the
proposed rule, we described the
requirement for States to determine the
length of terms for committee and
council members. For clarity, we are
amending the regulatory language in
§ 431.12(c) to reflect this information as
well, to now state ‘‘. . . members to the
MAC and BAC for a term of a length
determined by the State, which may not
be followed immediately by a
consecutive term for the same member,
on a rotating and continuous basis.’’ We
proposed this type of term because we
believe there is value in ensuring new
voices and perspectives are introduced
to the committee and council. We
further clarify that once a MAC or BAC
member’s term has been completed, the
State will select a new member, thus
ensuring that MAC and BAC
memberships rotate continuously.
Setting memberships as continuously
rotating means that the State must seek
to recruit members to fill open seats on
the MAC and BAC on an ongoing basis.
States can also select members to serve
multiple non-consecutive terms.
After consideration of public
comments, we are finalizing § 431.12(c)
with the following changes:
• Language modifications to reflect
the new name of the BAC.
• Replacing the term agency director
or higher authority with the term,
‘‘director of the single State Agency for
the Medicaid program.’’
• Replacing the word ‘‘appoint’’ with
‘‘select’’ in various places.
• Adding language to the regulation
to reflect that ‘‘the term of length for
MAC and BAC members will be term of
a length determined by the State, which
may not be followed immediately by a
consecutive term for the same member,
on a rotating and continuous basis.’’
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
4. MAC Membership and Composition
(§ 431.12(d))
Under § 431.12 of the current
regulation, paragraph (d), Committee
Membership, States are required to
select three types of committee
members: (1) Board-certified physicians
and other representatives of the health
professions who are familiar with the
medical needs of low-income
population groups and with the
resources available and required for
their care; (2) Members of consumers’
groups, including Medicaid
beneficiaries, and consumer
organizations such as labor unions,
cooperatives, consumer-sponsored
prepaid group practice plans, and
others; and (3) the director of the public
welfare department or the public health
department, whichever does not head
the Medicaid agency.
In the proposed rule, paragraph (d) of
§ 431.12, MAC membership and
composition, we proposed in (d)(1) to
require that a minimum of 25 percent of
the MAC must be individuals with lived
Medicaid beneficiary experience from
the BAC. The BAC, which is defined
later in § 431.12(e), is comprised of
people who: (1) are currently or have
been Medicaid beneficiaries, and (2)
individuals with direct experience
supporting Medicaid beneficiaries
(family members or caregivers of those
enrolled in Medicaid).
We proposed 25 percent as the
minimum threshold requirement for
(d)(1) to reflect the importance of
including the beneficiary perspective in
the administration of the Medicaid
program and to ensure that the
beneficiary perspective has meaningful
representation in the feedback provided
by the MAC. We did not propose a
higher percentage because we
acknowledge that States will benefit
from a MAC that includes
representation from a diverse set of
interested parties who work in areas
related to Medicaid but are not
beneficiaries, their family members, or
their caregivers.
In terms of the required
representation from the remaining MAC
members, as specified in the proposed
rule, paragraph (d)(2), we proposed that
a State must include at least one from
each category: (A) State or local
consumer advocacy groups or other
community-based organizations that
represent the interests of, or provide
direct service, to Medicaid beneficiaries;
(B) clinical providers or administrators
who are familiar with the health and
social needs of Medicaid beneficiaries
and with the resources available and
required for their care; (C) participating
PO 00000
Frm 00014
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
Medicaid managed care organizations or
the State health plan association
representing such organizations, as
applicable; and (D) other State agencies
serving Medicaid beneficiaries, as exofficio members.
We believe that advisory committees
and councils can be most effective when
they represent a wide range of
perspectives and experiences. Since we
know that each State environment is
different, we aimed to provide the State
with discretion on how large the MAC
and BAC should be. In the proposed
changes we did, however, specify the
types of categories of Committee
members that can best reflect the needs
of a Medicaid program. We believe that
diversely populated MACs and BACs
can provide States with access to a
broad range of perspectives, and
importantly, beneficiaries’ perspective,
which can positively impact the
administration of the Medicaid program.
This approach is consistent with the
language of section 1902(a)(4)(B) of the
Act, which requires a State plan to
meaningfully engage Medicaid
beneficiaries and other low-income
people in the administration of the plan.
The changes in membership we
proposed and are finalizing will support
States to set up MACs that align with
section 1902(a)(4)(B) since States will
now have to select the membership
composition to reflect the community
members who represent the interests of
Medicaid beneficiaries. The State also
benefits from having a way to hear how
the Medicaid program can be responsive
to its beneficiaries’ and the wider
Medicaid community’s needs.
We also noted in the proposed rule
that we encourage States to take into
consideration, as part of their member
selection process, the demographics of
the Medicaid population in their State.
Keeping diverse representation in mind
as a goal for the MAC membership can
be a way for States to help ensure that
specific populations and those receiving
critically important services are
appropriately represented on the MAC.
For example, in making MAC
membership selections, the State may
want to balance the representation of
the MAC according to geographic areas
of the State with the demographics and
health care needs of the Medicaid
program of the State. The State will
want to consider geographical diversity
(for example, urban and rural areas)
when making its membership
selections. We noted in the proposed
rule, that a State could also consider
demographic representation of its
membership by including members
representing or serving Medicaid
beneficiaries who receive services in the
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
following categories: (1) pediatric health
care; (2) behavioral health services; (3)
preventive care and reproductive health
services; (4) health or service issues
pertaining specifically to people over
age 65; and (5) health or service issues
pertaining specifically to people with
disabilities. By offering these
considerations, we seek to support
States in their efforts to eliminate
differences in health care access and
outcomes experienced by diverse
populations enrolled in Medicaid. We
intend that the MAC and the BAC can
support several of the priorities for
operationalizing health equity across
CMS programs as outlined in the CMS
Framework for Health Equity (2022–
2032) and the HHS Equity Action Plan
which is consistent with E.O. 13985,
which calls for advancing equity for
underserved communities.
Rather than prescribing specific
percentages for the other (non-BAC)
categories in the proposed rule, we only
required representation from each
category as part of the MAC. The
specific percentage of each of category
(other than the BAC members) relative
to the whole committee can be
determined by each State. This
approach will provide States with the
flexibility to determine how to best
represent the unique landscape of each
State’s Medicaid program. We solicited
comment on what should be the
minimum percentage requirement that
MAC members be current/past Medicaid
beneficiaries or individuals with direct
experience supporting Medicaid
beneficiaries (such as family members
or caregivers of those enrolled in
Medicaid). In addition to hearing
directly from beneficiaries, the State can
gain insights into how to effectively
administer its program from other
members of the Medicaid community.
States will determine which types of
providers to include under the clinical
providers or administrators category,
and we recommend they consider a
wide range of providers or
administrators that are experienced with
the Medicaid program including, but
not limited to: (1) primary care
providers (internal or family medicine
physicians or nurse practitioners or
physician assistants that practice
primary care); (2) behavioral health
providers (that is, mental health and
substance use disorder providers); (3)
reproductive health service providers,
including maternal health providers; (4)
pediatric providers; (5) dental and oral
health providers; (6) community health,
rural health clinic or Federally
Qualified Health Center (FQHC)
administrators; (7) individuals
providing long-term care services and
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
supports; and (8) direct care workers 40
who can be individuals with direct
experience supporting Medicaid
beneficiaries (such as family members
or caregivers).
We have also identified managed care
plans, including Primary Care Case
Management (PCCM) entities and
Primary Care Case Managers (PCCMs),41
as an important contributor to the MAC,
but we acknowledge that not all States
have managed care delivery systems.
We know many Medicaid managed care
plans administer similar committees
and thus allow for States to tailor
managed care plan representation based
on its delivery system and the
experience and expertise of managed
care plans in the State. For example,
States, if applicable, can fulfill this
category with only one or with multiple
managed care plans operating in the
State. In addition, we also give States
the flexibility to meet the managed care
plan representation requirements with
either participating Medicaid managed
care plans or a health plan association
representing more than one such
organization.
The language in paragraph (d)(2)(D)
broadens the previous MCAC
requirement to allow for additional
types of representatives from other State
agencies to be on the committee.
Specifically, the previous MCAC
regulation requires membership by ‘‘the
director of the public welfare
department or the public health
department, whichever does not head
40 As finalized in § 441.302(k) of this final rule,
CMS defines as Direct care worker as any of the
following individuals who may be employed by a
Medicaid provider, State agency, or third party;
contracted with a Medicaid provider, State agency,
or third party; or delivering services under a selfdirected service model: (A) A registered nurse,
licensed practical nurse, nurse practitioner, or
clinical nurse specialist who provides nursing
services to Medicaid beneficiaries receiving home
and community-based services available under this
subpart; (B) A licensed or certified nursing assistant
who provides such services under the supervision
of a registered nurse, licensed practical nurse, nurse
practitioner, or clinical nurse specialist; (C) A direct
support professional; (D) A personal care attendant;
(E) A home health aide; or (F) Other individuals
who are paid to provide services to address
activities of daily living or instrumental activities
of daily living, behavioral supports, employment
supports, or other services to promote community
integration directly to Medicaid beneficiaries
receiving home and community-based services
available under this subpart, including nurses and
other staff providing clinical supervision.
41 Throughout this document, the use of the term
‘‘managed care plan’’ includes managed care
organizations (MCOs), prepaid inpatient health
plans (PIHPs), and prepaid ambulatory health plans
(PAHPs) [as defined in 42 CFR 438.2] and is used
only when the provision under discussion applies
to all three arrangements. An explicit reference is
used in the preamble if the provision applies to
primary care case managers (PCCMs) or primary
care case management entities (PCCM entities).
PO 00000
Frm 00015
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40555
the Medicaid agency.’’ In the proposed
rule, we expanded the requirement for
external agency representation to be
broader than the welfare or public
health department, which would give
States more flexibility in representing
the Medicaid program’s interests based
on States’ unique circumstances and
organizational structure. States can
work with sister State agencies to
determine who should participate in the
MAC (for example, foster care agency,
mental health agency, department of
public health). We also proposed that
these representatives be part of the
committee as ex-officio members,
meaning that they hold the position
because they work for the relevant State
agency. In finalizing the proposals, we
reviewed this requirement closer. While
we believe it will be essential to have
these State-interested parties present for
program coordination and informationsharing, we intended to reflect in the
proposed rule that the formal
representation of the MAC should be
comprised of beneficiaries, advocates,
community organizations, and providers
that serve Medicaid beneficiaries.
Therefore, we clarify in this final rule
that while these ex-officio members will
sit on the MAC, they will not be voting
members of the MAC. Therefore, on
matters that the MAC decides by vote,
including but not necessarily limited to
finalizing the MAC’s recommendations
to the State, the ex-officio members will
not participate in voting.
We received public comments on
these proposals. The following is a
summary of the comments we received
and our responses.
Comment: We received many
comments about the proposed
requirement of having some BAC
members serving on the MAC.
Commenters either agreed with the
importance of having a subset of
Medicaid beneficiaries serve on both the
BAC and the MAC, or they noted that
having a subset of BAC members on
both committees could lead to undue
burden for these members based on the
number of meetings they would have to
attend. One commenter suggested a
phased-in approach where the BAC
members meet only as the BAC for a
time (for example, a year) and then
transition to serving on the MAC only.
Response: We understand the
concerns raised by the commenters
about putting undue burden on a subset
of BAC members. We believe it is vital
for the success of both the BAC and
MAC that there is a point of integration
via the crossover membership
requirement since this is the way to
ensure that the Medicaid beneficiary
perspective is included in both groups.
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
40556
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
We created this crossover requirement
to reflect the importance of including
the beneficiary perspective in the
administration of the Medicaid program
and to ensure that the beneficiary
perspective has meaningful
representation in the feedback provided
by the MAC. For commenters that are
concerned with undue burden of having
a subset of BAC members also attend
MAC meetings, in § 431.12(f)(3), we
note that MACs and BACs are only
required to meet once per quarter. While
the regulation does not state that the
subset of BAC members that join each
MAC meeting has to be the same, we
recognize that it would be more
effective to have consistency in the BAC
members that attend the MAC meetings
in many cases. However, if States or the
BAC are concerned with overburdening
its BAC members, a potentially less
efficient but workable alternative could
be to rotate which BAC members attend
the MAC in an effort to further reduce
the number of meetings attended for a
given BAC member. Nevertheless, the
suggestion of having a member
transition from solely being on the BAC
to solely being on the MAC might not
always promote the crossover concept
we are seeking with the requirement
that the MAC membership consist of 10
to 25 percent members from the BAC,
since we are striving for inclusion of the
Medicaid beneficiary perspective in
both groups via the BAC members.
Comment: In response to our
solicitation about having 25 percent as
the minimum threshold of BAC
membership crossover on the MAC, the
majority of the commenters stated that
a minimum 25 percent was the
appropriate amount of crossover
members. They noted that 25 percent
crossover membership would help to
center and amplify beneficiary voices on
the MAC. A few commenters stated that
the percentage should be lower (for
example 10 or 15 percent). These
commenters cited several reasons why
having a lower threshold number would
be better. Some commenters noted that
having a smaller number of BAC
members would allow States to better
support or train their members so they
could fully participate in the MAC.
Other commenters stated that having a
smaller number of BAC members could
lessen the burden on States of finding
and recruiting members to participate.
Another group of commenters wanted
the percentage of BAC crossover to be
higher than 25 percent (for example 33,
50, 51, or 75 percent). These
commenters sought a higher BAC
crossover in order to: safeguard against
marginalization of beneficiary members
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
on the MAC; amplify diverse voices
through a higher crossover number; and
rectify any power imbalances that may
exist. There were also a few commenters
who noted that States should have the
ability to determine their own
percentages for the BAC crossover.
Finally, we received comments asking
CMS to consider allowing States to use
a graduated approach to reach the 25
percent minimum requirement of BAC
crossover on the MAC.
Response: We thank the commenters
who agreed with our proposed
threshold of the requirement for a
minimum of 25 percent BAC crossover
on the MAC. For commenters who
thought the percentage should be lower,
we understand States may face
challenges with finding, recruiting, and
training beneficiary members to serve
on the BAC. To account for these
challenges, we are extending the
timeframe for implementation of this
requirement in this final rule so that
States have 2 years to achieve the 25
percent minimum threshold
requirement of MAC members that come
from the BAC. Instead of the 25 percent
minimum threshold coming into effect
right away, we are revising this final
rule to provide in § 431.12(d)(1) that, for
the period from July 9, 2024 through
July 9, 2025, 10 percent of the MAC
members must come from the BAC; for
the period from July 10, 2025 through
July 9, 2026 20 percent of MAC
members must come from the BAC; and
thereafter, 25 percent of MAC members
must come from the BAC.
For commenters who expressed the
need for a percentage higher than 25 for
the BAC member crossover, we note that
the policy we proposed and are
finalizing establishes a minimum
percentage threshold for States to meet.
If a State so chooses, it can select a
percentage higher than the minimum of
25 percent, provided the MAC
membership also satisfies the
requirements of § 431.12(d)(2) of this
final rule. For commenters who raised
the issue of providing training for BAC
members, we have a comment/response
on this topic under § 431.12(h)(3).
Comment: The majority of comments
received on § 431.12(d) were about
§ 431.12(d)(2), MAC composition
categories. We received comments that
fell into four groups. The first group of
commenters shared their broad support
for the MAC committee member
categories that we proposed and also
urged CMS to ensure that States select
members that represented the Medicaid
community and who were
geographically as well as racially/
ethnically diverse. The second group of
commenters asked for the MAC to
PO 00000
Frm 00016
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
include representation from members
who would qualify for the BAC (for
example, Medicaid beneficiaries, their
families, and caregivers). It is unclear
from the comments if these commenters
were asking for an additional group of
Medicaid beneficiaries be added to the
MAC (in addition to the 25 percent of
MAC we proposed to require be from
the BAC) or if they did not understand
that the MAC composition already
includes a category which accounts for
this category of members. The third
group of commenters asked that specific
types of interested parties be required to
be represented on the MAC categories
(for example, specific provider types,
unions, HCBS provider agencies,
hospitals, protection and advocacy
programs, legal professionals, and
medical billing professionals). The
fourth group of commenters suggested
ideas for types of MAC members that
States could use to meet categories
specified in the proposed rule (for
example add a State Ombudsman to the
ex-officio category). We also received a
few suggestions to add specific member
categories (for example, a member
category for FFS members, a member
category for people with behavioral
health conditions, and a youth member
category).
Response: We appreciate the wide
range of comments that were submitted
about the MAC membership
composition. We developed the MAC
composition framework in the proposed
rule by creating broad membership
categories that captured a range of
interested parties who are members of
the Medicaid community while giving
States as much flexibility as possible to
build their MACs in ways that account
for the unique features of the State’s
environment. All of the membership
categories, as currently written, are
broad enough to accommodate the types
of members described by the
commenters. For example, a State
Ombudsman can be used to fulfil the
State agency category; a State with both
managed care and FFS could chose to
select two members (one for each type
of delivery system) for the MAC; a
person with behavioral health
condition(s) could be suitable for
multiple categories depending on
whether they are a Medicaid beneficiary
(current or former) or represent a
consumer advocacy or communitybased organization. Finally, for the
commenter asking for a specific youth
member category, we will note that
there are no Federal requirements or
limitations concerning youth
participation on the MAC or BAC, and
this is in the State’s discretion. The
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
State could select a youth member to
fulfill a MAC or BAC member category
as long as that person meets the
requirements of that membership
category.
We also want to clarify for
commenters that Medicaid beneficiaries,
their families, and caregivers have their
own MAC category in the regulation,
because the BAC is listed in the final
regulation as one of the categories of
MAC members at § 431.12(d)(1).
After consideration of public
comments, for § 431.12(d), we are
finalizing as proposed with:
• Language modifications to reflect
the new name of the BAC;
• Replacing the language at § 431.12
(d)(1) to clarify the timeframe for States
to reach 25 percent of MAC members
coming from the BAC. The new
sentence will now read, ‘‘For the period
from July 9, 2024 through July 9, 2025,
10 percent of the MAC members must
come from the BAC; for the period from
July 10, 2025 through July 10, 2026 20
percent of MAC members must come
from the BAC; and thereafter, 25 percent
of MAC members must come from the
BAC.’’
• Language modifications to § 431.12
(d)(2)(C) to replace ‘‘managed care plan’’
with ‘‘MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs, PCCM
entities or PCCMs as defined in
§ 438.2’’; and
• Adding the word ‘‘non-voting’’ to
ex-officio members at the end of
§ 431.12 (d)(2)(D).
5. Beneficiary Advisory Council
(§ 431.12(e))
The current requirements governing
MCACs require the presence of
beneficiaries in committee membership
but do little else to ensure their
contributions are considered or their
voices heard. For example, in the
current regulations of § 431.12,
paragraph (e) Committee participation,
only briefly mentions the participation
of beneficiary members. The current
requirement provides little guidance
about how to approach the participation
of beneficiary members on the
committee.
We proposed to add new paragraph
§ 431.12(e). The proposed rule noted
that in the new paragraph, (e)
Beneficiary Advisory Council, States
would be required to create a BAC, a
dedicated Beneficiary Advisory Council,
that will meet separately from the MAC
on a regular basis and in advance of
each MAC meeting.
Specifically, at new paragraph (e)(1),
we proposed to require that the MAC
members described in paragraph (d)(1)
must also be members of the BAC. This
requirement will facilitate the bi-
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
directional communication essential to
effective beneficiary engagement and
allow for meaningful representation of
diverse voices across the MAC and BAC.
In paragraph (e)(2), we proposed to
require that the BAC meetings occur in
advance of each MAC meeting to ensure
BAC member preparation for each MAC
discussion. BAC meetings will also be
subject to requirements in paragraph
(f)(5), described later in this section, that
the BAC meetings must occur virtually,
in-person, or through a hybrid option to
maximize member attendance. We plan
to expound on best practices for
engaging beneficiary participation in
committees like the MAC in a future
toolkit.
We proposed the addition of the BAC
because we believe that it will result in
providing States with increased access
to beneficiary perspectives. The creation
of a separate beneficiary-only advisory
council also aligns with what we have
learned from multiple interviews with
State Medicaid agencies and other
Medicaid interested parties (for
example, Medicaid researchers, former
Medicaid officials) conducted over the
course of 2022 on the operation of the
existing MCACs. These interested
parties described the importance of
having a comfortable, supportive, and
trusting environment that facilitates
beneficiaries’ ability to speak freely on
matters most important to them.
Further, we believe that the crossover
structure for the MAC and BAC
proposed in § 431.12(d) allows for the
beneficiary-only group to meet
separately while still having a formal
connection to the broader, over-arching
MAC. It is important the MAC members
can directly engage with the
beneficiaries and hear from their
experience. We noted earlier that some
States may already have highly effective
BAC-type councils operating as part of
their Medicaid program. These existing
councils may represent specific
constituencies such as children with
complex medical needs or older adults
or may be participants receiving
services under a specific waiver. In
these instances, States may use these
councils to satisfy the requirements of
this rule, as long as the pre-existing
BAC-type council membership includes
the type of members required in the
proposed paragraph of § 431.12(e).
We received public comments on
these proposals. The following is a
summary of the comments we received
and our responses.
Comment: We received many
comments in support of the BAC as
specified in the newly proposed
§ 431.12(e). Commenters noted that the
BAC would provide a necessary and
PO 00000
Frm 00017
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40557
less-intimidating venue where Medicaid
beneficiaries along with their families
and caregivers can share first-person
experiences and feedback to the State.
While many commenters stated the BAC
was needed and a welcomed
improvement, a few commenters
cautioned that States would need more
than just to set up a BAC; they will also
need to invest in creating opportunities
for meaningful engagement.
Response: We agree that the BAC
must be supported and used by the State
in ways that create opportunities for
BAC members to be actively involved
and have their contributions considered.
Comment: A few commenters asked
CMS to clarify how existing community
groups or advisory councils could be
used to satisfy the requirements of the
BAC. One commenter asked if the BAC
would meet a State’s inclusive
Community First Choice (CFC)
requirements.
Response: The proposed new
paragraph (e) requires that States form a
BAC, but notes that the State can use an
existing beneficiary group. Prior to
rulemaking, CMS spoke to several States
and researchers to understand how
States were implementing the MCAC
requirements. From the information
gathered, we know that many States
already have active Medicaid
beneficiary groups that could fill these
requirements and can function as their
BACs. In these instances, it is not our
intention to ask a State to create a
second Medicaid beneficiary group to
meet the BAC requirements. If a State
wants to use an existing group to satisfy
the BAC requirements, they will need to
ensure that the existing committee’s
membership meets the membership
requirements of the BAC and that the
existing committee’s bylaws are
developed or updated, and published, to
explain that the committee functions to
meet the BAC requirements.
Regarding the ability to use the BAC
to meet CFC requirements of the State,
CMS notes in the ‘‘Medicaid Program;
State Plan Home and Community-Based
Services, 5-Year Period for Waivers,
Provider Payment Reassignment, and
Home and Community-Based Setting
Requirements for Community
FirstChoice and Home and Community
Based Services (HCBS) Waivers’’ final
rule,42 that States may utilize existing
42 ‘‘Medicaid Program; State Plan Home and
Community-Based Services, 5-Year Period for
Waivers, Provider Payment Reassignment, and
Home and Community-Based Setting Requirements
for Community FirstChoice and Home and
Community Based Services (HCBS) Waivers https://
www.medicaid.gov/sites/default/files/2019-12/cfcfinal-settings.pdf,’’ (79 FR 2948, 2982).
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
40558
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
advisory bodies in the implementation
of CFC, as long as the statutory
requirements as specified in § 441.715
for the Development and
Implementation Council are met. We
acknowledge the benefits of the
Implementation Council coordinating
with related interested parties councils
and commissions and encourage States
to do so. States may also choose to
leverage these councils and/or include
members from these councils to meet
the requirements for CFC.
Comment: The majority of the
comments received related to the newly
proposed § 431.12(e) were commenters
providing recommendations on which
groups of people should also be
required to be included as BAC
members. We received a range of
suggestions such as: HCBS beneficiaries,
individuals with specific chronic
diseases and disabilities, individuals
using long term care services and
supports (LTSS), individuals who are
receiving perinatal health services,
individuals who have lived experience
with behavioral health conditions, and
Medicaid beneficiaries who are deaf,
hard of hearing, or deaf blind.
Commenters also requested that the
BAC members represent a cross-section
of Medicaid beneficiaries that can also
be regarded as demographically and
geographically diverse.
Response: We agree with commenters
that the States should select the types of
BAC members that can provide them
with representative views of the
experience of Medicaid beneficiaries in
their State. The regulatory language
provides States with the flexibility to
make those determinations based on the
characteristics of their individual State
Medicaid program. It can be challenging
to find beneficiaries available to serve
on a council, particularly if the
requirements of membership are very
specific. By keeping our regulations
broad for what types of beneficiaries
should be selected for the BAC, we seek
to ensure States are able to recruit
members with fewer challenges.
Comment: A few commenters asked
for CMS to clarify or further define a
few terms used in newly proposed
§ 431.12(e). Specifically, a couple of
commenters asked CMS to clarify the
phrase ‘‘individuals with direct care
experience supporting Medicaid
beneficiaries.’’ Another commenter
asked if CMS could define whether the
term ‘‘caregivers’’ included paid
caregivers.
Response: In the proposed and in this
final rule, we have described
individuals with direct experience
supporting Medicaid beneficiaries as
‘‘family members or caregivers of those
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
Comment: Some commenters asked
CMS to create a Federal-level BAC to
ensure consistency across States.
Response: A Federal-level BAC would
not further the goal of providing States
with beneficiary input into their
programs because it would not focus on
the particular features of each
individual State’s Medicaid program or
beneficiary and provider communities.
Such a group is beyond the scope of this
rulemaking.
After consideration of public
comments, we are finalizing new
§ 431.12(e) as proposed, with changes
to:
• Language modifications to reflect
the new name of the BAC;
• Adding language that caregivers on
the BAC can be ‘‘paid or unpaid.’’
Section 431.12 (e) will now state, ‘‘. . .
individuals who are currently or have
been Medicaid beneficiaries and
individuals with direct experience
supporting Medicaid beneficiaries
(family members and paid or unpaid
caregivers of those enrolled in
Medicaid) . . . .’’
• Deleting the phrase ‘‘. . . and
provide input to . . . .’’ Section
431.12(e) will now state ‘‘. . . to advise
the State regarding their experience
with the Medicaid program, on matters
of concern related to policy
development and matters related to the
effective administration of the Medicaid
program.’’
enrolled in Medicaid.’’ In the proposed
rule’s preamble,43 we state that
caregivers can be paid or unpaid
caregivers. To better clarify these
definitions, we are adding the words
‘‘paid or unpaid’’ before the word
caregiver to the proposed regulatory
language at new paragraph § 431.12(e)
so that the phrase reads, ‘‘. . .
individuals who are currently or have
been Medicaid beneficiaries and
individuals with direct experience
supporting Medicaid beneficiaries
(family members and paid or unpaid
caregivers of those enrolled in
Medicaid), to advise the State. . . .’’
Comment: As noted in an earlier
section, several commenters asked CMS
to clarify the role of the BAC, citing that
in the proposals, the language varies
from ‘‘advisory’’ to ‘‘providing
feedback.’’
Response: The primary role of the
BAC is to advise the State Medicaid
agency on policy development and on
matters related to the effective
administration of the Medicaid program.
To better clarify the BAC’s advisory
role, we are removing from the proposed
regulatory language at new paragraph
§ 431.12(e) the words and to ‘‘provide
input to.’’ The phrase now reads ‘‘. . .
to advise the State regarding their
experience with the Medicaid program,
on matters of concern related to policy
development and matters related to the
effective administration of the Medicaid
program.’’
Comment: A few commenters shared
suggestions related to the BAC meetings
described in new paragraph
§ 431.12(e)(2). One commenter asked
CMS to encourage States to hold BAC
and MAC meetings on the same day,
with the BAC meeting occurring first in
an effort to minimize travel. Other
commenters asked CMS for additional
meetings for the BAC to be required to
attend (for example, meetings with the
State Medicaid Director and meetings
with CMS regional administrators).
Response: The meeting structure
specified in the BAC proposal is focused
on the interplay between the BAC and
MAC meetings. In new paragraph
§ 431.12(e)(2), we are requiring that the
BAC meetings be held separate from the
MAC and in advance of the MAC, so
that the BAC members have the
opportunity to prepare and hold an
internal discussion among themselves.
Holding MAC and BAC meetings in the
same day could be in line with the
meeting requirements. States may wish
to hold additional BAC meetings with
other parties, as needed.
6. MAC and BAC Administration
(§ 431.12(f))
We proposed to add new paragraph
§ 431.12(f), MAC and BAC
administration, to provide an
administrative framework for the MAC
and BAC that ensures transparency and
a meaningful feedback loop to the
public and among the members of the
committee and council.44
Specifically, in new paragraph (f)(1),
we proposed that State agencies would
be required to develop and post publicly
on their website bylaws for governance
of the MAC and BAC, current lists of
MAC and BAC memberships, and past
meeting minutes for both the committee
and council. In paragraph (f)(2), we
proposed that State agencies would be
required to develop and post publicly a
process for MAC and BAC member
recruitment and selection along with a
process for the selection of MAC and
BAC leadership. In paragraph (f)(3), we
proposed that State agencies would be
required to develop, publicly post, and
implement a regular meeting schedule
for the MAC and BAC. The proposed
43 ‘‘Medicaid Program; Ensuring Access to
Medicaid Services,’’ (88 FR 27960, 27968).
44 ‘‘Medicaid Program; Ensuring Access to
Medicaid Services,’’ (88 FR 27960, 27920).
PO 00000
Frm 00018
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
requirement specified that the MAC and
BAC must each meet at least once per
quarter and hold off-cycle meetings as
needed. In paragraph (f)(4), we proposed
requiring that that at least two MAC
meetings per year must be opened to the
public. For the MAC meetings that are
open to the public, the meeting agenda
would be required to include a
dedicated time for public comment to be
heard by the MAC. None of the BAC
meetings were required to be open to
the public unless the State’s BAC
members decided otherwise. We also
proposed that the State ensure that the
public is provided adequate notice of
the date, location, and time of each
public MAC meeting and any public
BAC meeting at least 30 calendar days
in advance. We solicited comment on
this approach. In paragraph (f)(5), we
proposed that States would be required
to offer in-person, virtual, and hybrid
attendance options including, at a
minimum telephone dial-in options at
the MAC and BAC meetings for its
members to maximize member
participation at MAC and BAC
meetings. If the MAC or BAC meeting
was deemed open to the public, then the
State must offer at a minimum a
telephone dial-in option for members of
the public.
With respect to in-person meetings,
we proposed in paragraph (f)(6) that
States would be required to ensure that
meeting times and locations for MAC
and BAC meetings were selected to
maximize participant attendance, which
may vary by meeting. For example,
States may determine, by consulting
with their MAC and BAC members, that
holding meetings in various locations
throughout the State may result in better
attendance. In addition, States may ask
the committee and council members
about which times and days may be
more favorable than others and hold
meetings at those times accordingly. We
also proposed that States use the
publicly posted meeting minutes, which
lists attendance by members, as a way
to gauge which meeting times and
locations garner maximum participate
attendance.
Finally, in paragraph (f)(7), we
proposed that State agencies were
required to facilitate participation of
beneficiaries by ensuring that meetings
are accessible to people with
disabilities, that reasonable
modifications are provided when
necessary to ensure access and enable
meaningful participation, that
communication with individuals with
disabilities is as effective as with others,
that reasonable steps are taken to
provide meaningful access to
individuals with Limited English
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
Proficiency, and that meetings comply
with the requirements at § 435.905(b)
and applicable regulations
implementing the ADA, section 504 of
the Rehabilitation Act, and section 1557
of the Affordable Care Act at 28 CFR
part 35 and 45 CFR parts 84 and 92.
Interested parties’ feedback and recent
reports 45 46 published on meaningful
beneficiary engagement illuminate the
need for more transparent and
standardized processes across States to
drive participation from key interested
parties and to facilitate the opportunity
for participation from a diverse set of
members and the community. Further,
we believe that in order for the State to
comply with the language of section
1902(a)(4)(B) of the Act, which requires
a State plan to meaningfully engage
Medicaid beneficiaries and other lowincome people in the administration of
the plan, it needs to be responsive to the
needs of its beneficiaries. To be
responsive to the needs of its
beneficiaries, the State needs to be able
to gather feedback from a variety of
people that touch the Medicaid
program, and the MAC and BAC will
serve as a vehicle through which States
can obtain this feedback.
We acknowledge that interested
parties may face a range of technological
and internet accessibility limitations,
and proposed requiring that, at a
minimum, States provide a telephone
dial-in option for MAC and BAC
meetings. While we understand that inperson interaction can sometimes assist
in building trusted relationships, we
also recognize that accommodations for
members and the public to participate
virtually is important, particularly since
the beginning of the COVID–19
pandemic. We solicited comment on
ways to best strike this balance.
We received public comments on
these proposals. The following is a
summary of the comments we received
and our responses.
Comment: We received many
comments expressing broad support of
§ 431.12(f)(1) proposals requiring States
45 Resources for Integrated Care and Community
Catalyst, ‘‘Listening to the Voices of Dually Eligible
Beneficiaries: Successful Member Advisory
Councils’’, 2019. Retrieved from https://
www.resourcesforintegratedcare.com/listening_to_
voices_of_dually_eligible_beneficiaries/.
46 Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services,
Person & Family Engagement Strategy: Sharing with
Our Partners. Retrieved from: https://www.cms.gov/
Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-AssessmentInstruments/QualityInitiativesGenInfo/Downloads/
Person-and-Family-Engagement-Strategic-Plan-1212-16.pdf#:∼:text=person
%E2%80%99s%20priorities
%2C%20goals%2C%20needs%20and%20values.
%E2%80%9D%20Using%20these,to%20guide%20
all%20clinical%20decisions%20and
%20drives%20genuine.
PO 00000
Frm 00019
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40559
to post publicly information on the
MAC and BAC (bylaws, meeting
minutes). The commenters noted that
transparency plays an important role in
promoting multi-directional
accountability and could also help
ensure the success of the MAC and
BAC. While commenters were
supportive, they also recommended that
States consider their Medicaid
communities’ communication access
needs, including cultural competency
and linguistic needs, when posting
these materials to their websites.
Response: We agree with commenters
that States should take steps to ensure
that any publicly posted materials are
accessible to the various interested
parties that comprise their Medicaid
community.
Comment: We received a few
comments asking us to reconsider the
requirement of having States to post
their BAC membership list on their
websites. Several commenters suggested
that States should give BAC members
the choice of being publicly identified.
Response: We thank commenters for
raising this issue, as we want to avoid
any situation where a Medicaid
beneficiary, family member or caregiver,
does not want to be publicly identified.
In response to these comments, we are
updating and finalizing the proposed
regulations to permit BAC members to
choose whether to be publicly identified
in materials such as membership lists
and meeting minutes. If BAC members
choose not to be identified in public
materials, they can be referred to as BAC
member 1, BAC member 2 and so on.
Specifically, we are updating and
finalizing the proposed language under
new paragraph § 431.12(f)(1) to state,
‘‘Develop and publish by posting
publicly on its website, bylaws for
governance of the MAC and BAC along
with a current list of members . . .
States will give BAC members the
option to include their names on the
membership list and meeting minutes
that will be posted publicly.’’
Comment: We received comments
supporting the § 431.12(f)(2)
requirement of having States publicly
post their process for recruitment and
selection. Commenters emphasized that
these processes must be inclusive and
reflect the diversity of their State’s
Medicaid community and beneficiaries.
Other commenters asked for CMS to
provide guidance or best practices on
how to recruit members, as well as
marketing best practices and the
preferred format for print and audio
materials.
Response: We agree that States should
develop recruitment strategies that will
result in identifying members that are
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
40560
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
representative of a State’s Medicaid
community and beneficiaries. However,
we have kept the requirements flexible
to be cognizant of the fact that States
can experience challenges in recruiting
Medicaid beneficiaries to serve on the
BAC. We also encourage States to
examine best practices from entities that
specialize in marketing, recruitment,
and the accessibility of published
materials as outlined on Digital.gov.47
Comment: We received some
comments asking that States have a
process for identifying conflicts of
interest when making member
selections.
Response: We agree that avoiding
conflicts of interest is important, and we
encourage States to establish conflict of
interest policies, to be documented in
the MAC/BAC bylaws or other
organizing documents that govern the
membership and operations of the
MAC/BAC, and to ensure these policies
are respected when selecting MAC/BAC
members. Since MAC and BAC
membership represent a variety of
backgrounds and interest relevant to
Medicaid, we also believe that building
in a time for conflict-of-interest
disclosure into each meeting’s agenda is
important. Specifically, under new
§ 431.12(f)(3) we are now adding that
each MAC and BAC meeting agenda
should have time set aside for members
to disclose any matters that are not
incompatible with their participation on
the MAC and/or BAC under the State’s
conflict of interest policy, but which
nevertheless could give rise to a
perceived or actual conflict of interest
and therefore should be disclosed. We
also believe our requirements for MAC
and BAC meetings, including the
posting of meeting minutes and
membership lists, will provide the
public and States with the transparency
needed to know if a conflict of interest
(perceived, apparent, or actual) occurred
during a meeting.
Comment: We received comments
regarding the requirement in
§ 431.12(f)(3) for both the MAC and BAC
to each meet at a minimum of once
quarterly. Commenters noted the
number of meetings could pose a
burden to the States and members.
Several commenters suggested that CMS
allow Medicaid agencies to hold
meetings in a way that matches their
administrative resources and goals.
Response: We selected a quarterly
meeting versus a monthly meeting
schedule for the MAC and BAC because
we believe it will provide States with
more flexibility in determining when to
47 https://digital.gov/resources/an-introductionto-accessibility/?dg.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
meet. For example, rather than having
the MAC and BAC members meeting
every month (12 times annually), we
reduce the time commitment for
members by having the State select
which month per quarter works best for
the MAC and BAC members (4 times
annually). Further, the goal of the MAC
and BAC is to advise the State on
matters related to policy development
and to the effective administration of
the Medicaid program. We believe that
holding a quarterly meeting, as a
minimum, allows States to integrate
their Medicaid community’s voice into
the effective administration of the
Medicaid program in a way that is
timely and meaningful. Further, we
believe that holding quarterly meetings
would result in the least amount of
burden for States. Holding more
meetings per year would likely result in
additional strain of time and resources
for the State and its members. Holding
meetings less frequently than quarterly
would not assist the timely integration
of the community voice into the
administration of the Medicaid program.
We also strive to further reduce the
burden to MAC and BAC members by
structuring the meeting requirements in
a way that allows States to select nontraditional meeting times and to use
different telecommunications options
(for example, online meetings) for its
meetings which would eliminate
members’ commuting times to meetings.
Comment: We received several
comments about new § 431.12(f)(4) in
support of the requirement that each
MAC meeting must have a public
comment period, citing the importance
of all interested parties to be able to
share feedback. Additionally, a few
commenters asked that States also have
a process to accept input from interested
parties while developing MAC agendas.
Response: States will have the
flexibility to develop the MAC agendas
in accordance with their own processes
and procedures. We encourage
commenters to work with their State
regarding those processes.
Comment: A couple of commenters
suggested that all MAC and BAC
meetings be open to the public.
Response: We place great importance
on meeting transparency, but we also
believe that States may need the
flexibility to keep closed some of their
meetings each year. The proposed
requirement in § 431.12(f)(4) related to
BAC meetings notes that BAC meetings
are not required to be open to the public
unless the State and the BAC members
decide otherwise. It is important for
States to create a dedicated space for
this group of Medicaid beneficiaries and
people with lived Medicaid experience
PO 00000
Frm 00020
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
to share their interactions with and
perceptions of the Medicaid program.
Having a comfortable, supportive, and
trusting environment will encourage
members to speak freely on matters
most important to them. We note that in
order to support overall transparency,
we proposed that the meeting minutes
of the BAC meetings be required to be
posted online and MAC members who
are also on the BAC will share input
from the BAC with the broader MAC.
Comment: We received comments in
response to our request for comments
about in-person and virtual attendance
options for the MAC and BAC meetings.
The comments emphasized the need for
States to offer both in-person and virtual
attendance options. One commenter
questioned if the proposed requirement
meant that offering an in-person
attendance option was a requirement for
each meeting.
Response: We thank commenters for
responding to our request for comments.
In response to those comments, we are
updating new § 431.12(f)(5) to list the
different types of meeting options.
Specifically, § 431.12(f)(5) states, ‘‘Offer
a rotating, variety of meeting attendance
options. These meeting options are: all
in-person attendance, all virtual
attendance, and hybrid (in-person and
virtual) attendance options. Regardless
of which attendance type of meeting it
is, States are required to always have, a
minimum, telephone dial-in option at
the MAC and BAC meetings for its
members.’’ For the commenter who
questioned if States had to always
provide in-person attendance options,
we are clarifying that if the meeting is
designated as a virtual-only meeting,
States do not need to have in-person
attendance.
Comment: One commenter suggested
we add a requirement for meetings to be
held both during and after work hours.
Response: In new § 431.12(f)(6), we
require that States ensure that the
meeting times selected for MAC and
BAC meetings maximize member
attendance. We encourage States to
consider working hours and the impact
on their MAC and BAC membership, as
appropriate.
Comment: Several commenters
expressed broad support for the
proposal to ensure that MAC and BAC
meetings are accessible by people with
disabilities and Limited English
Proficiency (LEP). Commenters also
provided suggestions to better ensure
meaningful participation, such as
making sure States have available:
interpreter services, American Sign
Language translation services, closed
captioning for virtual meeting, and
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
making materials available in plain
language.
Response: As reflected in
§ 431.12(f)(7), we agree that MAC and
BAC members with disabilities and LEP
should have access to the types of
supports needed to meaningfully engage
in meetings. We have updated the
relevant Federal requirements for States
to meet in this final rule.
Comment: One commenter requested
that CMS clarify what is meant by the
phrase, ‘‘that reasonable steps are taken
to provide meaningful access to
individuals with Limited English
Proficiency . . . .’’
Response: Title VI of the Civil Rights
Act requires recipients of Federal
financial assistance, including State
Medicaid programs, to take reasonable
steps to provide meaningful access to
their programs or activities for
individuals with Limited English
Proficiency.48 Section 1557 of the
Affordable Care Act similarly requires
recipients of Federal financial assistance
to take reasonable steps to provide
meaningful access to their health
programs or activities for individuals
with Limited English Proficiency, and
the implementing regulation requires
the provision of interpreting services
and translations when it is a reasonable
step to provide meaningful access.49
After consideration of public
comments, we are finalizing § 431.12(f)
as proposed with:
• Language modifications to reflect
the new name of the BAC.
• Updates to § 431.12(f)(1) to now
state, ‘‘States will also post publicly the
past meeting minutes of the MAC and
BAC meetings, including a list of
meeting attendees. States will give BAC
members the option to include their
names in the membership list and
meeting minutes that will be posted
publicly.’’
• Updates to § 431.12(f)(3) to state,
‘‘Each MAC and BAC meeting agenda
must include a time for members and
the public (if applicable) to disclose
conflicts of interest.’’
• Updates to § 431.12(f)(4) to move
one sentence up to be the new second
sentence and the deletion of a repetitive
sentence so that third sentence now
reads as, ‘‘The public must be
adequately notified of the date, location,
48 Lau v. Nichols, 414 U.S. 563, 566 (1974)
(interpreting Title VI and its implementing
regulations to require a school district with students
of Chinese origin with limited English proficiency
to take affirmative steps to provide the students
with a meaningful opportunity to participate in
federally funded educational programs).
49 45 CFR 92.101; see alsohttps://www.hhs.gov/
civil-rights/for-providers/laws-regulationsguidance/guidance-federal-financial-assistancetitle-vi/.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
and time of each public MAC meeting
and any public BAC meeting at least 30
calendar days in advance of the date of
the meeting.’’
• Updates to § 431.12(f)(5) to state,
‘‘Offer a rotating, variety of meeting
attendance options. These meeting
options are: all in-person attendance, all
virtual attendance, and hybrid (inperson and virtual) attendance options.
Regardless of which attendance type of
meeting it is, States are required to
always have at a minimum, telephone
dial-in option at the MAC and BAC
meetings for its members.’’
• Updates to paragraph (f)(7) to reflect
additional Federal requirements (adding
reference to the Title VI of the Civil
Rights Act of 1964). The sentence will
now state, ‘‘. . . that reasonable steps
are taken to provide meaningful access
to individuals with Limited English
Proficiency, and that meetings comply
with the requirements at § 435.905(b) of
this chapter and applicable regulations
implementing the ADA, Title VI of the
Civil Rights Act of 1964, section 504 of
the Rehabilitation Act, and section 1557
of the Affordable Care Act at 28 CFR
part 35 and 45 CFR parts 80, 84 and 92,
respectively.’’
7. MAC and BAC Participation and
Scope (§ 431.12(g))
We proposed to replace former
paragraph (e) Committee participation,
with new paragraph (g) MAC and BAC
Participation and Scope. The original
paragraph (e), Committee participation,
required that the MCAC must have
opportunity for participation in policy
development and program
administration, including furthering the
participation of beneficiary members in
the agency program.
In new paragraph § 431.12(g), we
proposed and are finalizing the
expansion of the types of topics which
provide the MAC and BAC should
advise to the State. The list of topics we
proposed included at a minimum topics
related to: (1) addition and changes to
services; (2) coordination of care; (3)
quality of services; (4) eligibility,
enrollment, and renewal processes; (5)
beneficiary and provider
communications by State Medicaid
agency and Medicaid managed care
plans; (6) cultural competency, language
access, health equity and disparities and
biases in the Medicaid program; or (7)
other issues that impact the provision or
outcomes of health and medical services
in the Medicaid program as identified
by the MAC, BAC or State.
In researching States’ MCACs, we
know that some already use the MCACs
advice on a variety of topics relating to
the effective and efficient
PO 00000
Frm 00021
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40561
administration of the Medicaid program.
With these changes, we aim to strike a
balance that reflects some States’
current practices without putting strict
limitations on specific topics for
discussion in a manner that would
constrict flexibility for all States.
Broadening the scope of the topics that
the MAC and BAC discuss will benefit
the State by giving greater insight into
how it is currently delivering coverage
and care for its beneficiaries and thereby
assist in identifying ways to improve the
way the Medicaid program is
administered.
The State will use this engagement
with the MAC and BAC to ensure that
beneficiaries’ and other interested
parties’ voices are considered and to
allow the opportunity to adjust course
based on the advice provided by the
committee and council members. The
State will base topics of discussion on
State need and will determine the topics
in collaboration with the MAC and BAC
to address matters related to policy
development and matters related to the
effective administration of the Medicaid
program. In finalizing the proposals, we
reviewed the wording for this
requirement closer. When listing the
types of topics on which the MAC and
BAC should advise to the State, we used
the term ‘‘or’’. However, using the term
‘‘or’’ does not represent the intention
behind the regulation. The MAC or BAC
should not be limited to advising the
State on one topic at a time. Our intent
is that the MAC and BAC, in
collaboration with the State, should be
able to provide recommendations on all
or any of the subset of the topics listed.
We clarify this intention in this final
rule by making a technical change to
replace the word ‘‘and’’ with the word
‘‘or’’ in the list of the types of topics on
which the MAC and BAC should advise
the State.
We received public comments on
these proposals. The following is a
summary of the comments we received
and our responses.
Comment: As noted in other sections,
we received a few comments asking
CMS to clarify the advisory authority of
the MAC and BAC, noting that language
fluctuated between advisory and
experiential feedback.
Response: As discussed earlier with
respect to § 431.12(a), the role of the
MAC and BAC is to advise the State
Medicaid agency. In reviewing the
language proposed in § 431.12(g), we see
similar opportunities where CMS can
refine its wording to make clear the
advisory roles that the MAC and BAC
hold. The primary role of the MAC and
BAC is to advise the State Medicaid
agency on policy development and on
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
40562
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
matters related to the effective
administration of the Medicaid program.
By replacing the wording in § 431.12(g)
from ‘‘provide recommendations’’ to
‘‘advise’’ we are being consistent with
the wording used in similar updates
made in this final rule and also making
clear that our intention is for the MAC
and BAC to serve in an advisory
capacity to the State.
Comment: All commenters who
addressed § 431.12(g) supported the
change in the MAC and BAC scope. The
majority of those commenters also
suggested additional topics for which
the MAC and BAC should advise the
State. These topics include getting
feedback on Secret Shopper studies,
external quality organization reports,
consumer facing materials, enrollment
materials, implementation of integrated
programs for dually eligible individuals,
rate reviews, and annual medical loss
ratio report. We also received a
comment noting the importance of
access to services with a request that it
be added it to the list of topics.
Response: We appreciate the support
to the proposed changes. We clarify that
the categories of topics we named in
this section were selected as examples
because they represented far-reaching
parameters related to the effective
administration of the Medicaid program.
We believe that the proposal we are
finalizing in this final rule allows for a
broad interpretation of the topics that
are within scope while leaving the
ultimate decision on which topics the
MAC and BAC will advise on to the
MAC, BAC, and State. We encourage
commenters to work with their States to
define the topics that will be discussed
at the MAC and BAC. Finally, we agree
that specifically mentioning access to
services is important, as it represents a
key topic area of this regulation.
Therefore, we are redesignating the
proposed § 431.12(g)(7) as (g)(8) and
adding a new § 431.12(g)(7), access to
services.
After consideration of public
comments, we are finalizing § 431.12(g)
as proposed with:
• Language modifications to reflect
the new name of the BAC.
• Replacing the wording at
§ 431.12(g) ‘‘to participate in and
provide recommendations’’ with
‘‘advise’’ so as to clarify the advisory
role of the MAC and BAC.
• Conforming edits to replacing the
term State Medicaid Director at
§ 431.12(g) with the term, ‘‘director of
the single State Agency for the Medicaid
program.’’
Language modifications to
§ 431.12(g)(5) to replace ‘‘managed care
plan’’ with ‘‘MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs,
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
PCCM entities or PCCMs as defined in
§ 438.2.’’
• Redesignating and finalizing
proposed § 431.12(g)(7) as (g)(8) and
adding a new § 431.12(g)(7), ‘‘access to
services.’’
• Replacing the word ‘‘or’’ with the
word ‘‘and’’ after 431.12(g)(7), access to
services.
8. State Agency Staff Assistance,
Participation, and Financial Help
(§ 431.12(h))
Under § 431.12 of the current
regulation, paragraph (f) Committee staff
assistance and financial help, the State
was required to provide the committee
with—(1) Staff assistance from the
agency and independent technical
assistance as needed to enable it to
make effective recommendations; and
(2) Financial arrangements, if necessary,
to make possible the participation of
beneficiary members.
In the proposed rule, we proposed to
redesignate previous paragraph
§ 431.12(f) to new paragraph (h) and
expand upon existing State
responsibilities for managing the MAC
and BAC regarding staff assistance,
participation, and financial support.
The changes we proposed and are
finalizing to new paragraph (h) are for
the State to provide staff to support
planning and execution of the MAC and
the BAC to include: (1) Recruitment of
MAC and BAC members; (2) Planning
and execution of all MAC and BAC
meetings; and (3) The provision of
appropriate support and preparation
(providing research or other information
needed) to the MAC and BAC members
who are Medicaid beneficiaries to
ensure meaningful participation. These
tasks include: (i) Providing staff whose
responsibilities are to facilitate MAC
and BAC member engagement; (ii)
Providing financial support, if
necessary, to facilitate Medicaid
beneficiary engagement in the MAC and
the BAC; and (iii) Attendance by at least
one staff member from the State
agency’s executive staff at all MAC and
BAC meetings.
The overlap of the current regulation
with our proposed changes will mean
much of the work to implement is
already occurring. We are not changing
the existing financial support
requirements. We understand from
States and other interested parties that
many States already provide staffing
and financial support to their MCACs in
ways that meet or go beyond what we
require through our updated
requirements. We believe that
expanding upon the current standards
regarding State responsibility for
planning and executing the functions of
PO 00000
Frm 00022
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
the MAC and BAC will ensure
consistent and ongoing standards to
further beneficiaries’ and other
interested parties’ engagement. For
example, we know that when any kind
of interested parties council meets, all
members of that council need to fully
understand the topics being discussed
in order to meaningfully engage in that
discussion. This is particularly relevant
when the topics of discussion are
complex or based in specific
terminology as Medicaid related issues
often can be.
We believe that when States provide
their MACs and BACs with additional
staffing support that can explain,
provide background materials, and meet
with the members in preparation for the
larger discussions, the members have a
greater chance to provide more
meaningful feedback and be adequately
prepared to engage in these discussions.
The proposed changes to the existing
requirements seek to create
environments that support meaningful
engagement by the members of the MAC
and the BAC, whose feedback can then
be used by States to support the efficient
administration of their Medicaid
program. We anticipate providing
additional guidance on model practices,
recruitment strategies, and ways to
facilitate beneficiary participation, and
we solicited comments on effective
strategies to ensure meaningful
interested parties’ engagement that in
turn can facilitate full beneficiary
participation.
Further, the proposed changes to the
requirement for beneficiary support,
including financial support, are similar
to the original MCAC requirements. For
example, using dedicated staff to
support beneficiary attendance at both
the MAC and BAC meetings and
providing financial assistance to
facilitate meeting attendance by
beneficiary members are similar to the
current regulations. Staff may support
beneficiary attendance through outreach
to the Medicaid beneficiary MAC and
BAC members throughout the
membership period to provide
information and answer questions;
identify barriers and supports needed to
facilitate attendance at MAC and BAC
meetings; and facilitate access to those
supports.
In the proposed rule, we proposed to
add a new requirement that at least one
member of the State agency’s executive
staff attend all MAC and BAC meetings
to provide an opportunity for
beneficiaries and representatives of the
State’s leadership to interact directly.
We received public comments on
these proposals. The following is a
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
summary of the comments we received
and our responses.
Comment: Many commenters
supported the modifications proposed at
§ 431.12(h), but they emphasized the
importance of requiring States to
appropriately compensate members that
are beneficiaries for their participation.
The comments noted that there should
be financial compensation to beneficiary
members for the time spent on BAC
activities, as well as financial
reimbursement for any travel, lodging,
meals, and childcare associated with
their participation in the BAC and/or
MAC. Commenters also asked CMS to
exclude the value of any financial
compensation paid to members for their
participation in the MAC and/or BAC
from consideration in determining
eligibility for Medicaid. A few
commenters expressed that the term ‘‘if
necessary’’ should be dropped from the
regulatory language, noting that States
should offer reimbursement to all
participating Medicaid beneficiaries.
Response: Under the policies we are
finalizing at § 431.12(h)(3)(ii), States
will have the ability to reimburse all
beneficiaries to facilitate Medicaid
beneficiary engagement in the MAC and
the BAC. This can include, at the State’s
discretion, reimbursement for travel,
lodging, meals, and childcare. We did
not remove the words ‘‘if necessary’’ to
account for Medicaid beneficiaries who
may not need financial support to
engage in the MAC and BAC activities.
We are also clarifying the
circumstances in which compensation
provided to beneficiary members would
be considered income for Medicaid
eligibility purposes. For both MAGI and
non-MAGI methodologies,
reimbursements (such as for meals eaten
away from home, mileage, and lodging)
do not count as income, but other
compensation (such as a daily stipend)
for participating in an advisory council
is countable income under applicable
financial methodologies. For non-MAGI
methodologies, the State could submit a
SPA to CMS to disregard such stipends
or other countable income under section
1902(r)(2) of the Act. Other means tested
programs may have other rules for
counting income, and we encourage
States to assess those rules and advise
Medicaid beneficiary members of the
MAC and BAC accordingly.
Comment: Many commenters in
support of the proposed requirements in
§ 431.12(h)(3) noted how critical it will
be for States to provide appropriate
technical support and preparation to
MAC and BAC members who are also
Medicaid beneficiaries in order to
ensure their full and active participation
in discussions. Commenters shared a
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
variety of suggestions for the type of
support that can help prepare these
members to feel comfortable fully and
meaningfully engaging in the process.
The suggestions made by the
commenters included specific areas to
be addressed in the trainings and
materials that the State agency staff
provides, such as providing background
materials in plain language,
implementing techniques to empower
members to participate successfully and
equally in MAC and BAC discussions,
supporting health literacy needs, and
training members on digital access to
meetings/technology. Additionally,
some commenters suggested that States
be required to provide MAC and BAC
members with a mentor and training on
the Medicaid program throughout the
length of their membership term.
Several commenters suggested that
States be required to select an
independent (outside of the Medicaid
agency) policy advisor or technical
expert to provide BAC members with
support in understanding Medicaid
topics and policy.
Response: We appreciate the support
for our proposals and understand the
interest in ensuring support for
beneficiary members of the MAC and
BAC. The underpinning of meaningful
member engagement is that members
have a substantial understanding of the
topics to be discussed. We agree with
commenters’ suggestions in general, but
given the differences in States’
structures and resources, we believe
there is a benefit in leaving the decision
of how best to provide training and
support to the MAC and BAC members
to the States. As we noted earlier in the
preamble, CMS will post publicly a
MAC best practices toolkit.
Comment: We received a couple of
comments asking CMS to clarify the role
of the State Medicaid agency staff
attending the MAC and BAC meetings.
Response: The purpose of requiring a
member from the State Medicaid
agency’s executive staff to attend MAC
and BAC meetings is to provide an
opportunity for beneficiaries and
representatives of the State’s Medicaid
agency leadership to interact directly.
The role of the executive staff person is
not to be a MAC/BAC co-chair, nor to
facilitate these meetings. The executive
staff person’s role is to hear directly
from and interact with Medicaid
beneficiaries and with the wider
Medicaid community in that State. The
person attending generally will be
expected to share take-aways from these
meetings with State’s Medicaid agency
leadership.
PO 00000
Frm 00023
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40563
After consideration of public
comments, we are finalizing § 431.12(h)
as proposed with:
• Language modifications to reflect
the new name of the BAC.
• Conforming edits to replace the
word ‘‘State Agency’’ with the ‘‘single
State agency for the Medicaid program’’
in several places across § 431.12(h).
Language modifications to
§ 431.12(h)(3) to state, ‘‘. . . MAC and
BAC members who are Medicaid
beneficiaries . . .’’
9. Annual Report (§ 431.12(i)).
In the spirit of transparency and to
ensure compliance with the updated
regulations, we added in the proposed
rule 50 and are finalizing new paragraph
§ 431.12(i) to require that the MAC, with
support from the State and in
accordance with the requirements
updated at this section, must submit an
annual report to the State. The State
must review the report and include
responses to the recommended actions.
The State must also: (1) provide MAC
members with final review of the report;
(2) ensure that the annual report of the
MAC includes a section describing the
activities, topics discussed, and
recommendations of the BAC, as well as
the State’s responses to the
recommendations; and (3) post the
report to the State’s website. In the
proposed rule, we noted that States had
one year to implement the annual report
requirement and we sought comment on
that timeline. In finalizing the
proposals, we reviewed these
requirements closer. It is our intention
that the MAC is required to submit an
annual report to the State. We clarify
this intention in this final rule by
making a technical change to add the
word ‘‘must’’ which was
unintentionally omitted in the proposed
rule.
The proposed requirements of this
paragraph seek to ensure transparency
while also facilitating a feedback loop
and view into the impact of the MAC
and BAC’s recommendations. We
solicited comment on additional ways
to ensure that the State can create a
feedback loop with the MAC and BAC.
We received public comments on
these proposals. The following is a
summary of the comments we received
and our responses.
Comment: Several commenters
supported the proposed requirements in
new § 431.12(i), of having States submit
an annual report that describes activities
of the MAC and BAC, including the
topics discussed and their
50 ‘‘Medicaid Program; Ensuring Access to
Medicaid Services,’’ (88 FR 27960, 27971).
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
40564
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
recommendations. Commenters noted
that requiring these reports is critical to
building trust as well as ensuring
transparency and accountability among
the State, MAC, and BAC members. In
addition, several commenters agreed
with the annual report requirement, but
they also wanted CMS to stipulate the
contents of the annual report. One
commenter suggested that States’ annual
reports include results from anonymous
surveys of MAC and BAC members
indicating whether these members felt
they have been listened to and if they
felt the State used members’ feedback.
Response: We appreciate the support
for the proposed regulations. We
carefully considered the benefits of
national uniformity of the contents of an
annual report. However, due to the
differences in how States may approach
setting priorities, creating their MAC
and BACs, and the varying level of
resources, we believe that States should
have the flexibility to adopt an approach
to the content of the annual report that
works best within their State.
Comment: A few commenters asked
CMS to either further require that the
BAC issue its own set of reports and
recommendations independently or as
part of the MAC report.
Response: While we fully understand
and agree with the importance of the
BAC and ensuring that their voices are
heard, we believe that requiring States
to create a second BAC-only annual
report would add administrative
burden. The proposed regulatory
language requires that States create an
annual report that reflects the activities
of both the MAC and BAC. Since the
annual report is required to contain the
priorities and activities of both the MAC
and BAC, there is no need for a separate
BAC-only report.
Comment: There were a handful of
commenters that wanted CMS to
reconsider the report requirement
because they thought the resource
burden was too great to develop an
annual report, the reporting requirement
lacked meaning, or they wanted CMS to
allow Medicaid agencies to set their
own cadence to the reports.
Response: We understand the
concerns of the commenters, but we
have written the annual report
requirement broadly to ensure maximal
flexibility for States to meet this
requirement. It is critical that States
document the work and key outcomes of
the MAC and BAC. Further, we believe
the annual report requirement supports
the implementation of the principles of
bi-directional feedback, transparency,
and accountability on the part of the
State, MAC, and BAC. In response to
comments about burden to States, we
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
have adjusted the proposed
applicability date for this requirement of
1 year and are now finalizing it as,
States have 2 years from July 9, 2024 to
finalize the first annual MAC report.
After the report has been finalized,
States will have 30 days to post the
annual report.
Comment: A few commenters asked
CMS to require States to conduct
additional activities related to
monitoring the MAC and BAC, in
addition to the annual report. The
commenters’ suggestions included:
implementing a corrective action plan
for States that failed to meet the MAC
requirements; requiring process
evaluations on the experiences of the
MAC and BAC members be conducted
and the findings be made public; and
requiring States to engage in program
improvement activities in response to
the recommendations made by the MAC
that appear in the annual report.
Response: We carefully considered
the benefits of requiring additional
studies and activities to be captured by
States and included in the annual
report. However, we want to keep the
parameters of our expectations on the
content of a State’s annual report to be
as broad as possible to give each State
the ability to create a report that will
help them best document the interested
parties’ engagement with the MAC and
the BAC and serve as a tool for helping
advance programmatic goals over time.
Comment: A couple of commenters
requested CMS publish the annual
reports on its website.
Response: We thank the commenters
for this suggestion. Currently, we
believe each respective State Medicaid
agency’s website to be the most
appropriate place for the annual reports
to be published. However, we will
consider whether the needs of interested
parties would be better served with
CMS collecting and publishing annual
reports as well.
Comment: A few commenters
inquired about how CMS would provide
oversight on compliance with activities
such as the annual report and number
of meetings requirements.
Response: We thank commenters for
these questions. We are currently
assessing the most effective strategies
with which to provide oversight. As
these requirements implement State
plan requirements in section 1902(a)(4)
and (a)(19) of the Act, noncompliance
with the provisions of this final rule
could result in a State plan compliance
action in accordance with § 430.35.
After consideration of public
comments, we are finalizing § 431.12(i)
as proposed with:
PO 00000
Frm 00024
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
• Language modifications to reflect
the new name of the BAC.
• Additional sentences at the end of
§ 431.12(i)(3), ‘‘States have 2 years from
July 9, 2024 to finalize the first annual
MAC report. After the report has been
finalized, States will have 30 days to
post the annual report.’’
10. Federal Financial Participation
(§ 431.12(j))
In the current regulation, paragraph
(g) Federal financial participation, noted
that FFP is available at 50 percent in
expenditures for the committee’s
activities. As noted in the proposed
rule, we are not making changes to, and
thus are maintaining, the current
regulatory language on FFP from
previous paragraph (g) to support
committee activities, to appear in new
paragraph (j) with conforming edits for
the new MAC and BAC names.
We received public comments on
these proposals. The following is a
summary of the comments we received
and our responses.
Comment: We received a few
comments about the newly proposed
§ 431.12(j), encouraging CMS to offer a
higher FFP than 50 percent. One
commenter suggested that 90 percent
FFP would be ideal.
Response: For Medicaid, all States
receive a statutory 50 percent Federal
matching rate for general administrative
activities. States may also receive higher
Federal matching rates for certain
administrative activities, such as design,
development, installation, and
operation of certain qualifying systems.
Federal matching rates are established
by Congress, and CMS does not have the
authority to change or increase them.
After consideration of public
comments, we are finalizing new
paragraph § 431.12(j) as proposed with:
• Language modifications to reflect
the new name of the BAC.
11. Applicability Dates § 431.12(k)
For this final rule, we are adding new
paragraph § 431.12 (k) Applicability
dates. In the proposed rule, we noted
that the requirements of § 431.12 would
be effective 60 days after the publication
date of the final rule, although we
established different applicability dates
by which States must implement certain
provisions. We then solicited comment
on whether 1 year was too much or not
enough time for States to implement the
updates in this regulation in an effective
manner. We understand that States may
need to modify their existing MCACs to
reflect the finalized requirements for
MACs and may also need to create the
BAC and recruit members to participate
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
if they do not already have a similar
entity already in place.
We received public comments on
proposed implementation timeline. The
following is a summary of the comments
we received and our responses.
Comment: We received several
comments related to the implementation
timeframes specified in the MAC and
BAC provisions of the proposed rule.
The majority of comments fell into two
categories: commenters who noted that
1 year should be sufficient to implement
the required changes; and commenters
who suggested that CMS provide at least
2 years for implementation. Other
commenters suggested that CMS
consider a graduated approach that
would allow States to demonstrate
compliance with the minimum 25
percent BAC crossover requirement over
a period of time. The commenters who
requested additional time shared
concerns about States’ many other
ongoing priorities, workforce shortages,
the amount of time and resources it
would take to set up the MAC and BAC,
and having enough time to submit
budget requests to their legislature so
they can get the resources to support the
required activities.
Response: We have carefully
considered the comments received and
acknowledge that additional time for
implementation of the requirements
could be beneficial for States given
competing priorities, budgeting and
other challenges States may encounter.
Additionally, we weighed the request
for a graduated approach to demonstrate
compliance with a 25 percent BAC
crossover requirement, and we agree
that a graduated approach will allow
States a longer ramp-up time to modify
their current MCACs, as well as to set
up the BAC and recruit members to
participate.
In the proposed rule, we proposed
that States have 1 year from the effective
date of the final rule to recruit members,
set up their MAC and BAC, hold
meetings, and submit their first annual
report. Based on public comment, we
understand that 1 year is not enough
time to complete all of these activities.
As a result, we are adding and finalizing
in this final rule a second
implementation year. Based on these
changes, States would now recruit
members and set up their MACs and
BACs during the first year
implementation year. In the second
implementation year, States would hold
the required MAC and BAC meetings.
At the end of that second
implementation year, States would
summarize the information from the
MAC and BAC activities and use that
information to complete an annual
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
report. States would then fulfill the
annual report requirement by finalizing
the report and posting the annual report
to their websites. This annual report
would need to be posted by States
within 30 days of the report being
completed.
Additionally, as noted in section
II.A.4., and in response to public
comment asking for States to have a
more graduated approach to reach the
requirement of having 25 percent of
MAC members be from the BAC, we are
finalizing in this rule an extended
implementation timeline for this
requirement. The finalized provision at
§ 431.12(d)(1) will require that, for the
period from July 9, 2024 through July 9,
2025, 10 percent of the MAC members
must come from the BAC; for the period
from July 10, 2025 through July 9, 2026,
20 percent of MAC members must come
from the BAC; and thereafter, 25 percent
of MAC members must come from the
BAC. We developed this approach based
on the comments we received about
competing State priorities and the time
and resources that a State would need
to meet the new requirements.
Additionally, we understand States may
face challenges with finding, recruiting,
and training beneficiary members to
serve on the BAC.
Based on the comments received, we
are changing two applicability dates. We
note in this new paragraph Applicability
dates § 431.12(k), that except as noted in
paragraphs (d)(1) and (i)(3) of this
section, the requirements in paragraphs
(a) through (j) are applicable July 9,
2025.
B. Home and Community-Based
Services (HCBS)
To address several challenges that we
described in the proposed rule (88 FR
27964 and 27965), we proposed both to
amend and add new Federal HCBS
requirements to improve access to care,
quality of care, and beneficiary health
and quality of life outcomes, while
consistently meeting the needs of all
beneficiaries receiving Medicaidcovered HCBS. The preamble of the
proposed rule (88 FR 27971 through
27996) outlined our proposed changes
in the context of current law.
As we noted in the proposed rule (88
FR 27971), we have previously received
questions from States about the
applicability of HCBS regulatory
requirements to demonstration projects
approved under section 1115 of the Act
that include HCBS. As a result, we
proposed that, consistent with the
applicability of other HCBS regulatory
requirements to such demonstration
projects, the requirements for section
1915(c) waiver programs and section
PO 00000
Frm 00025
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40565
1915(i), (j), and (k) State plan services
included in the proposed rule would
apply to such services included in
approved section 1115 demonstration
projects, unless we explicitly waive one
or more of the requirements as part of
the approval of the demonstration
project.
We proposed not to apply the
requirements for section 1915(c) waiver
programs and section 1915(i), (j), and (k)
State plan services that we proposed in
the proposed rule to the Program of AllInclusive Care of the Elderly (PACE)
authorized under sections 1894 and
1934 of the Act, as the existing
requirements for PACE either already
address or exceed the requirements
outlined in the proposed rule, or are
substantially different from those for
section 1915(c) waiver programs and
section 1915(i), (j), and (k) State plan
services.
We received public comments on
these proposals for HCBS under the
Medicaid program. The following is a
summary of the comments we received
and our responses. We discuss the
comments we received related to
specific proposals, and our responses, in
further detail throughout the sections in
this portion of the final rule (section
II.B.).
Comment: Many commenters
expressed general support for our efforts
to increase transparency and
accountability in HCBS programs, and
ultimately improve access to Medicaid
services. Commenters in particular
noted general support for our proposed
provisions in this section that are
designed to support HCBS delivery
systems through improvements in data
collection around waiting lists and
service delivery, enhancements to
person-centered planning,
standardization of critical incident
investigation and grievance process
requirements, and establishment of
defined quality measures. While overall
reaction to the payment adequacy
minimum performance level (discussed
in section II.B.5. of the proposed rule
and this final rule) was mixed, many
commenters agreed that HCBS programs
are facing shortages of direct care
workers that pose obstacles to
beneficiaries’ access to high-quality
HCBS.
Commenters also shared several ideas
for ways we could improve
beneficiaries’ access to, or the overall
quality of, HCBS beyond the provisions
presented in the proposed rule.
Some commenters expressed concerns
that the HCBS provisions we proposed,
when taken together, could present
significant administrative costs to States
and, in some cases, to providers.
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
40566
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
Response: We thank commenters for
their support. Comments on specific
provisions that we proposed are
summarized below, along with our
responses. We also appreciate the many
thoughtful suggestions made by
commenters for other ways they believe
HCBS could be improved beyond what
we proposed in the proposed rule.
While comments that are outside the
scope of what we proposed in the
proposed rule and not relevant are not
summarized in this final rule, we will
take these recommendations under
consideration for potential future
rulemaking.
We recognize that we must balance
our desire to stimulate ongoing
improvements in HCBS programs with
the need to give States, managed care
plans, and providers sufficient time to
make adjustments and allocate
resources in support of these changes.
After consideration of comments we
received, we are finalizing many of our
proposals, some with modifications.
These modifications are discussed in
this section (section II.B.) of the final
rule.
We also note that some commenters
expressed general support for all of the
provisions in section II.B. of this rule, as
well as for this rule in its entirety. In
response to commenters who supported
some, but not all, of the policies and
regulations we proposed in the
proposed rule (particularly in section
II.B related to HCBS), we are clarifying
and emphasizing our intent that each
final policy and regulation is distinct
and severable to the extent it does not
rely on another final policy or
regulation that we proposed.
While the provisions in section II.B.
of this final rule are intended to present
a comprehensive approach to improving
HCBS and complement the goals
expressed and policies and regulations
being finalized in sections II.A.
(Medicaid Advisory Committee and
Beneficiary Advisory Group) and II.C.
(Documentation of Access to Care and
Service Payment Rates) of this final rule,
we intend that each of them is a
distinct, severable provision, as
finalized. Unless otherwise noted in this
rule, each policy and regulation being
finalized under this section II.B is
distinct and severable from other final
policies and regulations being finalized
in this section or in sections II.A. or II.C
of this final rule, as well as from rules
and regulations currently in effect.
Consistent with our previous
discussion earlier in section II. of this
final rule regarding severability, we are
clarifying and emphasizing our intent
that if any provision of this final rule is
held to be invalid or unenforceable by
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
its terms, or as applied to any person or
circumstance, or stayed pending further
action, it shall be severable from this
final rule, and from rules and
regulations currently in effect, and not
affect the remainder thereof or the
application of the provision to other
persons not similarly situated or to
other, dissimilar circumstances. For
example, we intend that the policies
and regulations we are finalizing related
to person-centered planning and related
reporting requirements (sections II.B.1
and II.B.7. of this final rule) are distinct
and severable from the policies and
regulations we are finalizing related to
grievance system (section II.B.2. of this
final rule), and incident management
system and related reporting
requirements (sections II.B.3 and II.B.7.
of this final rule). The standalone nature
of the finalized provisions is further
discussed in their respective sections in
this rule.
Comment: Several commenters
addressed the relationship between the
proposed HCBS requirements and HCBS
authorized under a section 1115
demonstration project. A few
commenters requested clarification
about the application of the proposed
HCBS requirements in this section to
services delivered under section 1115
authority. A few commenters expressed
concern about what they perceived was
the exclusion of services provided
through a managed care delivery system
under section 1115 demonstration
authority. One commenter
recommended only applying the
finalized rules to new section 1115
demonstration programs; in the
alternative, if applying the finalized
requirements to current section 1115
demonstration programs, the commenter
recommended that States develop
transition plans and be given a
reasonable timeframe for bringing their
programs into compliance. A few
commenters recommended that we add
a specific reference to section 1115
demonstration authority of the Act in
our proposed HCBS requirements (if
finalized), including at § 438.72(b)
(applying various finalized
requirements to managed care programs)
and § 441.302(k) (applying new
payment adequacy requirements to
section 1915(c) waiver programs).
Response: We are confirming that,
consistent with the applicability of
other HCBS regulatory requirements to
such demonstration projects, the
requirements for section 1915(c) waiver
programs and section 1915(i), (j), and (k)
State plan services included in this final
rule, apply to such services included in
approved section 1115 demonstration
projects, unless we explicitly waive one
PO 00000
Frm 00026
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
or more of the requirements as part of
the approval of the demonstration
project. Further, we have not identified
a compelling reason to treat States
operating section 1115 demonstration
projects differently from States
operating other HCBS programs in terms
of implementation, such as by requiring
States with section 1115 demonstration
programs to develop transition plans (as
was recommended by one commenter).
We also believe that the timeframes that
are finalized in this rule are reasonable
and sufficient to allow all States
operating programs under all relevant
authorities to come into compliance. If
States have specific questions or
concerns regarding compliance with the
finalized requirements, we will provide
assistance as needed.
We note that we have already
included references to managed care
delivery systems implemented under
section 1115(a) of the Act in the
implementation requirements at
§§ 441.301(c)(3)(iii) (implementing the
person-centered planning process
minimum performance requirements),
441.302(a)(6)(iii) (implementing the
critical incident management system
minimum performance requirements),
441.302(k)(8) (implementing the
payment adequacy minimum
performance requirement), 441.311(f)
(implementing reporting requirements),
and 441.313(c) (implementing the
website transparency provision). We
decline commenters’ recommendations
that we include additional references to
section 1115 of the Act, as we believe
doing so would be duplicative. We will
ensure that the approved standard terms
and conditions of States’ section 1115
demonstration projects are clear that the
States must comply with all applicable
HCBS requirements that we are
finalizing in this rule.
We did not receive any comments on
our proposal not to extend HCBS
requirements that we are finalizing in
this rule to PACE. We are finalizing our
proposal to not apply the requirements
we are finalizing in this rule for section
1915(c) waiver programs and section
1915(i), (j), and (k) State plan services to
PACE authorized under sections 1894
and 1934 of the Act.
1. Person-Centered Service Plans
(§§ 441.301(c), 441.450(c), 441.540(c),
and 441.725(c))
Section 1915(c)(1) of the Act requires
that services provided through section
1915(c) waiver programs be provided
under a written plan of care (hereinafter
referred to as person-centered service
plans or service plans). Existing Federal
regulations at § 441.301(c) address the
person-centered planning process and
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
include a requirement at § 441.301(c)(3)
that the person-centered service plan be
reviewed and revised, upon
reassessment of functional need, at least
every 12 months, when the individual’s
circumstances or needs change
significantly, or at the request of the
individual.
In 2014, we released guidance for
section 1915(c) waiver programs 51
(hereinafter the 2014 guidance) that
included expectations for State
reporting of State-developed
performance measures to demonstrate
compliance with section 1915(c) of the
Act and the implementing regulations in
42 CFR part 441, subpart G through six
assurances, including assurances related
to person-centered service plans. The
2014 guidance indicated that States
should conduct systemic remediation
and implement a Quality Improvement
Project when they score below an 86
percent threshold on any of their
performance measures. We refer readers
to section II.B.1. of the proposed rule
(88 FR 27972) for a detailed discussion
of the six assurances identified in the
2014 guidance.
In the proposed rule (88 FR 27972
through 27975), we proposed a different
approach for States to demonstrate that
they meet the statutory requirements in
section 1915(c) of the Act and the
regulatory requirements in 42 CFR part
441, subpart G, including the
requirements regarding assurances
around service plans. We proposed this
approach based on feedback CMS
obtained during various public
engagement activities conducted with
States and other interested parties over
the past several years about the
reporting discussed in the 2014
guidance, as well as feedback received
through a request for information
(RFI) 52 we released in the spring of
2022. Through this feedback, many
States and interested parties expressed,
and we identified, that there is a need
to standardize reporting and set
minimum standards for HCBS. We
proposed HCBS requirements to
establish a new strategy for oversight,
monitoring, quality assurance, and
quality improvement for section 1915(c)
waiver programs, including minimum
performance requirements and reporting
requirements for section 1915(c) waiver
51 Modifications to Quality Measures and
Reporting in § 1915(c) Home and Community-Based
Waivers. March 2014. Accessed at https://
www.hhs.gov/guidance/sites/default/files/hhsguidance-documents/3-cmcs-quality-memonarrative_0_2.pdf.
52 CMS Request for Information: Access to
Coverage and Care in Medicaid & CHIP. February
2022. For a full list of question from the RFI, see
https://www.medicaid.gov/medicaid/access-care/
downloads/access-rfi-2022-questions.pdf.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
programs. Further, as is discussed later
in this section (section II.B.1. of the
rule), to ensure consistency and
alignment across HCBS authorities, we
proposed to apply the proposed
requirements for section 1915(c) waiver
programs to section 1915(i), (j), and (k)
State plan services, as appropriate.
As support for our proposals, we
noted that under section 1902(a)(19) of
the Act, States must provide safeguards
to assure that eligibility for Medicaidcovered care and services are
determined and provided in a manner
that is consistent with simplicity of
administration and that is in the best
interest of Medicaid beneficiaries. While
the needs of some individuals who
receive HCBS may be relatively stable
over some time periods, individuals
who receive HCBS experience changes
in their functional needs and individual
circumstances, such as the availability
of natural supports or a desire to choose
a different provider, that necessitate
revisions to the person-centered service
plan to remain as independent as
possible or to prevent adverse outcomes.
Thus, the requirements to reassess
functional need and to update the
person-centered service plan based on
the results of the reassessment, when
circumstances or needs change
significantly or at the request of the
individual, are important safeguards
that are in the best interest of
beneficiaries because they ensure that
an individual’s section 1915(c) waiver
program services change to meet the
beneficiary’s needs most appropriately
as those needs change.
We also noted that effective State
implementation of the person-centered
planning process is integral to ensuring
compliance with section 2402 of the of
the Patient Protection and Affordable
Care Act (Affordable Care Act) (Pub. L.
111–148, March 23, 2010). Section 2402
of the Affordable Care Act requires the
Secretary of HHS to ensure that all
States receiving Federal funds for HCBS,
including Medicaid, develop HCBS
systems that are responsive to the needs
and choices of beneficiaries receiving
HCBS, maximize independence and
self-direction, provide support and
coordination to facilitate the
participant’s full engagement in
community life, and achieve a more
consistent and coordinated approach to
the administration of policies and
procedures across public programs
providing HCBS.53
53 Section 2402(a) of the Affordable Care Act—
Guidance for Implementing Standards for PersonCentered Planning and Self-Direction in Home and
Community-Based Services Programs. Accessed at
https://acl.gov/sites/default/files/news%202016-10/
2402-a-Guidance.pdf.
PO 00000
Frm 00027
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40567
Finally, we noted that since the
release of the 2014 guidance, we have
received feedback from States, the HHS
Office of Inspector General (OIG),
Administration for Community Living
(ACL), and Office for Civil Rights (OCR),
and other interested parties on how
crucial person-centered planning is in
the delivery of care and the significance
of the person-centered service plan for
the assurance of health and welfare for
section 1915(c) waiver program
participants that underscored the need
for the proposals.54
To ensure a more consistent
application of person-centered service
plan requirements across States and to
protect the health and welfare of section
1915(c) waiver participants, under our
authority at sections 1915(c)(1) and
1902(a)(19) of the Act and section
2402(a)(1) and (2) of the Affordable Care
Act, we proposed several changes to our
person-centered service plan
requirements in section II.B.1 of the
proposed rule (88 FR 27972 through
27975), as discussed in more detail in
this section of the final rule. First, we
proposed revisions to § 401.301(c)(3)(i)
to clarify that: (1) States are required to
ensure person-centered service plans are
reviewed and revised in compliance
with requirements set forth therein; and
(2) changes to the person-centered
service plans are not required if the
reassessment does not indicate a need
for changes. Second, we proposed to
establish a minimum performance level
for States to demonstrate they meet the
requirements at § 441.301(c)(3).
Specifically, at § 441.301(c)(3)(ii)(A), we
proposed to require that States
demonstrate that a reassessment of
functional need was conducted at least
annually for at least 90 percent of
individuals continuously enrolled in the
waiver for at least 365 days. At
§ 441.301(c)(3)(ii)(B) we proposed to
require that States demonstrate that they
reviewed the person-centered service
plan, and revised the plan as
appropriate, based on the results of the
required reassessment of functional
need at least every 12 months for at least
90 percent of individuals continuously
enrolled in the waiver for at least 365
days. Finally, we proposed to apply the
requirements at § 441.301(c)(3) to
section 1915(j), (k), and (i) State plan
54 Ensuring Beneficiary Health and Safety in
Group Homes Through State Implementation of
Comprehensive Compliance Oversight. U.S.
Department of Health and Human Services, Office
of the Inspector General, Administration for
Community Living, and Office for Civil Rights.
January 2018. Accessed at https://oig.hhs.gov/
reports-and-publications/featured-topics/grouphomes/group-homes-joint-report.pdf.
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
40568
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
services at §§ 441.450(c), 441.540(c),
and 441.725(c), respectively.
We received public comments on
these proposals. The following is a
summary of the comments we received
and our responses.
Comment: One commenter questioned
whether States would continue to be
required to demonstrate compliance
with the six assurances and the related
subassurances, including those related
to person-centered service plans
described in the 2014 guidance, or
whether the minimum performance
requirements and reporting
requirements that we proposed in the
proposed rule for the section 1915(c)
waiver program, if finalized in the final
rule, supersede these six assurances and
related subassurances.
Response: We noted in the proposed
rule (88 FR 27972), and reiterate here,
that States must demonstrate that they
meet the statutory requirements in
section 1915(c) of the Act and the
regulatory requirements in part 441,
subpart G, including the requirements
regarding assurances around personcentered service plans.
We proposed new minimum
performance requirements and new
reporting requirements for section
1915(c) waiver programs that are
intended to supersede and fully replace
the reporting requirements and the 86
percent performance level threshold for
performance measures described in the
2014 guidance. Further, to ensure
consistency and alignment across HCBS
authorities, we proposed to apply the
proposed requirements for section
1915(c) waiver programs to section
1915(i), (j), and (k) State plan services as
appropriate.
We confirm that the section 1915(c)
six assurances and the related
subassurances,55 including those related
to person-centered service plans,
continue to apply. The requirements
proposed at § 441.301(c)(3)(ii)(A) and
(B) (discussed in the next section,
II.B.1.b. of this rule) assess State
performance with the requirements at
§ 441.301(c)(3) and we did not intend to
suggest that they would fully supersede
the section 1915(c) six assurances and
the related subassurances in the 2014
guidance. Further, as finalized later in
this rule, States will be required to
report on the minimum performance
levels at § 441.301(c)(3)(ii)(A) and (B).
To reduce unnecessary burden and to
avoid duplicative or conflicting
55 Modifications to Quality Measures and
Reporting in § 1915(c) Home and Community-Based
Waivers. March 2014. Accessed at https://
www.hhs.gov/guidance/sites/default/files/hhsguidance-documents/3-cmcs-quality-memonarrative_0_2.pdf.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
reporting requirements, we plan to work
with States to phase-out the reporting
requirements and the 86 percent
performance level threshold for
performance measures described in the
2014 guidance as they implement these
requirements in the final rule.
Comment: A commenter requested we
clarify what the impacts would be to the
existing section 1915(c) waiver
reporting tools as defined in the Version
3.6 HCBS Waiver Application if we
finalize our proposals.
Response: We expect to implement
new reporting forms for the new
reporting requirements that we are
finalizing in this final rule. However,
some components of the existing
reporting forms may remain in effect to
the extent that they cover other
requirements that remain unchanged by
the requirements that we are finalizing
in this final rule. States and interested
parties will have an opportunity to
comment on the new reporting forms
and the revised forms through the
Paperwork Reduction Act notice and
comment process.
a. Finalization of Amended
Requirement for Review of the PersonCentered Service Plan
(§ 441.301(c)(3)(i))
At § 441.301(c)(3), we proposed to
revise the regulatory text so that it is
clearer that the State is the required
actor under § 441.301(c)(3), and that
changes to the person-centered service
plan are not required if the reassessment
does not indicate a need for changes. In
the proposed rule (88 FR 27973), we
noted that, with this revision to the
regulatory text, the State could, for
instance, meet the requirement that the
person-centered service plan was
reviewed, and revised as appropriate,
based on the results of the required
reassessment of functional need by
documenting that there were no changes
in functional needs or the individual’s
circumstances upon reassessment that
necessitated changes to the service plan.
However, the State would still be
expected to review the service plan to
confirm that no revisions are needed,
even if the reassessment identified no
changes in functional needs or the
individual’s circumstances.
Specifically, we proposed to move the
sentence at § 441.301(c)(3) beginning
with ‘‘The person-centered service plan
must be reviewed. . .’’ to a new
paragraph at § 441.301(c)(3)(i) and
reposition the regulatory text under the
proposed title, Requirement. In
addition, we proposed to revise the
regulatory text at the renumbered
paragraph to clarify that the personcentered service plan must be reviewed,
PO 00000
Frm 00028
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
and revised as appropriate, based on the
reassessment of functional need as
required by § 441.365(e), at least every
12 months, when the individual’s
circumstances or needs change
significantly, or at the request of the
individual.
We received public comment on this
proposal. Below is the summary of the
comment and our response.
Comment: Commenters did not raise
specific concerns about the proposal at
§ 441.301(c)(3)(i). However, one
commenter raised concerns about the
impact the minimum performance
requirement proposed at
§ 441.301(c)(3)(ii) (discussed in greater
detail in the next section) would have
on the requirement at § 441.301(c)(3)(i).
The commenter expressed concern that
States may interpret the 90 percent
minimum performance levels proposed
at § 441.301(c)(3)(ii)(A) and (B) as
meaning they are only required to
conduct the reassessments and updates
to person-centered service plans as
required by § 441.301(c)(3)(i) for 90
percent of beneficiaries, not for 100
percent of beneficiaries receiving HCBS.
This commenter also suggested that
CMS clarify that States should conduct
functional assessments and personcentered plan updates for every
individual to make sure that the
requirement at § 441.301(c)(3)(i) is not
open to interpretation.
Response: We intend that the 90
percent minimum performance
requirements proposed at
§ 441.301(c)(3)(ii) would assess States’
minimum performance of the
requirements at § 441.301(c)(3)(i); we do
not suggest that reassessments of
functional need and reviews, and
revisions as appropriate, of the personcentered service plan, based on the
results of the required reassessment of
functional need, are required for only 90
percent of individuals enrolled in the
waiver program. The minimum
performance requirements at
§ 441.301(c)(3)(ii) (and the associated
reporting requirements at
§ 441.311(b)(3), discussed in section
II.B.7. of this final rule), while
important for aiding in our oversight
and States’ accountability for complying
with § 441.301(c)(3)(i), are distinct and
severable requirements from
§ 441.301(c)(3)(i). In other words, States
would be expected to comply fully with
§ 441.301(c)(3)(i) even had we not also
proposed the specific minimum
performance requirement at
§ 441.301(c)(3)(ii). Thus, the minimum
performance of 90 percent proposed in
§ 441.301(c)(3)(ii) notwithstanding, it is
our intent to require at § 441.301(c)(3)(i)
that States ensure that the person-
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
centered service plan for every
individual is reviewed, and revised as
appropriate, at least every 12 months,
when the individual’s circumstances or
needs change significantly, or at the
request of the individual. To ensure that
this expectation is clear in the
requirement, we are finalizing
§ 441.301(c)(3)(i) with a modification to
specify that the requirement at
§ 441.301(c)(3)(i) applies to every
individual.
Upon further review, we also
determined that retaining the reference
to § 441.301(c)(3) in § 441.365(e),
governing the frequency of functional
assessments for section 1915(d) waiver
programs, at the redesignated
§ 441.301(c)(3)(i), is both obsolete and
unnecessary. Section 441.365(e) was a
standard used by section 1915(d) waiver
programs, which were time-limited
programs that are no longer in effect, to
establish the frequency of functional
assessments. The requirements at
§ 441.301(c)(3) establish the frequency
of functional assessments for section
1915(c) programs, thus referencing
§ 441.365(e), which is obsolete, is
unnecessary.
Accordingly, we are finalizing
§ 441.301(c)(3)(i) with the previously
noted modifications to specify that the
requirement applies to every individual
and removing reference to § 441.365(e),
as well as a minor technical
modification to remove an extraneous
comma after the word ‘‘revised.’’ As
finalized, § 441.301(c)(3)(i) specifies that
the State must ensure that the personcentered service plan for every
individual is reviewed, and revised as
appropriate, based upon the
reassessment of functional need at least
every 12 months, when the individual’s
circumstances or needs change
significantly, or at the request of the
individual.
b. Minimum Performance Level
(§ 441.301(c)(3)(ii))
To ensure a more consistent
application of person-centered service
plan requirements across States and to
protect the health and welfare of section
1915(c) waiver participants, under our
authority at sections 1915(c)(1) and
1902(a)(19) of the Act and section
2402(a)(1) and (2) of the Affordable Care
Act, we proposed to codify a minimum
performance level to demonstrate that
States meet the requirements at
§ 441.301(c)(3) (88 FR 27973).
Specifically, at new
§ 441.301(c)(3)(ii)(A), we proposed to
require that States demonstrate that a
reassessment of functional need was
conducted at least annually for at least
90 percent of individuals continuously
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
enrolled in the waiver for at least 365
days. We also proposed, at new
§ 441.301(c)(3)(ii)(B), to require that
States demonstrate that they reviewed
the person-centered service plan and
revised the plan as appropriate based on
the results of the required reassessment
of functional need at least every 12
months for at least 90 percent of
individuals continuously enrolled in the
waiver for at least 365 days.
We intended that these proposed
minimum performance levels would
strengthen person-centered planning
reporting requirements while taking into
account that there may be legitimate
reasons why assessment and care
planning processes occasionally are not
completed timely in all instances. We
also considered whether to propose
allowing good cause exceptions to the
minimum performance level in the
event of a natural disaster, public health
emergency, or other event that would
negatively impact a State’s ability to
achieve a minimum 90 percent
performance level. In the end, we
decided not to propose good cause
exceptions because the minimum 90
percent performance level is intended to
account for various scenarios that might
impact a State’s ability to achieve these
minimum performance levels. Further,
we noted that there are existing disaster
authorities that States could utilize to
request a waiver of these requirements
in the event of a public health
emergency or a disaster (88 FR 27973).
We received public comments on
these proposals. The following is a
summary of the comments we received
and our responses.
Comment: Many commenters
supported our proposals to codify at
§ 441.301(c)(3)(ii)(A) and (B) minimum
performance levels for States to
demonstrate that they meet the
requirements at § 441.301(c)(3)(i). These
commenters noted that, by CMS
establishing minimum performance
levels for the person-centered planning
requirements, beneficiaries who receive
HCBS may be more empowered to
actively participate in decision-making
processes related to their care and
services.
Response: We appreciate the support
for our proposals.
Comment: One commenter suggested
we specify that a beneficiary’s services
should not be reduced, suspended, or
terminated because the reassessment of
functional need or person-centered
service plan update did not occur
within the specified timeframe.
Response: The proposed requirements
to reassess functional need and to
update the person-centered service plan
based on the results of the reassessment,
PO 00000
Frm 00029
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40569
when circumstances or needs change
significantly, or at the request of the
individual, are important safeguards
that are in the best interest of
beneficiaries because they ensure that
an individual’s section 1915(c) waiver
program services are reassessed to
ensure they continue meeting the
beneficiary’s needs most appropriately
as those needs change. Any changes in
the services and supports included in
the person-centered service plan for
beneficiaries should be based on
changes in circumstances or needs or
preferences of the individual; they
should not result from a failure by the
State or managed care plan to conduct
required assessment and service
planning processes timely. Further,
States should not reduce, suspend, or
terminate a beneficiary’s services solely
to reach the minimum performance
level required at § 441.301(c)(3)(ii)(A)
and (B).
Comment: A couple of commenters
suggested we clarify whether States
would be required to implement
corrective action for noncompliance
with the 90 percent performance level if
the same beneficiaries do not receive
timely reassessments or updated personcentered plans repeatedly. One
commenter questioned whether a 90
percent performance level provides an
acceptable margin of error (10 percent)
and requested clarification on whether
States will be expected to remediate
through corrective action if this
threshold is not met.
Response: Corrective actions or other
enforcement actions will be determined
on a case-by-case basis, using our
standard enforcement authority, for
States that are determined to not be
compliant with the requirements at
§ 441.301(c)(3)(ii)(A) and (B). We will
take this feedback into account as we
plan technical assistance and develop
guidance for States.
Comment: One commenter stated that
the person-centered planning
requirements are essential to ensure
choice and access to appropriate service
and suggested that, although the
proposed approach meets compliance
oversight and monitoring objectives, a
quality improvement strategy to address
improving outcomes with the personcentered planning requirements is
needed.
Response: We note that the proposed
requirements at § 441.301(c)(3)(ii)(A)
and (B) were intended to strengthen
person-centered planning reporting
requirements by codifying a minimum
performance level to demonstrate that
States meet the requirements at
§ 441.301(c)(3). We encourage States to
consider implementing quality
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
40570
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
improvement processes to strengthen
and improve person-centered planning
in their HCBS programs. Further, as
discussed in section II.B.8. of this final
rule, we are finalizing the HCBS Quality
Measure Set reporting requirements to
include requirements for States to
implement quality improvement
strategies in their HCBS programs; while
the HCBS Quality Measure Set is
distinct from the person-centered
planning requirements being finalized at
§ 441.301(c)(3), we believe the HCBS
Quality Measure Set requirements
support the quality improvement
objectives described by this commenter.
Comment: A few commenters
suggested CMS include a good cause
exception for States that do not meet the
minimum performance level to take into
account certain instances that fall
outside of the specified performance
standards for appropriate reasons, such
as for resource challenges in rural areas,
or for beneficiary-related events that
could delay the ability to complete the
assessment, such as medical
emergencies/hospitalizations.
Alternatively, a few commenters
supported our proposal to not allow
good cause exceptions to the
performance level, observing that the 90
percent minimum performance level
already gives States leeway for
unexpected occurrences.
Response: We believe that the 90
percent minimum performance level
proposed at § 441.301(c)(3)(ii)(A) and
(B) sets a realistic and achievable
threshold.
As we noted in the proposed rule (88
FR 27973), we decided to not propose
any good cause exceptions because the
minimum 90 percent performance level
accounts for various scenarios that
might impact the State’s ability to
achieve these performance levels, and
there are existing disaster authorities,
such as the waiver authority under
section 1135 of the Act, that States
could utilize to request a waiver of these
requirements in the event of a public
health emergency or a disaster. We
decline to include good cause
exceptions in the minimum
performance level in this final rule.
After consideration of public
comments, we are finalizing our
proposals at § 441.301(c)(3)(ii) with
minor modifications to clarify that the
State must ensure that the minimum
performance levels specified at
§ 441.301(c)(3)(ii)(A) and (B) are met
(since States typically have personcentered planning requirements carried
out by entities such as case managers or
providers, rather than directly by the
State). We are also finalizing
§ 441.301(c)(3)(ii)(B) with minor
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
technical modifications to make the
same punctuation correction as the
modification finalized in
§ 441.301(c)(3)(i).
c. Application to Managed Care and
Fee-for-Service (§ 441.301(c)(3))
To ensure consistency in personcentered service plan requirements
between FFS and managed care delivery
systems, we proposed to add the
requirements for services delivered
under FFS at § 441.301(c)(3) to services
delivered under managed care delivery
systems. Section 2402(a)(3)(A) of the
Affordable Care Act requires States to
improve coordination among, and the
regulation of, all providers of Federally
and State-funded HCBS programs to
achieve a more consistent
administration of policies and
procedures across HCBS programs. In
the context of Medicaid coverage of
HCBS, it should not matter whether the
services are covered directly on a FFS
basis or by a managed care plan to its
enrollees. Therefore, we proposed that a
State must ensure compliance with the
requirements in § 441.301(c)(3) with
respect to HCBS delivered both under
FFS and managed care delivery systems.
We note that in the proposed rule at
88 FR 27974, we made the statement
that to ensure consistency in personcentered service plan requirements
between FFS and managed care delivery
systems, we propose to add the
requirements at § 441.301(c)(3) to 42
CFR 438.208(c). This statement was
published in error, and we did not
intend to propose this specific
regulation text include reference to
§ 438.208(c). We note that
§ 438.208(c)(3)(v) already requires that
managed care plans comply with
§ 441.301(c)(3), generally, so we believe
that referencing § 438.208(c) is not
necessary. We also note that
§ 438.208(c)(3)(ii) requires compliance
with the other person-centered planning
requirements at § 441.301(c)(1) and (2).
Thus, also referring to § 438.208(c)
would be unnecessary.
We received public comments on this
proposal. The following is a summary of
the comments we received and our
responses.
Comment: Commenters expressed
support for the proposed requirements
at § 441.301(c)(3) to be applied to
managed care delivery systems as well,
noting that States must ensure
compliance with respect to HCBS
delivered both in FFS and managed care
delivery systems. Commenters also
noted that the process of conducting
reassessments and making updates to a
person-centered service plan is agnostic
to whether a provider is paid by a
PO 00000
Frm 00030
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
managed care plan or through a FFS
delivery system.
Response: We appreciate the support
for our proposal.
After consideration of public
comments received, we are finalizing
our proposed policy to require that the
person-centered planning requirements
at § 441.301(c)(3) finalized in this
section are applied to HCBS delivered
under both managed care and FFS
delivery systems. As noted above, we
are not finalizing a new reference to
§ 441.301(c)(3) at § 438.208(c), as
§ 438.208(c) already requires that
managed care plans comply with
§ 441.301(c)(1) through (c)(3), which
includes the requirements being
finalized in this rule at § 441.301(c)(3)(i)
and (ii). Additionally, as is discussed in
section II.B.11. of this rule, we are
finalizing our proposal at § 438.72(b) to
direct States to comply with the
requirements finalized in this final rule,
including the revised person-centered
centered planning requirements at
§ 441.301(c)(1) through (c)(3), for
services authorized under HCBS
authorities and provided under
managed care delivery systems.
d. Person-Centered Planning—
Definition of Individual (§ 441.301(c)(1))
We also proposed updates to existing
language describing the person-centered
planning process specific to section
1915(c) waivers. Current language
describes the role of an individual’s
authorized representative as if every
waiver participant will require an
authorized representative, which is not
the case. This language has been a
source of confusion for States and
providers. We proposed to amend the
regulation text at § 441.301(c)(1) to
better reflect that the individual, or if
applicable, the individual and the
individual’s authorized representative,
will lead the person-centered planning
process. When the term individual is
used throughout this section, it includes
the individual’s authorized
representative will lead the personcentered planning process if applicable.
We note that, in the proposed rule, we
described our proposal as removing
extraneous language and not as an
amendment of § 441.301(c)(1) (88 FR
27974). Upon further consideration, we
believe characterizing this proposal as
an amendment is more accurate. We
intend that this proposed language as
finalized will bring the section 1915(c)
waiver regulatory text in line with
person-centered planning process
language in both the section 1915(j) and
(k) State plan options.
We did not receive public comments
on this proposal. However, after further
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
consideration of the proposed
requirement, we are finalizing
§ 441.301(c)(1) with a technical
modification to clarify that the language
contained in § 441.301(c)(1), as
finalized, applies to the person-centered
planning requirements throughout
§ 441.301(c)(1) through (3). (New
language identified in bold.) This
modification expresses our intent that
§ 441.301(c)(1) applies to the personcentered planning requirements in
§ 441.301(c)(1) through (3), rather than
§ 441.301(c) in its entirety.
e. Applicability Date
(§ 441.301(c)(3)(iii))
We proposed at § 441.301(c)(3)(iii) to
make the performance levels under
§ 441.301(c)(3)(ii) effective 3 years after
the effective date of § 441.301(c)(3) (in
other words, 3 years after the effective
date of the final rule) in FFS delivery
systems. For States that implement a
managed care delivery system under the
authority of sections 1915(a), 1915(b),
1932(a), or 1115(a) of the Act and
include HCBS in the managed care
organization’s (MCO’s), prepaid
inpatient health plan’s (PIHP’s), or
prepaid ambulatory health plan’s
(PAHP’s) contract, we proposed to
provide States until the first rating
period with the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP,
beginning on or after 3 years after the
effective date of the final rule to
implement these requirements. We
solicited comment on whether the
timeframe to implement the proposed
regulations is sufficient, whether we
should require a shorter timeframe or
longer timeframe to implement these
provisions, and, if an alternate
timeframe is recommended, the
rationale for that alternate timeframe.
We received public comments on
these proposals. The following is a
summary of the comments we received
and our responses.
Comment: Most commenters
supported the 3-year timeframe for the
effective date as defined at
§ 441.301(c)(3)(iii). A few commenters
expressed concerns about the overall
burden they believe will be associated
with the final rule, due to competing
priorities, and the effect it may have on
States’ ability to implement the
proposed person-centered planning
provisions at § 441.301(c)(3)(ii) within 3
years following the effective date of the
final rule. A few commenters expressed
that the performance levels under
§ 441.301(c)(3)(ii) may require States to
have a longer runway to implement and
operationalize State regulation changes
and processes, revise policies, and hire
critical staff. A few commenters also
requested we consider alternative
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
effective dates for the person-centered
planning minimum performance
requirements, ranging from 18 months
to 4 years.
Response: We noted, in the proposed
rule (88 FR 27974), that we recognize
many States may need time to
implement the proposed HCBS
requirements we are finalizing in the
final rule. We acknowledge that States
will have to expend resources in
addressing the person-centered
planning minimum performance
requirements, including needing time to
amend provider agreements, make State
regulatory or policy changes, implement
process or procedural changes, update
information systems for data collection
and reporting, or conduct other
activities to implement these personcentered planning requirements.
We believe that 3 years for States to
ensure compliance with the personcentered planning minimum
performance requirements being
finalized at § 441.301(c)(3)(ii) is realistic
and achievable for States. We also note
that the minimum performance
requirements measure performance of
the requirements at § 441.301(c)(3)(i),
which substantively reflect activities
States are currently expected to perform
under existing § 441.301(c)(3). For
States implementing a managed care
delivery system under the authority of
sections 1915(a), 1915(b), 1932(a), or
1115(a) of the Act and include HCBS in
the in the MCO’s, PIHP’s, or PAHP’s
contract, we similarly believe it is
realistic and achievable to provide
States with a date to comply that is until
the first rating period with the MCO,
PIHP, or PAHP, beginning on or after 3
years after the effective date of this final
rule to implement these requirements.
We will provide technical assistance to
States as needed with meeting the
timeframe for compliance.
After consideration of the comments
received, we are finalizing the substance
of §§ 441.301(c)(3)(iii) as proposed, but
with minor modifications to correct
erroneous uses of the word ‘‘effective’’
and to make technical modifications to
the language pertaining to managed care
delivery systems to improve accuracy
and alignment with common phrasing
in managed care contracting policy. We
are retitling the requirement at
§ 441.301(c)(3)(iii) as Applicability date
(rather than Effective date). We are also
modifying the language at
§ 441.301(c)(3)(iii) to specify that States
must comply with the requirements at
§ 441.301(c)(3)(ii) beginning 3 years
from the effective date of this final rule
(rather than stating that the performance
levels described in § 441.301(c)(3)(ii) are
effective 3 years after the date of
PO 00000
Frm 00031
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40571
enactment of the final rule); and in the
case of the State that implements a
managed care delivery system under the
authority of sections 1915(a), 1915(b),
1932(a), or 1115(a) of the Act and
includes HCBS in the MCO’s, PIHP’s, or
PAHP’s contract, the first rating period
for contracts with the MCO, PIHP,
or PAHP beginning on or after the
date that is 3 years after the effective
date of this final rule. (New language
identified in bold.).
f. Application to Other Authorities
Section 2402(a)(3)(A) of the
Affordable Care Act requires States to
improve coordination among, and the
regulation of, all providers of Federally
and State-funded HCBS programs to
achieve a more consistent
administration of policies and
procedures across HCBS programs. In
accordance with the requirement of
section 2402(a)(3)(A) of the Affordable
Care Act and because HCBS State plan
options have similar person-centered
planning and service plan requirements,
we proposed to include the proposed
requirements at § 441.301(c)(3) in
section 1915(j), (k), and (i) State plan
services, at §§ 441.450(c), 441.540(c),
and 441.725(c), respectively. Consistent
with our proposal for section 1915(c)
waivers, we proposed these
requirements under section 1902(a)(19)
of the Act, which authorizes safeguards
necessary to assure that eligibility for
care and services under the Medicaid
program will be determined, and such
care and services will be provided, in a
manner consistent with the best interest
of beneficiaries. We believe these same
reasons for proposing these
requirements for section 1915(c) waivers
are equally applicable for these other
HCBS authorities.
We considered whether to apply the
proposed person-centered plan
requirements at § 441.301(c)(3) to
section 1905(a) ‘‘medical assistance’’
State plan personal care services, home
health services, and case management
services. However, we did not propose
that these requirements apply to any
section 1905(a) State plan services at
this time. First, States do not have the
same data collection and reporting
capabilities for these services as they do
for other HCBS at section 1915(c), (i), (j),
and (k). Second, person-centered
planning and service plan requirements
are not required by Medicaid for section
1905(a) services, although we
recommend that States implement
person-centered planning processes for
all HCBS. We note that the vast majority
of HCBS is delivered under section
1915(c), (i), (j), and (k) authorities, while
only a small percentage of HCBS
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
40572
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
nationally is delivered under section
1905(a) State plan authorities. However,
the small overall percentage includes
large numbers of people with mental
health needs who receive case
management.
We solicited comment on whether we
should establish similar person-centered
planning and service plan requirements
for section 1905(a) State plan personal
care services, home health services and
case management services.
We received public comments on
these proposals. The following is a
summary of the comments we received
and our responses.
Comment: Commenters expressed
support for applying the proposed
person-centered planning and personcentered plan requirements at
§ 441.301(c)(3) to section 1915(j), (k),
and (i) State plan services.
Response: We appreciate the support
for our proposal. As noted earlier, we
are finalizing modifications to
§ 441.301(c)(3)(i) to specify that the
requirement applies to every individual
and to make a technical correction to
remove an extraneous comma. We are
finalizing corresponding edits for
section 1915(k) in § 441.540(c) and
section 1915(i) in § 441.725(c). The
revised language for both § 441.540(c)
and § 441.725(c) will specify that the
State must ensure that the personcentered service plan for every
individual is reviewed, and revised as
appropriate, based upon the
reassessment of functional need, at least
every 12 months, when the individual’s
circumstances or needs change
significantly, and at the request of the
individual. States must adhere to the
requirements of § 441.301(c)(3).
Comment: A few commenters
responded to our request for comment
on whether we should establish similar
health and welfare requirements for
section 1905(a) State plan personal care
services, home health services, and case
management services. Several
commenters supported that we decided
not to propose to extend the personcentered plan requirements at
§ 441.301(c)(3) to section 1905(a)
services. These commenters expressed
concern that applying these
requirements to these State plan benefits
could pose critical challenges for State
Medicaid and other operating agencies,
due to varying levels of HCBS provided
and different data reporting
infrastructure States have for section
1905(a) services. A few commenters
recommended that CMS apply the
person-centered planning requirements
to mental health rehabilitative services
delivered under section 1905(a) State
plan authority. A couple of other
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
commenters suggested that mental
health rehabilitative services are
considered HCBS under the broader
definition enacted by Congress in the
American Rescue Plan Act of 2021 (Pub.
L. 117–2, March 11, 2021), suggesting
that CMS should consider including
these services in the person-centered
plan requirements at § 441.301(c)(3).
Response: At this time and as noted
in the proposed rule (88 FR 27974 and
27975), we are not applying the personcentered service plan requirements at
§ 441.301(c)(3) to section 1905(a)
services, due to the statutory and
regulatory differences between services
authorized under sections 1905(a) and
1915 of the Act. For example, there are
no statutory provisions in section
1905(a) of the Act that attach State-level
reporting requirements to any section
1905(a) service. Relatedly, States do not
have the same data collection and
reporting capabilities for these services
as they do for HCBS at section 1915(c),
(i), (j), and (k).
Additionally, we note that section
1905(a) services do not have the same
person-centered planning requirements
at § 441.301(c)(1) through (6). Formal
person-centered service planning
requirements are established for section
1915(j) services in § 441.468, for section
1915(k) services in § 441.540, and for
section 1915(i) services at § 441.725.
While service planning might be part of
some specific 1905(a) services, it is not
a required component of all section
1905(a) services.
We acknowledge that many
beneficiaries, particularly those
receiving mental health services, are
served by section 1905(a) services, and
encourage States to implement effective
person-centered planning processes that
are based on individual preferences and
personal goals and support full
engagement in community for Medicaid
beneficiaries receiving section 1905(a)
State plan personal care services, home
health services, case management
services, and rehabilitative services. We
thank commenters for their feedback on
this request for comment, which we
may consider in future rulemaking.
After consideration of public
comments, we are finalizing the
application of § 441.301(c)(3), as
finalized in this rule, to section 1915(j),
(k), and (i) State plan services by
finalizing relevant requirements at
§§ 441.450(c), 441.540(c), and
441.725(c), respectively. We are
finalizing §§ 441.450(c), 441.540(c), and
441.725(c), with a technical
modification to clarify that service plans
must meet the requirements of
§ 441.301(c)(3), but that references
therein to section 1915(c) of the Act are
PO 00000
Frm 00032
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
instead references to section 1915(j),
1915(k), and 1915(i) of the Act,
respectively. We are finalizing the
requirements at §§ 441.540(c) and
441.725(c) with minor modifications. To
maintain consistency with
modifications finalized in
§ 441.301(c)(3)(i), we are finalizing
§§ 441.540(c) and 441.725(c) with
modifications to specify that the
requirements apply to every individual
and to remove an extraneous comma.
g. Summary of Finalized Requirements
After consideration of the public
comments, we are finalizing the
proposals at §§ 441.301(c)(1),
441.301(c)(3), 441.450(c), 441.540(c),
and 441.725(c) as follows:
• We are finalizing the requirement at
§ 441.301(c)(1) with a technical
modification to clarify that
§ 441.301(c)(1) applies to paragraphs
(c)(1) through (3) of this section.
• We are finalizing § 441.301(c)(3)(i)
with modifications to specify that the
requirement applies to every individual
and to remove the reference to
§ 441.365(e), as well as finalizing a
minor technical change to remove an
extraneous comma.
• We are finalizing our proposals at
§ 441.301(c)(3)(ii) with minor
modifications to clarify that the State
must ensure that the minimum
performance levels specified at
§ 441.301(c)(3)(ii)(A) and (B) are met.
We are also finalizing
§ 441.301(c)(3)(ii)(B) with minor
technical modifications to correct the
punctuation (consistent with the change
finalized in § 441.301(c)(3)(i)).
• We are finalizing the applicability
date requirement at § 441.301(c)(3)(iii),
with a technical modification to the
language to improve accuracy and
alignment with common phrasing in
managed care contracting policy. We
also are finalizing § 441.301(c)(3)(iii) to
specify that States must comply with
the performance levels described in
paragraph (c)(3)(ii) of this section
beginning 3 years after July 9, 2024; and
in the case of the State that implements
a managed care delivery system under
the authority of sections 1915(a),
1915(b), 1932(a), or 1115(a) of the Act
and includes HCBS in the MCO’s,
PIHP’s, or PAHP’s contract, the first
rating period for contracts with the
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP beginning on or
after the date that is 3 years after July
9, 2024.
• We are finalizing §§ 441.450(c),
441.540(c), and 441.725(c), with a
technical modification to clarify that
service plans must meet the
requirements of § 441.301(c)(3), but that
references therein to section 1915(c) of
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
the Act are instead references to section
1915(j), 1915(k), and 1915(i) of the Act,
respectively.
• We are finalizing §§ 441.540(c) and
441.725(c), consistent with
modifications finalized in
§ 441.301(c)(3)(i), with a modification to
specify that the requirements apply to
every individual, and with technical
modification to correct the punctuation.
2. Grievance System (§ 441.301(c)(7);
Proposed at § 441.464(d)(2)(v), Being
Finalized at § 441.464(d)(5); Proposed at
§ 441.555(b)(2)(iv), Being Finalized at
§ 441.555(e); and § 441.745(a)(1)(iii))
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
a. Scope of Grievance System and
Definitions (§ 441.301(c)(7)(i) and
§ 441.301(c)(7)(ii))
Section 2402(a) of the Affordable Care
Act requires the Secretary of HHS to
ensure that all States receiving Federal
funds for HCBS, including Medicaid
HCBS, develop HCBS systems that are
responsive to the needs and choices of
beneficiaries receiving HCBS, maximize
independence and self-direction,
provide support and coordination to
assist with a community-supported life,
and achieve a more consistent and
coordinated approach to the
administration of policies and
procedures across public programs
providing HCBS.56 Among other things,
section 2402(a)(3)(B)(ii) of the
Affordable Care Act requires
development and monitoring of an
HCBS complaint system. Further,
section 1902(a)(19) of the Act requires
States to provide safeguards to assure
that eligibility for Medicaid-covered
care and services will be determined
and provided in a manner that is
consistent with simplicity of
administration and the best interest of
Medicaid beneficiaries.
Federal regulations at 42 CFR part
431, subpart E, require States to provide
Medicaid applicants and beneficiaries
with an opportunity for a fair hearing
before the State Medicaid agency in
certain circumstances, including for a
denial, termination, suspension, or
reduction of Medicaid eligibility, or for
a denial, termination, suspension, or
reduction in benefits or services. These
fair hearing rights apply to all Medicaid
applicants and beneficiaries, including
those receiving HCBS regardless of the
delivery system. Under 42 CFR part 438,
subpart F, Medicaid managed care plans
must have in place an appeal system
56 Section 2402(a) of the Affordable Care Act—
Guidance for Implementing Standards for PersonCentered Planning and Self-Direction in Home and
Community-Based Services Programs. Accessed at
https://acl.gov/sites/default/files/news%202016-10/
2402-a-Guidance.pdf.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
that allows a Medicaid managed care
enrollee to request an appeal, which is
a review by the Medicaid managed care
plan of an adverse benefit determination
issued by the plan; and a grievance
system, which allows a Medicaid
managed care enrollee to file an
expression of dissatisfaction with the
plan about any matter other than an
adverse benefit determination.
Currently, our regulations do not
provide for a venue to raise concerns
about issues that HCBS beneficiaries in
an FFS delivery system may experience
which are not subject to the fair hearing
process, such as the failure of a provider
to comply with the HCBS settings
requirements at § 441.301(c)(4) (which
are issues that a managed care enrollee
could file a grievance with their plan).
Under our authority at section
1902(a)(19) of the Act and section
2402(a)(3)(B)(ii) of the Affordable Care
Act, we proposed to require that States
establish grievance procedures for
Medicaid beneficiaries receiving
services under section 1915(c), (i), (j)
and (k) authorities through a FFS
delivery system. Specifically, for section
1915(c) HCBS waivers, we proposed at
§ 441.301(c)(7) that States must establish
a procedure under which a beneficiary
can file a grievance related to the State’s
or a provider’s compliance with the
person-centered planning and service
plan requirements at §§ 441.301(c)(1)
through (3) and the HCBS settings
requirements at §§ 441.301(c)(4) through
(6). This proposal was based on
feedback obtained during various public
engagement activities conducted with
interested parties over the past several
years about the need for beneficiary
grievance processes in section 1915(c)
waiver programs related to these
requirements. We also proposed to
apply this requirement to section
1915(i), (j) and (k) authorities, which are
discussed below in section II.B.2.h. of
this final rule.
To avoid duplication with the
grievance requirements at part 438,
subpart F, we proposed not to apply this
requirement to establish a grievance
procedure to managed care delivery
systems. We note, though, that the
requirements in this section are similar
to requirements for managed care
grievance requirements found at part
438, subpart F, with any differences
reflecting changes appropriate for FFS
delivery systems. The proposed
requirements included at § 441.301(c)(7)
in the proposed rule (88 FR 27975) were
focused specifically on grievance
systems and did not establish new fair
hearing system requirements, as appeals
of adverse eligibility, benefit, or service
determinations are addressed by
PO 00000
Frm 00033
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40573
existing fair hearing requirements at 42
CFR part 431, subpart E. We solicited
comments on any additional changes we
should consider in this section with
respect to a grievance system.
As discussed earlier in this section
II.B.2. of this final rule, section
2402(a)(3)(B)(ii) of the Affordable Care
Act requires development and
monitoring of an HCBS complaint
system. In addition, section
2402(a)(3)(A) of the Affordable Care Act
requires the Secretary of HHS to ensure
that all States receiving Federal funds
for HCBS, including Medicaid HCBS,
develop HCBS systems that achieve a
more consistent and coordinated
approach to the administration of
policies and procedures across public
programs providing HCBS. As such, we
believe the proposed requirement for
States to establish grievance procedures
for Medicaid beneficiaries receiving
HCBS through a FFS delivery system is
necessary to comply with the HCBS
complaint system requirements at
section 2402(a)(3)(B)(ii) of the
Affordable Care Act and to ensure
consistency in the administration of
HCBS between managed care and FFS
delivery systems. Further, in the
absence of a grievance system
requirement for FFS HCBS programs,
States may not have established
processes and systems for people
receiving HCBS through FFS delivery
systems to express dissatisfaction with
or voice concerns related to States’
compliance with the person-centered
planning and service plan requirements
at § 441.301(c)(1) through (3) and the
HCBS settings requirements at
§ 441.301(c)(4) through (6), as such
concerns are not subject to the existing
fair hearing process at 42 CFR part 431
subpart E. As a result, we believe the
proposal for a grievance system for FFS
HCBS programs is necessary to assure
that care and services will be provided
in a manner that is in the best interests
of the beneficiaries, as required by
section 1902(a)(19) of the Act.
We specifically focused our proposed
grievance system requirement on States’
and providers’ compliance with the
person-centered service plan
requirements at § 441.301(c)(1) through
(3) and the HCBS settings requirements
at § 441.301(c)(4) through (6) because of
the critical role that person-centered
planning and service plans play in
appropriate care delivery for people
receiving HCBS. Additionally, we
focused the grievance system
requirements on the HCBS settings
requirements because of the importance
of the HCBS settings requirements to
ensuring that HCBS beneficiaries have
full access to the benefits of community
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
40574
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
living and are able to receive services in
the most integrated setting appropriate
to their needs. Beneficiary advocates
and other interested parties indicated to
us that these are especially important
areas for which to ensure that grievance
processes are in place for all Medicaid
beneficiaries receiving HCBS. Further,
focusing the grievance systems
requirements on the person-centered
service plan requirements at
§ 441.301(c)(1) through (3) and the
HCBS settings requirements at
§ 441.301(c)(4) through (6) helps to
ensure that the proposed grievance
requirements do not duplicate or
conflict with existing fair hearing
requirements at part 431, subpart E, as
HCBS settings requirements and personcentered planning requirements are
outside the scope of the fair hearing
requirements.
At § 441.301(c)(7)(ii), we proposed to
define a grievance as an expression of
dissatisfaction or complaint related to
the State’s or a provider’s compliance
with the person-centered service plan
requirements at § 441.301(c)(1) through
(3) and the HCBS settings requirements
at § 441.301(c)(4) through (6), regardless
of whether the beneficiary requests that
remedial action be taken to address the
area of dissatisfaction or complaint.
Also, at § 441.301(a)(7)(ii), we proposed
to define the grievance system as the
processes the State implements to
handle grievances, as well as the
processes to collect and track
information about them.
We received public comments on
these proposals. The following is a
summary of the comments we received
and our responses.
Comment: Many commenters
expressed support for our proposal to
require that States establish a procedure
under which a beneficiary can file a
grievance related to the State’s or a
provider’s compliance with the personcentered service plan requirements at
§§ 441.301(c)(1) through (3) and the
HCBS settings requirements at
§§ 441.301(c)(4) through (6). In general,
commenters believed that clear,
transparent, and accessible grievance
processes are critical to ensuring that
beneficiaries can address violations of
their rights, provide feedback on their
experiences in HCBS, and more fully
participate in HCBS programs. One
commenter noted that a Federal
requirement will help establish national
best practices.
Some commenters connected a strong
grievance process with improved safety
and service quality in HCBS programs.
For instance, one commenter noted that
a grievance process can complement
other quality mechanisms (such as
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
performance measures) because a
grievance system can address problems
as they happen, thus preventing harm
before it can occur. Another commenter
suggested that preventing or
remediating poor service delivery has
the potential of improving the HCBS
workforce by promoting professionalism
and improving the public perception of
HCBS providers, which could aid
providers’ worker recruitment and
retention efforts; this commenter noted
that a strong workforce would promote
quality in HCBS.
Other commenters noted that a
grievance system would allow
beneficiaries to state their rights and
provide a fair and unbiased review of
beneficiaries’ concerns. Several
commenters were specifically
supportive of the proposal’s potential to
collect and track standardized
information about service system issues,
including obstacles to informed choice
and person-centered planning.
A few commenters also described
frustrations with current State or
provider grievance processes that they
have found difficult to access,
unresponsive, ineffective, or opaque.
One commenter described our proposal
as ‘‘overdue,’’ but also expressed
concerns about whether providers will
comply with requirements moving
forward. In this vein, a few commenters
suggested that CMS involvement and
oversight may be critical to ensuring
that existing or newly created grievance
processes are effective. One commenter
expressed the hope that beneficiaries
would be able to contact CMS if they
believe the State is not complying with
grievance process obligations.
Response: We thank commenters for
their support. We believe the personal
experiences with grievance systems that
commenters shared underscore the need
for national standards. Additionally,
while States will have a great deal of
responsibility for developing and
monitoring their own systems, having
Federal requirements for grievance
systems will facilitate our ability to
engage in oversight. We note that
members of the public are able to share
concerns with us about their State’s
Medicaid activities, which would
include the grievance system, once
implemented.57 We also note that in
addition to the grievance process
finalized under this rule, individuals
who believe they have been
discriminated against in HCBS
programs, including the right to be
57 Specific questions or concerns regarding the
application or implementation of the regulations
finalized in section II.B. of this rule may be directed
to HCBS_Access_Rule@cms.hhs.gov.
PO 00000
Frm 00034
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
served in the most integrated setting,
may file a civil rights complaint with
the HHS Office for Civil Rights at
https://www.hhs.gov/civil-rights/filinga-complaint/.
Comment: Several commenters
expressed opposition to the proposal,
suggesting that it was too prescriptive
and would result in unnecessary
information technology (IT) systems
changes in States that already have
grievance systems in place. Several
commenters also noted concerns that
the proposal would place administrative
burdens on providers. Additionally,
several commenters noted that this
requirement could be administratively
burdensome for States with a small
percentage of their population enrolled
in FFS. One commenter suggested that
we provide an exceptions process in
these circumstances.
Response: We address specific
concerns from commenters—including
concerns about potential duplication,
burden, and provider involvement—in
more detail in subsequent responses. As
described below, we are seeking to
balance State flexibility with the need
for accountability and consistency
among State systems. We also do not
believe that this proposal should place
excessive burdens on providers, as we
are requiring that States, and not
providers, bear the primary
responsibility of managing the grievance
system. Finally, as part of our goal of
establishing national standards, we do
not intend to exempt States from these
requirements based on the size of their
FFS populations.
Comment: One commenter requested
clarification on whether the State or
CMS is ‘‘in charge’’ of the grievance
process.
Response: We have proposed and, as
discussed further below, we are
finalizing Federal requirements that
States operate and maintain a grievance
system. The State is responsible for this
system. However, we will monitor the
States’ compliance with these
requirements.
Comment: A few commenters raised
concerns or expressed confusion about
how the proposed grievance system
requirement will affect dually eligible
beneficiaries who are enrolled in
managed care plans that already have
grievance processes. One commenter
raised concerns about the possibility of
multiple investigations being conducted
parallel to one another. Other
commenters inquired if Medicare
Advantage care navigators could be
required to help beneficiaries file
grievances, or if the proposed grievance
system requirements can be made part
of dual eligible special needs plan (D–
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
SNP) contracts. One commenter noted
that it is critical for dually eligible
beneficiaries to have one place to file
grievances about both Medicare and
Medicaid services. Another commenter
requested clarification on how the
grievance systems should work for
dually eligible beneficiaries who have,
as described by the commenter,
‘‘multiple, perhaps conflicting plans of
care.’’
Response: We plan to provide States
with technical assistance to help
address issues specific to dually eligible
beneficiaries. We note that we proposed
that the grievance system requirements
at § 441.301(c)(7), and as finalized in
this rule, apply only to beneficiaries
receiving services under section 1915(c),
(i), (j), and (k) authorities through FFS
delivery systems, and to issues arising
with these services. The new grievance
system requirement would not affect, for
instance, dually eligible beneficiaries
who receive services under section
1915(c), (i), (j), or (k) authorities through
fully integrated dual eligible special
needs plans (FIDE SNP), highly
integrated dual eligible special needs
plans (HIDE SNP), or D–SNPs otherwise
affiliated with MLTSS plans, as those
beneficiaries receive their HCBS
through managed care and not through
FFS. We also note that some dually
eligible beneficiaries may be enrolled in
managed care plans known as
applicable integrated plans (AIP), which
are subject to the integrated grievance
requirements at § 422.630. AIPs must
resolve and notify enrollees within
required timeframes for integrated
grievances filed for Medicare and
Medicaid services. We will provide
technical assistance as needed regarding
the application of the requirements
finalized at § 441.301(c)(7) to
beneficiaries in different categories of
dual eligibility.
Comment: One commenter
recommended continuity across
grievance systems in FFS and managed
care delivery systems to ensure
consistent and equitable processes for
addressing enrollee concerns.
Response: We agree that such
continuity is important. In drafting the
proposed requirements at
§ 441.301(c)(7) for FFS grievance
systems, which we are finalizing as
described in this section II.B.2 of the
final rule, we attempted to mirror the
requirements for managed care
grievance processes in part 438, subpart
F, as much as possible in order to
promote consistency between the two
systems.
Comment: A few commenters
requested that we allow States to
arrange for the operations of the
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
grievance procedures to be performed
by a vendor, local agencies, or other
contracted entity. Conversely, a few
other commenters raised concerns about
the possibility of the grievance process
being administered by providers. Some
of these commenters expressed concerns
that the requirement might be
burdensome for local and regional
entities to administer, and one
commenter raised concerns that
administration of the grievance process
by local agencies might cause problems
in terms of oversight and conflict of
interest.
A few commenters also noted that,
unlike in managed care where care is
managed under one plan, some FFS
delivery systems involve multiple State
agencies or agency divisions operating
different programs. The commenters
requested more clarification about
which agency or department is
responsible for oversight of the system
and coordination in these
circumstances.
Response: The requirements
proposed, and being finalized, in
§ 441.301(c)(7) are applied to the State,
by which we refer (as we do in many of
our regulations) to the single State
agency as described in § 431.10(b).
However, we believe that some States
may find it more efficient or effective to
have the operations of the grievance
system performed by other government
agencies or contractors, depending on
how a State’s systems are organized.
Allowing such contracting may also
help preserve existing State grievance
processes; we address additional
comments about preservation of existing
grievance systems later in this section
II.B.2. of the final rule. However, the
single State agency must retain ultimate
responsibility for ensuring compliance
with the requirements set forth in
§ 441.301(c)(7). We expect that States
are familiar with their local resources
(including the capacity of local
agencies) and would only have the
operations of the grievance system
performed by an entity that had the
necessary infrastructure and resources
to operate a system that would comply
with the requirements in § 441.301(c)(7).
To ensure that the responsibility of the
single State agency is clear, we are
finalizing § 441.301(c)(7)(i) with a
modification to specify that the State
may contract with contractors or other
government entities to perform activities
described in § 441.301(c)(7) provided
however that the State retains
responsibility for ensuring performance
of and compliance with these
provisions.
We also note that we intend that the
proposed requirements at
PO 00000
Frm 00035
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40575
§ 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(C)(3), which we are
finalizing as discussed in detail later in
this section II.B.2. of the final rule,
promote an unbiased review of
grievances because they prohibit
someone who has previously made
decisions related to the grievance from
reviewing the grievance. While we do
not intend to specify any additional
restrictions on the entities operating the
grievance system in this final rule, we
believe that it would be difficult to
envision scenarios in which it would be
appropriate for the State to contract
with a provider (or local agencies that
act as providers) to operate the
grievance system. For example, an
employee of a provider who signed off
on the provider’s actions that gave rise
to the grievance would be someone who
was involved with making a decision
about the grievance and thus neither
that employee (nor their subordinates)
would be appropriate decisionmakers in
the grievance process. If a State believed
it necessary to arrange for the operations
of the grievance system to be performed
by a local agency that also provided
services, firewalls would have to be put
in place to ensure that grievances were
reviewed by a neutral decisionmaker
within that agency.
Comment: Several commenters
supported the definition of grievance we
proposed at § 441.301(c)(7)(ii). Overall,
these commenters supported the focus
on compliance with the person-centered
planning process and the HCBS settings
rule. One of these commenters observed
that issues with these requirements are
often at the core of challenges
experienced by beneficiaries. One
commenter, however, questioned the
inclusion of concerns about the HCBS
settings requirements, noting that if a
setting violates the HCBS settings
requirements, the individual has the
choice of moving to a different setting.
Response: We appreciate commenters’
support for the definition of grievances.
We specifically included
noncompliance with the HCBS settings
requirements as one of the bases for
grievances so that beneficiaries do not
have the burden of addressing violations
of their rights by having to change
providers, which could result in some
circumstances in having to move out of
their home. We do not believe that
beneficiaries should have to choose
between their rights or their homes. As
a practical matter, switching residences
can be disruptive, emotionally and
physically demanding, costly, and timeintensive, not to mention particularly
difficult in areas that lack plentiful
affordable and accessible housing
options. We also believe that requiring
States to address these issues related to
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
40576
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
compliance with HCBS settings
requirements in the context of a
grievance system may encourage States
and providers to prevent similar issues
from occurring with other beneficiaries.
Comment: One commenter stated that
the definition of grievance was too
broad and requested that CMS narrow
the scope of allowable grievances. The
commenter stated that although the
proposed requirements limit the
grievance system to person-centered
planning, service plan requirements,
and HCBS settings requirements, they
would still allow a beneficiary to file a
grievance on nearly every aspect of their
HCBS experience, which would in turn
create the potential for an unreasonably
high volume of grievances to which
States would be required to respond.
A few commenters stated that the
definition of grievance was subjective,
and asked for general clarification on
what is meant by an ‘‘expression of
dissatisfaction.’’ Conversely, a few
commenters stated the definition of
grievance was not broad enough. One
commenter stated that the reference to
§§ 441.301(c)(1) through (3) would only
allow for the filing of grievances in
relation to the person-centered planning
process but would not allow for
grievances in relation to beneficiaries’
dissatisfaction with the delivery of the
services in the plan. The commenter
provided examples, such as a care
provider handling an HCBS beneficiary
roughly, failing to assist the beneficiary
with certain activities of daily living or
perform other services in the care plan,
being slow to respond to the
beneficiary’s requests for assistance in
residential settings, improper
administration of chemical restraints, or
general poor care that leads to injuries
such as bed sores. The commenter
recommended that the regulatory
language be revised to include the right
to file a grievance to protect beneficiary
health and welfare.
One commenter suggested that we
specify that grievances may include
issues regarding timeliness, quality, and
effectiveness of services, in addition to
the HCBS setting, person-centered
planning, and service plan
requirements. The commenter noted
that, in the commenter’s State,
beneficiaries have had to wait for long
periods of time for the initiation of
services after being approved for the
services.
Finally, another commenter noted
that they believed that the managed care
regulations’ grievance definition
includes an expression of dissatisfaction
about any matter other than an adverse
benefit determination and
recommended adding clarifying
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
language to the definition of a grievance
to ensure that beneficiaries do not
mistakenly file grievances about issues
that are adverse benefit decisions and
that entitle them to a fair hearing.
Response: We disagree with
commenters that the proposed
definition is overly broad. The
definition of grievance proposed at
§ 441.301(c)(7)(ii) was crafted to strike a
balance between providing beneficiaries
with broad, but not unlimited, bases for
filing a grievance. We believe that the
requirements in §§ 441.301(c)(1)
through (6) provide a clear list of
activities that the States and providers
must perform to ensure that HCBS
beneficiaries receive appropriate
person-centered planning, receive the
services described in the personcentered service plan to support the
individual in the community, and have
full access to the benefits of community
living and are able to receive services in
the most integrated setting appropriate
to their needs.58 We note that some
specific examples of when a beneficiary
may express dissatisfaction by filing a
grievance are discussed further in this
section.
We also disagree that the scope of the
definition is too narrow. We proposed
that the definition of grievance include
an expression of dissatisfaction or
complaint related to the State’s or
provider’s compliance with the personcentered service planning process,
required in §§ 441.301(c)(1) through (3).
We note that some issues regarding the
timeliness, quality, or effectiveness of
services may need to be addressed as
part of the person-centered service
planning process itself. For instance, if
a beneficiary believes the service is not
effective, the beneficiary may request
revision to the person-centered service
plan, as required at § 441.301(c)(3), to
identify either a more effective service
or a more effective provider; nonresponsiveness on the part of the entity
responsible for updating the service
plan could be a reason to file a
grievance.
Additionally, § 441.301(c)(4) requires
that home and community-based
settings must meet certain requirements
enumerated therein, including (but not
limited to): being integrated in and
supporting full access of individuals to
community life; ensuring that an
individual has rights to privacy, dignity
and respect, and freedom from coercion
and restraint; optimizing an individual’s
initiative, autonomy, and independence
58 We note that compliance with CMS regulations
and reporting requirements does not imply that a
State has complied with the integration mandate of
Title II of the ADA, as interpreted by the Supreme
Court in the Olmstead Decision.
PO 00000
Frm 00036
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
in daily activities and the physical
environment; and facilitating an
individual’s choice in services and
supports, as well as who provides them.
If, for instance, a beneficiary believes
that a worker has not treated the
beneficiary with respect, or the worker
is chronically late, and the provider has
failed to address the worker’s behavior
or provide a different worker at the
beneficiary’s request, it would be
reasonable for a beneficiary to file a
grievance, as the provider is not
ensuring that all of the qualities of a
home and community-based setting (as
described by § 441.301(c)(4)) are being
met. Accordingly, we believe that the
activities set forth in §§ 441.301(c)(1)
through (6) (both currently and as are
being amended in this final rule)
generally describe the actions of both
providers and States that are necessary
to uphold and promote high-quality
service delivery that promotes respect
for beneficiaries’ rights.
While we believe the scope of
grievances that may be considered
under the grievance system that we
proposed, and are finalizing,
appropriately captures activities that
promote delivery of quality HCBS and
respect for beneficiaries’ rights, we do
believe further clarity is warranted. We
believe it is more appropriate and
precise to say grievances may be filed
regarding the State’s or a provider’s
performance of (rather than compliance
with) the requirements described in
§§ 441.301(c)(1) through (6). We note
that the activities described in
§ 441.301(c)(1) through (6) must, as
required at § 441.301(c), be included in
a State’s waiver application; we want to
make it clear that grievances may be
filed when a State or provider fails to
perform these activities (not solely if the
State fails to include these items in a
waiver application). To clarify this
point, we are finalizing the scope of
grievances that may be filed under the
grievance system we proposed to set
forth at § 441.301(c)(7) with
modification, by revising the language
in § 441.301(c)(7)(i) to specify that
beneficiaries may file grievances
regarding a State’s or provider’s
performance of (rather than compliance
with) the activities described in
§§ 441.301(c)(1) through (6). We are
finalizing a conforming modification to
the definition of grievance at
§ 441.301(c)(7)(ii).
We observe that most of the examples
provided by commenters, as described
above, included instances in which a
beneficiary experienced abuse or harm
during the performance (or lack thereof)
of services in the person-centered
service plan. These types of complaints
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
may be more appropriately addressed
under the critical incident system being
finalized at § 441.302(a)(6). As
discussed in II.B.3. of this rule, we
believe the critical incident system
proposed at § 441.302(a)(6) is the
appropriate mechanism for investigating
harms to beneficiaries’ health and
safety. As we discuss in II.B.3 of this
rule, we proposed additional
performance measures and reporting
requirements for the critical incident
system (beyond what is proposed for the
grievance system) to ensure more formal
oversight of the investigations and
resolutions of threats to beneficiary
health and safety. We do not believe a
grievance system is an appropriate
mechanism for investigating threats to
the beneficiary’s health and welfare.
Therefore, we decline to broaden the
definition of grievances that may be
addressed under the grievance system
we are finalizing at § 441.301(c)(7) in
such a way that would suggest that the
grievance system is intended for
complaints regarding health and safety.
We believe doing so would create
duplicative system requirements for the
grievance process and critical incident
system and potentially cause States to
resolve threats to health and safety in
the grievance system that should have
been investigated and addressed within
the critical incident system.
We also disagree with the commenter
that suggested we align the definition of
grievance we proposed at
§ 441.301(c)(7)(ii) with the definition of
grievance for managed care grievance
processes at § 438.400(b). We believe
that, for the purposes of a FFS grievance
system intended to address specific
concerns with HCBS, using the same or
similar definition of grievance for
managed care grievance processes
would be overly broad and will not
diminish confusion about whether an
issue is appropriate to be filed as a
grievance, a critical incident, or a fair
hearing. We plan to provide technical
assistance to States as needed on this
topic.
We refer readers to section II.B.2.b. of
this final rule where we also address
more specific concerns related to
ensuring matters are filed with the
correct system in our discussion of
§ 441.301(c)(7)(iii).
Comment: One commenter suggested
that we broaden the definition of
grievance to specify that beneficiaries
can file grievances when their rights are
violated, and suggested that the
following be included in the definition
of rights:
• Right to work and fair pay;
• Right to control one’s own money;
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
• Right of possessions and
ownership;
• Right to privacy, dignity, and
respect;
• Freedom of choice and decisionmaking;
• Right to leisure activities;
• Freedom to marry and have
children;
• Right to food, shelter, and clothing;
• Freedom of movement;
• Freedom of religion;
• Freedom of speech and expression;
• Free association and assembly;
• Freedom from harm;
• Access to health care;
• Right to citizenship and right to
vote;
• Right to equal education;
• Right to equal access; and
• Due process.
Response: We believe that some of the
consumer rights listed by the
commenter are addressed in or mirrored
by components of the existing HCBS
settings rule requirements at
§ 441.301(c)(4), such as: ensuring that
the individuals have access to the
greater community, including
engagement in community life,
opportunities for employment in
competitive integrated settings, and
control over personal resources
(§ 441.301(c)(4)(i)); the right to privacy,
dignity and respect, and freedom from
coercion and restraint
(§ 441.301(c)(4)(ii)); allowing for
individuals to choose their activities
and set their own schedules
(§ 441.301(c)(4)(iv) and (vi)(C)); the
ability to determine with whom the
individual will interact, as well as to
have visitors of the individual’s
choosing at any time (§ 441.301(c)(4)(iv)
and (vi)(D)); and control over the
individual’s own physical environment,
living and sleeping space, and access to
food (§ 441.301(c)(4)(iv), (v)(B), and
(vi)(C)).
We note that many of the other rights
suggested by the commenter are either
addressed by other systems (such as
access to health care which, if related to
an adverse benefit determination made
by the State Medicaid agency, may be
subject to the fair hearings process or
are out of scope of the State Medicaid
agency’s authority) or by other
authorities (such as fair wages, equal
access to education, or violations of
constitutional rights).
Comment: Several commenters
requested that the grievance process
include issues such as authorization
disputes and the provision of services.
Response: We are not certain if the
commenters are referring to using the
grievance system to allow beneficiaries
or providers to challenge denials of
PO 00000
Frm 00037
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40577
services. We are also uncertain if
disputes over ‘‘provision of services’’
refers to the quantity or quality of
services. We note that the fair hearings
process at 42 CFR part 431, subpart E,
sets out the parameters that allow
beneficiaries to challenge an adverse
action by the State Medicaid agency. For
the purposes of a fair hearing, an
‘‘action’’ is defined at § 431.201 in part,
as the termination, suspension of, or
reduction in covered benefits or
services, or a termination, suspension
of, or reduction in Medicaid eligibility.
A State must provide an individual the
opportunity for a fair hearing in the
circumstances described in § 431.220(a),
which include when the Medicaid
agency has denied eligibility, services,
or benefits, and when the claim for
medical assistance has not been acted
on with reasonable promptness. In most
circumstances, a refusal of a State
Medicaid agency to authorize a
particular service for a beneficiary, or to
authorize the quantity of services the
beneficiary believes is necessary, would
be addressed in the fair hearings
process. In contrast, the grievance
process we have proposed is intended to
allow beneficiaries to raise concerns
about specific aspects of their services
that have been authorized.
Comment: Several commenters who
supported this proposal did so because
they agreed that, currently, concerns
regarding person-centered planning and
HCBS settings requirements are not
subject to the existing fair hearings
process at 42 CFR part 431 subpart E.
One commenter, however, suggested
that, rather than create a grievance
process to hear complaints about
person-centered service plans and the
HCBS settings requirements, we should
require that concerns about personcentered service plans or the HCBS
settings requirements be added to fair
hearings processes. The commenter
stated the belief that fair hearings permit
an unbiased third-party Administrative
Law Judge (ALJ) to consider the facts
and render an objective decision. By
contrast, the commenter believed that,
in their State, the current State
grievance process did not permit
unbiased or effective review.
Response: We agree that it is
important to provide beneficiaries with
the opportunity to raise concerns about
the person-centered service plans and
planning process and the HCBS settings
requirements. We do not, however,
believe that these are necessarily
appropriate matters for the fair hearings
process. The authority for the fair
hearings process comes from section
1902(a)(3) of the Act, which requires
that States provide beneficiaries and
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
40578
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
applicants an opportunity for a fair
hearing before the State agency to any
individual whose claim for medical
assistance is denied or is not acted upon
with reasonable promptness.
While beneficiaries can request a fair
hearing to address concerns about
service denials (including partial
denials) and other concerns described
under § 431.220(a), we believe that an
individual’s concerns about personcentered service plans, the planning
process, and HCBS settings are outside
the scope of issues for which the statute
requires that a fair hearing be provided,
and therefore we cannot require States
to provide an opportunity for a fair
hearing to address such issues. We note,
however, that States have discretion to
decide whether integrating their
grievance processes with other State
systems, including their fair hearings
systems, is feasible and appropriate, and
that the requirements for both systems
may still be met.
Separate from the fair hearing
requirement at section 1902(a)(3) of the
Act, section 2402(a)(3)(B)(ii) of the
Affordable Care Act requires the
development and monitoring of an
HCBS complaint system. To address this
statutory requirement, we proposed that
the grievance system address matters
that do not arise from a denial of
Medicaid eligibility or denial of
services, or failure to act upon the
individual’s claim for medical
assistance with reasonable promptness,
which are addressed separately under
the required fair hearing process. We
expect the grievance system will help
beneficiaries resolve concerns about the
quality of the services they are
receiving. We also note that the purpose
of our proposals in this section II.B.2. is
to require that States create, implement,
and maintain grievance systems that,
while not necessarily as formal as a fair
hearings process in all cases, will
nevertheless result in unbiased and
effective reviews of grievances.
We note that, while States may choose
to use ALJs as hearing officers to
conduct a Medicaid fair hearing, hearing
officers are not required to be ALJs.
Medicaid regulations at § 431.240(a)(3)
require that all fair hearings be
conducted by one or more impartial
officials or other individuals who were
not directly involved in the initial
determination in question. We also note
that the proposed requirements at
§ 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(C)(3), which we are
finalizing as discussed in detail later in
this section II.B.2. of the final rule, are
intended to promote an unbiased review
of grievances because they prohibit
someone who has previously made
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
decisions related to the grievance from
reviewing the grievance.
Comment: A few commenters
expressed concerns that, in States that
already have grievance systems, the
proposed requirements could result in
duplication of processes and confusion
for beneficiaries about where and how
to report grievances. Several of these
commenters requested we allow States
to use existing grievance systems to
meet the Federal requirement. One
commenter also suggested that if the
State’s existing system meets our
proposed criteria, the State should be
considered in compliance with the
requirements. Another commenter
suggested that providers or States with
existing grievance systems should not
have to modify their systems.
Commenters were especially
concerned about the impact on States
that already had multiple grievance
systems for different programs,
administered by different operating
agencies. These commenters requested
that we allow States flexibility to design
grievance systems and processes to fit
their unique program and systems
structures and implement multiple
grievance systems or processes tailored
to their programs. One commenter
raised specific concerns about having to
consolidate current grievance systems
into a single electronic system.
One commenter, however, requested
that we require States to have a single
grievance system; the commenter stated
that having multiple grievance
processes can be confusing and
burdensome for beneficiaries.
Response: We acknowledge that many
States already have grievance processes
in place for HCBS, and it is not our
intent for States to abandon these
systems or create additional systems.
We agree with the suggestion that, if a
State already has a grievance process in
place that meets the requirements that
we are finalizing in this rule, that State
will be considered in compliance with
these requirements. However, we
disagree that States with existing
grievance systems should be allowed to
maintain the system without
modification where their systems do not
meet Federal requirements. While we
encourage States to economize by
maintaining current systems as much as
possible, we do expect that States will
make any needed adjustments to bring
their systems into compliance with the
requirements we are finalizing in this
rule. We believe that having Federal
requirements for grievance systems will
promote consistency and accountability
across the country.
Additionally, we note that the
definition of grievance system that we
PO 00000
Frm 00038
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
proposed referred to ‘‘processes,’’
suggesting that a grievance system may
be made up of one or more processes (88
FR 28080). If a State wishes to maintain
multiple grievance processes, and each
of these processes comply with the
Federal requirements we are finalizing
in this rule, the State will be considered
in compliance.
We did not propose a requirement for
a State to maintain a single electronic
system for their grievance system and,
as discussed above, believe it would be
acceptable to maintain multiple
grievance processes. However, we also
emphasize that part of the definition of
grievance system we proposed, and are
finalizing, in § 441.307(c)(7)(ii) is that
the system allows States to collect and
track information about grievances. If
States choose to maintain separate
systems, including separate electronic
systems, they must develop ways to
ensure that they are able to track trends
across systems in meaningful ways. We
refer readers to section II.B.2.f of this
final rule, where we discuss our
proposals related to recordkeeping
requirements for the required grievance
system.
Although not required, we encourage
States to implement a single integrated
system across their HCBS programs, as
we echo one commenter’s concerns that
a single integrated system would likely
reduce confusion for beneficiaries and
facilitate their ability to access the
system. We also believe that a single
system would best permit States to track
trends across their HCBS programs and
use the data and information generated
by the grievance system to address
systemic issues in their HCBS programs.
Additionally, a single integrated system
may be more cost-effective for States to
operate once implemented.
Comment: One commenter requested
clarification on whether there is a
difference between a complaint and a
grievance, as well as what would elevate
a complaint to the level of a grievance.
One commenter asked for clarification
on the role of conflict-free case
managers in the grievance system.
Response: While section
2402(a)(3)(B)(ii) requires that we
promulgate regulations to ensure that all
States develop service systems that
include development and monitoring of
a complaint system, the Affordable Care
Act does not define the terms complaint
or complaint system. In developing our
proposal to implement this requirement
from the Affordable Care Act, we have
chosen to use the term grievance,
instead of complaint, and proposed to
define grievance and grievance system
at § 441.301(c)(7)(ii). If a State has
implemented a system it calls a
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
complaint system that meets the
requirements we proposed, and are
finalizing, at § 441.301(c)(7), it is
possible that this system could satisfy
the requirement for a State to have a
grievance system.
We do not understand the specific
nature of the comment regarding
conflict-free case managers. We note, in
general, that we will provide technical
assistance to States to assist in adapting
their HCBS programs and any associated
existing grievance processes to comply
with the requirements finalized at
§ 441.301(c)(7).
Comment: Several commenters
observed that some States currently
require providers to have policies and
procedures in place related to servicedelivery complaints. One commenter
requested that we provide clarification,
either in the final rule or subregulatory
guidance, regarding the inclusion of the
proposed grievance system
requirements in existing provider-level
complaint and grievance processes.
Commenters stated that additional
guidance is needed to help all interested
parties understand when beneficiaries
should file a grievance with their
provider and when they should file with
the State. One commenter
recommended that beneficiaries be
required to exhaust these processes at
the provider level before a complaint is
submitted to the State agency for
investigation or intervention.
Response: Our goal for proposing
uniform requirements for grievance
systems applicable to all States
providing HCBS under section 1915(c)
waiver program authority, and other
HCBS authorities as discussed in
section II.B.2.h of this final rule, is to
ensure consistent processes are
available for Medicaid beneficiaries
receiving such services. We decline to
require in this final rule that
beneficiaries exhaust their providerlevel complaint process prior to
accessing the State grievance system.
We believe that such a Federal
requirement would be inapplicable or
confusing in States that do not have
provider-level complaint process
requirements, do not require all
providers to have them, or do not
require that providers have uniform
complaint processes. We have
attempted to provide States with as
much flexibility as possible in the
design of their grievance system.
Additionally, we have concerns that
such an exhaustion requirement would
be a barrier, or would cause unnecessary
delay, for beneficiaries where the
relationship between the beneficiary
and the provider is contentious, or
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
where the provider does not have an
effective or efficient complaint process.
Comment: Commenters requested that
grievance processes be developed with
input from providers, beneficiaries,
families, and advocacy groups to create
a grievance system that is accessible,
practical, and sets realistic expectations
for its users.
Response: We have attempted to
provide States with as much flexibility
as possible in the design of their
grievance system and decline to add a
specific requirement on this point in
this final rule. We encourage States to
include input from interested parties
when developing their grievance system
policies and procedures to comply with
the requirements we are finalizing in
this rule.
Comment: Several commenters
suggested that the grievance system be
integrated with the critical incident
system. One commenter stated that
States should be required to enter the
grievance information and data into a
State database with standardized fields
that is either part of, or integrated with
an incident management system, so that
grievance data can be compared to data
on relevant individuals, providers, and
incidents (both reported and
unreported). Similarly, a few
commenters suggested that the
grievance system should be integrated
with the fair hearings system in States.
Response: While we agree that States
may find it useful to have a single,
integrated system for grievances, critical
incidents, and fair hearings, we are not
requiring in this final rule that States do
so. We believe it is important for States
to have flexibility in how they design
their grievance systems so that they may
expand on infrastructures and processes
they already have in place and tailor the
grievance systems to meet their
programmatic and operational needs,
even as they are held to standardized
Federal grievance system requirements.
After consideration of the comments
received, we are finalizing the language
at § 441.301(c)(7)(i) and (ii) with
modifications. For the reasons discussed
above, we are modifying
§ 441.301(c)(7)(i) to include language
specifying the State may have activities
described in paragraph (c)(7) of this
section performed by contractors or
other government entities, provided,
however, that the State retains
responsibility for ensuring performance
of and compliance with these
provisions. Additionally, we are
finalizing § 441.301(c)(7)(i) and the
definition of grievance in
§ 441.301(c)(7)(ii) with the modification
that States must establish a procedure
under which a beneficiary can file a
PO 00000
Frm 00039
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40579
grievance related to the State’s or a
provider’s performance of (rather than
compliance with) the person-centered
planning and service plan requirements
at §§ 441.301(c)(1) through (3) and the
HCBS settings requirements at
§§ 441.301(c)(4) through (6). We are
otherwise finalizing the definition of
grievance system at § 441.301(c)(7)(ii) as
proposed.
b. Grievance Process Requirements
(§ 441.301(c)(7)(iii))
At § 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(A) through (C),
we proposed new general requirements
for States’ grievance procedures for
section 1915(c) HCBS waiver programs
and other HCBS authorities as discussed
in section II.B.2.h of this final rule.
Specifically, at § 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(A),
we proposed to require that a
beneficiary or authorized representative
be permitted to file a grievance under
the section 1915(c) HCBS waiver
program. As discussed below in section
II.B.2.h. of this final rule, we also
proposed to apply these same
requirements to section 1915(i), (j) and
(k) HCBS programs. Under the proposal,
another individual or entity may file a
grievance on a beneficiary’s behalf, so
long as the beneficiary or authorized
representative provides written consent.
We noted that our proposal would not
permit a provider to file a grievance that
would violate conflict of interest
guidelines, which States are required to
have in place under § 441.540(a)(5). At
§ 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(A), we also proposed
to specify that all references to
beneficiary in the regulatory text of this
section includes the beneficiary’s
representative, if applicable.
At § 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(B)(1) through
(7), we proposed to require States to:
• Have written policies and
procedures for their grievance processes
that at a minimum meet the
requirements of this proposed section
and serve as the basis for the State’s
grievance process;
• Provide beneficiaries with
reasonable assistance in completing the
forms and procedural steps related to
grievances and to ensure that the
grievance system is consistent with the
availability and accessibility
requirements at § 435.905(b);
• Ensure that punitive action is not
threatened or taken against an
individual filing a grievance;
• Accept grievances, requests for
expedited resolution of grievances, and
requests for extensions of timeframes
from beneficiaries;
• Provide beneficiaries with notices
and other information related to the
grievance system, including information
on their rights under the grievance
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
40580
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
system and on how to file grievance,
and ensure that such information is
accessible for individuals with
disabilities and individuals who are
limited English proficient in accordance
with § 435.905(b);
• Review grievance resolutions with
which beneficiaries are dissatisfied; and
• Provide information on the
grievance system to providers and
subcontractors approved to deliver
services under section 1915(c) of the
Act.
At § 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(C)(1) through
(6),59 we proposed to require that the
processes for handling grievances must:
• Allow beneficiaries to file a
grievance either orally or in writing;
• Acknowledge receipt of each
grievance;
• Ensure that decisions on grievances
are not made by anyone previously
involved in review or decision-making
related to the problem or issue for
which the beneficiary has filed a
grievance or a subordinate of such an
individual, are made by individuals
with appropriate expertise, and are
made by individuals who consider all of
the information submitted by the
beneficiary related to the grievance;
• Provide beneficiaries with a
reasonable opportunity, face-to-face
(including through the use of audio or
video technology) and in writing, to
present evidence and testimony and
make legal and factual arguments
related to their grievance;
• Provide beneficiaries, free of charge
and in advance of resolution
timeframes, with their own case files
and any new or additional evidence
used or generated by the State related to
the grievance; and
• Provide beneficiaries, free of charge,
with language services, including
written translation and interpreter
services in accordance with
§ 435.905(b), to support their
participation in grievance processes and
their use of the grievance system.
We received public comments on
these proposals. The following is a
summary of the comments we received
and our responses.
Comment: Several commenters
supported the proposal at
§ 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(A) to require that a
beneficiary or the beneficiary’s
authorized representative be permitted
to file a grievance, including allowing
another individual or entity to file a
grievance on a beneficiary’s behalf, with
written consent from the beneficiary or
59 At 88 FR 27976, we incorrectly stated that we
were proposing these requirements at
§ 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(C)(1) through (5), rather than (1)
through (6). This typo has been corrected.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
the beneficiary’s authorized
representative.
However, several commenters raised
concerns about the proposed
requirement that beneficiaries or their
authorized representatives must provide
written consent to another individual or
entity to file a grievance on the
beneficiary’s behalf. A few commenters
noted that some beneficiaries may not
be able to give written consent, or that
waiting for written consent to be
obtained could create unnecessary
delays in grievance filings and
investigations. One commenter
suggested that we either remove the
word ‘‘written’’ or specify that consent
may be verbal or written. Another
commenter, using their State as an
example, suggested that a grievance
could be filed with verbal consent from
the beneficiary or authorized
representative, with written consent
obtained later. One commenter
suggested an agency could obtain a
beneficiary or authorized
representative’s consent over the phone
to allow another individual or entity to
file a grievance on the beneficiary’s
behalf.
Response: As discussed further
herein, we are finalizing the
requirement that consent must be
written as proposed. We modelled the
proposed requirement and language at
§ 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(A) on requirements
for the managed care grievance process
at § 438.402(c)(1)(ii), which provides
that, if State law permits and with the
written consent of the enrollee, a
provider or an authorized representative
may request an appeal or file a
grievance, or request a State fair hearing,
on behalf of a managed care enrollee.
Our general intent is to align the FFS
grievance system and managed care
grievance process to the greatest extent
possible. We also believe it is important
to ensure that there is some
documentation demonstrating that
beneficiaries or their authorized
representatives have provided consent
for a grievance to be filed on the
beneficiary’s behalf, especially as the
investigation of a grievance may involve
reviewing records pertaining to the
beneficiary’s care.
We note that written consent may be
broadly interpreted to include electronic
signatures, voice signatures, or other
methods that provide reasonable
accommodations to individuals who
might face challenges providing
traditional written signatures. States
will have flexibility in determining how
written consent is obtained and verified,
so long as the system States develop
ensures that the process presents as few
administrative barriers as possible for a
PO 00000
Frm 00040
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
beneficiary or authorized representative
to provide the necessary consent.
Comment: Several commenters
recommended that we clarify that
beneficiaries be able to choose who
represents them throughout the
grievance process. One commenter
recommended that the grievance
process should provide the beneficiary
with the opportunity to indicate who
they want to assist them in the process,
and this should serve as a type of
release.
Response: It was our intent that
beneficiaries and their authorized
representatives be able to involve other
individuals or entities of their choosing
to assist them throughout the grievance
process, in addition to filing a
grievance. We believe that it is logical
to assume that if a beneficiary or their
authorized representative needs
assistance filing a grievance, they may
also need assistance with other parts of
the process (such as requesting and
reviewing their case file, or presenting
information to support their concerns at
a hearing). We also note that while
States are required at
§ 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(B)(2) to provide
beneficiaries with reasonable assistance
in completing forms and taking other
procedural steps related to a grievance,
beneficiaries may prefer to get this
assistance from an individual or entity
of their own choosing, particularly in
situations where the beneficiary has
filed a grievance against the State. To
clarify this intent, we are finalizing
§ 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(A)(1) with a
modification to specify that another
individual or entity may file a grievance
on behalf of the beneficiary, or provide
the beneficiary with assistance or
representation throughout the grievance
process, with the written consent of the
beneficiary or authorized representative.
We note that we expect that, as part of
ensuring the process is person-centered,
beneficiaries or their authorized
representatives will be able to withdraw
consent for this third-party
representation at any time, and that
beneficiaries can generally terminate the
grievance process at any time.
We are finalizing
§ 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(B)(1) with a
modification to correct an erroneous
reference to subchapter in the regulatory
language and replace subchapter with
paragraph (c)(7).
Comment: Several commenters
requested clarifications or made
suggestions regarding our proposal at
§ 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(B)(2) to require that
States provide beneficiaries reasonable
assistance in completing forms and
taking other procedural steps related to
a grievance. One commenter
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
recommended that we set minimum
criteria for reasonable assistance in
filing a grievance, including but not
limited to the State making someone
available to meet with the beneficiary in
person. Another commenter observed
that many individuals who receive
section 1915(c) waiver services, for
example, have significant intellectual
and developmental disabilities and as a
result may need substantially more
assistance than other beneficiaries to
complete forms and procedural steps.
The commenter requested clarification
as to whether, in these circumstances,
the reasonable threshold is determined
by the needs of the beneficiary or the
burden is on the State to determine how
to provide reasonable assistance.
Response: We disagree that the term
reasonable assistance that we proposed
at § 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(B)(2) is unclear.
We intentionally proposed language that
would require States to determine, on a
case-by-case basis, what constitutes
reasonable assistance for beneficiaries
utilizing the grievance system.
Reasonable assistance may vary among
beneficiaries and thus we intended to
provide States with flexibility in
determining what assistance is
reasonable to provide. We decline to
include additional formal definitions or
criteria for the term reasonable
assistance in this final rule lest we
inadvertently set rigid standards that
would, counterproductively, inhibit
States from modifying processes for
beneficiaries. For instance, if we were to
require that States make someone
available to meet with the beneficiary in
person, we would not want this
misinterpreted as a requirement that
grievances may only be filed in person,
which could pose significant barriers to
individuals who lack transportation or
live far from the physical locations in
which grievances could be filed, even
though we recognize that some
beneficiaries may prefer to file a
grievance in person.
We agree with the commenter that
some beneficiaries may need more
assistance, or different types of
assistance, than other beneficiaries. We
decline, however, to weigh in on what
would be the threshold for determining
reasonableness, as this appears to be a
request for an opinion on hypothetical
situations. We note that the concept of
reasonableness is central to many areas
of law and bodies of guidance regarding
reasonableness are well-developed. We
also note that the grievance system in
general, by virtue of being administered
by State Medicaid programs, will be
subject to Title II of the Americans with
Disabilities Act (ADA) of 1990, and
section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
1973 (section 504), which may provide
some specific guidance for what may be
considered a reasonable modification in
a government service.
Comment: A number of commenters
advocated for the creation of a
requirement for an HCBS Ombudsman
program, similar to those required by
the Older Americans Act. Many
commenters noted an independent
ombuds program could provide more
effective assistance to individuals in
filing grievances, helping them navigate
the process, and representing them
during the proceedings, rather than
relying on assistance provided by the
State.
Response: We thank commenters for
their interest in this issue. As
commenters noted, Title VII of the Older
American Act authorizes and provides
Federal funding for the national LongTerm Care Ombudsman Program, which
is administered at the State level. These
programs provide advocacy on behalf of
residents of long-term care facilities.
While there is no similar Federal
statutory requirement for States to create
an HCBS ombuds program, States may
create such a program or similar
programs at their own discretion to
assist during grievance processes or to
provide other advocacy supports.
Comment: Several commenters
expressed concerns that it will be
challenging for beneficiaries to
understand when and how to file
grievances. Several commenters noted
the possibility that beneficiaries will be
confused by the grievance and fair
hearings processes and will file
grievances or appeals with the wrong
entities. One commenter suggested that
beneficiaries enrolled in managed care
for some medical services but receive
FFS HCBS may be confused when
presented with multiple grievance
processes.
A number of commenters
recommended that the grievance system
should be set up with a ‘‘no wrong
door’’ process so that, for example, a
managed care plan receiving a grievance
related to a FFS service would be
responsible for forwarding the grievance
to the appropriate entity. Similarly,
another commenter suggested that if an
enrollee mistakenly files a grievance
about an adverse benefit determination,
we require that this submission be
treated as a fair hearing request unless
the beneficiary objects. One commenter
cautioned that, based on the
commenter’s experience, creating a ‘‘no
wrong door’’ approach to grievances can
be complicated and resource intensive.
Another commenter requested that, if
setting up a ‘‘no wrong door’’ approach,
we ensure that the burden does not fall
PO 00000
Frm 00041
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40581
entirely on local entities, such as local
Area Agencies on Aging.
One commenter requested
clarification on whether appropriate
referral of a grievance to the critical
incident management process will count
as a successful resolution of the
grievance.
Response: We take very seriously the
concerns raised by commenters
regarding potential confusion among
beneficiaries about which matters
should be filed with which system. Our
understanding of the commenters’
suggestions is that such system should
be coordinated for accepting grievances,
fair hearing requests, and reports of
critical incidents, among other
engagements with beneficiaries, and
ensure that each grievance, fair hearing
request, or report of a critical incident
is appropriately and seamlessly
processed once it has been received by
that system. However, we are not adding
a formal ‘‘no wrong door’’ requirement
in this final rule. Rather, we are
finalizing the grievance system
requirements we proposed with
modifications as described below. We
understand that, despite efforts to
provide beneficiaries and interested
parties with information and to make
systems as user-friendly as possible,
there will be instances in which
beneficiaries attempt to access the
‘‘wrong’’ system. Additionally, there
may be some matters where it is not
immediately clear to the beneficiary if
the problem, for instance, is a matter for
the grievance system, critical incident
investigation, or the fair hearings
process. We also note that the
beneficiary (or someone on their behalf)
may report a critical incident (as
defined at § 441.302(a)(6) of this final
rule), or file an appeal under the fair
hearings process that may not, as a
whole, meet the definition of a
grievance, but may contain elements
that are more appropriate for
consideration under the grievance
system, while the remaining elements
should still proceed as a critical
incident investigation or in the fair
hearing process. (We note that
additional concerns about perceived
overlap between grievances and critical
incidents are addressed more fully later
in this section.) Further, we agree that
something akin to a ‘‘no wrong door’’
approach may be a good solution, to
ensure that matters that are brought to
the grievance system are not rejected
because they are really a matter for a fair
hearing or critical incident
investigation. We encourage States to
create a ‘‘no wrong door’’ policy and
system or integrate grievance filings
with existing ‘‘no wrong door’’ systems,
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
40582
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
if feasible. We believe that such a
system would help ensure that matters
are filed correctly, which could reduce
administrative burden on the grievance
system.
However, we did not propose, nor are
we requiring, that States create a ‘‘no
wrong door’’ system. We note that some
States may already have ‘‘no wrong
door’’ systems that could be used to
support beneficiary filings in the
grievance system. While we encourage
States that do not have such ‘‘no wrong
door’’ systems to consider developing
them, we recognize that there is variety
among State systems and we do not
wish to create a potentially rigid
requirement that misaligns with States’
existing infrastructures. We also want to
ensure that the grievance process
requirements finalized in this section
focus on standardizing the grievance
process itself, and are concerned that an
attempt to further standardize ancillary
processes would distract from this
intention. We will take commenters’
suggestions regarding ‘‘no wrong door’’
systems under consideration for
potential future policy development or
rulemaking.
While we are not requiring States
develop a ‘‘no wrong door’’ system, we
do take seriously commenters’ concerns
that beneficiaries may attempt to file
grievances with other systems operated
by the State. We proposed a requirement
at § 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(B)(2) that States
must provide reasonable assistance to
beneficiaries both with filing grievances
and completing other procedural steps;
we believe it is logical to expect that if
a beneficiary needs reasonable
assistance from the State for the
procedural steps, then they may need
assistance with determining where to
file their grievance in the first place. To
better address the concern about
potential beneficiary confusion about
the grievance, incident management,
fair hearings, and managed care
grievance and appeal systems, we are
modifying the language in
§ 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(B)(2) to indicate
more clearly that States must provide
reasonable assistance to ensure that
grievances are appropriately filed with
the grievance system (in other words,
that States help beneficiaries identify
whether their concern should be filed in
the grievance system and, to the greatest
extent possible, redirect grievances filed
with other State systems to the
grievance system).
Additionally, we note that the
disposition of matters that are not
grievances is outside the scope of the
grievance process requirements at
§ 441.301(c)(7) finalized in this section
regarding the grievance system;
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
however, we strongly encourage States
to ensure that grievances filed with the
grievance system that contain matters
that are appropriate for other systems,
including the critical incident system
(as finalized in section II.B.3. of this
rule), the fair hearings system (as
described in part 431, subpart E), or the
managed care grievance or appeal
system (as described in part 438,
subpart F) are also considered filings
with the appropriate system or systems
in accordance with the requirements
and timeframes for those systems.
We also remind States that States
have the option under current
regulations to assist beneficiaries with
filing fair hearing requests (as described
in part 431, subpart E). Section
431.221(c) provides that State Medicaid
agencies may assist applicants or
beneficiaries in submitting fair hearings
requests and section 2901.3 of the State
Medicaid Manual instructs States to
make every effort to assist applicants
and beneficiaries to exercise their
appeal rights. Additionally, section
2902.1 of the State Medicaid Manual
states that oral inquiries about the
opportunity to appeal should be treated
as an appeal for purposes of establishing
the earliest possible date for an appeal.
Thus, if a beneficiary submits a matter
to the grievance system which the State
recognizes as a matter more appropriate
for a fair hearing, the State should treat
this matter in accordance with the
requirements of § 431.221(c) and the
State Medicaid Manual by assisting the
beneficiary with filing a fair hearing
request and using the grievance
submission date to establish the earliest
possible submission date for the fair
hearing requests. States also have the
option to establish procedures that treat
the request made to the grievance
system as a submission of a fair hearing
request described at § 431.221(a) when
the matter raised in the grievance filing
is more appropriate for a fair hearing.
Finally, we clarify that matters that
are mistakenly filed with the grievance
system but are appropriately referred to
another system may be considered
‘‘resolved grievances’’ unless the State
determines that the matter also contains
separate grounds for a grievance review.
We note that should a matter be
resolved through referral to another
system, this matter would still be
subject to the requirements at
§ 441.301(c)(7)(v) and (vi) (notifying the
beneficiary of the resolution of a
grievance) and § 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(B)(6)
(review of grievance resolutions with
which the beneficiary is dissatisfied),
which are being finalized in this section
II.B.2. of the final rule.
PO 00000
Frm 00042
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
Comment: A few commenters
provided support for our proposal at
§ 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(B)(2) that the
reasonable assistance provided by the
State includes, but is not limited to,
ensuring the grievance system is
accessible to individuals with
disabilities and individuals with
Limited English Proficiency. These
commenters noted the importance of
providing accessible information to
beneficiaries, to ensure beneficiaries
have full participation in the process.
Some commenters suggested
modifications or additions to the
accessibility requirements, including:
• Replacing the term, interpreter
services, with the term, linguistic
accommodations, noting this would
better capture the need for trans creative
supports that addresses differences in
cultural norms and understandings;
• Requiring plain language
explanations of the grievance
procedures; and
• Adding mention of the regulations
implementing section 1557 of the
Affordable Care Act, particularly to
reflect §§ 92.201–92.205 of the 2022
Nondiscrimination in Health Programs
and Activities proposed rule (87 FR
47824).
Response: As discussed further
herein, we are not making modifications
to § 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(B)(2) in response
to these comments. While it may be a
term of art used in some fields, there is
no Federal guidance or definition of the
term, linguistic accommodations. We
retain the term, interpreter services, as
defined at § 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(B)(2), in
this final rule to remain consistent with
other Federal requirements. We thank
the commenter for bringing the term
linguistic accommodations to our
attention, and we will take it into
consideration for future technical
assistance related to this provision.
We note that the proposed
requirement at § 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(B)(2)
already included a mention of existing
accessibility requirements at
§ 435.905(b). Section 435.905(b)
includes a requirement that
communications be provided in plain
language. We believe it would be
duplicative to add a specific
requirement that information be
provided in plain language.
We also decline to add specific
reference to section 1557 of the
Affordable Care Act or its implementing
regulations, as we find such an addition
to be unnecessary. State Medicaid
agencies must comply with all relevant
requirements in section 1557 in all
aspects of their programs, including the
grievance process.
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
Upon review, we are finalizing
§ 441.307(c)(7)(iii)(B)(2) with some
modifications to better align the
provision with other regulations. We are
finalizing a modification to revise the
term ‘‘individuals who are limited
English proficient’’ to ‘‘individuals with
Limited English Proficiency.’’ This
modification conforms with the
language being finalized in § 431.12(f)(7)
(discussed in section II.A. of this final
rule). We are finalizing a modification to
clarify that auxiliary aids and services
are to be available where necessary to
ensure effective communication (instead
of upon request as originally proposed),
which we believe better conforms to
access standards such as those set forth
in the ADA and section 504.
Comment: One commenter noted that
the repeated references to the regulation
at § 435.905(b) (in the proposed
requirements at § 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(B)(2),
(c)(7)(iii)(C)(6), and (c)(7)(vi)(A)) may
suggest that these accessibility services
are not necessary outside of the specific
provisions for which they are listed. The
commenter suggested we create a
separate provision related to language
and disability access under the general
requirements for the grievance system
and specify that it applies to all
components of the grievance system.
Response: We disagree that a separate,
standalone accessibility requirement
would add clarity to States’ accessibility
requirements. We also do not believe
that we have overlooked a part of the
process that must be accessible and note
that the entire grievance system is
subject to other accessibility
requirements, including the ADA and
section 504, by virtue of being
administered by government agencies.
As discussed further herein, we are
finalizing the references to § 435.905(b)
included in the provisions in
§ 441.301(c)(7) as proposed, as we
believe that it is helpful to reiterate the
importance of compliance with
§ 435.905(b) in the various steps of the
grievance process.
Comment: One commenter
recommended that we mandate that
States accept electronic grievances with
fill-in forms that could be completed by
someone using a smart phone. Another
commenter also requested that we
require that the grievance system be
web-based. One commenter, however,
expressed concerns about a grievance
system that is only accessible
electronically, noting that some people
may not have access to or be able to use
computers.
Another commenter suggested that we
specify that States must maintain a tollfree number, a regularly monitored
email address for receiving grievances
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
from Medicaid HCBS beneficiaries, and
multiple modes of submitting a
grievance, including a request for
assistance with articulating and
submitting a grievance as a reasonable
accommodation.
Response: We appreciate commenters’
many thoughtful suggestions on how to
ensure that the grievance process system
is accessible and user-friendly. At this
time, we are not making changes in this
final rule at § 441.301(c)(7) to include
specific regulatory requirements for
exactly how States should implement an
electronic system for filing grievances.
We believe that the diversity of
comments on this issue demonstrates
that beneficiaries will likely need the
ability to access the grievance filing
process through multiple modalities.
We encourage States to consider user
access (in addition to legally required
accessibility considerations) and engage
the interested parties within the HCBS
community regarding the construction
of a user-friendly grievance filing
process that accommodates
beneficiaries’ different communication
and technology needs.
Comment: A few commenters
expressed support for our proposal to
prohibit punitive actions against
individuals who file grievances. One
commenter noted that, in their State,
beneficiaries are reluctant to complain
about care due to fear of retaliation.
Another commenter requested that CMS
clarify that the requirement applies to
punitive actions taken by either the
State or a provider. The commenter also
requested that CMS clarify that States
must investigate punitive actions from
providers. One commenter requested
that CMS clarify that punitive action
includes implying that an individual or
family might lose services if they access
the grievance process. Another
commenter stated that the State should
provide operational definitions of
punitive actions and provide easily
understood guidance to providers and
State entities as to what types of actions
would be considered punitive.
Several commenters offered specific
suggestions for revising the proposed
requirement at § 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(B)(3).
One commenter suggested we revise the
language to read ‘‘retaliatory action’’ or
‘‘retaliatory or punitive action.’’ Another
commenter suggested that we amend the
proposed regulatory text to define such
action as ‘‘any negative action following
a grievance, complaint, and appeal or
reporting of any issue to any regulatory
body.’’
Response: We clarify that this
requirement is intended to prohibit
punitive actions from either the State or
providers. We do expect that, as part of
PO 00000
Frm 00043
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40583
ensuring that beneficiaries (as well as
authorized representatives or other
individuals who have filed a grievance
on the beneficiary’s behalf) are
protected from punitive action, States
will have a system for both identifying
and investigating allegations of punitive
action. We agree with the commenter
that verbal threats from a provider
directed at the beneficiary, or the
beneficiary’s family, would be the type
of punitive action contemplated by this
provision that would merit
investigation. We also agree that
providing additional definitions and
examples of punitive actions will be an
important part of States’ grievance
system policies.
To better clarify who is protected
from punitive actions (both beneficiaries
and those filing grievances on their
behalf), we are finalizing a modification
to § 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(B)(3) to clarify that
prohibited actions are neither
threatened nor taken against an
individual filing a grievance or who has
had a grievance filed on their behalf. As
discussed in this section (section
II.B.2.b.), we are finalizing our proposal
at § 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(A)(1) to allow
beneficiaries to have another individual
or entity file a grievance on their behalf
with written consent. We intend to
make it clear that punitive action may
not be taken against a beneficiary,
whether the beneficiary personally filed
the grievance or received assistance
filing the grievance. We also want to
ensure that authorized representatives
or other individuals (including family
members or other beneficiaries) are
protected from punitive action when
helping beneficiaries file grievances.
We agree that amending the
regulatory language to ‘‘punitive or
retaliatory actions’’ would further
clarify the intent of the requirement, as
‘‘retaliation’’ is a common term
associated with prohibited behavior in
other types of complaints systems.
While there is overlap in the
connotations of ‘‘punitive’’ and
‘‘retaliatory’’ actions, we also believe
that some actions that could be taken
against individuals in response to the
filing of a grievance could be perceived
as ‘‘retaliatory’’ rather than ‘‘punitive.’’
We believe that the word ‘‘retaliatory’’
may particularly capture threats or
actions that could negatively affect a
beneficiary’s access to services, whether
or not the threat or negative outcome
actually materializes. For instance, if a
provider noted negative things to other
providers about a beneficiary or the
beneficiary’s authorized representative
and discouraged other providers from
accepting that beneficiary as client after
a grievance was filed against the
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
40584
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
provider, this action could be perceived
as ‘‘retaliatory’’ rather than ‘‘punitive,’’
particularly if this did not ultimately
result in a reduction or alteration of the
beneficiary’s services. Therefore, we are
finalizing § 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(B)(3) with
modification in this final rule to specify
that States must ensure that punitive or
retaliatory action is neither threatened
nor taken against an individual filing a
grievance or who has had a grievance
filed on their behalf.
We decline to make the other
modifications that commenters
suggested. We believe the requirement
we proposed at § 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(B)(3),
as modified herein, is sufficiently broad
and clear to address the essential
concerns raised by commenters. We
believe including language prohibiting
‘‘any negative action’’ may be
ambiguous and overly broad.
Additionally, we do not believe the
grievance system regulations should be
used to prohibit punitive or retaliatory
actions in response to actions performed
outside of the grievance process.
However, we note that, if a beneficiary
believes they are experiencing poor
treatment from a provider because the
beneficiary has filed a complaint about
the provider in a system other than the
grievance system, the beneficiary may
have grounds to file a grievance on the
basis of the poor treatment.
Comment: Several commenters
recommended the addition of more
specific provisions to protect against
punitive or retaliatory action, including
a post-grievance follow-up with the
beneficiary and assessing fines or other
penalties against a provider who has
taken retaliatory action. One commenter
also requested that CMS require States
to make the results of investigations into
allegations of punitive behavior
available to the public.
Response: We decline to make
modifications to
§ 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(B)(3) based on these
commenters’ suggestions because we
believe that the proposed regulation text
at § 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(B)(3), which we
are finalizing with modification as
discussed herein, is sufficient. To
comply with the requirement that States
ensure that punitive or retaliatory
actions are neither threatened nor taken
against individuals who have filed a
grievance or have had a grievance filed
on their behalf, we expect that States
will develop a system for identifying,
investigating, and deterring punitive or
retaliatory actions. We believe creating
more regulatory requirements as
commenters suggested would not
provide States with flexibility in how
they comply with this requirement.
Instead, States may develop processes in
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
accordance with their grievance
system’s structure and other relevant
considerations, such as provider
agreements and State laws.
Comment: We received a few
comments on the requirement we
proposed at § 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(B)(4) that
States must accept grievances, requests
for expedited resolution of grievances,
and requests for extensions of
timeframes from beneficiaries. One
commenter recommended that
§ 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(B)(4) be revised to
specify that no ‘‘magic language’’ is
needed to initiate the grievance process.
The commenter noted that a
‘‘demonstrated intent’’ to obtain
assistance with an HCBS-related
problem should be accepted as a
grievance.
Response: We are concerned that the
language proposed by the commenter is
overly broad. We agree that States
should make filing a grievance as simple
and accessible as possible for
beneficiaries, their authorized
representatives, and other individuals or
entities filing on a beneficiary’s behalf.
For example, we believe that it would
be inappropriate for a State to create a
complex grievance filing form and then
refuse to review a grievance because the
form was not filled out completely or
properly. We note that this scenario
would also be a plausible illustration of
a State’s failure to provide reasonable
assistance and accessibility as required
at § 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(B)(2). We also
believe it is critical that States make
every effort to ensure that beneficiaries
and their advocates know that a
grievance system exists and how to
access it. We do not, however, expect
that every expression of dissatisfaction,
in any context, must be treated as a
presumptive grievance filing. We
believe it is acceptable for States to
develop a grievance filing process that
requires a clear intent to file a grievance.
Further, we do not want to encourage
situations in which grievances are
pursued on the beneficiary’s behalf
without the beneficiaries’ knowledge or
consent.
Comment: We received a number of
comments regarding the requirement we
proposed at § 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(B)(5) that
States provide beneficiaries with notices
and other information related to the
grievance system, including information
on their rights under the grievance
system and on how to file grievances.
One commenter expressed particular
support for this requirement. Other
commenters provided several
suggestions for additional requirements
to ensure that beneficiaries receive
information regarding the grievance
process, including:
PO 00000
Frm 00044
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
• Requiring that States add an
explanation of grievance rights in any
HCBS-related communication from the
State to the beneficiary;
• Requiring that providers include an
explanation of grievance rights in the
person-centered service planning
process;
• Requiring that information on
grievance procedures be posted in each
group home or other provider owned or
controlled residential setting, along with
a toll-free number and email address for
filing grievances; and
• Including common examples of
grievances in the information given to
beneficiaries, so that beneficiaries are
better able to understand the potential
utility of the process.
A few commenters noted that,
regardless of where or how the
information was shared, the information
should be in accessible plain language
and large print formats.
Response: We do not intend to add
additional requirements in this final
rule regarding how States must inform
beneficiaries about the grievance
system, as we believe it is important for
States to retain flexibility in how they
communicate with beneficiaries. We
believe the ideas shared by commenters
are great examples of what could be
done. We note that there is a lot of
diversity among beneficiaries receiving
HCBS, States’ existing communication
pathways, and HCBS program design—
all factors that will affect the methods
of informing beneficiaries about the
grievance process. Therefore, we believe
it may be necessary for the information
about the grievance system to be
presented in multiple ways and through
multiple modalities. We encourage
States to engage with interested parties
to determine the most effective ways to
inform beneficiaries. We will also work
with States to identify effective ways to
inform beneficiaries about the State’s
grievance system.
We also highlight that our proposed
text at § 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(B)(5) requires
that information provided to
beneficiaries must comply with
§ 435.905(b), which does require that
materials use plain language. In
addition, States generally must comply
with the ADA and section 504, and their
implementing regulations. We are
finalizing § 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(B)(5)
largely as proposed, although with a
modification to change mention of
individuals who are limited English
proficient to individuals with Limited
English Proficiency, consistent with the
change to § 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(B)(2)
discussed previously in this section.
Comment: One commenter requested
clarification whether States have an
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
ongoing obligation to provide this notice
and information to beneficiaries,
including to people who begin HCBS
after the effective date of the grievance
system requirements that we proposed
at § 441.301(c)(7).
Response: We agree and clarify that
States will have an ongoing
responsibility to ensure that both new
and current beneficiaries receive
information about the grievance system
to comply with § 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(B)(5),
which we are finalizing as described in
this section (section II.B.2. of the final
rule).
Comment: One commenter noted that
our proposal at § 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(B)(6),
requiring the State to review any
grievance resolution with which the
beneficiary is dissatisfied, is too vague.
This commenter suggested that the
regulations should specify that the
reviewer be someone not involved in
the original determination, and the
beneficiary should have a process to
submit information as to why the
original resolution was insufficient. The
commenter also suggested that we
specify that the beneficiary must request
review, believing that otherwise the
expectation appears to be that the State
must decide whether the beneficiary is
dissatisfied. Finally, the commenter
suggested that the notice of the original
resolution should inform the beneficiary
of this review process and how to
initiate it.
One commenter also requested
clarification on how beneficiaries
should express dissatisfaction with a
resolution for the purpose of seeking
review of a resolution under
§ 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(B)(6).
Response: We believe that the
requirements at § 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(C)(3),
which we are finalizing as described in
this section II.B.2, address several of the
commenter’s concerns. We clarify that
the requirements at
§ 441.301(c)(7)(ii)(C)(3) apply to initially
filed grievances and review of
grievances under
§ 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(B)(6). We note that
§ 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(C)(3)(i) requires that
the individual making a decision on a
grievance is an individual who was
neither involved in any previous level
of review or decision-making related to
the grievance nor a subordinate of any
such individual. Section
441.301(c)(7)(iii)(C)(3)(iii) specifies that
the individual must consider all
comments, documents, records, and
other information submitted by the
beneficiary without regard to whether
such information was submitted to or
considered previously by the State.
We expect that beneficiaries would
express dissatisfaction by affirmatively
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
requesting review of a grievance
resolution. We agree that beneficiaries
have the responsibility of requesting the
review, and expect that States will
include, as part of their written policies,
the method for how beneficiaries may
request review and how beneficiaries
will be notified of this right.
Comment: We did not receive
comments on the requirement we
proposed at § 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(B)(7) that
States must provide information on the
grievance system to providers and
subcontractors. However, one
commenter requested that we require
States to give providers 14 days’ notice
if the provider is a party to the
grievance.
Response: We believe that whether,
and how, a State chooses to involve
providers in individual grievances filed
pursuant to § 441.301(c)(7) will vary on
a case-by-case basis and, thus, a
standardized notification requirement
may not be appropriate. For instance,
some grievances may be resolvable
without the provider’s involvement, and
in some cases, the beneficiary may not
want the provider to know the
beneficiary’s identity. If the beneficiary
and the State believe it is necessary to
have the provider involved in the
investigation, including appearing at the
resolution meeting, we expect that
States will give the provider reasonable
notice and ensure that the provider is
able to participate in the process.
Therefore, we intend to provide States
with flexibility in determining their
grievance system policies in this
respect.
Comment: One commenter supported
the requirement we proposed at
§ 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(C)(1) to allow
beneficiaries to file grievances orally but
recommended that we revise the
requirement to specify that States must
follow up with a written summary of the
oral grievance so the beneficiary can
ensure accuracy. Another commenter
suggested that we revise the
requirement at § 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(C)(2)
to specify that acknowledgement of the
receipt of a grievance must be in
writing.
Response: We appreciate the
comments and believe it is a best
practice for States to provide a summary
of the grievance to the beneficiary for
accuracy. However, we decline to
mandate that States provide a written
summary, as we intend to allow
flexibility for States to decide their own
policies to operationalize this
requirement. We believe that part of
acknowledging the grievance, as
required at § 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(C)(2),
involves developing an appropriate
PO 00000
Frm 00045
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40585
system for providing beneficiaries with
confirmation of their grievance.
Comment: One commenter requested
that we specify whether all grievances
filed must receive a full resolution or
whether there are instances in which
the acknowledgement of the grievance is
sufficient. The commenter anticipated
that because of the current direct care
workforce crisis, many grievances may
be filed related to provider shortages.
While acknowledging that understaffing
is a serious problem, the commenter
believed that the grievance process is
unlikely to be able to address the
problem to the beneficiary’s satisfaction.
Response: We note that the definition
of grievance that we are finalizing at
§ 441.301(c)(7)(ii) indicates that a
beneficiary may file a grievance
regardless of whether remedial action is
requested. We agree that, in instances in
which the beneficiary does not wish to
pursue remedial action and indicates
they are not interested in presenting and
debating their grievance as we proposed
at § 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(C)(4),
acknowledging the grievance may be
considered resolving the complaint
(rather than conducting additional
inquiry). We note that should a matter
be resolved with an acknowledgment,
this matter would still be subject to the
requirements at § 441.301(c)(7)(v) and
(vi) (notifying the beneficiary of the
resolution of a grievance) and
§ 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(B)(6) (review of
grievance resolutions with which the
beneficiary is dissatisfied).
Comment: A few commenters
commented on our proposal at
§ 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(C)(3), establishing
requirements for decisionmakers
reviewing grievances considered under
the grievance system. Several of these
commenters supported our efforts to
require a system that would provide a
fair and unbiased review of
beneficiaries’ concerns. However, one
commenter noted that the requirement
at § 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(C)(3) would
require a separate set of personnel to
respond to and investigate grievances
than the staff that is currently allocated
for program management,
administration, and support, and
expressed concern that this would
require additional resources.
Response: We note that the
requirement we proposed at
§ 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(C)(3) requires that
individuals reviewing and making
decisions about grievances are not the
same individuals, nor subordinates of
individuals, who made the original
decision or action that has given rise to
the grievance. This would require that
the provider that made the decision or
performed the action giving rise to the
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
40586
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
grievance would not be able to be the
decisionmaker for the grievance.
However, this would not preclude State
Medicaid agency personnel from
reviewing a grievance filed against a
provider. Additionally, even for
grievances filed about the State’s
performance, the requirement does not
necessarily require review from separate
departments or entities. With firewalls
as needed, reviewers may be from the
same department (or a different
department) so long as the necessary
expertise and independence standards
are met, and the reviewer takes into
account the information described in
§ 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(C)(3)(ii). We are not
making modifications to
§ 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(C)(3) based on these
comments.
Comment: One commenter questioned
if the intent of the requirement we
proposed at § 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(C)(3)(iii)
is to require a ‘‘de novo’’ review of the
grievances.
Response: De novo review typically
refers to a standard of review of a matter
on appeal after a trial court or
administrative body has reached a
determination. If a matter is being
reviewed de novo, the reviewer is
reviewing the whole matter as if it is
freshly presented to them, without
regard for what the prior decisionmaker
determined, or their rationale
supporting that determination. We did
not specify in the regulation text (either
proposed or finalized) whether this
process is intended as a de novo review
of grievances, as reference to de novo
review would have been inapplicable.
The general intent of the grievance
system we proposed at § 441.301(c)(7) is
not to address specific determinations
that are being appealed, as would be the
case in the fair hearing process. The
grievance system is intended to address
a beneficiary’s dissatisfaction or
complaint related to the State’s or
provider’s performance of personcentered planning or HCBS settings
requirements. We expect that the
grievance system will typically
represent the first opportunity a
beneficiary has had to present their
concerns directly to the State. Because
there likely has not been an initial
determination to consider and possibly
affirm or reverse, we do not believe de
novo review is applicable.
For example, consider two scenarios
in which a provider fails to send a
personal care assistant to two
beneficiary’s homes. For Beneficiary A,
the failure was because the provider
forgot to ensure a worker was scheduled
to deliver the services. For Beneficiary
B, the provider decided, unilaterally,
that Beneficiary B had been authorized
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
more personal care services than the
provider believed was necessary and
thus refused to send a personal care
assistant to Beneficiary B’s home. In
both scenarios, Beneficiary A and
Beneficiary B could file grievances
about the provider’s failure to provide
services as outlined in the personcentered care plan or attempt to change
the service plan without going through
the process required in § 441.301(c)(1)
through (3). The proper focus in both
cases would be on whether the provider
provided services in accordance with
the current person-centered care plan.
We would not expect in Beneficiary B’s
situation that the State would treat the
provider’s actions as a formal
determination requiring de novo review
(such as reviewing whether the
provider’s objections to the number of
service hours in the service plan were
valid, or making the beneficiary prove
that the service hours were needed).
Further, even if there has been an initial
decision by a provider or State that the
beneficiary disputes, we did not intend
the grievance system to operate like a
formal legal proceeding (that is, an
administrative hearing or trial) and,
again therefore, we do not believe the
concept of de novo review is applicable.
Comment: One commenter suggested
that we amend the definition of ‘‘skilled
professional medical personnel’’ to
allow the designation to apply to staff
administering the grievance process,
which would make the activity eligible
for a 75 percent Federal matching rate.
Response: We are not amending the
definition of skilled professional
medical personnel in this final rule. The
term ‘‘skilled professional medical
personnel’’ is defined at § 432.2 as
physicians, dentists, nurses, and other
specialized personnel who have
professional education and training in
the field of medical care or appropriate
medical practice and who are in an
employer-employee relationship with
the Medicaid agency. The term
explicitly does not include other,
nonmedical health professionals such as
public administrators, medical analysts,
lobbyists, senior managers, or
administrators of public assistance
programs of the Medicaid program. Per
§ 432.50, the FFP rate for skilled
professional medical personnel and
directly supporting staff of the Medicaid
agency is 75 percent. We do not intend
to require that the administrative
activities required for grievance process
must be administered by personnel with
specialized medical education and
training. Even for those who meet the
criteria to be considered skilled
professional medical personnel, only
the portion of their activities that
PO 00000
Frm 00046
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
require their advanced skills and
expertise would be eligible for the
enhanced matching rate. If similar
functions are performed by non-skilled
professional medical personnel, then
the activities themselves would not
qualify for the higher matching rate.
Comment: One commenter requested
clarification as to whether a telephonic
communication would satisfy the
proposed requirement at
§ 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(C)(4) that the State
provide a beneficiary with a reasonable
opportunity face-to-face, including
through the use of audio or video
technology.
Response: We believe that audio-only
telephone calls, when requested by the
beneficiary and with the inclusion of
any necessary accommodations, satisfy
this requirement.
Comment: One commenter
recommended that we revise proposed
§ 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(C)(4) by removing the
word ‘‘limited’’ from before ‘‘time
available,’’ as the commenter believed
the inclusion of the word ‘‘limited’’ was
unnecessary.
Response: We disagree with the
commenter’s statement that the word
‘‘limited’’ is unnecessary. The language
in this requirement was intended to
mirror similar language in the managed
care grievance process requirements at
§ 438.406(b)(4). Further, we believe it is
important that beneficiaries understand
the timeframes associated with the
grievance resolutions and understand
that it is intended, for their benefit, to
be a time-limited process.
Comment: One commenter
recommended that we mandate a
minimum number of days afforded to a
beneficiary to review their record and
submit additional germane evidence
and testimony to the State agency before
resolution. The commenter noted that
the proposed regulation merely requires
that the State agency provide the
beneficiary with ‘‘a reasonable
opportunity.’’ The commenter regarded
this as a vague standard and was
concerned that States would not grant
beneficiaries sufficient time. The
commenter noted that beneficiaries with
disabilities or complex medical issues
may need additional time and supports
to prepare evidence and testimony. The
commenter suggested that granting
beneficiaries a minimum of 21 days to
prepare their evidence and testimony
after receipt of the agency record would
ensure that the State provided the
record well in advance of the resolution
deadline and would protect
beneficiaries from the imposition of
unreasonable timeframes to prepare.
Response: We note that
§ 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(C)(4) requires that
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
the State provide the beneficiary a
reasonable opportunity to present
evidence and testimony and make legal
and factual arguments related to their
grievance, while
§ 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(C)(5) requires the
State to provide the beneficiary with
their case file and other records
sufficiently in advance of the resolution
timeframe for grievances. We are
unclear on which provision the
commenter is recommending we
modify. We decline to modify either
provision by prescribing specific
deadlines within the overall resolution
timeframe, to allow States to develop
flexible processes to accommodate
beneficiaries. We expect that States will
develop appropriate processes to allow
beneficiaries to request postponements
or rescheduling of any face-to-face
hearings that they have requested if they
find they need more time to prepare, or
other situations arise that would prevent
a beneficiary from being able to
participate in the hearing.
We also note that we are finalizing a
requirement at § 441.301(c)(7)(v)(C) to
allow beneficiaries to have the option of
requesting 14-day extensions if (for any
reason) a beneficiary requires additional
time beyond the 90-day resolution
timeframe we are finalizing at
§ 441.301(c)(7)(v)(B).
Comment: Several commenters
expressed concern about legal
representation during the process. One
commenter stated that beneficiaries
should get access to State-provided legal
assistance. Another commenter
requested that, if a beneficiary is unable
to afford an attorney, the opposing party
not be allowed an attorney.
Response: As discussed in a prior
response, beneficiaries have flexibility
in determining who will assist them
throughout the grievance process—
which could, if the beneficiary chose,
include assistance from a legal
professional. We believe that the
grievance system should be easy to
navigate and largely non-adversarial,
such that beneficiaries would not be
required, nor feel pressured, to have
legal representation. We also believe
that at least some portion of grievances
filed will be for minor issues that do not
require a formal inquiry. We agree with
commenters that it is preferable that
hearings neither be, nor have the
appearance of being, imbalanced in
terms of support for the beneficiary. We
encourage States, as they develop their
policies, to consider what level of
assistance beneficiaries will need during
face-to-face meetings and ensure that
reasonable assistance is provided.
Comment: One commenter stated that
§ 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(C)(5) should be
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
revised to expand the documents
beyond the beneficiary’s ‘‘case file.’’ The
commenter recommended that the
regulations require that the State obtain
relevant files and other information held
by the provider and then provide that
information to the beneficiary. The
commenter stated that, particularly in
cases involving residential providers,
provider-maintained information will be
relevant and often pivotal.
Response: We disagree and believe
adding this language is unnecessary. We
believe that the term, case file, could
have several meanings, depending on
the circumstances, and could include
the records related to the beneficiary’s
services maintained by the provider that
would be obtained by the State as part
of review of the grievance. We also note
that proposed § 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(C)(5)
already requires beneficiaries to receive
other documents and records, as well as
new and current evidence considered or
relied upon by the State related to the
grievance. We believe relevant records
from providers could fall into these
categories, depending on the record and
the circumstances by which the State
obtained it. We do not intend our
requirement at § 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(C)(5),
as proposed and being finalized in this
rule, to amend any existing obligations
for confidentiality of certain records and
we expect States to comply with
applicable Federal and State laws and
regulations governing confidentiality of
those records in determining what
records to provide to the beneficiary
related to their grievance in compliance
with § 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(C)(5). We
decline to make modifications to
§ 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(C)(5) as requested by
the commenter.
Comment: One commenter suggested
that we require that the grievance
system be compliant with the Health
Insurance Portability and
Accountability Act of 1996 (HIPAA).
Response: We had proposed at
§ 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(C)(5) that medical
records being used as part of a grievance
be handled in compliance with 45 CFR
164.510(b) (a provision of the HIPAA
Privacy Rule), to ensure that protected
health information (PHI) used during
the grievance review are obtained and
used with beneficiaries’ authorization.
In general, whenever a beneficiary’s PHI
may be obtained, maintained, or
disclosed by a State agency that is a
covered entity as defined in 45 CFR
160.103 (such as a State Medicaid
agency), States are responsible for
ensuring compliance with the
requirements of HIPAA and its
implementing regulations, as well as
any other applicable Federal or State
privacy laws governing confidentiality
PO 00000
Frm 00047
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40587
of a beneficiary’s records. We also note
that 45 CFR 164.510(b) is just one
provision of the HIPAA Privacy Rule
that permits the disclosure of PHI, and
other provisions may also permit the
disclosure of PHI (such as disclosure of
PHI to personal representatives under
45 CFR 164.502(g)); other permissions
may also apply in addition to what is
cited here and included in the
regulatory text of this final rule. Upon
further review, we have determined
that, given that a number of
requirements of the HIPAA Privacy Rule
may apply to the obtaining and sharing
of beneficiaries’ information, we are
finalizing § 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(C)(5) with
a modification to change the citation of
45 CFR 164.510(b) to a broader reference
to the HIPAA Privacy Rule (45 CFR part
160 and part 164 subparts A and E).
Finally, we also note that individuals
who believe their health information
privacy has been violated may file a
complaint with the HHS Office for Civil
Rights at https://www.hhs.gov/hipaa/
filing-a-complaint/.
After consideration of public
comments, we are finalizing
§ 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(A) as proposed, with
the following modification. We are
finalizing § 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(A)(1) with
modification to specify that another
individual or entity may file a grievance
on behalf of the beneficiary or provide
the beneficiary with assistance or
representation throughout the grievance
process with the written consent of the
beneficiary or authorized representative.
We are finalizing
§ 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(A)(2) as proposed.
We are finalizing requirements at
§ 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(B) as proposed, with
the following modifications. We are
finalizing § 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(B)(1) with
a modification to correct an erroneous
reference to subchapter by replacing
subchapter with paragraph (c)(7). We
are finalizing § 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(B)(2)
with modifications by: (1) adding to
States’ obligation the requirement that
States must provide beneficiaries
reasonable assistance in ensuring
grievances are appropriately filed with
the grievance system; (2) modifying
language to refer to individuals with
Limited English Proficiency; and (3)
clarifying that auxiliary aids and
services must be made available where
necessary to ensure effective
communication. We are finalizing
§ 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(B)(3) with
modifications to require that States
ensure that punitive or retaliatory
actions (rather than just punitive
actions) are neither threatened nor
taken. We are also adding language to
specify that the punitive or retaliatory
actions cannot be threatened or taken
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
40588
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
against an individual filing a grievance
or who has had a grievance filed on
their behalf. (New language identified
in bold.)
For reasons we discuss in greater
detail in the next section (section
II.B.2.c. of this rule) we are finalizing
§ 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(B)(4) with a
modification to remove the reference to
expedited grievances. We are finalizing
§ 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(B)(5) with a
modification to change the language to
refer to individuals with Limited
English Proficiency. We are finalizing
§ 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(B)(6) and (7) as
proposed.
We are finalizing
§ 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(C)(1) through (5)
with minor technical modifications. We
are replacing the periods at the end of
each paragraph with semi-colons and
adding the word and at the end of
§ 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(C)(5) to accurately
reflect that § 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(C)(1)
through (6) are elements of a list, not
separate declarative statements.
Additionally, for reasons we discuss in
greater detail in a later section (section
II.B.2.d.) because we are not finalizing
the expedited resolution timeframe at
§ 441.301(c)(7)(v)(B)(2), we are
finalizing § 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(C)(5) with
modifications to remove references to
§ 441.301(c)(7)(v)(B)(1) and (2) and add
a reference to § 441.301(c)(7)(v). We are
also finalizing § 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(C)(5)
with a modification to change the
citation of 45 CFR 164.510(b) to a
broader reference to the HIPAA Privacy
Rule (45 CFR part 160 and part 164
subparts A and E).
c. Filing Timeframe (§ 441.301(c)(7)(iv))
At § 441.301(c)(7)(iv)(A), we proposed
to require that the beneficiary be able to
file a grievance at any time. At
§ 441.301(c)(7)(iv)(B), we proposed to
require that beneficiaries be permitted
to request expedited resolution of a
grievance, whenever there is a
substantial risk that resolution within
standard timeframes will adversely
affect the beneficiary’s health, safety, or
welfare, such as if, for example, a
beneficiary cannot access personal care
services authorized in the personcentered service plan.
We received public comments on
these proposals. The following is a
summary of the comments we received
and our responses.
Comment: A few commenters made
suggestions or submitted clarifying
questions about our proposal at
§ 441.301(c)(7)(iv)(A) that beneficiaries
be able to file a grievance at any time.
One commenter requested clarification
on whether our intent was to prohibit
limits on the timeframe between the
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
occurrence of the subject of the
grievance and the date when the
individual files a grievance. Another
commenter noted that there should be a
90-day time limit on when beneficiaries
can file grievances.
Response: We do not intend for
beneficiaries’ ability to file grievances to
be time-limited. We appreciate
commenters’ concerns regarding this
issue; however, we defer to the rationale
we used when declining to add a
timeframe cap in the managed care
grievance filing process (81 FR 27511).
In the managed care grievance process,
§ 438.402(c)(2)(i) specifies that enrollees
may file a grievance with their managed
care plan at any time. As we previously
noted, grievances do not progress to the
level of a State fair hearing, which is a
time-sensitive process; therefore, we
found it unnecessary to include filing
limits because grievances are resolved
without having to consider the time
limits of other processes (81 FR 27511).
We understand that States may be
concerned about revisiting grievance
issues that occurred in the past, but we
believe this is a normal part of
providing services and that beneficiaries
should be permitted to file a grievance
at any time. We also note, that, as
discussed in more detail below, States
believe that educating beneficiaries
about the grievance process will take
time; therefore, we do not want to
prevent beneficiaries from filing
grievances in cases where the delay in
filing was because the beneficiary was
not initially aware of their ability to file
a grievance.
Comment: A few commenters
supported the proposal at
§ 441.301(c)(7)(iv)(B) to create a
pathway for expedited resolutions when
there is a substantial risk that resolution
within standard timeframes will
adversely affect the beneficiary’s health,
safety, or welfare.
Several commenters, however,
believed that the proposal at
§ 441.301(c)(7)(iv)(B) to create a
pathway for an expedited resolution
was unclear or overly broad and
requested additional clarification as to
what would constitute a grievance
warranting expedited resolution. Some
of these commenters stated that
technical assistance would be needed to
help States identify the criteria for
determining whether a resolution
should be expedited, and how to
proceed if a beneficiary disagrees with
the State’s determination that a
grievance request should be expedited
or resolved in the standard timeframe.
One commenter raised the concern that
if a beneficiary’s request for an
expedited resolution was denied, they
PO 00000
Frm 00048
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
may follow up with submitting another
grievance or file a fair hearing request.
Another commenter suggested that
expedited resolutions should be defined
as being contingent on the timely
receipt of information from the
beneficiary.
Some commenters noted that the
expedited resolution process’s focus on
health, safety, and welfare could lead to
duplication with other systems,
including the critical incident system.
They expressed the belief that there are
separate channels to address health and
safety concerns. For this reason, a few
commenters suggested that there should
only be one standard grievance
resolution and notice timeline of 90
calendar days. A few commenters also
suggested that we should not have an
expedited resolution process in the FFS
grievance system because there is not
such a process in the managed care
grievance system (as described in 42
CFR part 438, subpart F).
One commenter stated that, in their
experience, few grievances were about
issues affecting beneficiaries’ health and
safety, and thus it would not be
appropriate to create a requirement for
an expedited process as it was defined
in proposed § 441.301(c)(7)(iv)(B). The
commenter offered examples of typical
grievances, based on the commenter’s
experience with operating a State
grievance system. The commenter noted
that many grievances involve education
about the HCBS program (for example,
additional services and limitations),
information about available providers in
their area as an alternative to their
current provider, dissatisfaction with
their paid caregiver, and frustrations
with provider workforce shortages.
Response: We are persuaded by
commenters’ feedback summarized
here, as well as comments summarized
later in this section regarding the
expedited resolution timeframe. After
consideration of public comments, as
discussed here in section II.B.2, we are
not finalizing § 441.301(c)(7)(iv)(B) and
are removing other references to the
expedited resolution process where it
appears in § 441.301(c)(7) in this final
rule.
In particular, we are persuaded by the
concern that the expedited resolution
process as proposed could create
overlap with the critical incident
system, which is described in section
II.B.3 of this final rule. We believe that
the critical incident system is the most
appropriate mechanism for investigating
situations when a beneficiary has
experienced actual harm or substantial
risks to their health and safety. We do
not want there to be a delay in the
investigation of a critical incident
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
because it was incorrectly filed as a
grievance, nor do we want matters that
should be investigated as critical
incidents resolved only in the grievance
process.
In addition, as some commenters
correctly noted, the managed care
requirements at 42 CFR part 438,
subpart F, do not include an expedited
grievance resolution process. We have
not identified a compelling reason why
beneficiaries receiving HCBS through
FFS systems should need an expedited
resolution process for grievances when
no similar process has, as yet, been
deemed necessary in the managed care
system. After reexamining these
requirements in light of comments
received, we do not wish to create
misalignment between managed care
and FFS systems’ grievance resolution
processes.
In general, we agree with the
commenter that it is likely that many
grievances filed would not meet the
standard we proposed for expedited
resolution (and, as noted above, if they
did meet the standard, they are likely
candidates for the critical incident or
fair hearings systems). However, we
envision that there remains the potential
for some grievances to require
immediate attention and intervention,
even if they do not rise to the level of
a critical incident (as defined in
§ 441.302(a)(6)(i)(A)) or do not qualify
for a fair hearing (as set out in part 431,
subpart E). Therefore, we encourage
States to include in their grievance
system a system for identifying, triaging,
and expediting resolution of grievances
that require, according to the State’s
criteria, prioritization and prompt
resolution.
After consideration of the comments
received about § 441.301(c)(7)(iv), we
are finalizing our proposal at
§ 441.301(c)(7)(iv) with modification by
removing the expedited resolution
requirement at § 441.301(c)(7)(iv)(B) and
redesignating § 441.301(c)(7)(iv)(A) as
§ 441.301(c)(7)(iv). Additionally, we are
removing references to the expedited
resolution process in
§ 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(B)(4). We are also
removing requirements related to the
expedited resolution process in
§ 441.301(c)(7)(v). These changes are
discussed in their respective sections
below.
d. Resolution and Notification
(§ 441.301(c)(7)(v))
At § 441.301(c)(7)(v), we proposed
resolution and notification requirements
for grievances. Specifically, at
§ 441.301(c)(7)(v)(A), we proposed to
require that States resolve and provide
notice of resolution related to each
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
grievance as quickly as the beneficiary’s
health, safety, and welfare requires and
within State-established timeframes that
do not exceed the standard and
expedited timeframes proposed in
§ 441.301(c)(7)(v)(B). At
§ 441.301(c)(7)(v)(B)(1), we proposed to
require that standard resolution of a
grievance and notice to affected parties
must occur within 90 calendar days of
receipt of the grievance. At
§ 441.301(c)(7)(v)(B)(2), we proposed to
require that expedited resolution of a
grievance and notice must occur within
14 calendar days of receipt of the
grievance.
At § 441.301(c)(7)(v)(C), we proposed
that States be permitted to extend the
timeframes for the standard resolution
and expedited resolution of grievances
by up to 14 calendar days if the
beneficiary requests the extension, or
the State documents that there is need
for additional information and how the
delay is in the beneficiary’s interest. At
§ 441.301(c)(7)(v)(D), we proposed to
require that States make reasonable
efforts to give the beneficiary prompt
oral notice of the delay, give the
beneficiary written notice, within 2
calendar days of determining a need for
a delay but no later than the timeframes
in paragraph (c)(7)(v)(B), of the reason
for the decision to extend the timeframe,
and resolve the grievance as
expeditiously as the beneficiary’s health
condition requires and no later than the
date the extension expires, if the State
extends the timeframe for a standard
resolution or an expedited resolution.
We also proposed at
§ 441.301(c)(7)(iv)(B) and (c)(7)(v)(B)(2)
that beneficiaries be permitted to
request, and the State provide for,
expedited resolution of a grievance.
However, we noted that these proposed
requirements differ from the current
grievance system requirements for
Medicaid managed care plans at part
438, subpart F, which do not include
specific requirements for an expedited
resolution of a grievance. We solicited
comment on whether part 438, subpart
F should be amended to include the
proposed requirements for expedited
resolution of a grievance at
§ 441.301(c)(7)(iv)(B) and (v)(B)(2).
We received public comments on
these proposals. The following is a
summary of the comments we received
and our responses. We note that, as
discussed in the previous section, we
are not finalizing the expedited
resolution process at
§ 441.301(c)(7)(iv)(B). We will discuss
the impact of this change to the
requirements in § 441.301(c)(7)(v) in our
response to the comments below.
PO 00000
Frm 00049
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40589
Comment: A few commenters
requested that we provide additional
information to clarify what is expected
for a grievance to be considered
resolved.
Response: We believe that the
resolutions of grievances can take many
forms and may vary on a case-by-case
basis, and thus we decline to revise the
requirements at § 441.301(c)(7)(v) to
provide a more specific definition. We
proposed and are finalizing as discussed
in this section II.B.2 that a beneficiary
may file a grievance even if the
beneficiary does not request remedial
action. We expect that grievances will
vary not only in severity and urgency
but will also vary according to the
formality of the response. Some
grievances, as noted in a response
above, may require only a simple
acknowledgment of the concern. Others
may require immediate action(s),
including intervention(s) with or
action(s) taken against the provider. Still
others may involve the State setting up
a long-term corrective action plan or
monitoring, consistent with applicable
State laws governing such. We believe
that a critical part of the grievance
process involves collecting input from
the beneficiary filing the grievance on
the resolution or outcome they hope to
achieve through the grievance process.
This may include instances in which
the beneficiary wishes to bring a
concern to the State’s attention but is
not necessarily pursuing a specific
resolution.
Comment: A few commenters raised
concerns or questions about how States
should ensure compliance with
resolutions. One commenter noted the
importance of ensuring corrective
actions are taken in response to
grievances so that policy and systems
transformation can take place in a
timely manner. One commenter
requested that we provide States with
more tools to ensure provider
compliance, including appropriate
monetary and nonmonetary penalties.
Another commenter stated that the
grievance resolution process should
include an order for the creation of a
corrective action plan and subsequent
monitoring.
Response: We appreciate the
commenters’ suggestions, but we
decline to add specific actions to the
requirements at § 441.301(c)(7)(v). As
noted above, we believe that there will
be variety in both grievances and
resolutions. It would be difficult, and
perhaps detrimental, to establish a set of
Federal penalties that may be over- or
under-responsive to the range of matters
heard in the grievance process. Thus,
we want to retain flexibility in the
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
40590
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
regulatory requirements to allow State
grievance systems to respond
appropriately to each situation. We
expect that States will apply a
reasonable interpretation to the
requirement that the States ‘‘resolve’’
the grievance. For instance, if resolution
reasonably requires a corrective action
plan for a provider (for grievances
resolved against providers) or a
corrective action plan for the State (for
grievances resolved against the State),
we expect that a corrective action plan
would be executed and monitored as
part of the resolution in accordance
with applicable State laws. Through
State law and regulations, States can
create penalties, whether monetary or
non-monetary, for providers that have
violated their obligations as set forth by
the State Medicaid program.
Comment: Several commenters
suggested that the grievance resolution
process should include formal followup requirements. To ensure proper
follow-up, one commenter
recommended that the regulations
specify that grievances and their
resolutions be reviewed at the
subsequent person-centered planning
process. One commenter recommended
that the State should perform a follow
up at 30 and 90 days after the
resolution.
Response: We decline to add specific
follow-up requirements to
§ 441.301(c)(7)(v). As discussed in prior
responses, we believe that grievances
are likely to take many forms. We agree
that, in some instances, follow-up or
ongoing monitoring may be a critical
element of a particular resolution and,
thus, should be included. In other cases,
the grievance may not require follow-up
and, thus, a formal follow-up
requirement would impose an
unnecessary administrative burden.
There may also be instances in which a
beneficiary may not wish to be
repeatedly contacted after they believe
the matter has been resolved. We
believe that determining the
appropriateness of when, and how, to
monitor outcomes of grievances should
be part of policies States develop for
their grievance system.
Comment: One commenter
recommended that we revise the
requirement at § 441.301(c)(7)(v)(A) to
require that the State solicit more
information from beneficiaries on how a
delayed resolution could hurt the
beneficiary. One commenter suggested
that we include the language from this
provision in the timeframe requirement
for expedited grievances at
§ 441.301(c)(7)(v)(B)(2) so that the
requirement reads, ‘‘as expeditiously as
the beneficiary’s health condition
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
requires and no longer than 14 calendar
days after the State receives the
grievance.’’
Response: We decline to make the
suggested modifications to the
requirement at § 441.301(c)(7)(v)(A). We
clarify that this requirement at
§ 441.301(c)(7)(v)(A) sets a general
expectation for expeditious resolutions
for all grievances. We encourage States
to ensure that beneficiaries provide, in
their grievances, detailed information
about their concerns (including negative
impacts they are experiencing or believe
they will experience). However, we
have specifically not set requirements
for the amount or type of information
beneficiaries must submit when filing a
grievance, as we do not wish to
inadvertently mandate a process that is
administratively burdensome for
beneficiaries. We believe that
commenters may have interpreted this
requirement as a means of identifying
grievances being filed for expedited
resolution, which was not the intent.
Additionally, as discussed above, we are
not finalizing the requirement for an
expedited resolution at
§ 441.301(c)(iv)(B)(2).
We also note that, consistent with our
discussion above related to concerns
about confusion between the purpose of
the grievance system and the critical
incident system described in
§ 441.302(a)(6), we are revising the
language in this provision. Specifically,
we are finalizing our proposal at
§ 441.301(c)(7)(v)(A) with modification
to require that the State resolve each
grievance and provide notice as
expeditiously as the beneficiary’s health
condition requires, instead of our
proposal, which would have required
that such notice be provided as
expeditiously as the beneficiary’s
health, safety, and welfare requires. We
believe this avoids confusion with the
critical incident system and aligns the
language with a parallel requirement in
the managed care grievance
requirements at § 438.408(a), as well as
our language in §§ 441.301(c)(7)(v)(D)(3)
(pertaining to expeditious resolution
during extensions). We believe that
‘‘health condition’’ may be broadly
interpreted to refer both to physical and
mental health and well-being of the
beneficiary.
Comment: A few commenters
supported our proposal at
§ 441.301(c)(7)(v)(B)(1) that standard
resolution of a grievance and notice to
affected parties must occur within 90
calendar days of receipt of the
grievance. However, some commenters,
while not specifically opposing the 90day timeframe, expressed concerns that
the timeframe proposed for resolving
PO 00000
Frm 00050
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
grievances may not always allow for a
thorough investigation. One commenter
noted that, while this timeframe might
allow for investigation and resolution of
some grievances, other grievances might
require more extensive investigation
(such as interviews, on-site visits, legal
review and consultation, and request for
additional documentation) and could
take longer. The commenter also
worried about the time involved in
allowing the beneficiary a reasonable
opportunity to present evidence face-toface and in writing, as well as access to
their case file to review in advance.
Conversely, a number of commenters
recommended that the standard
resolution timeframe be shortened to 45
days. Many of these commenters stated
that 90 days is too long for an individual
to wait for resolution if they are
experiencing a serious violation of their
rights or access to services.
Response: We agree with commenters
that some grievances may take longer
than 90 days to resolve properly and
note that these extenuating
circumstances can be addressed through
the use of the 14-day extension we are
finalizing at § 441.301(c)(7)(v)(C) if the
conditions set forth in that requirement
are met. We also agree with commenters
that grievances should be resolved as
expeditiously as possible, but we do not
agree that cutting the proposed
timeframe in half (to 45 days) would be
a sufficient timeframe. We based our
proposal of 90 calendar days on the
current timeframe for resolution in the
managed care grievance system at
§ 438.408(b), and we do not find reason
to believe that FFS grievances would
require less time to resolve than
grievances in the managed care system.
We do not wish to set a timeframe that
encourages hasty investigations, nor the
overuse of the 14-day extensions. We
also note that 90 calendar days is the
maximum allowed timeframe and that
States may choose to set a shorter
timeframe, or several timeframes for
different types of grievances, so long as
none of the timeframes exceed 90
calendar days. We are finalizing the 90calendar day timeframe for resolutions
as proposed.
Comment: One commenter noted that
the proposed timeframe of 14 days for
expedited resolution was too long and
suggested that it be reduced to 7 days.
On the other hand, many commenters
expressed concerns about staff capacity
necessary to respond to expedited
grievances within 14 calendar days, as
well as the feasibility of completing
investigations within the proposed 14day timeframe. Commenters believed
that, given the potential seriousness of
grievance inquiries, it may be difficult
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
for all necessary information to be
gathered in 14 days and to grant the
beneficiary a reasonable opportunity to
present evidence in a face-to-face
meeting. Several commenters
recommended that, if finalizing an
expedited resolution timeframe, we
extend the timeframe to 30 calendar
days, and one commenter recommended
30 business days.
Response: As discussed above, we are
not finalizing the requirement for an
expedited resolution process. In
addition to the comments summarized
above about the process itself, we agree
with commenters that if a beneficiary
has filed a grievance and wishes to
present evidence and participate in a
face-to-face meeting with the
decisionmaker, 7 calendar days, or even
14 calendar days, may not be sufficient
time for all relevant materials to be
gathered and reviewed by the
beneficiary and decisionmaker, nor to
arrange for a resolution meeting. As
discussed above, we are encouraging
States to create their own processes for
expediting resolution of certain
grievances. We believe that there will be
some grievances filed that may (and
should) be resolved almost immediately,
including by a referral to the critical
incident system or fair hearings process.
We note that several commenters
suggested that 30 days is a reasonable
timeframe for expediting resolutions,
and States may want to take that
recommendation under consideration
when developing their own processes.
Consistent with our decision not to
finalize the expedited resolution process
at § 441.301(c)(7)(iv)(B), we are not
finalizing § 441.301(c)(7)(v)(B)(2).
Comment: One commenter noted that
imposing any timelines for resolving
grievances could detract from staff
resources needed to investigate critical
incidents, particularly if the grievance
and critical incident systems use the
same staff.
Response: We recognize that States
will have to supply staff and resources
for both the grievance and critical
incident systems that we are finalizing
in this rule. We will provide technical
assistance to States as needed to help
identify ways to manage both systems,
including setting priorities and
managing the critical incident
investigation and grievance resolution
timeframes.
Comment: A number of commenters
responded to our invitation to comment
on whether part 438, subpart F should
be amended to include the proposed
expedited resolution requirements at
§ 441.301(c)(7)(iv)(B) and (v)(B)(2).
Several commenters recommended that
expedited procedures be extended to the
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
managed care grievance procedures at
part 438 subpart F. However, several
commenters opposed adding expedited
resolution timeframes to part 438
subpart F. Similar to the opposition
presented to including expedited
resolutions in the FFS grievance system,
these commenters believed that very
few expressions of dissatisfaction
require expedited resolution and that
other mechanisms exist to address
health and safety concerns in a timely
manner. A few commenters also
provided suggestions on possible
changes to the managed care grievance
requirements, such as adding a
prohibition of punitive action against
beneficiaries who file grievances.
Response: We will take these
comments under consideration. We note
that we are not, at this time, finalizing
an expedited resolution process in the
FFS grievance system and are not
finalizing the requirements we proposed
at § 441.301(c)(7)(iv)(B) and at
§ 441.301(c)(7)(v)(B)(2) for such a
process. We also note that, while
outside the scope of this proposal, we
will take other recommendations
regarding potential changes to the
managed care grievance process under
consideration as well.
Comment: A few commenters noted
support for the proposal at
§ 441.301(c)(7)(v)(C) that States be
permitted to extend the timeframes for
the resolution of grievances by up to 14
calendar days.
Response: We thank the commenters
for their support.
We did not receive comments on the
requirements we proposed at
§ 441.301(c)(7)(v)(D).
After consideration of public
comments, we are finalizing our
proposal at § 441.301(c)(7)(v)(A) with
modification to require that the State
resolve each grievance, and provide
notice, as expeditiously as the
beneficiary’s health condition (instead
of health, safety, and welfare) requires.
Additionally, consistent with our
decision not to finalize the expedited
resolution process at
§ 441.301(c)(7)(iv)(B), we are not
finalizing the expedited resolution
timeframe at § 441.301(c)(7)(v)(B)(2),
redesignating § 441.301(c)(7)(v)(B)(1) as
§ 441.301(c)(7)(v)(B), and retitling
§ 441.301(c)(7)(v)(B) as ‘‘Resolution
timeframes.’’ We are also removing the
word ‘‘standard’’ in
§ 441.301(c)(7)(v)(B)(1) (which we are
finalizing at § 441.301(c)(7)(v)(B)) since
the finalized requirements do not
distinguish between ‘‘standard
resolution’’ and other types of
resolutions.
PO 00000
Frm 00051
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40591
We are finalizing § 441.301(c)(7)(v)(C),
with a technical correction to
redesignate paragraphs (C)(1)(i) and
(C)(1)(ii) as (C)(1) and (C)(2),
respectively. We are finalizing
§ 441.301(c)(7)(v)(D) as proposed, with
minor technical corrections.
Specifically, we are changing the
periods at the end of
§ 441.301(c)(7)(v)(D)(1) and (2) to semicolons and adding ‘‘and’’ at the end of
§ 441.301(c)(7)(v)(D)(2).
e. Notice of Resolution
(§ 441.301(c)(7)(vi))
We proposed at § 441.301(c)(7)(vi)
requirements related to the notice of
resolution for beneficiaries. Specifically,
at § 441.301(c)(7)(vi)(A), we proposed to
require that States establish a method
for written notice to beneficiaries and
that the method meet the availability
and accessibility requirements at
§ 435.905(b). At § 441.301(c)(7)(vi)(B),
we proposed to require that States make
reasonable efforts to provide oral notice
of resolution for expedited resolutions.
We received public comments on
these proposals. The following is a
summary of the comments we received
and our responses.
Comment: Several commenters
recommended that we expand the
requirements proposed at
§ 441.301(c)(7)(vi) pertaining to the
information beneficiaries receive at the
resolution of their grievance. The
commenters requested we include a
requirement that the notice explain
what the grievance is, the information
considered, the necessary remedial
actions (if any) for resolution, and the
ability to request further review.
Response: We encourage States to
include this information in resolution
notices as appropriate, but we decline to
make changes to this requirement in our
final rule. We note that this
requirement, as written, is consistent
with the parallel requirement in
§ 438.408(d), which provides States
with flexibility in developing a method
by which managed care plans will
notify enrollees of resolutions. We
intend to provide States with this same
flexibility in the FFS system, as we see
no compelling reason to impose more
rigid requirements on one system than
the other.
We also note that, consistent with the
discussion above not to finalize the
expedited resolution process, we are not
finalizing § 441.301(c)(7)(vi)(B), which
requires oral notice for expedited
resolutions. We expect that States,
should they decide to include an
expedited resolution process in their
grievance system, would develop an
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
40592
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
appropriate system for notifying
beneficiaries of these resolutions.
After consideration of the comments
received, we are finalizing
§ 441.301(c)(7)(vi)(A) without
substantive changes. However,
consistent with our decision (discussed
above) not to finalize the expedited
resolution process at
§ 441.301(c)(7)(iv)(B), we are not
finalizing the requirement we proposed
relating to the expedited resolution
process at § 441.301(c)(7)(vi)(B) and
redesignating § 441.301(c)(7)(vi)(A) as
§ 441.301(c)(7)(vi).
f. Recordkeeping (§ 441.301(c)(7)(vii))
We proposed at § 441.301(c)(7)(vii)
recordkeeping requirements related to
grievances. Specifically, at
§ 441.301(c)(7)(vii)(A), we proposed to
require that States maintain records of
grievances and review the information
as part of their ongoing monitoring
procedures. At § 441.301(c)(7)(vii)(B),
we proposed to require that the record
of each grievance must contain at a
minimum the following information: a
general description of the reason for the
grievance, the date received, the date of
each review or review meeting (if
applicable), resolution and date of the
resolution of the grievance (if
applicable), and the name of the
beneficiary for whom the grievance was
filed. Further, at § 441.301(c)(7)(vii)(C),
we proposed to require that grievance
records be accurately maintained and in
a manner that would be available upon
our request.
We received public comments on
these proposals. The following is a
summary of the comments we received
and our responses.
Comment: A few commenters
supported the proposal at
§ 441.301(c)(7)(vii)(A) to require that
States maintain records of grievances
and review the information as part of
their ongoing monitoring procedures,
and for the proposal at
§ 441.301(c)(7)(vii)(C) that grievance
records would be available upon CMS’s
request. A few commenters were also
specifically supportive of what they
regarded as the proposal’s potential to
collect and track standardized
information about service system issues,
including obstacles to informed choice
and person-centered planning.
One commenter observed that there
will be important lessons and
conclusions that may be drawn from the
data that should help the State to take
steps to deter future service provider
actions that lead to grievances. The
commenter also hoped that such data
could lead to educational opportunities
to refine State and service provider
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
knowledge of HCBS settings and personcentered service plan rules, and data
should be collected on the efficacy of
such educational interventions. One
commenter suggested that we require
qualitative, as well as quantitative,
reporting.
Response: We decline to make any
additional changes to our proposal at
§ 441.301(c)(7)(vii) in this final rule, but
we agree with the commenters that the
data and records that States collect as
part of the grievance process may be
critical in helping States improve their
HCBS programs. While we are not
finalizing specific requirements for how
States must use this data, promising
practices related to data collection and
analysis, including methods of
capturing qualitative data from the
records, will likely be included in the
technical assistance that will be
available to States during the
implementation period.
Comment: A few commenters
recommended requiring States to make
information on grievances publicly
available, such as by releasing an annual
report on the anonymized grievances
received in the previous 12 months,
categorized by issue, severity, and
resolution or lack of resolution. One
commenter suggested that such a report
would enhance transparency and could
assist with quality improvement by
providing States, providers, and
consumer advocates with insight into
grievance patterns and trends. Another
commenter recommended that we
require public online disclosure of
grievance details and resolutions. The
commenter noted this would help
individuals make informed choices
about providers and would encourage
compliance with person-centered
planning and settings requirements. One
commenter, presuming that the State’s
recordkeeping system would be made
publicly available, suggested that we
include the name of the decision maker
in the records so that CMS, researchers,
and advocacy groups can ensure that
decision makers are making unbiased
decisions.
Response: We did not propose that
States publicly report information about
grievance resolutions in this final rule;
we note, for instance, that we did not
include reporting on the grievance
system as part of the reporting
requirement being finalized at
§ 441.311, nor are we requiring that
States report information about
grievances as part of the website posting
requirement being finalized at
§ 441.313. We decline to make any
changes in this final rule to require such
public reporting.
PO 00000
Frm 00052
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
We believe that some public
disclosures may not be suitable or
appropriate in every instance, and it
would be difficult to tailor a meaningful
requirement to anticipate all of these
circumstances. We are concerned that,
for example, in States with smaller
HCBS populations, it may be difficult to
truly anonymize information about
grievances. Relatedly, some
beneficiaries may not want grievances
published about specific providers, as
some commenters suggest, as this would
further complicate anonymity when
some providers only serve a few clients.
We are concerned also that public
disclosure could have a chilling effect if
beneficiaries believed their grievance
could be made part of a public report.
While we agree that, over time, data
about trends in grievances could be
useful to both the States and external
interested parties in promoting systemic
improvements of HCBS, we defer to
States to determine when and how to
make this information public and for
what purpose. We also note that the
specific recommendation to add the
name of the decision maker to the
record is addressed in another response
later in this section.
Comment: One commenter
recommended that we establish a
process for an annual or regular review
of the States’ summary of issues and the
States’ resolution of the issues. Another
commenter recommended requiring an
independent evaluator periodically
review States’ grievance processes to
identify common barriers, trends,
participation rates, and effectiveness of
resolutions.
Response: When developing the
proposed requirements at
§ 441.301(c)(7), we did not intend to
create a formal system in which we
would routinely review individual
resolutions made by States’ grievance
systems and are not persuaded
otherwise after review of public
comments received. As discussed
further in this section II.B., we
proposed, and are finalizing, the
requirement at § 441.301(c)(7)(vii)(C)
that States must make records available
to us upon request. This provides CMS
with authority to review records should
we need to review the functioning of a
State’s grievance system on a case-bycase basis.
We believe that the grievance system’s
designated decision makers are
generally in the best position to
determine appropriate resolutions to
beneficiaries’ concerns and that the
need to review individual records
should be decided on a case-by-case
basis. We do agree regular review of the
States’ grievance systems is a good
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
suggestion, and we will take it under
consideration for future guidance and
rulemaking. Similarly, we are not
requiring that States have their
grievance system reviewed by an
independent evaluator in this final
rule—in part because we believe many
States will likely do this anyway, as part
of their standard audit processes.
However, we agree that having the
system regularly reviewed by an
independent entity is a good practice
that States may consider.
Comment: A few commenters
suggested specific categories of
information to be added to the record of
each grievance proposed at
§ 441.301(c)(7)(vii)(B). One commenter
suggested that all information
considered should be included as a
category in the record of each grievance.
A few commenters recommended we
add that the name of the decisionmaker
be included in the record to ensure that
conflict of interest requirements at
§ 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(C)(3) are preserved.
Response: We thank commenters for
their suggestions, but we decline to add
new record requirements for States at
§ 441.301(c)(7)(vii)(B). We believe
capturing the names of staff and
individuals who decided the outcome of
each grievance is an operational and
internal matter for States. States can
record whatever information about a
grievance resolution that they deem
appropriate in addition to what is
required. We believe
§ 441.301(c)(7)(vii)(B) as finalized
reflects an appropriate minimum level
of detail. We note that
§ 441.301(c)(7)(vii)(B) aligns with the
managed care grievance system
recordkeeping requirement at § 438.416.
After consideration of public
comments received, we are finalizing
§ 441.301(c)(7)(vii) without substantive
modifications. However, we are
finalizing § 441.301(c)(7)(viii)(B)(1)
through (5) with minor technical
modifications. We are replacing the
periods at the end of each paragraph
with semi-colons, to accurately reflect
that § 441.301(c)(7)(vii)(B)(1) through (6)
are elements of a nonexhaustive list, not
separate declarative statements. We are
also adding the word ‘‘and’’ to the end
of § 441.301(c)(7)(vii)(B)(5).
g. Applicability Date
(§ 441.301(c)(7)(viii))
In the proposed rule (88 FR 27977),
we recognized that many States may
need time to implement the proposed
grievance system requirements,
including needing time to amend
provider agreements, make State
regulatory or policy changes, implement
process or procedural changes, update
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
information systems for data collection
and reporting, or conduct other
activities to implement these
requirements. However, we noted that
the absence of a grievance system in
FFS HCBS systems poses a substantial
risk of harm to beneficiaries. We
proposed at § 441.301(c)(7)(viii) that the
requirements at § 441.301(c)(7) be
effective 2 years after the effective date
of the final rule. A 2-year time period
after the effective date of the final rule
for States to implement these
requirements reflected our attempt to
balance two competing challenges: (1)
the fact that there is a gap in existing
regulations for FFS HCBS grievance
processes related to important HCBS
beneficiary protection issues involving
person-centered planning and HCBS
settings requirements; and (2) feedback
from States and other interested parties
that it could take 1 to 2 years to amend
State regulations and work with their
State legislatures, if needed, as well as
to revise policies, operational processes,
information systems, and contracts to
support implementation of the
proposals outlined in this section. We
also considered all of the HCBS
proposals outlined in the proposed rule
(88 FR 27971 through 27995) as whole.
We solicited comments on overall
burden for States to meet the
requirements of this section, whether
this timeframe is sufficient, whether we
should require a shorter timeframe (1
year to 18 months) or longer timeframe
(3 to 4 years) to implement these
provisions, and if an alternate timeframe
is recommended, the rationale for that
alternate timeframe.
We received public comments on
these proposals. The following is a
summary of the comments we received
and our responses.
Comment: One commenter supported
our proposal at § 441.301(c)(7)(viii) that
the requirement at § 441.301(c)(7) be
effective 2 years after the effective date
of the final rule. However, one
commenter, stating that these grievance
protections will be vital to HCBS
beneficiaries, recommended that States
be required to come into compliance
within 18 months after the effective date
of the regulations.
A few commenters expressed
concerns about the burden they believe
will be associated with developing a
grievance system, particularly in States
that do not already have grievance
processes in place. Commenters
believed that it would take significant
resources to help beneficiaries
understand what rights they can claim
under the grievance system.
Commenters also described costs or
activities such as: funding and statutory
PO 00000
Frm 00053
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40593
change requests to State legislatures;
administrative rulemaking; IT and
administrative system design and
development, which may include
vendor procurement; collaboration with
other State agencies or agency divisions;
partnering with providers for
implementation; hiring and training
new staff; and approval of
implementation advance planning
documents by CMS. These commenters
suggested alternative effective dates
ranging from 3 to 5 years. One
commenter also suggested an effective
date of 4 years after CMS releases
relevant subregulatory guidance.
Response: We appreciate the fact that
States will have to expend resources in
developing the grievance system,
particularly States that do not currently
have grievance systems for Medicaid
beneficiaries receiving services under
section 1915(c), (i), (j) and (k)
authorities through a FFS delivery
system. Because of the activities that
some States will have to perform to
develop the grievance system shared by
commenters, we agree that requiring an
earlier timeframe of 18 months is not
realistic. We also appreciate, and agree
with, the sense of urgency expressed by
commenters. We believe it is important
to prioritize giving beneficiaries the
opportunity to have their concerns
heard. In this final rule, we have
provided States with as much flexibility
as possible to build on or retain existing
grievance systems and have kept
specific information systems
requirements to a minimum. We have
also reduced some potential initial
administrative challenges by not
finalizing a formal expedited resolution
requirement and by allowing States to
decide whether, and how, to implement
such a policy. After consideration of
public comments received as discussed
herein, we are finalizing the substance
of § 441.301(c)(7)(viii) as proposed, but
with minor modifications to correct
erroneous uses of the word ‘‘effective’’
and retitle the requirement as
Applicability date (rather than Effective
date). We are also modifying the
language at § 441.301(c)(7)(viii) to
specify that States must comply with
the requirements at § 441.301(c)(7)
beginning 2 years from the effective date
of this final rule, rather than stating that
this requirement is effective 2 years after
the date of enactment of the final rule.
(New text in bolded font). We are
finalizing § 441.301(c)(7)(viii) with a
technical modification to specify that
the applicability date applies to the
requirements at § 441.301(c)(7).
Comment: A few commenters
requested enhanced FMAP to support
implementation and operationalization
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
40594
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
of the grievance process. Two
commenters recommended that, in
addition to providing 90 percent FFP for
information systems improvements, we
should offer 75 percent FFP for all
quality-related activities, including
operational costs associated with a
grievance system. The commenters
suggested this would create parity
between the States whose service
delivery systems are largely FFS and the
States with managed care services that
can receive 75 percent FFP for External
Quality Review (EQR) activities.
Response: We note that enhanced
FMAP is available for certain activities
related to administering the Medicaid
program and designing, developing,
implementing, and operating certain IT
systems.60 However, Federal matching
rates are established by Congress and
CMS does not have the authority to
change or increase them, nor do we
have the authority to add additional
activities not specified in statute into
the scope of an existing enhanced
FMAP. We also do not agree that
providing broader enhanced match for
the FFS grievance system would create
parity with managed care, as we believe
this is an inaccurate characterization of
payments related to the managed care
grievance systems. While commenters
are correct that States can receive 75
percent enhanced match for EQR
activities, which are listed at § 438.358,
these activities are primarily validation
and review of data on performance
measures; the operation of a grievance
system is not listed as an EQR activity.
We also note that the associated
administrative costs for MCOs, PIHPs,
and PAHPs are variable and negotiated
with the State as part of their contracts.
After consideration of public
comments received, we are finalizing
the substance of § 441.301(c)(7)(viii) as
proposed, but with minor modifications
to correct erroneous uses of the word
‘‘effective’’ and retitle the requirement
as Applicability date (rather than
Effective date). We are also modifying
the language at § 441.301(c)(7)(viii) to
specify that States must comply with
the requirements at § 441.301(c)(7)
beginning 2 years from the effective date
of this final rule, rather than stating that
this requirement is effective 2 years after
the date of enactment of the final rule.
(New text in bolded font.) We are
finalizing § 441.301(c)(7)(viii) with a
technical modification to specify that
60 For a current list of activities eligible for this
enhanced FMAP, refer to: MACPAC, ‘‘Federal
Match Rates for Medicaid Administrative
Activities,’’ last access: October 22, 2023. https://
www.macpac.gov/federal-match-rates-for-medicaidadministrative-activities/.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
the applicability date applies to the
requirements at § 441.301(c)(7).
h. Application to Other Authorities
As discussed earlier in section II.B.1.
of this preamble, section 2402(a)(3)(A)
of the Affordable Care Act requires
States to improve coordination among,
and the regulation of, all providers of
Federally and State-funded HCBS
programs to achieve a more consistent
administration of policies and
procedures across HCBS programs. In
accordance with the requirement of
section 2402(a)(3)(A) of the Affordable
Care Act for States to achieve a more
consistent administration of policies
and procedures across HCBS programs
and because HCBS State plan options
also must comply with the HCBS
Settings Rule and with similar personcentered planning and service plan
requirements, we proposed to include
these grievance requirements within the
applicable regulatory sections.
Specifically, we proposed to apply these
proposed requirements in
§ 441.301(c)(7) to sections 1915(j), (k),
and (i) State plan services at
§§ 441.464(d)(2)(v), 441.555(b)(2)(iv),
and 441.745(a)(1)(iii), respectively.
Also, consistent with our proposal for
section 1915(c) waivers, we proposed to
apply the proposed grievance
requirements in § 441.301(c)(7) to
sections 1915(j), (k), and (i) State plan
services based on our authority under
section 1902(a)(19) of the Act to assure
that there are safeguards for
beneficiaries and our authority at
section 2402(a)(3)(B)(ii) of the
Affordable Care Act to require a
complaint system for beneficiaries. We
stated that the same arguments for
applying these requirements for section
1915(c) waivers are equally applicable
to these other HCBS authorities. We
requested comment on the application
of the grievance system provisions to
section 1915(i), (j), and (k) authorities.
We also noted that, in the language
added to § 441.464(d)(2)(v), the
proposed grievance requirements apply
when self-directed personal assistance
services authorized under section
1915(j) include services under a section
1915(c) waiver program.
As described in the proposed rule (88
FR 27978), we did not propose to apply
these requirements to section 1905(a)
services. Specifically, we considered
whether to also apply the proposed
requirements to section 1905(a)
‘‘medical assistance’’ in the form of
State plan personal care services, home
health services, and case management
services, but did not propose these
requirements apply to any section
1905(a) State plan services because
PO 00000
Frm 00054
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
section 1905(a) services are not required
to comply with HCBS settings
requirements and because the personcentered planning and service plan
requirements for most section 1905(a)
services are substantially different from
those for section 1915(c), (i), (j), and (k)
services. Further, the vast majority of
HCBS is delivered under section
1915(c), (i), (j), and (k) authorities, while
only a small percentage of HCBS
nationally is delivered under section
1905(a) State plan authorities. We
solicited comment, seeing the value in
discussing and seeking public input, on
whether we should establish grievance
requirements for section 1905(a) State
plan personal care services, home health
services and case management services.
We received public comments on
these proposals. The following is a
summary of the comments and our
responses.
Comment: A few commenters
supported the proposal to apply the
grievance system provisions proposed
for section 1915(c) at § 441.301(c)(7) to
sections 1915(i), (j) and (k) authorities.
They agreed with the goal of aligning
the different HCBS program authorities
and promoted consistency with
managed care.
Response: We thank commenters for
their support.
Comment: One commenter supported
the application of the grievance
requirements to self-directed personal
assistance services under section 1915(j)
of the Act as well. This commenter
noted that, during the pandemic, there
was no clear way to file a grievance with
Medicaid concerning a lack of access to
direct care workers, for example.
One commenter, on the other hand,
questioned the operationalization of the
grievance process for self-directed
personal care service models under
sections 1915(j) and (k), where the
beneficiary acts as the employer for
purposes of hiring, training,
supervising, and firing, their provider, if
necessary. This commenter was
concerned that allowing beneficiaries to
file grievances against their provider
would erode a beneficiary’s
responsibilities as the employer.
Another commenter, while supporting
application of the grievance process to
section 1915(j) self-directed services,
did suggest that implementing this
requirement in self-directed models may
require additional time and guidance.
Response: We believe it would be
inappropriate to exclude beneficiaries
enrolled in self-directed services
delivery models from the grievance
system and decline to do so in this final
rule. As noted by other commenters,
beneficiaries enrolled in self-directed
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
services may experience systemic
challenges with their services; they may
also interact with other providers in
addition to their self-directed service
provider (such as the entity providing
financial management services). We also
note that the grievance system is a
venue for expressing concerns about
violations of the HCBS settings
requirements, which may be relevant to
some beneficiaries in self-directed
programs. We do not believe that
additional time needs to be granted
specifically for inclusion of
beneficiaries using self-directed
services.
Comment: Several commenters
responded to our request for comment
on whether we should establish
grievance requirements for section
1905(a) State plan personal care
services, home health services and case
management services. A few
commenters supported the proposal not
to extend the requirements to section
1905(a) services on the basis that these
services are not subject to the same
person-centered planning and HCBS
settings rules. Additionally, several
commenters also believed the expansion
of these requirements to section 1905(a)
State plan services would pose
additional challenges to State Medicaid
and operating agencies. One commenter
noted that, in States that deliver section
1905(a) State plan services and section
1915(c) services through different
agencies or agency divisions,
implementation could prove
challenging and costly. A few
commenters stated that States should be
encouraged (but not required) to
implement the proposed provisions to
their section 1905(a) State plan services.
However, a few commenters
supported extending the grievance
system requirements to section 1905(a)
services. Among these commenters, a
few commenters recommended that
CMS apply the grievance system
requirements specifically to mental
health rehabilitative services delivered
under section 1905(a) services. These
services, some commenters stated, are
delivered to large numbers of Medicaid
beneficiaries, particularly those with
mental health needs. These commenters
elaborated on concerns that, otherwise,
there would be disparities between
individuals receiving similar services
from the same State Medicaid agency
under different authorities, and that
many Medicaid recipients with mental
health disabilities receiving services
under the section 1905(a) authority
would not have recourse if their rights
were violated. One commenter also
suggested that mental health
rehabilitative services are considered
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
‘‘home- and community-based services’’
under the broader definition enacted by
Congress in the American Rescue Plan
Act of 2021.
Response: At this time, we are not
requiring inclusion of section 1905(a)
services in the State grievance system.
That said, we are not convinced by the
argument that including section 1905(a)
services would simply be too much
work, as we do believe it is critical that
beneficiaries have access to mechanisms
to claim their rights and have their
concerns heard. Rather, we note that
there are statutory and regulatory
differences between services authorized
under sections 1905(a) and 1915 of the
Act. We would need to consider how to
define the nature of the grievances that
would be filed for section 1905(a)
services, given that they do not have the
same person-centered planning and
HCBS settings rule requirements at
§ 441.301(c)(1) through (6). As we
discussed extensively in this section,
the bases for a grievance are providers’
and States’ performance of the
requirements at § 441.301(c)(1) through
(6). We believe this definition of
grievance provides clear parameters for
matters that would be the subject of
grievances. We note that personcentered service planning requirements
are established for section 1915(j)
services in § 441.468, for section 1915(k)
services in § 441.540, and for section
1915(i) services at § 441.725. While
person-centered service planning might
be part of some specific 1905(a)
services, it is not a required component
of all section 1905(a) services.
Similarly, the HCBS settings
requirements a § 441.301(c)(3) through
(6) that apply to section 1915(c) services
have counterparts for section 1915(k)
services at § 441.530 and for 1915(i)
services at § 441.710. (For more
discussion of the application of the
HCBS settings rule’s application to
section 1915(c), (i), and (k) services, we
refer readers to the final rule published
in 2014 at 79 FR 2948.) Section 1915(j)
services offered through a section
1915(c) waiver (as specified, for
instance, at § 441.452(a)) would also be
subject to the HCBS settings
requirements at § 441.301(c)(3) through
(6). There is not a similar application of
the HCBS settings rule to section
1905(a) services.
If we are to apply a grievance process
to 1905(a) services, it is likely we would
weigh proposing a grievance process for
all section 1905(a) services versus for
only specific section 1905(a) services.
These services are diverse, are offered in
diverse settings, and lack the clear
regulatory framework that we were able
to use in constructing the bases for
PO 00000
Frm 00055
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40595
grievances in section 1915 services. We
believe this requires additional
consideration and discussion with the
public beyond what could be finalized
in this current rule.
Though we are not finalizing
inclusion of section 1905(a) services in
the State grievance system in this rule,
we acknowledge that many
beneficiaries, including those receiving
mental health services, are served by
section 1905(a) services and encourage
States to consider development of
grievance processes to address these
beneficiaries’ concerns. We appreciate
the commenters’ suggestions. Given that
our work to better ensure access in the
Medicaid program is ongoing, we intend
to gain implementation experience with
this final rule, and we will consider the
recommendations provided on the
proposed rule to help inform any future
rulemaking in this area, as appropriate.
After consideration of public
comments, we are finalizing the
application of the grievance system
requirements for section 1915(c)
waivers, as finalized in this rule at
§ 441.301(c)(7), to the other HCBS
authorities under sections 1915(j),
1915(k), and 1915(i). However, after
further review, we determined it is
necessary to make modifications to our
regulations for these other HCBS
authorities to clarify this intention. Our
proposed regulation text for these HCBS
authorities did not accurately reflect or
effectuate our proposal to require States
to implement and maintain a grievance
system, in accordance with
§ 441.301(c)(7), for these HCBS
authorities as well. We are finalizing the
regulation text we proposed at
§§ 441.464 (for section 1915(j)), 441.555
(for section 1915(k)), and 441.745 (for
section 1915(i)) with modification to
more clearly specify that a State must
implement and maintain a grievance
system in accordance with the
requirements we are finalizing at
§ 441.301(c)(7) for HCBS programs they
administer under these authorities.
For application to section 1915(j)
services, we are not finalizing the
amendment we proposed at
§ 441.464(d)(2)(v), but rather finalizing
this new requirement for a grievance
system at § 441.464(d)(5). We will retain
the current language at
§ 441.464(d)(2)(v), which indicates that
States must include grievance processes,
generally, among the support activities
about which States provide information,
counseling, training, and assistance. At
§ 441.464(d)(5), we are finalizing with
modification for clarity and precision
that the State must implement and
maintain a grievance process in
accordance with § 441.301(c)(7), rather
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
40596
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
than the language we proposed at
§ 441.464(d)(2)(v) (Grievance process, as
defined in § 441.301(c)(7) when selfdirected PAS include services under a
section 1915(c) waiver program). We are
also finalizing § 441.464(d)(5) with a
technical modification to clarify that the
grievance system must meet the
requirements of § 441.301(c)(7), but that
references therein to section 1915(c) of
the Act are instead references to section
1915(j) of the Act.
For application to section 1915(k)
services, we are not finalizing the
amendment we proposed at
§ 441.555(b)(2)(iv), but rather finalizing
this new requirement for a grievance
system at § 441.555(e). We will retain
the current language at
§ 441.555(b)(2)(iv), which indicates that
States must include grievances
processes, generally, among the support
activities about which States provide
information, counseling, training, and
assistance. At § 441.555(e), we are
finalizing with modification for clarity
and precision that the State must
implement and maintain a grievance
process in accordance with
§ 441.301(c)(7), rather than the language
we proposed at § 441.555(b)(2)(iv)
(Grievance process, as defined in
§ 441.301(c)(7)). We are also finalizing
§ 441.555(e) with a technical
modification to clarify that the
grievance system must meet the
requirements of § 441.301(c)(7), but that
references therein to section 1915(c) of
the Act are instead references to section
1915(k) of the Act.
For application to section 1915(i)
services, we are finalizing the
amendment we proposed at
§ 441.745(a)(1)(iii) with modifications.
As proposed, § 441.745(a)(1)(iii) had
indicated that a State must provide
beneficiaries receiving section 1915(i)
services with the opportunity to file a
grievance. To clarify that the State must
maintain a grievance process in
accordance with § 441.301(c)(7) for
beneficiaries receiving HCBS under
section 1915(i), we are finalizing
§ 441.745(a)(1)(iii) to specify that the
State must implement and maintain a
grievance process in accordance with
§ 441.301(c)(7). We note that several
requirements being finalized at
§ 441.301(c)(7) (such as
§ 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(A), (B)(2), and (C)(1),
discussed in section II.B.2.b. of this final
rule) require States to provide the
beneficiary with the opportunity to file
grievances in the grievance system. We
are also finalizing § 441.745(a)(1)(iii)
with a technical modification to clarify
that the grievance system must meet the
requirements of § 441.301(c)(7), but that
references therein to section 1915(c) of
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
the Act are instead references to section
1915(i) of the Act. Additionally, as we
are finalizing a new § 441.745(a)(1)(iii)
in this rule, we are redesignating the
current § 441.745(a)(1)(iii) as
§ 441.745(a)(1)(iv).
We also note that while we are
finalizing these amendments to
regulations under section 1915(j), (k)
and (i) authorities, we are not suggesting
that States that provide HCBS through
multiple authorities must operate a
separate grievance process for each
program. As discussed earlier in II.B.2.
of this preamble, while States are
allowed to maintain multiple grievance
processes (so long as each process
complies with § 441.301(c)(7)), we
strongly encourage States to maintain a
single, integrated grievance system for
all HCBS beneficiaries.
i. Summary of Finalized Requirements
After consideration of the public
comments, we are finalizing the
proposals at §§ 441.301(c)(7) as follows:
• We are finalizing the requirement
describing the grievance system purpose
at § 441.301(c)(7)(i) with technical
modifications to specify that States must
establish a procedure under which a
beneficiary can file a grievance related
to the State’s or a provider’s
performance of (rather than compliance
with) the activities described in
paragraphs (c)(1) through (6) of
§ 441.301(c)(7). (New language
identified in bold.) We are also adding
language to § 441.301(c)(7)(i) stating that
the State may contract with other
entities to perform activities described
in § 441.301(c)(7) but retains
responsibility for ensuring performance
of and compliance with these
provisions. The finalized requirement at
§ 441.301(c)(7)(i) will read: Purpose.
The State must establish a procedure
under which a beneficiary may file a
grievance related to the State’s or a
provider’s performance of the activities
described in paragraphs (c)(1) through
(6) of this section. This requirement
does not apply to a managed care
delivery system under the authority of
sections 1915(a), 1915(b), 1932(a), or
1115(a) of the Act. The State may have
activities described in paragraph (c)(7)
of this section performed by contractors
or other government entities, provided,
however, that the State retains
responsibility for ensuring performance
of and compliance with these
provisions.
• We are finalizing the definition of
grievance at § 441.301(c)(7)(ii) with a
technical modification, conforming with
the modification at § 441.301(c)(7)(i), to
specify that a grievance will mean an
expression of dissatisfaction or
PO 00000
Frm 00056
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
complaint related to the State’s or a
provider’s performance of (rather than
compliance with) the activities
described in paragraphs (c)(1) through
(6), regardless of whether remedial
action is requested. (New language
identified in bold.) We are finalizing the
definition of grievance system at
§ 441.301(c)(7)(ii) as proposed.
• We are finalizing the process
requirement at § 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(A) as
proposed, with the following
exceptions. We are finalizing
§ 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(A)(1) with
modification to specify that another
individual or entity may file a grievance
on behalf of the beneficiary, or provide
the beneficiary with assistance or
representation throughout the grievance
process, with the written consent of the
beneficiary or authorized representative.
The finalized requirement at
§ 441.301(c)(7)(ii)(A)(1) will read:
Another individual or entity may file a
grievance on behalf of the beneficiary,
or provide the beneficiary with
assistance or representation throughout
the grievance process, with the written
consent of the beneficiary or authorized
representative. We are finalizing
§ 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(A)(2) as proposed.
• We are finalizing the process
requirement at § 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(B) as
proposed.
• We are finalizing
§ 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(B)(1) with a
modification to correct an erroneous
reference to subchapter by replacing
subchapter with paragraph (c)(7).
• We are finalizing the process
requirements at § 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(B)(2)
with a modification to specify that
States must provide beneficiaries with
reasonable assistance in ensuring
grievances are appropriately filed with
the grievance system. We are also
finalizing § 441.307(c)(7)(iii)(B)(2) with
modifications to change the term
‘‘individuals who are limited English
proficient’’ to ‘‘individuals with Limited
English Proficiency.’’ We are also
finalizing with modification to clarify
that auxiliary aids and services are to be
available where necessary to ensure
effective communication. As finalized,
§ 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(B)(2) specifies that
States must provide beneficiaries
reasonable assistance in ensuring
grievances are appropriately filed with
the grievance system, completing forms,
and taking other procedural steps
related to a grievance. This includes, but
is not limited to, ensuring the grievance
system is accessible to individuals with
disabilities and to provide meaningful
access to individuals with Limited
English Proficiency, consistent with
§ 435.905(b) of this chapter, and
includes auxiliary aids and services
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
where necessary to ensure effective
communication, such as providing
interpreter services and toll-free
numbers that have adequate TTY/TTD
and interpreter capability.
• We are finalizing the process
requirement at § 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(B)(3)
with modifications to require that States
ensure that punitive or retaliatory action
(rather than just punitive actions) is
neither threatened nor taken against an
individual filing a grievance or who has
had a grievance filed on their behalf.
The finalized requirement at
§ 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(B)(3) will read:
Ensure that punitive or retaliatory
action is neither threatened nor taken
against an individual filing a grievance
or who has had a grievance filed on
their behalf. (New language identified
in bold.)
• We are finalizing the process
requirement § 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(B)(4)
with a modification to remove the
reference to expedited grievances. The
finalized requirements at
§ 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(B)(4) will read:
Accept grievances and requests for
extension of timeframes from the
beneficiary.
• We are finalizing the process
requirements at § 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(B)(5)
with a modification to change mention
of individuals who are limited English
proficient to individuals with Limited
English Proficiency.
• We are finalizing the process
requirements at § 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(B)(6)
and (7) as proposed.
• We are finalizing the requirements
at § 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(C)(4) and (5) with
a modification to replace the reference
to § 441.301(c)(7)(v)(B)(1) and (2) and
adding a reference to § 441.301(c)(7)(v).
We are also finalizing
§ 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(C)(5) with a
modification to change the reference to
45 CFR 164.510(b) to a broader reference
to the HIPAA Privacy Rule (45 CFR part
160 and part 164 subparts A and E).
• Aside from the modifications noted
previously to § 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(C)(4)
and (5), we are finalizing
§ 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(C) as proposed, with
minor formatting changes.
• We are finalizing the filing
timeframe requirement at
§ 441.301(c)(7)(iv) with modifications by
removing the expedited resolution
requirement at § 441.301(c)(7)(iv)(B) and
redesignating § 441.301(c)(7)(iv)(A) as
§ 441.301(c)(7)(iv). The finalized
requirement at 441.301(c)(7)(iv) will
read: Filing timeframes. A beneficiary
may file a grievance at any time.
• We are finalizing the resolution and
notification requirement at
§ 441.301(c)(7)(v)(A) with a
modification to require that the State
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
resolve each grievance, and provide
notice, as expeditiously as the
beneficiary’s health condition (instead
of health, safety, and welfare) requires.
The finalized requirement at
§ 441.301(c)(7)(v)(A) will read: Basic
rule. The State must resolve each
grievance, and provide notice, as
expeditiously as the beneficiary’s health
condition requires, within Stateestablished timeframes that may not
exceed the timeframes specified in this
section.
• We are not finalizing the expedited
resolution timeframe at
§ 441.301(c)(7)(v)(B)(2). Instead, we are
redesignating § 441.301(c)(7)(v)(B)(1) as
§ 441.301(c)(7)(v)(B) and retitling
§ 441.301(c)(7)(v)(B) as ‘‘Resolution
timeframes.’’ We are also removing the
word ‘‘standard’’ from
§ 441.301(c)(7)(v)(B). The finalized
requirement at § 441.301(c)(7)(v)(B) will
read: Resolution timeframes. For
resolution of a grievance and notice to
the affected parties, the timeframe may
not exceed 90 calendar days from the
day the State receives the grievance.
This timeframe may be extended under
paragraph (c)(7)(v)(C) of this section.
• We are finalizing the timeframe
extension requirement at
§ 441.301(c)(7)(v)(C) and (D) without
substantive changes. We are finalizing
§ 441.301(c)(7)(v)(C) with a technical
modification to redesignate paragraphs
(C)(1)(i) and (C)(1)(ii) as (C)(1) and
(C)(2), respectively. We are finalizing
§ 441.301(c)(7)(v)(D) as proposed, but
with a technical modification to change
the periods at the end of
§ 441.301(c)(7)(v)(D)(1) and (2) to semicolons, and adding ‘‘and’’ at the end of
§ 441.301(c)(7)(v)(D)(2).
• We are finalizing the notice format
requirement at § 441.301(c)(7)(vi)(A)
without substantive modification.
However, we are not finalizing the
proposal relating to the expedited
resolution process at
§ 441.301(c)(7)(vi)(B). Therefore, we are
redesignating § 441.301(c)(7)(vi)(A) as
§ 441.301(c)(7)(vi).
• We are finalizing the recordkeeping
requirements at § 441.301(c)(7)(vii)
without substantive modifications.
However, we are finalizing
§ 441.301(c)(7)(viii)(B)(1) through (5)
with semi-colons rather than periods at
the end of each paragraph, and with the
word ‘‘and’’ at the end of
§ 441.301(c)(7)(vii)(B)(5).
• We are finalizing the applicability
date requirements at § 441.301(c)(7)(viii)
to specify that States must comply with
the requirement at paragraph (c)(7)
beginning 2 years from the effective date
of this final rule.
PO 00000
Frm 00057
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40597
Additionally, we are finalizing the
application of the grievance process
requirements at § 441.301(c)(7) to
section 1915(j), (k) and (i) authorities as
follows:
• For application to section 1915(j)
services, we are not finalizing a
reference at § 441.464(d)(2)(v), as we
had proposed, but rather finalizing a
new requirement at § 441.464(d)(5) that
specifies that States must implement
and maintain a grievance process in
accordance with § 441.301(c)(7), except
that the references to section 1915(c) of
the Act are instead references to section
1915(j) of the Act.
• For application to section 1915(k)
services, we are not finalizing a
reference at § 441.555(b)(2)(iv), as we
had proposed, but rather finalizing a
new requirement at § 441.555(e) that
specifies that States must implement
and maintain a grievance process in
accordance with § 441.301(c)(7), except
that the references to section 1915(c) of
the Act are instead references to section
1915(k) of the Act.
• For application to section 1915(i)
services, we are finalizing a new
§ 441.745(a)(1)(iii) with modification to
clarify that the State must maintain a
grievance process in accordance with
§ 441.301(c)(7), except that the
references to section 1915(c) of the Act
are instead references to section 1915(i)
of the Act. We are redesignating the
existing § 441.745(a)(1)(iii) as
§ 441.745(a)(1)(iv).
3. Incident Management System
(§§ 441.302(a)(6), 441.464(e), 441.570(e),
441.745(a)(1)(v) and 441.745(b)(1)(i))
Section 1902(a)(19) of the Act requires
States to provide safeguards as may be
necessary to assure that eligibility for
care and services will be determined,
and that such care and services will be
provided, in a manner consistent with
simplicity of administration and the
best interests of the recipients. Section
1915(c)(2)(A) of the Act and current
Federal regulations at § 441.302(a)
require that States have in place
necessary safeguards to protect the
health and welfare of individuals
receiving section 1915(c) waiver
program services. Further, as discussed
previously in section II.B.1. of this rule,
section 2402(a) of the Affordable Care
Act requires the Secretary of HHS to
ensure that all States receiving Federal
funds for HCBS, including Medicaid,
develop HCBS systems that are
responsive to the needs and choices of
beneficiaries receiving HCBS, maximize
independence and self-direction,
provide support and coordination to
assist with a community-supported life,
and achieve a more a more consistent
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
40598
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
and coordinated approach to the
administration of policies and
procedures across public programs
providing HCBS.61 Among other things,
section 2402(a)(3)(B)(ii) of the
Affordable Care Act requires
development and oversight of a system
to qualify and monitor providers.
As noted earlier in section II.B.1. of
this rule, we released guidance for
section 1915(c) waiver programs
included in the 2014 guidance,62 which
noted that States should report on Statedeveloped performance measures to
demonstrate that they meet six
assurances, including a Health and
Welfare assurance for States to
demonstrate that they have designed
and implemented an effective system for
assuring waiver participant health and
welfare. Specifically, the 2014 guidance
highlighted, related to the Health and
Welfare assurance, the following:
• The State demonstrates on an
ongoing basis that it identifies,
addresses, and seeks to prevent
instances of abuse, neglect, exploitation,
and unexplained death;
• The State demonstrates that an
incident management system is in place
that effectively resolves incidents and
prevents further similar incidents to the
extent possible;
• The State’s policies and procedures
for the use or prohibition of restrictive
interventions (including restraints and
seclusion) are followed; and
• The State establishes overall health
care standards and monitors those
standards based on the responsibility of
the service provider as stated in the
approved waiver.
Consistent with the expectations for
other performance measures, the 2014
guidance noted that States should
conduct systemic remediation and
implement a Quality Improvement
Project when they score below 86
percent on any of their Health and
Welfare performance measures.
Despite States implementing these
statutory and regulatory requirements to
protect the health and welfare of
individuals receiving section 1915(c)
waiver program services, and States’
adherence to related subregulatory
guidance, there have been notable and
high-profile instances of abuse and
61 Section 2402(a) of the Affordable Care Act—
Guidance for Implementing Standards for PersonCentered Planning and Self-Direction in Home and
Community-Based Services Programs. Accessed at
https://acl.gov/sites/default/files/news%202016-10/
2402-a-Guidance.pdf.
62 Modifications to Quality Measures and
Reporting in § 1915(c) Home and Community-Based
Waivers. March 2014. Accessed at https://
www.hhs.gov/guidance/sites/default/files/hhsguidance-documents/3-cmcs-quality-memonarrative_0_2.pdf.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
neglect in recent years that highlight the
risks associated with poor quality care
and with inadequate oversight of HCBS
in Medicaid. For example, a 2018
report, ‘‘Ensuring Beneficiary Health
and Safety in Group Homes Through
State Implementation of Comprehensive
Compliance Oversight,’’ 63 (referred to
as the Joint Report, developed by ACL,
OCR, and the OIG), found systemic
problems with health and safety policies
and procedures being followed in group
homes and that failure to comply with
these policies and procedures left
beneficiaries in group homes at risk of
serious harm.
In addition, in 2016 and 2017, OIG
released several reports on their review
of States’ compliance with Federal and
State requirements regarding critical
incident reporting and monitoring.64 65 66
OIG found that several States did not
comply with Federal waiver and State
requirements for reporting and
monitoring critical incidents involving
individuals receiving HCBS through
waivers. In particular, the reports
indicated that:
• Critical incidents were not reported
correctly;
• Adequate training to identify
appropriate action steps for reported
critical incidents or reports of abuse or
neglect was not provided to State staff;
• Appropriate data sets to trend and
track critical incidents were not
accessible to State staff; and
• Critical incidents were not clearly
defined, making it difficult to identify
potential abuse or neglect.
In 2016, we conducted three State
audits based at least in part on concerns
regarding health and welfare and media
coverage on abuse, neglect, or
exploitation issues.67 We found that
63 Ensuring Beneficiary Health and Safety in
Group Homes Through State Implementation of
Comprehensive Compliance Oversight. US
Department of Health and Human Services, Office
of the Inspector General, Administration for
Community Living, and Office for Civil Rights.
January 2018. Accessed at https://oig.hhs.gov/
reports-and-publications/featured-topics/grouphomes/group-homes-joint-report.pdf.
64 HHS OIG. ‘‘Connecticut did not comply with
Federal and State requirements for critical incidents
involving developmentally disabled Medicaid
beneficiaries.’’ May 2016. Accessed at https://
oig.hhs.gov/oas/reports/region1/11400002.pdf.
65 HHS OIG. ‘‘Massachusetts did not comply with
Federal and State requirements for critical incidents
involving developmentally disabled Medicaid
beneficiaries.’’ July 2016. Accessed at https://
oig.hhs.gov/oas/reports/region1/11400008.pdf.
66 HHS OIG. ‘‘Maine did not comply with Federal
and State requirements for critical incidents
involving Medicaid beneficiaries with
developmental disabilities.’’ August 2017. Accessed
at https://oig.hhs.gov/oas/reports/region1/
11600001.pdf.
67 Presentation by CMS for Advancing States:
Quality in the HCBS Waiver—Health and Welfare.
PO 00000
Frm 00058
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
these three States had not been meeting
their section 1915(c) waiver assurances,
similar to findings reported by the OIG.
In two cases, for the incidents of
concern, tracking and trending of
critical incidents were not present.
Further, in at least two of the States,
staffing at appropriate levels was
identified as an issue.
In January 2018, the United States
Government Accountability Office
(GAO) released a report on a study of 48
States that covered assisted living
services.68 The GAO found large
inconsistencies between States in their
definition of a critical incident and their
system’s ability to report, track, and
collect information on critical incidents
that have occurred. States also varied in
their oversight methods, as well as the
type of information they were reviewing
as part of this oversight. The GAO
recommended that requiring States to
report information on incidents (such as
the type and severity of incidents and
the number of incidents) would
strengthen the effectiveness of State and
Federal oversight.
In July 2019, we issued a survey to
States that operate section 1915(c)
waivers, requesting information on their
approach to administering incident
management systems. The goal of the
survey was to obtain a comprehensive
understanding of how States organize
their incident management system to
best respond to, resolve, monitor, and
prevent critical incidents in their waiver
programs. The survey found that:
• Definitions of critical incidents vary
across States and, in some cases, within
States for different HCBS programs or
populations;
• Some States do not use
standardized forms for reporting
incidents, thereby impeding the
consistent collection of information on
critical incidents;
• Some States do not have electronic
incident management systems, and,
among those that do, many use systems
with outdated electronic platforms that
are not linked with other State systems,
leading to the systems operating in silos
and the need to consolidate information
across disparate systems; and
• Many States cited the lack of
communication within and across State
agencies, including with investigative
agencies, as a barrier to incident
resolution.
See: https://www.nasuad.org/sites/nasuad/files/
Final%20Quality%20201.pdf.
68 Government Accountability Office. ‘‘Medicaid
assisted living services—improved Federal
oversight of beneficiary health and welfare is
needed.’’ January 2018. Accessed at https://
www.gao.gov/assets/690/689302.pdf.
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
Additionally, during various public
engagement activities conducted with
interested parties over the past several
years, we have heard that ensuring
access to HCBS requires that we must
first ensure health and safety systems
are in place across all States, a theme
underscored by the Joint Report.
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
a. Incident Management System
Requirements (§ 441.302(a)(6))
Based on these findings and reports,
under the authorities at sections
1902(a)(19) and 1915(c)(2)(A) of the Act
and section 2402(a)(3)(B)(ii) of the
Affordable Care Act, we proposed a new
requirement at § 441.302(a)(6) to require
that States provide an assurance that
they operate and maintain an incident
management system that identifies,
reports, triages, investigates, resolves,
tracks, and trends critical incidents.
This proposal is intended to ensure
standardized requirements for States
regarding incidents that harm or place a
beneficiary at risk of harm and is based
on our experience working with States
as part of the section 1915(c) waiver
program and informed by the incident
management survey described
previously in this section of the final
rule. In the absence of an incident
management system, people receiving
section 1915(c) waiver program services
are at risk of preventable or intentional
harm. As such, we believe that such a
system to identify and address incidents
of abuse, neglect, exploitation, or other
harm during the course of service
delivery is in the best interest of and
necessary for protecting the health and
welfare of individuals receiving section
1915(c) waiver program services. We
proposed similar requirements for
section 1915(i), (j) and (k) HCBS
programs at §§ 441.464(e), 441.570(e),
441.745(a)(1)(v), and 441.745(b)(1)(i);
these are discussed further in section
II.B.3.i of this final rule.
We received public comments on
these proposals. The following is a
summary of the comments we received
and our responses.
Comment: Many commenters
supported the proposal at
§ 441.302(a)(6) to require States to
provide an assurance that they operate
and maintain an incident management
system that identifies, reports, triages,
investigates, resolves, tracks, and trends
critical incidents. Additionally, these
commenters noted that the proposed
requirements for this incident
management system can ensure States
standardize data and processes for
critical incident monitoring, identify
trends, and influence timely oversight of
responses to incidents to minimize
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
health and safety risks for beneficiaries
receiving HCBS.
Several commenters stated that
establishing an incident management
system, including requirements for datadriven analytics and trend reporting,
would help to better inform States and
providers by creating new collaborative
models to measure improvements to
better ensure quality of life for HCBS
beneficiaries. In the same vein, one
commenter noted that States should use
the data and information collected on
critical incidents to develop strategies to
reduce or eliminate the risk of abuse,
neglect, or exploitation; to enable
discovery of root cause for occurrence of
critical incidents; and to identify actions
to influence critical incidents
proactively, instead of reactively.
Response: We appreciate the support
for our proposal and agree that requiring
States to provide an assurance that they
operate and maintain an incident
management system that identifies,
reports, triages, investigates, resolves,
tracks, and trends critical incidents will
ensure that States are better informed
and more able to identify root causes for
the occurrence of critical incidents,
enabling them to act more proactively to
influence and prevent the occurrence of
such incidents.
Comment: A few commenters
requested we clarify how States can
fully address critical incidents for
dually eligible beneficiaries who are
enrolled in managed care plans, when
the managed care plan does not have
access to Medicare claims data. In the
same vein, they were also concerned
that States would require extensive
resources to utilize the Medicare claims
data.
These commenters also requested
clarification on the feasibility of
reporting across Medicare and Medicaid
in dual eligible special needs plan (D–
SNP) contracts.
Response: Since 2011, we have
provided States access to Medicare data
for dually-eligible beneficiaries,
including for beneficiaries in different
categories of dual eligibility, free-ofcharge via the Medicare-Medicaid Data
Sharing Program.69 Information on the
Medicare-Medicaid Data Sharing
Program, including how to request data
and the standard data sharing
agreements, is available through the
State Data Resource Center.70
69 See Medicare-Medicaid Data Sharing Program
at https://www.cms.gov/Medicare-MedicaidCoordination/Medicare-and-MedicaidCoordination/Medicare-Medicaid-CoordinationOffice/StateAccesstoMedicareData.
70 See State Data Resource Center at https://
www.statedataresourcecenter.com/home/contactus.
PO 00000
Frm 00059
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40599
We proposed that the incident
management system requirements, as
specified at § 441.302(a)(6) and as
finalized in this rule, will apply to
section 1915(c)(i), (j), and (k) services
delivered through managed care plans.
We also note that dually eligible
beneficiaries enrolled in managed care
plans known as fully integrated dual
eligible special needs plans (FIDE SNP)
and highly integrated dual eligible
special needs plans (HIDE SNP), are
subject to the incident management
requirements at § 441.302(a)(6) as
finalized. We will provide technical
assistance regarding the application of
these requirements to beneficiaries in
different categories of dual eligibility.
Comment: A few commenters
expressed concern that the requirements
we proposed for this incident
management system generally seemed to
be more focused on documentation of
critical incidents, rather than impacting
quality and outcomes for HCBS
participants to ensure optimal health
and welfare. One commenter
recommended that States should assure
that resolution of critical incidents
focuses on preventing harm to the HCBS
participant(s) involved in the critical
incident. This commenter also
suggested that States should take actions
to not only prevent further harm to
HCBS participant(s) involved in a
critical incident, but actions based on
the critical incident should be taken to
prevent further harm to all HCBS
participants.
Response: We believe the
requirements we proposed at
§ 441.302(a)(6), and as finalized in this
rule, give States the flexibility to decide
how to design and implement their
incident management system. We
encourage States to consider
implementing quality improvement
processes as part of their incident
management systems, as quality
improvement processes can help States
to promote the health and welfare of
beneficiaries by addressing systemic
issues in their HCBS programs. We also
note that the purpose of tracking and
trending critical incidents is to assist
States in understanding patterns that
require interventions to promote
improvement and prevent the
recurrence of harm to beneficiaries.
We also refer readers to the
requirements currently set forth at
§ 438.330(b)(5)(ii) that MCOs, PHIPs,
and PAHPs participate in efforts by the
State to prevent, detect, and remediate
critical incidents, consistent with
assuring beneficiary health and welfare
as required in § 441.302 and
§ 441.703(a). Further, as noted herein,
the six assurances and related
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
40600
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
subassurances for section 1915(c)
waiver programs, including the Health
and Welfare assurance, as set forth in
the 2014 guidance, continue to apply. In
addition, as discussed in section II.B.8.
of this final rule, the HCBS Quality
Measure Set reporting requirements
include requirements for States to
implement quality improvement
strategies in their HCBS programs; while
the HCBS Quality Measure Set
requirements being finalized in this rule
are distinct and severable from the
incident management requirements
being finalized at § 441.302(a)(6), we
believe the HCBS Quality Measure Set
requirements support the quality
improvement objectives described by
this commenter.
After consideration of these public
comments, we are finalizing our
proposal to require at § 441.302(a)(6)
that States must provide an assurance
that the State operates and maintains an
incident management system that
identifies, reports, triages, investigates,
resolves, tracks, and trends critical
incidents as proposed.
b. Critical Incident Definition
(§ 441.302(a)(6)(i)(A))
At § 441.302(a)(6)(i)(A) through (G),
we proposed new requirements for
States’ incident management systems.
Specifically, at § 441.302(a)(6)(i)(A), we
proposed to establish a standard
definition of a critical incident to
include, at a minimum, verbal, physical,
sexual, psychological, or emotional
abuse; neglect; exploitation including
financial exploitation; misuse or
unauthorized use of restrictive
interventions or seclusion; a medication
error resulting in a telephone call to or
a consultation with a poison control
center, an emergency department visit,
an urgent care visit, a hospitalization, or
death; or an unexplained or
unanticipated death, including but not
limited to a death caused by abuse or
neglect.
We proposed the Federal minimum
standard definition of a critical incident
at § 441.302(a)(6)(i)(A) to address the
lack of a standardized Federal definition
for the type of events or instances that
States should consider a critical
incident that must be reported by a
provider to the State and considered for
an investigation by the State to assess
whether the incident was the result of
abuse, neglect, or exploitation, and
whether it could have been prevented.
The definition we proposed at
§ 441.302(a)(6)(i)(A) is based on internal
analyses of data and information
obtained through a CMS survey of
States’ incident management systems,
commonalities across definitions, and
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
common gaps in States’ definitions of
critical incidents (for instance, that
many States do not consider sexual
assault to be a critical incident).
We also requested comment on
whether there are specific types of
events or instances of serious harm to
section 1915(c) waiver participants,
such as identity theft or fraud, that
would not be captured by the proposed
definition and that should be included,
and whether the inclusion of any
specific types of events or instances of
harm in the proposed definition would
lead to the overidentification of critical
incidents.
We received public comments on
these proposals. The following is a
summary of the comments we received
and our responses.
Comment: Several commenters
supported the proposed minimum
standard definition of a critical incident.
Commenters expressed that the
proposed requirements at
§ 441.302(a)(6)(i)(A) establish a
minimum Federal definition of a critical
incident which would help to
standardize practices across States and
HCBS programs to better serve and
prevent harm or risk of harm for
beneficiaries. A few commenters noted
the standardized Federal minimum
definition of a critical incident will
increase consistency across States,
section 1915(c) waivers, and HCBS
programs. A few commenters suggested
CMS further explain the critical
incident definition to minimize
misinterpretation, stating that
explanations of definitions for each type
of critical incident could ensure
reporting is uniform and consistent
across all State programs and services.
These commenters stated that without a
uniform understanding of each type of
critical incident, critical incidents could
be over or under reported. Similarly,
several other commenters suggested that
the definition of critical incident we
proposed is overly broad, expressing it
could impede the State’s coordination
with other agencies and interested
parties. These commenters indicated
that more explanation of the definitions
of critical incident at
§ 441.302(a)(6)(i)(A) could help to
address varying interpretations in
implementation of the proposed
requirements, noting that each State
Medicaid agency or interested parties
could independently establish meaning.
Response: We disagree with
commenters that the proposed
definition of critical incident is overly
broad. We believe that the proposed
requirements at § 441.302(a)(6)(i)(A)
provide States with a comprehensive
minimum standard definition of a
PO 00000
Frm 00060
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
critical incident. We recommend that
States view the definition as a minimum
Federal standard. States may consider
expanding the definition to include
other health and safety concerns based
on the unique needs of their HCBS
populations and the specific
characteristics of their HCBS programs.
We plan to provide technical assistance,
as needed, to States if they have
questions about the types of incidents
that should be included in the
standardized definition, and how this
definition relates to existing critical
incident definitions already in use.
Comment: Commenters responded to
our request for comment on whether
there were specific types of events or
instances of serious harm that would
not be captured by the proposed critical
incident definition and should be
included. A few commenters suggested
that we broaden the definition of critical
incident and suggested that the
following types of incidents be included
in the proposed definition of critical
incident at § 441.302(a)(6)(i)(A): abuse
between HCBS waiver housemates;
expression of racism, sexism,
homophobia, or transphobia by a
provider toward a beneficiary; lack of
direct care workers; physical or
emotional harm suffered by participant;
falls with severe or moderate injury/
illness; missed or delayed provision of
services identified in the personcentered plan; refusal of service; selfneglect; and a range of harmful things
beneficiaries may experience.
Alternatively, a few commenters
recommended that CMS not expand the
minimum definition of critical incident
further, indicating the critical incident
definition offers flexibility to States to
expand their critical incident definition
to fit the HCBS program and population
served by the State. Commenters
expressed that CMS should provide
technical assistance, for all States,
including for States that already have an
incident management system with
critical incident definitions and policies
and programs in place.
Response: We appreciate commenters
sharing these suggestions. We note that
many of these types of events would be
captured by the minimum standard
definition. For instance, we would
consider abuse between HCBS waiver
housemates to fall under verbal,
physical, sexual, psychological, or
emotional abuse. Similarly, expressions
of racism, sexism, homophobia, or
transphobia by a provider toward a
beneficiary may be considered a critical
incident. If a lack of direct care workers,
a refusal of service, or missed or delayed
provision of services identified in the
person-centered service plan results in
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
harm or risk of risk from the failure of
a provider to deliver needed services,
we would expect a State to consider
those events as instances of neglect.
Physical or emotional harm suffered by
a participant as a result of one or more
types of events included in our
definition of critical incidents or that
results in death would also be captured
as a critical incident. Falls with severe
or moderate injury/illness may be
considered critical incidents depending
on whether they occur as a result of an
event included in our definition of
critical incidents. They would also be
considered critical incidents if they
result in death. Some of these events,
such as missed or delayed provision of
services identified in the personcentered service plan, could also meet
the definition of a grievance and be
appropriate for consideration under the
grievance system, which we are
finalizing as part of a separate provision
in § 441.301(c)(7) (discussed in section
II.B.2 of this rule.)
We decline to include refusing a
service or self-neglect in the minimum
standard definition because we intend
this definition to focus on incidents that
occur during the course of service
delivery. However, States may include
these events in their own definitions.
We are unsure what the commenter
intended by ‘‘range of harmful things
beneficiaries may experience’’ and are
unable to respond directly to that
recommendation.
We appreciate these comments and
will take this feedback into
consideration when developing
resources for States on the incident
management system’s requirements.
Comment: One commenter stated that
we should consider whether what
constitutes a critical incident might
differ between adult and child
beneficiaries and recommended that
pediatricians could assist States in
development and implementation of
incident management requirements,
including critical incident requirements.
This commenter also stated that data
and information for children receiving
HCBS and housed in pediatric health
systems should be linked with the State
electronic critical incident system
proposed at § 441.302(a)(6)(i)(B).
Response: As previously discussed,
our proposal is to establish a minimum
Federal definition, and States may
consider expanding the definition to
include other health and safety concerns
based on the unique needs of their
HCBS populations. We also encourage
States to include input from interested
parties, including experts in children
receiving HCBS, when developing and
implementing their incident
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
management systems and policies and
procedures to meet the proposed
requirements. We discuss requirements
for data and information sharing and
electronic systems in more detail below
in this section II.B.3. of the rule.
Comment: Several commenters
provided feedback about the inclusion
of medication errors resulting in a
telephone call to or a consultation with
a poison control center in the proposed
critical incident definition at
§ 441.302(a)(6)(i)(A)(5). One commenter
expressed support for the reporting of a
medication error resulting in a
telephone call to or a consultation with
a poison control center, and agreed they
should be reported by the provider to
the State. Another commenter expressed
that beneficiaries receiving HCBS are
encouraged to be independent and have
the right to self-determination, and
completing investigations on
medication errors could be infringing
upon HCBS beneficiaries’ selfdetermination. One commenter
requested we consider that managed
care plans do not typically receive
member data from poison control
centers unless they are contracted with
the managed care plan to provide this
notification, making it difficult to track
incidents that result in a consultation
with the poison control center unless
this data is captured elsewhere in
member claims data. One commenter
expressed concern that including a
medication error in the definition of
critical incidents could be problematic
since not all providers who serve HCBS
beneficiaries are clinical staff who can
render a professional clinical
determination of medication error,
which could result in medication errors
being over or under reported and skew
data reports.
Response: We plan to provide States
with technical assistance to help
address issues raised by providers in
reporting any critical incidents that
occur during the delivery of services as
specified in a beneficiary’s personcentered service plan, or any critical
incidents that are a result of the failure
to deliver authorized services, including
medication errors resulting in a
telephone call to or a consultation with
a poison control center. Because we also
are finalizing § 441.302(a)(6)(i)(C) as
described in II.B.3.d. of this rule, we
confirm that States must require
providers to report to them any critical
incidents that occur during the delivery
of services as specified in a beneficiary’s
person-centered service plan, or any
critical incidents that are a result of the
failure to deliver authorized services. As
such, a provider would be expected to
report a medication error resulting in a
PO 00000
Frm 00061
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40601
contact with a poison control center if
the medication error occurred during
the delivery of services or a result of the
failure to deliver services. We believe
that such a system to identify and
address incidents of abuse, neglect,
exploitation, or other harm during the
course of service delivery is in the best
interest of and necessary for protecting
the health and welfare of individuals
receiving HCBS.
Comment: One commenter requested
that CMS clarify that in addition to
audio-only telephone, that the use of
audio or video technology be made
acceptable to satisfy the requirement
proposed at § 441.302(a)(6)(i)(A)(5) that
the State adopt the minimum standard
definition for critical incident for a
medication error resulting in contact
with a poison control center.
Response: We do not have the
authority to define additional
communication types or consultation
methods for poison control centers. We
decline to add ‘‘use of audio or video
technology’’ to the requirement
proposed at § 441.302(a)(6)(i)(A)(5). We
encourage States to collaborate with
their State and local poison control
centers to understand the types of
consultation that are acceptable and
make requests for additional
communication types or consultation
methods for poison control centers.
Comment: Several commenters
responded to our solicitation to
comment on whether the proposed
critical incident definition at
§ 441.302(a)(6)(i)(A) should include
other specific types of events or
instances of serious harm to
beneficiaries receiving HCBS, such as
identity theft or fraud. Most commenters
responding to the request for comment
recommended that CMS not expand the
critical incident definition to include
identity theft or fraud, noting it could
create duplication of existing
investigative and reporting processes.
Alternatively, a few commenters
supported the inclusion of identity theft
and fraud in the critical incident
definition. One commenter
recommended that CMS provide
additional guidance on identity theft or
fraud in the context of exploitation,
including financial exploitation if added
to the minimum critical incident
definition. One commenter expressed
concern with including identity theft or
fraud in the proposed critical incident
definition, except when the individual
has been formally and legally judged
incompetent to make relevant decisions.
Response: We agree with commenters
that expanding the critical incident
definition at § 441.302(a)(6)(i)(A) to
include identity theft or fraud could
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
40602
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
create duplication of existing Federal
investigative agencies and reporting
processes. Therefore, we have not
identified a compelling reason to add
other types of incidents, such as identity
theft or fraud, to the standardized
minimum definition of critical incidents
we proposed and are finalizing in this
rule.
Comment: One commenter
specifically responded to the request for
comment soliciting whether the
proposed critical incident definition at
§ 441.302(a)(6)(i)(A) includes any
specific types of events or instances of
harm that would lead to the
overidentification of critical incidents.
The commenter supported the proposed
definition, noting it would not result in
overidentification of critical incidents.
This commenter noted that, although
the events included in the critical
incident definition they use are not the
same as those in the proposed critical
incident definition at
§ 441.302(a)(6)(i)(A), they believed that
the proposed definition would not cause
overidentification of critical incidents
because their policies require any
incident, not solely those that are
defined, to be reported.
Response: We appreciate the support
for our proposal.
After consideration of these public
comments, we are finalizing
§ 441.302(a)(6)(i)(A) as proposed with
the following minor modifications: a
minor formatting modification at
§ 441.302(a)(6)(i)(A)(3) to correct an
improper italicization; a minor technical
modification at § 441.302(a)(6)(i)(A)(5)
to correct missing punctuation; and a
minor formatting modification to
conclude § 441.302(a)(6)(i)(A)(6) with a
semi-colon.
c. Electronic Critical Incident Systems
(§ 441.302(a)(6)(i)(B))
At § 441.302(a)(6)(i)(B), we proposed
that States must have electronic critical
incident systems that, at a minimum,
enable electronic collection, tracking
(including of the status and resolution
of investigations), and trending of data
on critical incidents. We also solicited
comment on the burden associated with
requiring States to have electronic
critical incident systems and whether
there is specific functionality, such as
unique identifiers, that should be
required or encouraged for such
systems. As part of our proposal, we
also encouraged, but did not propose to
require, States to advance the
interoperable exchange of HCBS data
and support quality improvement
activities by adopting standards in 45
CFR part 170 and other relevant
standards identified in the
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
Interoperability Standards Advisory
(ISA).71
We received public comments on
these proposals. Below is a summary of
the public comments we received and
our responses.
Comment: Several commenters
supported the proposed requirements at
§ 441.302(a)(6)(i)(B), that a State have an
electronic critical incident system that,
at a minimum, enables electronic
collection, tracking (including of the
status and resolution of investigations),
and trending of data on critical
incidents. A few commenters expressed
concern about the impact of the
proposed requirements on States that
already have multiple incident
management systems, including
electronic systems, for different
programs, administered by different
operating agencies. Commenters
requested that we allow States
flexibility to design the electronic
critical incident systems, which we
proposed to require at
§ 441.302(a)(6)(i)(B), by taking into
account existing State incident
management systems and processes
which fit their unique program and
systems structures. A few commenters
were especially concerned about the
impact on States that already enable
electronic collection of critical incidents
and questioned whether a single
incident management system is required
to be implemented across all waivers
and authorities, or whether a separate
system can be implemented for each
waiver or program. Commenters
expressed concern about having to
consolidate current incident
management systems, designed based
on State infrastructure, into a single
electronic system.
Response: We acknowledge that some
States currently have electronic incident
management systems in place for HCBS,
and it is not our intent for States to
abandon these systems. We encourage
States to build upon existing incident
management system infrastructure and
protocols to meet the electronic critical
incident systems requirements we
proposed at § 441.302(a)(6)(i)(B) and are
finalizing in this rule.
We believe that a single electronic
critical incident system may best enable
the State to prevent the occurrence of
critical incidents and protect the health
71 Relevant standards adopted by HHS and
identified in the ISA include the USCDI (https://
www.healthit.gov/isa/united-states-core-datainteroperability-uscdi), eLTSS (https://
www.healthit.gov/isa/documenting-care-plansperson-centered-services), and Functional
Assessment Standardized Items (https://
www.healthit.gov/isa/representing-patientfunctional-status-andor-disability).
PO 00000
Frm 00062
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
and safety of beneficiaries across their
lifespan. For example, in the absence of
a single electronic critical incident
system, States may have more difficulty
developing and implementing a
comprehensive plan to address and
resolve critical incidents across HCBS
programs and authorities. A single
electronic incident management system
could also better enable the State to
track critical incidents for providers that
deliver services in multiple HCBS
programs or under different HCBS
authorities, identify systemic causes of
critical incidents, or detect patterns of
preventable critical incidents and, in
turn, implement strategies to more
effectively prevent critical incidents.
We assume that some States may need
to make at least some changes to their
existing systems to fully comply with
the requirements at § 441.302(a)(6)(i)(B).
We have attempted to provide the State
with as much flexibility as possible in
the design of their incident management
system. As such, the State may opt to
maintain multiple systems that comply
with the requirements at § 441.302(a)(6).
We encourage each State to consider
developing a single electronic critical
incident system for all of their HCBS
programs under section 1915(c), (i), (j),
and (k) authorities.
However, if a State chooses to
implement multiple systems, we
strongly encourage the State to share
data among those systems to enable the
development and implementation of a
comprehensive plan to address and
resolve critical incidents for HCBS
beneficiaries and track and trend
incidents for specific providers. We note
that the State is responsible for ensuring
compliance with the requirements of
applicable Federal or State laws and
regulations governing confidentiality,
privacy, and security of certain
information and records.
Comment: Several commenters
recommended that CMS consider
providing additional funding
opportunities to assist States in the
development and implementation of
electronic critical incident systems we
proposed to require at
§ 441.302(a)(6)(i)(B).
Response: As noted in the proposed
rule (88 FR 27979), in Medicaid,
enhanced Federal financial
participation (FFP) is available at a 90
percent Federal Medical Assistance
Percentage (FMAP) for the design,
development, or installation of
improvements of mechanized claims
processing and information retrieval
systems, in accordance with applicable
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Federal requirements.72 Enhanced FFP
at a 75 percent FMAP is also available
for operations of such systems, in
accordance with applicable Federal
requirements.73 However, we reiterate
that receipt of these enhanced funds is
conditioned upon States meeting a
series of standards and conditions to
ensure investments are efficient and
effective.74
Comment: A few commenters
supported CMS encouraging States to
advance the interoperable exchange of
HCBS data by adopting standards in the
Interoperability Standards Advisory
(ISA), and requested we further
promote, support, and incentivize the
development of better interoperability
infrastructure to facilitate more seamless
data sharing between States, providers,
and managed care plans.
Response: While we did not propose
any specific requirements related to
interoperability for the electronic
incident management system, States
should ensure the advancement of the
interoperable exchange of HCBS data, to
further improve the identification and
reporting on the prevalence of critical
incidents for HCBS beneficiaries to
support quality improvement activities
that can help promote the health and
safety of HCBS beneficiaries. We clarify
that, to receive enhanced FMAP funds,
the State Medicaid agency is required at
§ 433.112(b)(12) to ensure the alignment
with, and incorporation of, standards
and implementation specifications for
health information technology adopted
by the Office of the National
Coordinator for Health IT in 45 CFR part
170, subpart B, among other
requirements set forth in
§ 433.112(b)(12). States should also
consider adopting relevant standards
identified in the Interoperability
Standards Advisory (ISA) 75 to bolster
improvements in the identification and
reporting on the prevalence of critical
incidents for HCBS beneficiaries and
present opportunities for the State to
72 See section 1903(a)(3)(A)(i) and § 433.15(b)(3),
80 FR 75817–75843; https://www.medicaid.gov/
state-resourcecenter/faq-medicaid-and-chipaffordable-care-act-implementation/downloads/
affordable-care-act-faq-enhancedfunding-formedicaid.pdf; https://www.medicaid.gov/federalpolicy-guidance/downloads/SMD16004.pdf.
73 See section 1903(a)(3)(B) and § 433.15(b)(4).
74 See § 433.112 (b, 80 FR 75841; https://
www.ecfr.gov/current/title-42/chapter-IV/
subchapter-C/part-433/subpart-C.
75 Relevant standards adopted by HHS and
identified in the ISA include the USCDI (https://
www.healthit.gov/isa/united-states-core-datainteroperability-uscdi), eLTSS (https://
www.healthit.gov/isa/documenting-care-plansperson-centered-services), and Functional
Assessment Standardized Items (https://
www.healthit.gov/isa/representing-patientfunctional-status-andor-disability).
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
develop improved information systems
that can support quality improvement
activities that can help promote the
health and safety of HCBS beneficiaries.
Comment: A few commenters
recommended CMS not require States to
include additional specific
functionalities, including unique
identifiers.
Response: We agree with commenters
to not require or encourage a specific
functionality, such as unique identifiers.
After consideration of public
comments received, we are finalizing
our proposal to require at
§ 441.302(a)(6)(i)(B) that States use an
information system, meeting certain
requirements, for electronic data
collection, tracking, and trending of
critical incident data, as proposed, with
minor modifications. We are finalizing
§ 441.302(a)(6)(i)(B) with the addition of
the word ‘‘enables’’ and striking
‘‘enables’’ from § 441.302(a)(6)(i)(B)(1)
so that it applies to all paragraphs in
§ 441.302(a)(6)(i)(B). We are finalizing
minor formatting changes to conclude
paragraphs (a)(6)(i)(B)(2) and (3) with
semi-colons.
d. Provider Critical Incident Reporting—
During Delivery of or Failure To Deliver
Services (§ 441.302(a)(6)(i)(C))
At § 441.302(a)(6)(i)(C), we proposed
that States must require providers to
report to the State any critical incidents
that occur during the delivery of section
1915(c) waiver program services as
specified in a waiver participant’s
person-centered service plan, or any
critical incidents that are a result of the
failure to deliver authorized services.
We believe that this proposed
requirement will help to specify
provider expectations for reporting
critical incidents and to ensure that
harm that occurs because of the failure
to deliver services will be appropriately
identified as a critical incident.
We received public comments on
these proposals. The following is a
summary of the comments we received
and our responses.
Comment: A few commenters
supported the requirement we proposed
at § 441.302(a)(6)(i)(C) that a State must
require providers to report to the State
any critical incidents that occur during
the delivery of services as specified in
a beneficiary’s person-centered service
plan, or any critical incidents that are a
result of the failure to deliver authorized
services. One commenter expressed that
requiring providers to report on any
critical incidents that occur during
service delivery, or as a result of the
failure to deliver authorized services,
encourages better, more transparent
reporting and provides a more accurate
PO 00000
Frm 00063
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40603
reflection of the prevalence and types of
critical incidents occurring in HCBS
delivery. Another commenter noted
missed or delayed services, especially a
pattern of missed or delayed service
appointments, can lead to poor health
outcomes for beneficiaries.
Response: We appreciate the
expressions of support for our proposal.
Comment: A few commenters raised
concerns with the requirement we
proposed at § 441.302(a)(6)(i)(C) that
States require providers to report to
them any critical incidents that occur
during the delivery of section 1915(c)
waiver program services as specified in
a waiver participant’s person-centered
service plan, or as a result of the failure
to deliver services authorized under a
section 1915(c) waiver program and as
specified in the waiver participant’s
person-centered service plan. One
commenter expressed that this
requirement would require reviewers of
critical incidents to draw conclusions
about the service provider’s role,
without taking into account a
beneficiary’s right to privacy, decision
making, personal preferences, and
autonomy, especially for beneficiaries
who live in their own home and/or
receive care from different providers.
Another commenter expressed concern
that, even after a thorough investigation,
it is often impossible to definitively
substantiate certain allegations of abuse
or neglect or determine whether a
negative outcome, such as a
hospitalization, was the direct result of
a critical incident that occurred during
the delivery of services or as a result of
the failure to deliver services as
authorized. A commenter expressed
concern that the requirement for
providers to report to States any critical
incidents that are a result of the failure
to deliver authorized services is too
broad and could cause critical incident
reporting to be ineffective and
inconsistent.
Response: We proposed requirements
for States regarding the reporting of
critical incidents by providers that we
believe are important for identifying and
addressing incidents of abuse, neglect,
exploitation, or other harms that occur
during the course of service delivery or
as a result of the failure to deliver
services. We note that the reporting of
a critical incident does not necessarily
mean that an action should be taken by
the State in response to the critical
incident. Further, even if no action is
warranted or it is not possible to
substantiate an allegation of abuse or
neglect, it is still important to have the
critical incident reported, and
investigation conducted if appropriate,
in case, for instance, a pattern later
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
40604
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
emerges that indicates systemic causes
of critical incidents or that warrants
action by the State.
Comment: A few commenters
suggested we modify § 441.302(a)(6) to
specify that critical incident records be
collected in accordance with applicable
privacy laws, such as HIPAA and its
implementing regulations.
Response: In consideration of public
comments received, we have not
identified a compelling reason, and
therefore decline, to add a reference to
specific privacy laws to the
requirements at § 441.302(a)(6). We note
that States have existing obligations to
comply with applicable Federal and
State laws and regulations governing
confidentiality, privacy, and security of
information, records, and data obtained
and maintained in a critical incident
system. We note that this regulatory
requirement does not modify these
obligations to comply with applicable
laws.
Comment: One commenter suggested
we require States to accept critical
incident reports, and acknowledge
receipt of the report, directly from
beneficiaries or other interested parties,
establish a process to accept such
reports, and allow reports to be made
orally or in writing. The commenter
recommended that we should require
that punitive action is neither
threatened nor taken against any
individual who makes a report in good
faith.
Response: We decline to modify our
proposal to broaden the requirements
related to critical incidents we proposed
at § 441.302(a)(6)(i)(C) in this final rule.
Although we proposed to only require
providers to report critical incidents at
§ 441.301(a)(6)(i)(C), the State is not
precluded from accepting the reporting
of critical incidents from others, who
are not providers, including
beneficiaries or other interested parties.
We believe that our proposal that the
State assure a system to identify and
address incidents of abuse, neglect,
exploitation, or other harm during the
course of service delivery, or as a result
of the failure to deliver services, is in
the best interest of, and necessary for,
protecting the health and welfare of
beneficiaries receiving HCBS in section
1915(c) waiver programs and under
section 1915(i), (j) and (k) State plan
services.
We encourage States to include in
their policies and procedures that
beneficiaries would not be prohibited
from reporting critical incidents and, in
doing so, would be free from any
punitive action when reporting a critical
incident to the State. We have provided
States with flexibility to establish their
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
own policies and procedures related to
addressing punitive actions against
beneficiaries involved in the critical
incident process.
After consideration of these public
comments, we are finalizing our
proposal at § 441.302(a)(6)(i)(C) with a
modification to require providers to
report to the State, within Stateestablished timeframes and procedures,
any critical incident that occurs during
the delivery of services authorized
under section 1915(c) of the Act and as
specified in the beneficiary’s (instead of
waiver participant’s) person-centered
service plan, or occurs as a result of the
failure to deliver services authorized
under section 1915(c) of the Act and as
specified in the beneficiary’s (instead of
waiver participant’s) person-centered
service plan. (New language identified
in bold.) We are also finalizing
§ 441.302(a)(6)(i)(C) with minor
formatting changes to conclude
§ 441.302(a)(6)(i)(C) with a semi-colon.
e. Data Sources To Identify Unreported
Critical Incidents (§ 441.302(a)(6)(i)(D))
At § 441.302(a)(6)(i)(D), we proposed
to require that States use claims data,
Medicaid Fraud Control Unit data, and
data from other State agencies such as
Adult Protective Services or Child
Protective Services to the extent
permissible under applicable State law
to identify critical incidents that are
unreported by providers and occur
during the delivery of section 1915(c)
waiver program services, or as a result
of the failure to deliver authorized
services. We believe that such data can
play an important role in identifying
serious instances of harm to waiver
program participants, which may be
unreported by a provider, such as a
death that occurs as a result of choking
of an individual with a developmental
disability residing in a group home, or
a burn that occurs because a provider
failed to appropriately supervise
someone with dementia and that results
in an emergency department visit.
We solicited comment on whether
States should be required to use these
data sources to identify unreported
critical incidents, and whether there are
other specific data sources that States
should be required to use to identify
unreported critical incidents.
We received public comments on
these proposals. The following is a
summary of the comments we received
and our responses.
Comment: Several commenters
expressed support for our proposal at
§ 441.302(a)(6)(i)(D). One commenter
noted that these data sources could help
establish pathways at the beneficiary
and systems levels for reporting,
PO 00000
Frm 00064
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
tracking, and addressing issues with
person-centered planning and provider
noncompliance, and they will also
advance efforts to ensure States’ ongoing
compliance with the HCBS Settings
Rule. Another commenter approved of
the requirement that States use data
sources to identify unreported critical
incidents, including claims data,
Medicaid Fraud Control Unit data, and
data from other State agencies such as
Adult Protective Services or Child
Protective Services to the extent
permissible under applicable State law,
expressing that implementation of this
requirement could result in a more
accurate reflection of the prevalence and
types of critical incidents occurring in
HCBS delivery, in working with
managed care plans and providers.
Response: We appreciate the support
for our proposal.
Comment: Two commenters requested
that collaboration with police and law
enforcement be included in the data
sources under § 441.302(a)(6)(i)(D). One
commenter noted CMS should require
providers to report to law enforcement
in a timely manner any reasonable
suspicion of a crime committed against
a beneficiary receiving HCBS. Another
commenter recommended CMS require
providers to report suspicion of a crime
to law enforcement. A commenter also
questioned whether an investigative
agency includes law enforcement.
Additionally, a few commenters also
recommended that collaboration with
the designated Protection & Advocacy
(P&A) system for the State be included
in the data sources under
§ 441.302(a)(6)(i)(D), citing that P&A
systems have the authority to investigate
incidents of abuse and neglect of
individuals with developmental
disabilities if the incidents are reported
to the system or if there is probable
cause to believe that the incidents
occurred.
Response: While we intend that
§ 441.302(a)(6)(i)(D) establishes the
minimum requirements for States to use
certain data sources to detect
unreported critical incidents, States
retain flexibility to use additional data
sources, such as police and law
enforcement data and P&A systems, to
identify critical incidents that are
unreported by providers. However, we
decline to include additional data
sources in the regulation at this time.
We are concerned that it would be
difficult for States to use non-Medicaid
data sources, such as data from P&A
systems and law enforcement records, to
effectively identify unreported critical
incidents for Medicaid beneficiaries and
that such requirements would be
administratively and operationally
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
burdensome for States to implement. At
§ 441.302(a)(6)(i)(D), we proposed to
require that States use claims data,
Medicaid Fraud Control Unit data, and
data from other State agencies to the
extent permissible under applicable
State law to identify critical incidents
that are unreported by providers and
occur during the delivery of section
1915(c) waiver program services, or as a
result of the failure to deliver authorized
services, identifying Adult Protective
Services or Child Protective Services as
examples of State agencies. We
encourage the State to include
additional State agency data sources to
detect unreported critical incidents as
defined at § 441.302(a)(6)(i)(D) as
appropriate.
Comment: A couple commenters
stated that CMS should direct States to
take definitive enforcement actions to
address provider compliance with the
incident management requirements.
One commenter proposed to penalize
HCBS providers that do not timely
report critical incidents by imposing
monetary penalties or suspension from
the Medicaid program. Another
commenter recommended that we allow
States to implement an escalation of
remedies to address provider reporting,
up to and including a separate
investigation with sanctions, if
necessary.
Response: We reiterate that States
already have broad authority to create
penalties, whether monetary or nonmonetary, for providers that have
violated their obligations as set forth by
the State Medicaid program.
After consideration of public
comments we received, we are
finalizing our proposal at
§ 441.302(a)(6)(i)(D), with a
modification to require providers to
report to the State, within Stateestablished timeframes and procedures,
any critical incident that occurs during
the delivery of services authorized
under section 1915(c) of the Act and as
specified in the beneficiary’s (instead of
waiver participant’s) person-centered
service plan, or occurs as a result of the
failure to deliver services authorized
under section 1915(c) of the Act and as
specified in the beneficiary’s (instead of
waiver participant’s) person-centered
service plan. (New language identified
in bold.) We are also finalizing
§ 441.302(a)(6)(i)(D) with minor
formatting changes to conclude
§ 441.302(a)(6)(i)(D) with a semi-colon.
f. Critical Incident Data Sharing
(§ 441.302(a)(6)(i)(E))
At § 441.302(a)(6)(i)(E), we proposed
States share information, consistent
with the regulations in 42 CFR part 431,
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
subpart F on the status and resolution
of investigations. We set the expectation
that data sharing could be accomplished
through the use of information sharing
agreements with other entities in the
State responsible for investigating
critical incidents if the State refers
critical incidents to other entities for
investigation.
We received public comments on
these proposals. The following is a
summary of the comments we received
and our responses.
Comment: Several commenters
recommended CMS provide technical
assistance related to the data sharing
requirements. Commenters noted data
sharing barriers in and between the
State, agencies, and divisions within in
the same agency, influencing successful
implementation of the proposed
requirements at § 441.302(a)(6)(i)(G).
Response: We appreciate these
comments identifying the need for
technical assistance related to data and
information sharing agreements. We
will take this feedback into
consideration when developing
resources for States on the incident
management system requirements.
Further, we generally note that the
State is responsible for ensuring its
critical incident system(s) comply with
all applicable Federal and State laws
and regulations governing
confidentiality, privacy, and security of
records obtained, maintained, and
disclosed via this incident management
system.
After consideration of public
comments, we are finalizing the
proposed § 441.302(a)(6)(i)(E) as
proposed, with a minor technical
modification to clarify that mention of
critical incident in § 441.302(a)(6)(i)(E)
refers to critical incidents as defined in
paragraph (a)(6)(i)(A) of this section
(meaning § 441.302).
g. Separate Investigation of Critical
Incidents (§ 441.302(a)(6)(i)(F))
At § 441.302(a)(6)(i)(F), we proposed
to require the State be required to
separately investigate critical incidents
if the investigative agency fails to report
the resolution of an investigation within
State-specified timeframes. These
proposed requirements are intended to
ensure that the failure to effectively
share information between State
agencies or other entities in the State
responsible for investigating incidents
does not impede a State’s ability to
effectively identify, report, triage,
investigate, resolve, track, and trend
critical incidents, particularly where
there could be evidence of serious harm
or a pattern of harm to a section 1915(c)
PO 00000
Frm 00065
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40605
waiver program participant for which a
provider is responsible.
We received public comments on
these proposals. The following is a
summary of the comments we received
and our responses.
Comment: Many commenters
expressed serious concerns about the
requirements we proposed at
§ 441.302(a)(6)(i)(F), that the State is
required to separately investigate
critical incidents if the investigative
agency fails to report the resolution of
an investigation within State-specified
timeframes. Commenters recognized the
importance of cross-agency
collaboration but identified that the
timeframes for investigations by
investigative agencies, such as Adult
Protective Services and Child Protective
Services, can be prolonged. Further,
opening a separate concurrent
investigation at the State level, if the
investigative agency fails to report the
resolution of an investigation within
State-specified timelines, could
compromise the integrity of both
investigations. Some commenters
questioned the feasibility of the
requirements at § 441.302(a)(6)(i)(F) due
to State statutory provisions around
investigative agency responsibilities and
allowable data sharing.
Response: These proposed
requirements are intended to ensure that
the failure to effectively share
information between State agencies or
other entities in the State responsible for
investigating incidents does not impede
a State Medicaid agency’s ability to
effectively identify, report, triage,
investigate, resolve, track, and trend
critical incidents to protect the health
and welfare of HCBS beneficiaries. We
believe that requiring the State to
separately investigate critical incidents
if the investigative agency fails to report
the resolution of an investigation within
State-specified timeframes will
strengthen the ability of the State
Medicaid agency to act quickly and/or
separately if investigations by Adult
Protective Services, Child Protective
Services, or other State agencies are
taking longer to address and resolve.
Further, it will ensure that the State has
the information it needs to take action
to protect beneficiary health and safety
if a provider is responsible
(intentionally or unintentionally) for
causing harm to beneficiaries or putting
beneficiaries at risk of harm.
Additionally, we note that the State
Medicaid agency may have the authority
to take certain actions against the
provider (such as suspend their
Medicaid enrollment) that other State
agencies, such as Adult Protective
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
40606
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Services or Child Protective Services,
are unable to take.
We have provided States with
flexibility to establish State-specified
timelines to separately investigate
critical incidents if the investigative
agency fails to report the resolution of
an investigation and encourage States to
take into account specific nuances that
may impact the timelines.
After consideration of public
comments, we are finalizing the
proposed § 441.302(a)(6)(i)(F) as
proposed.
h. Reporting (§§ 441.302(a)(6)(i)(G) and
441.302(a)(6)(ii))
Section 1902(a)(6) of the Act requires
State Medicaid agencies to make such
reports, in such form and containing
such information, as the Secretary may
from time to time require, and to
comply with such provisions as the
Secretary may from time to time find
necessary to assure the correctness and
verification of such reports. Under our
authority at section 1902(a)(6) of the
Act, we proposed to modernize the
health and welfare reporting by
requiring all States to report on the same
Federally prescribed quality measures
as opposed to the State-developed
measures, which naturally vary State by
State. Specifically, at
§ 441.302(a)(6)(i)(G), we proposed to
require that States meet the reporting
requirements at § 441.311(b)(1) related
to the performance of their incident
management systems. We discuss these
reporting requirements in our
discussion of proposed § 441.311(b)(1).
Further, under our authority at sections
1915(c)(2)(A) and 1902(a)(19) of the Act,
we proposed to codify a minimum
performance level to demonstrate that
States meet the requirements at
§ 441.302(a)(6). Specifically, at
§ 441.302(a)(6)(ii), we proposed to
require that States demonstrate that: an
investigation was initiated, within Statespecified timeframes, for no less than 90
percent of critical incidents; an
investigation was completed and the
resolution of the investigation was
determined, within State-specified
timeframes, for no less than 90 percent
of critical incidents; and corrective
action was completed, within Statespecified timeframes, for no less than 90
percent of critical incidents that require
corrective action. This minimum
performance level strengthens health
and welfare reporting requirements
while taking into account that there may
be legitimate reasons for delays in
investigating and addressing critical
incidents.
In the proposed rule (88 FR 27980),
we considered whether to allow good
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
cause exceptions to the minimum
performance level in the event of a
natural disaster, public health
emergency, or other event that would
negatively impact a State’s ability to
achieve a minimum 90 percent. We
opted not to propose good cause
exceptions because the minimum 90
percent performance level accounts for
various scenarios that might impact a
State’s ability to achieve these
performance levels, and there are
existing disaster authorities that States
could utilize to request a waiver of these
requirements in the event of a public
health emergency or a disaster.
We received public comments on
these proposals. The following is a
summary of the comments we received
and our responses.
Comment: A couple of commenters
expressed concern about implementing
the performance levels at the 90 percent
threshold at § 441.302(a)(6)(ii).
Alternatively, one commenter
recommended the performance level
should instead be 100 percent to protect
the health and welfare of HCBS
beneficiaries, since the minimum
performance level to demonstrate that
States meet the requirements at
§ 441.302(a)(6) should gauge State
performance by how efficiently they
conduct critical incident investigations.
Response: We believe the
performance levels at the 90 percent
threshold sets a high, but achievable
standard, for complying with the
requirements at § 441.302(a)(6)(ii). Our
intention in proposing minimum
performance requirements at
§ 441.302(a)(6)(ii) was to provide a
standard by which we could oversee,
and hold States accountable, for
complying with the requirements for an
incident management system that we
are finalizing at § 441.302(a)(6). Further
it, was intended to strengthen the
critical incident requirements while also
recognizing that there may be legitimate
reasons why critical incident processes
occasionally are not completed timely
in all instances. However, it is our
expectation that States make reasonable
efforts to ensure every critical incident
is investigated, resolved, and (if
necessary) subject to corrective action
within State-specified timeframes.
Comment: A few commenters
suggested CMS include a good-cause
exception to the incident management
performance level for certain instances
that fall outside of the specified
performance standards for appropriate
reasons, such as for resource challenges
or when the investigating agency
requests that the State refrain from
contact due to an ongoing and active
investigation. Alternatively, a few
PO 00000
Frm 00066
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
commenters supported the approach in
the proposed rule to not allow goodcause exceptions to the incident
management performance level,
observing that the 90 percent minimum
performance level already gives States
leeway for unexpected occurrences.
Response: We reiterate our belief that
the 90 percent minimum performance
level sets a high, but achievable
standard for States’ incident
management systems. We underscore
that the minimum 90 percent
performance level accounts for various
scenarios that might impact the State’s
ability to achieve these performance
levels, and there are existing disaster
authorities that States could utilize to
request a waiver of these requirements
in the event of a public health
emergency or a disaster. The 90 percent
minimum performance level is intended
to strengthen incident management
system requirements. We also recognize
that there may be legitimate reasons
why incident management processes
occasionally are not completed timely
in all instances. We reiterate that our
expectation is that States make
reasonable efforts to ensure every
critical incident is investigated,
resolved, and (if necessary) subject to
corrective action within State-specified
timeframes.
After consideration of public
comments, we are finalizing our
proposals at §§ 441.302(a)(6)(i)(G) and
441.302(a)(6)(ii) as proposed.
i. Applicability Date
We proposed at § 441.302(a)(6)(iii) to
provide States with 3 years to
implement these requirements in FFS
delivery systems following the effective
date of the final rule. For States with
managed care delivery systems under
the authority of sections 1915(a),
1915(b), 1932(a), or 1115(a) of the Act
and that include HCBS in the MCO’s,
PIHP’s, or PAHP’s contract, we
proposed to provide States until the first
rating period that begins on or after 3
years after the effective date of the final
rule to implement these requirements.
We received public comments on
these proposals. The following is a
summary of the comments we received
and our responses.
Comment: Several commenters
expressed concerns about the burden
they believe will be associated with the
proposed provision to implement the
incident management requirements at
§ 441.302(a)(6) within 3 years following
the effective date of the final rule.
Commenters stated that implementation
of the incident management
requirements as proposed at
§ 441.302(a)(6)(i)(B) could require
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
potential State statute and regulatory
amendments, lead time for securing
additional technology resources, and
operational and workflow changes.
Commenters requested CMS consider
alternative effective dates for the
incident management system ranging
from 4 to 7 years, with the most frequent
suggestions at 4 to 5 years to address
these concerns.
Response: We believe that 3 years for
States to comply with the requirements
at § 441.302(a)(6) is realistic and
achievable for most of the incident
management provisions. However, we
agree that the proposed 3-year
implementation timeframe for States to
comply with the electronic incident
management requirements at
§ 441.302(a)(6)(i)(B) could create
hardships for States. We agree that
States and managed care plans may
require a timeframe longer than 3 years
to address funding needs, policy
changes, IT procurements, and other
systems changes, necessary to
implement an electronic incident
management system as required at
§ 441.302(a)(6)(i)(B), which may
necessitate 5 years.
After consideration of public
comments, we are finalizing
§ 441.302(a)(6)(iii) with minor
modifications to correct erroneous uses
of the word ‘‘effective.’’ We are retitling
the requirement at § 441.302(a)(6)(iii) as
Applicability date (rather than Effective
date). We are also modifying the
applicability date to require that States
must comply with the requirements in
paragraph (a)(6) beginning 3 years from
the effective date of this final rule,
except for the requirement at paragraph
(a)(6)(B) of this section, with which the
State must comply beginning 5 years
from the effective date of the final rule.
In addition, we are making a technical
correction to clarify that the
applicability dates in § 441.302(a)(6)(iii)
apply only to the requirements in
§ 441.302(a)(6). Additionally, we are
also finalizing with modification the
language pertaining to managed care
delivery systems to improve accuracy
and alignment with common phrasing
in managed care contracting policy at
§ 441.302(a)(6)(iii).
j. Application to Other Authorities
At § 441.302(a)(6)(iii), we proposed to
apply these requirements to services
delivered under FFS or managed care
delivery systems. Section 2402(a)(3)(A)
of the Affordable Care Act requires
States to improve coordination among,
and the regulation of, all providers of
Federally and State-funded HCBS
programs to achieve a more consistent
administration of policies and
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
procedures across HCBS programs. In
the context of Medicaid coverage of
HCBS, it should not matter whether the
services are covered directly on an FFS
basis or by a managed care plan to its
enrollees. The requirement for
consistent administration should
require consistency between these two
modes of service delivery. We proposed
that a State must ensure compliance
with the requirements in § 441.302(a)(6)
with respect to HCBS delivered both
under FFS and managed care delivery
systems.
Section 2402(a)(3)(A) of the
Affordable Care Act requires States to
improve coordination among, and the
regulation of, all providers of Federally
and State-funded HCBS programs to
achieve a more consistent
administration of policies and
procedures across HCBS programs. In
accordance with the requirement of
section 2402(a)(3)(A) of the Affordable
Care Act for States to achieve a more
consistent administration of policies
and procedures across HCBS programs
and because of the importance of
assuring health and welfare for other
HCBS State plan options, we proposed
to include the incident management
requirements at § 441.302(a)(6) within
the applicable regulatory sections,
including section 1915(j), (k), and (i)
State plan services at §§ 441.464(e),
441.570(e), and 441.745(a)(1)(v),
respectively. We note that a conforming
reference to § 441.745(b)(1)(i), although
not discussed in preamble of the
proposed rule, was included in the
proposed rule (88 FR 28086); the
reference supports the application of
incident management requirements to
section 1915(i) services. Consistent with
our proposal for section 1915(c)
waivers, we based on our authority
under section 1902(a)(19) of the Act to
assure that there are safeguards for
beneficiaries. We believe the same
arguments for these requirements for
section 1915(c) waivers are equally
applicable for these other HCBS
authorities.
We received public comments on
these proposals. The following is a
summary of the comments we received
and our responses.
Comment: Several commenters
supported the requirements at
§ 441.302(a)(6)(iii), expressing that
States must ensure compliance with the
requirements in § 441.302(a)(6) with
respect to HCBS delivered both in FFS
and managed care delivery systems,
noting there is no meaningful difference
between abuse, neglect, or exploitation
perpetrated by a provider paid through
a managed care plan or by a provider
paid through a FFS delivery system.
PO 00000
Frm 00067
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40607
One commenter recommended we assist
States in developing instructions for
State incident management systems for
work with Medicaid managed care plans
and contracted providers in
implementing the requirements in
§ 441.302(a)(6).
Response: We appreciate the support
for our proposal. We will take this
feedback into consideration when
developing technical assistance and
other resources for States on the
incident management system
requirements.
After consideration of public
comments received, we are finalizing
the proposal at § 441.302(a)(6)(iii) for
HCBS delivered under both FFS and
managed care delivery systems.
Comment: Several commenters
supported the proposal to apply the
incident management system
requirements at § 441.302(a)(6) to
sections 1915(i), (j) and (k) authorities.
Commenters expressed that equally
applicable requirements for States
across waiver authorities can ensure
better access, equity, quality, and
reporting for HCBS beneficiaries.
Response: We appreciate the support
for our proposal.
Comment: A few commenters
responded to our request for comment
on whether we should establish similar
health and welfare requirements for
section 1905(a) State plan personal care,
home health, and case management
services. Several commenters supported
the proposal not to extend the incident
management requirements at
§ 441.302(a)(6) to section 1905(a)
services and expressed that applying
these requirements to State plan benefits
would pose critical challenges for State
Medicaid and other operating agencies,
due to varying levels of HCBS provided
and different data reporting
infrastructure States have for 1905(a)
services. A few commenters
recommended that CMS apply the
incident management system
requirements to mental health
rehabilitative services delivered under
section 1905(a) State plan authority. A
couple of commenters suggested that
mental health rehabilitative services are
considered home- and communitybased services under the broader
definition enacted by Congress in the
American Rescue Plan Act of 2021.
They also indicated that many Medicaid
beneficiaries with mental health
disorders and disabilities receiving
services under the section 1905(a)
authority would benefit from the
beneficiary protections afforded through
the incident management system
requirements at § 441.302(a)(6).
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
40608
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Response: At this time, we are not
mandating inclusion of section 1905(a)
services in the State requirements for
incident management systems, due to
the statutory and regulatory differences
between services authorized under
sections 1905(a) and 1915 of the Act.
That said, we are not persuaded by the
argument that including section 1905(a)
services would simply be too much
work, as we do believe it is critical that
Medicaid beneficiaries have protections
for freedom from harm. We
acknowledge that many beneficiaries,
particularly those receiving mental
health services, are served by section
1905(a) services, and encourage States
to consider development of critical
incident processes to address
protections for beneficiaries from harm
or events that place a beneficiary at risk
of harm.
After consideration of public
comments, we are finalizing application
of the requirements at § 441.302(a)(6) to
other HCBS program authorities within
the applicable regulatory sections,
including section 1915(j), (k), and (i)
State plan services. We are finalizing the
requirements at §§ 441.464(e),
441.570(e), and 441.745(a)(1)(v) and
(b)(1)(i) as proposed, with minor
modifications to clarify that the
references to section 1915(c) of the Act
are instead references to section 1915(j),
1915(k), and 1915(i) of the Act,
respectively.
k. Summary of Finalized Requirements
After consideration of the public
comments, we are finalizing the
requirements at §§ 441.302(a)(6), as
follows:
• We are finalizing
§ 441.302(a)(6)(i)(A) as proposed with
the following minor modifications: a
minor formatting modification at
§ 441.302(a)(6)(i)(A)(3) to correct an
improper italicization; a minor technical
modification at § 441.302(a)(6)(i)(A)(5)
to correct missing punctuation; and a
minor formatting modification to
conclude § 441.302(a)(6)(i)(A)(6) with a
semi-colon.
• We are finalizing
§ 441.302(a)(6)(i)(B) as proposed with
the following minor modifications:
adding the word ‘‘Enables’’ to
§ 441.302(a)(6)(i)(B) and striking it from
§ 441.302(a)(6)(i)(B)(1); and minor
formatting modifications to conclude
§ 441.302(a)(6)(i)(B)(2) and (3) with a
semi-colon.
• We are finalizing the requirements
at § 441.302(a)(6)(i)(C) with a
modification to require providers to
report to the State, within Stateestablished timeframes and procedures,
any critical incident that occurs during
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
the delivery of services authorized
under section 1915(c) of the Act and as
specified in the beneficiary’s personcentered service plan, or occurs as a
result of the failure to deliver services
authorized under section 1915(c) of the
Act and as specified in the beneficiary’s
person-centered service plan. We are
also finalizing § 441.302(a)(6)(i)(C) with
a minor formatting change so that it
concludes with a semi-colon.
• We are finalizing the requirements
at § 441.302(a)(6)(i)(D, with a
modification to require providers to
report to the State, within Stateestablished timeframes and procedures,
any critical incident that occurs during
the delivery of services authorized
under section 1915(c) of the Act and as
specified in the beneficiary’s personcentered service plan, or occurs as a
result of the failure to deliver services
authorized under section 1915(c) of the
Act and as specified in the beneficiary’s
person-centered service plan. We are
also finalizing § 441.302(a)(6)(i)(D) with
a minor formatting change so that it
concludes with a semi-colon.
• We are finalizing the requirement at
§ 441.302(a)(6)(i)(E) with a minor
formatting modification to change a
reference to § 441.302(a)(6)(i)(A) to
paragraph (a)(6)(i)(A).
• We are finalizing the requirements
at § 441.302(a)(6)(i)(F) and (G) and
(a)(6)(ii) as proposed.
• We are finalizing the requirement at
§ 441.302(a)(6)(iii) with modifications to
specify that States must comply with
the requirements in paragraph (a)(6)
beginning 3 years from the effective date
of this final rule; except for the
requirement at paragraph (a)(6)(B) of
this section, with which the State must
comply beginning 5 years after the date
that is the effective date of this final
rule; and in the case of the State that
implements a managed care delivery
system under the authority of sections
1915(a), 1915(b), 1932(a), or 1115(a) of
the Act and includes HCBS in the
MCO’s, PIHP’s, or PAHP’s contract, the
first rating period for contracts with the
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP beginning on or
after 3 years from the effective date of
this final rule, except for the
requirement at paragraph (a)(6)(B) of
this section, with which the first rating
period for contracts with the MCO,
PIHP, or PAHP beginning on or after 5
years from the effective date of this final
rule.
• We are finalizing the requirements
at §§ 441.464(e), 441.570(e), and
441.745(a)(1)(v) and (b)(1)(i) with minor
modifications to clarify that the
references to section 1915(c) of the Act
are instead references to section 1915(j),
PO 00000
Frm 00068
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
1915(k), and 1915(i) of the Act,
respectively.
4. Reporting (§ 441.302(h))
As discussed earlier in section II.B.1.
of this rule, section 2402(a)(3)(A) of the
Affordable Care Act requires HHS to
promulgate regulations to ensure that
States develop HCBS systems that are
designed to improve coordination
among, and the regulation of, all
providers of Federally and State-funded
HCBS programs to achieve a more
consistent administration of policies
and procedures across HCBS programs.
We also believe that standardizing
reporting across HCBS authorities will
streamline and simplify reporting for
providers, improve States’ and CMS’s
ability to assess HCBS quality and
performance, and better enable States to
improve the quality of HCBS programs
through the availability of comparative
data. Further, section 1902(a)(6) of the
Act requires State Medicaid agencies to
make such reports, in such form and
containing such information, as the
Secretary may from time to time require,
and to comply with such provisions as
the Secretary may from time to time find
necessary to assure the correctness and
verification of such reports.
To avoid duplicative or conflicting
reporting requirements at § 441.302(h),
we proposed to amend § 441.302(h) by
removing the following language:
‘‘annually’’; ‘‘The information must be
consistent with a data collection plan
designed by CMS and must address the
waiver’s impact on -’’; and by removing
paragraphs (1) and (2) under
§ 441.302(h). Further, we proposed to
add ‘‘, including the data and
information as required in § 441.311’’ at
the end of the new amended text,
‘‘Assurance that the agency will provide
CMS with information on the waiver’s
impact.’’ By making these changes, we
proposed to consolidate reporting
expectations in one new section at
proposed § 441.311, described in section
II.B.7. of the proposed rule, under our
authority at section 1902(a)(6) of the Act
and section 2402(a)(3)(A) of the
Affordable Care Act. As noted earlier in
section II.B.1. of the proposed rule, this
reporting will supersede existing
reporting for section 1915(c) waivers
and standardize reporting across section
1915 HCBS authorities.
We did not receive specific comments
on this proposal.
We are finalizing our proposed
amendment of § 441.302(h) as proposed.
We did receive comments on
proposed § 441.311, described in section
II.B.7. of this rule, which establishes a
new Reporting Requirements section.
Comments on this proposal and our
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
responses are summarized in section
II.B.7. of this final rule.
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
5. HCBS Payment Adequacy
(§§ 441.302(k), 441.464(f), 441.570(f),
441.745(a)(1)(vi))
Section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act
requires State Medicaid programs to
ensure that payments to providers are
consistent with efficiency, economy,
and quality of care and are sufficient to
enlist enough providers so that care and
services are available to beneficiaries at
least to the extent as to the general
population in the same geographic area.
Access to most HCBS generally requires
hands-on and in-person services to be
delivered by direct care workers. Direct
care workers are referred to by various
names, such as direct support
professionals, personal care attendants,
and home health aides, within and
across States. They perform a variety of
roles, including nursing services,
assistance with activities of daily living
(such as mobility, personal hygiene, and
eating) and instrumental activities of
daily living (such as cooking, grocery
shopping, and managing finances),
behavioral supports, employment
supports, and other services to promote
community integration for older adults
and people with disabilities. We discuss
the definition of direct care workers in
more detail below in the context of our
proposed definition of direct care
workers.
Direct care workers typically earn low
wages and receive limited benefits 76 77 78
contributing to a shortage of direct care
workers and high rates of turnover in
this workforce, which can limit access
to and impact the quality of HCBS.
Workforce shortages can also reduce the
cost-effectiveness of services for State
Medicaid agencies that take into
account the actual cost of delivering
services when determining Medicaid
payment rates, such as by increasing the
reliance on overtime and temporary
staff, which have higher hourly costs
than non-overtime wages paid to
permanent staff. Further, an insufficient
76 MACPAC Issue Brief. State Efforts to Address
Medicaid Home- and Community-Based Services
Workforce Shortages. March 2022. Accessed at
https://www.macpac.gov/wp-content/uploads/
2022/03/MACPAC-brief-on-HCBS-workforce.pdf.
77 Campbell, S., A. Del Rio Drake, R. Espinoza, K.
Scales. 2021. Caring for the future: The power and
potential of America’s direct care workforce. Bronx,
NY: PHI https://phinational.org/wp-content/
uploads/2021/01/Caring-for-the-Future-2021PHI.pdf.
78 We recognize that there are workforce shortages
that may impact access to other Medicaid-covered
services aside from HCBS. We are focusing in this
rule on addressing workforce shortages in HCBS
and continue to assess the feasibility and potential
impact of other actions to address workforce
shortages in other parts of the health care sector.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
supply of HCBS providers can prevent
individuals from transitioning from
institutions to home and communitybased settings and from receiving HCBS
that can prevent institutionalization.
HCBS is, on average, less costly than
institutional services,79 80 and most
older adults and people with disabilities
prefer to live in the community.
Accordingly, limits on the availability of
HCBS lessen the ability for State
Medicaid programs to deliver LTSS in a
cost-effective, beneficiary friendly
manner.
Shortages of direct care workers and
high rates of turnover also reduce the
quality of HCBS. For instance,
workforce shortages can prevent
individuals from receiving needed
services and, in turn, lead to poorer
outcomes for people who need HCBS.
Insufficient staffing can also make it
difficult for providers to achieve quality
standards.81 High rates of turnover can
reduce quality of care,82 including
through the loss of experienced and
qualified workers and by reducing
continuity of care for people receiving
HCBS,83 which is associated with the
reduced likelihood of improvement in
function among people receiving home
health aide services.84
While workforce shortages have
existed for years, the COVID–19
pandemic exacerbated the problem,
leading to higher rates of direct care
worker turnover (for instance, due to
higher rates of worker-reported stress),
an inability of some direct care workers
79 Reaves, E.L., & Musumeci, M.B. December 15,
2015. Medicaid and Long-Term Services and
Supports: A Primer. Kaiser Family Foundation.
Accessed at https://www.kff.org/medicaid/report/
medicaid-and-long-term-services-and-supports-aprimer/.
80 Kim, M–Y, Weizenegger, E., & Wysocki, A. July
22, 2022. Medicaid Beneficiaries Who Use LongTerm Services and Supports: 2019. Chicago, IL:
Mathematica. Accessed at https://
www.medicaid.gov/medicaid/long-term-servicessupports/downloads/ltss-user-brief-2019.pdf.
81 American Network of Community Options and
Resources (ANCOR). 2021. The state of America’s
direct support workforce 2021. Alexandria, VA:
ANCOR. Accessed at https://www.ancor.org/sites/
default/files/the_state_of_americas_direct_support_
workforce_crisis_2021.pdf.
82 Newcomer R, Kang T, Faucett J . Consumerdirected personal care: comparing aged and nonaged adult recipient health-related outcomes among
those with paid family versus non-relative
providers. Home Health Care Serv Q.
2011;30(4):178– 97.
83 Campbell, S., A. Del Rio Drake, R. Espinoza, K.
Scales. 2021. Caring for the future: The power and
potential of America’s direct care workforce. Bronx,
NY: PHI https://phinational.org/wp-content/
uploads/2021/01/Caring-for-the-Future-2021PHI.pdf.
84 Russell D, Rosati RJ, Peng TR, Barro
´ n Y,
Andreopoulos E . Continuity in the provider of
home health aide services and the likelihood of
patient improvement in activities of daily living.
Home Health Care Manage Pract. 2013;25(1):6–12.
PO 00000
Frm 00069
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40609
to return to their positions prior to the
pandemic (for instance, due to difficulty
accessing child care or concerns about
contracting COVID–19 for people with
higher risk of severe illness), workforce
shortages across the health care sector,
and wage increases in retail and other
jobs that tend to draw from the same
pool of workers.85 86 87 Further, demand
for direct care workers is expected to
continue rising due to the growing
needs of the aging population, the
changing ability of aging caregivers to
provide supports, the increased
provision of services in the most
integrated community setting rather
than institutional services, and a decline
in the number of younger workers
available to provide services.88 89 90
Section 2402(a) of the Affordable Care
Act requires the Secretary of HHS to
ensure that all States receiving Federal
funds for HCBS, including Medicaid,
develop HCBS systems that are
responsive to the needs and choices of
beneficiaries receiving HCBS, maximize
independence and self-direction,
provide coordination for and support
each person’s full engagement in
community life, and achieve a more
consistent and coordinated approach to
the administration of policies and
procedures across public programs
providing HCBS.91 In particular, section
2402(a)(1) of the Affordable Care Act
requires States to allocate resources for
85 MACPAC Issue Brief. State Efforts to Address
Medicaid Home- and Community-Based Services
Workforce Shortages. March 2022. Accessed at
https://www.macpac.gov/wp-content/uploads/
2022/03/MACPAC-brief-on-HCBS-workforce.pdf.
86 Campbell, S., A. Del Rio Drake, R. Espinoza, K.
Scales. 2021. Caring for the future: The power and
potential of America’s direct care workforce. Bronx,
NY: PHI https://phinational.org/wp-content/
uploads/2021/01/Caring-for-the-Future-2021PHI.pdf.
87 American Network of Community Options and
Resources (ANCOR). 2021. The state of America’s
direct support workforce 2021. Alexandria, VA:
ANCOR. Accessed at https://www.ancor.org/sites/
default/files/the_state_of_americas_direct_support_
workforce_crisis_2021.pdf.
88 MACPAC Issue Brief. State Efforts to Address
Medicaid Home- and Community-Based Services
Workforce Shortages. March 2022. Accessed at
https://www.macpac.gov/wp-content/uploads/
2022/03/MACPAC-brief-on-HCBS-workforce.pdf.
89 Campbell, S., A. Del Rio Drake, R. Espinoza, K.
Scales. 2021. Caring for the future: The power and
potential of America’s direct care workforce. Bronx,
NY: PHI https://phinational.org/wp-content/
uploads/2021/01/Caring-for-the-Future-2021PHI.pdf.
90 Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services.
November 2020. Long-Term Services and Supports
Rebalancing Toolkit. Accessed at https://
www.medicaid.gov/medicaid/long-term-servicessupports/downloads/ltss-rebalancing-toolkit.pdf.
91 Section 2402(a) of the Affordable Care Act—
Guidance for Implementing Standards for PersonCentered Planning and Self-Direction in Home and
Community-Based Services Programs. Accessed at
https://acl.gov/sites/default/files/news%202016-10/
2402-a-Guidance.pdf.
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
40610
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
services in a manner that is responsive
to the changing needs and choices of
beneficiaries receiving HCBS, while
section 2402(a)(3)(B)(iii) of the
Affordable Care Act requires States to
oversee and monitor HCBS system
functions to assure a sufficient number
of qualified direct care workers to
provide self-directed personal assistance
services. To comply with sections
2402(a)(1) and 2402(a)(3)(B)(iii) of the
Affordable Care Act, States must have a
sufficient direct care workforce to be
able to deliver services that are
responsive to the changing needs and
choices of beneficiaries, and,
specifically, a sufficient number of
qualified direct care workers to provide
self-directed personal assistance
services. We proposed requirements
across section 1915(c), (i), (j) and (k)
HCBS programs to further this outcome.
a. Assurance of Sufficient Rates
(§ 441.302(k))
Consistent with section 1902(a)(30)(A)
of the Act and sections 2402(a)(1) and
2402(a)(3)(B)(iii) of the Affordable Care
Act, we proposed to require at
§ 441.302(k) that State Medicaid
agencies provide assurance that
payment rates for certain HCBS
authorized under section 1915(c) of the
Act are sufficient to ensure a sufficient
direct care workforce (defined and
explained later in this section of the
rule) to meet the needs of beneficiaries
and provide access to services in
accordance with the amount, duration,
and scope specified in the personcentered service plan, as required under
§ 441.301(c)(2). We believe that this
proposed requirement supports the
economy, efficiency, and quality of
HCBS authorized under section 1915(c)
of the Act, by ensuring that a sufficient
portion of State FFS and managed care
payments for HCBS go directly to
compensation of the direct care
workforce.
We received public comments on
these proposals. The following is a
summary of the comments we received
and our responses.
Comment: A significant number of
commenters raised the issue of State
Medicaid rates for homemaker, home
health aide, and personal care services.
Many commenters suggested that
requiring that a sufficient portion, or
even requiring a specific percent, of
Medicaid payments be spent on
compensation for direct care workers
will not address rate sufficiency, which
they regard as the underlying cause of
low wages for direct care workers. Even
commenters who were supportive of
§ 441.302(k) generally or the proposed
minimum performance level at
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
§ 441.302(k)(3) (discussed further
below) acknowledged that the policies
may be more successful if they
coincided with rate increases to ensure
that providers’ service operations
remain fully supported. Many
commenters recommended that as an
alternative to (or in addition to) this
proposal, we create requirements that
States regularly review and update or
increase their rates.
Several commenters were concerned
that wages for direct care workers will
not increase if the underlying Medicaid
payment rates for the services remain
low and are not increased. However,
one commenter suggested that if a
State’s Medicaid rates are low, this
places even greater importance on
ensuring that as much of the rate as
possible is going to compensation for
direct care workers.
A few commenters expressed the
belief that the accountability and
transparency created by the proposal, in
addition to the associated reporting
requirement we proposed at § 441.311(e)
(discussed further in section II.B.7. of
this rule), would encourage providers to
pass more of their Medicaid payments
along to direct care worker wages. A few
commenters offered anecdotal
observations that, when their State
allocated additional funds to HCBS
providers, the commenters believed the
increased funding was not passed along
to direct care worker wages. One
commenter noted that a permanent
payment adequacy requirement is
preferable to the temporary passthrough policies that have been enacted
for one-time rate increases, because a
permanent requirement would not be
dependent on rate increases.
Response: While section
1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act does not
provide us with authority to require
specific payment rates or rate-setting
methodologies, section 1902(a)(30)(A) of
the Act does provide us with authority
to oversee that States assure that
payments are consistent with efficiency,
economy, and quality of care and are
sufficient to enlist enough providers so
that care and services are available
under the plan, at least to the extent that
such care and services are available to
the general population in the geographic
area. We did not propose to establish,
and are not finalizing, specific payment
rates for HCBS under the Medicaid
program. Instead, we reiterate that
under section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act
payments must be sufficient to recruit
and retain enough providers to ensure
care and services are available to
beneficiaries; we proposed to
implement this requirement by
specifying a percentage of Medicaid
PO 00000
Frm 00070
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
payments be spent on compensation to
direct care workers. We believe this
policy will also promote, and be
consistent with, economy, efficiency,
and quality of care.
Broadly speaking, we also do not
believe that simply increasing rates
alone, without setting guardrails for
how the payments are allocated, would
ensure that direct care workers’ wages
will increase. Rather, we agree with
commenters who believed that,
regardless of the underlying Medicaid
rate, requiring a certain amount of
Medicaid payments be spent on
compensation will help ensure that
Medicaid payments are distributed in a
way that supports direct care workers,
including their recruitment and
retention, to the greatest extent possible.
While we did not propose, and are not
finalizing, a requirement that State
Medicaid agencies increase their rates,
we anticipate that States will examine
their rates to assure they are sufficient
to support the direct care workforce to
comply with the policy we proposed
and are finalizing with modifications, as
discussed further herein. We also direct
commenters to the proposals discussed
in section II.C. of this final rule, which
includes a number of provisions related
to rate transparency that are intended to
support FFS rate sufficiency.
Comment: One commenter
recommended that we revise
§ 441.302(k) to specify that rates must be
sufficient to ensure a sufficient number
of providers, including members of the
direct care workforce. The commenter
stated that this revision would match
the broader term ‘‘provider’’ in section
1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act while
highlighting the importance of the direct
care workforce.
Response: We appreciate the
commenter’s feedback, but we decline
to make the recommended revision. At
this time, we want to make the focus of
the requirement explicitly on the
individuals who are part of the direct
care workforce, whether they act as
individual providers (such as by
working as an independent contractor),
are employed by a provider entity, or
otherwise. We agree with the
commenter that section 1902(a)(30)(A)
of the Act requires that Medicaid
payments must be sufficient to enlist
enough providers so that care and
services are available to beneficiaries at
least to the extent that such care and
services are available to the general
population in the geographic area. We
note that section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the
Act also requires that States assure that
payments are consistent with efficiency,
economy, and quality of care. We agree
that enrolling sufficient numbers of
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
providers is critical to Medicaid service
delivery, and that providers in turn may
not be able to deliver services if they do
not have a sufficient number of direct
care workers. As noted in a previous
response, we proposed to implement
these requirements by specifying a
percentage of Medicaid payments be
spent on compensation to direct care
workers. We believe this policy will
promote, and be consistent with,
economy, efficiency, and quality of care,
as required by statute at section
1902(a)(3)(A) of the Act.
Comment: One commenter requested
clarification on whether the payment
adequacy requirement applies only to
the voluntary, nonprofit sector or
whether it also applies to State-operated
services.
Response: Given the varied nature of
HCBS programs, we specifically
proposed for the payment adequacy
requirement to apply broadly to
compensation paid to direct care
workers by providers receiving
payments for furnishing homemaker,
home health aide, or personal care
services from the State; we did not
propose to apply these requirements to
only certain types of providers or their
ownership arrangements. We
specifically proposed at
§ 441.302(k)(1)(ii)(G) (which we are
finalizing at § 441.302(k)(1)(ii) as
discussed later in this section) that a
direct care worker, to whom this
requirement would apply, may be
employed by or contracted with a
Medicaid provider, State agency, or
third party or delivering services under
a self-directed service model. The
requirements we proposed, and are
finalizing in this section II.B.5, under
§ 441.302(k) require States to assure that
payment rates are adequate to ensure a
sufficient direct care workforce by, in
turn, ensuring that providers spend a
certain percentage of their total
payments for certain HCBS on
compensation for direct care workers
furnishing those HCBS.
After consideration of the comments
received, we are finalizing the assurance
requirement at § 441.302(k) with
modifications as discussed in this
section II.B.5 of this final rule. We are
finalizing the language we proposed in
the introductory paragraph at
§ 441.302(k) with technical
modifications so that it is clear that the
reference to person-centered service
plans is to beneficiaries’ personcentered service plans. The finalized
language at § 441.302(k) will read: HCBS
payment adequacy. Assurance that
payment rates are adequate to ensure a
sufficient direct care workforce to meet
the needs of beneficiaries and provide
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
access to services in the amount,
duration, and scope specified in
beneficiaries’ person-centered service
plans.
b. Minimum Performance Requirement
and Flexibilities (§ 441.302(k)(2), (3),
(4), (5), and (6))
Our proposal at § 441.302(k)(2) and
(3) was designed to affect the
inextricable link between sufficient
payments being received by the direct
care workforce and access to and,
ultimately, the quality of HCBS received
by Medicaid beneficiaries. We believe
that this proposed requirement would
not only benefit direct care workers but
also individuals receiving Medicaid
HCBS because supporting and
stabilizing the direct care workforce will
result in better qualified employees,
lower turnover, and a higher quality of
care. The direct care workforce must be
able to attract and retain qualified
workers in order for beneficiaries to
access providers of the services they
have been assessed to need and for the
direct care workforce to be comprised of
workers with the training, expertise, and
experience to meet the diverse and often
complex HCBS needs of individuals
with disabilities and older adults.
Without access to a sufficient pool of
direct care workers, individuals are
forced to forgo having their needs met,
or have them addressed by workers
without sufficient training, expertise, or
experience to meet their unique needs,
both of which could lead to worsening
health and quality of life outcomes, loss
of independence, and
institutionalization.92 93 94 95 Further, we
believe that ensuring adherence to a
Federal standard of the percentage of
Medicaid payments going to direct care
workers is a concrete step in
recruitment and retention efforts to
stabilize this workforce by enhancing
92 MACPAC Issue Brief. State Efforts to Address
Medicaid Home- and Community-Based Services
Workforce Shortages. March 2022. Accessed at
https://www.macpac.gov/wp-content/uploads/
2022/03/MACPAC-brief-on-HCBS-workforce.pdf.
93 Campbell, S., A. Del Rio Drake, R. Espinoza, K.
Scales. 2021. Caring for the future: The power and
potential of America’s direct care workforce. Bronx,
NY: PHI https://phinational.org/wp-content/
uploads/2021/01/Caring-for-the-Future-2021PHI.pdf.
94 American Network of Community Options and
Resources (ANCOR). 2021. The state of America’s
direct support workforce 2021. Alexandria, VA:
ANCOR. Accessed at https://www.ancor.org/sites/
default/files/the_state_of_americas_direct_support_
workforce_crisis_2021.pdf.
95 Chong, N., I. Akorbirshoev, J. Caldwell, H.S.
Kaye, and M. Mitra. 2021. The relationship between
unmet need for home and community-based
services and health and community living
outcomes. Disability Health Journal. Accessed at
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/
pii/S1936657421001953.
PO 00000
Frm 00071
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40611
salary competitiveness in the labor
market. In the absence of such
requirements, we may be unable to
support and stabilize the direct care
workforce because we would not be able
to ensure that the payments are used
primarily and substantially to pay for
care and services provided by direct
care workers. Therefore, at
§ 441.302(k)(3)(i), we proposed to
require that at least 80 percent of all
Medicaid payments, including but not
limited to base payments and
supplemental payments, with respect to
the following services be spent on
compensation to direct care workers:
homemaker services, home health aide
services, and personal care services.96
While many States have already
voluntarily established such minimums
for payments authorized under section
1915(c) of the Act,97 we believe a
Federal standard would support
ongoing access to, and quality and
efficiency of, HCBS. Our proposal was
based on feedback from States that have
implemented similar requirements for
payments for certain HCBS under
section 9817 of the ARP 98 or other
State-led initiatives. We refer readers to
our proposed rule for more specific
discussion of the feedback we received
from States regarding their
implementation of similar requirements
(88 FR 27984).
We focused our proposed requirement
on homemaker services, home health
aide services, and personal care services
because they are services for which we
96 We note that section 2402(a) of the Affordable
Care Act applies broadly to all HCBS programs and
services funded by HHS. Further, section 2402(a)
does not include limits on the scope of services,
HCBS authorities, or other factors related to its use
of the term HCBS. Therefore, we believe that there
is no indication that personal care, homemaker, and
home health aide services would fall outside the
scope of section 2402(a).
97 For instance, as part of their required activities
to enhance, expand, or strengthen HCBS under ARP
section 9817, some States have required that a
minimum percentage of rate increases and
supplemental payments go to the direct care
workforce. See https://www.medicaid.gov/
medicaid/home-community-based-services/
guidance/strengthening-and-investing-home-andcommunity-based-services-for-medicaidbeneficiaries-american-rescue-plan-act-of-2021section-9817/ for more information on
ARP section 9817.See https://www.medicaid.gov/
medicaid/home-community-based-services/
guidance/strengthening-and-investing-home-andcommunity-based-services-for-medicaidbeneficiaries-american-rescue-plan-act-of-2021section-9817/ for more information on
ARP section 9817.
98 Information on State activities to expand,
enhance, or strengthen HCBS under ARP section
9817 can be found on Medicaid.gov at https://
www.medicaid.gov/medicaid/home-communitybased-services/guidance/strengthening-andinvesting-home-and-community-based-services-formedicaid-beneficiaries-american-rescue-plan-actof-2021-section-9817/.
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
40612
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
expect that the vast majority of payment
should be comprised of compensation
for direct care workers. These services
are comprised of individualized
supports for Medicaid beneficiaries
delivered by direct care workers and
generally have low equipment or supply
costs relative to other services. Further,
these are services that would most
commonly be conducted in individuals’
homes and general community settings.
As such, there should be low facility or
other indirect costs associated with the
services. We requested comment on the
following options for the minimum
percentage of payments that must be
spent on compensation to direct care
workers for homemaker services, home
health aide services, and personal care
services: (1) 75 percent; (2) 85 percent;
and (3) 90 percent. If an alternate
minimum percentage was
recommended, we requested that
commenters provide the rationale for
that minimum percentage.
We received public comments on
these proposals. The following is a
summary of the comments we received
and our responses.
Comment: Many commenters
(regardless of whether they supported
the overall proposal itself) applauded
our acknowledgement of, and efforts to
address, HCBS workforce shortages,
which many commenters characterized
as a ‘‘crisis.’’ Many commenters
appeared to agree that wages to direct
care workers are generally low, and that
these low wages contribute to overall
workforce challenges. Both providers
and beneficiaries submitted comments
detailing struggles they have had in
hiring and retaining qualified direct care
workers. Some of these commenters
described the frustration of having to
constantly recruit and train new direct
care workers. Some commenters
described having to turn away new
clients due to staff shortages, and
beneficiaries reported experiencing
delays or reductions in their services
due to difficulty in finding direct care
workers to provide the services. Many
direct care workers also submitted
personal examples of the hardships
caused by financial strain due to
inadequate pay, including having to
work long hours at multiple jobs to earn
extra income, missing time with their
own families, struggling to pay bills,
risking exposure to (or contracting)
COVID–19, and experiencing burnout
and psychological stress. A few of these
commenters indicated they had left the
direct care workforce due to low wages.
Several commenters stated that the
proposed minimum performance
requirement, if finalized, would likely
lead to increases in wages for direct care
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
workers and strengthen the workforce,
which in turn could improve the quality
of HCBS. In particular, a number of
commenters noted the potential for the
proposal to have a positive impact on
workers who are Black, other people of
color, and women, who are
disproportionately represented in the
direct care workforce—groups that have
historically experienced low wages due
to discrimination.
Commenters were able to draw
anecdotal connections between wages
and worker retention. A few providers,
for instance, noted that they had made
efforts to increase their workers’ wages,
and observed that the increase in wages
had a positive impact on their staff
retention and the number of
beneficiaries the providers were able to
serve.
A few other commenters noted that
there are other factors that may
contribute to worker shortages, and
recommended that we continue to
partner with the Administration for
Community Living and other Federal
agencies to promote a comprehensive,
integrated campaign that addresses
multiple facets of the workforce
shortage, including promotion of and
improvement of social valuation of this
work, support of workforce pipelines,
changes to immigration policy, and
creative strategies for atypical workforce
development.
Response: We thank commenters for
sharing their personal experiences and
perspectives on how they have been
affected by the direct care workforce
shortage and the low wages paid to
many direct care workers. We share the
belief that this requirement will create
a foundation of support for the direct
care workforce, which we believe is
fundamental to HCBS delivery. We
focused in this proposal on
compensation for direct care workers
because, as we noted above and many
commenters confirmed anecdotally,
many direct care workers have been
paid low wages for a long time.99 100 We
recognize that other factors also play
important roles in worker retention and
shortages. While we will continue to
partner with other Federal agencies to
address these issues, some of the factors
affecting the workforce lie outside of our
99 MACPAC Issue Brief. State Efforts to Address
Medicaid Home- and Community-Based Services
Workforce Shortages. March 2022. Accessed at
https://www.macpac.gov/wp-content/uploads/
2022/03/MACPAC-brief-on-HCBS-workforce.pdf.
100 Campbell, S., A. Del Rio Drake, R. Espinoza,
K. Scales. 2021. Caring for the future: The power
and potential of America’s direct care workforce.
Bronx, NY: PHI https://phinational.org/wp-content/
uploads/2021/01/Caring-for-the-Future-2021PHI.pdf.
PO 00000
Frm 00072
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
regulatory purview and are outside of
the scope of this proposal.
Comment: A significant number of
commenters provided feedback on the
idea of having a national minimum
performance level (separate from
providing comment on what the
percentage should be). One commenter,
representing several State agencies,
supported the intent of the proposal and
indicated that the proposed
requirements could ‘‘improve
recruitment, retention and economic
security of the HCBS direct care
workforce.’’ While offering cautions, the
commenter indicated that many States
generally support a single national
minimum performance requirement, but
they also recommended that we
consider providing States with
flexibility related to the requirement
based on provider size, rural/urban
status, and risk of closure.
Many commenters expressed
concerns that a single national
minimum performance level could fail
to take into account various factors that
might affect the percent of Medicaid
payments that is spent on compensation
for direct care workers including
substantial differences among HCBS
waiver programs, such as size, services,
populations, service area, and staffing
needs; State requirements for providers,
such as differences in business
operations requirements, licensure
costs, staff training requirements, or
whether States require providers to
maintain physical office space; and
local economic environments, including
cost of living, taxes, and wage laws.
Many commenters requested that we not
finalize a minimum performance level,
so that providers may be allowed
flexibility to allocate their Medicaid
payments as they determine to be
appropriate. One commenter, while
acknowledging a workforce crisis, noted
that Area Agencies on Aging and
provider organizations are taking steps
to improve recruitment and retention
and that a Federal mandate such as the
80 percent minimum performance level
proposed in the rule is unnecessary,
may have unintended consequences,
and may complicate State and local
efforts currently underway.
Response: After consideration of
public comments as described in this
section II.B.5 of this rule, we are
finalizing a national minimum
performance level in this final rule. We
believe that not doing so would fail to
help address the chronic shortages in
the HCBS direct care workforce. In this
context, the status quo amounts to
minimal oversight over how much of
the Medicaid payment is going to
support the direct care workers who are
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
performing the core activities of
homemaker, home health aide, and
personal care services. While some
States have already implemented
initiatives to ensure that a certain
percentage of Medicaid payments or rate
increases are going to direct care worker
compensation, as noted above, we
believe a Federal requirement is
necessary and would be more effective
to promote consistency and
transparency nationwide.
We agree that there may be State or
local circumstances that impact the
percent of Medicaid payments that is
spent on compensation for direct care
workers. Where possible, we have built
flexibilities into this requirement as
discussed further in this section II.B.5 to
ensure that it addresses certain
differences among HCBS programs and
providers. Specifically, as we discuss in
detail later in this section, we are
modifying the policy we proposed at
§ 441.302(k) by: (1) adding a definition
of excluded costs at § 441.302(k)(1)(iii)
to ensure certain costs are not included
in the minimum performance level
calculation of the percentage of
Medicaid payments to providers that is
spent on compensation for direct care
workers; (2) revising the definition of
direct care worker proposed at
§ 441.301(k)(1)(ii) to clarify that clinical
supervisors are included in the
definition of direct care workers; (3)
revising § 441.302(k)(3)(ii) to allow
States to set a separate minimum
performance level for small providers;
(4) adding a new provision at
§ 441.302(k)(4) to provide an option for
States to develop reasonable, objective
criteria to identify small providers to
meet a small provider minimum
performance level set by the State; (5)
adding a new provision at
§ 441.302(k)(5) to allow States to
develop reasonable, objective criteria to
exempt certain providers from meeting
the minimum performance level
requirement; and (6) adding a new
provision at § 441.302(k)(7) to exempt
the Indian Health Service (IHS) and
Tribal health programs subject to 25
U.S.C. 1641 from the HCBS payment
adequacy requirements at § 441.302(k).
The specific modifications and the
rationale for these modifications are
discussed in greater detail in this
section II.B.5. of the final rule.
Further, we are modifying the policy
we proposed at § 441.302(k) to require
States to comply with this HCBS
payment adequacy policy beginning 6
years after the effective date of this final
rule, rather than the 4 years we
proposed. (We discuss this modification
to § 441.302(k)(4), being redesignated as
§ 441.302(k)(8), in section II.B.5.h., of
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
this rule.) We will continue to use our
standard enforcement tools and
discretion, as appropriate, when States
must comply with § 441.302(k).
Ultimately, while we agree that
providers generally have flexibility to
determine how to spend their Medicaid
payments, we believe it is important to
reiterate the parameters for payment
rates required under section
1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act. Section
1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act requires that
payment rates must be economic and
efficient; they must not be so high as to
be uneconomic or inefficient. This
provision also requires payment rates to
be consistent with quality of care and
sufficient to enlist enough providers to
ensure a specified level of access to
services for beneficiaries; rates must not
be so low as to impermissibly limit
beneficiaries’ access to care or the
quality of care they receive. The
Supreme Court in Armstrong v.
Exceptional Child Center, Inc., in
considering this provision, recognized
that Congress was ‘‘explicitly conferring
enforcement of this judgment-laden
standard upon the Secretary[,] . . .
thereby achieving ‘the expertise,
uniformity, widespread consultation,
and resulting administrative guidance
that can accompany agency decisionmaking.’ ’’ 101 We believe that
implementing this statutory requirement
includes some degree of oversight into
how providers are allocating the
Medicaid payments that they receive for
delivering HCBS to beneficiaries. For
example, if providers are spending a
high proportion of their Medicaid
payments on compensation to direct
care workers but beneficiaries have
difficulty accessing services and quality
is compromised due to an insufficient
number of direct care workers, then the
payment rate may be too low to satisfy
section 1902(a)(30)(A). Conversely, if
concerns about access to and quality of
services were not present and providers
were spending a low proportion of their
Medicaid payments on compensation to
direct care workers, then the Medicaid
payment rate may exceed a level that is
economic and efficient, contributing to
overhead spending and/or operating
margin at levels higher than needed to
ensure access and quality.
Comment: While several commenters
agreed that a national minimum
performance level is authorized by
section 1902(a)(30) of the Act, a few
other commenters disagreed that this
policy is authorized by section
1902(a)(30) of the Act. These latter
101 Armstrong v. Exceptional Child Center, Inc.,
575 U.S. 320, 328–29 (2015) (internal citations
omitted).
PO 00000
Frm 00073
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40613
commenters noted that section
1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act requires each
State plan for medical assistance to
provide such methods and procedures
relating to the utilization of, and the
payment for, care and services available
under the plan as may be necessary to
assure that payments are consistent with
efficiency, economy, and quality of care
and are sufficient to enlist enough
providers so that care and services are
available under the plan at least to the
extent that such care and services are
available to the general population in
the geographic area. As such, these
commenters contended that this
statutory provision applies to State
plans, not to CMS, and speaks to the
adequacy of payments to Medicaidenrolled healthcare providers, not the
providers’ workforce. They stated that
section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act cannot
be read to delegate authority to us to
prescribe specific wage pass-through
requirements that States must impose
upon providers.
Response: We believe that the statutes
we cited support the components of our
proposal. Regarding the applicability of
section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act, we
refer readers to our prior discussion of
section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act in
section II.B.5.a. of this rule. As we noted
in that discussion, section
1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act provides us
with authority to oversee that States
assure that payments are consistent with
efficiency, economy, and quality of care
and are sufficient to enlist enough
providers so that care and services are
available under the plan, at least to the
extent that such care and services are
available to the general population in
the geographic area. We did not propose
to establish, and are not finalizing,
specific payment rates. Instead, we
proposed that States demonstrate that
payments are sufficient to ensure care
and services are available to
beneficiaries by specifying a percentage
of Medicaid payments that States must
ensure is spent on compensation to
direct care workers. We believe this
policy will also promote, and be
consistent with, economy, efficiency,
and quality of care. We also disagree
that section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act
speaks only to provider enrollment. We
believe that setting a performance level
at which States support their State plan
assurance that payments are consistent
with efficiency, economy, and quality of
care is an appropriate use of our
oversight authority under section
1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act.
Comment: A few commenters agreed
that sections 2402(a)(1) and 2402(a)(3)
of the Affordable Care Act authorize the
creation of a national minimum
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
40614
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
performance requirement to support the
direct care workforce. However, a few
commenters disagreed with this
application of section 2402(a)(1) of the
Affordable Care Act. These commenters
noted that section 2402(a)(1) of the
Affordable Care Act requires the
Secretary of the Department of Health
and Human Services (HHS) to
promulgate regulations to ensure that all
States develop service systems that are
designed to allocate resources for
services in a manner that is responsive
to the changing needs and choices of
beneficiaries receiving noninstitutionally-based long-term services
and supports and that provides
strategies for beneficiaries receiving
such services to maximize their
independence, including through the
use of client-employed providers.
Commenters stated that, although this
provision speaks to HHS’s authority to
promulgate regulations, those
regulations must pertain to ensuring
that States develop systems to
appropriately allocate resources to the
types of services their beneficiaries
need. These commenters contended that
section 2402 of the Affordable Care Act
allows HHS to, for example, require
States to assess whether they should
provide services such as delivering
healthy meals to certain populations or
allow beneficiaries to hire a family
member to assist them (and fund the
wages), but it does not provide HHS the
authority to require States to impose
upon providers wage pass-through
requirements that are set at a specific
minimum performance level.
Response: We disagree with
commenters’ interpretation of section
2402(a)(1) of the Affordable Care Act.
Section 2402(a)(1) of the Affordable
Care Act requires States to allocate
resources for services in a manner that
is responsive to the changing needs and
choices of beneficiaries receiving HCBS.
As discussed throughout this section,
one of the most fundamental ways that
HCBS programs meet the needs of
beneficiaries is by having a sufficient
direct care workforce to provide the
services beneficiaries have been
assessed to need. Without an adequate
supply of workers, beneficiaries may not
be able to access all the services that
they need and that fully reflect their
choices or preferences. We believe that
setting a benchmark that helps measure
whether Medicaid payments are being
allocated in a way that is responsive to
the HCBS workforce shortage and
supports essential aspects of HCBS
delivery is an appropriate application of
our authority under section 2402(a)(1) of
the Affordable Care Act.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
Comment: One commenter did not
agree that section 2402(a)(3)(B)(iii) of
the Affordable Care Act authorized the
application of a minimum performance
requirement. The commenter noted that
section 2402(a)(3)(B)(iii) of the
Affordable Care Act requires the
Secretary of HHS to promulgate
regulations to ensure that all States
develop service systems that are
designed to improve coordination
among, and the regulation of, all
providers of such services under
Federally and State-funded programs in
order to oversee and monitor all service
system functions to assure an adequate
number of qualified direct care workers
to provide self-directed personal
assistance services. The commenter
stated that this statutory provision both
bestows authority upon HHS to
promulgate regulations and specifically
references the need to ensure an
adequate number of direct care workers.
However, the commenter noted that,
like section 2402(a)(1) of the ACA,
section 2402(a)(3)(B)(iii) specifies that
HHS’s role—and its authority to
promulgate such regulations—is limited
to ensuring that States develop service
systems that assure an adequate number
of qualified direct care workers to
provide self-directed personal assistance
services. The commenter also stated that
this statutory provision applies only to
the self-directed service delivery model
and does not authorize HHS to
promulgate wage pass-through
requirements with respect to services
delivered by provider agencies. The
commenter stated, generally, that the
Medicaid program’s fundamental
premise is to allow each State or
Territory the ability to tailor its program
to reflect its unique needs, and that this
is at odds with a requirement for States
to direct providers’ behavior.
Response: We generally disagree with
the commenter’s analysis of section
2402(a)(3)(B)(iii) of the Affordable Care
Act that it does not authorize the
application of a minimum performance
requirement. Section 2402(a)(3)(B)(iii) of
the Affordable Care Act requires States
to oversee and monitor HCBS system
functions to assure there is a sufficient
number of qualified direct care workers
to provide self-directed personal
assistance services. We believe that, to
comply with this statutory requirement,
States must have a sufficient direct care
workforce to be able to deliver services
that are responsive to the changing
needs and choices of beneficiaries
(regardless of delivery model), and,
specifically, States must have a
sufficient number of qualified direct
care workers to provide self-directed
PO 00000
Frm 00074
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
personal assistance services. In other
words, an insufficient direct care
workforce generally will impact
whether a State has a sufficient number
of qualified direct care workers to
provide self-directed personal assistance
services in compliance with this
requirement. However, we do agree that
section 2402(a)(3)(B)(iii) of the
Affordable Care Act speaks specifically
to self-directed services. We cited this
authority for the purposes of supporting
our inclusion of self-directed services in
this proposal.
As noted in prior responses, we
believe that section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the
Act and 2402(a)(1) of the Affordable
Care Act authorize us to set parameters
or benchmarks for HCBS expenditures
(both including and in addition to
expenditures for self-directed personal
care services). Section 1902(a)(30)(A) of
the Act provides us with authority to
oversee that States assure that Medicaid
payments for services are consistent
with efficiency, economy, and quality of
care and are sufficient to enlist enough
providers so that care and services are
available under the plan, at least to the
extent that such care and services are
available to the general population in
the geographic area. Section 2402(a)(1)
of the Affordable Care Act requires HHS
to ensure States to allocate resources for
services in a manner that is responsive
to the changing needs and choices of
beneficiaries receiving HCBS. States
retain flexibility in how they construct
their HCBS systems. Rather, we believe
the minimum performance requirement
we proposed, and are finalizing with
modifications in this section II.B.5, sets
a benchmark to help us determine
whether States are ensuring that their
HCBS systems are allocating sufficient
resources to support the direct care
workforce to ensure there are sufficient
providers so that care and services are
available to beneficiaries and that these
services are consistent with efficiency,
economy, and quality of care. We
believe that setting such a benchmark
that helps measure whether Medicaid
payments are being allocated in a way
that is responsive to the HCBS
workforce shortage and supports
essential aspects of HCBS delivery is an
appropriate application of our authority
under section 2402(a)(1) of the
Affordable Care Act and applies to other
HCBS in addition to the self-directed
personal care services specifically
addressed in section 2402(a)(iii)(B).
Comment: A number of commenters
stated that we did not provide enough
data to support the proposal for an 80
percent minimum performance level.
One commenter suggested that by not
providing sufficient data to support the
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
proposal, we have not fulfilled our
obligations under the Administrative
Procedure Act.
A number of commenters
recommended we collect more data
before finalizing a certain percent for
the national minimum performance
level. Some commenters suggested that
a State-by-State analysis of rates and the
potential impact of a minimum
performance level would need to be
performed before setting a minimum
performance level. A few of these
commenters suggested that helpful data
could be collected from States’ rate
studies, HCBS waiver rates, provider
cost reports, or the data we proposed in
the proposed rule to be reported to us
(including our proposals at § 441.311(e)
and § 447.203, which we discuss in
sections II.B.7. and II.C. of this rule,
respectively). One commenter suggested
using the electronic visit verification
(EVV) system 102 as a tool for gathering
relevant data. Several commenters also
suggested that any additional data
collection performed to support a
national minimum performance level be
used to assess unintended consequences
of such a level.
A few commenters questioned the
specific data relied on for the proposal
of an 80 percent minimum performance
level. They noted concerns including:
• A lack of support for the claim in
the proposed rule that some States have
set wage pass-through requirements as
high as 90 percent;
• Use of data on the American Rescue
Plan Act of 2021 section 9817 funds by
a few States to increase worker wages,
which have only been relatively
recently distributed, and thus reflect
limited data;
• State wage pass-through
requirements as part of their activities to
enhance, expand, or strengthen HCBS
under section 9817 the American
Rescue Plan Act of 2021were generally
only applied to temporary rate
increases, not entire rates; and
• Minnesota and Illinois, two States
that have wage pass-through
requirements, have their requirements
set at 72 percent and 77 percent,
respectively, and both use different
definitions of compensation or direct
care worker than what was proposed.
Response: As discussed in the
proposed rule (88 FR 27982), we based
our proposal on feedback from States
that have implemented similar
requirements for payments for certain
102 Section 12006 of the 21st Century Cures Act
(Pub. L. 114–255) requires States to have EVV
systems for Medicaid personal care services and
home health care services.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
HCBS under section 9817 of the ARP 103
or other State-led initiatives. For
example, as noted by commenters,
Minnesota has established a minimum
threshold of 72.5 percent,104 while
Illinois has implemented a minimum
threshold of 77 percent, for similar
requirements for HCBS payments as we
proposed.105 To further clarify the data
that we used to inform our proposal,
which was referenced in footnote 81 in
the proposed rule (88 FR 27983 to
27984), we note the following examples
of different types of States’ wage passthrough requirements that States added
to spending plans for ARP section 9817:
• Indiana announced a Direct Service
Workforce Investment Grant in which
95 percent of the grant funds must be
spent on direct service professionals.106
• Massachusetts required that HCBS
providers use 90 percent of a rate
increase to support their direct care
workers.107
• North Carolina required that 80
percent of its rate increases for certain
HCBS be spent on direct care worker
wages.108
• West Virginia set different wage
pass-through requirements (ranging
from 50 percent to 100 percent) for the
amount of the rate increase that would
be allocated to direct care workers
providing services to beneficiaries in
several of the State’s waiver
programs.109
103 Information on State activities to expand,
enhance, or strengthen HCBS under ARP section
9817 can be found on Medicaid.gov at https://
www.medicaid.gov/medicaid/home-communitybased-services/guidance/strengthening-andinvesting-home-and-community-based-services-formedicaid-beneficiaries-american-rescue-plan-actof-2021-section-9817/.
104 See https://www.revisor.mn.gov/statutes/cite/
256B.85/pdf for more information.
105 See https://casetext.com/regulation/illinoisadministrative-code/title-89-social-services/part240-community-care-program/subpart-t-financialreporting/section-2402040-minimum-direct-serviceworker-costs-for-in-home-service for more
information.
106 Indiana Family and Social Services
Administration, ‘‘HCBS Enhanced FMAP Spending
Plan: Direct Service Workforce Investment Grant
Program,’’ https://www.in.gov/fssa/ompp/hcbsenhanced-fmap-spending-plan/.
107 Massachusetts Executive Office of Health and
Human Services, ‘‘Strengthening Home and
Community Based Services and Behavioral Health
Services Using American Rescue Plan (ARP)
Funding,’’ https://www.mass.gov/info-details/
strengthening-home-and-community-basedservices-and-behavioral-health-services-usingamerican-rescue-plan-arp-funding.
108 North Carolina Department of Health and
Human Services, North Carolina ‘‘January 2023
Quarterly Report for the Implementation of the
American Rescue Plan Act of 2021, Section 9817—
10% FMAP Increase for HCBS’’ https://
medicaid.ncdhhs.gov/hcbs-spending-plannarrative-january-2023/download?attachment.
109 West Virginia Department of Health and
Human Resources, ‘‘Spending Plan for
Implementation of American Rescue Plan Act of
PO 00000
Frm 00075
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40615
We acknowledge that we are unable to
present a State-by-State study of the
impact of a specific minimum
performance level on all State Medicaid
programs and providers. The variability
among HCBS programs (including
staffing requirements, service
definitions, and rate methodologies)
poses challenges to performing and
presenting a multi-State analysis of the
allocation of Medicaid payments to
direct care workers using existing
available data, such as rate studies or
cost reports. We also note that
information from EVV system reporting
would only pertain to use of personal
care services or home health aide
services (not homemaker services) and
would not speak to rates. We agree that
the reporting requirement we proposed,
and are finalizing in this rule, at
§ 441.311(e) may generate standardized
data that is more amenable to national
comparisons.
We also believe that the reporting
requirement at § 441.311(e) may yield
important data that will support
transparency around the portion of
Medicaid payments being shared with
direct care workers; such transparency
in and of itself may well encourage
States and providers to look critically at
their rates and how they are allocated.
Further, we believe that gathering and
sharing data about the amount of
Medicaid dollars that are going to the
compensation of workers is a critical
step in understanding the ways we can
enact policies that support the direct
care workforce and thereby help
advance access to high quality care for
Medicaid beneficiaries. However, we
believe that a reporting requirement
alone will not be as effective at
stabilizing the direct care workforce.
We believe that compensation levels
are a significant factor in the creation of
a stable workforce, and that a stable
workforce will result in better qualified
employees, lower turnover, and safer
and higher quality care. If individuals
are attracted to the HCBS workforce and
incentivized to remain employed in it
with sufficient compensation, the
workforce is more likely to be
comprised of workers with the training,
knowledge, and experience to meet the
diverse and often complex needs of
individuals with disabilities and older
adults receiving HCBS. A stable and
qualified workforce will also enable
beneficiaries to access providers of the
services they have been assessed to
need. As noted in an earlier comment
2021, Section 9817.’’ https://dhhr.wv.gov/bms/
News/Documents/WV%
20State%20ARP%20HCBS%20
Spending%20Plan.pdf.
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
40616
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
summary, commenters almost
unanimously agreed that the direct care
workforce shortage is posing extensive
challenges to HCBS access and quality
of care. We believe that setting a
minimum performance requirement that
we have determined to be reasonable
based on available information (and is
supported by many commenters) is an
appropriate exercise of our
responsibility to oversee the sufficiency
of Medicaid payments under section
1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act and States’
allocation of resources under section
2402(a) of the Affordable Care Act.
We agree that the data from States that
implemented wage pass-throughs
through activities in their ARP section
9817 spending plans is relatively recent.
However, we do not believe that data
should be disqualified simply because it
was generated recently; such data is
likelier to provide a more current
snapshot of States’ Medicaid rates and
the needs of their direct care workforce.
We also agree that States applied
wage pass-through requirements to rate
increases that they were implementing
as part of their ARP section 9817
spending plans and that at least some of
these wage pass-through requirements
were temporary. As such, these
percentages might not be as relevant to
the selection of a minimum performance
level as a permanent wage pass-through
requirement applied to the entire
Medicaid rate. That said, we do believe
that these data are useful for illustrating
that the need to support direct care
workers’ wages is relevant across the
country, and that States and interested
parties have not only identified
increases in wages for direct care
workers as a priority, but they have also
identified allocating specific portions of
Medicaid rates as an appropriate
mechanism for addressing low wages.
We echo a comment summarized earlier
that the advantage of establishing a
permanent minimum performance
requirement is that it creates a stable
support for the direct care workforce,
rather than intermittent increases in
compensation that are dependent on
specific actions taken by State or
Federal legislatures.
As observed by some commenters, the
percent we proposed, at 80 percent, is
slightly higher than the wage passthrough requirements set by Minnesota
and Illinois. We believe that the 80
percent minimum performance level we
are finalizing is informed by the current
range of the wage pass-through
requirements set by those States, but is
set slightly higher to encourage further
steps towards improving compensation
for workers. We also note that we are
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
not required to replicate precisely what
certain States have done.
We continue to believe 80 percent is
the feasible performance level to ensure
that payments made for Medicaid HCBS
are appropriately allocated to direct care
workers’ compensation to ensure
sufficient providers for beneficiaries to
access HCBS as approved in their
person-centered plans. However, given
that the 80 percent minimum
performance is higher than what States
have currently set in terms of permanent
wage pass-through requirements, we
will provide States with additional time
to come into compliance with the 80
percent performance level. We are
finalizing at § 441.302(k)(8) a
modification to the applicability date for
§ 441.302(k) to indicate that States must
comply with this requirement at
§ 441.302(k) beginning 6 years after the
effective date of this rule, rather than 4
years as proposed. We will continue to
use our standard enforcement tools and
discretion, as appropriate, when States
must comply with § 441.302(k). As
discussed in greater detail below, we are
also finalizing additional flexibilities
that States, at their option, may utilize
to apply a different percentage for small
providers and exempt certain providers
that experience hardships from the
State’s calculation for meeting these
performance levels. We also describe
below an exemption of the Indian
Health Service (IHS) and Tribal health
programs subject to 25 U.S.C. 1641 from
the HCBS payment adequacy
requirements.
Comment: A significant number of
commenters stated that an 80 percent
minimum performance level, if
finalized, would not leave providers
enough money for costs associated with
administrative tasks, programmatic
activities, supervision, technology,
office or facility expenses, training, or
travel reimbursement. Many
commenters noted the 80 percent
minimum performance level would
result in unintended consequences—
namely that affected HCBS providers
would cut back on services, limit or stop
serving Medicaid beneficiaries, or close
altogether. A few commenters expressed
concern that our proposal would result
in fewer new providers enrolling as
Medicaid HCBS providers. Many
commenters worried that such
reductions in available services or the
provider pool would reduce, rather than
increase, beneficiaries’ access to highquality HCBS. A few commenters
worried that HCBS provider closures, as
a result of the proposed policy, could
result in more beneficiaries moving into
institutional settings.
PO 00000
Frm 00076
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
Several commenters also expressed
the belief that the 80 percent minimum
performance level would discourage
innovation among providers. One
commenter suggested that providers
would be penalized if they relied on
assistive technology, remote supports,
or other technology solutions to support
beneficiaries in lieu of human
assistance.
Response: We thank commenters for
their feedback. As discussed in greater
detail later in this section, we are
modifying the policy we proposed at
§ 441.302(k)(3) to establish certain
exceptions from the minimum
performance level, and to establish a 6year effective date, rather than the 4
years we had proposed. We will
continue to use our standard
enforcement tools and discretion, as
appropriate, when States must comply
with § 441.302(k). As discussed in
greater detail below, we are also: (1)
adding a definition of excluded costs at
§ 441.302(k)(1)(iii) to exclude certain
costs from the minimum performance
level calculation of the percentage of
Medicaid payments to providers that is
spent on compensation for direct care
workers; (2) revising the definition of
direct care worker proposed at
§ 441.301(k)(1)(ii) to clarify that clinical
supervisors are included in the
definition of direct care workers; (3)
revising § 441.302(k)(3)(ii) to allow
States to set a separate minimum
performance level for small providers;
(4) adding a new provision at
§ 441.302(k)(4) to provide an option for
States to develop reasonable, objective
criteria to identify small providers to
meet a small provider minimum
performance level set by the State; (5)
adding a new provision at
§ 441.302(k)(5) to allow States to
develop reasonable, objective criteria to
exempt certain providers from meeting
the minimum performance level
requirement; and (6) adding a new
provision at § 441.302(k)(7) to exempt
the Indian Health Service (IHS) and
Tribal health programs subject to 25
U.S.C. 1641 from the HCBS payment
adequacy requirements at § 441.302(k).
We believe that these amended
requirements will address some
commenters’ concerns about leaving
providers sufficient administrative
funds for certain personnel and
administrative activities and will meet
the needs of providers that are small or
experiencing other challenges in
meeting the minimum performance
level.
We always encourage providers to
find innovative ways to deliver services
but believe that these services (even if
delivered with the assistance of
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
technology or telehealth) at their core
require direct care workers to provide
them. It is difficult to imagine how
strategies that do not aim to stabilize
direct care worker wages would
improve the efficacy or quality of these
services. We do believe, however, that
placing a limit on the amount of the
Medicaid payment going to expenses
other than direct care worker
compensation could encourage
innovative efforts to improve and
streamline administrative activities.
In response to commenters’ concerns
that this proposal would have the
unintended consequence of causing
program cuts or provider closures, we
do not believe this outcome would be
the result from implementing the
proposed minimum performance level.
We believe that the current
environment—in which providers and
beneficiaries routinely struggle to find
qualified direct care workers, and direct
care workers leave the HCBS workforce
for better-paying jobs—poses a
significant threat to access and
community integration because there
are an insufficient number of direct care
workers to meet beneficiaries’ needs. In
addition, the direct care worker shortage
threatens beneficiary access to services
and community integration as such
shortage may lead to provider closures
if providers are unable to find enough
workers to deliver services. This
shortage also threatens service quality
through the loss of well-trained and
experienced direct care workers, if left
unaddressed. Further, we believe that
the modifications we are finalizing to
this requirement will help to mitigate
these concerns.
Comment: Some commenters
(including beneficiaries, providers,
labor organizations, disability or legal
advocacy organizations, and research
and policy organizations) agreed that 80
percent was an appropriate or
reasonable payment adequacy
requirement. A couple of these
commenters based their support on
personal experience, including a few
who indicated that they were providers,
and stated that 80 percent was an
achievable minimum performance level.
A few commenters pointed out that the
medical loss ratio (MLR) for managed
care is 85 percent. One commenter
suggested that the minimum
performance level be increased to 85
percent to align with the MLR. One
commenter recommended that the 80
percent standard should account for
necessary administration of HCBS
programs, including training. This
commenter stated that, if it does not
account for necessary administration,
the payment rates that States and
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
managed care programs have
established are likely too low. The
commenter also recommended that,
once the requirement is implemented,
we review whether the percentage
should be higher than 80 percent.
A number of commenters suggested
alternative, lower minimum
performance levels. Several commenters
(including providers, State Medicaid
agencies, a labor organization, and an
advocacy organization) suggested
minimum performance levels ranging
from 70 percent to 75 percent. A few of
the commenters who recommended 75
percent self-identified as providers and
believed that 75 percent was achievable
based on their own experiences and
expenditure calculations. One
commenter recommended we mandate a
72.35 percent minimum performance
level and change the definition of
compensation to exclude the 7.65
percent employer share of FICA taxes
for direct care workers; the commenter
believed this would reduce confusion
regarding employers’ shares of taxes and
align the definition of compensation
with that used by some States. A few
commenters recommended 70 percent
based on experience with rate studies or
provider expenditures in their States.
Several commenters, including
providers and commenters representing
State agencies, recommended setting a
minimum performance level at either 60
percent or 65 percent, based on the
commenters’ personal experience
running a provider agency or overseeing
provider agencies. One commenter
suggested a minimum performance level
of 60 percent based on a hypothetical
analysis of one State’s HCBS rates and
projected expenditures.
While not making specific
recommendations, several commenters
(mostly providers and State Medicaid
agencies) submitted comments that
included anecdotal data of what
providers spend on compensation; these
percentages ranged from 55 to 81
percent.
Response: We thank commenters for
engaging in this issue, including sharing
their own experiences allocating
Medicaid payments. While we found
the feedback provided by commenters
instructive, both the range of
recommendations and the anecdotal
nature of information supporting most
of the recommendations prevented us
from relying on the recommendations to
finalize additional modifications to the
proposed minimum performance at the
provider level requirement at
§ 441.302(k)(3).
We do not agree that we should
increase the minimum performance
level upward to match the 85 percent
PO 00000
Frm 00077
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40617
MLR required in managed care as the
MLR is a calculation and associated
reporting requirement for Medicaid
managed care contracts in accordance
with § 438.8 and is not specific to
HCBS.
Additionally, as discussed previously
and in more detailed responses below,
we are finalizing some modifications
related to the exclusion of certain costs,
the inclusion of clinical supervisors in
the definition of direct care workers,
and options for a small provider
minimum performance level and
hardship exemptions for some providers
that will change somewhat the impact of
the minimum performance level.
Further, we are modifying the policy we
proposed at § 441.302(k) to establish
certain exceptions from the minimum
performance level proposed at
§ 441.302(k)(3), and requiring States to
comply beginning 6 years after the
effective date of this final rule, rather
than the 4 years we had proposed. We
will continue to use our standard
enforcement tools and discretion, as
appropriate, when the minimum
performance level requirement go into
effect. We believe these modifications
are necessary to balance the goal of
stabilizing the direct care workforce
with the operational realities faced by
providers of varying sizes and locations.
Comment: A few commenters
suggested that the minimum
performance level, if finalized, should
be applied at the State level, rather than
the provider level. Commenters
suggested that applying the minimum
performance level at the State level
would create some flexibility, as this
would require only that all providers in
the State meet the minimum
performance level in aggregate.
However, a few other commenters
recommended that we clarify that the
minimum performance level applies at
the provider level.
Response: We clarify that we intended
to propose that the minimum
performance level policy would apply at
the provider level, meaning that the
State must ensure that each provider
spends Medicaid payments they receive
for certain HCBS on direct care worker
compensation in accordance with the
minimum performance level
requirement. As noted previously, we
believe it is important for States to hold
providers individually accountable for
how they allocate their Medicaid
payments and are finalizing other
policies, discussed below and elsewhere
in this section II.B.5. of the final rule,
for States to accommodate providers
that need additional flexibility. We note
that there was an error in the heading
of § 441.302(k)(3), which was proposed
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
40618
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
as ‘‘Minimum performance at the State
level.’’ We apologize for any confusion
this may have caused; we believe that
most commenters, based on their
comments, understood the minimum
performance requirement to apply at the
provider level. Accordingly, we are
finalizing § 441.302(k)(3) with
modification by revising the heading for
§ 441.302(k)(3) to read ‘‘Minimum
performance at the provider level,’’ as it
was originally intended to read.
Additionally, to ensure that it is
understood that the minimum
performance level that must be met by
the State is calculated as the percentage
of total payment (not including
excluded costs, which are discussed in
greater detail in section II.B.5.d. of this
final rule) to a provider for furnishing
homemaker, home health aide, or
personal care services, as set forth at
§ 440.180(b)(2) through (4), represented
by the provider’s total compensation to
direct care workers. (New text in bold
font).
Comment: A significant number of
commenters worried that a national
minimum performance level, regardless
of the percentage, would have a
disparate impact on providers that are
small, new, in rural or underserved
areas, or run by/for people from specific
underserved communities (such as
indigenous people) or individuals for
whom English is a second language.
Some commenters worried that the
proposal favors large providers and
would lead to consolidation of
providers. A few other commenters
worried that this would mean that
beneficiaries would have fewer choices
of providers and have to work with
larger corporate providers. One
commenter worried that a national
minimum performance level would
have a disparate impact on agency
providers (which may have more
overhead costs), as opposed to providers
of self-directed services.
A number of commenters requested
that if we finalize a national payment
adequacy requirement, we include
additional flexibilities to minimize
unintended consequences on certain
providers, particularly small and rural
providers. One commenter suggested
that we allow for ‘‘hardship
exemptions’’ on a case-by-case basis.
One commenter suggested that we allow
States to exempt providers that pay
workers 200 percent of the Federal
Poverty Level. Another commenter
suggested that we exempt States from
the payment adequacy requirement if
the State has a minimum hourly base
wage of $15 per hour applicable to
direct care workers delivering the
affected services.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
Other commenters recommended
adjustments to the national minimum
performance level, rather than
exemptions. A few commenters
suggested that we allow for a variable
payment adequacy requirement or for
‘‘scaling’’ of the minimum performance
level, adjusted for different provider
sizes or different types of services. A
few other commenters recommended
requiring a range to identify rates,
which could vary by provider size,
number of Medicaid beneficiaries
served, rural or urban status, hardship
status (risk of closure), or other
characteristics. One commenter
suggested the rate could vary by
delivery system or service type. A
number of commenters recommended
that we allow States to set their own
payment adequacy requirement.
A small number of commenters raised
concerns that requiring a minimum
performance level would conflict with
25 U.S.C. 1641, governing how IHS and
Tribal health programs (as defined in 25
U.S.C. 1603(25)) may use Medicare and
Medicaid funds, and other applicable
laws providing for Tribal selfgovernance and self-determination. One
commenter recommended that we
exempt IHS and Tribal health programs
from the requirement.
Response: We believe that at least
some of commenters’ concerns about
provider impact may be alleviated by
some of the modifications we are
finalizing to our proposed policy in this
section II.B.5. of the final rule. In
particular, we are excluding travel costs
from the calculation of the minimum
performance level, as increased travel
expenses were cited as a primary
concern for rural providers. (We refer
readers to the discussion of the
definition of compensation and
excluded costs in section II.B.5.d. of this
rule, below.)
We note that the purpose of this
proposal is not to set a particular wage
for direct care workers, but to ensure
that Medicaid payments are being
allocated in ways that promote
efficiency, economy, and quality of care.
We believe that all States are
accountable to this requirement and
should hold their providers
accountable. However, we also agree
that some small providers may
experience additional challenges in
meeting a payment adequacy
requirement, as any fixed costs must be
covered by a smaller pool of revenues
than for larger providers, and small
providers have fewer opportunities for
administrative efficiencies than larger
providers do. We share commenters’
desires that the minimum performance
level not have a disparate impact on
PO 00000
Frm 00078
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
small providers, new providers that may
still be developing their processes,
providers that may, for various reasons,
have additional administrative tasks
(such as an increased need for
interpreter or translation services), or
providers that face disparately high
costs, such as providers that may have
to pay for temporary lodging for direct
care workers delivering services to
clients in extremely rural areas.
While we are finalizing a minimum
performance level at § 441.302(k)(3)(i) as
previously discussed that States must
apply to most of their providers, we also
agreed with commenters’ suggestions.
We are finalizing our policy with
modifications at § 441.302(k)(3)(ii) to
provide that States may apply a
different minimum percentage to small
providers that the States develop in
accordance with requirements at
§ 441.302(k)(4). These modifications at
§ 441.302(k)(3)(ii) and (k)(4) will allow
States the option to require a reasonable
number of small providers, as defined
using reasonable, objective criteria set
by the State through a transparent
process that must include public notice
and opportunities for comment from
interested parties, to meet a different
minimum performance level. This
separate minimum performance level
would also be set by the State based on
reasonable, objective criteria through a
transparent process that must include
public notice and opportunities for
comment from interested parties. In
order to apply a small provider
minimum performance level, States
must ensure it is supported by data or
other reasonable factors in the State. We
also note that States would still need to
collect and report data as required in
§ 441.302(k)(2) and § 441.311(e)
(discussed in section II.B.7. of this rule)
for providers subject to the small
provider minimum performance level.
Further, under our authority at
section 1902(a)(6) of the Act, we are
finalizing an additional provision at
§ 441.302(k)(6)(i), to require that States
that establish a small provider
minimum performance level in
accordance with § 441.302(k)(4) must
report to CMS annually, in the form and
manner, and at a time, specified by
CMS, on the following: the State’s small
provider criteria; the State’s small
provider minimum performance level;
the percent of providers of services set
forth at § 440.180(b)(2) through (4) that
qualify for the small provider
performance level; and a plan, subject to
CMS review and approval, for small
providers to meet the minimum
performance requirement at
§ 441.302(k)(3)(i) within a reasonable
period of time.
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
We also agree with commenters that
some providers may experience
hardships with meeting a payment
adequacy requirement because, for
instance, they are new to serving
Medicaid beneficiaries and thus have
not had time to develop administrative
efficiencies. Additionally, we agree that
special attention needs to be paid where
a provider may be at risk of closure and
could cause beneficiaries to lose access
to HCBS in a particular area. We also
agree that States are best positioned to
identify the nature of the hardships and
which providers are experiencing these
hardships. As a result, we are finalizing
a modification at § 441.302(k)(5) to
allow States to develop reasonable,
objective criteria through a transparent
process to exempt from the minimum
performance requirement at
§ 441.302(k)(3) a reasonable number of
providers determined by the State to be
facing extraordinary circumstances that
prevent their compliance with
§ 441.302(k)(3). The State must develop
these criteria through a transparent
process that includes public notice and
opportunities for comment from
interested parties. If a provider meets
the State’s hardship exemption criteria,
the provider should be excluded from
the State’s calculation of the minimum
performance level at § 441.302(k)(3). We
note that we expect that most providers
would be subject to a hardship
exemption on a temporary basis, and
that States would still need to collect
and report data as required in
§ 441.302(k)(2) and § 441.311(e) for
providers with hardship exemptions.
Further, under our authority at
section 1902(a)(6) of the Act, we are
finalizing an additional provision at
§ 441.302(k)(6)(ii) to require that States
that provide a hardship exemption to
providers facing extraordinary
circumstances must report to CMS
annually, in the form and manner, and
at a time, specified by CMS, on the
State’s hardship criteria, the percentage
of providers of services set forth at
§ 440.180(b)(2) through (4) that qualify
for a hardship exemption, and a plan,
subject to CMS review and approval, for
reducing the number of providers that
qualify for a hardship exemption within
a reasonable period of time.
We plan to issue guidance on both the
small provider performance level and
the hardship exemption and encourage
States to consult with CMS as they
develop their criteria. However, we note
that, for States in which a small
proportion of providers (less than 10
percent of the total number of providers
of services at § 440.180(b)(2) through
(4)) qualify for either the small provider
performance level or a hardship
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
exemption, CMS may waive the
requirements, at § 441.302(k)(6)(i)(D),
for States to report on a plan for small
providers to meet the minimum
performance level at § 441.302(k)(3)(i)
within a reasonable period of time, and
at § 441.302(k)(6)(ii)(C), for States to
report on a plan for reducing the
number of providers that qualify for a
hardship exemption within a reasonable
period of time. We are finalizing this
waiver at § 441.302(k)(6)(iii).
In addition, we are modifying the date
for when States must comply with the
requirements at § 441.302(k) to be
beginning 6 years after the effective date
of the final rule, rather than the 4 years
we had proposed. (We refer readers to
our discussion in II.B.5.h. of this rule.)
We will continue to use our standard
enforcement tools and discretion, as
appropriate, when the minimum
performance level requirement goes into
effect.
Finally, we are persuaded by
commenters who raised concerns about
interactions between statutory
requirements for IHS and certain Tribal
health programs health programs subject
to 25 U.S.C. 1641 and the proposed
requirement at § 441.302(k). Congress
has already passed laws, such as 25
U.S.C. 1641, specifying how IHS and
Tribal health programs (as defined in 25
U.S.C. 1603(25)) are to use their
Medicaid collections. Because Congress
has already specified how such funds
must be used, we are finalizing an
exemption at § 441.302(k)(7) to the
HCBS payment adequacy requirements
at § 441.302(k) for IHS and Tribal health
programs subject to 25 U.S.C. 1641.
After consideration of the comments
received, we are finalizing
§ 441.302(k)(3) with modifications, as
well as finalizing new requirements at
§ 441.302(k)(4), (5), and (6). The
requirements we are finalizing with
modifications are as follows:
We are finalizing § 441.302(k)(3) with
several modifications to retitle the
requirement as Minimum performance
at the provider level and clarify the
components of the required calculation
and the services that fall within this
requirement. We also made
modifications at § 441.302(k)(3) to
clarify that excluded costs are not
included in the calculation of the
percentage of total payments to a
provider that is spent on compensation
to direct care workers and to specify the
specific services (homemaker, home
health aide, and personal care services)
to which the payment adequacy
requirement applies. We are also
modifying § 441.302(k)(3) to note the
exceptions to the minimum
performance level that we are adding at
PO 00000
Frm 00079
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40619
(k)(5) (hardship exemption) and (k)(7)
(IHS and Tribal health programs subject
to 25 U.S.C. 1641). As finalized,
§ 441.302(k)(3) specifies that, except as
provided in paragraphs (k)(5) and (7),
the State must meet the following
minimum performance level as
applicable, calculated as the percentage
of total payment (not including
excluded costs) to a provider for
furnishing homemaker, home health
aide, or personal care services, as set
forth at § 440.180(b)(2) through (4),
represented by the provider’s total
compensation to direct care workers.
(New text in bold font).
We are modifying the language at
§ 441.302(k)(3)(i) to read that the
minimum performance level of 80
percent applies to all payments to a
provider, except as provided in
paragraph (k)(3)(ii). We are finalizing a
new requirement at § 441.302(k)(3)(ii) to
read that at the State’s option, for
providers determined by the State to
meet its State-defined small provider
criteria in paragraph (k)(4)(i) of this
section, the State must ensure that each
provider spends the percentage set by
the State in accordance with paragraph
(k)(4)(ii) of this section of total
payments the provider receives for
services it furnishes as described in
paragraph (k)(3) of this section on total
compensation for direct care workers
who furnish those services.
We are redesignating the applicability
date we proposed at § 441.302(k)(4) as
§ 441.302(k)(8), as discussed further in
section II.B.5.f. of this rule. We are
finalizing a new § 441.302(k)(4) and
adding new paragraphs (i) and (ii) to
provide an option for States to develop
reasonable, objective criteria through a
transparent process to identify small
providers to meet the State-defined
small provider minimum performance
level; require that the transparent
process for developing criteria to
identify providers that meet the small
provider minimum performance level
must include public notice and
opportunities for comment from
interested parties; and require that the
small provider minimum performance
level be set based on reasonable,
objective criteria the State develops
through a transparent process that
includes public notice and
opportunities for comment from
interested parties.
We are finalizing a new
§ 441.302(k)(5) to allow States to
develop reasonable, objective criteria
through a transparent process to exempt
from the minimum performance
requirement at § 441.302(k)(3) a
reasonable number of providers
determined by the State to be facing
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
40620
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
extraordinary circumstances that
prevent their compliance with
§ 441.302(k)(3). The State must develop
these criteria through a transparent
process that includes public notice and
opportunities for comment from
interested parties. If a provider meets
the State’s hardship exemption criteria,
the provider should be excluded by the
State from its calculation of the State’s
compliance with the minimum
performance level at § 441.302(k)(3).
We are finalizing a new provision at
§ 441.302(k)(6) to require States to
report on their development and use of
the small provider minimum
performance level and hardship
exemption. Specifically, at
§ 441.302(k)(6)(i), States that establish a
small provider minimum performance
level in accordance with § 441.302(k)(4)
must report to CMS annually, in the
form and manner, and at a time,
specified by CMS, on the following: the
State’s small provider criteria; the
State’s small provider minimum
performance level; the percent of
providers of services at § 440.180(b)(2)
through (4) that qualify for the small
provider performance level; and a plan,
subject to CMS review and approval, for
small providers to meet the minimum
performance requirement at
§ 441.302(k)(3)(i) within a reasonable
period of time. We are also requiring at
§ 441.302(k)(6)(ii) that States that
provide a hardship exemption to
providers facing extraordinary
circumstances must report to CMS
annually, in the form and manner, and
at a time, specified by CMS, on the
State’s hardship criteria, the percentage
of providers of services at
§ 440.180(b)(2) through (4) that qualify
for a hardship exemption, and a plan,
subject to CMS review and approval, for
reducing the number of providers that
qualify for a hardship exemption within
a reasonable period of time.
Additionally, we are finalizing a waiver
at § 441.302(k)(6)(iii) that specifies that
CMS may waive the reporting
requirements in paragraphs (6)(i)(D) or
(6)(ii)(C), as applicable, if the State
demonstrates it has applied the small
provider minimum performance level at
§ 441.302(k)(4)(ii) or the hardship
exemption at § 441.302(k)(5) to a small
proportion of the State’s providers.
Finally, we are finalizing a new
§ 441.302(k)(7) specifying that the
Indian Health Service and Tribal health
programs subject to the requirements at
25 U.S.C. 1641 are exempt from the
requirements at § 441.302(k).
c. Other Services (§ 441.302(k)(3))
We considered whether the
requirements we proposed at
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
§ 441.302(k)(3)(i) related to the percent
of Medicaid payments going to the
direct care workforce should apply to
other services in addition to
homemaker, home health aide, or
personal care services (as set forth at
§ 440.180(b)(2) through (4)), such as
adult day health, habilitation, day
treatment or other partial
hospitalization services, psychosocial
rehabilitation services, and clinic
services for individuals with chronic
mental illness. However, these services
may have facility or other indirect costs
for which we do not have adequate
information to determine a minimum
percent of the payment that should be
spent on compensation for the direct
care workforce. We requested comment
on whether the proposed requirements
at § 441.302(k)(3)(i) related to the
percent of payments going to the direct
care workforce should apply to other
services listed at § 440.180(b). In
particular, in recognition of the
importance of services provided to
individuals with intellectual or
developmental disabilities, we
requested comment on whether the
proposed requirements at
§ 441.302(k)(3)(i) related to the percent
of payments going to the direct care
workforce should apply to residential
habilitation services, day habilitation
services, and home-based habilitation
services.
We also requested comment on the
following options for the minimum
percentage of payments that must be
spent on compensation to direct care
workers for each specific service that
this provision should apply if this
provision should apply to other services
at § 440.180(b): (1) 65 percent; (2) 70
percent; (3) 75 percent; and (4) 80
percent. Specifically, we requested that
commenters respond separately on the
minimum percentage of payments for
services delivered in a non-residential
community-based facility, day center,
senior center, or other dedicated
physical space, which would be
expected to have higher other indirect
costs and facility costs built into the
Medicaid payment rate than other
HCBS. If an alternate minimum
percentage is recommended, we
requested that commenters provide the
rationale for that minimum percentage.
We further clarified that we were
requesting comment on a different range
of options for the other services at
§ 440.180(b) than for the services at
§ 440.180(b)(2) through (4) because we
expect that some of the other services at
§ 440.180(b), such as adult day health
and day habilitation services, may have
higher other indirect costs and facility
costs than the services at § 440.180(b)(2)
PO 00000
Frm 00080
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
through (4). We also requested that
commenters respond separately on the
minimum percentage of payments for
facility-based residential services and
other facility-based round-the-clock
services that have other indirect costs
and facility costs that would be paid for
at least in part by room and board
payments that Medicaid does not cover.
If a minimum percentage is
recommended for any services, we
requested that commenters provide the
rationale for that minimum percentage.
We received public comments on
these proposals. The following is a
summary of the comments we received
and our responses.
Comment: One commenter requested
additional clarification on how the
services we proposed to be included in
the requirements at § 441.302(k)(3) were
selected. One commenter suggested that
we only apply the minimum
performance requirement to personal
care services. The commenter suggested
we could align the requirement with the
EVV system reporting requirement,110
which applies to personal care services,
including personal care services
delivered as part of habilitation services.
Response: The priority of this
proposal is to support the direct care
workforce, and to this end we have
focused on accountability for services
that rely on direct care workers to
perform the core activities. As noted in
the background discussion of this
provision and in previous responses, the
services subject to the minimum
performance requirement were selected
because they are unlikely to have
facility costs as part of the rate or as a
component of the core service. We also
note that the data we reviewed when
determining an appropriate minimum
performance requirement focused on
home-based services, not facility-based
services. Additionally, as identified in
an analysis performed by CMS, the three
services we proposed to be subject to
this requirement at § 441.302(k) fall
within the taxonomy of home-based
services, which are both high-volume
and high-cost.111 Thus, we believe that
targeting these services will maximize
the impact of this requirement by
addressing the needs of many
beneficiaries and promoting better
oversight of the allocation of Medicaid
rates for frequently used services. Given
these similarities among homemaker,
home health aide, and personal care
110 Section 12006 of the 21st Century Cures Act
(Pub. L. 114–255).
111 Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services.
‘‘Trends in Rate Methodologies for High-Cost, High
Volume Taxonomies.’’ https://www.medicaid.gov/
sites/default/files/2019-12/trends-in-rate-august2017.pdf. Last access October 2, 2023.
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
services, we cannot find a justification
for removing homemaker and home
health aide services from this
requirement.
Comment: A few commenters
requested that we provide a more
specific definition of personal care
services. Commenters noted that States
do not always use HCBS taxonomies
consistently, and personal care services
can be applied to a different
constellation of activities in different
waivers. Similarly, one commenter
noted that the lack of definitions in the
proposed rule for homemaker, home
health aide, and personal care services
is problematic because States do not use
these terms consistently and use a
variety of different terms to describe
these services.
Response: We understand that States
have service definitions for homemaker,
home health aide, and personal care
services that differ from the definition of
homemaker, home health aide, and
personal care services in the section
1915(c) waiver Technical Guide 112 and
that States do not always use these
terms consistently. However, codifying
definitions of homemaker, home health
aide, and personal care services would
have broad implications for State’s
HCBS programs that would extend
beyond the HCBS payment adequacy
requirements in this final rule. We will
provide additional subregulatory
guidance and technical assistance to aid
in implementation of the HCBS
payment adequacy requirements and
may consider addressing in future
rulemaking.
Comment: Many commenters
responded to our solicitation for
comment on whether we should include
habilitation services in the services
subject to the minimum performance
requirement. Most commenters who
responded did not believe that
habilitation services should be included
in the requirement. They echoed our
concerns that these services are likelier
to include at least some activities in a
provider-operated facility or residential
setting, which changes the expected
costs of providing and allocation of the
payment for these services.
Much of the public feedback around
habilitation services focused on the
facility or residential portion of those
services. Commenters noted that rent,
utilities, property maintenance, and
other costs associated with residential
or facility-based services can vary
112 See Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services,
‘‘Application for a § 1915(c) Home and Community
Based Waiver: Instructions, Technical Guide and
Review Criteria.’’ January 2019. Available at https://
wms-mmdl.cms.gov/WMS/help/35/Instructions_
TechnicalGuide_V3.6.pdf.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
significantly. One commenter suggested
that if residential habilitation was
included in the minimum performance
requirement, the minimum performance
level for residential habilitation should
be set at 75 percent to account for
additional administrative costs. A few
other commenters suggested that a
different minimum performance level
should be set for habilitation services, if
included, but did not specify a
particular percentage.
Some commenters also suggested that
residential services might require more,
or different staffing levels, as well as
different types of staff than home-based
services, which might change the
necessary minimum performance level.
Commenters disagreed, however, on
whether these staffing differences would
necessitate a higher or lower minimum
performance level than for in-home
services, and commenters did not
recommend a percentage to specifically
address the perceived differences in
staffing. One commenter objected to any
discussion of residential settings, out of
concern that this would appear to
promote congregate settings in violation
of the home and community-based
settings requirements; the commenter
stated that all services should be
provided in the community.
Several commenters recommended
that we not apply the minimum
performance level at § 441.302(k)(3)(i) to
habilitation services and encouraged us
to collect data on the percent of
payments for habilitation services.
Response: We believe that the
comments we received affirm our
decision not to apply the HCBS
payment adequacy policy we are
finalizing at § 441.302(k) to habilitation
or other facility-based services (in
which services are delivered in a
provider-operated physical location and
for which facility-related costs are
included in the Medicaid payment rate)
due to the number of additional or
variable expenses associated with
facility-based services. While outside
the scope of this final rule, we refer
readers to and our requirements for, and
the criteria of, a home and communitybased setting at § 441.301(c)(4) and (5).
We agree with commenters that
additional data collection on
habilitation services would be useful.
Please refer to the discussion of
§ 441.311(e) in section II.B.7. of this
rule, below.
Comment: Although not necessarily
supporting the inclusion of habilitation
services in the minimum performance
requirement, commenters worried about
the impact on beneficiaries receiving
habilitation services, who are largely
individuals with intellectual or
PO 00000
Frm 00081
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40621
developmental disabilities or behavioral
health needs. Some commenters stated
that direct care workers who had been
providing habilitation services might
switch to working for providers that
offer homemaker, home health aide, or
personal care services because they
believed that the requirements at
§ 441.302(k), if finalized, would lead to
increased wages paid to these workers
or to Medicaid agencies allocating more
resources for these services. One
commenter speculated that, if a lower
minimum performance level was set for
residential habilitation, this would
encourage more services to be provided
in congregate settings because providers
would try to take advantage of the lower
minimum performance level. Several
commenters that provided services to
people with intellectual disabilities and
people with mental illness suggested we
amend § 441.302(k)(3)(i) to specify an
exclusion for direct care workers (or
direct service professionals) providing
services for individuals with intellectual
and developmental disabilities or severe
mental illness, as they believed that
many of these services are delivered as
facility-based habilitation services; the
commenters were concerned that these
providers have additional noncompensation expenses that are not
considered by the proposal, and that it
was unclear whether facility-based
services were already excluded from the
proposal.
Response: We agree that, by excluding
habilitation services from this
requirement, we are excluding services
that are used more frequently by certain
populations. This was not our intent,
and we do not intend to explicitly
exclude certain services from this
requirement on the basis of the
population receiving the service.
However, as noted above, because of
differences in these services, we do not
believe we can set an appropriate
minimum performance level for these
services at this time. Although we are
not requiring that habilitation or other
facility-based services (in which
services are delivered in a provideroperated physical location and for
which facility-related costs are included
in the Medicaid payment rate) be
included in the minimum performance
requirement, States are able to set wage
pass-through requirements of their own
for such services to promote the stability
of the workforce; we also believe that
States may naturally adjust rates or
wages in other services in response to
the implementation of the minimum
performance requirement for
homemaker, home health aide, and
personal care services.
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
40622
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
Comment: One commenter expressed
a concern that the minimum
performance requirement would apply
to skilled nursing facilities. Several
commenters requested that we clarify in
§ 441.302(k)(3)(i) that direct care
workers would be excluded from the
minimum performance requirement if
they are providing services in
residential settings. One commenter
requested that we clarify that assisted
living facilities or assisted living
services are not included in the
minimum performance requirement,
while another commenter raised
concern about a lack of clarity about
whether the requirement applies to
assisted living facilities.
Response: The requirements we are
finalizing in this section II.B. of this rule
only apply to HCBS, and the minimum
performance requirement at
§ 441.302(k)(3) applies specifically to
homemaker, home health aide, and
personal care services as set forth at
§ 440.180(b)(2) through (4). However,
while the minimum performance
requirement would not apply to
institutional services (because those are
not HCBS), we decline to explicitly
restrict the application of this
requirement on the basis of different
community-based settings. As we noted
in prior responses, we selected
homemaker, home health aide, and
personal care services because these are
typically services delivered in the home.
However, we acknowledge that
beneficiaries may live in different
residential settings that are considered
homes, and that these services may be
bundled with other services delivered to
beneficiaries in residential settings.
Comment: A number of commenters
requested that we add private duty
nursing to the services subject to the
minimum performance requirement.
Response: We believe that at least
some commenters may be referring to
private duty nursing as defined at
section 1905(a)(8) of the Act and
§ 440.80 of our regulations. As
discussed in greater detail below in
section II.B.5.g. of this rule, we are not
planning to require that the minimum
performance level be applied to services
authorized under section 1905(a) at this
time. We note that home health aide
services, included in § 440.180(b)(3) but
authorized as part of a section 1915(c)
waiver, are included in the minimum
performance requirement. It is possible
that some services that commenters are
characterizing as ‘‘private duty nursing’’
may fall within the category of a section
1915(c) home health aide service, even
as we acknowledge that Federal
requirements for private duty nursing
specify that these are skilled care
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
services provided by a registered nurse
or licensed practical nurse.
Comment: A few commenters
recommended that we apply the
minimum performance requirement to a
number of other services that are
experiencing staffing shortages,
including: job supports; respite
provided in the community; community
habilitation services; in-home cognitive
rehabilitation therapy; and in-home
physical, occupational and speech
therapy services. A few commenters
suggested, without specifying which
services, that the minimum performance
requirement ought to be expanded to
other services, or that it would be easier
to administer if applied to a broader
array of services than just homemaker,
home health aide, and personal care
services.
Response: We thank the commenters
for their suggestions and will take them
under consideration for potential future
rulemaking. As we noted earlier in this
section of the final rule, we selected
homemaker, home health aide, and
personal care services because they are
services for which we expect that the
vast majority of payment to be
comprised of compensation for direct
care workers. Further, they are highvolume and high-cost services,113 and as
a result, we believe that targeting these
services will maximize the impact of
this requirement by addressing the
needs of many beneficiaries and
promoting better oversight of the
allocation of Medicaid rates for
frequently used services. We note that
States are able to apply wage passthrough requirements to additional
services if they choose.
After consideration of the comments
received, we are finalizing our proposed
language at § 441.302(k)(3) to apply the
minimum performance requirement to
homemaker, home health aide, and
personal care services as set forth at
§ 440.180(b)(2) through (4).
d. Definition of Compensation
(§ 441.302(k)(1)(i))
At § 441.302(k)(1)(i), we proposed to
define compensation to include salary,
wages, and other remuneration as
defined by the Fair Labor Standards Act
and implementing regulations (29
U.S.C. 201 et seq., 29 CFR parts 531 and
778), and benefits (such as health and
dental benefits, sick leave, and tuition
reimbursement). In addition, we
proposed to define compensation to
include the employer share of payroll
113 Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services.
‘‘Trends in Rate Methodologies for High-Cost, High
Volume Taxonomies.’’ https://www.medicaid.gov/
sites/default/files/2019-12/trends-in-rate-august2017.pdf. Last access October 2, 2023.
PO 00000
Frm 00082
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
taxes for direct care workers delivering
services under section 1915(c) waivers.
We considered whether to include
training or other costs in our proposed
definition of compensation. However,
we determined that a definition that
more directly assesses the financial
benefits to workers would better ensure
that a sufficient portion of the payment
for services went to direct care workers,
as it is unclear that the cost of training
and other workforce activities is an
appropriate way to quantify the benefit
of those activities for workers. We
requested comment on whether the
definition of compensation should
include other specific financial and
non-financial forms of compensation for
direct care workers.
We received public comments on
these proposals. The following is a
summary of the comments we received
and our responses.
Comment: A couple of commenters
noted support for our definition of
compensation and encouraged us to
finalize the definition as proposed.
Response: We thank the commenters
for their support.
Comment: Several commenters
expressed concern that workers’
overtime pay would not be considered
part of the definition of compensation.
Response: Our definition of
compensation as proposed at
§ 441.302(k)(1)(i)(A) included salary,
wages, ‘‘and other remuneration as
defined by the Fair Labor Standards
Act’’ and its regulations. As the Fair
Labor Standards Act includes overtime
pay in its definition of wages, overtime
pay therefore is included in our
definition of compensation as well.
Comment: Many commenters
supported the inclusion of health and
dental insurance and sick leave in the
definition of benefits at
§ 441.302(k)(1)(i)(B). A few commenters
requested that life insurance, disability
insurance, and retirement contributions
also be added to this definition. Several
commenters also requested clarification
as to whether paid time off was
included in the definition of
compensation, and a few suggested that
it should be included.
One commenter noted that our
definition of compensation was too
broad, particularly the use of the term
‘‘such as’’ when describing the
inclusion of benefits. The commenter
expressed concern that employers could
over-include items in compensation by
calling them ‘‘benefits.’’ One commenter
worried that if too many benefits were
included in compensation, this would
reduce workers’ take-home pay.
One commenter expressed concerns
that it will be difficult for State
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
Medicaid agencies to quantify benefits
included in direct care worker
compensation.
Response: We believe that all the
items identified by these commenters—
life insurance, disability insurance,
retirement, and paid time off—would be
reasonably considered part of
compensation. In its glossary, the
Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) defines
compensation as ‘‘employer costs for
wages, salaries, and employee benefits,’’
and notes that the National
Compensation Survey includes the
following categories in employee
benefits: insurance (life insurance,
health benefits, short-term disability,
and long-term disability insurance);
paid leave (vacations, holidays, and sick
leave); and retirement (defined benefit
and defined contribution plans).114 We
believe the items suggested by the
commenters align with our intent and
are reflected by a common
understanding of ‘‘benefits’’ as
exemplified in the BLS glossary.
To help clarify what is meant by
‘‘benefits,’’ we are modifying the
language we proposed at
§ 441.302(k)(1)(i)(B) in this final rule.
We are retaining ‘‘health and dental
benefits’’ but also are adding to the list
‘‘life and disability insurance.’’ We note
that the definition used by BLS simply
refers to health benefits, life insurance,
and different types of disability
insurance collectively as ‘‘insurance,’’
but we believe that spelling out
examples of types of insurance is useful
here. In the context of our definition,
‘‘insurance’’ listed by itself might be
unclear (since it could be confused with
other types of insurance that would not
be considered compensation, like
employers’ liability insurance), and we
wish to make it clear that the benefits
must benefit the employee directly. We
are also modifying ‘‘sick leave’’ to the
broader term ‘‘paid leave,’’ as this
should be understood to cover any time
for which the employee is paid, whether
it be for sick leave, holidays, vacations,
and so forth. We also are adding
retirement, which we believe is also a
useful blanket term for different types of
retirement plans or contributions on the
employee’s behalf. After consideration
of public comments, we are finalizing
§ 441.302(k)(1)(i)(B) with modification
to specify that compensation includes
benefits, such as health and dental
benefits, life and disability insurance,
paid leave, retirement, and tuition
reimbursement.
When proposing that benefits be
included in the definition of
compensation, we intentionally
included the phrase ‘‘such as’’ to
indicate that the examples of benefits
provided in the definition is not
exhaustive. We did not attempt to list
all possible benefits in the regulatory
definition, as we believe that would run
the risk of creating a definition that is
too narrow. We plan to provide
technical assistance to States on how to
help ensure that providers are applying
a reasonable definition of ‘‘benefits’’ and
are only counting expenses thereunder
that would reasonably be considered an
employee benefit.
Comment: Some commenters
supported including employers’ share of
payroll taxes in the definition of
compensation at § 441.302(k)(1)(i)(C).
However, several commenters
recommended that this expense be
removed from the definition, as these
are not expenses included in employees’
take-home pay and are the
responsibility of the employer. Several
commenters requested that employers’
contributions to worker’s compensation
and unemployment insurance be
included in the definition of
compensation.
Response: It is our intent to include
employers’ payroll tax contributions for
unemployment insurance and
workman’s compensation (as well as
payments required by the Federal
Insurance Compensation Act) under
§ 441.302(k)(1)(i)(C) and thus as part of
our definition of compensation for the
purposes of the requirements at
§ 441.302(k). While not necessarily paid
directly to the workers, these expenses
are paid on their behalf. We also note,
for instance, that per the BLS, the
National Compensation Survey calls
these payroll taxes ‘‘legally mandated
employee benefits’’ and includes them
as part of the definition of ‘‘employee
benefits’’ for the purposes of
determining compensation.115 We plan
to provide technical assistance to States
on how to help ensure that providers are
including payroll tax contributions for
unemployment insurance and
workman’s compensation when
reporting on compensation to workers.
Comment: Several commenters noted
support for including tuition
reimbursement in the definition of
compensation. Several commenters
suggested that costs associated with
continuing education should also be
included as compensation.
Response: We appreciate the
commenters’ support. We believe the
term ‘‘tuition reimbursement’’ is broad
enough to cover a variety of scenarios in
114 See BLS ‘‘Glossary’’ at https://www.bls.gov/
bls/glossary.htm.
115 See BLS ‘‘Glossary’’ at https://www.bls.gov/
bls/glossary.htm.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
PO 00000
Frm 00083
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40623
which a provider may choose to
reimburse a worker for tuition costs
incurred either prior to or during their
period of employment.
Comment: A number of commenters
supported either including training in
the definition of compensation or
excluding training from the
administrative and other expenses that
are not considered compensation under
this rule. Some of these commenters
noted that certain types of services or
programs might involve additional
training for staff, such as services
delivered to beneficiaries with complex
needs. One commenter suggested that
raising workers’ wages will not
necessarily increase service quality if it
is not accompanied by better training for
staff. Another commenter worried that
providers could decide to cut back on
training in order to meet the minimum
performance level, which could
endanger workers. Commenters cited
examples of trainings, including inservice trainings and cardiopulmonary
resuscitation trainings, as being critical
for caring for beneficiaries. Several
commenters suggested that direct care
workers who serve beneficiaries with
higher-acuity needs may require
additional training than other direct
care workers.
Commenters suggested that, if training
was included in the definition of
‘‘compensation’’ (or was excluded from
administrative and other expenses that
are not considered compensation under
this rule), training should be defined to
include time spent in training, training
materials, trainers, and training
facilities.
Conversely, one commenter stated
that if training was included in the
definition of compensation, the
minimum performance level should be
adjusted further upward (above 80
percent). One commenter stated that if
training was included as compensation
to direct care workers, this cost should
be restricted to the time workers spend
in training and not include training
materials and payments made to the
trainer. One commenter stated that the
cost of onboarding new staff should not
be considered ‘‘training.’’ One
commenter expressed skepticism that
training was truly a major cost for
providers.
Response: We clarify that the time
direct care workers spend in training
would already be accounted for in the
definition of compensation. We agree
with commenters on several points: that
training is critical to the quality of
services; that training needs might vary
across (or even within) States’ Medicaid
HCBS programs, depending on the
nature of the services or the acuity of
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
40624
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
the beneficiaries served; that training
costs may be difficult to standardize;
and that worker training is essential to
quality, as well as the health and safety
of both the direct care worker and the
beneficiary. We do not want to
encourage providers to reduce training
to cut administrative costs.
However, we are also reluctant upon
considering comments to treat all
training costs as ‘‘compensation’’ to the
direct care worker. Trainings, as
commenters noted, are often required as
part of the job and may vary depending
on the services or the needs of the
beneficiaries they serve. We are
concerned that including training costs
in the definition of compensation could
mean that direct care workers with
higher training requirements would see
more of their ‘‘compensation’’ going to
training expenses, which could cause
them to receive lower take-home pay
than colleagues with fewer training
requirements.
Rather than include training costs in
the definition of compensation at
§ 441.302(k)(1)(i)), we are creating a new
definition at § 441.302(k)(1)(iii) to
define excluded costs for the purposes
of the payment adequacy requirement at
§ 441.302(k)(3). Excluded costs are those
that are not included in the State’s
calculation of the percentage of
Medicaid payments that is spent on
compensation for direct care workers
required at § 441.302(k)(3). In other
words, States would ensure providers
deduct these costs from their total
Medicaid payments before performing
the calculation. We are specifying at
§ 441.302(k)(3)(iii) that excluded costs
are limited to: training costs (such as
costs for training materials or payment
to qualified trainers); travel costs for
direct care workers (such as mileage
reimbursement or public transportation
subsidies); and costs of personal
protective equipment for direct care
workers. This would mean that
providers could deduct the total eligible
training expenses, travel costs, and
personal protective equipment for direct
care workers from the total payments
they receive for homemaker, home
health aide, and personal care services
before the compensation percentage is
determined for the minimum
performance level as required under
§ 441.302(k)(3).
The training costs that are excluded
costs under § 441.302(k)(1)(iii) are
limited to those costs associated with
the training itself (such as qualified
trainers and materials) and are distinct
from the compensation paid to a direct
care worker participating in the training
as part of their employment duties
under § 441.302(k)(1)(i).
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
Comment: One commenter requested
clarification as to whether travel
expenses were part of the definition of
‘‘compensation.’’ Many commenters
stated that travel or transportation
expenses should be included in the
definition of compensation, or not
treated as an administrative expense.
Many commenters also expressed the
concern that it would be difficult to
cover the cost of travel as part of
administrative expenses and other
expenses that are not considered
compensation under this rule,
especially in rural areas where direct
care workers may have to travel large
distances to visit clients or transport
them to appointments. A few
commenters worried that if travel were
considered an administrative expense,
providers would be reluctant to serve
beneficiaries outside of a narrow service
area to save on travel expenses. A
number of direct care workers shared
experiences of having to pay for gas outof-pocket when they transported
beneficiaries and having to shoulder the
financial burden of wear-and-tear on
their cars. One commenter noted that
travel costs are frequently included in
rate calculations. Several commenters
suggested that ‘‘travel,’’ if included in
the definition of compensation, should
include time workers spent travelling,
mileage reimbursement, and public
transportation reimbursement.
However, a few commenters
specifically noted that travel should not
be considered part of the definition of
compensation. One commenter noted
that due to the variability of travel costs,
it would be difficult to include travel in
a standardized definition of
compensation.
Response: We agree with commenters
that certain travel-related expenses
should not be considered compensation
to direct care workers. Travelling to
beneficiaries’ homes or assisting them in
the community is an essential function
of the job, and thus, travel
reimbursement is not for the direct care
worker’s personal benefit.116 We also
agree that travel costs will vary
significantly by region and even by
beneficiary. We too are concerned that
including travel in the definition of
compensation could mean that direct
care workers with higher travel
demands would see more of their
compensation going to travel, which
could cause them to receive lower take116 See 29 U.S.C. 207(e)(2) (permitting employers
to exclude ‘‘reasonable payments for traveling
expenses’’ when determining an employee’s regular
rate of pay under the FLSA); see also 29 CFR
778.217 (same).
PO 00000
Frm 00084
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
home pay than colleagues with lower
travel demands.
At the same time, we are aware of the
critical importance of travel to the
delivery of these services and do not
want to create unintended
consequences. We are persuaded by
commenters’ concerns that counting
travel as an administrative expense
could induce some providers to stop
serving beneficiaries that live outside
certain regions. We would also be
concerned if direct care workers were
expected to shoulder the financial
burden of travel out-of-pocket, as
appears to be happening in some cases
now.
To preserve beneficiary access to
services and avoid burden or disparate
impact on beneficiaries, direct care
workers, and providers in rural or
underserved areas, we are excluding
travel costs in this final rule from the
calculation of the percent of Medicaid
payments for certain services going to
compensation for direct care workers.
This means that providers can deduct
the total travel expenses for direct care
workers that providers incur from the
total Medicaid payments they receive
before the compensation percentage is
determined.
In order to reflect the exclusion of
travel costs from the payment
calculation, we are adding a new
§ 441.302(k)(1)(iii)(B) that specifies that
travel costs (such as reimbursement for
mileage or public transportation) may be
considered an excluded cost for the
purposes of the minimum performance
requirement at § 441.302(k)(3). The
travel costs that are excluded costs
under § 441.302(k)(1)(iii) are limited to
those costs associated with the travel
itself (such as reimbursement for
mileage or public transportation) and
are distinct from the compensation paid
to a direct care worker for any time
spent traveling as part of their
employment duties under
§ 441.302(k)(1)(i). Please refer to our
discussion in an earlier response
regarding the new definition of
excluded costs at § 441.302(k)(1)(iii) and
its effect for the calculation required at
§ 441.302(k)(3).
Comment: Several commenters
expressed concerns about covering the
cost of vehicle purchases or
maintenance as an administrative
expense. One commenter suggested that
if travel were included in the definition
of compensation, it should include the
cost of vehicles or vehicle maintenance.
Response: We note that the payment
adequacy requirement applies to
Medicaid payments for homemaker
services, home health aide services, and
personal care services. In our
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
experience, it is rare that providers
would be purchasing vehicles for these
services or that vehicle purchases would
be part of the rate. We do not expect that
the cost of vehicles would be part of
excludable travel costs, but we plan to
provide technical assistance to States on
a case-by-case basis.
Comment: Several commenters noted
that personal protective equipment
(PPE) for staff should be counted as
compensation or that these expenses
should not count as an administrative
expense. Several direct care workers
also shared experiences of having to
provide their own PPE during the
COVID–19 public health emergency
(PHE), and the harms caused to them
both physically and financially by
contracting COVID–19.
Response: We agree, particularly
given the recent experience with the
COVID–19 PHE, that PPE should not be
treated as an administrative expense.
Providing direct care workers with
adequate PPE is critical for the health
and safety of both the direct care
workers and the beneficiaries they
serve. We also do not believe that direct
care workers should have to pay for PPE
out-of-pocket or that it is considered
part of their compensation.
Similar to our approach with training
and travel above, we are excluding the
cost of PPE for direct care workers in
this final rule from the calculation of the
percentage of payments spent on
compensation for direct care workers. In
order to reflect the exclusion of PPE
costs from the payment calculation, we
are adding new §§ 441.302(k)(1)(iii) that
specifies that PPE costs for direct care
workers may be considered an excluded
cost for the purposes of the minimum
performance requirement at
§ 441.302(k). Please refer to our
discussion in an earlier response
regarding the new definition of
excluded costs at § 441.302(k)(1)(iii) and
its effect for the calculation required at
§ 441.302(k)(3).
Comment: Several commenters
requested clarification as to what
activities and costs would not be
counted as compensation under this
rule. A significant number of
commenters described other activities or
costs they believed should count as
compensation, should not be counted as
part of non-compensation costs, or
simply would not be affordable if
providers were left with only 20 percent
of the Medicaid rate for personal care,
homemaker, or home health aide
services. These included costs
associated with:
• Administration, including wages
paid to administrative and human
resources staff, who perform activities
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
such as billing, payroll processing,
contracts management, or scheduling
client appointments;
• Other business expenses, such as
organization accreditation, liability
insurance, and licensure.
• Human resources activities,
including recruitment activities or
advertising for new staff.
• Background checks, drug screening,
and medical screening for employees
(such as testing staff for tuberculosis
prior to starting service delivery).
• Office space and utilities (especially
for providers that are required by State
law to have a physical office).
• Office supplies, medical supplies,
food, or other out-of-pocket expenses for
clients, IT, mobile devices (including
those used for electronic visit
verification), and staff uniforms.
• Non-cash awards to direct care
workers, such as parties, staff retreats,
gifts for staff, Employee Assistance
Programs, or other wellness programs.
• Recordkeeping and complying with
quality measures and other reporting
requirements.
Commenters noted that these costs are
essential to operating a service
organization. Commenters also noted
that at least some of these costs, such as
office space, are fixed costs, or costs that
are beyond providers’ control.
Response: We believe that most of the
items listed above would qualify as
administrative expenses, but some
activities may be considered
compensation or excluded costs under
the definitions we are finalizing at
§ 441.302(k)(1), depending on the
context. We clarify that, by designating
activities as administrative and other
expenses that are not considered
compensation under this rule, we do not
suggest that they are inessential.
However, we also believe, as has been
discussed in prior responses, that a vast
majority of the payment for homemaker,
home health aide, and personal care
services must be spent supporting core
activities that are performed by direct
care workers. As noted by commenters
in earlier comment summaries, we also
do not want States to allow providers to
add so many non-cash benefits to a
worker’s compensation that their takehome pay is excessively reduced. We
plan to provide technical assistance to
States to help ensure that States
understand what are considered
administrative and other expenses that
are included in the percentage
calculation and what are considered
excluded costs.
Comment: Several commenters raised
concerns that wages spent for staff
conducting certain beneficiary support
activities would not be considered
PO 00000
Frm 00085
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40625
compensation. These activities include
completing person-centered service
plans or scheduling client
appointments.
Response: We believe that some of the
activities described by commenters are
activities that would be performed by
staff who would classify as direct care
workers, as we proposed to define at
§ 441.302(k)(1)(ii). We refer readers to
our discussion of our proposed
definition of direct care workers in the
next section below. We plan to provide
technical assistance to help States
appropriately identify direct care
workers and, separately, administrative
staff, administrative activities, and other
costs that are not considered
compensation under this rule.
Comment: A few commenters
expressed the concern that employers
will shift more administrative activities
to direct care workers, to avoid having
these activities fall under administrative
and other costs that are not considered
compensation under this rule. The
commenter stated that this could
increase burnout for direct care workers.
Response: As discussed earlier, the
definition of compensation we
proposed, and are finalizing with
modification, includes all compensation
paid to direct care workers for activities
related to their roles as direct care
workers. States should ensure providers
do not count in the percentage
calculation at § 441.302(k)(3)
compensation for the time that workers
spend on administrative or other tasks
unrelated to their roles as direct care
workers as compensation to direct care
workers. We would not view as
permissible under this regulation the
shifting of administrative tasks to direct
care workers as a way to inflate
compensation for direct care workers.
However, providers can count as
compensation to direct care workers the
time that direct care workers spend on
tasks, including administrative tasks,
such as completing timecards, that are
directly related to their roles as direct
care workers in providing services to
beneficiaries. We plan to provide States
with technical assistance on how to
accurately capture compensation for
workers who provide direct care and
perform administrative or other roles.
However, we decline to make changes
in this final rule based on these
comments.
Comment: Several commenters
requested clarification on what was
included in the denominator of the
calculation (in other words, what is
meant by ‘‘payments’’ when calculating
the percent of payments being spent on
compensation for direct care workers).
One commenter suggested that rather
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
40626
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
than requiring 80 percent of Medicaid
payments be spent on compensation, we
require that 80 percent of all revenue be
spent on compensation. One commenter
requested clarification about whether,
for managed care delivery systems,
payment is the State’s capitation
payment to the MCO or the MCO’s
payment to the home care provider
agency. The commenter also
recommended that we require States to
set a minimum payment rate that MCOs
or other entities pay home care agencies
and that the minimum rates be set at a
level to pay workers the locally required
minimum wage and other compensation
as defined in the regulation, and for the
home care agency to reserve 20 percent
overhead.
A few commenters made specific
suggestions for parameters of what
should be included or excluded in the
denominator, such as:
• Only collected revenue (and not
billed charges) would be considered as
base or supplemental payments;
• Excluding refunded or recouped
payments from current or prior years
based on program financial audits;
• Excluding chargebacks; and
• Excluding bad debt.
Response: For Medicaid FFS
payments in the denominator of the
calculation should include base and
supplemental payments (as described in
SMDL 21–006 117). Those base and
supplemental payments should only
include payments actually collected, or
revenue, rather than billed charges. In
addition, refunded or recouped
payments from current or prior years
based on program financial audits,
chargebacks, and bad debt should be
excluded from those base and
supplemental payment amounts. We are
available to provide States with
technical assistance related to
calculating payments for the purpose of
determining the percent of all payments
that is spent on compensation.
For Medicaid managed care,
payments refer to payments from the
managed care plan to the provider and
not the capitation payment from the
State to the managed care plan. Further,
for Medicaid managed care, payments in
the denominator of the calculation
should include only those payments
actually collected and exclude refunded
or recouped payments from current or
prior years based on program financial
audits, chargebacks, and bad debt. We
117 CMS State Medicaid Director Letter: SMDL
21–006. December 2021. New Supplemental
Payment Reporting and Medicaid Disproportionate
Share Hospital Requirements under the
Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2021. Available
at https://www.medicaid.gov/sites/default/files/
2021-12/smd21006.pdf.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
note that section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the
Act does not provide us with authority
to require specific payment rates or ratesetting methodologies.
As discussed throughout this section
(II.B.5), we proposed the requirements
at § 441.302(k) using our authority
under section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act,
which requires State Medicaid programs
to ensure that payments to providers are
consistent with efficiency, economy,
and quality of care and are sufficient to
enlist enough providers so that care and
services are available to beneficiaries at
least to the extent as to the general
population in the same geographic area.
We believe section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the
Act speaks specifically to Medicaid
payments, not to all revenue received by
providers (which may be from various
sources); thus, we decline to modify the
requirement to affect non-Medicaid
revenues.
Comment: One commenter requested
that revenue from value-based care
(VBC) arrangements in managed care be
exempt from the calculation so as not to
disrupt State or managed care efforts
moving toward VBC or to disincentivize
providers from pursuing innovative
strategies to improve health and
financial outcomes such as lowering
emergency room visits, inpatient
utilization, and admissions from HCBS
to inpatient settings such as nursing
facilities. The commenter also noted
that providers must make numerous
additional investments above and
beyond typical compensation rates for a
VBC or pay-for-performance (PFP)
arrangement to work. Additionally, the
commenter noted, VBC and PFP
programs rely on lengthy cycles of data,
tracking, analysis, and reconciliation
before additional payments are made.
The commenter stated that, if these
types of payments are included in the
denominator of the calculation, this will
prove disruptive to these programs.
Response: We appreciate the
commenter raising these concerns and
agree that VBC, PFP, and other unique
payment arrangements that reward and
support quality over quantity are
important, and it was not our intention
to appear to discourage them or
minimize their value. However, given
the wide-ranging designs of such
payments and that most HCBS are often
not included in these arrangements, we
are not requiring a specific way to
address them in this final rule. We also
decline to adopt the commenter’s
suggestion to exempt revenue from VBC
arrangements in managed care from the
calculation of the percent of Medicaid
payments for certain HCBS that is spent
on compensation of direct care workers,
as such an exemption would undermine
PO 00000
Frm 00086
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
the intent of the proposal and the
usefulness of the data for assessing the
percentage of all Medicaid payments for
certain HCBS that is spent on
compensation for direct care workers.
We plan to provide States with
technical assistance as needed on how
to include revenues from VBC, PFP, and
other unique payment arrangements in
the calculation.
After consideration of the comments
received, we are finalizing
§ 441.302(k)(1)(i) with a modification to
clarify at § 441.302(k)(1)(i)(B) that
compensation includes benefits, such as
health and dental benefits, life and
disability insurance, paid leave,
retirement, and tuition reimbursement.
We are also finalizing a new
definition at § 441.302(k)(1)(iii) to
define excluded costs, which are costs
that are not included in the calculation
of the percentage of Medicaid payments
that is spent on compensation for direct
care workers. In other words, States
must ensure providers deduct these
costs from their total Medicaid
payments before performing the
calculation required at § 441.302(k)(3)).
Such costs are limited to: (A) Costs of
required trainings for direct care
workers (such as costs for qualified
trainers and training materials); (B)
Travel costs for direct care workers
(such as mileage reimbursement or
public transportation subsidies)
provided to direct care workers; and (C)
Costs of personal protective equipment
for direct care workers.
e. Definition of Direct Care Worker
(§ 441.302(k)(1)(ii))
At § 441.302(k)(1)(ii), we proposed to
define direct care workers to include
workers who provide nursing services,
assist with activities of daily living
(such as mobility, personal hygiene,
eating) or instrumental activities of
daily living (such as cooking, grocery
shopping, managing finances), and
provide behavioral supports,
employment supports, or other services
to promote community integration.
Specifically, we proposed to define
direct care workers to include nurses
(registered nurses, licensed practical
nurses, nurse practitioners, or clinical
nurse specialists) who provide nursing
services to Medicaid-eligible
individuals receiving HCBS, licensed or
certified nursing assistants, direct
support professionals, personal care
attendants, home health aides, and other
individuals who are paid to directly
provide services to Medicaid
beneficiaries receiving HCBS to address
activities of daily living or instrumental
activities of daily living, behavioral
supports, employment supports, or
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
other services to promote community
integration. We further identified in the
preamble of the proposed rule that our
definition of direct care worker is
intended to exclude nurses in
supervisory or administrative roles who
are not directly providing nursing
services to people receiving HCBS.
Our proposed definition of direct care
worker was intended to broadly define
such workers to ensure that the
definition appropriately captures the
diversity of roles and titles across States
that direct care workers may have. We
included workers with professional
degrees, such as nurses, in our proposed
definition because of the important roles
that direct care workers with
professional degrees play in the care
and services of people receiving HCBS,
and because excluding workers with
professional degrees may increase the
complexity of reporting, and may
unfairly punish States, managed care
plans, and providers that
disproportionately rely on workers with
professional degrees in the delivery of
HCBS. We also proposed to define
direct care workers to include
individuals employed by a Medicaid
provider, State agency, or third party;
contracted with a Medicaid provider,
State agency, or third party; or
delivering services under a self-directed
service model. This proposed definition
is in recognition of the varied service
delivery models and employment
relationships that can exist in HCBS
waivers. We requested comment on
whether there are other specific types of
direct care workers that should be
included in the definition, and whether
any of the types of workers listed should
be excluded from the definition of direct
care worker.
We received public comments on
these proposals. The following is a
summary of the comments we received
and our responses.
Comment: Several commenters
supported finalizing the definition of
direct care worker as proposed.
However, one commenter opposed the
entire definition. The commenter noted
that the definition, which resembles a
definition of direct care worker used by
the Department of Labor, is
distinguishable from the definition used
by the Bureau of Labor Statistics. The
commenter recommended that no
definition should be finalized until
there has been an interagency
workgroup to review and coordinate the
different definitions.
Response: As discussed earlier in this
section II.B.5.e. of this rule, our
proposed definition of direct care
worker was intended to capture the
diversity of roles and titles across States
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
that direct care workers may have. It
was also intended to include
individuals in the varied service
delivery models and employment
relationships that can exist in HCBS
waivers. As discussed later in this
section II.B.5.e. of this rule, we are
finalizing the definition of direct care
worker largely as proposed with a
modification to clarify that direct care
workers include nurses and other staff
providing clinical supervision, as we do
not want to discourage clinical oversight
that contributes to the quality of
services by creating a disincentive for
providers to hire clinicians when
necessary. We believe that the definition
of direct care worker, as finalized,
appropriately defines direct care worker
for the specific purposes of the
requirements in § 441.302(k), and we
note that it was subject to interagency
review.
Comment: Several commenters
supported including clinicians (such as
those we proposed at
§ 441.302(k)(1)(ii)(A)) in the definition
of direct care worker. Commenters
noted that providers are often required
to have clinicians on staff and that such
clinicians are critical to ensuring quality
of care. A few commenters, however,
expressed ambivalence or reservations
about including clinicians in the
definition of direct care worker. One
commenter noted that some States do
not include nurses in their State
definitions of direct care worker. A few
commenters observed that because
clinicians (including nurses) generally
earn higher wages, providers that
employ clinicians will have an easier
time reaching the minimum
performance level for direct care worker
compensation or that the higher wages
of clinicians will mask the lower wages
of direct care workers who do not have
professional degrees and generally earn
lower wages.
Response: We continue to believe it is
appropriate to include clinicians (such
as registered nurses, licensed practical
nurses, nurse practitioners, or clinical
nurse specialists) in the definition of
direct care worker and are finalizing the
definition in this final rule with these
clinicians included. There is a shortage
of nurses and other clinicians delivering
HCBS, and we believe it is important to
support these members of the HCBS
workforce (especially as they also work
directly with beneficiaries). We echo
observations from commenters that
some services are required to be
delivered or monitored by clinicians.
We also would not want to discourage
clinical oversight that contributes to the
quality of services by creating a
disincentive for providers to hire
PO 00000
Frm 00087
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40627
clinicians when necessary. Therefore,
we are clarifying that our definition of
direct care worker is intended to
include nurses and other staff who
directly provide services to beneficiaries
or who provide clinical supervision.
However, consistent with the proposed
rule, our definition is intended to
exclude staff who provide
administrative supervision. We are
finalizing a modification at the end of
§ 441.302(k)(1)(ii)(F) to specifically
include nurses and other staff providing
clinical supervision.
Comment: One commenter suggested
that if a State requires that a program
employ a nurse to perform occasional
beneficiary visits, the State should pay
the nurses directly, rather than requiring
the providers to pay them.
Response: We thank the commenter
for this suggestion. While we do not
intend to establish specific requirements
for how States pay for services provided
by nurses, we agree that this could be
a solution for States that would prefer
for providers to reach the payment
adequacy requirement without relying
on salaries for clinical staff. We decline
to make changes in this final rule based
on this comment.
Comment: A number of commenters
requested that we include private duty
nurses, including registered nurses,
licensed practical nurses, and certified
nursing assistants, in the definition of
direct care worker.
Response: We note that private duty
nurses are not necessarily a separate
category of worker, but rather registered
nurses, licensed practical nurses, or
certified nursing assistants who provide
services classified and billed as private
duty nursing. As a technical matter, we
clarify that only registered nurses and
licensed practical nurses may provide
private duty nursing services authorized
under § 440.80. As discussed above,
these types of clinicians are included in
the definition of direct care worker in
§ 441.302(k)(1)(i)(A) so long as they are
providing one of the three HCBS
services specified in the minimum
performance requirement (homemaker,
home health aide, or personal care
services). However, private duty nursing
is not one of the services we have
proposed, and are finalizing, for
application of this the minimum
performance requirement.
Comment: Many commenters
recommended that nurse supervisors be
included in the definition of direct care
workers. Several of these commenters
noted that these are required positions
for their programs. Some commenters
observed that nurse supervisors perform
important activities like supervising and
training other direct care workers,
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
40628
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
coordinating beneficiaries’ care, or
completing documentation and other
paperwork specific to beneficiaries’ care
(as opposed to paperwork related to
business administration). Several
commenters stated that clinical
supervision is critical to the quality of
HCBS. A few commenters noted that
nurse supervisors sometimes visit
beneficiaries or provide direct services
when filling in for absent direct care
workers.
One commenter noted support for
excluding general administrative or
supervisory staff from the definition of
direct care workers. A few commenters
expressed concerns about the exclusion
of administrative or supervisory staff
who may sometimes also provide
services to beneficiaries. Some of these
commenters noted that especially
during workforce shortages,
administrative staff or supervisors may
fill in for direct care workers. A couple
of commenters requested clarification
on how wages for staff who perform
both direct care work and
administrative or supervisory work
should be counted for the purposes of
complying with the minimum
performance level. One commenter
requested clarification on whether first
line supervisors of direct support
professionals are included in the
definition of direct care workers.
Several commenters stated that they
opposed the exclusion of supervisory or
managerial staff because these are
required positions for their programs.
Several commenters noted that staff
who provide supervision or perform
administrative tasks, such as
understanding and reviewing
compliance and other regulatory
requirements, are critical to quality. One
commenter expressed the concern that
excluding supervisory or managerial
staff from the 80 percent minimum
performance level would mean that
providers would have to lower the
salaries of these positions, and then in
turn may have trouble filling these
positions. One commenter raised
concerns about ‘‘wage compression,’’
with providers reducing wages for
higher-skilled jobs or paying these jobs
more like entry-level jobs.
Response: We are persuaded that
nurses or other staff who provide
clinical oversight and training for direct
care workers participate in activities
directly related to beneficiary care (such
as completing or reviewing
documentation of care), are qualified to
provide services directly to
beneficiaries, and periodically interact
with beneficiaries should be included in
the definition of direct care workers at
§ 441.302(k)(1)(ii). As noted earlier, we
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
are modifying our definition of direct
care worker at § 441.302(k)(1)(ii)(F) to
clarify that it includes nurses and other
staff providing clinical supervision.
However, consistent with the proposed
rule, our definition is intended to
exclude staff who provide
administrative supervision (such as
overseeing business operations).
While we acknowledge that
administrative staff and administrative
supervisors are often required staff and
perform essential functions (including
quality and compliance reporting and
recordkeeping), we believe it is critical
for the economic and efficient use of
Medicaid funds that the vast majority of
Medicaid payment for homemaker,
home health aide, and personal care
services must go to supporting the core
activities of that service; the core
activities of homemaker, home health
aide, and personal care services are
performed by direct care workers. As
discussed above, evidence specifically
shows that direct care workers are paid
low wages and, thus, our priority is
ensuring a greater share of Medicaid
payments go to direct care workers’
compensation. If there is an insufficient
number of direct care workers employed
by a provider, then those HCBS cannot
be delivered, and beneficiaries may not
be able to access the HCBS they need.
We will continue to partner with States
to help providers find efficient ways to
support their administrative and
reporting requirements.
Comment: Many commenters
expressed concern that direct support
professionals were excluded from the
definition of direct care worker, as
direct care workers are often associated
with provision of services to older
adults and people with physical
disabilities, while direct service
professionals typically provide services
to people with intellectual and
developmental disabilities.
Response: We note that direct support
professionals are explicitly included in
the definition of direct care worker at
§ 441.302(k)(1)(ii)(C), so there is no need
to further modify the definition of direct
care worker in response to these
comments. If someone designated by
their State as a direct support
professional provides a service that is
subject to the minimum performance
requirement, their compensation will be
included in the calculation for the
minimum performance level.
Comment: One commenter suggested
that payments to contract employees
should not count toward the minimum
performance level.
Response: Given the varied nature of
HCBS programs, we specifically
proposed for the definition of direct care
PO 00000
Frm 00088
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
worker at § 441.302(k)(1)(ii)(G) to
encompass a broad array of employment
relationships. We cannot find sufficient
justification for excluding certain types
of employment relationships from this
requirement and are finalizing our
definition of direct care worker to
include individuals employed by a
Medicaid provider, State agency, or
third party; contracted with a Medicaid
provider, State agency, or third party; or
delivering services under a self-directed
service model, as proposed. However,
we are making a technical modification
for clarity to not finalize
§ 441.302(k)(1)(ii)(G) and to add
language proposed at
§ 441.302(k)(1)(ii)(G) to the end of
§ 441.302(k)(1)(ii).
Comment: One commenter opposed
including workers who deliver services
via a self-directed services delivery
model in the definition of direct care
workers. They noted that including
these workers would ‘‘chip away at the
uniqueness at the heart of the selfdirection paradigm,’’ unintentionally
burden self-directed employers and
employees, reduce autonomy by
introducing a single title for a wide
variety of caregiving types, and would
not recognize the flexible and
interdependent nature of self-direction
or the fact that Medicaid beneficiaries
who self-direct their services do not
retain the funds that remain in budgets
at the end of the year.
Response: We thank the commenter
for raising their concerns. We decline to
make modifications to the definition of
direct care worker to exclude direct care
workers providing services in selfdirected services delivery models
generally. We believe it is important for
States to have a sufficient direct care
workforce to be able to deliver services
that are responsive to the changing
needs and choices of beneficiaries, as
required by section 2402(a)(1) of the
Affordable Care Act, regardless of
whether they are receiving services
through a self-directed services delivery
model or a model that is not selfdirected. Further, we believe it is
important for States to have a sufficient
number of qualified direct care workers
to provide self-directed personal
assistance services, as required by
section 2402(a)(3)(B)(iii) of the
Affordable Care Act.
However, we do agree that there are
certain self-directed services delivery
models for which the minimum
performance level at (k)(3) would not be
appropriate. We intend to apply the
requirements at § 441.302(k)(3) to
models in which the beneficiary
directing the services is not setting the
payment rate for the worker (such as
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
agency-provider models). We do not
intend to apply the requirements to selfdirected services delivered through
models in which the beneficiary sets the
payment rate for the worker (such as in
individual budget authority models). In
the latter scenario, we expect that all or
nearly all of that payment rate routinely
is spent on the direct care worker’s
compensation. We are finalizing a new
requirement at § 441.302(k)(2)(ii) that
clarifies this policy; this requirement is
discussed in greater detail in section
II.B.5.g. of this final rule.
After consideration of the comments
received, we are finalizing the definition
of direct care worker at
§ 441.302(k)(1)(ii) with technical
modifications for clarity to change the
term, Medicaid-eligible individuals, to
the term, Medicaid beneficiaries, in both
§ 441.302(k)(1)(ii)(A) and (F). We are
finalizing § 441.302(k)(1)(ii) with a
modification at the end of
§ 441.302(k)(1)(ii)(F) to provide that
direct care workers include nurses and
other staff providing clinical
supervision. The finalized revised text
at § 441.302(k)(1)(ii)(F) will read: Other
individuals who are paid to provide
services to address activities of daily
living or instrumental activities of daily
living, behavioral supports, employment
supports, or other services to promote
community integration directly to
Medicaid beneficiaries receiving HCBS
available under this subpart, including
nurses and other staff providing clinical
supervision. We are making a technical
modification to not finalize
§ 441.302(k)(1)(ii)(G) and add language
proposed at § 441.302(k)(1)(ii)(G) to the
end of § 441.302(k)(1)(ii) to clarify that
a direct care worker may be employed
by a Medicaid provider, State agency, or
third party; contracted with a Medicaid
provider, State agency, or third party; or
delivering services under a self-directed
service model.
f. Reporting (§ 441.302(k)(2))
Section 1902(a)(6) of the Act requires
State Medicaid agencies to make such
reports, in such form and containing
such information, as the Secretary may
from time to time require, and to
comply with such provisions as the
Secretary may from time to time find
necessary to assure the correctness and
verification of such reports. At
§ 441.302(k)(2), under our authority at
section 1902(a)(6) of the Act, we
proposed to require that States
demonstrate that they meet the
minimum performance level at
§ 441.302(k)(3)(i) through new Federal
reporting requirements at § 441.311(e).
We discuss these reporting requirements
in our discussion of proposed
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
§ 441.311(e) in section II.B.7 of this final
rule.
We received public comments on
these proposals. The following is a
summary of the comments we received
and our responses. We also direct the
reader to the discussion of § 441.311(e)
in section II.B.7. of this final rule for
additional comments and responses.
Comment: A number of commenters,
while not supporting the minimum
performance requirement, did express
support for the requirement that States
must collect and report data on the
percent of Medicaid payments for
certain HCBS going to compensation of
direct care workers. Commenters noted
this reporting could yield important
data about the compensation to workers
and allow for national comparisons.
Response: We agree with commenters
that the reporting requirement proposed
at § 441.311(e) will yield important data
about compensation to workers that will
help support the HCBS direct care
workforce and promote better oversight
of how Medicaid payments for certain
services are used.
We note that, while several
commenters encouraged us to finalize
the reporting requirement at
§ 441.311(e) without finalizing the
minimum performance requirement at
§ 441.302(k)(3), no commenter suggested
that we finalize the minimum
performance requirement without a
reporting requirement. We believe that
the reference included in § 441.302(k)(2)
to the reporting requirement at
§ 441.311(e) is necessary for CMS to
oversee States’ compliance with the
minimum performance requirement at
§ 441.302(k)(3); however, the reporting
requirement at § 441.311(e) is distinct
and severable from the minimum
performance requirement at
§ 441.302(k). As discussed in more
detail in section II.B.7, the reporting
requirement at § 441.311(e), which we
are finalizing with modifications,
addresses a broader universe of services
than is included in the minimum
performance level at § 441.302(k)(3) and
has an earlier applicability date than the
date we are finalizing at § 441.302(k)(8)
(discussed later in this section). While
we are finalizing both the minimum
performance requirement at
§ 441.302(k)(3) and the payment
adequacy reporting requirement, as
amended, at § 441.311(e), these
represent distinct policies, and we
believe that the reporting requirement
can (and will) function independently
from the minimum performance
requirement.
Comment: Several commenters
suggested that we add a requirement to
§ 441.302(k)(2) that would require
PO 00000
Frm 00089
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40629
States, as part of their assurances of
compliance with the minimum
percentage requirement, to acknowledge
and explain any differences between the
actual payment rates for home care
services and the rate most recently
recommended by the interested parties’
advisory group under § 447.203(b)(6) of
this final rule and discussed in section
II.C. of this rule. The commenters
suggested that if the actual rate is lower
than the recommended rate, the State
would also need to explain why it is
sufficient to ensure access to services.
Response: Although the interested
parties’ advisory group will provide an
invaluable perspective on the adequacy
of rates, as discussed in greater detail
later in this preamble, the role of the
group finalized at § 447.203(b)(6) is
advisory. States will not be required to
follow the recommendations of the
group. We believe the policies as we are
finalizing strike the right balance of
accountability and flexibility for wholly
new rate processes. We further note the
recommendations of the interested
parties’ advisory group will be posted
publicly for review. Finally, we note
that we are also finalizing steps a State
must take to demonstrate adequate
access to services when proposing a rate
reduction or restructuring in
circumstances that could result in
diminished access to care.
After consideration of the comments
received, we are finalizing
§ 441.302(k)(2) with modifications. For
reasons discussed in section II.B.5.g. of
this final rule, at § 441.302, we are
redesignating paragraph (k)(2) as
paragraph (k)(2)(i) to allow for the
addition of a new requirement at
paragraph (k)(2)(ii) regarding treatment
of certain payment data under selfdirected services delivery models.
As discussed in section II.B.5.b. of
this rule, we are finalizing reporting
requirements at § 441.302(k)(6) to
ensure accountability in the States’ use
of the small provider minimum
performance level and hardship
exemptions. To clarify that States must
comply with this requirement, as well
as the reporting requirement at
§ 441.311(e), we are finalizing references
to § 441.302(k)(6) in § 441.302(k)(2)(i).
We also are finalizing a technical
modification for clarity that the State
must demonstrate annually, consistent
with the reporting requirements at
§§ 441.302(k)(6) and 441.311(e), that
they meet the minimum performance
level at § 441.302(k)(3). (New text in
bold font).
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
40630
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
g. Application to Other Authorities
(Proposed at § 441.302(k)(4), Finalized
at § 441.302(k)(8); and §§ 441.464(f),
441.570(f), and 441.745(a)(1)(vi))
At § 441.302(k)(4), we proposed to
apply the HCBS requirements described
in the proposed rule to services
delivered under FFS or managed care
delivery systems. As discussed earlier in
section II.B.1. of this preamble, section
2402(a)(3)(A) of the Affordable Care Act
requires States to improve coordination
among, and the regulation of, all
providers of Federally and State-funded
HCBS programs to achieve a more
consistent administration of policies
and procedures across HCBS programs.
In the context of Medicaid coverage of
HCBS, it should not matter whether the
services are covered directly on an FFS
basis or by a managed care plan to its
enrollees. The requirement for
consistent administration should
require consistency between these two
modes of service delivery. We
accordingly proposed to specify that a
State must ensure compliance with the
requirements in § 441.302(k) with
respect to HCBS delivered both under
FFS and managed care delivery systems.
Similarly, because workforce
shortages exist under other HCBS
authorities, which include many of the
same types of services to address
activities of daily living or instrumental
activities of daily living as under section
1915(c) waiver authority, we proposed
to include these requirements within
the applicable regulatory sections.
Specifically, we proposed to apply the
proposed requirements at § 441.302(k)
to section 1915 (j), (k), and (i) State plan
at §§ 441.464(f), 441.570(f), and
441.745(a)(1)(vi), respectively.
Consistent with our proposal for section
1915(c) waivers, we proposed these
requirements based on our authority
under section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act
to ensure payments to HCBS providers
are consistent with efficiency, economy,
and quality of care and are sufficient to
enlist enough providers so that care and
services are available to beneficiaries at
least to the extent as to the general
population in the same geographic area.
We believed the same arguments for
proposing these requirements for
section 1915(c) waivers are equally
applicable for these other HCBS
authorities. We requested comment on
the application of payment adequacy
provisions across section 1915(i), (j),
and (k) authorities. As noted earlier in
section II.B.4. of the proposed rule, to
accommodate the addition of new
language at § 441.464(e) and (f), we
proposed to renumber existing
§ 441.464(e) as paragraph (g) and
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
existing § 441.464(f) as paragraph (h).
We requested comment on whether we
should exempt, from these
requirements, services delivered using
any self-directed service delivery model
under any Medicaid authority.
We considered whether to also apply
these proposed payment adequacy
requirements to section 1905(a)
‘‘medical assistance’’ State plan
personal care and home health services.
However, we did not propose that these
requirements apply to any section
1905(a) State plan services based on
State feedback that they do not have the
same data collection and reporting
capabilities in place for section 1905(a)
services as they do for section 1915(c),
(i), (j), and (k) services. Further, the vast
majority of HCBS is delivered under
section 1915(c), (i), (j), and (k)
authorities, while only a small
percentage of HCBS nationally is
delivered under section 1905(a) State
plan authorities. We requested comment
on whether we should apply these
requirements to section 1905(a) State
plan personal care and home health
services.
We received public comments on
these proposals. The following is a
summary of the comments we received
and our responses.
Comment: A few commenters
supported holding providers delivering
care in managed care delivery systems
accountable for paying a sufficient
amount to direct care workers. A few
commenters requested that we clarify
how this requirement would apply to
MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs. One
commenter noted that managed care
plans do not control the payment rates
that contracted providers pay their
direct care workers.
A few commenters requested that we
clarify managed care plans’
responsibility for tracking and reporting
expenditures. A few commenters
expressed concern that this proposal
would pose particular reporting or
accounting burdens for providers that
participate in multiple Medicaid
managed care plans, serve nonMedicaid clients, or receive bundled
payments.
Response: We acknowledge
commenters’ broad concerns about how
these requirements will apply to
managed care plans and will provide
technical assistance regarding specific
questions as they are raised during
implementation. However, we are
finalizing our proposal to apply the
requirements at § 441.302(k) to both
managed care and FFS delivery systems.
We clarify here that the requirements in
§ 441.302(k) are the ultimate
responsibility of States, regardless of
PO 00000
Frm 00090
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
whether their HCBS are delivered
through an FFS delivery system,
managed care delivery system, or both.
The minimum performance requirement
applies at the provider level, not the
managed care plan level. We expect that
States will develop an appropriate
process with their managed care plans
should the State determine that
managed care plans have some role in
activities such as the data collection or
reporting required in § 441.302(k)(2)
(being finalized as § 441.302(k)(2)(i)).
We agree that managed care plans do
not control payment rates that
contracted providers pay their direct
care workers and reiterate that the focus
of § 441.302(k) is on the percentage of
the payment to providers that is passed
along as compensation to direct care
workers.
We plan to provide technical
assistance to States with managed care
delivery systems to minimize provider
reporting and accounting burden and to
address questions related to bundled
payments that include the affected
services (homemaker, home health aide,
and personal care services).
Comment: A few commenters
specifically noted support for applying
the payment adequacy requirement to
programs authorized under all section
1915 authorities. One commenter did
not support applying this requirement
to ‘‘all 1915 waiver authorities’’ but did
not provide a specific rationale for their
recommendation.
Response: We are finalizing
§§ 441.464(f), 441.570(f), and
441.745(a)(1)(vi) (applying § 441.302(k)
to section 1915(j), (k) and (i) services,
respectively) with minor technical
modifications as noted later in this
section II.B.5.g. of this final rule.
Comment: A number of commenters
expressed concerns about the
application of the minimum
performance level to self-directed
services authorized under sections
1915(j) and 1915(k) of the Act. A few
commenters, while not necessarily
suggesting that self-directed services
should be excluded from the payment
adequacy requirement, believed that it
would take more time and additional
guidance to implement the requirement
for self-directed services.
Some commenters raised concerns
about the application of the requirement
to specific models of self-direction,
particularly the self-directed model with
service budget (as defined in
§ 441.545(b)) (often referred to as the
individual budget authority model), in
which the beneficiary sets the direct
care worker’s wages. Some commenters
worried that the application of the
minimum performance level to such
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
models would put the individual
beneficiary in the position of acting as
a provider for this purpose. Other
commenters were concerned that if the
minimum performance level was
applied to these self-directed services
delivery models, beneficiaries would
have to apply a set percent of their
budget to compensation of workers and
thus would lose the flexibility of
determining how their budget was spent
or what to pay their direct care workers.
One commenter pointed out that
beneficiaries in self-directed services
delivery models do not personally keep
unspent funds and, thus, do not stand
to profit by lowering direct care
workers’ wages. A few commenters also
requested clarification of how the
payment adequacy requirement would
impact the co-employment relationship
in self-directed services. One
commenter noted that the vast majority
of HCBS furnished under self-directed
services delivery models are paid so that
the entire payment rate goes toward
direct care worker’s wages and other
associated costs such as employer taxes,
workers’ compensation, and other
employer requirements such as Statemandated paid sick leave, while
payment for financial management
services is paid separately. In these
models, nearly 100 percent of the
payment rate goes toward the direct care
worker’s wages and associated costs,
which would create an unfair
comparison to agency-directed services.
A few commenters noted that it
would be undesirable to apply the
minimum performance level to HCBS
furnished via self-directed services
delivery models because these services
involve additional activities and costs
not associated with other types of
services. These commenters noted that
services furnished via self-directed
services delivery models involve more
training and human resources support
for the beneficiaries to help them hire
and direct their workers. One
commenter stated that the proposed
minimum performance level of 80
percent would be too high to
accommodate other non-compensation
activities included in self-directed
services delivery models, such as
employment or day activities, case
management, and back up supports.
On the other hand, some commenters
noted that self-directed services delivery
models should be included in the
payment adequacy requirements and
that it is important to support
compensation for direct care workers
who provide HCBS via self-directed
services delivery models. One
commenter noted that most personal
care services in the commenter’s State
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
are furnished via self-directed services
delivery models.
Response: We agree with commenters
that the minimum performance
requirement may be difficult to apply
(and, in fact, may simply be
inapplicable) to self-directed services
delivery models with service budget
authority in which the beneficiary
directing the services sets the worker’s
wages as the payment rate for the
service (such as models meeting the
definition of § 441.545(b) for section
1915(k) services, or self-directed
services typically authorized under the
section 1915(j) authority).
We also agree with one commenter
who noted that, because of the separate
payment of financial management
services, nearly all of the payments for
personal care, homemaker, and home
health aide services furnished via selfdirected services delivery models with
service budget authority are spent on
compensation for direct care workers.
We believe that applying the minimum
performance requirement to such
models would be ineffectual and an
unnecessary burden on States.
We believe the minimum performance
requirement is appropriate when
applied to a Medicaid rate for selfdirected services that includes both
compensation to direct care workers and
administrative activities and in which
the beneficiary did not set the payment
rate for the worker.
We note that at least some of the
‘‘non-compensation activities’’
identified by one commenter, such as
employment or day activities and case
management, do not appear to fall under
the specific services to which we
proposed, and are finalizing, for the
minimum performance requirement to
apply, and therefore, they would not
likely be subject to the minimum
performance requirement as finalized.
To clarify the application of
§ 441.302(k) to HCBS furnished via selfdirected services delivery models, we
are finalizing a new requirement at
§ 441.302(k)(2)(ii), specifying that, if the
State provides that homemaker, home
health aide, or personal care services, as
set forth at § 440.180(b)(2) through (4),
may be furnished under a self-directed
services delivery model in which the
beneficiary directing the services sets
the direct care worker’s payment rate,
then the State does not include such
payment data in its calculation of the
State’s compliance with the minimum
performance levels at paragraph (k)(3).
We are finalizing the general
application of § 441.302(k) to HCBS
authorized under section 1915(j), (k),
and (i) authorities, with the
understanding that some services
PO 00000
Frm 00091
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40631
delivered under these authorities will
fall under the exception for self-directed
services delivery models being finalized
at § 441.302(k)(2)(ii).
We note that the exception at
§ 441.302(k)(2)(ii) directs States to
exclude certain data from the specified
excluded self-directed services models
when establishing compliance with the
minimum performance level or small
provider performance level at
§ 441.302(k)(3). We believe, however,
that the regulation text at § 441.302(k)
requiring States to assure that payment
rates are adequate to ensure a sufficient
direct care workforce to meet the needs
of beneficiaries and provide access to
services in the amount, duration, and
scope specified in beneficiaries’ personcentered service plans applies to all selfdirected services models offered under
all section 1915 authorities.
Comment: Commenters were mixed in
their support for excluding section
1905(a) services from the payment
adequacy requirement. A few
commenters expressed strong support
for extending the payment adequacy
requirement to services authorized
under section 1905(a), particularly
commenters writing from States in
which larger numbers of beneficiaries
receive section 1905(a) State plan
services. One commenter expressed
concern that not including section
1905(a) services would
disproportionately exclude direct care
workers providing services to children
or adults with intellectual and
developmental disabilities. One
commenter noted that section 1902(a)(6)
of the Act gives CMS the authority to
apply the requirement section 1905(a)
services.
However, several commenters did not
support applying the requirement to
section 1905(a) State plan services.
Many of these commenters simply did
not support applying the minimum
performance requirement to services
under any authority. A few commenters
agreed with our concerns that applying
the payment adequacy requirement to
section 1905(a) State plan services
would pose a particular burden on
States due to differences in how these
services are delivered and monitored.
Several commenters expressed
concerns about potential unintended
consequences of not applying the
minimum performance requirement to
section 1905(a) State plan services. In
particular, some commenters raised
concerns that direct care workers would
stop working for providers that deliver
section 1905(a) services, in favor of
working for providers that were subject
to the minimum performance
requirement. On the other hand, a few
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
40632
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
commenters worried that providers
would stop providing services under
section 1915 authorities and switch to
providing section 1905(a) services to
avoid having to comply with the
payment adequacy requirement.
Response: At this time, we are not
requiring the application of the HCBS
payment adequacy requirements at
§ 441.302(k) to section 1905(a) services.
Given our work to better ensure access
in the Medicaid program is ongoing, we
intend to gain implementation
experience with this final rule, and we
will take these comments under
consideration for any potential future
rulemaking regarding section 1905(a)
services.
Comment: One commenter requested
clarification as to whether the payment
adequacy requirements would apply to
services delivered under section 1115
authority.
Response: At § 441.302(k)(4) (which
we are finalizing at § 441.302(k)(8)), we
proposed to apply these requirements to
services delivered under FFS or
managed care delivery systems,
including those authorized under
section 1115(a) of the Act. We are
finalizing this requirement in this final
rule, with modifications as noted
herein, including retaining the
application to managed care delivery
systems authorized section 1115(a).
After consideration of public
comments, and for reasons discussed in
sections II.B.5.b. and II.B.5.h. of this
rule, we are finalizing § 441.302(k)(4)
with modifications to redesignate
§ 441.302(k)(4) as § 441.302(k)(8) and
change the date for States to comply
with the requirements at § 441.302(k)
from 4 years to 6 years. We are
finalizing § 441.302(k)(8) with minor
modifications to correct erroneous uses
of the word ‘‘effective.’’ We are retitling
the requirement at § 441.302(k)(8) as
Applicability date (rather than Effective
date). We are also modifying the
language at § 441.302(k)(8) to specify
that States must comply with the
requirements in § 441.302(k) beginning
6 years after the effective date of this
final rule, rather than stating that
§ 441.302(k)(8) is effective 6 years after
the effective date of the final rule. In
addition, we are finalizing technical
modifications to the language pertaining
to the applicability date for States
providing services through managed
care delivery systems to improve
accuracy and alignment with common
phrasing in managed care contracting
policy.
As finalized, the redesignated
§ 441.302(k)(8) reads: Applicability date.
States must comply with the
requirements set forth in paragraph (k)
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
of this section beginning 6 years after
the effective date of this paragraph; and
in the case of the State that implements
a managed care delivery system under
the authority of section 1915(a), 1915(b),
1932(a), or 1115(a) of the Act and
includes homemaker, home health aide,
or personal care services, as set forth at
§ 440.180(b)(2) through (4) in the
MCO’s, PIHP’s, or PAHP’s contract, the
first rating period for contracts
with the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP
beginning on or after the date that is
6 years after the effective date of this
paragraph. (New language identified in
bold.)
After consideration of the comments,
as noted above in this section, we are
finalizing a requirement at
§ 441.302(k)(2)(ii) specifying that if the
State provides that homemaker, home
health aide, or personal care services, as
set forth at § 440.180(b)(2) through (4),
may be furnished under a self-directed
services delivery model in which the
beneficiary directing the services sets
the direct care worker’s payment rate,
then the State does not include such
payment data in its calculation of the
State’s compliance with the minimum
performance levels at paragraph (k)(3).
We are finalizing the application of
§ 441.302(k) to section 1915(j), (k), and
(i) services with minor modifications.
We are finalizing a technical
modification to clarify that the reference
to person-centered service plans in
§§ 441.464(f), 441.570(f), and
441.745(a)(1)(vi) is to beneficiaries’
person-centered service plans. We are
also clarifying in §§ 441.464(f),
441.570(f), and 441.745(a)(1)(vi) that
while § 441.302(k) applies to services
delivered under these authorities,
references to section 1915(c) of the Act
are instead references to sections
1915(j), (k), or (i), as appropriate.
Additionally, to ensure application of
all relevant requirements of § 441.302(k)
to section 1915(i) and (k) authorities, we
are also finalizing a modification to
§§ 441.474(c), 441.580(i) and
441.745(a)(1)(vii) to clarify that the
reporting requirement at § 441.302(k)(6)
applies to section 1915(j), (k) and (i)
authorities, respectively. (We note that
discussion of the finalization of
§§ 441.474(c), 441.580(i) and
441.745(a)(1)(vii) is in II.B.7. of this
final rule.) We note that while we are
applying the requirement at
§ 441.302(k)(6) to section 1915(j), (k),
and (k) authorities, States would only be
required to comply with this reporting
requirement if the State provided
services under these authorities
described in § 441.302(k)(2)(i) and if the
State meets the other criteria set forth in
§ 441.302(k)(6).
PO 00000
Frm 00092
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
h. Applicability Date (Proposed at
§ 441.302(k)(4), Being Finalized at
§ 441.302(k)(8))
As noted throughout the HCBS
provisions in this preamble, we
recognize that many States may need
time to implement these requirements,
including to amend provider agreements
or managed care contracts, make State
regulatory or policy changes, implement
process or procedural changes, update
information systems for data collection
and reporting, or conduct other
activities to implement these proposed
payment adequacy requirements. We
expect that these activities will take
longer than similar activities for other
HCBS provisions in the rule. Further,
we expect that it will take a substantial
amount of time for managed care plans
and providers to establish the necessary
systems, data collection tools, and
processes necessary to collect the
required information to report to States.
As a result, we proposed at
§ 441.302(k)(4), to provide States with 4
years to implement these requirements
in FFS delivery systems following the
effective date of the final rule. For States
that implement a managed care delivery
system under the authority of sections
1915(a), 1915(b), 1932(a), or 1115(a) of
the Act and include HCBS in the
MCO’s, PIHP’s, or PAHP’s contract, we
proposed to provide States until the first
rating period for contracts with the
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP, beginning on or
after 4 years after the effective date of
the final rule to implement these
requirements. Similar to our rationale in
other sections, this proposed timeline
reflects feedback from States and other
interested parties that it could take 3 to
4 years for States to complete any
necessary work to amend State
regulations and work with their State
legislatures, if needed, as well as to
revise policies, operational processes,
information systems, and contracts to
support implementation of the
proposals outlined in this section. We
also considered the overall burden of
the proposed rule as a whole in
proposing the effective date for the
payment adequacy provision. We
invited comments on the overall burden
associated with implementing this
section, whether this timeframe is
sufficient, whether we should require a
shorter timeframe (such as 3 years) or
longer timeframe (such as 5 years) to
implement the payment adequacy
provisions and if an alternate timeframe
is recommended, the rationale for that
alternate timeframe.
We received public comments on
these proposals. The following is a
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
summary of the comments we received
and our responses.
Comment: A few commenters
supported our proposal that the
minimum performance requirement go
into effect four years after the
publication of this final rule. One
commenter noted that 4 years should be
sufficient time for States and providers
to make necessary adjustments. A few
commenters noted that 4 years was too
long, given the urgency of the workforce
shortage. One commenter suggested that
we require the minimum performance
requirement go into effect January 1,
2025, while another commenter
suggested a 2-year effective date. One
commenter suggested the requirement
should go into effect in 3 years, to align
with some of the other proposed
effective dates in this rule.
Other commenters recommended that
we allow for a longer effective date,
such as 6 years. Commenters noted that
large-scale changes, such as what would
be required to comply with the
minimum performance requirement,
would take time.
Several commenters suggested that
compliance with the minimum
performance requirement be phased in
over time to give providers and States
an opportunity to adjust their systems
and policies.
Response: While we are sympathetic
to commenters’ sense of urgency
regarding the workforce shortage, we do
not believe it is realistic for States to
comply with the requirements earlier
than the proposed four years. We agree
with commenters that, for some States,
ensuring that a minimum percent of
Medicaid payments go to direct care
worker compensation (and tracking
compliance with this requirement) will
require a period of adjustment. We do
expect that providers should already be
aware of their Medicaid revenues and
what they pay their workers; however,
we acknowledge that they may not
already be reporting this information to
the States and that the States will need
to work with their providers to develop
an appropriate reporting mechanism.
We also understand that some providers
will have to adjust how they operate
their business in order to meet the
required minimum performance level.
We also acknowledge that we will need
to provide additional subregulatory
guidance and technical assistance to aid
in implementation.
We agree with commenters that a
slightly longer date for States to comply
with the requirements is necessary. We
believe that the complementary
reporting requirement at § 441.311I
(discussed in section II.B.7. of this rule)
can be leveraged to create a transition
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
period to aid States in their compliance
with § 441.302(k)(3). As such, we are
finalizing § 441.302(k)(8) with a
modification to change the date for
States to comply with the requirements
from 4 years to 6 years. The data
collected as part of § 441.311(e) will
give States feedback on how close they
are to reaching the minimum
performance level and will help CMS
develop targeted technical assistance for
States that are farther away from
attaining compliance. For States electing
to create a State-defined minimum
performance level for small providers,
this period between reporting and
performance will also allow States to
make any necessary adjustments to their
State-defined minimum performance
levels. It will also allow States to make
any necessary adjustments to their
criteria for hardship exemptions and to
identify providers who need hardship
exemptions. We will continue to use our
standard enforcement tools and
discretion, as appropriate, when the
requirements at §§ 441.302(k) go into
effect.
As noted in section II.B.5.b. and
II.B.5.h. of this section, we are creating
new requirements at § 441.302(k)(4)
through (7) and thus are redesignating
proposed § 441.302(k)(4) as
§ 441.302(k)(8) and finalizing
§ 441.302(k)(8) with the modifications
as noted in section II.B.5.b. of this final
rule. We are finalizing § 441.302(k)(8)
with minor modifications to correct
erroneous uses of the word ‘‘effective.’’
We are retitling the requirement at
§ 441.302(k)(8) as Applicability date
(rather than Effective date). We are also
modifying the language at
§ 441.302(k)(8) to specify that States
must comply with the requirements in
§ 441.302(k) beginning 6 years after the
effective date of this final rule, rather
than stating that § 441.302(k)(8) is
effective 6 years after the effective date
of the final rule. In addition, we are
finalizing technical modifications to the
language pertaining to the applicability
date for States providing services
through managed care delivery systems
to improve accuracy and alignment with
common phrasing in managed care
contracting policy.
i. Summary of Finalized Requirements
After consideration of the public
comments, we are finalizing the
requirements at § 441.302(k) as follows:
• We are finalizing the assurance
requirement at § 441.302(k) with
technical modifications.
• We are finalizing § 441.302(k)(1)
with a technical modification.
• The definition of compensation at
§ 441.302(k)(1)(i) (now also at
PO 00000
Frm 00093
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40633
§ 441.311(e)(1)(i)) and finalized as
proposed, with the exception of
§ 441.302(k)(1)(i)(B) (now also at
§ 441.311(e)(1)(i)(B)), which is revised to
read: Benefits (such as health and dental
benefits, life and disability insurance,
paid leave, retirement, and tuition
reimbursement).
• The definition of direct care worker
at § 441.302(k)(1)(ii) (now also at
§ 441.311(e)(ii)) is finalized with
technical modifications to
§ 441.302(k)(1)(ii)(A) and (F) (now also
at § 441.311(e)(1)(ii)(A) and (F)). We are
also finalizing the following addition at
the end of § 441.302(k)(1)(ii)(F) (now
also at § 441.311(e)(1)(ii)(F)), including
nurses and other staff providing clinical
supervision. The revised text at
§ 441.302(k)(1)(ii)(F) (now also at
§ 441.311(e)(1)(ii)(F)) will read as
follows: Other individuals who are paid
to provide services to address activities
of daily living or instrumental activities
of daily living, behavioral supports,
employment supports, or other services
to promote community integration
directly to Medicaid beneficiaries
receiving home and community-based
services available under this subpart,
including nurses and other staff
providing clinical supervision. In
addition, we are making a technical
modification to not finalize
§ 441.302(k)(1)(ii)(G) and add language
proposed at § 441.302(k)(1)(ii)(G) to the
end of § 441.302(k)(1)(ii) to clarify that
a direct care worker may be employed
by a Medicaid provider, State agency, or
third party; contracted with a Medicaid
provider, State agency, or third party; or
delivering services under a self-directed
services delivery model.
• A definition of excluded costs is
finalized at § 441.302(k)(1)(iii) (now also
at § 441.311(e)(1)(iii)) as follows:
Excluded costs means costs that are
not included in the calculation of the
percentage of Medicaid payments to
providers that is spent on compensation
for direct care workers. Such costs are
limited to:
(A) Costs of required trainings for
direct care workers (such as costs for
qualified trainers and training
materials);
(B) Travel costs for direct care
workers (such as mileage
reimbursement or public transportation
subsidies); and
(C) Costs of personal protective
equipment for direct care workers.
• Section 441.302(k)(2) is finalized
with modifications. We are
redesignating the language at
§ 441.302(k)(2) as § 441.302(k)(2)(i). We
are finalizing § 441.302(k)(2)(i) to
include references to the reporting
requirements that are finalized at
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
40634
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
§§ 441.302(k)(6) and 441.311(e) and the
exception finalized at § 441.302(k)(2)(ii).
We also made a technical modification
for clarity that the State must
demonstrate annually, consistent with
the reporting requirements at
§§ 441.302(k)(6) and 441.311(e), that
they meet the minimum performance
level at § 441.302(k)(3). In addition, we
made technical modifications for clarity
and precision to specify the specific
services (homemaker, home health aide,
and personal care services) to which the
payment adequacy requirement applies
and to specify that these requirements
apply to services authorized under
section 1915(c) of the Act, unless
excepted under § 441.302(k)(2)(ii).
• We are finalizing at new
requirement at § 441.302(k)(2)(ii) that
clarifies that if the State provides that
homemaker, home health aide, or
personal care services, as set forth at
§ 440.180(b)(2) through (4), may be
furnished under a self-directed services
delivery model in which the beneficiary
directing the services sets the direct care
worker’s payment rate, then the State
would not include such payment data in
its calculation of the State’s compliance
with the minimum performance levels
at paragraph (k)(3).
• Section 441.302(k)(3) is finalized
with several modifications to retitle the
requirement as ‘‘Minimum performance
at the provider level’’ and clarify the
components of the required calculation
and the services that fall within this
requirement. Section 441.302(k)(3) is
also finalized with modifications to
clarify that excluded costs are not
included in the calculation of the
percentage of total payments to a
provider that is spent on compensation
to direct care workers and to specify the
specific services (homemaker, home
health aide, and personal care services)
to which the payment adequacy
requirement applies. We are also
modifying § 441.302(k)(3) to note the
exceptions to the minimum
performance level that we are adding at
(k)(5) (hardship exemption) and (k)(7)
(IHS and Tribal health programs subject
to 25 U.S.C. 1641).
• Section 441.302(k)(3)(i) is finalized
with a clarification that the minimum
performance level of 80 percent applies
to all payments to a provider, except as
provided in paragraph (k)(3)(ii).
• Section 441.302(k)(3)(ii) is amended
to add an option for States to set a Statedefined small provider minimum
performance level. As finalized,
§ 441.302(k)(3)(ii) reads: (ii) At the
State’s option, providers determined by
the State to meet its State-defined small
provider criteria in paragraph (k)(4)(i) of
this section, the State must ensure that
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
each provider spends the percentage set
by the State in accordance with
paragraph (k)(4)(ii) of this section of
total payments the provider receives for
services it furnishes as described in
paragraph (k)(3) on total compensation
for direct care workers who furnish
those services.
• An option for States to develop
criteria to identify small providers to
meet the State-defined small provider
minimum performance level is added at
new § 441.302(k)(4).
• An option for States to provide
some providers with a hardship
exemption is added at new
§ 441.302(k)(5).
• Reporting requirements are
finalized at § 441.302(k)(6), establishing
reporting requirements for States that
utilize the small provider minimum
performance level and hardship
exemption options finalized at
§ 441.302(k)(4)(ii) and (k)(5), as well as
a waiver of these requirements that may
be granted under certain circumstances.
• An exemption from the
requirements at § 441.302(k) is finalized
for IHS and Tribal health programs
subject to 25 U.S.C. 1641 at
§ 441.302(k)(7).
• Section 441.302(k)(4) is
renumbered as § 441.302(k)(8) and is
finalized, with other technical
modifications, to specify that States
must comply with the requirements set
forth at § 441.302(k)(8) beginning 6
years from the effective date of this final
Rule.
• We are finalizing §§ 441.464(f),
441.570(f), and 441.745(a)(1)(vi) with
technical modification to clarify that the
references to person-centered service
plans in §§ 441.464(f), 441.570(f), and
441.745(a)(1)(vi) are to beneficiaries’
person-centered service plans. We are
also finalizing modifications to clarify
that § 441.302(k) applies to services
delivered under these authorities,
except that references to section 1915(c)
of the Act are instead references to
sections 1915(j), (k), or (i) of the Act, as
appropriate.
• We are finalizing a modification to
§§ 441.474(c), 441.580(i), and
441.745(a)(1)(vii) to clarify that the
reporting requirement at § 441.302(k)(6)
applies to section 1915(j), (k) and (i)
authorities, respectively.
6. Supporting Documentation Required
(§ 441.303(f)(6))
As discussed in the proposed rule (88
FR 27986), States vary in whether they
maintain waiting lists for section
1915(c) waivers, and if a waiting list is
maintained, how individuals may join
the waiting list. Section 1915(c) of the
Act authorizes States to set enrollment
PO 00000
Frm 00094
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
limits or caps on the number of
individuals served in a waiver, and
many States maintain waiting lists of
individuals interested in receiving
waiver services once a spot becomes
available. While some States require
individuals to first be determined
eligible for waiver services to join the
waiting list, other States permit
individuals to join a waiting list after an
expression of interest in receiving
waiver services. This can overestimate
the number of people who need
Medicaid-covered HCBS because the
waiting lists may include individuals
who are not eligible for services.
According to the Kaiser Family
Foundation, over half of people on
HCBS waiting lists live in States that do
not screen people on waiting lists for
eligibility.118
We have not previously required
States to submit any information on the
existence or composition of waiting
lists, which has led to gaps in
information on the accessibility of
HCBS within and across States. Further,
feedback obtained during various public
engagement activities conducted with
States and other interested parties over
the past several years about reporting
requirements for HCBS, as well as
feedback received through the RFI 119
discussed earlier, indicate that there is
a need to improve public transparency
and processes related to States’ HCBS
waiting lists. In addition, we have
found, over the past several years in
particular, that some States are
operating waiting lists for their section
1915(c) waiver programs despite serving
fewer people than their CMS-approved
enrollment limit or cap, even though
States are expected to enroll individuals
up to their CMS-approved enrollment
limit or cap before imposing a waiting
list. However, because we do not
routinely collect information on States’
use of waiting lists and the number of
people on waiting lists, we are unable
to determine the extent to which States
are operating such unauthorized waiting
lists or to work with States to address
these unauthorized waiting lists.
Section 1902(a)(6) of the Act requires
State Medicaid agencies to make such
reports, in such form and containing
such information as the Secretary may
from time to time require, and to
comply with such provisions as the
118 Burns, A., M. O’Malley Watts, M. Ammula. A
Look at Waiting lists for Home and CommunityBased Services from 2016 to 2021. Kaiser Family
Foundation. https://www.kff.org/47f8e6f/.
119 CMS Request for Information: Access to
Coverage and Care in Medicaid & CHIP. February
2022. For a full list of question from the RFI, see
https://www.medicaid.gov/medicaid/access-care/
downloads/access-rfi-2022-questions.pdf.
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
Secretary may from time to time find
necessary to assure the correctness and
verification of such reports. Based on
the authority found at section 1902(a)(6)
of the Act, we proposed to require
information from States on waiting lists
to improve public transparency and
processes related to States’ HCBS
waiting lists and ensure that we are able
to adequately oversee and monitor
States’ use of waiting lists in their
section 1915(c) waiver programs. To
address new proposed requirements at
§ 441.311(d)(1), described in section
II.B.7. of this rule, on State reporting on
waiting lists, we proposed to amend
§ 441.303(f)(6) by adding a sentence to
the end of the existing regulatory text to
require that if the State has a limit on
the size of the waiver program and
maintains a list of individuals who are
waiting to enroll in the waiver program,
the State must meet the reporting
requirements at § 441.311(d)(1).
We received public comments on
these proposals. The following is a
summary of the comments we received
and our responses. We also received a
number of comments on the related
reporting requirement at § 441.311(d).
Those comments are addressed in
section II.B.7.
Comment: A few commenters shared
local data and anecdotal experiences
about States’ waiting lists, which some
described as containing thousands of
people and requiring beneficiaries to
wait for long periods of time, even
years, before accessing services. One
commenter observed that as demand for
HCBS grows, the waiting lists will also
grow. A few commenters expressed
concerns that the long waiting times
may result in beneficiaries having to
enter institutional care. Commenters
also noted that beneficiaries and their
families experience confusion regarding
waiting lists, including how long they
will have to remain on the waiting list
before receiving services; commenters
noted that this confusion or lack of
transparency can make it difficult for
beneficiaries to make informed
decisions or plan for future care needs.
A few commenters specifically
supported our proposed amendment to
§ 441.303(f) that would require States to
report information on waiting lists for
section 1915(c) waiver programs, which
commenters believed would contribute
to transparency and provide additional
data to help make future changes within
HCBS programs. Commenters believed
that a requirement to report this
information would improve CMS’s
ability to provide oversight and to hold
States accountable for waiting list
practices. A few commenters believed
that creating reporting requirements for
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
waiting lists is a necessary step toward
the larger goal of reducing HCBS
waiting lists through expansion of HCBS
programs. A few commenters noted this
information is critical when requesting
additional appropriations from State
legislatures to expand HCBS programs.
Response: We thank the commenters
for their support and for sharing their
experiences and perspectives. We agree
that collecting and reporting data on
waiting lists is a critical step in
identifying unmet needs among
beneficiaries and can support the
efficient administration and expansion
of HCBS programs.
Comment: A few commenters
expressed opposition to adding a
reporting requirement for section
1915(c) waiver programs. Commenters
noted concerns that this requirement
would necessitate changes in States’
data collection processes and IT
systems.
Response: We address commenters’
concerns in more detail in the
discussion of § 441.311(d) in section
II.B.7. of this rule. As we note in that
section, we have designed the reporting
requirement to minimize administrative
burden on States while still generating
valuable data about waiting lists needed
to support transparency and
accountability. We plan to offer States
technical assistance as needed to help
align their current data collection
practices with what will be needed to
comply with this reporting requirement.
After consideration of the public
comments, we are finalizing the
requirements at § 441.303(f) as
proposed. We note that specific
recommendations regarding the
reporting requirement are addressed in
section II.B.7. as part of the discussion
of § 441.311(d).
7. Reporting Requirements (§§ 441.311,
441.474(c), 441.580(i), and
441.745(a)(1)(vii))
Section 1902(a)(6) of the Act requires
State Medicaid agencies to make such
reports, in such form and containing
such information, as the Secretary may
from time to time require, and to
comply with such provisions as the
Secretary may from time to time find
necessary to assure the correctness and
verification of such reports. As
discussed in section II.B.1. of the
proposed rule, in 2014, we released
guidance for section 1915(c) waiver
programs in which we requested States
to report on State-developed
performance measures across several
domains, as part of an overarching
HCBS waiver quality strategy. The 2014
guidance established an expectation that
States conduct systemic remediation
PO 00000
Frm 00095
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40635
and implement a Quality Improvement
Project when they score below 86
percent on any of their performance
measures. Under our authority at
section 1902(a)(6) of the Act, we
proposed requirements at § 441.311, in
combination with other proposed
requirements identified throughout the
proposed rule, to supersede and fully
replace the reporting metrics and the
minimum 86 percent performance level
expectations for States’ performance
measures described in the 2014
guidance.
The reporting requirements we
proposed in the proposed rule
represented consolidated feedback from
States, consumer advocates, managed
care plans, providers, and other HCBS
interested parties on improving and
enhancing section 1915(c) waiver
performance to integrate nationally
standardized quality measures into the
reporting requirements, address gaps in
existing reporting requirements related
to access and the direct service
workforce, strengthen health and
welfare and person-centered planning
reporting requirements, and eliminate
annual performance measure reporting
requirements that provide limited useful
data for assessing State compliance with
statutory and regulatory requirements.
The intent of the proposed reporting
requirements was to allow us to better
assess State compliance with the
statutory and regulatory requirements
for section 1915(c) waiver programs. As
indicated at the end of this preamble
section, we proposed that the reporting
requirements at § 441.311 also apply to
State plan options authorized under
section 1915(i), (j) and (k) of the Act, as
well as to both FFS and managed care
delivery systems, unless otherwise
indicated.
We proposed, at § 441.311(a), a
regulation setting forth the statutory
basis and scope of the reporting
requirements in § 441.311.
We did not receive comments on
§ 441.311(a). Based on further
consideration, we are finalizing
§ 441.311(a) with a modification for
clarity to remove ‘‘simplification’’ and
make a minor formatting change to
ensure § 441.311(a) aligns directly with
the statutory requirement at section
1902(a)(19) of the Act.
We also note that, consistent with
statements we made in the introduction
of sections II. and II.B. of this final rule
regarding severability, we intend that
each provision in § 441.311 of this final
rule is, as finalized, distinct and
severable to the extent it does not rely
on another final policy or regulation
that we proposed. While we intend that
each of the provisions being finalized
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
40636
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
within § 441.311, and policies and
regulations being finalized elsewhere in
this rule, present a comprehensive
approach for our oversight of States’
Medicaid programs and improving
HCBS, we also intend that each
reporting requirement within § 441.311
is distinct and severable from one
another and from other policies and
regulations, being finalized in this rule
as well as those rules and regulations
currently in effect, to the extent
applicable.
Specifically, we proposed, and are
finalizing, various reporting
requirements in § 441.311 to provide
mechanisms for us to oversee States’
compliance with other policies being
finalized in this rule, such as reporting
requirements at § 441.311(b)(1) through
(2) for incident management system and
critical incident requirements under
§ 441.302(a)(6), as well as to collect data
to support future policy considerations
to address the direct care worker
shortage at § 441.311(e). While we
intend them to be distinct and
severable, we are finalizing these
reporting requirements in § 441.311 to
consolidate them in one place in
regulation so they are easier to find.
They are not interdependent to the
extent each does not rely on another
final policy or regulation that we
proposed and are finalizing in this rule.
We believe that the reporting
requirements being finalized herein at
§ 441.311(b)(1) through (4), (c), (d)(1)
and (2), and (e) are each valuable on
their own and would provide critical
data and oversight even in a
circumstance where individual
provisions within § 441.311 were not
finalized or implemented; however, we
note that in this final rule, we are
finalizing all reporting requirements in
§ 441.311, albeit some with
modifications, as discussed in this
section.
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
a. Compliance Reporting
(1) Incident Management System
Assessment (§ 441.311(b)(1) and (2))
As noted earlier in section II.B.3. of
this rule, there have been notable and
high-profile instances of abuse and
neglect in recent years that highlight the
risks associated with poor quality care
and with inadequate oversight of HCBS
in Medicaid. This is despite State efforts
to implement statutory and regulatory
requirements to protect the health and
welfare of individuals receiving section
1915(c) waiver program services, and
State adoption of related subregulatory
guidance. In addition, a July 2019
survey of States that operate section
1915(c) waivers found that:
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
• Definitions of critical incidents vary
across States and, in some cases, within
States for different HCBS programs or
populations;
• Some States do not use
standardized forms for reporting
incidents, thereby impeding the
consistent collection of information on
critical incidents;
• Some States do not have electronic
incident management systems, and,
among those that do, many use systems
with outdated electronic platforms that
are not linked with other State systems,
leading to the systems operating in silos
and the need to consolidate information
across disparate systems; and
• Many States cited the lack of
communication within and across State
agencies, including with investigative
agencies, as a barrier to incident
resolution.
Based on these findings and reports,
as well as feedback obtained during
various public engagement activities
conducted with interested parties over
the past several years to standardize and
strengthen health and welfare reporting
requirements, we proposed new
requirements for States’ incident
management systems at § 441.302(a)(6),
as discussed in section II.B.3. of this
preamble. We also proposed new
reporting requirements that will allow
us to better assess State compliance
with the requirements at § 441.302(a)(6).
Relying on our authority at section
1902(a)(6) of the Act, at § 441.311(b), we
proposed to establish new compliance
reporting requirements. Specifically, at
§ 441.311(b)(1)(i), we proposed to
require that States report every 24
months on the results of an incident
management system assessment to
demonstrate that they meet the
requirements at § 441.302(a)(6) that the
State operate and maintain an incident
management system that identifies,
reports, triages, investigates, resolves,
tracks, and trends critical incidents,
including that:
• The State define critical incidents
to meet the proposed minimum
standard definition at
§ 441.302(a)(6)(i)(A);
• The State have an electronic critical
incident system that, at a minimum,
enables electronic collection, tracking
(including of the status and resolution
of investigations), and trending of data
on critical incidents as proposed at
§ 441.302(a)(6)(i)(B);
• The State require that providers
report any critical incidents that occur
during the delivery of section 1915(c)
waiver program services as specified in
a waiver participant’s person-centered
service plan, or are a result of the failure
PO 00000
Frm 00096
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
to deliver authorized services, as
proposed at § 441.302(a)(6)(i)(C);
• The State use claims data, Medicaid
Fraud Control Unit data, and data from
other State agencies such as Adult
Protective Services or Child Protective
Services to the extent permissible under
applicable State law to identify critical
incidents that are unreported by
providers and occur during the delivery
of section 1915(c) waiver program
services, or as a result of the failure to
deliver authorized services, as proposed
at § 441.302(a)(6)(i)(D);
• The State ensure records being used
as part of the incident management
system are handled in compliance with
45 CFR 164.510(b), and records with
protected health information are
obtained and used with beneficiary
consent at § 441.302(a)(6)(i)(E);
• The State share information on
reported incidents, the status and
resolution of investigations, such as
through the use of information sharing
agreements, with other entities in the
State responsible for investigating
critical incidents, if the State refers
critical incidents to other entities for
investigation, as proposed at
§ 441.302(a)(6)(i)(E); and
• The State separately investigate
critical incidents if the investigative
agency fails to report the resolution of
an investigation within State-specified
timeframes as proposed at
§ 441.302(a)(6)(i)(F).
Given the risk of preventable and
intentional harm to beneficiaries when
effective incident management systems
are not in place, documented instances
of abuse and neglect among people
receiving HCBS, and identified
shortcomings and weaknesses of States’
incident management systems discussed
earlier, we believed the proposed
requirement for States to report every
other year on the results of an incident
management system assessment is in the
best interest of and necessary for
protecting the health and welfare of
individuals receiving section 1915(c)
waiver program services. In the absence
of such a reporting requirement, we
believed that we are unable to
determine whether States have effective
systems in place to identify and address
incidents of abuse, neglect, exploitation,
or other harm during the course of
service delivery; ensure that States are
protecting the health and welfare of
individuals receiving section 1915(c)
waiver program services; and safeguard
people receiving section 1915(c) waiver
program services from preventable or
intentional harm.
In proposing an every 24-month
timeframe for reporting, we were
attempting to take into account the
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
likely frequency of State changes to
policies, procedures, and information
systems, while also balancing State
reporting burden and the potential risk
to beneficiaries if States have incident
management systems that are not
compliant with the proposed
requirements at § 441.302(a)(6). We
believed an every 24-month timeframe
for reporting is sufficient to detect
substantial changes to policies,
procedures, and information systems
and ensure that we have accurate
information on States’ incident
management systems. We also
proposed, at § 441.311(b)(1)(ii), to allow
States to reduce the frequency of
reporting to up to once every 60 months
for States with incident management
systems that are determined to meet the
requirements at proposed
§ 441.302(a)(6). We invited comments
on whether the timeframe for States to
report on the results of the incident
management system assessment is
sufficient or if we should require
reporting more frequently (every year)
or less frequently (every 3 years). We
also invited comment on whether we
should require reporting more
frequently (every 3 years or every 4
years) for States that are determined to
have an incident management system
that meets the requirements at
§ 441.302(a)(6). If an alternate timeframe
is recommended, we requested that
commenters provide the rationale for
that alternate timeframe.
We received public comments on this
proposal. The following is a summary of
the comments we received and our
responses. We also received comments
on the incident management system
requirements. Those comments and our
responses are in section II.B.3. of this
final rule.
Comment: A few commenters
generally supported the proposed
incident management requirements
being finalized at § 441.302(a)(6), which
are the subject of the reporting
requirement at § 441.311(b)(1). One
commenter questioned how these
reporting requirements would interact
with current State reporting
requirements related to critical
incidents or other waiver reporting
requirements.
Response: We thank commenters for
their support. We expect to implement
new reporting forms for the new
reporting requirements that we are
finalizing in this final rule, including
the critical incident reporting
requirements. We also expect to modify
existing reporting forms, particularly to
remove the reporting requirements in
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
the 2014 guidance 120 that are being
superseded and fully replaced by the
requirements in this final rule. We note
that some components of the existing
reporting forms may remain in effect to
the extent that they cover other
requirements that remain unchanged by
the requirements that we are finalizing
in this final rule. States and interested
parties will have an opportunity to
comment on the new reporting forms
and the revised forms through the
Paperwork Reduction Act notice and
comment process. Further, we expect
that States will be able to build on
existing systems to comply with the
requirements being finalized in this rule
at §§ 441.302(a)(6) and 441.311(b)(1)
(discussed in sections II.B.3. and II.B.7.
of this rule, respectively.) We plan to
provide technical assistance to specific
State questions, as needed, about how
these requirements can align and
interact with current practices.
Comment: A few commenters
requested clarification on the
assessment that is mentioned in
§ 441.311(b)(1)(i). Commenters
requested more information on the
contents of the assessment States must
perform of their incident management
systems and how States should report
the results of the assessment. A few
commenters requested more detail on
the reporting template and when the
report would need to be submitted. A
few commenters expressed the hope
that the reporting timing could be
aligned with waiver years or other
administrative deadlines. One
commenter inquired if States were
expected to pay for the assessment. One
commenter requested clarification on
the deadline for when this assessment
must be completed. A few commenters
noted that the assessment was required
to be performed annually.
Response: The assessment that States
perform of their systems will include
review of the elements being finalized at
§ 441.302(a)(6). The requirements we are
finalizing in § 441.302(a)(6) is discussed
in detail in section II.B.3. of this final
rule. The assessment results will be
collected as part of the overall data
collection activities associated with the
reporting requirements in § 441.311. Per
§ 441.311(f), as finalized herein (and
discussed below in this section II.B.7.),
States will be required to comply with
the reporting requirement for
§ 441.311(b)(1) beginning 3 years after
the effective date of this final rule. This
120 We note that, although States will no longer
be expected to meet the reporting requirements and
86 percent minimum performance level in the 2014
guidance, the six assurances and related
subassurances in the 2014 guidance continue to
apply.
PO 00000
Frm 00097
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40637
means that States will be required to
submit the assessment results to CMS in
three years; thus, assessments should be
performed in time for States to meet this
timeframe. We will be making the
required assessment and reporting
template available for public comment
through the Paperwork Reduction Act
notice and comment process. Specific
reporting due dates will be determined
through subregulatory guidance.
We anticipate that the costs that
States incur to conduct and report on
the results of the assessment will be
eligible for Federal match as an
administrative activity. Current
Medicaid Federal matching funds are
available for State expenditures on the
design, development, and installation
(including enhancements), and for
operation, of mechanized claims
processing and information retrieval
systems. Under section 1903(a)(7) of the
Act, Federal matching funds are
available for administrative activities
necessary for the proper and efficient
administration of the Medicaid State
plan. This may include the costs that
States incur to conduct and report on
the results of the incident management
assessment.
We also clarify that there is not a
requirement that the incident
management assessment be performed
annually. As discussed in greater detail
below, §§ 441.311(b)(1)(i) and (ii)
require that States must submit an
incident management assessment every
24 months unless CMS determines the
system meets the requirements at
§ 441.302(a)(6), at which point the
assessment must be made every 60
months. Assessments of the incident
management system need to be
performed as part of this assurance
schedule. However, States are welcome
to perform assessments more frequently
than this schedule requires.
Comment: A few commenters
requested that we require States to
assess whether the State system tracks
the reporting of critical incidents to the
designated State Protection and
Advocacy system at the same time the
incident was reported to the State.
Response: We are declining to make
modifications to requirements for States
system assessments. We note that
commenters made a similar request to
add this requirement to the system
requirements proposed at
§ 441.302(a)(6). We also declined to add
the requirement to § 441.302(a)(6). We
refer readers to section II.B.3. of this
rule for the related discussion. However,
States are welcome to add other factors
to their system assessment beyond the
requirements we are finalizing in this
rule.
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
40638
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
Comment: One commenter requested
clarification on the consequences of a
State’s incident management system
being found to be non-compliant with
§ 441.302(a)(6).
Response: Corrective actions or other
enforcement actions will be determined
on a case-by-case basis, using our
standard enforcement authority, for
States with incident management
systems that are determined by the
assessment to not be compliant with the
requirements at § 441.302(a)(6).
Additionally, States that do not have
compliant systems will be required to
perform assessments every 24 months,
as required by § 441.311(b)(1)(i) until
CMS determines that the system meets
the requirements of § 441.302(a)(6) and
the State can reduce reporting frequency
to every 60 months, as provided by
§ 441.311(b)(1)(ii). We are not making
any changes in this final rule based on
this comment.
Comment: A few commenters
supported the proposals at
§ 441.311(b)(1)(i) and (ii) that States
must provide the required assessment
every 24 months and, if the system is
determined to be compliant, every 60
months. One commenter encouraged us
to reduce the frequency in
§ 441.311(b)(1)(i) to one year. One
commenter suggested that States should
provide assessments on their systems
every 1 to 2 years, and if the State’s
system has been deemed to be in
compliance, the assessment should be
provided every 3 to 4 years.
A few commenters, however, believed
that the reporting frequency should be
increased. One commenter
recommended this reporting should
occur every three years. A few
commenters worried that 24 months
would not be sufficient time for States
to submit the assessment to CMS, and
implement any system changes, which
might require IT systems updates and
acquiring additional funding from State
legislatures. One commenter suggested
that the assessment should be submitted
every 5 years to align with the waiver
renewal cycle.
One commenter noted that requiring
an assessment every 24 months will
create an unnecessary duplication of
work. The commenter agreed with the
need for an initial assessment but
contended that the ongoing assessments
were unnecessary, as States could
independently monitor ongoing
operations and make quality
improvements and system updates as
needed.
Response: We continue to believe that
24 months (and, for compliant systems,
60 months) is an appropriate frequency
that ensures accountability without
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
being overly burdensome. We refer
readers to our prior response regarding
situations in which we determine, based
on the State’s assessment, that its
system does not meet the requirements
finalized at § 441.302(a)(6).
We do not agree that requiring a
regular schedule of system review is
duplicative. If a State is already
conducting regular system reviews as
part of a quality improvement process,
that review can form the basis for the
every 24-month or, as appropriate, every
60-month assessment. We believe that
for States that may not already have
such processes in place, some regular
schedule of review is necessary to
ensure that over time, systems do not
fall out of compliance. We also would
encourage States to use these
assessments as opportunities to conduct
more comprehensive audits or reviews
to identify opportunities for system
improvements.
After consideration of the comments
received, we are finalizing the reporting
frequency in § 441.311(b)(1)(i) with a
technical modification for clarity that
the State must report on the results of
an incident management system
assessment, every 24 months, in the
form and manner, and at a time,
specified by CMS, rather than according
to the format and specifications
provided by CMS. We are finalizing
§ 441.311(b)(1)(ii) as proposed.
(2) Critical Incidents (§ 441.311(b)(2))
As discussed earlier in section II.B.4.
of the proposed rule, at
§ 441.302(a)(6)(i)(A), we proposed to
require States to define critical incidents
at a minimum as verbal, physical,
sexual, psychological, or emotional
abuse; neglect; exploitation including
financial exploitation; misuse or
unauthorized use of restrictive
interventions or seclusion; a medication
error resulting in a telephone call to or
a consultation with a poison control
center, an emergency department visit,
an urgent care visit, a hospitalization, or
death; or an unexplained or
unanticipated death, including but not
limited to a death caused by abuse or
neglect.
Based on the same rationale as
discussed previously in section
II.B.7.a.(1) of this preamble related to
the proposed incident management
system assessment reporting
requirement, at § 441.311(b)(2), relying
on our authority under section
1902(a)(6) of the Act, we proposed to
require that States report annually on
the number and percent of critical
incidents for which an investigation was
initiated within State-specified
timeframes; number and percent of
PO 00000
Frm 00098
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
critical incidents that are investigated
and for which the State determines the
resolution within State-specified
timeframes; and number and percent of
critical incidents requiring corrective
action, as determined by the State, for
which the required corrective action has
been completed within State-specified
timeframes. We intended to use the
information generated from the
proposed reporting requirements at
§ 441.311(b)(2)(i) through (iii) to
determine if States meet the
requirements at § 441.302(a)(6)(ii).121
Given the risk of harm to beneficiaries
when effective incident management
systems are not in place, documented
instances of abuse and neglect among
people receiving HCBS, and identified
shortcomings and weaknesses of States’
incident management systems discussed
earlier, we believed the proposed
requirement at § 441.311(b)(2) for States
to report annually on critical incidents
is in the best interest of and necessary
for protecting the health and welfare of
individuals receiving section 1915(c)
waiver program services. We invited
comments on the timeframe for States to
report on the critical incidents, whether
we should require reporting less
frequently (every 2 years), and if an
alternate timeframe is recommended,
the rationale for the alternate timeframe.
We received public comments on this
proposal. The following is a summary of
the comments we received and our
responses. We also received comments
on the minimum performance
requirements for critical incident
investigations proposed in
§ 441.302(a)(6), which form the basis of
the reporting requirement at
§ 441.311(b)(2). These comments and
our responses are in section II.B.3. of
this final rule.
Comment: A few commenters
generally supported our proposal at
§ 441.311(b)(2). One commenter
observed that the current lack of
standardized incident management
systems across all States puts
beneficiaries at risk and believed that
the critical incident reporting
requirements will help to prevent
adverse experiences, increase
accountability for States, and provide
beneficiaries with an avenue of redress
when they experience harm.
Response: We thank commenters for
their support.
Comment: A few commenters
opposed the reporting requirement at
§ 441.311(b)(2). One commenter
121 We note that there was a typographical error
in the NPRM at 88 FR 27987, incorrectly identifying
the proposed reporting requirements at
§ 441.311(b)(2)(ii) through (iv), rather
§ 441.311(b)(2)(i) through (iii).
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
believed that building the necessary IT
systems to complete the reporting will
impose an extraordinary cost to States
and take years to develop, test, and
implement. Another commenter
expressed concerns that the reporting
requirements would necessitate a
restructuring of some States’ critical
incident management, including
revising policies, procedures, trainings,
and processes.
Response: As discussed in the
proposed rule (88 FR 27978), since
2014, States operating section 1915(c)
waiver programs have been expected to
demonstrate on an ongoing basis that
they identify, address, and seek to
prevent instances of abuse, neglect,
exploitation, and unexplained death,
and demonstrate that an incident
management system is in place that
effectively resolves incidents and
prevents further similar incidents to the
extent possible. While we acknowledge
that some States may have to make some
adjustments to their systems, we expect
that most will be able to build on
existing systems to achieve this
reporting. We plan to offer States
technical assistance as needed to
support questions they may have about
adjustments they need to make to
existing policies, tracking, and reporting
systems. We decline to make any
changes in this final rule based on these
comments.
Comment: A few commenters
requested that we share more details
about the reporting template and when
the report would need to be submitted.
A few commenters expressed the hope
that the reporting timing could be
aligned with waiver years or other
administrative deadlines.
Response: The reporting requirement
at § 441.311(b)(2) will be collected as
part of the overall data collection
activities associated with the reporting
requirements in § 441.311. Per
§ 441.311(f), as finalized herein and
discussed in this section II.B.7. of the
rule, States must comply with the
reporting requirement at § 441.311(b)(2)
beginning 3 years from the effective date
of this final rule]. Prior to that
applicability date, we will be making
the reporting template available for
public comment through the Paperwork
Reduction Act notice and comment
process. Specific reporting due dates
will be determined through
subregulatory guidance.
Comment: One commenter requested
clarification on whether the reporting
was statewide or could be submitted for
each program. The commenter noted
that for States operating multiple critical
incident systems, or tracking critical
incidents at the program level, reporting
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
of data at an aggregate statewide level
will not only prove operationally
challenging, but it could also limit the
ability to identify and address programspecific issues.
Response: States are expected to
report aggregated statewide data for this
requirement. We believe that a State
could track critical incidents by
program at the State level and then
aggregate this data for the purposes of
the reporting requirement at
§ 441.311(b)(2). We plan to offer
technical assistance to States, as needed,
that have decentralized critical incident
systems to facilitate the aggregated
statewide reporting. We also note that
States will be able to provide input into
the reporting instrument when it is
shared for public comment during the
Paperwork Reduction Act notice and
public comment process.
Comment: One commenter was
critical of the proposed reporting
metrics at § 441.311(b)(2), believing that
the focus of the metrics was too much
on timeliness: timely initiation of
investigations, timely resolutions, and
timely corrective action. The commenter
did not believe that there was sufficient
focus on the substance of the incidents.
A few commenters recommended that
we add the following metrics to
§ 441.311(b)(2): the number of critical
incidents in each year, categorized by
type of incident and extent of injury or
by severity; whether corrective action
was needed; whether corrective action
was performed; whether any corrective
action addressed the needs of current
participants or future participants (or
both); and whether corrective action
adequately addressed participants’
needs.
One commenter stated that the
information should be reported to the
public, although in a format that
protects the anonymity of the
beneficiary and filer. The commenter
also suggested that a separate section of
the public report should provide
information on substantiated critical
incidents by provider, including the
service provider’s owner and the name
under which they are doing business.
Response: We disagree that the
metrics in § 441.311(b)(2) focus only on
timeliness. Inherent in these metrics is
the expectation that States will
promptly investigate and resolve critical
incidents, which we believe is the
essential purpose of the critical incident
system. We developed the reporting
requirement at § 441.311(b)(2) to strike a
balance between collecting enough
information to enable Federal oversight
of the States’ system designed to
investigate and resolve critical incidents
and imposing as minimal an
PO 00000
Frm 00099
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40639
administrative burden on States and
providers as possible. We believe it is
important for States to have flexibility
in how they design their system to
identify, report, triage, investigate,
resolve, track, and trend critical
incidents as set forth in the proposed
requirements at § 441.302(a)(6), which
we are finalizing as discussed in section
II.B.3. We also believe that requiring a
broad, national reporting requirement
for States to report critical incident
timeliness data will provide a
mechanism to assess whether States are
complying with their own timeframes
for investigating, resolving, and
implementing corrective actions, and to
ensure States are complying with their
own established processes for reviewing
and addressing critical incidents.
We did not propose, and are not
finalizing, specific requirements for how
States must use this data. We will likely
include promising practices related to
data collection and analysis, including
methods of capturing qualitative data
from the records, in technical assistance
for States to aid in implementation.
We note that the data required in
§ 441.311(b)(2) is included in the public
posting requirement we are finalizing at
§ 441.313 (discussed in greater detail in
II.B.9. of this final rule). We are not
requiring that States publicly report
specific information about critical
incidents, including the names of
providers involved in critical incidents.
We believe that some public disclosures
may not be suitable or appropriate in
every instance, and it would be difficult
to tailor a meaningful requirement to
anticipate all of these circumstances.
We are concerned that, for example, in
States with smaller HCBS populations,
it may be difficult to truly anonymize
information about critical incidents.
While we agree that, over time,
qualitative data about trends in critical
incidents could be useful to both States
and other interested parties in
promoting systemic improvements in
their HCBS programs, we defer to States
to determine when and how to make
this information public, in accordance
with applicable laws governing
confidentiality of such information, and
for what purpose.
Comment: A few commenters
supported the proposal that this data
should be reported on an annual basis.
A few commenters recommended less
frequent reporting, such as every two
years, to reduce burden.
One commenter, while not necessarily
recommending a different reporting
frequency, noted that reporting
requirements must take into account the
unique factors that impact the length of
time it could take to complete an
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
40640
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
investigation or conduct corrective
action. The commenter noted that
depending on the nature of the
corrective action and when the
corrective action process begins in a
reporting year, annual reporting may
result in misleading data about the
number of resolved critical incidents or
completed corrective actions.
Response: Given the importance and
time-sensitive nature of critical incident
investigations, resolutions, and
corrective actions, we believe it is
necessary to collect this data on an
annual basis so we may monitor these
systems. We also clarify that the
reporting is not intended to track how
many critical incidents were
investigated, resolved, or resulted in
completed corrective actions in a
reporting year; the requirement is to
report how many critical incidents were
investigated, resolved, or resulted in
completed corrective actions within
State-specified timeframes during the
reporting period. Thus, even if the
reporting period falls in the middle of
a critical incident resolution or
corrective action, these incidents would
not be reported as ‘‘non-compliant’’ if
they were still within the State-specified
timeframes for completion.
After consideration of these
comments, we are finalizing the
introductory text at § 441.311(b)(2), with
a technical modification for clarity that
the State must report to CMS annually
in the form and manner, and at a time,
specified by CMS, rather than according
to the format and specifications
provided by CMS. We are also
simplifying the title and moving the
reference to § 441.302(a)(6)(i)(A) from
the title of § 441.311(b)(2) to the
introductory text. As finalized, the
introductory text at § 441.311(b)(2) will
specify that the State must report to
CMS annually on the following
information regarding critical incidents
as defined in § 441.302(a)(6)(i)(A), in the
form and manner, and at a time,
specified by CMS. We are finalizing
§ 441.311(b)(2)(i) through (iii) as
proposed.
(3) Person-Centered Planning
(§ 441.311(b)(3))
Under the authority of section
1902(a)(6) of the Act, we proposed at
§ 441.311(b)(3) to require that States
report annually to demonstrate that they
meet the requirements at
§ 441.301(c)(3)(ii). Specifically, at
§ 441.311(b)(3)(i), we proposed to
require that States report on the percent
of beneficiaries continuously enrolled
for at least 365 days for whom a
reassessment of functional need was
completed within the past 12 months.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
At § 441.311(b)(3)(ii), we proposed to
require that States report on the percent
of beneficiaries continuously enrolled
for at least 365 days who had a service
plan updated as a result of a
reassessment of functional need within
the past 12 months. These proposed
requirements were based on feedback
obtained during various interested
parties’ engagement activities conducted
with States and other interested parties
over the past several years about the
reporting discussed in the 2014
guidance. As discussed in section II.B.7.
of the preamble for the proposed rule,
this feedback indicated that we should
strengthen person-centered planning
reporting requirements and eliminate
annual performance measure reporting
requirements that provide limited useful
data for assessing State compliance with
statutory and regulatory requirements.
These proposed requirements were also
based on feedback received through the
RFI 122 discussed earlier about the need
to standardize reporting and set
minimum standards for HCBS.
As discussed in section II.B.1. of the
preamble for the proposed rule, we
proposed a revision to the regulatory
text so that it is clear that changes to the
person-centered service plan are not
required if the re-assessment does not
indicate a need for changes. As such, for
the purpose of the reporting
requirement at § 441.311(b)(3)(ii),
beneficiaries would be considered to
have had a person-centered service plan
updated as a result of the re-assessment
if it is documented that the required reassessment did not indicate a need for
changes.
For both of the metrics at
§ 441.301(c)(3)(ii), we proposed to allow
States to report a statistically valid
random sample of beneficiaries, rather
than for all individuals continuously
enrolled in the waiver program for at
least 365 days.
We invited comments on whether
there are other specific compliance
metrics related to person-centered
planning that we should require States
to report, either in place of or in
addition to the metrics we proposed. We
also invited comments on the timeframe
for States to report on person-centered
planning, whether we should require
reporting less frequently (every 2 years),
and if an alternate timeframe is
recommended, the rationale for the
alternate timeframe.
We received public comments on this
proposal. The following is a summary of
122 CMS Request for Information: Access to
Coverage and Care in Medicaid & CHIP. February
2022. For a full list of question from the RFI, see
https://www.medicaid.gov/medicaid/access-care/
downloads/access-rfi-2022-questions.pdf.
PO 00000
Frm 00100
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
the comments we received and our
responses. We also received comments
on the person-centered service plans
minimum performance requirements
proposed in § 441.301(c)(3)(ii), which
form the basis of the reporting
requirement at § 441.311(b)(3). These
comments and our responses are in
section II.B.1. of this final rule.
Comment: A few commenters
expressed support for the requirement
that States report annually on the
specified performance metrics for
person-centered planning. Commenters
echoed sentiments that are reflected in
section II.B.1. of this final rule, that
many States are already regularly
performing the assessment and
reassessment activities in compliance
with the minimum performance
standards being finalized in
§ 441.301(c)(3)(ii) and, thus, reporting
on these activities is reasonable.
We did not receive feedback in
response to our request for comment on
additional or alternative metrics that
should be included in the reporting
requirement at § 441.311(b)(3).
Response: We thank commenters for
their support. We note that the metrics
in § 441.311(b)(3) are based on the
minimum performance requirements
being finalized at § 441.301(c)(3)(ii);
comments on these minimum
performance standards are discussed in
section II.B.1. of this final rule.
Comment: A few commenters
expressed reservations about the
proposal to allow States to report data
on a statistically valid sample of
beneficiaries, suggesting instead that we
require complete reporting on all
relevant beneficiary data.
Response: We intended that the
proposed requirement allow States to
report data and information for the
person-centered service planning
reporting metrics at § 441.311(b)(3)
using a statistically valid random
sampling of beneficiaries would reduce
State burden, while still providing
valuable data for strengthening States’
person-centered service planning
processes. We will consider expanding
the reporting to capture the full
population of beneficiaries receiving
HCBS in future rulemaking if it is
determined that such an approach gives
a more complete picture of personcentered service planning. We note that
States may choose to report on the total
population for this measure as opposed
to a sample, for instance, if doing so
better aligns with their data collection
process or needs.
We note that, as proposed, we stated
in § 441.311(b)(3)(i) and (ii) that the
State may report these metrics for a
statistically valid random sample of
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
beneficiaries. We are finalizing the
requirements at § 441.311(b)(3)(i) and
(ii) with a technical modification to
specify that the State may report this
metric using statistically valid random
sampling of beneficiaries. (Revised
language identified in bold.) We make
this technical correction to better align
the language with standard terminology
for the sampling methodology we
intended in these requirements.
Comment: One commenter
specifically noted that the frequency of
annual reporting was feasible. One
commenter noted that while the
reporting frequency is reasonable, it is
important to align with other reporting
requirements already placed on States
and managed care plans to minimize
State and managed care plan reporting
burdens.
A few commenters requested
clarification on when the report
required in § 441.311(b)(3) would be
due to CMS and whether we would
provide a template for the reporting.
One commenter requested clarification
on how this aggregated data should be
reported, noting that current
mechanisms for reporting similar data
are waiver specific.
Response: We will be releasing
subregulatory guidance, including
technical specifications for the new
reporting requirements in this final rule,
and making the required reporting
templates available for public comment
through the Paperwork Reduction Act
notice and comment process. Per
§ 441.311(f) below, States must comply
with the reporting requirement for
§ 441.311(b)(3) beginning 3 years from
the effective date of this final rule].
Specific reporting due dates will be
determined through subregulatory
guidance; we will work with States to
align these due dates with other
obligations to minimize administrative
burden to the greatest extent possible.
After consideration of the public
comments received, we are finalizing
the reporting requirement at
§ 441.311(b)(3)(i) and (ii), with the
technical modification noted above to
specify that the State may report this
metric using statistically valid random
sampling of beneficiaries. We are also
finalizing a technical correction to the
regulation text at § 441.311(b)(3). In the
proposed rule (88 FR 27988), we
indicated that we were proposing at
§ 441.311(b)(3) to require that States
report annually to demonstrate that they
meet the requirements at
§ 441.301(c)(3)(ii). In the publication of
the proposed rule, this language was
omitted from the regulatory text in error.
We are finalizing § 441.311(b)(3) with
technical modifications to specify that,
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
to demonstrate that the State meets the
requirements at § 441.301(c)(3)(ii)
regarding person-centered planning (as
described in § 441.301(c)(1) through (3)),
the State must report to CMS annually.
We are also making a technical
modification to indicate that the
reporting must be in the form and
manner, and at a time, specified by
CMS. We believe, based on the language
included in the proposed rule (88 FR
27988) and the comments received, that
commenters understood the intent of
this regulation even with language
omitted.
(4) Type, Amount, and Cost of Services
(§ 441.311(b)(4))
As discussed previously in section
II.B.4. of this preamble, we proposed to
amend § 441.302(h) to avoid duplicative
or conflicting reporting requirements
with the new Reporting Requirements
section at proposed § 441.311. In
particular, at § 441.302(h), we proposed
to remove paragraphs (1) and (2). At
§ 441.311(b)(4), we proposed to add the
language previously at § 441.302(h)(1).
In doing so, we proposed to retain the
current requirement that States report
on the type, amount, and cost of
services and to include the reporting
requirement in the new consolidated
reporting section at § 441.311.
We received public comments on this
proposal. The following is a summary of
the comments we received and our
responses.
Comment: One commenter supported
this proposal.
Response: We thank the commenter
for their support.
Comment: One commenter requested
clarification on whether the reporting
requirement at § 441.311(b)(4) will
apply to managed care plans.
Response: The requirement at
§ 441.311(b)(4) replicates the current
requirement at § 441.302(h), which
applies to section 1915(c) programs,
regardless of whether they are part of a
FFS or managed care delivery system.
As stated in the proposed rule (88 FR
27988), it was our intent to consolidate
the current reporting requirement at
§ 441.302(h)(1) with the new
requirements being finalized at
§ 441.311. We note that as this
requirement was presented in the
proposed rule, we inadvertently struck
part of the language from § 441.302(h)
that we intended to retain in
§ 441.311(b)(4) that clarified the
reporting frequency (annually) and the
object (the 1915(c) waiver’s impact on
the State plan) of the requirement
currently at § 441.302(h)(1). We are
concerned that without this omitted
language, § 441.311(b)(4) does not
PO 00000
Frm 00101
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40641
include information needed to
implement this requirement. We believe
that, as we expressed our intent in the
proposed rule (88 FR 27988) to retain
the reporting requirement at
§ 441.302(h)(1), readers would have
understood that we intended to preserve
the essential elements of the reporting.
To ensure that this requirement can
be implemented as intended, we are
finalizing § 441.311(b)(4) with language
from § 441.302(h) to specify that,
annually, the State will provide CMS
with information on the waiver’s
impact on the type, amount, and cost of
services provided under the State plan.
(Restored language is noted in bold.)
We also specify here that, as the
requirement at § 441.302(h) specifies
certain reporting for programs
authorized under section 1915(c), this
new requirement at § 441.311(b)(4) will
similarly apply only to section 1915(c)
waiver programs. We discuss the impact
of this clarification on references to
section 1915(j), (k), and (i) services (at
§§ 441.474(c), 441.580(i), and
441.745(a)(1)(vii)) later in this section.
After consideration of the comments
received, and in light of the clarification
outlined above, we are finalizing the
provision at § 441.311(b)(4) to specify
that annually, the State will provide
CMS with information on the waiver’s
impact on the type, amount, and cost of
services provided under the State plan.
Further, we are finalizing
§ 441.311(b)(4) with a technical
modification to specify that the
information is to be reported in the form
and manner, and at a time, specified by
CMS.
b. Reporting on the Home and
Community-Based Services (HCBS)
Quality Measure Set (§ 441.311(c))
At § 441.311(c), relying on our
authority under section 1902(a)(6) of the
Act, we proposed to require that States
report every other year on the HCBS
Quality Measure Set, which is described
later in section II.B.8. of the preamble.
Specifically, we proposed, at
§ 441.311(c)(1)(i), to require that States
report every other year, according to the
format and schedule prescribed by the
Secretary through the process for
developing and updating the HCBS
Quality Measure Set described in
section II.B.8. of the final rule, on
measures identified in the HCBS
Quality Measure Set as mandatory
measures for States to report or are
identified as measures for which the
Secretary will report on behalf of States,
and, at § 441.311(c)(1)(ii), to allow
States to report on measures in the
HCBS Quality Measure Set that are not
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
40642
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
identified as mandatory, as described
later in this section of the rule.
We proposed every other year for
State reporting in recognition of the fact
that the current, voluntary HCBS
Quality Measure Set is heavily
comprised of survey-based measures,
which are more burdensome, including
for beneficiaries who would be the
respondents for the surveys, and costlier
to implement than other types of quality
measures. Further, we believed that
requiring reporting every other year,
rather than annually, would better allow
States to use the data that they report for
quality improvement purposes, as it
would provide States with sufficient
time to implement interventions that
would result in meaningful
improvement in performance scores
from one reporting period to another.
We also proposed this frequency in
recognition of the overall burden of the
proposed requirement.
Because the delivery of high quality
services is in the best interest of
Medicaid beneficiaries, we proposed at
§ 441.311(c)(1)(iii), under our authority
at section 1902(a)(19) of the Act, to
require States to establish performance
targets, subject to our review and
approval, for each of the measures in the
HCBS Quality Measure Set that are
identified as mandatory for States to
report or are identified as measures for
which we will report on behalf of States,
as well as to describe the quality
improvement strategies that they will
pursue to achieve the performance
targets for those measures.123
At § 441.311(c)(1)(iv), we proposed to
allow States to establish State
performance targets for other measures
in the HCBS Quality Measure Set that
are not identified as mandatory for
States to report or as measures for which
the Secretary will report on behalf of
States as well as to describe the quality
improvement strategies that they will
pursue to achieve the performance
targets for those targets.
At § 441.311(c)(2), we proposed to
report on behalf of the States, on a
subset of measures in the HCBS Quality
Measure Set that are identified as
measures for which we will report on
behalf of States. Further, at
§ 441.311(c)(3), we proposed to allow,
but not require, States to report on
measures that are not yet required but
will be, and on populations for whom
reporting is not yet required but will be
phased-in in the future.
We solicited comments on whether
there should be a threshold of
compliance that would exempt the State
from developing improvement
strategies, and if so, what that threshold
should be. We also invited comments on
whether the timeframe for States to
report on the measures in HCBS Quality
Measure Set is sufficient, whether we
should require reporting more
frequently (every year) or less frequently
(every 3 years), and, if an alternate
timeframe is recommended, the
rationale for that alternate timeframe.
We welcomed comments on any
additional changes we should consider
in this section.
We received public comments on this
proposal. The following is a summary of
the comments we received and our
responses. We also received comments
on the HCBS Quality Measure Set
requirements proposed at § 441.312.
These comments and our responses are
in section II.B.8. of this final rule.
Comment: Regarding whether there
should be a threshold of compliance
that would exempt the State from
developing improvement strategies, one
commenter recommended exemptions
for States to develop improvement
strategies if they are performing within
the top 5th to 10th percentile of
performance targets for the quality
measures in the HCBS Quality Measure
Set, to alleviate administrative burden.
Another commenter discouraged CMS
from permitting a compliance threshold
exemption for States from developing
improvement strategies, emphasizing
that all States should be held
accountable for providing high-quality
care and services to beneficiaries
receiving HCBS regardless of
performance.
Response: We continue to believe
that, for each of the measures in the
HCBS Quality Measure Set that are
identified as mandatory for States to
report, or are identified as measures for
which we will report on behalf of States,
States should establish and describe the
quality improvement strategies to
achieve the performance targets for
those measures.124 We reiterate our
belief that the HCBS Quality Measure
Set will promote more common and
consistent use within and across States
of nationally standardized quality
measures in HCBS programs, and will
allow CMS and States to have
comparative quality data on HCBS
programs. As such, exempting States
from developing improvement strategies
123 We note that compliance with CMS
regulations and reporting requirements does not
imply that a State has complied with the integration
mandate of Title II of the ADA, as interpreted by
the Supreme Court in the Olmstead Decision.
124 We note that compliance with CMS
regulations and reporting requirements does not
imply that a State has complied with the integration
mandate of Title II of the ADA, as interpreted by
the Supreme Court in the Olmstead Decision.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
PO 00000
Frm 00102
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
for quality measures in the HCBS
Quality Measure Set does not align with
this intent.
Comment: Several commenters
recommended either faster or slower
implementation for reporting of the
measures in the HCBS Quality Measure
Set. A few commenters recommended
we change the timeframe requirement
for States to report on the quality
measures in the HCBS Quality Measure
Set to every year. In this same vein, one
commenter suggested we align the
reporting timelines required for
reporting measures in the HCBS Quality
Measure Set to other Medicaid, CHIP,
Medicare, and Marketplace measure
sets, expressing that reporting biennially
(every other year) could lock in data lags
that could hinder State progress in
improving HCBS for beneficiaries. A
few commenters recommended
alternatives to the HCBS Quality
Measure Set biennial reporting time
frame. These alternatives included the
following: initiating reporting based on
State choice; reporting on odd- or evennumbered years; and beginning State
reporting upon renewal of their section
1915(c) waiver or based on the State
reporting years for their waiver program.
A few commenters expressed concern
that the timeframe for reporting
measures in the HCBS Quality Measure
Set should be longer than every other
year, emphasizing the significant
amount of systems work, contracting,
and survey data needed to capture the
necessary data and implement reporting
on HCBS measures. Commenters
recommended we consider that the
implementation of the HCBS Quality
Measure Set reporting requirements as
proposed at § 441.311(c)(1)(iii) could
require State statutory and regulatory
amendments, lead time for securing
additional technology resources, and
operational and workflow changes.
Commenters requested CMS consider
alternative dates for States beginning
reporting on the measures in the HCBS
Quality Measure Set, ranging from an
additional 3 to 5 years to address these
concerns.
Response: We continue to believe that
a biennial timeframe requirement for
States to report on the measures in
HCBS Quality Measure Set is an
appropriate frequency that ensures
accountability without being overly
burdensome and are finalizing the
frequency of reporting as proposed. We
determined that a shorter annual
reporting timeframe would not likely be
operationally feasible because of the
potential systems and contracting
changes (to existing contracts or the
establishment of new contracts) that
States may be required to make. For
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
example, additional reporting
requirements may need to be added to
State contracts, changes may be needed
to data sharing agreements with
managed care plans, and modifications
of databases or systems might be
required to record new variables.
However, to provide States sufficient
time to comply with the requirements
finalized at § 441.311(c), we are
finalizing at § 441.311(f)(2) an
applicability date beginning 4 years,
rather than 3 years, from the effective
date of this final rule for the HCBS
Quality Measure Set reporting at
§ 441.311(c). Our primary purpose in
extending the effective date is to ensure
States have sufficient time for interested
parties to provide input into the
measures, as required by § 441.312(g),
which we are finalizing in section II.B.8.
of this rule.
In general, we anticipate that States
will not need more than 4 years after the
effective date of the final rule, to
implement systems and contracting
changes, or acquire any additional
support needed to report on the quality
measures in the HCBS Quality Measure
Set.
We plan to work collaboratively with
States to provide the technical
assistance and reporting guidance
through the Paperwork Reduction Act
process necessary to support reporting.
Comment: A few commenters
requested confirmation of whether
States with section 1115 demonstrations
are expected to comply with the HCBS
Quality Measures Set requirements in
this final rule.
Response: Yes, consistent with the
applicability of other HCBS regulatory
requirements to such demonstration
projects, the reporting requirements for
section 1915(c) waiver programs and
section 1915(i), (j), and (k) State plan
services included in this rule, including
the requirements at § 441.311 (and the
related quality measure requirements at
§ 441.312), would apply to such services
included in approved section 1115
demonstration projects, unless we
explicitly waive or exclude one or more
of the requirements as part of the
approval of the demonstration project.
Comment: A couple of commenters
recommended that we offer States
financial assistance to develop and
deploy the ability to report the quality
measures in the HCBS Quality Measure
Set.
Response: We note that Medicaid
Federal matching funds are available for
State expenditures on the design,
development, and installation
(including of enhancements), and for
operation, of mechanized claims
processing and information retrieval
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
systems. We also note that under section
1903(a)(7) of the Act, Federal matching
funds are available for administrative
activities necessary for the proper and
efficient administration of the Medicaid
State plan. This may include developing
and deploying the ability to report the
quality measures in the HCBS Quality
Measure Set.
Comment: A few commenters
expressed that instructions related to
the reporting requirements for the
quality measures in the HCBS Quality
Measures Set, and how they are related
to the section 1915(c) waiver reporting
requirements, would be helpful for
implementing the reporting of the
measure set.
Response: We thank commenters for
the feedback. We plan to work
collaboratively with States to provide
the technical assistance and reporting
guidance through the Paperwork
Reduction Act process necessary to
support reporting and help facilitate
compliance with this requirement.
After consideration of public
comments received, we are finalizing
the HCBS Quality Measure Set reporting
requirements at § 441.311(c) with
modifications. At § 441.311(f)(2), we are
finalizing that States must comply with
the reporting requirements at
§ 441.311(c) beginning 4 years, rather
than 3 years, from the effective date of
this final rule for the HCBS Quality
Measure Set. Our primary purpose in
extending the applicability date is to
ensure States have sufficient time for
interested parties to provide input into
the measures, as required by
§ 441.312(g), which we are finalizing in
section II.B.8. of this rule.
c. Access Reporting (§ 441.311(d))
As noted earlier in section II.B.6. of
this preamble, feedback obtained during
various public engagement activities
conducted with States and other
interested parties over the past several
years about reporting requirements for
HCBS, as well as feedback received
through the RFI 125 discussed earlier,
indicated that there is a need to improve
public transparency and processes
related to States’ HCBS waiting lists and
for standardized reporting on HCBS
access, including timeliness of HCBS
and the comparability to services
received to eligibility for services. At
§ 441.311(d) we proposed that the State
must report to CMS annually on the
following, according to the format and
specifications provided by CMS. We are
125 CMS Request for Information: Access to
Coverage and Care in Medicaid & CHIP. February
2022. For a full list of question from the RFI, see
https://www.medicaid.gov/medicaid/access-care/
downloads/access-rfi-2022-questions.pdf.
PO 00000
Frm 00103
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40643
finalizing in this rule § 441.311(d) with
a technical modification for clarity that
requires that the State must report to
CMS annually on the following, in the
form and manner, and at a time,
specified by CMS. (New language
identified in bold.)
(i) Waiver Waiting Lists
(§ 441.311(d)(1)(i))
At § 441.311(d)(1)(i), relying on our
authority under section 1902(a)(6) of the
Act, we proposed to require that States
provide a description annually,
according to the format and
specifications provided by CMS, on how
they maintain the list of individuals
who are waiting to enroll in a section
1915(c) waiver program, if they have a
limit on the size of the waiver program
and maintain a list of individuals who
are waiting to enroll in the waiver
program, as described in § 441.303(f)(6).
We further proposed to require that this
description must include, but be not
limited to, information on whether the
State screens individuals on the waiting
list for eligibility for the waiver
program, whether the State periodically
re-screens individuals on the waiver list
for eligibility, and the frequency of rescreening if applicable. We also
proposed to require States to report, at
§ 441.311(d)(1)(ii), the number of people
on the waiting list, if applicable, and, at
§ 441.311(d)(1)(iii), the average amount
of time that individuals newly enrolled
in the waiver program in the past 12
months were on the waiting list, if
applicable. We invited comments on
whether there are other specific metrics
or reporting requirements related to
waiting lists that we should require
States to report, either in place of or in
addition to the requirements we
proposed. We also invited comments on
the timeframe for States to report on
their waiting lists, whether we should
require reporting less frequently (every
2 or 3 years), and if an alternate
timeframe was recommended, the
rationale for that alternate timeframe.
We received public comments on this
proposal. The following is a summary of
the comments we received and our
responses. We also received comments
on the related requirement at
§ 441.303(f). Those comments are
addressed in section II.B.6. of this rule.
Comment: Many commenters
supported the proposal at
§ 441.311(d)(1) to require States to
report on waiting lists, including
whether the State screens individuals
on the list for eligibility, frequency of rescreening, number of individuals
waiting to enroll, and average amount of
time newly enrolled individuals were
on the waiting list. Commenters
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
40644
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
believed that this reporting would
promote consistency, transparency,
oversight, and accountability of waiting
list practices and help States identify
unmet needs among their Medicaid
beneficiaries. Commenters noted that
this additional information will better
allow interested parties to advocate for
policy changes to address underlying
causes of waiting lists and expand
HCBS programs; one commenter
described this requirement as a good
‘‘first step’’ to understanding access
issues for HCBS waivers.
A few commenters stated this
requirement, with its potential to
support policies that reduce waiting
lists, would help beneficiaries avoid
having to turn to institutional care for
their LTSS needs. Commenters also
noted transparent, understandable data
about waiting lists may help individuals
and families to make more informed
decisions about accessing coverage as
they plan for their future.
A few commenters noted that
nationally comparable data and
information-sharing among States will
encourage standardization of waiting
list processes and help States identify
best practices for reducing waiting lists.
Commenters noted that inconsistencies
in the way States report data about their
waiting lists and the current lack of
standardized reporting requirements
makes it difficult to form a clear picture
of how many people are waiting to
receive services, as well as how many of
these individuals on the waiting list are
actually eligible for services. One
commenter suggested that making the
waiting list public may lead to needed
administrative updates to waiting lists,
such as removing duplicate applications
or applications from beneficiaries who
have moved out of State or passed away.
Response: We agree that this critical
data is not currently available in a way
that allows for monitoring or
comparison on a national level. We
believe that this reporting requirement
is an important first step in making data
publicly available that can be used to
identify unmet needs among Medicaid
beneficiaries, support policymaking,
and improve administrative efficiency.
Comment: A few commenters
expressed opposition to, or concerns
about, the waiting list reporting
requirement at § 441.311(d)(1). A few
commenters expressed concerns that the
reporting requirement did not align with
current State waiting list practices and
would require significant change in data
collection and IT systems. One
commenter was concerned that due to
differences in States’ HCBS programs,
infrastructure, and waiting list practices,
attempting to collect and compare data
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
on a national level could be misleading.
A few commenters requested
clarification on how CMS would use
this data to drive meaningful policy
changes and improvement in HCBS
access. A few commenters stated that
the proposed requirements would not
address the underlying causes of
waiting lists, which they attributed to
limited funding for HCBS waiver slots,
low Medicaid reimbursement rates,
delays or barriers within States’
Medicaid eligibility determination
processes, or shortages of HCBS direct
care workers. A few commenters, while
not necessarily opposing the
requirement at § 441.311(d)(1),
suggested that we focus on gathering
information about why States have caps
on the number of beneficiaries who may
be served by HCBS waivers and why
States have waiting lists when they have
not met their waiver caps.
One commenter raised a concern that
the reporting requirement would cause
States to redirect or prioritize resources
for waivers with waiting lists at the
expense of waivers that currently do not
have waiting lists.
Response: We are not currently
collecting States’ data on their waiting
lists and understand that States may
have to update data collection systems
to comply with this new requirement.
We proposed the reporting requirement
at § 441.311(d) to strike a balance
between collecting enough information
to enable Federal oversight of States’
waiting list practices and imposing as
minimal an administrative burden on
States and providers as possible. We
plan to offer States technical assistance
as needed to help align their current
data collection practices with what will
be needed to comply with this reporting
requirement. The reporting requirement
at § 441.311(d)(1) is a first step in what
will be an evolving process to promote
transparency, oversight, and data-driven
improvements in States’ waiting list
practices. We acknowledge that
differences in States’ HCBS programs
may initially make comparing States’
data challenging, but we believe that
collecting this data will help highlight
such differences and draw connections
between different States’ policies and
the impact on their beneficiaries’ access
to HCBS. As noted by other
commenters, States may be able to use
this data to learn from the experiences
of other States.
We acknowledge that there are many
underlying causes for States to have
long waiting lists, but we believe that
the first step toward addressing these
challenges, where possible, is to
quantify the scope of these waiting lists
through data collection. This data will
PO 00000
Frm 00104
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
not only help identify situations in
which a State appears to be maintaining
a waiting list when not all of the
waiver’s slots are taken but can also
facilitate conversations with States
about reasons for limitations on waiver
enrollment.
We clarify that the purpose of this
requirement is to document unmet
needs for individuals who are seeking
enrollment in HCBS waivers and to
identify resources or practices that
could be used to improve waiting list
processes. As such, our goal is not to
require that States shift needed
resources away from other areas of their
Medicaid programs.
Comment: One commenter requested
that we provide reporting tools to help
States track the required data. One
commenter requested that the data
needed for this reporting requirement be
derived from the State’s own eligibility
and service authorization processes, not
from providers and beneficiaries,
particularly for self-directed services.
Response: We plan to release
subregulatory guidance and other tools
to assist States with implementation of
this reporting requirement. We will also
be making the reporting template
available for public comment through
the Paperwork Reduction Act notice and
comment process.
While States have flexibility as to how
they will gather the data needed to
complete this reporting, we encourage
States to find ways to rely on
administrative data rather than
gathering data directly from
beneficiaries to meet the reporting
requirements.
Comment: A few commenters
requested that the information about
waiting lists be made available to the
public in a consumer-friendly and
accessible format in order to facilitate
program accountability and potentially
improve beneficiary understanding of
waiting list information. One
commenter suggested that publishing
data about the waiting list may help
publicize the need for more direct care
workers.
Response: As discussed in more detail
later in section II.B.9 of this rule, we are
finalizing a requirement at § 441.313(a)
to require States to operate a website
that meets the availability and
accessibility requirements at
§ 435.905(b) of this chapter and that
provides the results of the reporting
requirements at § 441.311 (including
this access reporting requirement at
§ 441.311(d), as well as the incident
management, critical incident, personcentered planning, and service
provision compliance data; data on the
HCBS Quality Measure Set; and
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
payment adequacy data, discussed in
this section) and the reporting
requirements at § 441.302(k)(6). Please
refer to the discussion of the website
posting requirements in section II.B.9. of
this rule.
Comment: One commenter suggested
that we consider offering incentives for
States to reduce or end waiting lists
through a higher FMAP rate for a
limited time period. One commenter
requested that States be given a grace
period and allowed to update their
section 1915(c) waivers prior to any
punitive action.
Response: We note that the
requirement at § 441.311(d)(1) is a
reporting requirement intended to
encourage transparency and does not
include any specific performance
measures with which States must
comply. To the extent that States are in
compliance with existing requirements
for section 1915(c) waiver programs, it
is also not intended to require that
States make changes to their waiver
programs or processes. We intend to use
our standard enforcement discretion to
require State compliance with the
reporting requirement, which (as
discussed under § 441.311(f) below) will
go into effect three years after the
effective date of this final rule. In
addition, we note that CMS does not
have authority to provide States with a
higher FMAP rate for any expenditures
than has been authorized by statute.
Comment: A number of commenters
noted that waiting list terminology,
definitions, and processes vary widely
among States and even among
individual State programs. Commenters
observed that some States operate what
they refer to as interest lists,
preauthorization lists, or similarly
named lists, rather than waiting lists. In
some cases, individuals can sign up to
express interest in a waiver program but
may not have yet been assessed for
eligibility at the time they joined the
interest list. Commenters questioned
whether these individuals would be
considered ‘‘waiting to enroll’’ as
described in the proposed rule, as they
are waiting to be determined eligible to
enroll. Commenters requested
clarification as to what data would be
collected from States that maintain
interest lists or similarly named lists of
individuals who have not yet been
determined to be eligible for the waiver.
A few commenters expressed
concerns that if interest lists are not
included in this requirement, States
may be encouraged to stop maintaining
waiting lists. One commenter noted that
if the requirement does apply to interest
lists, States that use an interest list
approach would have to make
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
significant changes to their processes to
meet the waiting list reporting
requirement. One commenter observed
that in their State, the State maintains
a single waiting list for all waivers,
which could complicate reporting.
Several commenters requested that we
create a definition of a waiting list. One
commenter supported what they
believed to be our proposed
standardized definition of a waiting list
(but did not specify what they thought
that definition to be). A few commenters
requested that we require States to have
waiting lists for their waiver programs
and that States screen individuals for
eligibility prior to placing the
individuals on the waiting list.
Response: We intended for the
reporting requirement to apply to all
States that maintain a list of individuals
interested in enrolling in a section
1915(c) waiver program, whether or not
the individual has been assessed for
eligibility. As we stated in the proposed
rule (88 FR 27986), many States
maintain waiting lists of individuals
interested in receiving waiver services
once a spot becomes available. While
some States require individuals to first
be determined eligible for waiver
services to join the waiting list, other
States permit individuals to join a
waiting list after an expression of
interest in receiving waiver services.
We note that the requirement at
§ 441.311(d)(1) requires States to submit
a description of their waiting list that
includes information on whether the
State screens individuals on the waiting
list for eligibility for the waiver
program, whether the State periodically
re-screens individuals on the waiver list
for eligibility, and the frequency of rescreening if applicable. This
requirement indicates that
§ 441.311(d)(1) applies to States even if
they do not screen the individuals on
their list for eligibility. We believe that
for the purposes of this requirement
individuals who are waiting to be
screened for eligibility for the waiver are
considered ‘‘waiting to enroll.’’
We believe that States that maintain
an interest list (or a similarly named list
of individuals who have expressed
interest in the waiver and are waiting to
be assessed for eligibility) can report the
same information required in
§ 441.311(d)(1) as States that maintain
lists of individuals who have been
screened for eligibility. We expect, for
instance, that States typically would
have information about the number of
individuals who are on an interest list
and how long those individuals have
been on those lists. If a State maintains
two separate lists for a waiver—a list of
individuals who have been screened for
PO 00000
Frm 00105
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40645
eligibility for the waiver and a list of
individuals who have expressed interest
in enrolling in the waiver but have not
yet been screened—the State should
report on both to meet the reporting
requirements at § 441.311(d)(1).
As we did not propose a formal
definition of waiting list, nor a
requirement for States to maintain a
waiting list of individuals who have
been screened for eligibility, we will not
add these components to the finalized
§ 441.311(d). States retain flexibility in
determining whether or not to maintain
a list of individuals who are interested
in enrolling in the waiver (whether or
not the individual has been screened for
eligibility). We will take commenters’
recommendations into consideration for
future policymaking if, after monitoring
reporting generated by § 441.311(d), we
identify the need for further
standardization of these processes.
Comment: We received responses to
our comment solicitation on additional
metrics that could be collected
regarding the waiting list. One
commenter recommended that we not
add more metrics to § 441.311(d)(1).
Several commenters did suggest
additional metrics. Many of these
commenters believed that more detailed
data would allow for a better assessment
of overall unmet needs and disparities
within the waiting lists. Additional
metrics suggested by commenters
included:
• Disaggregated data about
beneficiaries, by demographic
categories, including race, ethnicity,
Tribal status, language status, sex or
gender identification, sexual
orientation, age, and geographic
location;
• Disaggregated data on beneficiaries’
dual eligible status, disability,
diagnosis, functional status, level of
care, and risk of institutionalization;
• Whether States maintain separate
waiting lists or registries for
beneficiaries who are eligible for HCBS
but have been determined by the State
to not have a need prioritized by the
State for enrollment in the waiver;
• The criteria used to determine
beneficiaries’ placement and movement
within a waiting list;
• How much time individuals spend
waiting for an eligibility assessment and
how much time elapses between an
assessment and service authorization;
• The number of eligibility screens
performed on each beneficiary on the
waiting list in the past year, and why a
rescreen was performed;
• The number of beneficiaries
removed from the waiting list due to
death, admission to an institutional
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
40646
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
setting, or having been rescreened and
deemed ineligible;
• The number of beneficiaries on the
waiting list who are receiving care
through another State Medicaid
program, reasons why beneficiaries
prefer to remain on the waiting list
rather than enroll in other services, and
what beneficiary needs remain unmet
by other Medicaid programs while a
beneficiary is on a waiting list; and
• Whether a participant who has been
approved for HCBS waiver services is
able to find a provider, how long it took
for them to find that provider, and what
services they wanted, but could not
access because no provider was
available.
Response: We thank commenters for
their feedback. We will take these
recommendations under consideration
for future policymaking, but at this time
decline to make modifications to the
requirements based on these comments.
We believe it is important to strike a
balance between collecting enough
information to promote transparency
around waiting lists and imposing as
minimal an administrative burden on
States and providers as possible. We
also believe that information on whether
States screen individuals on their
waiting lists, the number of
beneficiaries on the waiting list, and the
average amount of time beneficiaries
enrolled in HCBS waivers spent on the
waiting list provides important
preliminary data on the States’ waiting
list practices. As we gather and review
this data, we will consider what
additional information may be needed
to further improve our oversight of
HCBS programs and improve
beneficiaries’ access to services.
However, we agree that some of the
granular data elements suggested by
commenters could provide States with
valuable insight into their own
programs and beneficiary needs. We
encourage States to consider what
information they have the capacity to
collect and would find useful for
developing local policies to support
beneficiaries’ access to section 1915(c)
HCBS waiver programs in their State.
Comment: One commenter
recommended requiring that States
report duplicated and unduplicated
counts of individuals across waiver
program waiting lists.
Response: We have not identified a
compelling reason to require that States
report unduplicated counts of
beneficiaries for all waiver programs.
We clarify that the reporting required
for § 441.331(d)(1) is for each waiting
list; if an individual is on multiple
waiting lists, we believe that person
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
should be counted among individuals
on each of those waiting lists.
Comment: A few commenters
recommended additional metrics that
fall outside the scope of reporting on
waiting list practices or waiver
enrollment, including:
• Whether individuals on waiting
lists are also being screened for
eligibility for other programs that they
may be able to benefit from (for
example, Supplemental Nutrition
Assistance Program);
• How long it takes a State to approve
enrollment in any program that provides
Medicaid LTSS, from the date that it
receives an application until the date of
the approval letter; and
• Additional measures to assess the
needs of populations that face barriers
to navigating the HCBS programs,
applying, and getting on a waiting list.
Response: While these metrics lie
outside the scope of the proposed
reporting requirements, we will add
these to other comments regarding
broader HCBS access and equity issues
that we will consider for future
policymaking.
Comment: A few commenters
suggested that we collect data on
reasons for long waiting times, such as
challenges with workforce availability
or provider capacity. Some commenters,
particularly those representing States or
providers, were concerned that without
this information, States and providers
would be held responsible for long
waiting lists or long waiting times for
services that are due to reasons beyond
States’ or providers’ control. One
commenter recommended adding a
requirement that States describe any
conditions, such as State funding
priorities, that serve to limit access to
the HCBS described in the waiver
application. A few commenters
recommended adding a requirement to
the interested parties’ advisory group
being finalized at § 447.203 that would
require States, through their interested
parties’ advisory groups, to examine
reasons for gaps in services that are
revealed by the reporting on waiting
lists.
Response: We do not believe it would
be feasible at this stage to standardize
the collection of qualitative data
regarding the causes of waiting lists; this
data would also be difficult to validate.
As noted in prior responses, the purpose
of the requirement at § 441.311(d)(1) is
to encourage transparency; the
requirement does not include any
specific performance measures with
which States or providers must comply.
We believe that collecting the number of
individuals on the waiting list and the
length of time individuals spend on
PO 00000
Frm 00106
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
waiting list will present quantifiable
and comparable baseline data that can
facilitate more nuanced conversations
with States about potential unmet
beneficiary needs and the underlying
causes of these unmet needs.
We note that, regarding the interested
parties’ advisory group being finalized
at § 447.203, the requirements at
§ 447.203 already include an
expectation that access reporting that is
required by 441.311(d) would be
appropriate data for the Interested
Parties Advisory Group (IPAG) to
consider when making
recommendations regarding the
sufficiency of rates. We decline to add
a specific requirement as suggested by
the commenter, as we wish to allow
both States and the IPAGs some
discretion in determining their
approach to examining the impact on
payments rates in their State.
Comment: A few commenters
supported annual reporting for
§ 441.311(d)(1). One commenter
observed that one of their State agencies
had already identified annual reporting
on the waiting list as a best practice and
was publishing an annual report. One
commenter recommended quarterly
reporting to encourage States to take
more aggressive steps to reduce the size
of their waiting lists. A few commenters
believed that biennial (every other year)
reporting would reduce burden on
States and better account for
fluctuations in waiting list size that are
beyond the State Medicaid agency’s
control.
One commenter highlighted that
waiting list volumes may vary at certain
times of year or from year to year,
depending on how States structure the
release of new waiver slots and the
timing of the State legislative sessions
where new funding for waiver slots may
be approved. The commenter stated that
it is important to take these factors into
account when considering reporting
frequency and when evaluating reported
data from year to year.
Response: We are finalizing the
annual reporting frequency as proposed
at § 441.311(d)(1). We continue to
believe that annual reporting on waiting
lists strikes the right balance between
collecting current data on waiting lists
and minimizing burden on States to the
greatest extent possible. We believe
reporting more frequently than annually
may represent an undue burden on
States, although States are encouraged
to share information with interested
parties within their State on a more
frequent basis if they are able to do so.
We are concerned that if we extend the
reporting to a biennial frequency, the
information will become outdated prior
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
to the next public report. We also note
that States will likely have to develop or
maintain the same data tracking systems
regardless of whether the reporting itself
is done annually or biennially; we
believe the potential reduction in
administrative burden by biennial
reporting is outweighed by the need for
more timely information on waiting
lists.
Comment: One commenter requested
clarification that the reporting
requirement at § 441.311(d)(1) is limited
to the section 1915(c) authority and to
the section 1915(j) authority, where it is
used as the State’s authority for selfdirection in a section 1915(c) waiver.
This commenter recommended limiting
this requirement to these authorities.
Response: We agree that, because
section 1915(i) and section 1915(k) State
plan services cannot have capped
enrollment, the reporting requirements
at § 441.311(d)(1) would not apply to
these authorities. We also agree that the
reporting requirements at
§ 441.311(d)(1) would also apply to
section 1915(j) authority only where
section 1915(j) is used as the State’s
authority for self-direction in a section
1915(c) waiver. We note that the
reporting requirements at
§ 441.311(d)(1) would apply to section
1115(a) demonstration projects that
include HCBS if the State caps
enrollment for the HCBS under the
section 1115(a) demonstration project.
As discussed later in this section,
section II.B.7. of this final rule, we are
finalizing the application of the
reporting requirements at § 441.311 to
section 1915(j), (k), and (i) authorities
with modifications to specify that States
must only comply with the reporting
requirements applicable to the services
under these authorities.
After consideration of the commenters
received, we are finalizing
§ 441.311(d)(1) as proposed.
(ii) Reporting on Wait Times for
Services and Authorized Service Hours
Provided (§ 441.311(d)(2))
At § 441.311(d)(2)(i), based on our
authority under section 1902(a)(6) of the
Act, we proposed to require States
report annually on the average amount
of time from when homemaker services,
home health aide services, or personal
care services, as listed in § 440.180(b)(2)
through (4), are initially approved to
when services began, for individuals
newly approved to begin receiving
services within the past 12 months. We
proposed to focus on these specific
services for this reporting requirement
because of feedback from States,
consumer advocates, managed care
plans, providers, and other HCBS
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
interested parties that timely access to
these services is especially challenging
and because the failure of States to
ensure timely access to these services
poses substantial risk to the health,
safety, and quality of care of individuals
residing independently and in other
community-based residences. We
believed that having States report this
information will assist us in our
oversight of State HCBS programs by
helping us target our technical
assistance and monitoring efforts. We
requested comment on whether this
requirement should apply to additional
services authorized under section
1915(c) of the Act.
For this metric, we proposed to allow
States to report on a statistically valid
random sample of individuals newly
approved to begin receiving these
services within the past 12 months,
rather than for all individuals newly
approved to begin receiving these
services within the past 12 months. We
invited comments on the timeframe for
States to report on this metric, whether
we should require reporting less
frequently (every 2 or 3 years), and if an
alternate timeframe is recommended,
the rationale for that alternate
timeframe. We also invited comments
on whether there are other specific
metrics related to the amount of time
that it takes for eligible individuals to
begin receiving homemaker services,
home health aide services, or personal
care services that we should require
States to report, either in place of or in
addition to the metric we proposed.
At § 441.311(d)(2)(ii), also based on
our authority under section 1902(a)(6) of
the Act, we proposed to require States
to report annually on the percent of
authorized hours for homemaker
services, home health aide services, or
personal care services, as listed in
§ 440.180(b)(2) through (4), that are
provided within the past 12 months. For
this metric, we further proposed to
allow States to report on a statistically
valid random sample of individuals
authorized to receive these services
within the past 12 months, rather than
all individuals authorized to receive
these services within the past 12
months. We invited comments on the
timeframe for States to report on this
metric, whether we should require
reporting less frequently (every 2 or 3
years), and if an alternate timeframe is
recommended, the rationale for that
alternate timeframe. We also invited
comments on whether there are other
specific metrics related to individuals’
use of authorized homemaker services,
home health aide services, or personal
care services that we should require
States to report, either in place of or in
PO 00000
Frm 00107
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40647
addition to the metric we proposed. We
further requested comment on whether
this requirement should apply to
additional services authorized under
section 1915(c) of the Act.
We received public comments on this
proposal. The following is a summary of
the comments we received and our
responses.
Comment: Several commenters
supported our proposals at
§ 441.311(d)(2) that States report on the
time it takes between service
authorization and service delivery and
the number of authorized hours
compared to the number of hours
provided. A few commenters, while
characterizing these as imperfect
measures, nevertheless noted that the
data measurements can help assess
systematic issues with provider
enrollment and access to care. One
commenter observed that similar data is
not currently available from their State,
and believed this type of data would be
useful.
Commenters noted that in their
experience, beneficiaries might wait
months after being authorized to receive
services for the services to actually
begin, or do not receive all of the
services indicated in their personcentered care plan; these delays and
underutilization of services cause a
wide array of issues for the beneficiary
and their families.
Commenters also noted these
proposals complemented the waiver
waiting list requirement at
§ 441.311(d)(1), noting that even when
individuals are enrolled in a waiver,
this does not always mean that their
services start immediately. A few
commenters also stated that in their
experience, even in States that do not
have waiting lists for their waiver
programs, beneficiaries may wait long
periods of time for the waiver services
to begin.
Response: As we discuss further in
responses below, we recognize that the
reasons for service delays and
underutilization are nuanced. The
reporting requirements at
§ 441.311(d)(2) are a first step in what
will be an evolving process to promote
transparency, oversight, and data-driven
improvements in States’ waiting list
practices.
Comment: A few commenters cited
factors that may contribute to delays or
underutilization of services, some of
which are beyond the control of State
Medicaid agencies, managed care plans,
or providers. Commenters cited
challenges including administrative
inefficiency, shortages of direct care
workers or available providers, and
geographic constraints. Other
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
40648
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
commenters cited specific obstacles,
such as: difficulty in obtaining complete
medical information from the
beneficiary, delays in the care planning
process, additional training
requirements for self-directed service
workers, lags in providers submitting
claims or other delays in claims
processing, or unavailability of the
beneficiary due to travel,
hospitalization, changes in provider,
withdrawal from the program, or loss of
Medicaid eligibility. A few commenters
suggested that in some cases,
beneficiaries decline services or are
already receiving a different service that
meets their needs prior to the new
services being authorized.
One commenter noted that there are
service delivery delays in care provided
under private payers and wondered how
these delays compare to those in
Medicaid HCBS and whether they may
be attributable to the adequacy of the
provider network or to reimbursement
rates.
A few commenters believed that the
requirements at § 441.311(d)(2) would
not address these underlying causes of
service delays or underutilization and,
thus, would not improve access to
services. One commenter requested
clarification on how this data would be
used to promote meaningful change.
On the other hand, some commenters
believed that the requirements at
§ 441.311(d)(2) can help identify unmet
needs and uncover some of the causes
of these challenges, which in turn can
focus efforts on efficient solutions.
Response: We acknowledge that there
are many underlying causes for service
delays or service underutilization. We
believe that the first step toward
addressing these challenges, where
possible, is to quantify the scope of
these delays or underutilization through
data collection. Additionally, some of
the challenges commenters cited are
within the purview of States, managed
care plans, or providers to address. If
the data demonstrates what appears to
be significant delays or underutilization,
we believe this information can help
facilitate conversations with States,
managed care plans, and providers
about the reasons for these reporting
results.
We also note that the purpose of the
data is to track trends in service delivery
times and utilization, not to track the
outcomes for each beneficiary. The
reporting will be the average amount of
time a random sample of beneficiaries
waited between service authorization
and the start of services, and the total
percent of authorized services that were
provided. Thus, some of the factors that
commenters cited, particularly those
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
involving the behavior of specific
beneficiaries, such as failure to provide
timely medical data, declining services,
or traveling, we believe should not
significantly impact the reported
numbers unless these obstacles are
particularly prevalent (in which case,
this may also be an area to identify for
policy or program improvement).
Comment: A few commenters
opposed the requirements at
§ 441.311(d)(2). A few commenters
suggested that some States or managed
care plans are not currently tracking the
time between service authorization and
the start of services and that it would
take significant resources to develop,
test, and deploy changes to the State’s
documentation management system.
One commenter noted that it may be
difficult to track this data because
services are authorized, and claims are
paid using different systems or are
overseen by different parts of State
government. One commenter noted that,
while their State does track service
utilization data, it would take additional
staff resources to comply with the
reporting requirements.
Response: We are not currently
collecting States’ data on the times
between service authorization and when
services begin, or the number of
authorized hours that are being utilized
and understand that States may not be
tracking all of this data; the absence of
this data is what has prompted us to
propose the requirement at
§ 441.311(d)(2). We recognize that,
because this data has not previously
been tracked by all States, some States
may have to update their data collection
systems to comply with this new
requirement. As discussed elsewhere in
this rule, in Medicaid, enhanced FFP is
available at a 90 percent FMAP for the
design, development, or installation of
improvements of mechanized claims
processing and information retrieval
systems, in accordance with applicable
Federal requirements. Enhanced FFP at
a 75 percent FMAP is also available for
operations of such systems, in
accordance with applicable Federal
requirements. We reiterate that receipt
of these enhanced funds is conditioned
upon States meeting a series of
standards and conditions to ensure
investments are efficient and effective.
We also note that, under section
1903(a)(7) of the Act, Federal matching
funds are available for administrative
activities necessary for the proper and
efficient administration of the Medicaid
State plan.
We developed the reporting
requirement at § 441.311(d)(2) to strike
a balance between collecting enough
information to enable Federal oversight
PO 00000
Frm 00108
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
of service delivery and utilization and
imposing as minimal an administrative
burden on States and providers as
possible. We believe the long-term
benefits of collecting this data outweigh
the initial burden of implementation.
Accordingly, we decline to make any
changes in this final rule based on these
comments.
We are finalizing § 441.311(d)(2)(i)
with a modification that we believe will
further reduce administrative burden on
States. As noted in an earlier comment
summary, some commenters noted that
in some instances beneficiaries may
wait long periods of time to receive
services. Upon further consideration, we
have determined that the requirement at
§ 441.311(d)(2) as written may present
some data collection challenges in
situations in which the beneficiary’s
date of approval of service and the date
when services actually begin are
separated by enough time that they fall
in two different reporting periods. For
instance, if the reporting period aligned
with the calendar year, if an individual
was approved for services on November
1, 2028, but did not start receiving
services until February 1, 2029, it is not
clear how that beneficiary’s wait time
for services would be captured in the
reporting period for January 1, 2028,
through December 31, 2028. (We note
that we are using the calendar year as
the reporting period only for the
purposes of this example. As discussed
later in this section, we will work with
States and other interested parties
through the Paperwork Reduction Act
process to determine the actual
reporting period.) It appears that in this
circumstance, the State would have to
first indicate that the beneficiary had
waited 2 months (November 1, 2028,
through the end of the reporting period
on December 31, 2028); then the State
would need to submit updated
information for this beneficiary to report
the beneficiary’s total wait time. This
process would need to be repeated on a
rolling basis for other beneficiaries
whose approval date and service start
date fell in different reporting periods.
Repeated updates to States’ data would
be burdensome, make it difficult for
States to share meaningful data with
CMS and the public, and lead to delays
in State reporting of complete data for
each reporting period.
To avoid this type of confusion in
reporting, we are amending the
requirement at § 441.311(d)(2)(i) to
specify that the reporting is for
individuals newly receiving services,
rather than for individuals newly
approved to begin receiving services.
(Revised language is noted in bold.) As
applied to the example above, this
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
modification to § 441.311(d)(2)(i) means
that the beneficiary whose services
began on February 1, 2029 would be
included in the January 1, 2029, through
December 31, 2029, reporting period;
the State would be able to ‘‘look back’’
to identify when the services were
approved (in the example, services were
approved November 1, 2028) and the
State would report the beneficiary’s
total wait time between November 1,
2028 and February 1, 2029. We believe
this modification preserves the
intention of what we proposed in
§ 441.311(d)(2)(i)—to measure the time
between when a beneficiary was
approved to receive services and when
the services actually begin—but clarifies
and streamlines the reporting process.
Comment: A few commenters
expressed concerns that States would
use information about unfilled service
hours to infer whether or not authorized
services are necessary for the
beneficiary. These commenters noted
that many reasons exist as to why an
individual would be unable to receive
authorized care on a particular day but
still need the care, such as the service
provider was unavailable or there was
confusion around when and what
services were to be delivered on that
day. One commenter requested
reassurance that the reporting
requirement at § 441.311(d)(2)(ii) to
report on the average number of hours
authorized that are provided would not
be used to reduce or limit beneficiaries’
access to services. One commenter
suggested that we monitor services to
ensure that States are not reducing
services in response to this data.
Response: The purpose of this
reporting requirement at
§ 441.311(d)(2)(ii) is not to audit
individual beneficiaries’ service
utilization or to use the information as
a reason to reduce their authorized
service hours. The purpose and intent of
the requirement is to identify barriers to
beneficiaries’ access to services.
Accordingly, we decline to make any
changes in this final rule based on these
comments. However, we note that the
State is required at § 441.301(c)(2) to
ensure that the person-centered service
plan reflects the services and supports
that are important for the individual to
meet the needs identified through an
assessment of functional need, as well
as what is important to the individual
with regard to preferences for the
delivery of such services and supports,
and this requirement remains
unchanged. States and managed care
plans should not use the data collected
to meet the reporting requirement at
§ 441.311(d)(2)(ii) to reduce authorized
hours.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
Comment: One commenter requested
clarification on when the approval of
services occurs, such as at the time of
enrollment or when a physician signs
the plan of treatment. The commenter
also observed that it will be critical to
standardize the data elements that must
be captured in this reporting.
Response: Given the variable nature of
States’ processes, we defer to States to
determine when services are considered
to have been approved and how this
approval date can be tracked
consistently for the reported services.
We intend to provide States with
technical assistance, including technical
specifications and sampling guidance,
for the new reporting requirements in
this final rule, which will aid in
consistent data reporting. We will also
be making the reporting template
available for public comment through
the Paperwork Reduction Act notice and
comment process.
Comment: A couple of commenters
recommended requiring States to set a
target for timeliness (such as 7 days) and
measure the percentage of all cases in
which the wait time exceeded that
target.
Response: At this time, we are
focusing on creating baseline datareporting standards. We will take these
recommendations for setting or
requiring benchmarks under
consideration should we pursue future
rulemaking in this area.
Comment: We received responses to
our comment solicitation on whether
§ 441.311(d)(2) should apply to other
section 1915(c) services aside from
homemaker, home health aide, and
personal care services as set forth at
§ 440.180(b)(2) through (4).
One commenter recommended
narrowing the scope of this requirement
to personal care services only and
removing homemaker and home health
aide services from the requirement. The
commenter contended that homemaker
services do not cover activities of daily
living which are typically associated
with direct care to HCBS beneficiaries.
The commenter also noted that home
health aide services are typically offered
under the Medicaid State plan rather
than a section 1915(c) waiver. The
commenter concluded that limiting the
requirement to personal care services
would allow CMS and States to
concentrate on highly utilized personal
care services and would make the
requirement more operationally feasible
for States.
On the other hand, a few commenters
advocated for extending the reporting
requirements to all HCBS. One of these
commenters suggested that applying the
requirement to only a few services
PO 00000
Frm 00109
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40649
would create an unintended
consequence of focusing more attention
on certain services and the populations
receiving those services, at the expense
of other beneficiaries. A few of these
commenters also pointed out that other
services are experiencing direct care
worker shortages that could be
contributing to service delays or
underutilization that need to be
identified.
One commenter suggested that we
add services offered by specialty
providers, such as occupational
therapists, physical therapists, or
speech-language pathologists, to the
requirement.
A couple of commenters
recommended extending the
requirement to include services
typically delivered to people with
intellectual or developmental
disabilities, such as habilitation
services. Similar to the reasons cited by
commenters for extending the
requirement to all HCBS, commenters in
favor of extending the requirements to
include habilitation noted that these
services are critical and beneficiaries
who receive them are experiencing
delays in services or other access issues.
However, one commenter requested that
we not extend these requirements to
habilitation services, citing concerns
that some States’ information systems
are not equipped to track this
information for habilitation services.
The commenter also noted that
differences between habilitation
services and other types of HCBS
require additional study and
consideration prior to applying these
reporting requirements for habilitation
services.
Response: We believe that the services
proposed for inclusion in this
requirement include activities of daily
living that are critical to beneficiaries’
health, safety, and ability to live
successfully in the community.
Additionally, as identified in an
analysis performed by CMS, the three
services fall within the taxonomy of
home-based services, which are both
high-volume and high cost.126 Thus, we
believe that targeting these services will
maximize the impact of this
requirement by addressing the needs of
many beneficiaries and promoting better
oversight of frequently used services.
Given the similarities among
homemaker, home health aide, and
personal care services, we cannot find a
justification for removing homemaker
126 Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services.
‘‘Trends in Rate Methodologies for High-Cost, High
Volume Taxonomies.’’ https://www.medicaid.gov/
sites/default/files/2019-12/trends-in-rate-august2017.pdf. Last access October 2, 2023.
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
40650
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
and home health aide services from this
requirement.
Because we want to start by focusing
on a selection of high-volume, high-cost
services, we do not at this time intend
to expand the reporting requirement to
all HCBS. We do agree with commenters
that services in addition to homemaker,
home health aide, and personal care
services may be particularly vulnerable
to delays due to shortages in the direct
care workforce. For that reason, we are
extending the requirement to
habilitation services in this final rule
which, like homemaker, home health
aide, and personal care services, tend to
be hands-on services that are delivered
by direct care workers who often earn
lower wages. We believe that expanding
the reporting to include habilitation
services will ensure that beneficiary
populations, namely individuals with
intellectual or developmental
disabilities who commonly receive
personal care services as part of their
habilitation services, are not excluded
from our efforts to support the direct
care workforce.
We acknowledge the comment that
habilitation services are unique from
other services, but also cannot identify
reasons why these differences should
exclude them from this reporting
requirement.
After consideration of these
comments and the benefits of aligning
reporting requirements across services,
we are finalizing the reporting
requirements at § 441.311(d)(2)(i) and
(ii) with a modification to include
homemaker, home health aide, personal
care, and habilitation services, as set
forth at § 440.180(b)(2) through (4) and
(6).
Comment: One commenter requested
clarification on whether § 441.311(d)(2)
would apply to services in both
managed care and FFS delivery systems.
One commenter requested that we
require reporting on managed care
plans’ prior authorization practices,
including differing lengths of
authorizations and untimely
authorizations that were not in place or
renewed prior to the date of expected
services. The commenter noted that
missing authorizations may cause
disruptions in payments to providers
and threaten the continuity of
beneficiaries’ access to the services.
Response: The reporting requirements
apply to services delivered under both
FFS and managed care delivery systems.
For additional information, we refer
readers to the discussion of
§§ 441.311(f) and 438.72(b) below. We
note that a State may consider requiring
reporting on specific managed care
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
processes through its contracts with
managed care plans.
Comment: A few commenters
requested clarification as to whether the
requirements at § 441.311(d)(2) would
apply to self-directed services. A few
commenters raised specific questions or
concerns about the application of the
reporting requirements at
§ 441.311(d)(2) to self-directed services,
particularly self-directed service models
with individual budget authority.
Commenters noted that the inherent
flexibility of these services might make
reporting on the utilization of service
hours particularly misleading. One
commenter noted that, when an
individual selects an independent
worker to provide services, that worker
might have to go through background
checks and training that would make it
appear that the service delivery is
delayed. One commenter worried that
States would become concerned with
the appearance of delays in the delivery
of self-directed services and discourage
beneficiaries from seeking self-directed
services. Another commenter pointed
out that since beneficiaries might use
their budget authority to purchase
equipment or devices that replace some
hands-on services, or may choose to
adjust their service schedules, service
utilization data on these services might
inaccurately suggest that the beneficiary
is being underserved. On the other
hand, one commenter recommended
that self-directed services be included in
this reporting. Another commenter
stated that from their personal
experience as a provider, beneficiaries
receiving self-directed services tend to
have higher service utilization rates
than beneficiaries in agency-directed
services. One commenter suggested that
data on all models of self-directed
services be tailored to the unique needs
of the model, such as by requiring
reporting on the percent of the budget
used rather than the number of service
hours. Another commenter suggested
that additional guidance would be
needed to apply the reporting
requirements to self-directed models.
Response: As discussed in section
II.B.7.e. of this final rule, these reporting
requirements will apply to self-directed
services. We thank commenters for
raising these concerns. As noted earlier,
we intend to provide States with
technical assistance, including technical
specifications and sampling guidance,
for the new reporting requirements in
this final rule, which should aid in
reporting on self-directed services. As
noted in a prior response, the purpose
of the data is to track trends in service
delivery times and utilization, not to
track the outcomes for each beneficiary.
PO 00000
Frm 00110
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
The reporting will be the average
amount of time a random sample of
beneficiaries waited between service
authorization and the start of services,
and the total percent of authorized
services that are provided. Thus, some
of the factors that commenters cited,
such as additional training for selfdirected service workers or individual
beneficiaries’ changes in schedules,
should not significantly impact the
reported numbers. However, we will
work with States to monitor this issue.
Comment: A few commenters raised
concerns about the proposal to allow
States to report data on a statistically
valid sample of beneficiaries, suggesting
instead that we require complete
reporting on all relevant beneficiary
data. Commenters were concerned that
using a sample could mask disparities
or fail to identify individuals with
particularly acute unmet needs. One
commenter suggested that if we permit
reporting on a random sample, we add
a requirement that the data must
include information on race, ethnicity,
and population (such as older adults,
people with intellectual and
developmental disabilities, and people
with physical disabilities) in order to
identify disparities in service delivery.
Response: To minimize State
reporting burden, we are finalizing the
requirement to allow States to report
data for § 441.311(d)(2) using
statistically valid random sampling. We
believe that due to variety in States’
current tracking systems, some States
might find reporting using statistically
valid random sampling to be more
manageable and auditable than
attempting to report on all beneficiaries.
We will consider expanding reporting to
the full population in future rulemaking
if it is determined that such an approach
gives a more complete picture of service
delivery. We note that States may
choose to report on the full population,
as opposed to sampling their
beneficiaries, if for instance, doing so
better aligns with their data collection
process or needs.
We are finalizing the requirements at
§ 441.311(d)(2)(i) and (ii) with a
technical modification to specify that
the State may report this metric using
statistically valid random sampling of
beneficiaries. (Revised language
identified in bold.) We make this
technical correction to better align the
language with standard terminology for
the sampling methodology we intended
in these requirements.
Comment: We received responses to
our comment solicitation on additional
metrics that could be collected
regarding service delivery and
utilization. One commenter
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
recommended that we not add more
metrics to § 441.311(d)(2). Several
commenters did suggest additional
metrics. Many of these commenters
noted that more detailed data would
allow for a better assessment of overall
unmet needs and disparities within
service delivery. Additional metrics
suggested by commenters included:
• Disaggregated data about
beneficiaries, by demographic
categories, including race, ethnicity,
language status, sex or gender
identification, sexual orientation, age,
and geographic location;
• Tracking the total number of
beneficiaries who received service
authorizations versus the number of
beneficiaries who received services;
• Tracking why services are not
provided or why a beneficiary declines
a service;
• Disaggregated data by HCBS
authority and population (including
dual eligibility), delivery system,
provider type, and managed care plan;
and
• Tracking beneficiaries’ long-term
access to services or other metrics to
measure continuity of care and how the
care contributes to beneficiaries’ goals
and outcomes.
One commenter, while not
recommending that we require the
measure for all States, shared a State’s
experience of including a measure to
assess missed visits in its managed
LTSS program. The commenter
observed that this required a significant
amount of time to identify legitimate
reasons for services to not have been
provided and to build the system
mechanisms to capture that data, which
was primarily identified through case
management record review.
Response: We thank commenters for
their thoughtful feedback. We will take
these recommendations under
consideration for future policymaking,
but at this time, we decline to modify
the metrics required at § 441.311(d)(2)
based on these comments.
As noted in previous responses, we
do not believe it would be feasible at
this stage to standardize the collection
of certain types of qualitative data, such
as reasons for delayed or undelivered
services, or how the services contribute
to beneficiaries’ outcomes; this data
would also be difficult to validate and,
as noted by one commenter, timeconsuming to implement.
We believe it is important to strike a
balance between collecting information
to promote transparency around service
times and utilization and imposing as
minimal an administrative burden on
States and providers as possible. We
also believe that the reporting
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
requirements at § 441.311(d)(2) are
straightforward metrics on which to
begin reporting. As we gather and
review this data, we will consider what
additional information may be needed
to further improve our oversight of
HCBS programs and improve
beneficiaries’ access to services and may
consider additional reporting
requirements in the future.
However, we agree that some of the
granular data elements suggested by
commenters could provide States with
valuable insight into their own
programs and beneficiary needs. We
encourage States to consider what
information they have the capacity to
collect and would find useful for
developing local policies to support
beneficiaries’ access to HCBS waivers in
their State.
Comment: A few commenters
recommended additional metrics that
fall outside the scope of the reporting in
§ 441.311(d)(2). One commenter
recommended collecting data on case
manager or service coordinator
caseloads. A few commenters
recommended measuring time between
an individual’s date of application and
their eligibility determination, and the
time between an individual’s eligibility
determination and the plan of care
development or authorization for
services.
Another commenter noted that a
cause of delay in receiving HCBS may
be due to delays in the development of
care plans that are required for HCBS
delivery to begin. The commenter noted
that a potential solution to this specific
barrier is the use of provisional plans of
care, which are discussed in Olmstead
Letter #3.127 The commenter
recommend that we affirm that HCBS
provisional plans of care are an
available option and require States to
report on usage of such plans.
Response: We thank commenters and
note these comments are not directly
related to the proposed requirements in
§ 441.311(d), and thus we decline to
127 Refer to Centers for Medicare and Medicaid
Services, ‘‘Olmstead Letter #3, Attachment 3–a.’’
July 25, 2000. Available at https://
www.medicaid.gov/sites/default/files/FederalPolicy-Guidance/downloads/smd072500b.pdf;. The
commenter notes that in Olmstead Letter #3,
Attachment 3–a (https://www.medicaid.gov/
Federal-Policy-Guidance/downloads/
smd072500b.pdf), CMS explains that it ‘‘will accept
as meeting the requirements of the law a
provisional written plan of care which identifies the
essential Medicaid services that will be provided in
the person’s first 60 days of waiver eligibility, while
a fuller plan of care is being developed and
implemented.’’ During this time, the relevant
agencies work with the beneficiary to develop and
finalize a ‘‘comprehensive plan of care,’’ which goes
into effect as soon as practically possible, and at
least within 60 days.
PO 00000
Frm 00111
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40651
make modifications to § 441.311(d)
based on these suggestions. We plan to
consider the comments as we regard
broader HCBS access and equity issues
for future policymaking. We also note
that while requiring use of provisional
care plans would be outside the of scope
of this requirement, we agree with the
commenter that the use of provisional
care plans as described in Olmstead
Letter #3 may help avoid the delay of
services pending the development of the
care plan.128 In this letter, we explain
that we will accept, as meeting
requirements, a provisional written plan
of care which identifies the essential
Medicaid services that will be provided
in the person’s first 60 days of waiver
eligibility, while a fuller plan of care is
being developed and implemented.
During this time, the relevant agencies
work with the beneficiary to develop
and finalize a ‘‘comprehensive plan of
care,’’ which goes into effect as soon as
practically possible, and at least within
60 days.
Comment: One commenter
recommended that we allow States the
option to choose one of the proposed
criteria in § 441.311(d)(2) on which to
report or to propose a different metric
on which to report. The commenter
believed this would permit flexibility in
reporting on and context for data related
to timeliness of initiation of service
planning and service delivery. The
commenter believed that this could
serve as the first stage in a phased
approach for access reporting.
Response: We thank the commenter
for their suggestion. However, we
believe it is important to take steps to
establish nationally comparable data,
which would require States to report on
the same metrics. As discussed in
previous responses, we are not
finalizing any additional metrics for
§ 441.311(d)(2) and believe that the two
metrics included in this requirement are
a reasonable first step in data collection.
Comment: A few commenters
supported annual reporting for
§ 441.311(d)(2). One commenter noted
that annual reporting will better monitor
service interruptions due to shortages of
direct care workers. One commenter
noted that a beneficiary’s service
utilization can fluctuate significantly
even from month to month. One
commenter believed that biennial (every
other year) reporting would reduce
burden on States.
Response: We are finalizing the
annual reporting frequency as proposed
128 Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services,
‘‘Olmstead Letter #3, Attachment 3–a.’’ July 25,
2000, which is available at https://
www.medicaid.gov/sites/default/files/FederalPolicy-Guidance/downloads/smd072500b.pdf.
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
40652
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
in § 441.311(d)(2). We continue to
believe that annual reporting strikes the
right balance between collecting current
data and minimizing burden on States
to the greatest extent possible. We are
concerned that if we extend the
reporting to a biennial frequency, the
information will become outdated prior
to the next public report.
After consideration of the comments
received, we are finalizing the
requirements at § 441.311(d)(2), with
modifications. We are finalizing
§ 441.311(d)(2)(i) with a modification to
specify that the reporting is for
individuals newly receiving services
within the past 12 months, rather than
for individuals newly approved to begin
receiving services. We are also finalizing
a modification so that both reporting
requirements at § 441.311(d)(2)(i) and
(ii) require reporting on homemaker
services, home health aide services,
personal care, or habilitation services, as
set forth in § 440.180(b)(2) through (4)
and (6), and allow States to report using
statistically valid random sampling of
beneficiaries.
We note that we are finalizing
§ 441.311(d)(2) with technical
corrections. As a result of modifying
§ 441.311(d)(2) to include habilitation
services, we are modifying the title of
this provision to specify Access to
homemaker, home health aide, personal
care, and habilitation services. We are
also finalizing a technical modification
in both § 441.311(d)(2)(i) and (ii) to
indicate that the services are as ‘‘set
forth’’ in § 440.180(b)(2) through (4) and
(6), rather than as ‘‘listed’’ in.
d. Payment Adequacy (§ 441.311(e))
At § 441.311(e), we proposed new
reporting requirements for section
1915(c) waivers, under our authority at
section 1902(a)(6) of the Act, requiring
that States report annually on the
percent of payments for homemaker,
home health aide, and personal care
services, as listed at § 440.180(b)(2)
through (4), spent on compensation for
direct care workers. For the same
reasoning discussed in section II.B.5. of
this preamble, we have focused this
requirement on homemaker services,
home health aide services, and personal
care services because they are services
for which we expect that the vast
majority of payment should be
comprised of compensation for direct
care workers and for which there would
be low facility or other indirect costs.
These are services that would most
commonly be conducted in individuals’
homes and general community settings.
As such, there should be low facility or
other indirect costs associated with the
services. We also believed that this
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
reporting requirement could serve as the
mechanism by which States
demonstrated that they meet the
proposed HCBS Payment Adequacy
requirements at § 441.302(k).
We considered whether the proposed
reporting requirements at § 441.311(e)
related to the percent of payments going
to the direct care workforce should
apply to other services, such as adult
day health, habilitation, day treatment
or other partial hospitalization services,
psychosocial rehabilitation services and
clinic services for individuals with
chronic mental illness. We had selected
homemaker, home health aide, and
personal care services (as defined at
§ 440.180(b)(2) through (4)) for this
reporting requirement to align with the
payment adequacy minimum
performance requirement at
§ 441.302(k)(3), which is discussed in
section II.B.5. of this preamble.
However, we requested comment on
whether States should be required to
report annually on the percent of
payments for other services listed at
§ 440.180(b) spent on compensation for
direct care workers and, in particular,
on the percent of payments for
residential habilitation services, day
habilitation services, and home-based
habilitation services spent on
compensation for direct care workers.
We further proposed that States
separately report for each service subject
to the reporting requirement and, within
each service, separately report on
payments for services that are selfdirected. We considered whether other
reporting requirements such as a State
assurance or attestation or an alternative
frequency of reporting could be used to
determine State compliance with the
requirement at § 441.302(k) and decided
that the proposed requirement would be
most effective to demonstrate State
compliance. We requested comment on
whether we should allow States to
provide an assurance or attestation,
subject to audit, that they meet the
requirement in place of reporting on the
percent of payments, and whether we
should reduce the frequency of
reporting to every other year.
To minimize burden on States and
providers, we proposed that States
report in the aggregate for each service
across all of their services across all
programs as opposed to separately
report for each waiver or HCBS
program. However, we requested
comment on whether we should require
States to report on the percent of
payments for certain HCBS spent on
compensation for direct care workers at
the delivery system, HCBS waiver
program, or population level. We also
requested comment on whether we
PO 00000
Frm 00112
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
should require States to report on
median hourly wage and on
compensation by category.
In consideration of additional burden
reduction for certain providers, we
requested comment on whether we
should allow States the option to
exclude, from their reporting to us,
payments to providers of agency
directed services that have low
Medicaid revenues or serve a small
number of Medicaid beneficiaries, based
on Medicaid revenues for the service,
number of direct care workers serving
Medicaid beneficiaries, or the number of
Medicaid beneficiaries receiving the
service. We also requested comment on
whether we should establish a specific
limit on this exclusion and, if so, the
specific limit we should establish, such
as to limit the exclusion to providers in
the lowest 5th, 10th, 15th, or 20th
percentile of providers in terms of
Medicaid revenues for the service,
number of Medicaid beneficiaries
served, or number of direct care workers
serving Medicaid beneficiaries.
We proposed that payments for selfdirected services by States should be
included in these reporting
requirements, although we noted
feedback from interested parties
indicating that compensation for direct
care workers in self-directed models
tends to be higher and may comprise a
higher percentage of the payments for
services than other HCBS. This decision
not to exclude them was based on the
importance of ensuring a sufficient
direct care workforce for self-directed
services. We requested comment on
whether we should allow States to
exclude payments for self-directed
services from these reporting
requirements.
We note that, for clarity, we are
aligning the definitions of
compensation, direct care worker, and
excluded costs at § 441.311(e)(1) with
those we are finalizing in
§ 441.302(k)(1). As a result, the
reporting requirement we proposed at
§ 441.311(e) is finalized at
§ 441.311(e)(2)(i), as discussed below.
While we consider the reporting
requirement at § 441.311(e) to be
distinct and severable from the payment
adequacy requirements in § 441.302(k),
we believe that the reverse is not the
case—that § 441.302(k) does rely on the
reporting mechanism at § 441.311(e) to
establish compliance with the minimum
performance requirement at
§ 441.302(k)(3). As such, we believe it is
advantageous to have aligned
definitions.
We received public comments on this
proposal. The following is a summary of
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
the comments we received and our
responses.
Comment: Several commenters
expressed general support for our
proposed requirement at § 441.311(e)
that States report annually on the
percent of payments for homemaker,
home health aide, and personal care
services, as listed at § 440.180(b)(2)
through (4), spent on compensation for
direct care workers. Commenters
believed that this requirement would
provide data about how Medicaid
payments are being spent, which would
improve oversight and enable
meaningful comparisons across
programs. One commenter requested
clarification on the intent of the
reporting requirement.
Commenters also believed that this
requirement would ensure compliance
with the payment adequacy minimum
performance requirement at
§ 441.302(k)(3). Several commenters,
however, expressed support for
finalizing this reporting requirement,
but not for finalizing the minimum
performance requirement at
§ 441.302(k)(3). These commenters
noted that the reporting requirement by
itself would yield useful data that
would support payment transparency in
HCBS programs.
Response: This requirement is
intended to help track the percent of
Medicaid payments for certain HCBS
that is spent on compensation for direct
care workers. As we discussed
extensively in section II.B.5. of this rule,
we believe that ensuring that a
significant portion of payments for these
hands-on services is spent on
compensation for direct care workers
aligns with our responsibility under
section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act to
require assurance that payments are
consistent with efficiency, economy,
and quality of care. We do note that this
reporting requirement also is a
mechanism by which States
demonstrate compliance with the
payment adequacy requirements at
§ 441.302(k), which is discussed in
detail in section II.B.5. of this rule.
While we are finalizing the payment
adequacy requirements at § 441.302(k),
we agree that the value provided by this
reporting requirement is distinct and
severable from the minimum
performance requirement and serves as
a standalone requirement. To clarify the
distinction between this reporting
requirement and the payment adequacy
requirement at § 411.302(k), we are
revising the language at § 411.311(e)(2)
to remove the reference to the minimum
performance requirement at
§ 411.302(k)(3). We believe this will
better demonstrate that the reporting
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
requirement has a function aside from
demonstrating compliance with
§ 411.302(k). We also believe this to be
necessary because, as discussed further
below, we are finalizing the reporting
requirement at § 411.311(e)(2) to include
reporting of data related to habilitation
services, which are not subject to the
minimum performance requirement at
§ 411.302(k)(3). Thus, we believe
retaining the reference to § 411.302(k)(3)
would cause some confusion.
Comment: A few commenters
opposed the reporting requirement
proposed at § 441.311(e) (which we are
finalizing at § 411.311(e)(2)). These
commenters noted that the reporting
requirement would increase
administrative burden and
administrative costs for providers; a few
commenters believed the increase in
administrative tasks would undermine
the goal of the minimum performance
requirement at § 441.302(k)(3) to reduce
providers’ spending on administrative
activities.
Other commenters expressed concern
that this requirement would create a
burden for States. One commenter,
although recognizing the need for more
data about compensation to direct care
workers, believed that most States do
not currently collect this type of data
and would require significant time,
administrative effort, and expense to
collect, compile, report, and analyze the
data in a meaningful way. A few
commenters stated that States would
need to make significant changes to
current billing and reporting practices
and IT in order to isolate the use of
reimbursements for the three specified
services from the larger menu of
services a provider typically offers. A
couple of commenters expressed
concerns about the time and resources
it would take to educate providers about
the requirements and their reporting
responsibilities.
Additionally, a few commenters
expressed concerns about whether
States have the capacity to validate the
accuracy of providers’ reports and
conduct audits, especially in States with
a large number of providers. One
commenter expressed concern about the
cost associated with hiring and training
independent auditors to audit providers’
reported compensation of direct care
workers. One commenter shared firsthand experience with implementing a
wage pass-through requirement as part
of the State’s spending plan under ARP
section 9817; the commenter regarded
the process of monitoring and validating
the percentage of payments going to
direct care workers as administratively
burdensome.
PO 00000
Frm 00113
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40653
Response: We acknowledge that
complying with this reporting
requirement will necessitate certain
expenditures of resources and time on
the part of providers and States. As
noted by commenters, we believe that
the value of the data collected through
their efforts makes these expenditures of
resources worthwhile. As discussed
further below, we are finalizing the
redesignated § 441.311(e)(2)(i) to require
only aggregated data by service, as
proposed, which we believe will reduce
burden on both providers and States.
We believe that, generally speaking,
States and providers should already
have information about the amount of
Medicaid payments providers receive
for specific services, and that providers
likely already track expenditures on
wages and benefits for their workers. We
also believe that the simpler, aggregated
reporting will be easier for States to
validate and include in their existing
auditing processes.
However, to ensure that States are
prepared to comply with this reporting,
we are adding a requirement at
§ 441.311(e)(3) to require that States
must report, one year prior to the
applicability date for (e)(2)(i) of this
section, on their readiness to comply
with the reporting requirement in
(e)(2)(i) of this section. This will allow
us to identify States in need of
additional support to come into
compliance with § 441.311(e)(2)(i) and
provide targeted technical assistance to
States as needed.
Comment: A couple of commenters
requested that CMS issue subregulatory
guidance or share best practices to assist
with strategies for collecting data and
ensuring compliance with the
requirement. One commenter
recommended that we work with States
to determine the most efficient way to
gather comparable, useful data to inform
future rate policies, including exploring
whether existing State tools could meet
the requirement or could do so with
modification.
A few commenters raised particular
concerns about cost reports, which they
believed would be necessary for
implementing the reporting
requirement. Commenters stated that
without standardized cost reports, it
will be difficult to ensure consistent and
comparable data reporting across
programs. Some of these commenters
noted that, in States that do not
currently require cost reports, this will
present a new burden for both providers
and States. A couple of commenters
worried that providers may lack both
the familiarity and the resources to
complete cost reports. A few
commenters requested that CMS
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
40654
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
develop a standard cost reporting
template to ensure accurate data
collection and assessment of
compliance across all States.
A couple of commenters, noting the
language proposed in § 441.311(e)
(which we are finalizing at
§ 441.311(e)(2)(i)) that the reporting will
be at the time and in the form and
matter specified by CMS, requested
additional information regarding the
method of submission and the
methodology that will be required for
the calculations used in the report.
Response: We intend to release
subregulatory guidance to assist States
with implementation of this
requirement, and we plan to also
provide technical assistance and best
practices to help States identify ways to
use existing infrastructure or tools to
gather and report. Further, as noted
earlier, we intend to provide States with
technical specifications for the new
reporting requirements in this final rule,
which will aid in consistent data
reporting. In addition, we will be
making the reporting template available
for public comment through the
Paperwork Reduction Act notice and
comment process. Through that process,
the public will have the opportunity to
review and provide feedback on the
elements of the required State reports,
including the methodology of the
calculations, as well as the timing and
format of the report to us.
As discussed further below, we are
finalizing the requirement at
§ 441.311(e)(2)(i) (originally proposed at
§ 441.311(e)) that States need only
report aggregated data by service. We
believe this will reduce the overall
burden on States and providers and
reduce the need for complex cost
reporting.
Comment: One commenter requested
enhanced FMAP for costs associated
with the reporting requirement.
Response: Enhanced FFP is available
at a 90 percent FMAP for the design,
development, or installation of
improvements of mechanized claims
processing and information retrieval
systems, in accordance with applicable
Federal requirements.129 Enhanced FFP
at a 75 percent FMAP is also available
for operations of such systems, in
accordance with applicable Federal
requirements.130 We reiterate that
receipt of these enhanced funds is
129 See section 1903(a)(3)(A)(i) and § 433.15(b)(3),
80 FR 75817–75843; https://www.medicaid.gov/
state-resourcecenter/faq-medicaid-and-chipaffordable-care-act-implementation/downloads/
affordable-care-act-faq-enhancedfunding-formedicaid.pdf; https://www.medicaid.gov/federalpolicy-guidance/downloads/SMD16004.pdf.
130 See section 1903(a)(3)(B) and § 433.15(b)(4).
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
conditioned upon States meeting a
series of standards and conditions to
ensure investments are efficient and
effective.131 We decline to make any
changes in this final rule based on this
comment.
Comment: One commenter suggested
that, instead of requiring reporting on
the percentage of Medicaid payments
going to compensation for direct care
workers, we should require States to
report annually on how their rates are
determined and if the State’s rate review
included factors such as current wage
rates, inflation, required costs of
business, and increasing health
insurance rates. Another commenter
recommended that CMS consider
implementing a regular review and
assessment to determine if State
Medicaid rates provide competitive
wages for the direct care workforce and
review how these wages are funded in
the various payment models.
Response: We focused this particular
proposal on the allocation of Medicaid
payments, not on rate setting or rate
methodology. Such considerations are
outside the scope of this proposal.
However, we direct readers to the
discussion in Documentation of Access
to Care and Service Payment Rates
(section II.C. of this final rule) which
may speak to readers’ interests in rate
transparency and analysis. We decline
to make any changes in this final rule
based on this comment.
Comment: A few commenters
requested clarification of the
enforcement mechanisms for the
reporting requirement.
Response: In terms of enforcing
compliance of the States’ obligation to
submit reports as required at
§ 441.311(e), we intend to use our
standard enforcement discretion. In
terms of providers’ cooperation with
States in submitting the data States need
to make their reports, we note that
States already have broad authority to
take enforcement action and create
penalties, whether monetary or nonmonetary, for providers that have
violated their obligations as set forth by
the State Medicaid program. We decline
to make any changes in this final rule
based on this comment.
Comment: A few commenters
requested that we clarify managed care
plans’ responsibility for tracking and
reporting expenditures. A few
commenters expressed concern that this
proposal would pose particular
reporting or accounting burdens for
providers that participate in multiple
131 See § 433.112 (b, 80 FR 75841; https://
www.ecfr.gov/current/title-42/chapter-IV/
subchapter-C/part-433/subpart-C.
PO 00000
Frm 00114
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
Medicaid managed care plans, serve
non-Medicaid clients, or receive
bundled payments.
Response: We plan to provide
technical assistance to States to address
the role of managed care plans in
adhering to this reporting requirement,
as well as to assist with strategies for
addressing bundled payments that
include the services affected by this
requirement. Also, as discussed in
greater detail below, we are not
proposing granular reporting (such as
requiring data be disaggregated by
managed care plan or by HCBS waiver
program). Additionally, we would like
to emphasize that our intention is that
the State requires providers share
information about the percent of all of
their Medicaid FFS payments and the
payment they receive from managed
care plans that is being spent on
compensation for the direct care
workforce; we do not intend that the
State should expect providers to provide
a separate percent of Medicaid
payments from each managed care plan
in which they are enrolled, or provide
separate calculations based on payment
from services provided to non-Medicaid
beneficiaries that is separate and
distinct from their participation in the
Medicaid managed care program. We
therefore decline to make any changes
in this final rule based on this comment.
Comment: A couple of commenters
suggested that we expand reporting to
include more HCBS than the three
services specified, or even to apply this
requirement to all HCBS. One of the
commenters noted that, while more
work, it would be administratively
simpler to report on a broader array of
services, rather than trying to isolate
data for a few HCBS. One of the
commenters recommended that we
could phase in these expanded
reporting requirements, beginning with
homemaker, home health aide, and
personal care services.
Response: As discussed below, we are
expanding this reporting requirement in
this final rule to include habilitation
services. We tailored this requirement to
address the services that are most likely
to be delivered by direct care workers
who predominantly earn lower wages.
At this time, we do not intend to expand
the requirement beyond homemaker,
home health aide, personal care, and
habilitation services. However, we note
that States are free to collect additional
information for State use if the States
believe this would simplify
administration or they would like to
track allocations of Medicaid payments
to direct care workers providing other
types of HCBS.
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
Comment: In response to our request
for comments, a few commenters
recommended expanding the reporting
requirement to include the percent of
payments for residential habilitation
services, day habilitation services, and
home-based habilitation services that is
spent on compensation for direct care
workers. One commenter believed that
it was important to include habilitation
because, in the absence of such data,
individuals with developmental
disabilities will be disadvantaged since
habilitation is a primary vehicle for the
delivery of support services to people
with intellectual and developmental
disabilities in most States. Another
commenter believed this information
would be critical for determining any
future minimum performance level for
compensation to direct care workers
that was applied to habilitation services.
A few commenters, on the other hand,
did not support including habilitation
services, but did not specify reasons
why these services should be excluded.
Response: We agree with commenters
that collecting information about
habilitation services would yield useful
data about the allocation of Medicaid
payments in support of the direct care
workforce. Like homemaker, home
health aide, and personal care services,
habilitation services also tend to be
hands-on services that are delivered by
direct care workers who often earn
lower wages. However, a key difference
between habilitation services and the
services that were initially selected for
this reporting requirement is that they
may include facility costs if the service
includes residential habilitation or day
habilitation. Reporting on habilitation
could be useful in better understanding
these costs as well, as it will allow for
a comparison between the facility-based
habilitation services and in-home
services. We also agree with
commenters that, as habilitation
services are more often delivered to
people with intellectual and
developmental disabilities, excluding
habilitation services will
disproportionately impact beneficiaries
with intellectual and developmental
disabilities.
While we agree with commenters that
it is important to collect data on
habilitation services, we also
acknowledge that, as noted above, some
services include facility costs that may
impact the percent of Medicaid
payments being spent on compensation
for direct care workers. Similar to our
proposed requirement at § 441.311(e),
that self-directed services be reported
separately, we also are requiring that
services that include facility costs in the
Medicaid rate be reported separately;
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
this way, we can observe the differences
between the allocation of payments in
facility-based services versus services
that are provided solely in the
beneficiary’s home or in community
settings that are not facilities.
After consideration of the comments,
we are adding habilitation services to
this reporting requirement being
finalized at § 441.311(e)(2)(i). We are
modifying the requirement at
§ 441.311(e)(2)(i) to specify that the
services included in this requirement
are those set forth at § 440.180(b)(2)
through (4) and (6). We note that
§ 440.180(b)(6) refers to habilitation
services, without distinguishing
between residential habilitation
services, day habilitation services, and
home-based habilitation services. Thus,
we are also specifying that services with
facility costs included in the Medicaid
rate must be reported separately. These
categories will be further described in
subregulatory guidance. We
approximate this distinction in this
reporting requirement through the
separate depiction of services with
facility costs.
Comment: One commenter
recommended that we exclude nurses
and direct care workers who provide
nursing assistance from this reporting
requirement. Another commenter
suggested that we should require data to
be stratified by workforce. This
commenter worried that without this
disaggregation, workers who typically
earn lower wages (such as personal care
assistants) will be ‘‘overshadowed’’ in
the data by workers who typically earn
higher wages (such as nurses). The
commenter believed this lack of
transparency within the data would
limit targeted interventions and
advocacy for the lowest-paid positions
within HCBS.
Response: Nurses and staff who
provide nursing assistance are included
in the definition of direct care worker
we are finalizing at § 441.311(e)(1)(ii), as
discussed previously. While some of the
underlying rationale of this reporting
requirement is related to concerns about
low wages earned by some direct care
workers, our broader concern is the
health of the HCBS workforce as a
whole. The HCBS workforce is
experiencing a shortage of workers in all
categories, including clinicians and
nursing assistants. These workers
provide direct, hands-on services to
beneficiaries and may in some cases be
required to provide or supervise the
services. We do not believe excluding
them from the reporting serves our
larger interests in supporting the direct
care workforce overall. For that reason,
we also do not believe that it is
PO 00000
Frm 00115
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40655
necessary to include a Federal reporting
requirement that compensation to
nurses should be reported separately, as
our primary interest is in tracking the
allocation of Medicaid payments to the
direct care workers who are delivering
the services. As noted above, States may
choose to disaggregate data (for State
use) for different categories of direct
care workers in order to examine
workforce issues at the State level.
Comment: Several commenters
responded to our request for comment
on whether we should allow States to
provide an assurance or attestation,
subject to audit, that they meet the
requirement in place of reporting on the
percent of payments. A few commenters
opposed an attestation rather than a
reporting requirement. These
commenters agreed that the reporting
requirement is the most effective means
of verifying States’ compliance with the
payment adequacy minimum
performance requirement at
§ 441.302(k)(3). Commenters also noted
that the reporting requirement, rather
than an attestation only, will yield
granular data that will allow for
comparison across States and, within
States, across providers and service
categories; such data, commenters
believe, will enable States to better
understand the impact of payment
levels on access and adjust their rates
accordingly, as well as prove useful for
CMS’s Federal oversight of
beneficiaries’ access.
A few commenters, on the other hand,
supported requiring an attestation in
lieu of a reporting requirement.
Commenters, who mostly represented
State agencies, preferred the option as
being less burdensome and allowing for
more flexibility. One commenter
suggested that such an attestation could
still be a means of limited data
collection and proposed that, as part of
an attestation, we provide States with a
standardized reporting tool to assess
whether their rates are sufficient to
ensure a livable wage for direct care
workers.
A couple of commenters noted that,
while an attestation would be helpful to
Medicaid programs, some Medicaid
agencies noted that they would still
need to collect at least some providerlevel data to ensure compliance.
Response: We agree with commenters
that a reporting requirement will be
more effective and useful at monitoring
and understanding the allocation of
Medicaid payments to compensation for
direct care workers, especially as this
reporting requirement is intended to do
more than simply demonstrate
compliance with the payment adequacy
requirements at § 441.302(k). We also
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
40656
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
are persuaded by commenters’
observations that, even with an
attestation, States would still need to
collect data from providers to ascertain
the accuracy of their attestation. In light
of the fact that an attestation would only
slightly reduce burden and would not
result in data collection that would
allow for national comparisons, we are
moving forward with the reporting
requirement rather than replacing it
with an attestation.
Comment: Several commenters
responded to our proposal at
§ 441.311(e) (which we are finalizing at
§ 441.311(e)(2)(i)) that reporting would
be required annually as well as our
request for comment on whether we
should reduce the frequency of
reporting to every other year. A few
commenters supported our proposal
that this reporting would be collected
annually. One commenter believed that
reporting less frequently than every year
would result in the reporting of out-ofdate data and would delay identification
of problems in the HCBS system that
could cause access issues for
beneficiaries. Another commenter noted
that the value of the data for rate-setting
and the work of the interested party
advisory group (discussed in section
II.C.2. of this final rule, specifically in
the discussion of § 447.203(b)(6))
outweighs any potential burden of
annual reporting.
A few commenters supported
reporting every two years, rather than an
annual reporting period. One
commenter made the specific suggestion
that the reporting should be every two
years with a 12-month lag to better
ensure accurate reporting. Commenters
who supported reporting every 2 years
stated that this would allow States
sufficient time to collect data, conduct
necessary follow-up activities, and
publish data while also helping them
better balance this requirement with
other compliance and reporting
activities. One commenter opposed an
annual reporting period because it
misaligned with their State’s cycle of
rate methodology review, which occurs
every three to five years.
One commenter proposed an
alternative reporting frequency of 3
years, but with the expectation that
States would be collecting the data
quarterly and analyzing the data
annually. The commenter noted this
frequency would also give the MAC and
BAG (discussed in section II.A. of this
rule) time to react to the data prior to
its being reported to CMS.
Response: We agree that if too much
time lapses between each reporting
period, the reports, when released, will
become quickly out of date. We also
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
appreciate commenters’ observations
that interested parties, including
advisory groups, might rely on this data
when making recommendations for
Medicaid rates or examining HCBS
workforce issues; this places even
greater importance on timely data. We
also note that, as discussed further
below, we are finalizing the requirement
that only aggregated data must be
reported, which should reduce burden
on States and providers and make
annual reporting manageable. We note
that while annual reporting may be
more frequent than States’ rate review
process, collecting this data annually
will allow States to track trends in
workforce compensation that they could
include in their rate reviews.
We decline to add a requirement
specifying how frequently States should
review the data they collect. The
purpose of this requirement is, in part,
to establish the frequency with which
States must submit a report to CMS,
which we proposed as being on an
annual basis. We do not intend to
require that States collect and internally
review their data quarterly; however,
States may choose to do so if feasible
and useful. We expect that, at
minimum, States will review and
analyze the data they receive on an
annual basis as part of their submission
of the report required by
§ 441.311(e)(2)(i).
Comment: One commenter
specifically noted support for the
requirement at § 441.311(e) that States
report separately for each service subject
to the reporting requirement. A few
commenters requested that we finalize
the requirement to allow States to report
aggregated data to minimize burden. A
few commenters suggested that
aggregate reporting would be preferable
to a more granular approach (such as
reporting on the percent of payments for
certain HCBS spent on compensation for
direct care workers at the delivery
system, HCBS waiver program, or
population level; reporting on median
hourly wage and on compensation by
category).
Response: As noted in our
background discussion of this provision,
we believe that reporting on aggregated
data by service strikes the best balance
between monitoring the proportion of
Medicaid payments that are being spent
on compensation for direct care workers
and avoiding unnecessary data
collection and burden on States and
providers.
Comment: We received responses to
our request for comment on whether we
should require States to report on the
percent of payments for certain HCBS
that is spent on compensation for direct
PO 00000
Frm 00116
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
care workers at the delivery system,
HCBS waiver program, or population
level. A number of commenters
supported more granular reporting,
which they believed would yield more
valuable data and support transparency.
Several commenters supported
reporting at the delivery system level,
which commenters believed would help
capture differences between managed
care and FFS. A few of these
commenters also suggested that for
managed care delivery systems,
reporting should also be disaggregated
by plan. One commenter also suggested
that within managed care reporting,
States should report separately for
services delivered to dually eligible
beneficiaries.
A few commenters supported
breaking down the reporting by HCBS
program.
One commenter noted that both
provider payments and direct care
worker compensation can have
considerable variations across all of a
State’s programs and having this
information would be useful for State
policymakers as they develop payment
rates. This commenter believed that
States and providers must already be
tracking which services are provided
under each program.
A few commenters supported
reporting at the population level.
Suggestions for what would be included
in the population level reporting
included race, ethnicity, and geographic
location. One commenter believed that
demographic information about
beneficiaries and their geographic
regions would help address barriers to
access that are unique to certain
populations and areas (such as access
issues in rural regions). One commenter,
however, believed that collecting data at
the population level was not feasible.
Commenters made suggestions for
additional details to add to the reporting
requirement, including reporting on:
• Direct care worker turnover;
• Compensation to workers by setting
(services delivered at home, residential,
or facility-based day settings); and
• The number of direct care workers
who are considered W–2 employees
versus independent contractors.
Response: We thank commenters for
their thoughtful feedback. We will take
these recommendations under
consideration for future policymaking,
but at this time are moving forward with
finalizing the language in the
requirement at § 441.311(e)(2)(i)
specifying that States must report the
percent of total Medicaid payments
spent on compensation to direct care
workers by service. We note that a few
of the suggestions are outside of the
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
scope of this proposal, which is
intended for States to report data about
the percent of payments for certain
HCBS that is spent on compensation for
direct care workers, not for providers to
report on the demographics or
employment status of each of their
workers, nor on granular beneficiarylevel data. We direct readers who are
interested to data collection about
beneficiaries, including demographic
data, to the discussion of the HCBS
Quality Measure Set in section II.B.8. of
this rule.
As noted in previous responses, we
believe it is important to strike a balance
between collecting enough information
to enable Federal oversight of how
Medicaid payments are being allocated
and imposing as minimum an
administrative burden on States and
providers as possible. We believe that
the data on the percent of Medicaid
payments going to compensation for
direct care workers is sufficient to help
us ensure that a significant portion of
Medicaid payments for these hands-on
services goes to the direct care
workforce, which in turn supports our
responsibility under section
1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act to require
assurance that payments are consistent
with efficiency, economy, and quality of
care.
However, we agree that some of the
granular data elements suggested by
commenters could provide States with
valuable insight into their own
programs and workforce needs. We
encourage States to consider what
information they have the capacity to
collect and would find useful for
developing local policies to support
direct care workers in their State.
Comment: One commenter also
recommended collecting data
specifically designed to measure the
impact of the payment adequacy
minimum performance requirement
(which we are finalizing at § 441.302(k))
on the HCBS provider network. The
commenter suggested we collect data
on:
• The number of providers employing
direct care workers that opened or
closed before and after the effective date
of the minimum performance
requirement;
• The number of beneficiaries
(particularly those with higher needs)
for whom providers started or
discontinued service provision before
and after the effective date of the
minimum performance requirement;
• The number of health and safety
waiver requests that were received
before and after the effective date of the
minimum performance requirement;
and
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
• The causal factors service providers
cite when closing their business before
and after the rule becomes effective.
Response: As the reporting
requirement proposed at § 441.311(e)
was intended only to measure the
percent of Medicaid rates going to direct
care worker compensation,
recommendations for data collection
regarding provider behavior are outside
of the scope of our proposal.
However, we note that there are
already data collection requirements for
some HCBS regarding the number of
beneficiaries served through a section
1915(k) program (as required at
§ 441.580) or annual reporting on the
projected number of beneficiaries who
will be served under section 1915(i) (as
required at § 441.745(a)(1)).
Additionally, we are finalizing other
reporting requirements in this final rule
that may speak to some of the
commenter’s concerns. Specifically, we
note that we are finalizing a rate
disclosure process (discussed in section
II.C., particularly under § 447.203(c)),
which will include identification of the
number of Medicaid-paid claims and
the number of Medicaid enrolled
beneficiaries who received a service
within a calendar year for certain
services, including homemaker, home
health aide, personal care, and
habilitation services defined at
§ 440.180(b)(2) through (4) and (6). We
also note that the reporting requirement
finalized in the previous section of this
rule (under § 441.311(d)) will require
reporting on the following metrics
related to beneficiary access to
homemaker, home health aide, personal
care, and habilitation services: the
average amount of time from when
services are initially approved to when
services began, for individuals newly
approved to begin receiving services
within the past 12 months; and the
percent of authorized hours for the
services that are provided within the
past 12 months. We note that these
other reporting requirements, as
finalized, will go into effect prior to the
finalized effective date for the payment
adequacy minimum performance
requirement. This means that there will
be data collected for these metrics both
before and after the implementation of
the payment adequacy requirement at
§ 441.302(k). Finally, we note that we do
not know what the commenter is
referring to by using the term, health
and safety waiver requests.
Comment: Commenters responded to
our request for comment on whether we
should require States to report on
median hourly wage and on
compensation by category. A number of
commenters supported adding this level
PO 00000
Frm 00117
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40657
of detail to the reporting requirement.
Commenters noted that this level of
reporting would help monitor workforce
compensation generally, including
identifying whether there were
compensation disparities across service
types. A few commenters also suggested
this data would help track the impact of
the payment adequacy minimum
performance requirement (required at
§ 441.302(k)(3)) on workforce
compensation. One commenter also
suggested that this data could be helpful
to the interested parties advisory group
(discussed further in section II.C.2. of
this rule, under § 447.203(b)(6)). A few
commenters also recommended that we
require collection of specific details on
other provider expenditures, such as for
travel, training, administrative
expenses, or other non-compensation
program expenses.
One commenter, however, noted that
median hourly wage and compensation
by category reporting could be
duplicative of other measures and
required reporting.
Response: We thank commenters for
their thoughtful feedback. In the
proposed rule, in addition to requesting
comment on whether we should require
reporting on median hourly wages, in a
separate proposal (under
§ 447.203(b)(3)) we had proposed a
payment rate disclosure process for
HCBS that included providing
information about the hourly Medicaid
rates paid for homemaker, home health
aide, and personal care services. The
proposals under § 447.203(b)(3) were
standalone reporting requirements
unrelated to the reporting requirement
at § 441.311(e). As discussed in section
II.C. of this final rule, the payment rate
disclosure process at § 447.203(b)(3) is
being finalized with modifications to
include habilitation services in the
reporting requirement. We do not see a
need to finalize an additional reporting
process that may be duplicative of both
data and burden.
Additionally, upon consideration of
the comments, we have identified no
compelling reason to require a Federal
requirement for disaggregating the data
by compensation category. We believe
that employee benefits, in addition to
wages, are also integral to direct care
workers. (We refer readers to the
discussion in section II.B.5. of this rule,
which includes concerns raised by
public commenters about the lack of
benefits for direct care workers.)
Additionally, the third component of
compensation—employers’ share of
payroll taxes—is a fixed cost. While
States may want to collect this
disaggregated data from providers to
observe local compensation trends or to
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
40658
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
share with the interested parties
advisory group, we are not adding a
requirement for this disaggregation as
part of the required State reporting at
§ 441.311(e).
Comment: In response to our request
for comment, a few commenters
recommended that we allow States to
exclude from their reporting to CMS
payments to providers of agencydirected services that have low
Medicaid revenues or serve a small
number of beneficiaries. We did not
receive feedback on metrics for
determining which providers would be
eligible for such an exclusion, nor on
possible caps or limits for an exclusion.
One commenter noted that excluding
certain providers due to size, revenue,
or geography would create further
inequities in the HCBS field and be
administratively infeasible to
implement. A couple of commenters
worried that excluding small providers
would create perverse incentives for
providers to remain small by failing to
hire additional workers or declining to
serve additional beneficiaries.
Response: We are concerned that
excluding certain providers from the
reporting requirement at § 441.311(e)
would not support the goals of this
requirement to promote transparency
about how Medicaid payments are being
allocated.
For clarity, we also note that the
reporting requirement we proposed at
§ 441.311(e), and are finalizing at
§ 441.311(e)(2)(i), requires each State to
report to CMS annually on the
percentage of Medicaid payments for
certain services that is spent on
compensation for direct care workers.
We intend that each State collect and
report this data regardless of whether
the State establishes, and their providers
meet, the hardship exemption we are
finalizing at § 441.302(k)(5) or the small
provider requirements at
§ 441.302(k)(3)(ii) and (4). We do note
that, under the requirements we are
finalizing at § 441.302(k)(6), the State
must report additional information
regarding any small provider
requirements or hardship exemptions
the State develops and implements.
However, we are finalizing the
reporting requirement at § 441.311(e)
with modification, adding
§ 441.311(e)(4) to exclude data from
Indian Health Service and Tribal health
programs subject to the requirements at
25 U.S.C. 1641 from the required
reporting. As discussed in section
II.B.5.b. of this final rule, the
requirements being finalized at
§ 441.302(k) conflict with statutory
requirements at 25 U.S.C. 1641, and we
are finalizing, at § 441.302(k)(7), an
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
exemption to the payment adequacy
requirement at § 441.302(k) for IHS and
Tribal health programs subject to 25
U.S.C. 1641. Given the conflict between
§ 441.302(k) and the statutory
requirements at 25 U.S.C. 1641, we
would likely be unable to use HCBS
payment adequacy data from IHS and
the Tribal health programs subject to 25
U.S.C. 1641 to inform future
policymaking related to how IHS or
Tribal health programs spend Medicaid
payments they receive, including on
direct care worker compensation.
Further, we do not want data from the
exempted IHS and Tribal health
programs to skew the other data States
would collect and report to CMS under
§ 441.311(e), which CMS intends to use
to evaluate direct care worker
compensation nationally and inform
policymaking to address the workforce
shortage.
Comment: A few commenters
suggested other metrics that could be
used as the basis for an exception to the
reporting requirement. One commenter
suggested that an exception could be
made for providers in areas (defined as
a city, county, or grouping of zip codes)
with a documented deficit of service
providers accepting new clients. One
commenter recommended that any
provider who pays a full-time direct
care worker at an hourly rate that
exceeds 200 percent of the Federal
poverty level be exempted from
reporting. Another commenter
suggested that if a provider can
demonstrate they spend more than 85
percent of Medicaid payments on
compensation should be exempted from
any detailed cost reporting.
Response: As noted above, we are
finalizing the reporting requirement
without exceptions for providers.
However, we appreciate the
recommendations for possible
exceptions criteria and will take these
into consideration for future
policymaking.
Comment: One commenter requested
that we exclude self-directed services
from reporting. However, we received a
number of comments encouraging us to
include self-directed services in the
reporting as proposed and agreeing that
these services should be reported
separately. A few of these commenters
stated that self-directed services should
be reported separately from agencyprovided services, due to the differences
in these service models.
A few commenters, however, believed
that the reporting for self-directed
services should be further broken down
by whether the service is provided by an
independent worker or by a worker who
is employed by an agency. One
PO 00000
Frm 00118
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
commenter noted that our rationale for
separating out self-directed services was
that compensation for workers in selfdirected models tends to be higher and
to comprise a greater percentage of
Medicaid payment for services, which
the commenter believed to be true of
services delivered by independent
providers, but not necessarily of selfdirected services delivered through
agency models.
One commenter noted that some
States might have challenges in
distinguishing payments for selfdirected services delivered via agency
models, as these payments may appear
in claims processing as traditional
HCBS agency payments, rather than as
self-directed services.
Response: We agree with commenters
that, in terms of the percent of the
payment going to compensation for
direct care workers, there will be
significant differences between the
percent for services delivered by
independent workers hired by the
beneficiary for whom the beneficiary
sets the payment rate under a selfdirected services delivery model versus
those delivered by a worker employed
by a provider. In particular, we are
concerned that this reporting
requirement might not yield meaningful
data if applied to the self-directed
services delivery models in which the
individual beneficiary determines the
wage paid directly to the direct care
worker out of the beneficiary’s service
budget (such as models meeting the
definition at § 441.545(b) for section
1915(k) services, self-directed services
typically authorized under section
1915(j)). We believe the reporting
requirement on the percentage of
payments going to compensation for
direct care workers is only appropriate
when applied to a Medicaid rate that
includes both compensation to direct
care workers and administrative
activities. In the former scenario, we
expect that all or nearly all of that
payment rate routinely is spent on the
direct care worker’s compensation; in
the latter scenario, we expect the
payment rate to a provider includes
both the direct care worker’s
compensation and administrative costs
for the provider.
Based on the comments received, and
to ensure we are collecting only
meaningful data that demonstrates the
percent of Medicaid payments that are
going to direct care worker
compensation, we are finalizing a new
requirement at § 441.311(e)(2)(ii) that
specifies, if the State provides that
homemaker, home health aide, personal
care services, or habilitation services, as
set forth at § 440.180(b)(2) through (4)
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
and (6), may be furnished under a selfdirected services delivery model in
which the beneficiary directing the
services sets the direct care worker’s
payment rate, then the State must
exclude such payment data from the
reporting required in paragraph (e) of
this section. We note that self-directed
homemaker, home health aide, personal
care, or habilitation services delivered
through self-directed services models
not described in § 441.311(e)(2)(ii)
would still be part of the reporting
requirements finalized at
§ 441.311(e)(2)(i).
After consideration of the comments
received, we are finalizing § 441.311(e)
with modifications. As discussed in
section II.B.5. of this final rule, we are
replicating at § 441.311(e)(1)(i), (1)(ii),
and (1)(iii) the finalized definitions at
§ 441.302(k)(1)(i), (k)(1)(ii), and
(k)(1)(iii), respectively.
At § 441.311, we are redesignating
paragraph (e) as paragraph (e)(2)(i). At
finalized § 441.311(e)(2)(i), we are
making a technical modification to
remove the reference to the definition of
direct care workers at § 441.302(k)(1).
As we are also adding the definition of
direct care workers at § 441.311(e)(1)(ii),
the reference to § 441.302(k)(1) is
unnecessary. We are finalizing
§ 441.311(e)(2)(i) with substantive
modifications to specify that the State
must report to CMS annually on the
percentage of total payments (not
including excluded costs), to include
habilitation services (as set forth in
§ 440.180(b)(6)) in the reporting, and to
specify that States must report
separately for services delivered in a
provider-operated physical location for
which facility-related costs are
included in the payment rate. (Revised
text in bold font). We are also finalizing
§ 441.311(e)(2)(i) with technical
modifications to: include references to
§ 441.311(e)(2)(ii) and (4); clarify that
the provision applies to services as set
forth in § 440.180(b)(2) through (4) and
(6) (as opposed to services at
§ 440.180(b)(2) through (4) that are
authorized under section 1915(c) of the
Act); and clarify that reporting is at the
time and in the form and manner
specified by CMS.
We are finalizing a new requirement
at § 441.311(e)(2)(ii) that specifies if the
State provides that homemaker, home
health aide, personal care services, or
habilitation services, as set forth at
§ 440.180(b)(2) through (4) and (6), may
be furnished under a self-directed
services delivery model in which the
beneficiary directing the services sets
the direct care worker’s payment rate,
then the State must exclude such
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
payment data from the reporting
required in paragraph (e) of this section.
We are finalizing a new
§ 441.311(e)(3), requiring that the State
must report, one year prior to the
applicability date for paragraph (e)(2)(i)
of this section, on its readiness to
comply with the reporting requirement
in paragraph (e)(2)(i) of this section.
We are finalizing a new
§ 441.311(e)(4) to require States to
exclude data from the Indian Health
Service and Tribal health programs
subject to the requirements at 25 U.S.C.
1641 from the required reporting at
§ 441.311(e), as well as to require that
States not require submission of data by,
or include any data from, the Indian
Health Service or Tribal health
programs subject to the requirements at
25 U.S.C. 1641 for the State’s reporting
required under § 441.311(e)(2).
e. Applicability Date (§ 441.311(f))
We proposed at § 441.311(f)(1) to
provide States with 3 years to
implement the compliance reporting
requirements at § 441.311(b), the HCBS
Quality Measure Set reporting
requirements at § 441.311(c), and the
access reporting requirements at
§ 441.311(d) in FFS delivery systems
following the effective date of the final
rule. For States that implement a
managed care delivery system under the
authority of sections 1915(a), 1915(b),
1932(a), or 1115(a) of the Act and
include HCBS in the MCO’s, PIHP’s, or
PAHP’s contract, we proposed to
provide States until the first rating
period for contracts with the MCO,
PIHP, or PAHP, beginning on or after 3
years after the effective date of the final
rule to implement these requirements.
This time period was based on feedback
from States and other interested parties
that it could take 2 to 3 years to amend
State regulations and work with their
State legislatures, if needed, as well as
to revise policies, operational processes,
information systems, and contracts to
support implementation of these
proposed reporting requirements. We
also considered all of the HCBS
proposals outlined in the proposed rule
as whole. We invited comments on
whether this timeframe was sufficient,
whether we should require a shorter
timeframe (2 years) or longer timeframe
(4 years) to implement these provisions,
and if an alternate timeframe was
recommended, the rationale for that
alternate timeframe.
In addition, we proposed at
§ 441.311(f)(2) to provide States with 4
years to implement the payment
adequacy reporting requirements at
§ 441.311(e) in FFS delivery systems
following the effective date of the final
PO 00000
Frm 00119
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40659
rule. For States that implement a
managed care delivery system under the
authority of sections 1915(a), 1915(b),
1932(a), or 1115(a) of the Act and
include HCBS in the MCO’s, PIHP’s, or
PAHP’s contract, we proposed to
provide States until the first rating
period for contracts with the MCO,
PIHP, or PAHP beginning on or after 4
years after the effective date of the final
rule to implement these requirements.
This time period was intended to align
with the effective date for the HCBS
payment adequacy requirements at
§ 441.302(k), which are discussed in
section II.B.5. of this preamble. It was
also based on feedback from States and
other interested parties that it could take
3 to 4 years to amend State regulations
and work with their State legislatures, if
needed, as well as to revise policies,
operational processes, information
systems, and contracts to support
implementation of these reporting
requirements. We also considered all of
the HCBS proposals outlined in the
proposed rule as a whole. We solicited
comments on whether this timeframe
was sufficient, whether we should
require a shorter timeframe (3 years) or
longer timeframe (5 years) to implement
these provisions, and if an alternate
timeframe is recommended, the
rationale for that alternate timeframe.
We received public comments on this
proposal. The following is a summary of
the comments we received and our
responses.
Comment: A few commenters
supported the effective dates in
§ 441.311(f). One commenter noted that
the effective dates appear to be
appropriate and necessary to ensure that
data is reported accurately and
uniformly. One commenter suggested
that States should begin to report on
person-centered planning within 2
years. One commenter noted particular
support for the longer four-year
timeframe for the payment adequacy
reporting requirements at § 441.311(e),
which the commenter noted recognized
the additional complexity of this
provision. A few commenters stated that
they support the 4-year effective date for
§ 441.311(e) but would advocate for a 6year effective date if the payment
adequacy minimum performance level
in § 441.302(k) is also being finalized.
A number of commenters noted that
while they are supportive of each of
these proposals individually, they were
nevertheless concerned that the number
of new requirements will be difficult to
implement cost-effectively and
accurately in the proposed timeframes.
Several commenters noted that
proposed data elements required in
§ 441.311 are beyond what the States
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
40660
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
currently collect and—even if the States
are able to expand on existing systems—
will require policy and process changes
and system updates and will place
strain on existing staff resources; some
commenters stated these changes may
require seeking appropriations from
State legislatures for additional staff or
system upgrades, as well as acquiring
vendor support, which could take
additional time. A few commenters
noted their States would face challenges
in coordinating data collection across
multiple systems, which may be
administered by different agencies or
contracted entities. A few commenters
noted the feasibility of compliance with
§ 441.311 will depend on how quickly
CMS can provide subregulatory
guidance on the reporting requirements;
these commenters requested that we set
an effective date of 3 or 4 years after the
release of subregulatory guidance.
While commenters requested that we
extend the timeframes in § 441.311(f),
we received few suggestions for how
much additional time would be needed.
A few commenters suggested alternative
timeframes of 4 to 6 years for the
provisions in § 441.311. One commenter
suggested that timeframes should be
specifically waived for self-directed
services and that States should be
required to submit transition plans for
implementing the requirements for selfdirected services.
Response: We are finalizing the
substance of § 441.311(f) as proposed,
but with minor modifications to correct
erroneous uses of the word ‘‘effective.’’
We are retitling the requirement at
§ 441.311(f) as Applicability dates
(rather than Effective dates). We are also
modifying the language at § 441.311(f) to
specify the dates when States must
comply with the requirements in
§ 441.311(f), rather than stating the dates
when the requirements in § 441.311(f)
are effective, beginning a specified
number of years after the effective date
of the final rule.
As noted above in section II.B.7.b. of
the rule, we have determined it is
necessary to provide States with an
additional year for compliance with the
quality measure set reporting
requirement at § 441.311(c). Our
primary purpose in extending the date
for States to comply is to ensure States
have sufficient time for interested
parties to provide input into the
measures, as required by § 441.312(g),
which we are finalizing in section II.B.8.
of this rule.
Regarding the dates for States to
comply with the other requirements in
§ 441.311, as discussed throughout this
section, we continue to believe that
many of these requirements build on
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
activities that States have already been
doing as part of the administration of
their HCBS programs and will work
with States to identify ways to leverage
existing data collection tools and update
their current systems as efficiently as
possible.
We also acknowledge that complying
with these reporting requirements will
necessitate expenditures of resources
and time on the part of States, managed
care plans, and (in some cases)
providers. We believe that the value of
the data collected through their efforts
makes this expenditure of resources
worthwhile. This data captures
information related to beneficiaries’
health and safety (addressed by the
incident management system and
critical incident reporting in
§ 441.311(b)(1) and (2)) and
beneficiaries’ long-standing concerns
about access to HCBS waivers and
services (addressed by the personcentered planning and access reporting
requirements in § 441.311(b)(3) and (d)).
These data are urgently needed, and we
do not want to postpone
implementation of this reporting further
than proposed.
Additionally, the data collected as
part of the payment adequacy reporting
requirement in § 441.311(e) not only
addresses the current workforce
shortages that are impacting service
delivery, but the data are also going to
be relied on by the interested parties
advisory group (discussed further in
section II.C.2. of this rule, under
§ 447.203(b)(6)) to develop
recommendations to the State on
Medicaid rates for certain HCBS. We do
not believe the interests of beneficiaries,
providers, workers, or States are served
by delaying the collection and
publication of this information. As a
result, we are declining to make changes
in this final rule based on these
comments. We plan to provide technical
assistance to States experiencing
challenges implementing specific
reporting requirements.
Comment: A few commenters, while
not opposing the proposed dates that
the reporting requirements become
effective, noted that it is important to
align these reporting requirements with
other reporting requirements in States
and for managed care plans to minimize
State and managed care plan reporting
burdens. Commenters also believed that
streamlining reporting requirements
across programs could help to ensure
that States and CMS do not analyze
similar data that report on the same
populations and same or similar
programs across different timeframes,
which would complicate findings.
PO 00000
Frm 00120
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
Response: We will be releasing
subregulatory guidance, including
technical specifications for the new
reporting requirements in this final rule,
and making the required reporting
templates available for public comment
through the Paperwork Reduction Act
notice and comment process. Specific
reporting due dates will be determined
through subregulatory guidance; we
plan to work with States to align these
due dates with other obligations to
minimize administrative burden to the
greatest extent possible.
After consideration of public
comments, we are finalizing § 441.311(f)
with minor modifications to correct
erroneous uses of the word ‘‘effective.’’
We are removing from § 441.311(f)(1)
the date for States to comply with the
quality measure set reporting
requirements date and adding it to
§ 441.311(f)(2) so that States will have 4
years from the effective date of this final
rule to comply with those requirements.
We are also finalizing in
§ 441.311(f)(1) and (2) a modification to
the language pertaining to managed care
delivery systems to improve accuracy
and alignment with common phrasing
in managed care contracting policy. We
are specifying at § 441.311(f)(1) that
States must comply with the reporting
requirements at paragraphs (b) and (d)
of this section beginning 3 years after
the effective date of this final rule; and
in the case of a State that implements a
managed care delivery system under the
authority of sections 1915(a), 1915(b),
1932(a), or 1115(a) of the Act and
includes HCBS in the MCO’s, PIHP’s, or
PAHP’s contract, the first rating period
for contracts with the MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP beginning on or after the date that
is 3 years after the effective date of this
final rule.
We are specifying at § 441.311(f)(2)
that States must comply with the
reporting requirements at paragraphs (c)
and (e) of this section beginning 4 years
after the effective date of this final rule;
and in the case of a State that
implements a managed care delivery
system under the authority of sections
1915(a), 1915(b), 1932(a), or 1115(a) of
the Act and includes HCBS in the
MCO’s, PIHP’s, or PAHP’s contract, the
first rating period for contracts with the
MCO, PIHP or PAHP beginning on or
after the date that is 4 years after the
effective date of this final rule.
f. Application to Other Authorities
(§§ 441.311(f), 441.474(c), 441.580(i),
and 441.745(a)(1)(iii))
At § 441.311(f), we proposed to apply
all of the reporting requirements
described in § 441.311 to services
delivered under FFS and managed care
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
delivery systems. As discussed earlier in
section II.B.1. of this preamble, section
2402(a)(3)(A) of the Affordable Care Act
requires States to improve coordination
among, and the regulation of, all
providers of Federally and State-funded
HCBS programs to achieve a more
consistent administration of policies
and procedures across HCBS programs,
and as noted in the Medicaid context
this would include consistent
administration between FFS and
managed care programs. We accordingly
proposed to specify that a State must
ensure compliance with the
requirements in § 441.302(a)(6) with
respect to HCBS delivered both under
FFS and managed care delivery systems.
As discussed earlier in section II.B.1.
of this preamble, the proposed
requirements at § 441.311, in
combination with other proposed
requirements identified throughout the
proposed rule, are intended to
supersede and fully replace the
reporting expectations and the
minimum 86 percent performance level
for State’s performance measures
described in the 2014 guidance, also
discussed earlier in section II.B.1. of this
preamble. We expect that States may
implement some of the requirements
proposed in the proposed rule in
advance of any effective date. We will
work with States to phase out the 2014
guidance as they implement the
requirements in this final rule to reduce
unnecessary burden and to avoid
duplicative or conflicting reporting
requirements.
In accordance with the requirement of
section 2402(a)(3)(A) of the Affordable
Care Act for States to achieve a more
consistent administration of policies
and procedures across HCBS programs,
and because these reporting
requirements are relevant to other HCBS
authorities, we proposed to include
these requirements within the
applicable regulatory sections for other
HCBS authorities. Specifically, we
proposed to apply the requirements at
§ 441.311 to section 1915(j), (k), and (i)
State plan services at §§ 441.474(c),
441.580(i), and 441.745(a)(1)(vii),
respectively. Consistent with our
proposal for section 1915(c) waivers, we
proposed these requirements based on
our authority under section 1902(a)(6) of
the Act, which requires State Medicaid
agencies to make such reports, in such
form and containing such information,
as the Secretary may from time to time
require, and to comply with such
provisions as the Secretary may from
time to time find necessary to assure the
correctness and verification of such
reports. We believed the same
arguments for these requirements for
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
section 1915(c) waivers are equally
applicable for these other HCBS
authorities. We requested comment on
the application of these provisions
across section 1915(i), (j), and (k)
authorities. To accommodate the
addition of new language at § 441.580(i),
we proposed to renumber existing
§ 441.580(i) as § 441.580(j).
We considered whether to also apply
these reporting requirements to section
1905(a) ‘‘medical assistance’’ State plan
personal care, home health, and case
management services. However, we
proposed that these requirements not
apply to any section 1905(a) State plan
services based on State feedback that
they do not have the same data
collection and reporting capabilities in
place for section 1905(a) services as they
do for sections 1915(c), (i), (j), and (k)
services and because the personcentered planning, service plan, and
waiting list requirements that comprise
a significant portion of these reporting
requirements have little to no relevance
for section 1905(a) services, in
comparison to section 1915(c), (i), (j),
and (k) services. Further, the vast
majority of HCBS is delivered under
section 1915(c), (i), (j), and (k)
authorities, while only a small
percentage of HCBS nationally is
delivered under section 1905(a) State
plan authority. We requested comment
on whether we should establish similar
reporting requirements for section
1905(a) ‘‘medical assistance’’ State plan
personal care, home health, and case
management services.
We noted that we expected that we
would establish new processes and
forms for States to meet the reporting
requirements, provide additional
technical information on how States can
meet the reporting requirements
including related to sampling
requirements (where States are
permitted to report on a sample of
beneficiaries rather than on all
individuals who meet the inclusion
criteria for the reporting requirement),
and amend existing templates and
establish new templates under the
Paperwork Reduction Act.
We received public comments on this
proposal. The following is a summary of
the comments we received and our
responses.
Comment: A few commenters
supported applying the proposed
reporting requirements at § 441.311 to
services delivered under managed care,
noting that it is important to gather data
on services across delivery systems. A
few commenters requested clarification
on whether, or how, the reporting
requirements applied to services
delivered under managed care.
PO 00000
Frm 00121
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40661
Response: The reporting requirements
in this section apply to services in both
FFS and managed care delivery systems.
We note that comments about the
application of specific provisions to
managed care are addressed in the
sections above. As needed, we plan to
provide technical assistance to States
that have additional questions.
Comment: A few commenters
expressed support for applying
reporting requirements at § 441.311 to
services delivered through other section
1915 authorities. A few commenters,
while not necessarily recommending
that we exclude self-directed services
authorized under section 1915(j), noted
that because of differences in selfdirected services, we should consider
extending timeframes for
implementation in self-directed services
or release additional guidance specific
to self-directed services.
Response: We are finalizing our
proposal to extend the reporting
requirements in this section to services
offered under sections 1915(i), (j), and
(k). We note that comments about the
application of specific provisions to
self-directed care are addressed in the
sections above. While we do not believe
it is necessary to extend timeframes for
the implementation of the reporting
requirements in section 1915(j) selfdirected services, we plan to provide
technical assistance to States that have
additional questions.
Comment: One commenter requested
clarification that the waiver reporting
requirement at § 441.311(d)(1) is limited
to the section 1915(c) authority and to
the section 1915(j) authority, where it is
used as the State’s authority for selfdirection in a section 1915(c) waiver.
This commenter recommended limiting
this requirement to these authorities.
Response: We agree that, because
section 1915(i) and section 1915(k) State
plan services cannot have capped
enrollment, the reporting requirements
at § 441.311(d)(1) would not apply to
these authorities. We also agree that the
reporting requirements at
§ 441.311(d)(1) would also apply to
section 1915(j) authority only where
section 1915(j) is used as the State’s
authority for self-direction in a section
1915(c) waiver. We note that the
reporting requirements at
§ 441.311(d)(1) would apply to section
1115(a) demonstration projects that
include HCBS if the State caps
enrollment for the HCBS under the
section 1115(a) demonstration project.
We also note that, similar to the
concern raised by commenters about the
applicability of § 441.311(d)(1), as
discussed in section II.B.7.a.4. of this
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
40662
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
rule, § 441.311(b)(4) also applies only to
section 1915(c) programs.
Comment: A few commenters
requested that we extend the reporting
requirements at § 441.311 to section
1905(a) services. Commenters noted
that, in some States, many people
receive services through section 1905(a).
A few commenters also raised concerns
that there would be a disparate impact
on certain populations or less oversight
of certain services if reporting
requirements were not extended to
services under section 1905(a), such as
personal care, home health, or
rehabilitative services. A few
commenters recommended not
extending the reporting requirements to
section 1905(a) services at this time,
citing concerns about additional burden.
Response: At this time, we are not
mandating inclusion of section 1905(a)
services in the reporting requirements at
§ 441.311. Given that our work to better
ensure access in the Medicaid program
is ongoing, we intend to gain
implementation experience with this
final rule, and we will consider these
comments provided on the proposed
rule to help inform any future
rulemaking in this area, as appropriate.
We are not persuaded by the argument
that including section 1905(a) services
would simply be too much work, as we
do agree that transparency,
accountability, and oversight are critical
for all HCBS. However, we are
continuing to review statutory and
regulatory differences between services
authorized under sections 1905(a) and
1915 of the Act that could impact how
these requirements would apply to
section 1905(a) services. We also note
that we have not extended the minimum
performance requirements for incident
management, person-centered planning,
or payment adequacy to section 1905(a)
services (refer to discussions in sections
II.B.1., II.B.3, and II.B.5. of this final
rule, respectively, for more detail on
those discussions). Furthermore, as
section 1905(a) service do not have
waiting lists, the requirement at
§ 441.311(d)(1) would not be applicable
to these services.
After consideration of the comments
received, we are finalizing application
of § 441.311 to section 1915(j), (k), and
(i) authorities. We are making
modifications at §§ 441.474(c),
441.580(i) and 441.745(a)(1)(vii) with
modifications to clarify that the
references to section 1915(c) of the Act
are instead references to section 1915(j),
(k) and (i) of the Act, respectively.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
g. Summary of Finalized Requirements
After consideration of the public
comments, we are finalizing the
requirements at § 441.311 as follows:
• We are finalizing § 441.311(a) with
a modification for clarity to remove
‘‘simplification’’ and make a minor
formatting change to ensure § 441.311(a)
aligns directly with the statutory
requirement at section 1902(a)(19) of the
Act .
• We are finalizing the incident
management system compliance
requirement at § 441.311(b) with a
technical modification for clarity in
§ 441.311(b)(1)(i) that the State must
report on the results of an incident
management system assessment, every
24 months, in the form and manner, and
at a time, specified by CMS, rather than
according to the format and
specifications provided by CMS.
• We are finalizing the critical
incident compliance requirement at
§ 441.311(b)(2) with a technical
modification for clarity that the State
must report to CMS annually in the
form and manner, and at a time,
specified by CMS, rather than according
to the format and specifications
provided by CMS. For consistency, we
are also simplifying the title and
removing the reference to
§ 441.302(a)(6)(i)(A) from the title of
§ 441.311(b)(2).
• We are finalizing the personcentered planning reporting
requirement at § 441.311(b)(3) with a
technical modification to specify at
§ 441.311(b)(3), to demonstrate that the
State meets the requirements at
§ 441.301(c)(3)(ii) regarding personcentered planning (as described in
§ 441.301(c)(1) through (3)), the State
must report to CMS annually on the
following, in the form and manner, and
at a time, specified by CMS, rather than
according to the format and
specifications provided by CMS. We are
also finalizing the reporting requirement
at § 441.311(b)(3)(i) and (ii), with the
technical modification noted
previously, to specify that the State may
report this metric using statistically
valid random sampling of beneficiaries.
• We are finalizing the reporting
requirement at § 441.311(b)(4) with a
modification to restore language that
was erroneously omitted, and with
additional technical modifications so
that § 441.311(b)(4) specifies that
annually, the State will provide CMS
with information on the waiver’s impact
on the type, amount, and cost of
services provided under the State plan,
in the form and manner, and at a time,
specified by CMS.
PO 00000
Frm 00122
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
• We are finalizing the HCBS Quality
Measure Set reporting requirements at
§ 441.311(c) with modifications. At
§ 441.311(c), we are finalizing a date of
4 years, rather than 3 years, for States
to comply with the HCBS Quality
Measure Set reporting requirements at
§ 441.311(c).
• We are finalizing the access
reporting requirement at § 441.311(d)
with a technical modification to specify
that reporting will be in the form and
manner, and at a time, specified by
CMS. We are finalizing § 441.311(d)(1)
as proposed. We are finalizing
§ 441.311(d)(2)(i) with a modification to
specify that the reporting is for
individuals newly receiving services
within the past 12 months, rather than
for individuals newly approved to begin
receiving services. We are finalizing the
requirements at § 441.311(d)(2), with
modifications so that both reporting
requirements at § 441.311(d)(2)(i) and
(ii) require reporting on homemaker
services, home health aide services,
personal care, or habilitation services, as
set forth in § 440.180(b)(2) through (4)
and (6), and allow States to report using
statistically valid random sampling of
beneficiaries. We are modifying the title
of this provision at § 441.311(d)(2) to
specify Access to homemaker, home
health aide, personal care, and
habilitation services. We are also
finalizing a technical modification in
both § 441.311(d)(2)(i) and (ii) to
indicate that the services are, as set forth
in § 440.180(b)(2) through (4) and (6),
rather than, as listed in, as noted in the
proposed rule.
• We are replicating at
§ 441.311(e)(1)(i) through (iii) the
finalized definitions at
§ 441.302(k)(1)(i), through (iii),
respectively.
• We are redesignating § 441.311(e) as
§ 441.311(e)(2)(i) and finalizing
§ 441.311(e)(2)(i) with modifications to
specify that, except as provided at
(e)(2)(ii) and (4), the State must report
to CMS annually on the total percentage
of payments (not including excluded
costs) for furnishing homemaker
services, home health aide services,
personal care, and habilitation services,
as set forth in § 440.180(b)(2) through (4)
and (6), that is spent on compensation
for direct care workers, at the time and
in the form and manner specified by
CMS. The State must report separately
for each service and, within each
service, must separately report services
that are self-directed and services
delivered in a provider-operated
physical location for which facilityrelated costs are included in the
payment rate.
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
• We are finalizing a new
requirement at § 441.311(e)(2)(ii) that
specifies if the State provides that
homemaker, home health aide, personal
care services, or habilitation services, as
set forth at § 440.180(b)(2) through (4)
and (6), may be furnished under a selfdirected services delivery model in
which the beneficiary directing the
services sets the direct care worker’s
payment rate, then the State must
exclude such payment data from the
reporting required in paragraph (e) of
this section.
• We are finalizing a new
§ 441.311(e)(3), requiring that the State
must report, 1 year prior to the
applicability date for paragraph (e)(2)(i)
of this section, on its readiness to
comply with the reporting requirement
in paragraph (e)(2)(i) of this section.
• We are finalizing a new
§ 441.311(e)(4) to require States to
exclude the Indian Health Service and
Tribal health programs subject to the
requirements at 25 U.S.C. 1641 from the
reporting required in paragraph (e) of
this section, and not require submission
of data by, or include any data from, the
Indian Health Service or Tribal health
programs subject to the requirements at
25 U.S.C. 1641 for the State’s reporting
required under paragraph (e)(2).
• We are finalizing § 441.311(f) with
modification to move the date that
States are required to comply with the
quality measure reporting at
§ 441.311(c) from § 441.311(f)(1) to
§ 441.311(f)(2), and to clarify the
language regarding applicability dates in
the case of a State that implements a
managed care delivery system under the
authority of sections 1915(a), 1915(b),
1932(a), or 1115(a) of the Act and
includes HCBS in the MCO’s, PIHP’s, or
PAHP’s contract.
• We are finalizing §§ 441.474(c),
441.580(i), and 441.745(a)(1)(vii) with
modifications to clarify that the
references to section 1915(c) of the Act
are instead references to section 1915(j),
(k), and (i) of the Act, respectively.
8. Home and Community-Based
Services (HCBS) Quality Measure Set
(§§ 441.312, 441.474(c), 441.585(d), and
441.745(b)(1)(v)).
On July 21, 2022, we issued State
Medicaid Director Letter #22–003 132 to
release the first official version of the
HCBS Quality Measure Set. The HCBS
Quality Measure Set is a set of
nationally standardized quality
measures for Medicaid-covered HCBS. It
132 CMS State Medicaid Director Letter. SMD#
22–003 Home and Community-Based Services
Quality Measure Set. July 2022. Accessed at https://
www.medicaid.gov/federal-policy-guidance/
downloads/smd22003.pdf.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
is intended to promote more common
and consistent use within and across
States of nationally standardized quality
measures in HCBS programs, create
opportunities for CMS and States to
have comparative quality data on HCBS
programs, drive improvement in quality
of care and outcomes for people
receiving HCBS, and support States’
efforts to promote equity in their HCBS
programs. It is also intended to reduce
some of the burden that States and other
interested parties may experience in
identifying and using HCBS quality
measures. By providing States and other
interested parties with a set of
nationally standardized measures to
assess HCBS quality and outcomes and
by facilitating access to information on
those measures, we believe that we can
reduce the time and resources that
States and other interested parties
expend on identifying, assessing, and
implementing measures for use in HCBS
programs.
a. Basis and Scope (§ 441.312(a))
Section 1102(a) of the Act provides
the Secretary of HHS with authority to
make and publish rules and regulations
that are necessary for the efficient
administration of the Medicaid program.
Section 1902(a)(6) of the Act requires
State Medicaid agencies to make such
reports, in such form and containing
such information, as the Secretary may
from time to time require, and to
comply with such provisions as the
Secretary may from time to time find
necessary to assure the correctness and
verification of such reports. Under our
authority at sections 1102(a) and
1902(a)(6) of the Act, we proposed a
new section, at § 441.312, Home and
Community-Based Services Quality
Measure Set, to require use of the HCBS
Quality Measure Set in section 1915(c)
waiver programs and promote public
transparency related to the
administration of Medicaid-covered
HCBS. We proposed to describe the
basis and scope for this requirement at
§ 441.312(a).
In proposing this requirement, we
believed that quality is a critical
component of efficiency, and as such,
having a standardized set of measures
used to assess the quality of Medicaid
HCBS programs supports the efficient
operation of the Medicaid program.
Further, we believed that it is necessary
for the efficient administration of
Medicaid-covered HCBS authorized
under section 1915(c) of the Act,
consistent with section 1902(a)(4) of the
Act, as it would establish a process
through which we regularly update and
maintain the required set of measures at
§ 441.311(c) in consultation with States
PO 00000
Frm 00123
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40663
and other interested parties (as
described later in this section of the
rule). The process, as proposed, would
ensure that the priorities of interested
parties are reflected in the selection of
the measures included in the HCBS
Quality Measure Set. The process, as
proposed, also would ensure that the
required set of HCBS quality measures
is updated to address gaps in the HCBS
Quality Measure Set as new measures
are developed and to remove measures
that are less relevant or add less value
than other available measures, and the
HCBS quality measures meets scientific
and other standards for quality
measures. Due to the constantly
evolving field of HCBS quality
measurement, we proposed these
requirements based on our belief that
the failure to establish such a process
would result in ongoing reporting by
States of measures that do not reflect the
priorities of interested parties, measures
that offer limited value compared to
other measures, and measures that do
not meet strong scientific and other
standards. It would also result in a lack
of reporting on key measurement
priority areas, which could be addressed
by updating the HCBS Quality Measure
Set as new measures are developed. The
failure to establish such a process would
lead to inefficiency in States’ HCBS
quality measurement activities through
the continued reporting on an outdated
set of measures. In other words, we
believed that such a process is necessary
for the efficient administration of
Medicaid-covered HCBS by ensuring
that quality measure reporting
requirements are focused on the most
valuable, useful, and scientifically
supported areas of quality measurement,
and that quality measures with limited
value are removed timely from quality
measure reporting requirements.
We received public comments on this
proposal. The following is a summary of
the comments we received and our
responses.
Comment: Many commenters
supported the proposed basis and scope
at § 441.312(a). Several commenters
supported the requirements at § 441.312
(a) in its entirety.
Response: We thank the commenters
for their support for our proposal.
Comment: A few commenters raised
concerns that the HCBS Quality
Measure Set is overly prescriptive from
a Federal perspective and sets a onesize-fits-all approach, expressing that
the responsibility for safeguarding
quality in HCBS belong to each State.
Response: We disagree with
commenters that the proposed
requirement for States to use the HCBS
Quality Measure Set is overly
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
40664
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
prescriptive. CMS and States have
worked for decades to support the
increased availability and provision of
high-quality HCBS for Medicaid
beneficiaries. While there are quality
and reporting requirements for
Medicaid HCBS, the requirements vary
across authorities and are often
inadequate to provide the necessary
information for ensuring that HCBS are
provided in a high-quality manner that
best protects the health and welfare of
beneficiaries. Consequently, quality
measurement and reporting
expectations are not consistent across
services, and instead vary depending on
the authorities under which States are
delivering services. While we support
State flexibility, the lack of standardized
measures has resulted in thousands of
metrics and measures currently in use
across States, with different metrics and
measures often used for different HCBS
programs within the same State. As a
result, CMS and States are limited in the
ability to compare HCBS quality and
outcomes within and across States or to
compare the performance of HCBS
programs for different Medicaid
beneficiary populations. We underscore
our belief that use of the HCBS Quality
Measure Set will promote more
common and consistent use within and
across States of nationally standardized
quality measures in HCBS programs,
create opportunities for CMS and States
to have comparative quality data on
HCBS programs, drive improvement in
quality of care and outcomes for people
receiving HCBS, and support States’
efforts to promote equity in their HCBS
programs. As discussed further in this
section II.B.8. of this rule, we are
finalizing the requirements at
§ 441.312(a) as proposed and plan to
provide technical assistance to States as
needed to address the concerns raised
by commenters.
Comment: Several commenters
requested that CMS align the HCBS
quality measures universally across
Medicaid programs, recommending
streamlining measures across the HCBS
Quality Measure Set, the Medicaid and
CHIP (MAC) Quality Rating System
(QRS), and the Adult Core Set. Further,
commenters recommended we consider
a minimum set of mandatory quality
measures and limit them to a small set,
similar to the MAC QRS, and allow
States the flexibility to utilize voluntary
measures in addition to the minimum
mandatory measures, as appropriate.
Commenters further noted that States
already have implemented measures
that may not be included in the quality
measures identified in the HCBS
Quality Measure Set, and this approach
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
for a small set of mandatory measures
could minimize disruption to the
quality-related work that is currently
being undertaken by States in their
Medicaid programs.
One commenter observed that
creating a unified reporting structure on
mandatory measures would bring a level
of discipline and consistency that
would foster more reliable data across
the Medicaid program, noting that it is
imperative to create alignment for data
collection across States.
Response: We thank the commenters
for this feedback. We will take these
comments into consideration when
developing and updating the HCBS
Quality Measure Set and developing
subregulatory guidance on the required
use of the HCBS Quality Measure Set.
We agree with the commenters on the
importance of parsimony, alignment,
and harmonization in quality
measurement across the Medicaid
program, to the extent possible. While
we aim to align measures across
programs as much as possible, the HCBS
Quality Measure Set is designed to
promote more common and consistent
use of nationally standardized quality
measures in HCBS programs and to
support States with improving quality
and outcomes specifically for
beneficiaries receiving HCBS. As a
result, we expect the HCBS Quality
Measure Set to be in alignment with the
MAC QRS and the Child and Adult Core
Sets.
We also acknowledge that States are
already using quality measures to assess
quality in their HCBS programs, and it
is not our intent for States to abandon
this quality-related work. The measure
set is intended to reduce some of the
burden that States and other interested
parties may experience in identifying
and using HCBS quality measures.
However, States may continue to utilize
existing measures not found in the
HCBS Quality Measure Set if the States
believe they generate valuable
information, as long as the measures in
the HCBS Quality Measures Set are
implemented in accordance with
§ 441.312, which we are finalizing as
discussed further in this section II.B.8.
of this rule.
After consideration of the comments
received, we are finalizing § 441.312(a)
with a minor formatting change to
correct punctuation.
b. Definitions (§ 441.312(b))
We proposed a definition at
§ 441.312(b)(1) for ‘‘Attribution rules,’’
to mean the process States use to assign
beneficiaries to a specific health care
program or delivery system for the
purpose of calculating the measures in
PO 00000
Frm 00124
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
the HCBS Quality Measure Set as
described at § 441.312(d)(6). We also
proposed a definition at § 441.312(b)(2)
for ‘‘Home and Community-Based
Services Quality Measure Set’’ to mean
the Home and Community-Based
Services Quality Measures for Medicaid
established and updated at least every
other year by the Secretary through a
process that allows for public input and
comments, including through the
Federal Register.
We received public comments on
these proposals. The following is a
summary of the comments we received
and our responses.
Comment: Commenters generally
supported the proposed definitions at
§ 441.312(b).
Response: We thank these
commenters for their support.
After consideration of the comments
received, we are finalizing at
§ 441.312(b)(1) the definition of
attribution rules as proposed. As
discussed in more detail in our
discussion of § 441.312(c) in the next
section below (section B.8.c. of this
rule), we are making several changes
related to the frequency of updates to
the HCBS Quality Measure Set. To
accommodate those changes, we are
striking the words, at least every other
year, from the definition of the Home
and Community-Based Services Quality
Measure Set we proposed at
§ 441.312(b)(2).
As finalized at § 441.312(b)(2) the
definition of Home and CommunityBased Services Quality Measure Set
means the Home and Community-Based
Services Quality Measures for Medicaid
established and updated by the
Secretary through a process that allows
for public input and comment,
including through the Federal Register,
as described in paragraph (d) of this
section. We note that the measure
updates are specified in § 441.312(c) as
finalized, and thus the frequency of
updates do not need to be set forth in
the definition of the HCBS Quality
Measure Set. Additionally, we are
finalizing § 441.312(b) with a minor
technical modification to correct an
inadvertent omission in the regulatory
text in the proposed rule and are
finalizing the addition of the numbers
(1) and (2) in front of each definition.
c. Responsibilities of the Secretary
(§ 441.312(c))
At § 441.312(c), we described the
proposed general process for the HCBS
Quality Measure Set that the Secretary
will follow to update and maintain the
HCBS Quality Measure Set. Specifically,
at § 441.312(c)(1), we proposed that the
Secretary will identify, and update at
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
least every other year, through a process
that allows for public input and
comment, the quality measures to be
included in the HCBS Quality Measure
Set. At § 441.312(c)(2), we proposed that
the Secretary will solicit comment at
least every other year with States and
other interested parties, which we
identified later in this section of the
preamble of the proposed rule, to:
• Establish priorities for the
development and advancement of the
HCBS Quality Measure Set.
• Identify newly developed or other
measures that should be added,
including to address gaps in the
measures included in the HCBS Quality
Measure Set.
• Identify measures that should be
removed as they no longer strengthen
the HCBS Quality Measure Set.
• Ensure that all measures included
in the HCBS Quality Measure Set are
evidence-based, are meaningful for
States, and are feasible for State-level
and program-level reporting as
appropriate.
The proposed frequency for updating
the quality measures included in the
HCBS Quality Measure Set was aligned
with the proposed frequency at
§ 441.311(c)(1) for States’ reporting of
the measures in the HCBS Quality
Measure Set. We based other aspects of
the proposed process that the Secretary
will follow to update and maintain the
HCBS Quality Measure Set in part on
the processes for the Secretary to update
and maintain the Child, Adult, and
Health Home Core Sets as described in
the Medicaid Program and CHIP;
Mandatory Medicaid and Children’s
Health Insurance Program (CHIP) Core
Set Reporting final rule (88 FR 60278);
(hereinafter the ‘‘Mandatory Medicaid
and CHIP Core Set Reporting final
rule’’). We believed that such alignment
in processes will ensure consistency
and promote efficiency for both CMS
and States across Medicaid quality
measurement and reporting activities.
At § 441.312(c)(3), we proposed that
the Secretary will, in consultation with
States and other interested parties,
develop and update the measures in the
HCBS Quality Measure Set, at least
every other year, through a process that
allows for public input and comment.
We solicited comments on whether the
timeframes for updating the measures in
the HCBS Quality Measure Set and
conducting the process for developing
and updating the HCBS Quality
Measure Set is sufficient, whether we
should conduct these activities more
frequently (every year) or less frequently
(every 3 years), and if an alternate
timeframe was recommended, the
rationale for that alternate timeframe.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
We received public comments on
these proposals. The following is a
summary of the comments we received
and our responses.
Comment: Several commenters
expressed support for our proposal at
§ 441.312(c)(1) to identify and update
the quality measures included in the
HCBS Quality Measure Set at least every
other year, through a process that allows
for public input and comment. One
commenter noted that identifying and
updating the measures annually, instead
of every other year, could maximize the
effectiveness of the HCBS Quality
Measure Set, especially with a new and
rapidly evolving field of HCBS
measures, suggesting that an every other
year frequency might impact the use of
innovative approaches to inform quality
improvement in HCBS. Alternatively,
several commenters expressed concern
and recommended less frequent updates
to the HCBS Quality Measure Set,
questioning the usefulness of the
measures that change every other year
and suggesting that taking a longer time
between updates to the HCBS Quality
Measure Set will minimize financial
burden and allow States to more
accurately measure improvement over
time. In the same vein, one commenter
expressed that every other year updates
to the measure set might have an effect
and impact the usefulness of
longitudinal data. These commenters
suggested alternative timeframes
ranging from 3 to 5 years, with 3 years
being the most frequently suggested
frequency for updates to the HCBS
Quality Measure Set.
Response: We thank commenters for
their feedback. In consideration of
comments received, we agree that
clarification of the frequency in updates
to the HCBS Quality Measure Set is
required. We note that the proposed
process for updating the quality
measures included in the Quality
Measure Set differs in frequency from,
though is based in part on, the processes
for the Secretary to update and maintain
the Child, Adult, and Health Home Core
Sets as described in the final rule,
‘‘Medicaid Program and CHIP;
Mandatory Medicaid and Children’s
Health Insurance Program (CHIP) Core
Set Reporting’’ (88 FR 60278)
(hereinafter the ‘‘Mandatory Medicaid
and CHIP Core Set Reporting final
rule’’). We proposed a frequency for
updating the quality measures included
in the HCBS Quality Measure Set,
which is different from the mandatory
annual State reporting of the Core Set
measures in the Mandatory Medicaid
and CHIP Core Set Reporting final rule,
because the HCBS Quality Measure Set
was only first released for voluntary use
PO 00000
Frm 00125
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40665
by States in July 2022, while Child,
Adult, and Health Home Core Sets
voluntary reporting has been in place
for a number of years. Further, a
substantial portion of the measures
included in the HCBS Quality Measure
Set, particularly compared to the Child,
Adult, and Health Home Core Sets, is
derived from beneficiary experience of
care surveys, which are costlier to
implement than other types of
measures. We recognize that States may
need to make enhancements to their
data and information systems or incur
other costs in implementing the HCBS
Quality Measure Set. Upon further
consideration, we assure States that
CMS will not update the measure set to
add new measures or retire existing
measures more frequently than every
other year, and are modifying the
beginning date as no later than
December 31, 2026, instead of 2025. We
note that, while the finalized
requirement will allow CMS to add new
measures or retire existing measures
every other year, CMS intends to retain
each of the measures in the measure set
for at least 5 years to ensure the
availability of longitudinal data, unless
there are serious issues associated with
the measures (such as related to
measure reliability or validity) or States’
use of the measures (such as excessive
cost of State data collection and
reporting or insurmountable technical
issues with State reporting on the
measures).
After consideration of the comments
received about the frequency of
updating the quality measures in
§ 441.312(c)(1), we are finalizing
§ 441.312(c)(1) with modifications to
require that the Secretary shall identify
and update quality measures no more
frequently than every other year,
beginning no later than December 31,
2026, the quality measures to be
included in the Home and CommunityBased Services Quality Measure Set as
defined in paragraph (b) of this section).
(New language identified in bold.)
We are also finalizing a new
requirement at § 441.312(c)(2) to require
the Secretary to make technical updates
and corrections to the Home and
Community-Based Services Quality
Measure Set annually as appropriate.
This addition is intended to ensure that
the measures included in the measure
set are accurate and up to date, and that
we may correct errors, clarify
information related to the measures, and
align with updated technical
specifications of measure stewards,
particularly given the revision to
§ 441.312(c)(2) to indicate that CMS will
not update the HCBS Quality Measure
Set more frequently than every other
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
40666
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
year. To accommodate the new
requirement at § 441.312(c)(2), we have
renumbered the provisions proposed at
§§ 441.312(c)(2) and (3) to
§§ 441.312(c)(3) and (4), respectively.
We are finalizing redesignated
§ 441.312(c)(3)(iv) with a minor
technical modification for clarity to
specify that the Secretary shall ensure
that all measures included in the Home
and Community-Based Services Quality
Measure Set reflect an evidence-based
process including testing, validation,
and consensus among interested parties;
are meaningful for States; and are
feasible for State-level, program-level, or
provider-level reporting as appropriate.
We are also finalizing the redesignated
requirement at § 441.312(c)(4) with a
modification to replace the words, at
least, with the words, no more
frequently than, to require that the
Secretary, in consultation with States,
develop and update, no more frequently
than every other year, the Home and
Community-Based Services Quality
Measure Set using a process that allows
for public input and comment as
described in paragraph (d) of this
section.
As noted in the proposed rule, in
Medicaid, enhanced FFP is available at
a 90 percent FMAP for the design,
development, or installation of
improvements of mechanized claims
processing and information retrieval
systems, in accordance with applicable
Federal requirements.133 Enhanced FFP
at a 75 percent FMAP is also available
for operations of such systems, in
accordance with applicable Federal
requirements.134 However, we reiterate
that receipt of these enhanced funds is
conditioned upon States meeting a
series of standards and conditions to
ensure investments are efficient and
effective.135 We clarify, to receive
enhanced FMAP funds, the State
Medicaid agency is required at
§ 433.112(b)(12) to ensure the alignment
with, and incorporation of, standards
and implementation specifications for
health information technology adopted
by the Office of the National
Coordinator for Health IT in 45 CFR part
170, subpart B, among other
requirements set forth in
§ 433.112(b)(12). States should also
consider adopting relevant standards
133 See section 1903(a)(3)(A)(i) and § 433.15(b)(3),
80 FR 75817–75843; https://www.medicaid.gov/
state-resourcecenter/faq-medicaid-and-chipaffordable-care-act-implementation/downloads/
affordable-care-act-faq-enhancedfunding-formedicaid.pdf; https://www.medicaid.gov/federalpolicy-guidance/downloads/SMD16004.pdf.
134 See section 1903(a)(3)(B) and § 433.15(b)(4).
135 See § 433.112 (b, 80 FR 75841; https://
www.ecfr.gov/current/title-42/chapter-IV/
subchapter-C/part-433/subpart-C.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
identified in the Interoperability
Standards Advisory (ISA) 136 to bolster
improvements in the identification and
reporting on the prevalence of critical
incidents for HCBS beneficiaries and
present opportunities for the State to
develop improved information systems
that can support quality improvement
activities that can help promote the
health and safety of HCBS beneficiaries.
We plan to provide States with
technical assistance and subregulatory
guidance to support implementation of
the HCBS Quality Measure Set.
After consideration of the comments
received, we are finalizing § 441.312(c)
with modifications. We are finalizing
§ 441.312(c)(1) with modifications to
require that the Secretary shall identify,
and update no more frequently than
every other year, beginning no later than
December 31, 2026, the quality
measures to be included in the Home
and Community-Based Services Quality
Measure Set as defined in paragraph (b)
of this section. (New language identified
in bold.)
We are finalizing § 441.312(c)(2)
without substantive changes, but we are
redesignating the requirement as
§ 441.312(c)(3). We are finalizing a new
requirement at § 441.312(c)(2) that the
Secretary shall make technical updates
and corrections to the Home and
Community-Based Services Quality
Measure Set annually as appropriate.
We are also redesignating what had
been proposed as § 441.312(c)(3) as
(c)(4) and finalizing the redesignated
§ 441.312(c)(4) with a modification to
replace the word at least with no more
frequently than.
d. Process for Developing and Updating
the HCBS Quality Measure Set
(§ 441.311(d))
At proposed § 441.312(d), we
described the proposed process for
developing and updating the HCBS
Quality Measure Set. Specifically, we
proposed that the Secretary will address
the following through a process to:
• Identify all measures in the HCBS
Quality Measure Set, including newly
added measures, measures that have
been removed, mandatory measures,
measures that the Secretary will report
on States’ behalf, measures that States
can elect to have the Secretary report on
their behalf, as well as the measures that
136 Relevant standards adopted by HHS and
identified in the ISA include the USCDI (https://
www.healthit.gov/isa/united-states-core-datainteroperability-uscdi), eLTSS (https://
www.healthit.gov/isa/documenting-care-plansperson-centered-services), and Functional
Assessment Standardized Items (https://
www.healthit.gov/isa/representing-patientfunctional-status-andor-disability).
PO 00000
Frm 00126
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
the Secretary will provide States with
additional time to report and the
amount of additional time.
• Inform States how to collect and
calculate data on the measures.
• Provide a standardized format and
reporting schedule for reporting the
measures.
• Provide procedures that States must
follow in reporting the measure data.
• Identify specific populations for
which States must report the measures,
including people enrolled in a specific
delivery system type such as those
enrolled in a managed care plan or
receiving services on a fee-for-service
basis, people who are dually eligible for
Medicare and Medicaid, older adults,
people with physical disabilities, people
with intellectual or developmental
disabilities, people who have serious
mental illness, and people who have
other health conditions; and provide
attribution rules for determining how
States must report on measures for
beneficiaries who are included in more
than one population.
• Identify the measures that must be
stratified by race, ethnicity, Tribal
status, sex, age, rural/urban status,
disability, language, or such other
factors as may be specified by the
Secretary.
• Describe how to establish State
performance targets for each of the
measures.
As discussed in section II.B.8. of the
proposed rule (88 FR 27992 through
27993), we anticipated that, for State
reporting on the measures in the HCBS
Quality Measure Set, as outlined in the
reporting requirements we proposed at
§ 441.311, the technical information on
attribution rules described at proposed
§ 441.312(d)(6), would call for inclusion
in quality reporting based on a
beneficiary’s continuous enrollment in
the Medicaid waiver. This ensures the
State has enough time to furnish
services during the measurement
period. In the technical information, we
anticipated we would set attribution
rules to address transitions in Medicaid
eligibility, enrollment in Medicare, or
transitions between different delivery
systems or managed care plans, within
a reporting year, for example, based on
the length of time beneficiaries was
enrolled in each. We invited comment
on other considerations we should
address in the attribution rules or other
topics we should address in the
technical information.
We received public comments on
these proposals. The following is a
summary of the comments we received
and our responses.
Comment: Several commenters
provided input on the proposed process
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
that the Secretary will follow to update
and maintain the HCBS Quality
Measure Set. A few commenters
recommended that, to advance
meaningful quality improvement and
measurement, we should prioritize the
importance of a measure and a
measure’s usability and use for measure
selection and suggested an additional
evaluative category of advancing equity.
A couple of commenters suggested that
we should consider implementing a
process to determine if quality measures
are based on person-centered planning
principles, emphasizing that many of
the measures in the HCBS Quality
Measure Set are more system and
process-oriented, rather than focused on
assessing and improving personcentered experiences and preferences.
One commenter recommended we
conduct a broad-based public review of
possible quality measures and domains
for individuals with intellectual and
developmental disabilities to inform the
quality measures process. Another
commenter suggested that we include
an oral health measure for beneficiaries
receiving HCBS in the selection of
measures for the HCBS Quality Measure
Set. A few commenters recommended
we prioritize the development and
inclusion of culturally and linguistically
appropriate measures within the HCBS
Quality Measure Set, prioritizing
reporting of the most feasible measures,
aligning the CMS Core Sets, to capture
the experiences and outcomes of diverse
populations and ensure that HCBS
programs address the unique needs and
preferences of beneficiaries from
different cultural backgrounds.
Response: At § 441.312(d), we
described the general process that the
Secretary will follow to update and
maintain the HCBS Quality Measure
Set.
We underscore the importance of
alignment in quality measurement
across the Medicaid program, to the
extent possible. We proposed at
§ 441.312(d)(7), that the process for
developing and updating the HCBS
Quality Measure Set will address the
subset of measures that must be
stratified by race, ethnicity, Tribal
status, sex, age, rural/urban status,
disability, language, or such other
factors as may be specified by the
Secretary and informed by consultation
every other year with States and
interested parties.
After further consideration, we have
identified that including Tribal status as
a measure stratification factor is
misaligned, as it is not included as a
measure stratification factor for the
Adult Core Set as defined in the
Mandatory Medicaid and CHIP Core Set
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
Reporting final rule. We are also
concerned that this additional measure
stratification factor will create
additional burden for States. After
further consideration, to ensure
alignment in Medicaid quality
measurement and alignment of the
HCBS Quality Measure Set with the
Adult Core Set, we are removing Tribal
status as a measure stratification factor
at § 441.312(d)(7). We note that Tribal
status could be included as a measure
stratification factor under such other
factors as may be specified by the
Secretary and informed by consultation
every other year with States and
interested parties in accordance with
§ 441.312(b)(2) and (g).
At § 441.312(d), we proposed and are
finalizing the process for developing
and updating the HCBS Quality
Measure Set. At § 441.312(d)(5) the
process for developing and updating the
HCBS Quality Measure Set includes the
identification of the beneficiary
populations for which States are
required to report the HCBS quality
measures identified by the Secretary.
We are finalizing § 441.312(d)(5)(i) with
a technical modification, including the
identification of the beneficiaries
receiving services through specified
delivery systems for which States are
required to report the HCBS quality
measures identified by the Secretary,
replacing managed care plan with MCO,
PIHP, or PAHP as defined in § 438.2.
(New language identified in bold.)
Comment: A few commenters
requested we clarify how the HCBS
Quality Measure Set would relate to
measurement for beneficiaries who are
dually eligible for Medicare and
Medicaid. One commenter further
expressed strong support for
disaggregation of data for dually eligible
beneficiaries, but also questioned
whether partial benefit dually eligible
beneficiaries were required to be
included in the population for quality
measurement, as most do not receive
HCBS or any other Medicaid benefits.
Response: We plan to provide States
with guidance and technical assistance
to help address issues specific to dually
eligible beneficiaries. Further, inclusion
and exclusion criteria for each measure
will be addressed through the technical
specifications for the measure. We note
that, to the extent that dual-eligible
beneficiaries are receiving services
authorized under section 1915(c), (i), (j),
or (k) Medicaid programs and delivered
through managed care plans, and meet
the inclusion criteria for the measure,
they are required to be included in the
reporting on that measure. We will
provide technical assistance regarding
the application of these requirements to
PO 00000
Frm 00127
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40667
beneficiaries in different categories of
dual eligibility.
Comment: One commenter requested
that CMS clarify the requirement at
§ 441.312(d)(7) referencing the subset of
measures in the HCBS Quality Measure
Set that must be stratified by health
equity characteristics, noting that the
proposed § 441.312(f) would require
States to stratify 100 percent of
measures by 7 years after the effective
date of the final rule. They emphasized
a disconnect between the two
provisions, as a subset of measures is
not the same as 100 percent of measures
and suggest removing the word subset to
avoid confusion in implementation.
Response: Reporting of stratified data
is a cornerstone of our approach to
advancing health equity. We note
reporting stratified data helps identify
and eliminate health disparities across
HCBS populations. As we noted in the
proposed rule (88 FR 27993), measuring
health disparities, reporting these
results, and driving improvements in
quality are cornerstones of the CMS
approach to advancing health equity
through data reporting and stratification
aligns with E.O. 13985.137
At § 441.312(f), in specifying which
measures, and by which factors, States
must report stratified measures
consistent with § 441.312(d)(7), the
Secretary will take into account whether
stratification can be accomplished based
on valid statistical methods and without
risking a violation of beneficiary privacy
and, for measures obtained from
surveys, whether the original survey
instrument collects the variables
necessary to stratify the measures, and
such other factors as the Secretary
determines appropriate. We reiterate
that we considered giving States the
flexibility to choose which measures
they would stratify and by what factors.
However, as discussed in the Mandatory
Medicaid and CHIP Core Set Reporting
rule (87 FR 51313), consistent
measurement of differences in health
and quality of life outcomes between
different groups of beneficiaries is
essential to identifying areas for
intervention and evaluation of those
interventions.138 This consistency could
not be achieved if each State made its
own decisions about which data it
137 Exec. Order No. 13985 (2021), Accessed at
https://www.whitehouse.gov/briefing-room/
presidential-actions/2021/01/20/executive-orderadvancing-racial-equity-and-support-forunderserved-communities-through-the-federalgovernment/.
138 Schlotthauer AE, Badler A, Cook SC, Perez DJ,
Chin MH. Evaluating Interventions to Reduce
Health Care Disparities: An RWJF Program. Health
Aff (Millwood). 2008;27(2):568–573.
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
40668
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
would stratify and by what factors.139 140
We also recognize that States may be
constrained in their ability to stratify
measures in the HCBS Quality Measure
Set and that data stratification would
require additional State resources. We
also may face constraints in stratifying
measures for which we are able to report
on behalf of States, as our ability to
stratify will be dependent on whether
the original dataset or survey
instrument: (1) collects the demographic
information or other variables needed
and (2) has a large enough sample size.
preserved and model accuracy is
improved. In consideration of these
factors we are finalizing at
§ 441.312(d)(7) that the subset of
measures among the measures in the
HCBS Quality Measure Set that must be
stratified by health equity
characteristics as proposed.
In response to the commenter’s
observation regarding when 100 percent
of the measures must be stratified, we
note that, for reasons discussed in
greater detail in section II.B.7. and
II.B.8.e. of this final rule, we are
modifying the requirement at
§ 441.311(f) to change the timing by
which measures must be stratified. As
finalized, § 441.311(f) requires that
stratification of 25 percent of the
measures in the Home and CommunityBased Services Quality Measure Set for
which the Secretary has specified that
reporting should be stratified by 4 years
after the effective date of these
regulations, 50 percent of such measures
by 6 years after the effective date of
these regulations, and 100 percent of
measures by 8 years after the effective
date of these regulations.
After consideration of the comments
received, we are finalizing
§ 441.312(d)(1) through (6) and (8) as
proposed. We are finalizing
§ 441.312(d)(7) with modification to
remove Tribal status as a stratification
factor. As finalized, § 441.312(d)(7)
provides that the process for developing
and updating the HCBS Quality
Measure Set will address the subset of
measures among the measures in the
HCBS Quality Measure Set that must be
stratified by race, ethnicity, sex, age,
rural/urban status, disability, language,
or such other factors as may be specified
139 Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services
(CMS) Office of Minority Health (OMH). Stratified
Reporting. 2022; https://www.cms.gov/About-CMS/
Agency-Information/OMH/research-and-data/
statistics-and-data/stratified-reporting.
140 National Quality Forum. A Roadmap for
Promoting Health Equity and Eliminating
Disparities. Sep 2017. Accessed at https://
www.qualityforum.org/Publications/2017/09/A_
Roadmap_for_Promoting_Health_Equity_and_
Eliminating_Disparities__The_Four_I_s_for_Health_
Equity.aspx.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
by the Secretary and informed by
consultation every other year with
States and interested parties.
e. Phasing In of Certain Reporting
(§ 441.311(e) and (f))
At § 441.312(e), we proposed, in the
process for developing and updating the
HCBS Quality Measure Set described at
proposed § 441.312(d), that the
Secretary consider the complexity of
State reporting and allow for the phasein over a specified period of time of
mandatory State reporting for some
measures and of reporting for certain
populations, such as older adults or
people with intellectual and
developmental disabilities. At
§ 441.312(f), we proposed that, in
specifying the measures and the factors
by which States must report stratified
measures, the Secretary will consider
whether such stratified sampling can be
accomplished based on valid statistical
methods, without risking a violation of
beneficiary privacy, and, for measures
obtained from surveys, whether the
original survey instrument collects the
variables or factors necessary to stratify
the measures.
We considered giving States the
flexibility to choose which measures
they would stratify and by what factors.
However, as we noted was discussed in
the Mandatory Medicaid and CHIP Core
Set Reporting final rule (88 FR 60278),
consistent measurement of differences
in health and quality of life outcomes
between different groups of
beneficiaries is essential to identifying
areas for intervention and evaluation of
those interventions.141 This consistency
could not be achieved if each State
made its own decisions about which
data it would stratify and by what
factors.142 143
In the proposed rule, we recognized
that States may be constrained in their
ability to stratify measures in the HCBS
Quality Measure Set and that data
stratification would require additional
State resources. We also noted that there
are several challenges to stratification of
measure reporting. First, the validity of
stratification is threatened when the
141 Schlotthauer AE, Badler A, Cook SC, Perez DJ,
Chin MH. Evaluating Interventions to Reduce
Health Care Disparities: An RWJF Program. Health
Aff (Millwood). 2008;27(2):568–573.
142 Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services
(CMS) Office of Minority Health (OMH). Stratified
Reporting. 2022; https://www.cms.gov/About-CMS/
Agency-Information/OMH/research-and-data/
statistics-and-data/stratified-reporting.
143 National Quality Forum. A Roadmap for
Promoting Health Equity and Eliminating
Disparities. Sep 2017. Accessed at https://
www.qualityforum.org/Publications/2017/09/A_
Roadmap_for_Promoting_Health_Equity_and_
Eliminating_Disparities__The_Four_I_s_for_Health_
Equity.aspx.
PO 00000
Frm 00128
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
demographic data are incomplete.
Complete demographic information is
often unavailable to us and to States due
to several factors, including the fact that
Medicaid applicants and beneficiaries
are not required to provide race and
ethnicity data. Second, when States
with smaller populations and less
diversity stratify data, it may be possible
to identify individual data, raising
privacy concerns. Therefore, if the
sample sizes are too small, the data
would be suppressed, in accordance
with the CMS Cell Size Suppression
Policy and the data suppression policies
for associated measure stewards and
therefore not publicly reported to avoid
a potential violation of privacy.144
We also acknowledged that we may
face constraints in stratifying measures
for which we are able to report on behalf
of States, as our ability to stratify would
be dependent on whether the original
dataset or survey instrument: (1) collects
the demographic information or other
variables needed and (2) has a large
enough sample size. The Transformed
Medicaid Statistical Information System
(T–MSIS), for example, currently has
the capability to stratify some HCBS
Quality Measure Set measures by sex
and urban/rural status, but not by race,
ethnicity, or disability status. This is
because applicants provide information
on sex and urban/rural address, which
is reported to T–MSIS by States,
whereas applicants are not required to
provide information on their race and
ethnicity or disability status, and often
do not do so. However, we have
developed the capacity to impute race
and ethnicity using a version of the
Bayesian Improved Surname Geocoding
(BISG) method 145 that includes
Medicaid-specific enhancements to
optimize accuracy, and are able to
stratify by race and ethnicity, urban/
rural status, and sex.
With these challenges in mind, we
proposed that stratification by States in
reporting of HCBS Quality Measure Set
data would be implemented through a
phased-in approach in which the
Secretary would specify which
measures and by which factors States
must stratify reported measures. At
§ 441.312(f), we proposed that States
would be required to provide stratified
data for 25 percent of the measures in
the HCBS Quality Measure Set for
144 CMS Cell Size Suppression Policy, Issued
2020: https://www.hhs.gov/guidance/document/
cms-cell-suppression-policy or the cell suppression
standards of the associated measure stewards.
145 Elliott, Marc N., et al. ‘‘Using the Census
Bureau’s surname list to improve estimates of race/
ethnicity and associated disparities.’’ Health
Services and Outcomes Research Methodology 9.2
(2009): 69–83.
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
which the Secretary has specified that
reporting should be stratified by 3 years
after the effective date of these
regulations, 50 percent of such measures
by 5 years after the effective date of
these regulations, and 100 percent of
measures by 7 years after the effective
date of these regulations. We noted that
the percentages listed here aligned with
the proposed phase-in of equity
reporting in the Mandatory Medicaid
and CHIP Core Set Reporting final rule
(88 FR 60278). However, the timeframe
associated with each percentage of
measures to phase-in equity reporting
that we proposed in this rule is different
with a slower phase-in, in large part
because when compared to the Child,
Adult, and Health Home Core Sets, the
HCBS Measure Set in its current form
includes a substantial number of
measures that are derived from
beneficiary experience of care surveys,
which are costlier to implement than
other types of measures. In addition, the
slower phase-in was also intended to
take into consideration the overall
burden of the reporting requirements
and that States have less experience
with the HCBS Quality Measure Set.
Specifically, the Mandatory Medicaid
and CHIP Core Set Reporting final rule
(88 FR 60278) requires States to provide
stratified data for 25 percent of
measures within 2 years after the
effective date of the final rule, 50
percent of measures within 3 years after
the effective date of the final rule, and
100 percent of measures within 5 years
after the effective date of the final rule.
In our proposed rule, we determined
that our proposed phased-in approach
to data stratification would be
reasonable and minimally burdensome,
and thus consistent with E.O. 13985 on
Advancing Racial Equity and Support
for Underserved Communities Through
the Federal Government (January 20,
2021),146 because we were balancing the
importance of being able to identify
differences in outcomes between
populations under these measures with
the potential operational challenges that
States may face in implementing these
proposed requirements.
We recognized that States may need
to make enhancements to their data and
information systems or incur other costs
in implementing the HCBS Quality
Measure Set. We reminded States that
enhanced FFP is available at a 90
percent match rate for the design,
development, or installation of
146 Exec. Order No. 13985 (2021), Accessed at
https://www.whitehouse.gov/briefing-room/
presidential-actions/2021/01/20/executive-orderadvancing-racial-equity-and-support-forunderserved-communities-through-the-federalgovernment/.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
improvements of mechanized claims
processing and information retrieval
systems, in accordance with applicable
Federal requirements.147 Enhanced FFP
at a 75 percent match rate is also
available for operations of such systems,
in accordance with applicable Federal
requirements.148 We also encouraged
States to advance the interoperable
exchange of HCBS data and support
quality improvement activities by
adopting standards in 45 CFR part 170
and other relevant standards identified
in the ISA.149
We invited comments on the
proposed schedule for phasing in
reporting of HCBS Quality Measure Set
data. We also solicited comment on
whether we should phase-in reporting
on all of the measures in the HCBS
Quality Measure Set.
We received public comments on
these proposals. The following is a
summary of the comments we received
and our responses.
Comment: A few commenters
supported our proposal at § 441.312(f)
in its entirety.
Response: We thank the commenters
for their support of our proposed
requirements.
Comment: Several commenters
submitted recommendations and
requests related to the details of
stratified reporting, such as definitions
of specific categories of populations,
data suppression policies, how to
handle missing data, and different
measures of delivery systems.
Response: We believe that stratified
data would enable us and States to
identify the health and quality of life
outcomes of underserved populations
and potential differences in outcomes
based on race, ethnicity, sex, age, rural/
urban status, disability, language, and
other such factors on measures
contained in the HCBS Quality Measure
Set. We refer readers to section II.B.8. of
the proposed rule (88 FR 27993) for a
detailed discussion of stratified data and
sampling.
147 See section 1903(a)(3)(A)(i) of the Act and
§ 433.15(b)(3), 80 FR 75817 through 75843; https://
www.medicaid.gov/state-resourcecenter/faqmedicaid-and-chip-affordable-care-actimplementation/downloads/affordable-care-act-faqenhancedfunding-for-medicaid.pdf; https://
www.medicaid.gov/federal-policy-guidance/
downloads/SMD16004.pdf.
148 See section 1903(a)(3)(B) and § 433.15(b)(4).
149 Relevant standards adopted by HHS and
identified in the ISA include the USCDI (https://
www.healthit.gov/isa/united-states-core-datainteroperability-uscdi), eLTSS (https://
www.healthit.gov/isa/documenting-care-plansperson-centered-services), and Functional
Assessment Standardized Items (https://
www.healthit.gov/isa/representing-patientfunctional-status-andor-disability).
PO 00000
Frm 00129
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40669
We expect to align with Department
of Health and Human Services (HHS)
data standards for stratification, based
on the disaggregation of the 1997 Office
of Management and Budget (OMB)
Statistical Policy Directive No 15.150 We
expect to update HCBS Quality Measure
Set reporting stratification categories if
there are any changes to OMB or HHS
Data Standards. We will take this
feedback into account as we plan
technical assistance and develop
guidance for States.
Comment: Several commenters
supported all the proposed
requirements for stratification but
recommended either faster or slower
implementation. A couple of
commenters suggested that States be
required to report stratified data by 3
years after the effective date of this final
rule rather than phase in this
requirement. Multiple commenters
provided alternate phase-in schedules
for stratification of the HCBS Quality
Measure Set, with the most frequent
suggestions to add two to five years to
the phase-in timeline for data
stratification requirements for the
measures in the HCBS Quality Measure
Set. Some commenters expressed that
they supported a staggered
implementation timeline of the data
stratification requirements and noted
that additional time and flexibility for
States could make compliance more
attainable because of State legislative,
budgeting, procurement, and
contracting requirements. Another
commenter, who represents State
agencies, emphasized that many States
have long-standing challenges with
collecting complete demographic data
on Medicaid beneficiaries, and they
expressed concerns with small samples,
staffing capacity, survey fatigue, and
problems identifying baseline
demographics. One commenter
recommended that the initial
implementation of stratification occur
with a rolling start date by State, based
on waiver renewal date.
Response: We continue to believe that
the time frame for States to implement
stratification of data on quality
measures in the HCBS Quality Measure
Set is an appropriate frequency that
ensures accountability without being
overly burdensome. We determined that
a shorter phase timeframe would not
likely be operationally feasible because
of the potential systems and contracting
changes (to existing contracts or the
establishment of new contracts) that
150 The categories for HHS data standards for race
and ethnicity are based on the disaggregation of the
OMB standard: https://minorityhealth.hhs.gov/
omh/browse.aspx?lvl=3&lvlid=53.
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
40670
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
States may be required to make, in order
to collect these data for reporting. For
example, additional reporting
requirements may need to be added to
State contracts, changes may be needed
to data sharing agreements with
managed care plans, and modifications
of databases or systems might be
required to record new variables.
As discussed in section II.B.7. of this
final rule, we are finalizing at
§ 441.311(f)(2) that States must comply
with the HCBS Quality Measure Set
reporting requirement at § 441.311(c)
beginning 4 years after the effective date
of this final rule, rather than 3 years. We
are making this modification in order to
allow for sufficient time for interested
parties to provide input into the
measures, as required by § 441.312(g),
which we are finalizing as described in
this section II.B.8. of this rule. To align
with this modification, we are finalizing
the phase-in requirement at § 441.312(f).
As finalized, § 441.312(f) requires that
stratification of 25 percent of the
measures in the Home and CommunityBased Services Quality Measure Set for
which the Secretary has specified that
reporting should be stratified by 4 years
after the effective date of these
regulations, 50 percent of such measures
by 6 years after the effective date of
these regulations, and 100 percent of
measures by 8 years after the effective
date of these regulations.
We anticipate that States will not
need more than 4 years after the
effective date of the final rule, to
implement systems and contracting
changes, or any additional support
needed to report on the quality
measures in HCBS Quality Measure Set.
However, as described at finalized
§ 441.312(e), we will consider the
complexity of State reporting and allow
for the phase in over a specified period
of time of mandatory State reporting for
some measures and of reporting for
certain populations, such as older adults
or people with intellectual and
disabilities. Further, we plan to work
collaboratively with States to provide
technical assistance and reporting
guidance through the Paperwork
Reduction Act process necessary to
support reporting.
Comment: A couple of commenters
recommended that we offer States
financial assistance to develop and
deploy health equity efforts, including
funding support in addressing the
capture of self-reported data.
Response: As discussed above, in
Medicaid, enhanced FFP is available at
a 90 percent FMAP for the design,
development, or installation of
improvements of mechanized claims
processing and information retrieval
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
systems, in accordance with applicable
Federal requirements. Enhanced FFP at
a 75 percent FMAP is also available for
operations of such systems, in
accordance with applicable Federal
requirements. We reiterate that receipt
of these enhanced funds is conditioned
upon States meeting a series of
standards and conditions to ensure
investments are efficient and
effective.151 This may include
improving data reporting, which could
promote greater health equity.
We clarify, to receive enhanced FMAP
funds, the State Medicaid agency is
required at § 433.112(b)(12) to ensure
the alignment with, and incorporation
of, standards and implementation
specifications for health information
technology adopted by the Office of the
National Coordinator for Health IT in 45
CFR part 170, subpart B, among other
requirements set forth in
§ 433.112(b)(12). States should also
consider adopting relevant standards
identified in the ISA 152 to bolster
improvements in the identification and
reporting on the prevalence of critical
incidents for HCBS beneficiaries and
present opportunities for the State to
develop improved information systems
that can support quality improvement
activities. We further clarify that States
are responsible for ensuring compliance
with the requirements of HIPAA and its
implementing regulations, as well as
any other applicable Federal or State
privacy laws governing confidentiality
of a beneficiary’s records.
After consideration of the comments
we received, we are finalizing
§ 441.312(e) as proposed.
We are finalizing § 441.312(f) with a
modification to require that
stratification of 25 percent of the
measures in the Home and CommunityBased Services Quality Measure Set for
which the Secretary has specified that
reporting should be stratified by 4 years
after the effective date of these
regulations, 50 percent of such measures
by 6 years after the effective date of
these regulations, and 100 percent of
measures by 8 years after the effective
date of these regulations.
151 See § 433.112 (b, 80 FR 75841; https://
www.ecfr.gov/current/title-42/chapter-IV/
subchapter-C/part-433/subpart-C.
152 Relevant standards adopted by HHS and
identified in the ISA include the USCDI (https://
www.healthit.gov/isa/united-states-core-datainteroperability-uscdi), eLTSS (https://
www.healthit.gov/isa/documenting-care-plansperson-centered-services), and Functional
Assessment Standardized Items (https://
www.healthit.gov/isa/representing-patientfunctional-status-andor-disability).
PO 00000
Frm 00130
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
e. Consultation With Interested Parties
(§ 441.312(g))
At § 441.312(g), we proposed the list
of interested parties with whom the
Secretary must consult to specify and
update the quality measures established
in the HCBS Quality Measure Set. The
proposed list of interested parties
included: State Medicaid Agencies and
agencies that administer Medicaidcovered HCBS; health care and HCBS
professionals who specialize in the care
and treatment of older adults, children
and adults with disabilities, and
individuals with complex medical
needs; health care and HCBS
professionals, providers, and direct care
workers who provide services to older
adults, children and adults with
disabilities and complex medical and
behavioral health care needs who live in
urban and rural areas or who are
members of groups at increased risk for
poor outcomes; HCBS providers; direct
care workers and organizations
representing direct care workers;
consumers and national organizations
representing consumers; organizations
and individuals with expertise in HCBS
quality measurement; voluntary
consensus standards setting
organizations and other organizations
involved in the advancement of
evidence-based measures of health care;
measure development experts; and other
interested parties the Secretary may
determine appropriate.
We received public comments on
these proposals. The following is a
summary of the comments we received
and our responses.
Comment: Several commenters
commended our proposal at § 441.312(g)
to consult and receive input from
interested parties. These commenters
expressed they are encouraged by the
continued collaboration with CMS in
identifying and updating the HCBS
Quality Measure Set. A few commenters
shared suggestions for others to include
as interested parties, mentioning
managed care plans, community
representatives from underserved
communities, family members, and
caregivers.
Response: We appreciate the
submission of these comments and will
take them into consideration as the
Secretary carries out the responsibilities
at § 441.312(g).
Comment: One commenter
recommended we establish an ongoing
process of consultation with States and
interested parties to make updates to the
quality measures in the HCBS Quality
Measure Set in a longer cycle between
updates based on consensus, such as 5
years. This commenter emphasized this
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
approach can assure interested parties
that the measure set will continue to be
developed over time based on new
information and priorities and help
avoid making changes too rapidly to be
sustained by States.
Response: We appreciate the
submission of these comments. As
noted previously, we are finalizing
§ 441.312(c)(1) and (2) with
modifications to indicate that we will
identify, and update no more frequently
than every other year, beginning no later
than December 31, 2026, the quality
measures to be included in the HCBS
Quality Measure Set as defined in
paragraph (b) of this section.
We will make technical updates and
corrections to the HCBS Quality
Measure Set annually as appropriate.
Additionally, as discussed in greater
detail in section II.B.7. of this final rule,
we are giving States more time to engage
with interested parties by finalizing an
applicability date of 4 years, rather than
3 years, for the requirement that States
must comply with the HCBS Quality
Measure Set reporting at § 441.311(c).
We are making this revision in order to
allow for sufficient time for interested
parties to provide input into the
measures, as required by § 441.312(g).
After consideration of the comments
received, we are finalizing § 441.312(g)
as proposed.
f. Application to Other Authorities
(§§ 441.474(c), 441.585(d), and
441.745(b)(1)(v))
Because these quality measurement
requirements are relevant to other HCBS
authorities, we proposed to include
these requirements within the
applicable regulatory sections for other
HCBS authorities. Specifically, we
proposed to apply the proposed
requirements at § 441.312 to section
1915(j), (k), and (i) State plan services at
§§ 441.474(c), 441.585(d), and
441.745(b)(1)(v), respectively.
Consistent with our proposal for section
1915(c) waivers, we proposed these
requirements based on our authority
under section 1902(a)(6) of the Act,
which requires State Medicaid agencies
to make such reports, in such form and
containing such information, as the
Secretary may from time to time require,
and to comply with such provisions as
the Secretary may from time to time find
necessary to assure the correctness and
verification of such reports. We believed
the same arguments for proposing these
requirements for section 1915(c) waivers
are equally applicable for these other
HCBS authorities. We requested
comment on the application of these
provisions across sections 1915(i), (j),
and (k) authorities.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
21:37 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
We received public comments on
these proposals. The following is a
summary of the comments we received
and our responses.
Comment: Several commenters
supported the proposal to apply the
HCBS Quality Measure Set requirements
at § 441.312 to sections 1915(i), (j) and
(k) authorities, stating there should be
equally applicable requirements for
States across authorities to ensure
consistency, coordination, and
alignment across quality improvement
activities for these HCBS beneficiaries.
Alternatively, a few commenters
expressed that applying the HCBS
Quality Measure Set requirements
across sections 1915(i), (j) and (k)
authorities could pose challenges for
States since the application of quality
measure data collection and reporting
for these HCBS authorities is mixed
among States. One commenter requested
an exemption for the section 1915(i)
authority, noting that implementing the
HCBS Quality Measure Set requirements
for this authority is onerous, since the
service array for section 1915(i)
programs is more limited than in section
1915(c) programs.
Response: We thank commenters for
their support. We note that States can
cover the same services under section
1915(i) as they can cover under section
1915(c) of the Act. As such, exempting
States from implementing the HCBS
Quality Measure Set requirements under
section 1915(i) does not align with our
intent, which is to ensure consistency
and alignment in reporting requirements
across HCBS authorities. We are
finalizing our proposal to apply the
HCBS Quality Measure Set requirements
to sections 1915(c), (i), (j) and (k)
authorities and plan to provide
technical assistance to States as needed
to address the concerns raised by
commenters.
After consideration of the comments
received, we are finalizing the
application of § 441.312 to section
1915(j) services by finalizing a reference
to § 441.312 at § 441.474(c). (Note that
we also discuss finalization of
§§ 441.474(c) in section II.B.7. of this
final rule.) We are finalizing the
application of § 441.312 to sections
1915(k) and 1915(i) services at
§§ 441.585(d) and 441.745(b)(1)(v) with
modifications to clarify that the
references to section 1915(c) of the Act
are instead references to section 1915(k)
and 1915(i) of the Act, respectively.
g. Summary of Finalized Requirements
After consideration of the public
comments, we are finalizing the
requirements at § 441.312 as follows:
PO 00000
Frm 00131
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40671
• We are finalizing § 441.312(a) with
a minor technical change.
• We are finalizing the definition of
attribution rules and Home and
Community-Based Services Quality
Measure Set at § 441.312(b)(1) with a
minor formatting change.
• We are finalizing the
responsibilities of the Secretary at
§ 441.312(c)(1) with technical
modifications to revise the frequency for
updating the measure set to no more
frequently than every other year and
replace December 31, 2025 with
December 31, 2026.
• We are finalizing a new
requirement at § 441.312(c)(2) that the
Secretary shall make technical updates
and corrections to the Home and
Community-Based Services Quality
Measure Set annually as appropriate.
• We are redesignating § 441.312(c)(2)
as paragraphs (c)(3) and finalizing with
minor technical modification.
• We are redesignating § 441.312(c)(3)
as § 441.312(c)(4) and finalizing
§ 441.312(c)(4) with a minor technical
modification to replace ‘‘at least’’ with
‘‘no more frequently than.’’
• We are finalizing § 441.312(d)(i) as
proposed with a modification for clarity
to replace managed care plan with
MCO, PIHP or PAHP as defined in
§ 438.2.
• We are finalizing § 441.312(e) as
proposed.
• We are finalizing the requirement at
§ 441.312(f) with a technical
modification in the dates by when a
certain percent of measures are to be
stratified, delaying each deadline by one
year.
• We are finalizing § 441.312(g) as
proposed.
• We are finalizing the reference to
§ 441.312 in § 441.474(c) as proposed.
• We are finalizing the requirements
at §§ 441.585(d) and 441.745(b)(1)(v)
with modification to clarify that the
references to section 1915(c) of the Act
are instead references to section 1915(k)
and 1915(i) of the Act, respectively.
9. Website Transparency (§§ 441.313,
441.486, 441.595, and 441.750)
Section 1102(a) of the Act provides
the Secretary of HHS with authority to
make and publish rules and regulations
that are necessary for the efficient
administration of the Medicaid program.
Under our authority at section 1102(a)
of the Act, we proposed a new section,
at § 441.313, titled Website
Transparency, to promote public
transparency related to the
administration of Medicaid-covered
HCBS. As noted in the proposed rule,
we believe quality is a critical
component of efficiency, as payments
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
40672
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
for services that are low quality do not
produce their desired effects and, as
such, are more wasteful than payments
for services that are high quality. The
proposed approach was based on
feedback we obtained during various
public engagement activities conducted
with States and other interested parties
over the past several years that it is
difficult to find information on HCBS
access, quality, and outcomes in many
States. As a result, it is not possible for
beneficiaries, consumer advocates,
oversight entities, or other interested
parties to hold States accountable for
ensuring that services are accessible and
high quality for people who need
Medicaid HCBS. We believe that the
website transparency requirements
support the efficient administration of
Medicaid-covered HCBS authorized
under section 1915(c) of the Act by
promoting public transparency and the
accountability of the quality and
performance of Medicaid HCBS
systems, as the availability of such
information improves the ability of
interested parties to hold States
accountable for the quality and
performance of their HCBS systems.
a. Website Availability and Accessibility
(§ 441.313(a))
At § 441.313(a), we proposed to
require States to operate a website that
meets the availability and accessibility
requirements at § 435.905(b) of this
chapter and provides the results of the
reporting requirements under § 441.311
(specifically, incident management,
critical incident, person-centered
planning, and service provision
compliance data; data on the HCBS
Quality Measure Set; access data; and
payment adequacy data). We solicited
comment on whether the requirements
at § 435.905(b) are sufficient to ensure
the availability and accessibility of the
information for people receiving HCBS
and other HCBS interested parties and
for specific requirements to ensure the
availability and accessibility of the
information.
We received public comment on these
proposals. The following is a summary
of the comments we received and our
responses.
Comment: Several commenters
supported the website transparency
provisions at § 441.313(a), emphasizing
that advancing the collection of
information and data by States is
important to enable the ability of the
public, including beneficiaries, to be
able to access and compare performance
results across States for the reporting
requirements proposed at § 441.311.
Response: We appreciate the support
for our proposal and thank commenters
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
for their feedback. We note that
consistent with statements we made in
the introduction of sections II. and II.B.
of this final rule regarding severability,
while the intent of § 441.313 is for
States to post all information collected
under §§ 441.302(k)(6) and 441.311 as
required, we believe that the website
posting requirements being finalized
herein at § 441.313 would provide
critical data to the public even in a
circumstance where individual
provisions at §§ 441.302(k)(6) and
441.311 were not finalized or
implemented. We do acknowledge that
§ 441.313 is interrelated with
§§ 441.302(k)(6) and 441.311 to the
extent that if one of the reporting
requirements was not finalized or
implemented, posting of the data
collected under that particular
requirement would not be available to
post on the website as required at
§ 441.313. However, if one or more of
the reporting requirements at
§§ 441.302(k)(6) and 441.311 is finalized
and implemented, then States must post
this data on the website as required in
§ 441.313, as finalized. We note that in
this final rule, we are finalizing the
reporting requirement at § 441.302(k)(6)
(as discussed in section II.B.5. of this
final rule) and the reporting
requirements proposed in § 441.311
(with modifications, as discussed in
section II.B.7. of this final rule.)
Comment: One commenter requested
we consider providing additional FMAP
for the website creation and support
needed to conduct the public posting of
information and data required under
§ 441.311 on the State web page,
including to address increased staff time
and effort to answer questions regarding
the public information required to be
reported.
Response: We note we do not have
authority to permit States to claim
Medicaid expenditures at enhanced
FMAP rates that are not specified in
statute. As noted in the proposed rule,
in Medicaid, enhanced FFP is available
at a 90 percent FMAP for the design,
development, or installation of
improvements of mechanized claims
processing and information retrieval
systems, in accordance with applicable
Federal requirements.153 Enhanced FFP
at a 75 percent FMAP is also available
for operations of such systems, in
accordance with applicable Federal
153 See section 1903(a)(3)(A)(i) and § 433.15(b)(3),
80 FR 75817–75843; https://www.medicaid.gov/
state-resourcecenter/faq-medicaid-and-chipaffordable-care-act-implementation/downloads/
affordable-care-act-faq-enhancedfunding-formedicaid.pdf; https://www.medicaid.gov/federalpolicy-guidance/downloads/SMD16004.pdf.
PO 00000
Frm 00132
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
requirements.154 However, receipt of
these enhanced funds is conditioned
upon States meeting a series of
standards and conditions to ensure
investments are efficient and
effective.155 We plan to provide States
with technical assistance related to the
availability of enhanced FMAP to
support the implementation of the
requirements in this final rule.
After consideration of the comments
received, we are finalizing the
introductory paragraph at § 441.313(a)
as proposed with one modification to
include the additional reporting
requirements to specify that the State
must operate a website consistent with
§ 435.905(b) of this chapter that
provides the results of the reporting
requirements specified at
§§ 441.302(k)(6) and 441.311.
b. Website Data and Information
(§ 441.313(a)(1))
We proposed at § 441.313(a)(1) to
require that the data and information
States are required to report under
§ 441.311 be provided on one web page,
either directly or by linking to the web
pages of the MCO, PAHP, PIHP, or
primary care case management entity
that is authorized to provide services.
We solicited comment on whether
States should be permitted to link to
web pages of these managed care plans
and whether we should limit the
number of separate web pages that a
State could link to, in place of directly
reporting the information on its own
web page.
We received public comments on this
proposal. The following is a summary of
the comments we received and our
responses.
Comment: A few commenters
supported and noted that the States
should have one central web page
operated and housed solely by the State
to ensure data and information is
reported consistently across their HCBS
programs. One of the commenters
suggested a State could, in their
centralized State web page, give users
the opportunity to filter by provider,
managed care plan, or locality and
include contact information for
managed care plans. A few commenters
generally supported permitting States to
link to web pages of managed care plans
to meet the proposed requirement.
Another commenter identified that
beneficiaries may rely on their managed
care plan’s website for information
instead of the State website and
154 See
section 1903(a)(3)(B) and § 433.15(b)(4).
§ 433.112 (b, 80 FR 75841; https://
www.ecfr.gov/current/title-42/chapter-IV/
subchapter-C/part-433/subpart-C.
155 See
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
recommended limiting web page links
to managed care plans’ websites, raising
concern that requiring States to post the
data and information from the managed
care plans could be duplicative and lead
to user confusion if website updates
between the State and managed care
plans were not synched. A few
commenters emphasized that having
multiple managed care plan web page
links to access the data and information
that States are required to report under
§ 441.311 could place a burden on
beneficiaries, consumers, and the
public, to find and navigate the unique
displays of managed care plan websites.
Response: We thank commenters for
their suggestions. We have attempted to
provide States with as much flexibility
as possible in reporting of data and
information required at § 441.311. State
and managed care plan reporting of
required data and information must be
available and accessible for HCBS
beneficiaries and other interested
parties, without placing undue burden
on them. Upon further consideration,
we agree that it adds a undue level of
complexity and the potential for
duplicate sources of the data and
information by requiring the State to
link to individual web pages of managed
care plans.
After consideration of these public
comments, we are finalizing the
requirements at § 441.313(a)(1) with a
modification to remove the word, web
page, and replace with the word,
website, and made minor formatting
changes. We plan to provide technical
assistance to States as needed to address
the concerns raised by commenters.
Comment: One commenter agreed that
the State should link to managed care
plan web pages to report on the results
of the reporting requirements at
§ 441.311, rather than have the managed
care plans forward these results to the
State to report on their State website.
This commenter also recommended
requiring the same language and format
requirements in § 438.10(d) apply to
§ 441.33 and noted that many States
serve Medicaid HCBS participants who
receive services under managed LTSS
and FFS, and that misalignment could
occur between the regulations for
managed care and FFS.
Response: Managed care plan
websites required at § 438.10(c)(3) are
already subject to the requirements at
§ 438.10(d), and we have not identified
a compelling reason to make a similar
reference in § 441.311. We decline to
add mention of § 438.10(d) and are
finalizing the requirements at § 441.311
as proposed.
After consideration of public
comments, we are finalizing the
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
requirements at § 441.313(a)(1) with a
modification to require the State to
include all content on one website,
either directly or by linking to websites
of individual MCO’s, PIHP’s, or PAHP’s,
as defined in § 438.2. We also are
finalizing the requirements at
§ 441.313(a)(1) with a modification to
remove the word, web page, and replace
with the word, website, and make minor
formatting changes.
c. Accessibility of Information
(§ 441.313(a)(2))
At § 441.313(a)(2), we proposed to
require that the website include clear
and easy to understand labels on
documents and links. We requested
comments on whether these
requirements are sufficient to ensure the
accessibility of the information for
people receiving HCBS and other HCBS
interested parties and for specific
requirements to ensure the accessibility
of the information.
We received public comment on this
proposal. The following is a summary of
the comments we received and our
responses.
Comment: Two commenters
recommended we recognize the
communication needs of deaf, hard of
hearing, deaf-blind, and blind
individuals, including those who have
low vision, emphasizing that these
beneficiaries should have access to
culturally and linguistically competent
services, as well as services and
auxiliary aids pursuant to Title II of the
Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA)
of 1990 and section 504 of the
Rehabilitation Act of 1973 (section 504).
They also recommended that we
reference the Twenty-First Century
Communications and Video
Accessibility Act of 2010 (Pub. L. 111–
260), which includes the use of clear
language, icons, captioned videos,
American Sign Language, and suitable
color contrast. The commenters
emphasized that any website materials
and reports should be written with
accommodations, including large print
and braille, to ensure beneficiaries have
equal, effective, and meaningful website
communication. One commenter
recommend that we also consider that
due to the ‘‘digital divide’’ many HCBS
beneficiaries do not have easy access to
the internet and recommended we
require States and managed care plans
to share the information posted on their
websites in an alternative format at the
beneficiary’s request.
Response: We confirm that our
proposal requires States to operate a
website that meets the availability and
accessibility requirements at
§ 435.905(b) of this chapter, which
PO 00000
Frm 00133
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40673
requires the provision of auxiliary aids
and services at no cost to individuals
with disabilities in accordance with the
ADA and section 504. We have
attempted to provide the State with as
much flexibility as possible in the
design of their website. We agree that
State and managed care plan websites
must be available and accessible for
people receiving HCBS and other HCBS
interested parties. Further, we note that
States’ websites are subject to State or
local laws regarding accessibility, and
States must comply with other
applicable laws independent of the
requirements at § 441.313(a).
We encourage States to identify
inequities for HCBS beneficiaries who
have insufficient internet access and
develop mechanisms to communicate
website information that is available
and accessible.
After consideration of comments
received, we are finalizing
§ 441.313(a)(2) as proposed.
d. Website Operation Verification
(§ 441.313(a)(3))
At § 441.313(a)(3), we proposed to
require that States verify the accurate
function of the website and the
timeliness of the information and links
at least quarterly. We requested
comment on whether this timeframe is
sufficient or if we should require a
shorter timeframe (monthly) or a longer
timeframe (semi-annually or annually).
We received public comments on
these proposals. The following is a
summary of the comments we received
and our responses.
Comment: A few commenters
responded to our comment solicitation,
expressing alternative timeframes
related to the requirements at
§ 441.313(a)(3). Two commenters
suggested websites should be updated
on a more frequent monthly basis to
ensure accuracy and functionality. A
few other commenters suggested that
websites should be updated semiannually. Alternatively, another
commenter requested that the
verification of web content be
completed annually to minimize
administrative burden on States with
significant web content to review and
verify.
Response: We agree that accurate
function of the website and the
timeliness of the information is
important. We note in section II.B.9. of
the proposed rule (88 FR 27995 through
27996), and reiterate here, that we
believe promoting public transparency
and accountability of the quality and
performance of Medicaid HCBS
systems, and the availability of such
information will improve the ability of
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
40674
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
beneficiaries, consumer advocates,
oversight entities, or other interested
parties to hold States accountable for
ensuring that services are accessible and
high quality for people who need
Medicaid. We believe that verification
quarterly, is reasonable taking into
account the level of complexity required
for such State reporting. We decline to
make any changes to § 441.313(a)(3) in
this final rule.
After consideration of the comments
received, we are finalizing
§ 441.313(a)(3) as proposed.
Federal requirements.156 Enhanced FFP
at a 75 percent FMAP is also available
for operations of such systems, in
accordance with applicable Federal
requirements.157 However, receipt of
these enhanced funds is conditioned
upon States meeting a series of
standards and conditions to ensure
investments are efficient and
effective.158
After consideration of comments
received, we are finalizing the
requirements at § 441.313(a)(4) as
proposed.
e. Oral and Written Translation
Requirements (§ 441.313(a)(4))
f. CMS Website Reporting (§ 441.313(b))
We proposed at § 441.313(b) that CMS
report on its website the information
reported by States to us under § 441.311.
For example, we envisioned that we
will update CMS’s website to provide
HCBS comparative information reported
by States that can be compared to HCBS
information shared by other States. We
also envisioned using data from State
reporting in future iterations of the CMS
Medicaid and CHIP Scorecard.159
We received public comments on
these proposals. The following is a
summary of the comments we received
and our responses.
Comment: A few commenters
supported the proposal that CMS would
report on its own website the results of
the data and information required to be
reported under § 441.311, noting this
enables easier comparison of results
across States and serve as a single
information source for users. One
commenter suggested we consider a
source, such as an HCBS hub, as defined
by the commenter, on the CMS website,
where users can quickly be directed to
State HCBS programs and contracted
managed care plan website pages.
One commenter suggested we initiate
a best practice using the CMS website as
an example for States to follow and
share input with States on developing
their websites to meet the requirements
at § 441.313(a). Another commenter
recommended we convene a technical
expert panel of relevant interested
parties to create a set of guidelines and
best practices that States could leverage
to meet the proposed website
At § 441.313(a)(4), we proposed to
require that States include prominent
language on the website explaining that
assistance in accessing the required
information on the website is available
at no cost and include information on
the availability of oral interpretation in
all languages and written translation
available in each non-English language,
how to request auxiliary aids and
services, and a toll free and TTY/TDY
telephone number.
We received public comment on this
proposal. The following is a summary of
the comments we received and our
responses.
Comment: Several commenters
supported the proposed requirements at
§ 441.313(a)(4), One commenter further
stated that, to ensure best quality,
instructions to States on expectations
for conducting translation in nonEnglish languages to support the
availability of oral interpretation in all
languages and to assure uniformity
across State policies to implement this
component of the provision would be
helpful. A few commenters opposed the
proposed requirements at
§ 441.313(a)(4), expressing concern
about the State financial and
administrative burden that could occur
due to the necessity to hire vendors to
meet the expectations to conduct
translation in non-English languages as
required.
Response: We believe that the
proposed requirements at
§ 441.313(a)(4) are important for
ensuring that the required information
on the website is accessible to people
receiving HCBS and other interested
parties. We reiterate, as noted in the
proposed rule (88 FR 27979 and 27995),
in Medicaid, enhanced FFP is available
at a 90 percent FMAP for the design,
development, or installation of
improvements of mechanized claims
processing and information retrieval
systems, in accordance with applicable
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
156 See section 1903(a)(3)(A)(i) and § 433.15(b)(3),
80 FR 75817–75843; https://www.medicaid.gov/
state-resourcecenter/faq-medicaid-and-chipaffordable-care-act-implementation/downloads/
affordable-care-act-faq-enhancedfunding-formedicaid.pdf; https://www.medicaid.gov/federalpolicy-guidance/downloads/SMD16004.pdf.
157 See section 1903(a)(3)(B) and § 433.15(b)(4).
158 See § 433.112 (b, 80 FR 75841; https://
www.ecfr.gov/current/title-42/chapter-IV/
subchapter-C/part-433/subpart-C.
159 CMS’s Medicaid and CHIP Scorecard.
Accessed at https://www.medicaid.gov/stateoverviews/scorecard/.
PO 00000
Frm 00134
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
transparency requirements at
§ 441.313(a) to offset States’ time and
resource investments in building the
website, and to assist with minimizing
the State’s risk of updating websites that
do not meet requirements.
Response: We appreciate the
submission of these comments and will
take this feedback into consideration as
CMS updates its website to report on the
results of the data and information
required to be reported under § 441.311.
After consideration of the comments
received, we decline to make any
changes to § 441.313(b) in this final rule
and are finalizing as proposed.
g. Applicability Dates (§ 441.313(c))
We proposed at § 441.313(c) to
provide States with 3 years to
implement these requirements in FFS
delivery systems. For States with
managed care delivery systems under
the authority of sections 1915(a),
1915(b), 1932(a), or section 1115(a) of
the Act and that include HCBS in the
MCO’s, PIHP’s, or PAHP’s contract, we
proposed to provide States until the first
managed care plan contract rating
period that begins on or after 3 years
after the effective date of the final rule
to implement these requirements. We
based this proposed time period
primarily on the effective date for State
reporting at § 441.311.
We solicited comments on whether
this timeframe is sufficient, whether we
should require a longer timeframe (4
years) to implement these provisions,
and if a longer timeframe is
recommended, the rationale for that
longer timeframe.
We received comments on this
proposal. Below is a summary of the
comments and our responses.
Comment: Most commenters
supported the timeframe of 3 years
following the effective date of the final
rule to implement the website
transparency requirements at § 441.313,
emphasizing that these requirements
facilitate the process of comparing
results across States and create a single
source where beneficiaries, providers,
advocates, and policymakers can find a
‘‘wealth of information about HCBS
access.’’ One commenter expressed
support for the proposed section
regarding transparency related to the
administration of Medicaid-covered
HCBS but did not believe it should take
3 years to implement. A few
commenters also expressed concerns
about the challenges they believe will be
associated with the website
transparency requirements at § 441.313,
due to administrative burden States may
face with significant web content to
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
review and verify to implement the
provision.
Response: We believe that 3 years is
a realistic and achievable timeframe for
States to comply with the website
transparency requirements, and we have
not identified a compelling reason make
changes to this date. We are finalizing
the requirement at § 441.3131(c) as
proposed with modifications as
described later in this section. We
reiterate, as noted in the proposed rule,
in Medicaid, enhanced FFP is available
at a 90 percent FMAP for the design,
development, or installation of
improvements of mechanized claims
processing and information retrieval
systems, in accordance with applicable
Federal requirements.160 Enhanced FFP
at a 75 percent FMAP is also available
for operations of such systems, in
accordance with applicable Federal
requirements.161 However, receipt of
these enhanced funds is conditioned
upon States meeting a series of
standards and conditions to ensure
investments are efficient and
effective.162
After consideration of public
comments, we are finalizing the
substance of § 441.313(c) as proposed,
but with minor modifications to correct
erroneous uses of the word ‘‘effective’’
and to make technical modifications at
§ 441.313(c) to the language pertaining
to managed care delivery systems to
improve accuracy and alignment with
common phrasing in managed care
contracting policy. We are retitling the
requirement at § 441.313(c) as
Applicability date (rather than Effective
date). We are also modifying the
language at § 441.313(c) to specify that
States must comply with the
requirements in § 441.313(c) beginning 3
years from the effective date of this final
rule.
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
h. Application to Managed Care and
Fee-for Service (§§ 441.486, 441.595,
and 441.750)
As discussed in section II.B.1. of the
proposed rule, section 2402(a)(3)(A) of
the Affordable Care Act requires States
to improve coordination among, and the
regulation of, all providers of Federally
and State-funded HCBS programs to
achieve a more consistent
administration of policies and
160 See section 1903(a)(3)(A)(i) and § 433.15(b)(3),
80 FR 75817–75843; https://www.medicaid.gov/
state-resourcecenter/faq-medicaid-and-chipaffordable-care-act-implementation/downloads/
affordable-care-act-faq-enhancedfunding-formedicaid.pdf; https://www.medicaid.gov/federalpolicy-guidance/downloads/SMD16004.pdf.
161 See section 1903(a)(3)(B) and § 433.15(b)(4).
162 See § 433.112 (b, 80 FR 75841; https://
www.ecfr.gov/current/title-42/chapter-IV/
subchapter-C/part-433/subpart-C.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
procedures across HCBS programs. In
the context of Medicaid coverage of
HCBS, it should not matter whether the
services are covered directly on a FFS
basis or by a managed care plan to its
enrollees. The requirement for
consistent administration should
require consistency between these two
modes of service delivery. We
accordingly proposed to specify that a
State must ensure compliance with the
requirements in § 441.313, with respect
to HCBS delivered both under FFS and
managed care delivery systems.
Similarly, because we proposed to
apply the reporting requirements at
§ 441.311 to other HCBS State plan
options, we also proposed to include
these website transparency
requirements within the applicable
regulatory sections. Specifically, we
proposed to apply the requirements of
§ 441.313 to section 1915(j), (k), and (i)
State plan services at §§ 441.486,
441.595, and 441.750, respectively.
Consistent with our proposal for section
1915(c) waivers, we proposed these
requirements based on our authority
under section 1102(a) of the Act to make
and publish rules and regulations that
are necessary for the efficient
administration of the Medicaid program.
We believe the same reasons for these
requirements for section 1915(c) waivers
are equally applicable for these other
HCBS authorities.
We solicited comment on the
application of these provisions across
section 1915(i), (j), and (k) authorities.
We did not receive public comments
on this provision.
After consideration of public
comments received on this rule, we are
finalizing the application of the website
transparency requirements at § 441.313
to section 1915(j), (k), and (i) State plan
services. We are finalizing our proposed
requirements at §§ 441.486, 441.595,
and 441.750 with minor modifications
to clarify that the references to section
1915(c) of the Act are instead references
to section 1915(j), 1915(k), and 1915(i)
of the Act, respectively.
i. Summary of Finalized Requirements
After consideration of the public
comments, we are finalizing the
requirements at § 441.313 as follows:
• We are finalizing the requirement at
§ 441.313(c), with a technical
modification to the language to improve
accuracy and alignment with common
phrasing in managed care contracting
policy. We also are finalizing
§ 441.313(c) to specify that States must
comply with the requirements as
described in § 441.313(c) of this section
beginning 3 years after the effective date
of this final rule; and in the case of the
PO 00000
Frm 00135
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40675
State that implements a managed care
delivery system under the authority of
sections 1915(a), 1915(b), 1932(a), or
1115(a) of the Act and includes HCBS
in the MCO’s, PIHP’s, or PAHP’s
contract, the first rating period for
contracts with the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP
beginning on or after the date that is 3
years after the effective date of this final
rule.
• We are finalizing at §§ 441.313(a)
and (b) with minor technical
modifications to include the additional
requirements at § 441.302(k)(6).
• We are finalizing the requirements
at § 441.313(c) with minor formatting
changes.
• We are finalizing §§ 441.486,
441.595, and 441.750 with minor
modifications to clarify that the
references to section 1915(c) of the Act
are instead references to section 1915(j),
1915(k), and 1915(i) of the Act,
respectively.
10. Applicability of Proposed
Requirements to Managed Care Delivery
Systems
As discussed earlier in sections
II.B.1., II.B.4., II.B.5., II.B.7., and II.J. of
this rule, we proposed to apply the
requirements we proposed at
§§ 441.301(c)(3), 441.302(a)(6),
441.302(k), 441.311, and 441.313 to both
FFS and managed care delivery systems.
Although the proposed provisions at
§§ 441.301(c)(3), 441.302(a)(6) and (k),
441.311, and 441.313 would apply to
LTSS programs that use a managed care
delivery system to deliver services
authorized under section 1915(c)
waivers and section 1915(i), (j), and (k)
State plan authorities, we believe
incorporating a reference in 42 CFR part
438 would be helpful to States and
managed care plans. Therefore, we
proposed to add a cross reference to the
requirements in proposed § 438.72 to be
explicit that States that include HCBS in
their MCO’s, PIHP’s, or PAHP’s
contracts would have to comply with
the requirements at §§ 441.301(c)(1)
through (3), 441.302(a)(6) and (k),
441.311, and 441.313. We believed this
would make the obligations of States
that implement LTSS programs through
a managed care delivery system clear,
consistent, and easy to locate. While we
believed the list proposed in § 438.72
would help States easily identify the
provisions related to LTSS, we
identified that a provision specified in
any other section of 42 CFR part 438 or
any other Federal regulation but omitted
from § 438.72, is still in full force and
effect. We also noted that
§ 438.208(c)(3)(ii) currently references
§ 441.301(c)(1) and (2). We did not
propose any changes to the regulatory
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
40676
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
language at § 441.301(c)(1) or (2) or to
§ 438.208(c)(3)(ii) in the proposed rule.
We included § 441.301(c)(1) and (2) in
the proposed regulatory language at
§ 438.72 so that it would be clear that
the requirements at § 441.301(c)(1) and
(2) continue to apply.
We received various comments and
questions about how specific provisions
would be implemented in managed care
contexts; these comments and our
responses are addressed in the sections
pertaining to those provisions. We did
not receive other comments specifically
on this proposal at § 438.72.
Upon further review, we have
determined it necessary to make a
clarifying correction to § 438.72, which
we are finalizing with modifications.
We proposed that § 438.72(b) would
read that the State must comply with
the review of the person-centered
service plan requirements at
§ 441.301(c)(1) through (3), the incident
management system requirements at
§ 441.302(a)(6), the payment adequacy
requirements at § 441.302(k), the
reporting requirements at § 441.311, and
the website transparency requirements
at § 441.313 for services authorized
under section 1915(c) waivers and
section 1915(i), (j), and (k) State plan
authorities. We noted that in some
cases, our description of the references
in the regulations did not align with the
titles of those regulations (such as at
§ 441.302(a)(6), in which only
§ 441.302(a)(6)(i) is specifically titled
requirements, although our intent was
for States to comply with
§ 441.302(a)(6)(i) through (iii). To avoid
confusion due to any misaligned
language, we are removing the narrative
descriptions of the requirements and
retaining just the references to the
regulatory text.
After consideration of public
comments, we are finalizing § 438.72(b)
with this modification, which will read
that the State must comply with
requirements at §§ 441.301(c)(1) through
(3), 441.302(a)(6), 441.302(k), 441.311,
and 441.313 for services authorized
under section 1915(c) waivers and
section 1915(i), (j), and (k) State plan
authorities.
C. Documentation of Access to Care and
Service Payment Rates (§ 447.203)
Section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act
requires that State plans ‘‘assure that
payments are consistent with efficiency,
economy, and quality of care and are
sufficient to enlist enough providers so
that care and services are available
under the plan at least to the extent that
such care and services are available to
the general population in the geographic
area.’’ Through the provisions we are
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
finalizing in § 447.203, we are
establishing an updated process through
which States will be required to
document, and we will ensure,
compliance with the requirements of
section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act.
In the 2015 final rule with comment
period, we codified a process that
requires States to complete and make
public AMRPs that analyze and inform
determinations of the sufficiency of
access to care (which may vary by
geographic location in the State) and are
used to inform State policies affecting
access to Medicaid services, including
provider payment rates. The AMRP
must specify data elements that support
the State’s analysis of whether
beneficiaries have sufficient access to
care, based on data, trends, and factors
that measure beneficiary needs,
availability of care through enrolled
providers, and utilization of services.
States are required to update their
AMRPs at regular intervals and
whenever the State proposes to reduce
FFS provider payment rates or
restructure them in circumstances when
the changes could result in diminished
access. Specifically, the AMRP process
at § 447.203 before this final rule (which
we refer to in this final rule preamble as
the previous AMRP process) required
States to consider the extent to which
beneficiary needs are fully met; the
availability of care through enrolled
providers to beneficiaries in each
geographic area, by provider type and
site of service; changes in beneficiary
utilization of covered services in each
geographic area; the characteristics of
the beneficiary population (including
considerations for care, service and
payment variations for pediatric and
adult populations and for individuals
with disabilities); and actual or
estimated levels of provider payment
available from other payers, including
other public and private payers, by
provider type and site of service. The
analysis further required consideration
of beneficiary and provider input, and
an analysis of the percentage
comparison of Medicaid payment rates
to other public and private health
insurer payment rates within geographic
areas of the State, for each of the
services reviewed, by the provider types
and sites of service. While the previous
regulations included broad
requirements for what an acceptable
methodology used to conduct this
analysis must include, States retained
discretion in establishing their
processes, including but not limited to
the specification of data sources and
analytical methodologies to be used. For
example, States were broadly required
PO 00000
Frm 00136
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
to include actual or estimated levels of
provider payments available from other
payers; however, States retained
discretion on which payers they
reported on, including where the
payment data was sourced from. The
result has been a large analytical burden
on States without a standardization that
allows us and other interested parties to
compare data between States to
understand whether the Federal access
standards are successfully achieving
access consistent with section
1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act for
beneficiaries nationwide.
Through the previous AMRP process,
we aimed to create a transparent and
data-driven process through which to
ensure State compliance with section
1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act. Following
publication of the 2011 proposed rule
and as discussed in both the 2015 final
rule with comment period and the 2016
final rule, as we worked with States to
implement the previous AMRP
requirements, many States expressed
concerns about the rule.163 164 165 States
were concerned about the
administrative burden of completing the
previous AMRPs and questioned
whether the previous AMRP process is
the most effective way to establish that
access to care in a State’s Medicaid
program meets statutory requirements.
States with high managed care
enrollment were also concerned about
the previous AMRP process because the
few remaining FFS populations in their
State often reside in long-term care
facilities or require only specialized care
that is ‘‘carved out’’ of managed care
(that is, not covered under the State’s
contract with managed care plans), but
long-term care and specialized care
services were not required to be
analyzed under the previous AMRP
process. We have also heard concerns
from other interested parties, including
medical associations and non-profit
organizations, that the 2015 final rule
with comment period afforded States
too much discretion in developing
access measures which could lead to
ineffective monitoring and enforcement,
as well as challenges comparing access
across States. One commenter on the
2015 final rule was concerned that
States had too much discretion in ‘‘. . .
setting standards and access measure
. . .’’ and ‘‘. . . whether they have met
their chosen standards’’ as this process
relies on self-regulation rather than ‘‘an
independent, objective third party as the
primary arbiter of a State’s compliance
163 76
FR 26341.
FR 67576 at 67583 and 67584.
165 81 FR 21479 at 21479.
164 80
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
. . .’’ 166 Another commenter stated that
‘‘CMS should designate a limited and
standardized set of data measures that
would be collected rather than leaving
the decision of which data measures to
use to State discretion’’ as this would
‘‘enable the development of key, valid,
and uniform measures; more effective
monitoring and enforcement; and will
ensure comparability of objective
measures across the States.’’ 167 At the
time of publication of the 2011
proposed rule and 2015 final rule with
comment period, we noted our belief
that a uniform approach to meeting the
statutory requirement under section
1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act, including
setting standardized access to care data
measures, could prove difficult given
then-current limitations on data, local
variations in service delivery,
beneficiary needs, and provider practice
roles.168 169
Separately, the Supreme Court, in
Armstrong v. Exceptional Child Center,
Inc., 575 U.S. 320 (2015), ruled that
Medicaid providers and beneficiaries do
not have a direct private right of action
against States to challenge Medicaid
payment rates in Federal courts. This
decision means provider and
beneficiary legal challenges against
States are unavailable in Federal court
to supplement our oversight as a means
of ensuring compliance with section
1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act. The
Armstrong decision also underscored
HHS’ and CMS’ unique responsibility
for resolving issues concerning the
interpretation and implementation of
section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act. The
Supreme Court’s Armstrong decision
placed added importance on CMS’
administrative review of SPAs
proposing to reduce or restructure FFS
payment rates. Accordingly, the 2015
final rule with comment period was an
effort to establish a more robust
oversight and enforcement strategy with
respect to section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the
Act.
In consideration of State agencies’ and
other interested parties’ feedback on the
previous AMRP process, as well as
CMS’ obligation to ensure continued
compliance with section 1902(a)(30)(A)
of the Act, we are updating the
requirements in § 447.203. We are
rescinding and replacing the AMRP
166 American Medical Association, Comment
Letter on 2015 Final Rule with Comment Period
(January 4, 2016), https://www.regulations.gov/
comment/CMS-2011-0062-0328.
167 American Association of Retired Persons,
Comment Letter on 2011 Propose Rule (July 5,
2011), https://www.regulations.gov/comment/CMS2011-0062-0121.
168 76 FR 26341 at 26349.
169 80 FR 67576 at 67577, 67579, 67590.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
requirements previously in
§ 447.203(b)(1) through (8) with a
streamlined and standardized process,
described in § 447.203(b) and (c). This
change is informed by a center-wide
review of our policy and processes
regarding access to care for all facets of
the Medicaid program. The 2015 final
rule with comment period
acknowledged our need to better
understand FFS rate actions and their
potential impact on State programs, and
the requirements we finalized require a
considerable amount of data from
States. To ensure States were meeting
the statutory requirement under section
1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act, the previous
AMRP process was originally intended
to establish a transparent data-driven
process for States to measure the current
status of access to services within the
State and utilize this process for
monitoring access when proposing rate
reductions and restructurings.170 As the
rule took effect and as we reviewed
States’ previous AMRPs, we found that
some rate reductions and restructurings
had much smaller impacts than others.
The 2017 SMDL reflected the
experience that certain payment rate
changes would not likely result in
diminished access to care and do not
require the substantial review of access
data that generally is required under the
2015 final rule with comment period.
Since publication of the 2019 CMCS
Informational Bulletin stating the
agency’s intention to establish a new
access strategy, we have developed the
new process we are finalizing in this
final rule that considers the lessons
learned under the previous AMRP
process, and emphasizes transparency
and data analysis, with specific
requirements varying depending on the
State’s current payment levels relative
to Medicare, the magnitude of the
proposed rate reduction or
restructuring, and any access to care
concerns raised to State Medicaid
agency by interested parties. With these
provisions, we aim to balance Federal
and State administrative burden with
our shared obligation to ensure
compliance with section 1902(a)(30)(A)
of the Act (and our obligation to oversee
State compliance with the same).
We received public comments on our
overall approach to a new access
strategy as well as broad comments
about multiple provisions in the rule.
We received some comments that were
outside of the scope of the proposed
rule entirely (for example, related to
access in managed care and coverage of
services), and therefore, are not
addressed in this final rule. We also
170 80
PO 00000
FR 67576 at 67577.
Frm 00137
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40677
note that some commenters expressed
general support for all of the provisions
in section II.C. of this rule, as well as for
this rule in its entirety. In response to
commenters who supported some, but
not all, of the policies and regulations
we proposed in the proposed rule
(particularly in section II.C related to
FFS access), we are clarifying and
emphasizing our intent that each final
policy and regulation is distinct and
severable to the extent it does not rely
on another final policy or regulation
that we proposed.
While the provisions in section II.C.
of this final rule are intended to present
a comprehensive approach to ensuring
that FFS payment rates are adequate to
ensure statutorily sufficient access for
beneficiaries, and these provisions
complement the goals expressed and
policies and regulations being finalized
in sections II.A. (MAC and BAC) and
II.B. (HCBS) of this final rule, we intend
that each of them is a distinct, severable
provision, as finalized. Unless otherwise
noted in this rule, each policy and
regulation being finalized under this
section II.C is distinct and severable
from other final policies and regulations
being finalized in this section or in
sections II.A. or II.B of this final rule, as
well as from rules and regulations
currently in effect.
Consistent with our previous
discussion earlier in section II. of this
final rule regarding severability, we are
clarifying and emphasizing our intent
that if any provision of this final rule is
held to be invalid or unenforceable by
its terms, or as applied to any person or
circumstance, or stayed pending further
State action, it shall be severable from
this final rule, and from rules and
regulations currently in effect, and not
affect the remainder thereof or the
application of the provision to other
persons not similarly situated or to
other, dissimilar circumstances. For
example, we intend that the policies
and regulations we are finalizing related
to the payment rate transparency
publication requirement (section
II.C.2.a. of this final rule) are distinct
and severable from the policies and
regulations we are finalizing related to
the comparative payment rate analysis
requirement and the payment rate
disclosure publication requirement
(sections II.C.2.b. of this final rule,
which we further intend are severable
from each other). These provisions are
in turn also severable from the
interested parties advisory group
provision in section II.C.2.c. of this final
rule, the State analysis procedures for
rate reduction and restructuring SPAs in
section II.C.3. of this final rule, and from
the Medicaid provider participation and
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
40678
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
public process to inform access to care
policies in section II.C.4. of this final
rule, and each of these in turn is
intended to be severable from each
other.
The following is a summary of the
general comments we received on our
proposal to rescind the previous AMRP
requirements in § 447.203(b)(1) through
(8) and replace them with a streamlined
and standardized process in
§ 447.203(b) and (c), and our responses.
Comment: We received general
support from most commenters for our
proposal to rescind the AMRP process
finalized in the 2015 final rule with
comment period in its entirety and
replace it with new requirements for
payment rate transparency and State
analysis procedures for rate reductions
and restructuring as described in the
proposed rule to ensure compliance
with section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act.
We also received commenter feedback
encouraging CMS to ensure the process
replacing the AMRPs is robust and
public, and that it ensures access to
critical services is measured adequately.
Response: We thank the commenters
for their support and are finalizing the
rescission of the previous AMRP
process in its entirety and its
replacement with the new requirements
as proposed, apart from some minor
revisions to the proposed regulatory
language, which we address in detail
later in this final rule. As of the effective
date of this final rule, States are no
longer required to submit AMRPs to
CMS as previously required in
§ 447.203(b)(1) through (8). We believe
our new policies are robust and that
they ensure public transparency and
that access to critical services is
measured adequately.
Comment: While most commenters
generally supported the proposal to
rescind § 447.203(b) in its entirety and
replace it with new requirements to
ensure FFS Medicaid payment rate
adequacy, a couple of commenters
recommended that CMS maintain some
or all of the AMRP process for certain
providers (that is, FQHCs, clinics,
dental care providers, and community
mental health providers), in addition to
the newly proposed payment rate
transparency, comparative payment rate
analysis, and payment rate disclosure
requirements. Additionally, these
commenters raised concerns that the
newly proposed requirements focused
exclusively on fee schedule payment
rate transparency and comparison to
Medicare payment rates; therefore,
FQHCs, clinics, dental care providers,
and community mental health providers
would be excluded from the proposed
payment rate transparency and
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
comparative payment rate analysis
provisions because these providers
generally are not paid fee schedule
payment rates (within the meaning of
this final rule) and/or lack
corresponding Medicare payment rates.
One commenter recommended keeping
the AMRP requirements in place as a
separate process for analyzing access to
primary care services provided by
FQHCs, clinics, or dental providers if
these providers are excluded from the
payment rate transparency and
comparative payment rate disclosure as
a way to assess access to care to these
services and providers as they were
previously included in the AMRP
requirements. Another commenter
stated that, in comparison to the
AMRPs, the provisions in the proposed
rule are an oversimplified approach to
evaluating Medicaid FFS payment rates
and do not sufficiently focus on
payment levels for a comprehensive
continuum of behavioral health
services.
Response: We acknowledge these
commenters’ support for the previous
AMRP process and suggestion to
continue to subject payment rates for
FQHCs, clinics (as defined in § 440.90),
dental care providers, and community
mental health providers to the previous
AMRP process. However, we are not
incorporating this suggestion, to ensure
a consistent approach to evaluating
access to care within FFS and across
delivery systems that more
appropriately balances administrative
burden on States and us with the
usefulness of the process for ensuring
that payment rates comply with section
1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act.
To address commenters’ concerns
about services being excluded from the
payment rate transparency provision in
§ 447.203(b)(1), we will briefly address
which payment rates are and are not
subject to the payment rate transparency
provisions, but this issue is discussed in
greater detail in a later comment
response. For purposes of the payment
rate transparency provision in
§ 447.203(b)(1), Medicaid FFS fee
schedule payment rates are payment
amounts made to a provider and known
in advance of a provider delivering a
service to a beneficiary by reference to
a fee schedule. To the extent a State
pays fee schedule payment rates for
clinic services (as defined in § 440.90),
dental services, and community mental
health services that meet the previously
stated description, those payment rates
are subject to the payment rate
transparency provisions in
§ 447.203(b)(1). As for the comparative
payment rate analysis requirements in
§ 447.203(b)(2)–(3), as discussed in
PO 00000
Frm 00138
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
greater detail later in this final rule, only
codes included on the CMS-published
list of evaluation and management (E/
M) Current Procedural Terminology or
Healthcare Common Procedure Coding
System (HCPCS) CPT/HCPCS codes are
subject to the analysis.
Additionally, as further discussed in
a later comment response, States use
provider-specific cost and visit data for
a particular benefit category to set the
prospective payment system (PPS) rates
that are paid to FQHCs or rural health
clinics (RHCs) in a process governed by
section 1902(bb) of the Act. Because
States utilize these data rather than fee
schedule payment rates within the
meaning of this final rule, those rates
paid to FQHCs and RHCs are not subject
to the new payment rate transparency
provisions in § 447.203(b)(1) or the
comparative payment rate analysis
requirements in § 447.203(b)(2) through
(3). Lastly, like all State plan services for
which the State proposes a rate
reduction or restructuring in
circumstances where the changes could
result in reduced access, FQHC, RHC,
clinic (as defined in § 440.90), dental,
and community mental health services
are subject to access analyses in
§ 447.203(c) for proposed rate
reductions and restructuring.
While we recognize that there may be
multiple approaches to evaluating
access to care for Medicaid
beneficiaries, we respectfully disagree
with the commenter that the payment
rate transparency and State analysis
procedures for rate reductions and
restructuring are an oversimplified
approach for evaluating Medicaid FFS
payment rates. As part of a
comprehensive review of our policy and
processes regarding access to care for all
facets of the Medicaid program, we
proposed a more streamlined approach,
as compared to previous AMRP process,
that we intended better to balance
Federal and State administrative burden
with our shared obligation to ensure
compliance with section 1902(a)(30)(A)
of the Act.
Additionally, we disagree with the
commenter that, in comparison to the
previous AMRP process, the provisions
in the proposed rule do not sufficiently
focus on payment levels for a
comprehensive continuum of behavioral
health services. The provisions of this
final rule serve as one part of our
comprehensive efforts to ensure that
payment levels across the continuum of
behavioral health services are economic
and efficient, as well as consistent with
quality and access consistent with the
statute. As we discussed in the
proposed rule, we limited the scope of
behavioral health services subject to
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
comparative payment rate analysis to
include only outpatient services.171 For
this final rule, we have revised the
outpatient behavioral health services
category of service in
§ 447.203(b)(2)(iii), which we are
finalizing as ‘‘Outpatient mental health
and substance use disorder services.’’
This revision will ensure this final rule
is consistent with the services in the
Managed Care final rule (as published
elsewhere in this Federal Register) and
reflects a more granular level of service
description. As this category of service
remains outpatient, this allows us to
focus on ambulatory care provided by
practitioners in an office-based setting
without duplicating existing Federal
requirements for demonstrating
compliance with applicable upper
payment limits (UPLs) and the
supplemental payment reporting
requirements under section 1903(bb) of
the Act. Therefore, between the
comparative payment rate analysis
requirements that we are finalizing in
this rule (including outpatient mental
health and substance use disorder
services) and existing UPL and
supplemental payment reporting
requirements (including requirements
specific to inpatient services furnished
in psychiatric residential treatment
facilities, institutions for mental
diseases, and psychiatric hospitals), we
believe that States and CMS will have
available sufficient information about
inpatient and outpatient mental health
and substance use disorder services
payment rates to appropriately monitor
payment levels across the continuum of
mental health and substance use
disorder services.
Comment: Several commenters raised
concerns about administrative burden
on States to comply with the payment
rate transparency publication,
comparative payment rate analysis, and
payment rate disclosure requirements.
Commenters were generally concerned
about the compounding effect on
already overburdened State resources
that would be required to meet these
provisions, the other HCBS and MAC
and BAG provisions of the proposed
rule, and the provisions of the Managed
Care proposed rule. Specifically for the
payment rate transparency provisions
under § 447.203(b), commenters were
generally concerned about the
significant amount of State resources
(including number of staff, staff time,
and financial expense) that would be
required to collect, prepare, analyze,
and publish the data and information
required.
171 88
FR 27960 at 28006.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
Additionally, a few commenters
expressed concerns about the burden
associated with the proposed rule and
stated that they did not believe the
requirement to publish Medicaid
payment rates through the payment rate
transparency publication would benefit
the Medicaid program by providing
States and CMS with an effective and
meaningful way of ensuring access to
care is sufficient. One commenter stated
that they expect their State Medicaid
program to limit future program
enhancements and improvements
because they would need to redirect
resources to complying with the
provisions of the proposed rule, if
finalized.
Response: We appreciate the
commenters’ concerns, and we would
like to note that the FFS provisions,
including the payment rate
transparency, comparative payment rate
analysis, and payment rate disclosure
requirements (§ 447.203(b)(1) through
(5)), interested parties’ advisory group
requirements (§ 447.203(b)(6)), and State
analysis procedures for payment rate
reductions or payment restructuring
(§ 447.203(c)), finalized in this rule are
expected to result in a net burden
reduction on States compared to the
previous AMRP requirements, as
discussed in the proposed rule and in
section III. of this final rule. We are also
providing States with a full 2-year
compliance period between the effective
date of this final rule and the initial
applicability date of July 1, 2026, rather
than 6 or 9 months as finalized with the
previous AMRP process.172 Given that
the previously referenced requirements
of this final rule should be less
burdensome for States than the
rescinded, previous AMRP
requirements, and the length of time
States have to prepare to implement
these new requirements, we expect that
States will be able to meet the payment
rate transparency, interested parties’
advisory group, and State analysis
procedures for payment rate reductions
or payment restructuring requirements,
if a rate reduction or restructuring is
proposed through a SPA, without
needing to limit future program
enhancements or increase the level of
172 In the 2015 final rule with comment period
(80 FR 67576), the previous AMRPs were originally
due on July 1 providing States with approximately
6 months between the final rule effective date of
January 4, 2016, and due date of July 1, 2016. Based
on comments received on the 2015 final rule with
comment period, the 2016 final rule (81 FR 21479)
extended the due date to October 1, 2016, providing
States with an additional 3 months to submit their
first AMRPs for a total of approximately 9 months
from the effective date of the 2015 final rule when
States were first notified they would be required to
submit AMRPs.
PO 00000
Frm 00139
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40679
State resources dedicated to ensuring
compliance with the access requirement
in section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act.
We would also like to reassure States
that the provisions of § 447.203(b)(1) in
this final rule include flexibilities that
could further ease the burden on States.
For example, the payment rate
transparency publication requirements
described in paragraph (b)(1) and
paragraph (b)(1)(ii) have limited
formatting requirements, and therefore
we expect many States that already
publish at least some of their Medicaid
FFS fee schedule payment rates directly
on fee schedules posted on the State
agency’s website would only need to
make minor revisions or updates (if any)
to comply with the new requirements
with respect to these already-published
payment rates. States are not required to
create new fee schedules if their
published payment rate information is
already organized in such a way that a
member of the public can readily
determine the amount that Medicaid
would pay for each covered service,
consistent with § 447.203(b)(1).
Additionally, because commenters
informed us that some States use a
contractor to maintain their fee
schedules on the contractor’s website,
we have revised the language in
§ 447.203(b)(1) to permit the State to
‘‘publish all Medicaid fee-for-service
payment rates on a website that is
accessible to the general public’’ by
removing the proposed requirement that
the payment rates be published on a
website that is ‘‘developed and
maintained by the single State agency.’’
This flexibility is being provided for
States to continue utilizing a contractor
to develop fee schedules as well as
utilizing a contractor’s (or other third
party’s) website to publish the payment
rate transparency publication so long as
the State publishes a readily accessible
link on its State-maintained website to
the required content and ensures on an
ongoing basis that the linked content
meets all applicable requirements of this
final rule. We continue to require that
‘‘[t]he website where the State agency
publishes its Medicaid fee-for-service
payment rates must be easily reached
from a hyperlink on the State Medicaid
agency’s website’’ in § 447.203(b)(1)(ii).
We acknowledge that States utilization
of contractors to meet certain
programmatic responsibilities is a
common occurrence, and with this
modification, we are ensuring flexibility
for States to rely on these relationships
to meet the payment rate transparency
publication requirement.
With respect to the comparative
payment rate analysis in § 447.203(b)(2)
and (3), as discussed in the proposed
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
40680
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
rule, States have the flexibility to map
their geographical areas to those used
for Medicare payment for purposes of
meeting the requirement that States
break down their payment rates by
geographical location, as applicable.173
We will provide States with a list of the
CPT/HCPCS codes to be used for
comparison in subregulatory guidance,
including an example list, that will be
issued prior to the effective date of this
final rule.174 While the first published
list will be an example list of codes that
would have been subject to the
comparative payment rate analysis if it
were in effect for CY 2023, we will
publish the initial list of E/M CPT/
HCPCS codes subject to the comparative
payment rate analysis no later than June
30, 2025, to provide States 1 full
calendar year between the issuance of
the CMS-published list of E/M CPT/
HCPCS codes and the due date of the
comparative payment rate analysis, as
described in the proposed rule.175
For the payment rate disclosure in
§ 447.203(b)(2) and (3), which requires
States to publish the average hourly
Medicaid FFS fee schedule payment
rate for personal care, home health aide,
homemaker, and habilitation services,
as discussed in detail in a later response
to comments in this section, there is no
Medicare comparison component.
Because the disclosure will reflect only
the State’s payment rate data, we chose
not to specify codes; this will provide
States more flexibility in meeting the
requirements in line with each State’s
unique circumstances. For example, the
payment rate disclosure requirements
can accommodate the flexibility States
have in setting their payment rates and
methodologies for personal care, home
health aide, homemaker, and
habilitation services, as well as the
provider types licensed to deliver these
services to beneficiaries.
We disagree with commenters that the
requirement to publish Medicaid
payment rates through the payment rate
transparency publication would not
benefit the Medicaid program by
providing States and CMS with an
effective and meaningful way of
ensuring access to care is sufficient. As
discussed in the proposed rule, payment
rate transparency is a critical
component of assessing compliance
with section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act.
By publishing their Medicaid payment
rates publicly, States will be providing
the necessary information to evaluate if
State payment rates are consistent with
efficiency, economy, and quality of care
173 88
FR 27960 at 28013.
FR 27960 at 28008.
175 88 FR 27960 at 28008 through 28009.
174 88
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
and are sufficient to enlist enough
providers so that care and services are
available under the plan at least to the
extent that such care and services are
available to the general population in
the geographic area and interested
parties have basic information available
to them to understand Medicaid
payment levels and the associated
effects of payment rates on access to
care so that they may raise concerns to
State Medicaid agencies via the various
forms of public processes available to
interested parties.176 Also as discussed
in section V.D. of the proposed rule, we
considered, but did not propose, to
require Medicaid payment information
be directly submitted to CMS, rather
than publicly published, because this
requirement to publicly display
payment rate information is
methodologically similar to the previous
regulation at § 447.203, which required
previous AMRPs be submitted to us and
publicly published by the State and
CMS. We found this aspect of the rule
to be an effective method of publicly
sharing access to care information, as
well as ensuring State compliance, and
are carrying it forward into the
provisions finalized in this rule.177
Additionally, the Supreme Court’s
Armstrong decision underscored the
importance of CMS’ determinations, as
the responsible Federal agency,
regarding the sufficiency of Medicaid
payment rates.
Comment: A couple of commenters
requested clarification regarding CMS
exempting States that deliver all of their
Medicaid services through managed
care from all of the payment rate
transparency provisions under
§ 447.203(b).
Response: All States are required to
comply with the payment rate
transparency publication, comparative
payment rate analysis, and payment rate
disclosure provisions finalized in this
rule under § 447.203(b), regardless of
the quantity of services covered or
delivered or beneficiaries enrolled in
managed care. Due to coverage
transition periods, such as where an
individual is Medicaid eligible but not
yet enrolled in a managed care plan or
benefits are covered retroactively,178
176 88
FR 27960 at 27967.
FR 27960 at 28075.
178 Once an individual is enrolled in Medicaid,
coverage is effective either on the date of
application or the first day of the month of
application. Benefits also may be covered
retroactively for up to three months prior to the
month of application if the individual would have
been eligible during that period had he or she
applied. Coverage generally stops at the end of the
month in which a person no longer meets the
requirements for eligibility. https://
www.medicaid.gov/medicaid/eligibility/.
177 88
PO 00000
Frm 00140
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
even States that generally enroll all
beneficiaries into managed care plans
pay for some services on a FFS basis
that are carved out of the managed care
plan contracts, and therefore, are
expected to have Medicaid FFS fee
schedule payment rates in effect. Such
Medicaid FFS fee schedule payment
rates are subject to the provisions
finalized in this rule under § 447.203(b).
Comment: Several commenters
requested CMS clearly define the
services considered to be categories of
services subject to all provisions under
§ 447.203(b). One commenter requested
CMS publish information regarding the
timing of when States can expect the
CMS published list of E/M CPT/HCPCS
codes subject to the comparative
payment rate analysis.
Response: For the payment rate
transparency requirements in
§ 447.203(b)(1), as further discussed in a
later response to comments in this
section, services for which providers are
paid Medicaid FFS fee schedule
payment rates within the meaning of
this final rule, which generally are
payment amounts made to a provider
and known in advance of a provider
delivering a service to a beneficiary, are
subject to the requirements of
§ 447.203(b)(1)(i) through (vi).
For the comparative payment rate
analysis described in § 447.203(b)(3)(i),
the list of the E/M CPT/HCPCS codes
that specifies the services subject to the
analysis will be published in
subregulatory guidance. Prior to the
effective date of this final rule, we will
issue subregulatory guidance, including
a hypothetical example list of the E/M
CPT/HCPCS codes that would be subject
to the comparative payment rate
analysis, if the comparative rate analysis
requirements were applicable with
respect to payment rates in effect for CY
2023. This example list defines the
services that would be subject to the
comparative payment rate analysis
through the identification of specific E/
M CPT/HCPCS codes that are in effect
for CY 2023. In other words, the
example list of E/M CPT/HCPCS codes
includes codes that meet the following
criteria: the code is effective for CY
2023; the code is classified as an E/M
CPT/HCPCS code by the American
Medical Association (AMA) CPT
Editorial Panel; the code is included on
the Berenson-Eggers Type of Service
(BETOS) code list effective for the same
time period as the hypothetical
comparative payment rate analysis (CY
2023) and falls into the E/M family
grouping and families and subfamilies
for primary care services, obstetrics and
gynecological services, and outpatient
behavioral services (now called
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
outpatient mental health and substance
use disorder services in this final rule);
and the code has an A (Active), N (NonCovered), R (Restricted), or T
(Injections) code status on the Medicare
Physician Fee Schedule (PFS) with a
Medicare established relative value unit
(RVU) and payment amount for CY
2023. As discussed in the proposed rule,
we expect to provide States with
approximately 1 full calendar year of
access to the CMS-published list of E/
M CPT/HCPCS codes and Medicare
non-facility payment rates as
established in the annual Medicare PFS
rule for a calendar year to provide States
with sufficient time to develop and
publish their comparative payment rate
analyses as described in
§ 447.203(b)(4).179 Therefore, we expect
that the first CMS-published list of the
E/M CPT/HCPCS codes that actually
will be subject to the comparative
payment rate analysis requirements will
be published by July 1, 2025 for CY
2025, to facilitate States’ publication of
their comparative payment rate analyses
by the applicability date of July 1, 2026.
The categories of services subject to
the payment rate disclosure
requirements described in
§ 447.203(b)(3)(ii), as discussed later in
this preamble, are personal care, home
health aide, homemaker, and
habilitation services provided under
FFS State plan authority, including
sections 1915(i), 1915(j), 1915(k) State
plan services; section 1915(c) waiver
authority; and under section 1115
demonstration authority. We are not
identifying codes for these categories of
services because States may use a wide
variety of codes to bill and pay for these
services, and because the payment rate
disclosure does not have a comparison
element that would necessitate
uniformity with another payer. While
we encourage States to organize their
payment rate disclosure on a code basis,
when possible, for clarity and
formatting consistency with the
comparative payment rate analysis,
States have flexibility in meeting the
payment rate disclosure requirements to
ensure each State’s unique
circumstances can be accounted for in
the disclosure.
Comment: Several commenters urged
CMS to delay the proposed applicability
date of the § 447.203(b) provisions,
including the compliance actions
described in § 447.203(b)(5), to allow
States sufficient time for compliance.
Commenters stated that the amount of
recently proposed Federal changes,
including this rulemaking and the
Managed Care proposed rule, raised
179 88
FR 27960 at 28008–28009.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
concerns about State resources
necessary to comply with all new
Federal regulations. Some commenters
expressed concern that withholding
administrative FFP would further
hinder States’ ability to meet the
requirements and CMS should only act
after exhausting all other efforts to
ensure States are compliant (including
adopting a tiered approach to
enforcement and directly engaging with
non-compliant States to create a
corrective action plan).
Commenters suggested the following
alternative applicability dates:
approximately 3 years from the effective
date of a final rule (that is, January 1,
2027), 4 years (that is, January 1, 2028),
or 5 years (that is, January 1, 2029).
Alternatively, a few commenters urged
CMS to accelerate the proposed
applicability date of the § 447.203(b)
provisions by one year from January 1,
2026, to January 1, 2025, to ensure
payment rate information is published
timely to help address questions about
access, particularly for HCBS. In
addition to the proposed compliance
procedures described in § 447.203(b)(5),
a couple of commenters suggested CMS
publish an annual calendar for States to
follow and CMS should also report on
the timeliness of each State’s
compliance with the payment rate
transparency, comparative payment rate
analysis, and payment rate disclosure
requirements.
Response: We are finalizing the
payment rate transparency requirements
in § 447.203(b) with an applicability
date of July 1, 2026, which is 6 months
later than we proposed. This date is an
alternative applicability date that was
described in the proposed rule to allow
for States to have a period of at least 2
years between the effective date of the
final rule and the applicability date for
the § 447.203(b) provisions. The July 1,
2026, applicability date applies to the
payment rate transparency, comparative
payment rate analysis, and payment rate
disclosure requirements. For payment
rate transparency, the initial publication
of the Medicaid FFS payment rates shall
occur no later than July 1, 2026, and
include approved Medicaid FFS
payment rates in effect as of July 1,
2026. For the comparative payment rate
analysis and payment rate disclosure,
the initial comparative payment rate
analysis and payment rate disclosure
must include Medicaid payment rates in
effect as of July 1, 2025, and be
published no later than July 1, 2026. As
finalized in this rule, the Medicare nonfacility payment rates as established in
the annual Medicare PFS final rule for
a calendar year included in the
comparative payment rate analysis must
PO 00000
Frm 00141
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40681
be effective for the same time period for
the same set of E/M CPT/HCPCS codes
used for the base Medicaid FFS fee
schedule payment rate. The Medicare
PFS is published through annual notice
and comment rulemaking, and takes
effect January 1 of the upcoming
calendar year. As discussed in the
proposed rule, we acknowledged that
Medicare may issue a correction to the
Medicare PFS after the final rule is in
effect, and this correction may impact
our published list of E/M CPT/HCPCS
codes and we would like to reemphasize
that we expect States to rely on the CMS
published list of E/M CPT/HCPCS codes
subject to the comparative payment rate
analysis for complying with the
requirements in paragraphs (b)(2)
through (4).180 States are required to use
the Medicare non-facility payment rates
as established in the Medicare PFS final
rule for calendar year 2025 for purposes
of the initial comparative payment rate
analysis to be published by July 1, 2026.
In accordance with paragraph (b)(4), the
comparative payment rate analysis is
required to be updated no less than
every 2 years and by no later than July
1 of the second year following the most
recent update, therefore, the second
comparative payment rate analysis
would be for calendar year 2027, the
third analysis would be for calendar
year 2029, so on and so forth. Each
comparative payment rate analysis
would use the respective year’s CMS
published list of E/M CPT/HCPCS codes
which will be updated by CMS
approximately one full calendar year
before the due date of the next
comparative payment rate analysis and
the list will include changes made to the
AMA CPT Editorial Panel and the
Medicare PFS based on the most recent
Medicare PFS final rule, as described in
the proposed rule.181
We are not finalizing the alternative
applicability dates, including dates
sooner and later than the July 1, 2026,
due date finalized in this rule, as
suggested by commenters. We are not
accelerating the date as we are mindful
of the numerous new regulatory
requirements established in this final
rule, the Managed Care final rule (as
published elsewhere in this Federal
Register), and the Streamlining
Eligibility & Enrollment final rule. We
want to ensure States have adequate
time to implement all newly finalized
provisions, with at least 2 years between
the effective date and applicability date
as described in the proposed rule.182 We
180 88
FR 27960 at 28009.
FR 27960 at 28008.
182 88 FR 27960 at 28008.
181 88
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
40682
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
are also not delaying the applicability
date as we believe the applicability date
for the provisions finalized in section
II.C. of this final rule are reasonable
given that States should have their
Medicaid FFS fee schedule payment
rates data readily available, Medicare
payment rate data are publicly available,
and we are making available supportive
guidance and templates with this final
rule. In the beginning of section II. of
this final rule, we include a table with
the provisions and relevant timing
information and applicability dates of
all provisions in the rule. We believe
this table delivers the information the
commenter was seeking. We expect the
information published in this final rule
is sufficient for States to comply in a
timely manner and we currently do not
intend to publish a calendar in any
other format. We are finalizing the
compliance provisions at § 447.203(b)(5)
as proposed. While we currently do not
intend to publish a report of the
timeliness of each State’s compliance
with the payment rate transparency,
comparative payment rate analysis, and
payment rate disclosure requirements,
as suggested by a couple of commenters,
given that our work to better ensure
access in the Medicaid program is
ongoing, we intend to gain
implementation experience with this
final rule, and we will consider the
recommendations provided on the
proposed rule to help inform any future
rulemaking in this area, as appropriate.
Comment: A number of commenters
suggested CMS conduct the proposed
payment rate transparency publication,
comparative payment rate analysis, and
payment rate disclosure on behalf of
States to ensure a consistent, national
approach to analyzing and publishing
payment rate information. These
commenters stated CMS could do this
by requiring States to submit their fee
schedules to CMS or CMS could collect
fee schedule rate information during the
SPA approval process. Specifically for
the payment rate disclosure, two
commenters suggested using existing
data collection tools, specifically the
State of the Workforce Survey, to source
the information required for the
disclosure to ease burden on States.183
183 The State of the Workforce Survey collects
comprehensive data on provider agencies and the
Direct Support Professional (DSP) workforce
providing direct supports to adults (age 18 and
over) with intellectual and developmental
disabilities (IDD). The goal of the survey and the
resulting data is to help States examine workforce
challenges, identify areas for further investigation,
benchmark their workforce data, measure
improvements made through policy or
programmatic changes, and compare their State
data to those of other States and the NCI–IDD
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
Additionally, a couple of commenters
suggested CMS create a centralized data
repository of all States’ payment rate
transparency, comparative payment rate
analysis, and payment rate disclosure
publications for public use, including
data analysis, if the proposed
requirements are applied to States.
Response: As described in section
V.D.3 of this final rule, prior to the
issuance of the 2023 proposed rule, we
specifically considered ways for CMS to
produce and publish the comparative
payment rate analysis proposed in
§ 447.203(b)(2) through (3) whereby we
would develop reports for all States
demonstrating Medicaid payment rates
for all services or a subset for Medicaid
services as a percentage of Medicare
payment rates.184 We decided not to
propose this approach because it would
rely on T–MSIS data, which would
increase the lag in available data due to
the need for CMS to prepare it and then
validate the data with States to ensure
the publication is accurate, in addition
to introducing uncertainty into the
results due to ongoing variation in State
T–MSIS data quality and completeness.
Given the increased lag time associated
with T–MSIS data and uncertainty in
results that would diminish the utility
of the comparative payment rate
analysis, we decided producing and
publishing the analysis would likely
result in inaccuracies, resulting in
burden on States to correspond with
CMS to provide missing information
and correct other information. After
considering, and ultimately not
proposing, CMS complete a comparative
payment rate analysis on behalf of
States, we did not further consider
conducting the payment rate
transparency publication or payment
rate disclosure on behalf of States due
to the previously stated reasons (that is,
lagging data from T–MSIS and the need
that would remain to validate data with
States).
We are not creating a centralized data
repository of all States’ payment rate
transparency, comparative payment rate
analysis, and payment rate disclosure
publications for public use as suggested
by commenters because we are striving
to balance Federal and State
administrative burden with our shared
obligation to ensure compliance with
section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act.
Requiring States to submit the
information they already published on
their State or contractor’s website would
be duplicative and create additional
burden on States. We acknowledge that
average. https://idd.nationalcoreindicators.org/
staff-providers/.
184 88 FR 27960 at 28075.
PO 00000
Frm 00142
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
we could also pull data from State or
contractor websites to create a central
Federal repository; however, we intend
our initial focus to be on establishing
the new payment rate transparency,
comparative payment rate analysis, and
payment rate disclosure requirements;
providing States with support during
the compliance period; and ensuring
these data are available to beneficiaries,
providers, CMS, and other interested
parties for the purposes of assessing
access to care issues. Additionally, we
believe that the States, as stewards of
Medicaid payment rate information in
each of their Medicaid programs, are the
party in the best position to publish and
analyze their own payment rate
information. States’ ownership of
payment rate information will ensure
accurate payment rate transparency
publications, comparative payment rate
analyses, and payment rate disclosures.
Given that our work to better ensure
access in the Medicaid program is
ongoing, we intend to gain
implementation experience with this
final rule, and we will consider the
recommendations provided on the
proposed rule to help inform any future
rulemaking in this area, as appropriate.
While we appreciate the suggestion to
utilize existing data collection tools,
specifically the State of the Workforce
Survey, we will not be relying on the
State of the Workforce Survey because
the data do not include all States, the
District of Columbia, and the Territories
(2021 Survey only sourced data from 28
States and the District of Columbia);),
account for payment rate variation by
population (pediatric and adult),
provider type, and geographical location
(2021 Survey only includes mean
starting wage, the median starting wage,
as well as the minimum and maximum
starting hourly wages); or include
individual providers (2021 Survey only
sourced data from provider agencies).
Accordingly, it would not be a sufficient
data source to meet the requirements for
the payment rate disclosure as finalized
in this final rule.
Comment: We received some
comments about CMS requiring States
to change their payment rates. A couple
of commenters requested CMS require
States to change their payment rates
when deficiencies are identified through
the payment rate transparency
publication, comparative payment rate
analysis, or payment rate disclosure;
when provider shortages are
documented; and when reimbursement
or payment rates fall below a certain
threshold, such as 50 percent of the
corresponding Medicare payment rate;
however, most commenters who
suggested CMS set a threshold did not
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
suggest a specific number for the
threshold. One commenter specifically
asked if CMS would require States to
increase institutional service payment
rates. The commenter was concerned
that an increase in a direct care worker’s
Medicaid hourly rate, without a
corresponding increase in a Medicaid
payment rate for institutional services,
would result in fewer hours of care able
to be delivered. We received one
comment requesting CMS to expressly
permit States to pay more than Medicare
for services furnished through the FFS
system. Additionally, one commenter
expressed caution that increasing
payment rate transparency does not
necessarily ensure access to care or
coverage of services in Medicaid.
Response: To clarify, the provisions in
this final rule do not require States to
change their payment rates. Although
we intend for States to consider the
information produced for the payment
rate transparency publication,
comparative payment rate analysis, and
payment rate disclosure in an ongoing
process of evaluating the State’s
payment rate sufficiency and when
considering changing payment rates or
methodologies (and we intend to make
similar use of the information in
performing our oversight activities and
in making payment SPA approval
decisions), we did not propose and are
not finalizing that any payment rate
changes necessarily would be triggered
by the proposed requirements.
Specifically, we did not propose, nor
are we finalizing, a requirement that
States must increase their institutional
or non-institutional service payment
rates through this final rule. Based on
the information provided by the
commenter (and without additional
information about providers, such as,
number of providers in a State or
number of provider accepting new
patients or accepting Medicaid), we
understand the concerns raised to
generally be an issue with a State’s
limitations on service coverage (that is,
a coverage limit of $1,000/month limit
on institutional services is insufficient
for the amount of care required). While
we do not have the authority to require
States to change their Medicaid
payment rates, we remind States that
the Medicaid program is a Federal-State
partnership and States have the
flexibility and responsibility to set
payment rates that are consistent with
efficiency, economy, quality of care, and
access as required by section
1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act and a coverage
limit could be inconsistent with this
standard. We encourage the commenter
to utilize the public process procedures
described in § 447.204 to raise these
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
concerns with their State. We also did
not propose and are not finalizing a
regulatory change that explicitly permits
States to pay more than Medicare for
services furnished through the FFS
system. We acknowledge that existing
UPL requirements limit Medicaid
payments to a reasonable estimate of
what Medicare would have paid.185
However, outside of the services subject
to UPL requirements limiting aggregate
State Medicaid payment amounts, as the
Medicaid program is a Federal-State
partnership, States have the flexibility
and responsibility to set payment rates
that are consistent with efficiency,
economy, and quality of care as required
by section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act.
Currently, States can set FFS payment
rates that are more than Medicare for
numerous services, provided any
applicable aggregate UPL is satisfied,
and creating an explicit permission in
regulation would not change the
existing flexibilities States have in
setting their payment rates.
We understand the commenter’s
concerns that increasing payment rate
transparency does not necessarily
ensure access to care or coverage of
services in Medicaid. We acknowledged
in the proposed rule that there may be
other causes of access to care issues
outside of provider payment rates, such
as beneficiaries experiencing difficulty
scheduling behavioral health care
appointments due to a provider shortage
where the overall number of behavioral
health providers within a State is not
sufficient to meet the demands of the
general population.186 However, we
believe it is important to address one of
the potential causes of access to care
issues: payment rates that are not
sufficient to enlist an adequate supply
of providers as required by section
1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act. Given that our
work to better ensure access in the
Medicaid program is ongoing, we intend
to gain implementation experience with
this final rule, and we will consider
additional areas of access to care outside
of payment rates to help inform any
future rulemaking to promote improved
access to care, as appropriate.
Comment: A number of commenters
requested CMS provide States with
guidance, templates, tools, examples, or
descriptions of acceptable forms for
publishing the payment rates,
comparative payment rate analysis, and
185 § 447.272 for inpatient hospitals, § 447.321 for
outpatient hospitals and clinic services, § 447.325
for other inpatient and outpatient facilities (nursing
facilities, intermediate care facilities for the
developmentally disabled (ICF/DD), psychiatric
residential treatment facilities (PRTF), and
institutions for mental disease (IMDs).
186 88 FR 27960 at 28016.
PO 00000
Frm 00143
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40683
payment rate disclosure to ensure States
understand how to comply with these
provisions. A few commenters
requested guidance on specific aspects
of provisions of the proposed rule:
accessible web pages and accounting for
additional ways payment rates can vary
(such as site of service and patient
acuity). Those commenters also noted
that some States use value-based
payment (VBP) methodologies and
requested guidance on how the various
provisions of the proposed rule has
accounted for these payment
methodologies. Additionally, a couple
of commenters suggested CMS provide
guidance to the public to ensure the
newly published data are
understandable.
Response: Prior to the effective date of
this final rule, we will issue
subregulatory guidance including a
hypothetical example list of the E/M
CPT/HCPCS codes that would be subject
to the comparative payment rate
analysis, if the comparative rate analysis
requirements were applicable with
respect to payment rates in effect for CY
2023; illustrative examples of compliant
payment rate transparency, comparative
payment rate analysis, and payment rate
disclosure publications (including to
meet accessibility standards); and a
template to support completion of the
additional State rate analysis under
§ 447.203(c)(2). We encourage States to
review the subregulatory guidance to be
issued prior to the effective date of this
final rule and reach out to CMS for
technical guidance regarding
compliance with the comparative
payment rate analysis and any other
requirement of this final rule.
We are only requiring the payment
rate transparency publication,
comparative payment rate analysis, and
payment rate disclosure include
payment rate breakdowns by population
(pediatric and adult), provider type, and
geographical location, as applicable.
Payment rate variations by site of
service are not required, but States have
flexibility to include this optional
payment rate break down in the
payment rate transparency publication.
While not required in this final rule,
should a State opt to breakdown their
payment rates by site of service, the
State should use the minimum payment
amount for purposes of the
requirements of § 447.203(b), because a
provider is assured to receive at least
this amount for furnishing the service at
any site of service. At State option, the
State could also include additional
payment rate breakdowns a provider
might receive at other sites of service in
the State (for example: office, inpatient
hospital, school, mobile unit, urgent
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
40684
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
care facility, nursing facility). We did
not propose or finalize in this rule a
requirement for States to include a
payment rate breakdown for site of
services because we want our initial
focus to be on establishing the new
payment rate transparency, comparative
payment rate analysis, and payment rate
disclosure requirements, providing
States with support during the
compliance period, and ensuring the
data required under this final rule are
available to beneficiaries, providers,
CMS, and other interested parties for the
purpose of assessing access to care
issues. We believe that payment rate
breakdowns by population (pediatric
and adult), provider type, and
geographical location will provide a
sufficient amount of transparency to
ensure that interested parties have basic
information available to them to
understand Medicaid payment levels
and the associated effects of payment
rates on access to care so that they may
raise concerns to State Medicaid
agencies via the various forms of public
processes available to interested parties.
Additionally, payment rate variations
based on patient acuity are also not
explicitly required in the payment rate
transparency publication. Payment
adjustments for patient acuity generally
are limited to institutional settings (for
example, inpatient hospitals and
nursing facilities). Should a State opt to
breakdown their payment rates by
patient acuity, to the State should use
the minimum payment amount for
purposes of the requirements of
§ 447.203(b), because a provider is
assured to receive at least this amount
for furnishing the service to any patient.
At State option, the State could also
include additional payment rate
breakdowns the provider might receive
for other levels of patient acuity. We
also acknowledge that prospective
payment system rates, such as
Medicare’s Patient Driven Payment
Model (PDPM) for nursing facilities and
inpatient prospective payment system
(IPPS) for inpatient hospitals, typically
account for patient acuity. As further
discussed in a later response to
comments in this section, PPS rates for
inpatient hospital, outpatient hospital,
and nursing facility services that are
paid to most hospitals and nursing
facilities and are payments based on a
predetermined, fixed amount are subject
to the payment rate transparency
provision in this final rule. This is
because these PPS rates are typically
known in advance of a provider
delivering a service to a beneficiary and
fall into the scope of a Medicaid FFS fee
schedule payment rate within the
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
meaning of this final rule, as discussed
in a later response to comments in this
section.
We understand the commenters’
concerns about ensuring the various
payment rate transparency publications
of this final rule are understandable to
the public. We expect State publications
of Medicaid payment rate transparency
information, comparative payment rate
analysis, and payment rate disclosures
that comply with the requirements of
this final rule to be transparent and
clearly understandable to beneficiaries,
providers, CMS, and other interested
parties. Therefore, we do not anticipate
a need for guidance for the public at this
time, but we will continue to assess
once the requirements are in effect.
Comment: A couple of commenters
suggested CMS conduct provider
shortage assessments and engage
providers, beneficiary advocacy
organizations, direct service workers,
caregivers, and other relevant interested
parties in the data collection and
analysis processes in the proposed rule
and create a Federal-level public
comment process within the CMS
review of SPAs and HCBS waiver
applications or renewals.
Response: We appreciate the
commenters’ suggestions; however, we
did not propose to conduct provider
shortage assessments, or to engage with
interested parties in the data collection
and analysis processes outside of the
work of the interested parties’ advisory
group in § 447.203(b)(6). After obtaining
implementation experience of these new
policies, we will keep these suggestions
in mind as we consider whether
additional requirements may be
appropriate to propose through future
rulemaking.
Comment: One commenter suggested
CMS consider future rulemaking to
require States survey HCBS participants
and their support systems to identify
additional access issues and perceived
causes, with a particular focus on
assessing access related to unpaid and
paid support. The commenter provided
an example of a parent of an adult child
providing a significant number of hours,
both paid and unpaid, which the
commenter suggested could be an
indicator that the family cannot find a
qualified provider for the services.
Response: We appreciate the
commenter’s suggestion. Given that our
work to better ensure access in the
Medicaid program is ongoing, we intend
to gain implementation experience with
this final rule, and we will consider the
recommendations provided on the
proposed rule to help inform any future
rulemaking in this area, as appropriate.
PO 00000
Frm 00144
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
Comment: One commenter questioned
the relationship between higher
payment rates in FFS and higher rates
of accepting new Medicaid patients, as
well as the potential for affecting rates
across payers and delivery systems,
noting that even if the State raise the
rates for the Medicaid FFS that does not
mean that Medicaid or Medicare
managed care plans, including managed
care plans for individuals dually eligible
for both Medicare and Medicaid, also
will raise their provider payment rates.
The commenter noted that raising the
rates for Medicaid FFS does not mean
that the State will ensure that the
managed care plans operating in the
State also pay higher rates, noting that
practitioners are less likely to accept
Medicaid if the managed care plans do
not raise payment rates to align when
FFS rates have been increased.
Response: We appreciate the views of
the commenter. The provisions of
§ 447.203(c) only apply to Medicaid
FFS, and do not apply to Medicaid
managed care plans. Requirements for
Medicaid managed care are discussed in
the Medicaid Managed Care final rule
(as published elsewhere in this Federal
Register). Payment rates that managed
care plans pay to providers are not
required to be set at the Medicaid FFS
rate levels as managed care is a riskbased arrangement whereby States pay
managed care plans prospective
capitation rates, and plans contract with
network providers and negotiate
provider payment rates. Managed care
plans have their own access to care
requirements, including the network
adequacy requirements in 42 CFR
438.68. Managed care plan capitation
rates are subject to actuarial soundness
requirements at § 438.4.
1. Fully Fee-For-Service States
We solicited comments on whether
additional access standards for States
with a fully FFS delivery system may be
appropriate. Because the timeliness
standards of the proposed Medicaid and
Children’s Health Insurance Program
Managed Care Access, Finance, and
Quality proposed rule (Managed Care
proposed rule) at § 438.68 would not
apply to any care delivery in such
States, we stated that we were
considering whether a narrow
application of timeliness standards to
fully FFS States that closely mirrored
the proposed appointment wait time
standards, secret shopper survey
requirements, and publication
requirements (as applied to outpatient
mental health and substance use
disorder, adult and pediatric; primary
care, adult and pediatric; obstetrics and
gynecology; and an additional type of
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
service determined by the State) in that
rule might be appropriate. Given that
timeliness standards would apply
directly to States, we also solicited
comments on a potentially appropriate
method for CMS to collect data
demonstrating that States meet the
established standards at least 90 percent
of the time.
In developing the proposed rule, with
respect to FFS, our intent and focus was
on replacing the previous AMRP
process. While we saw value in
discussing and seeking public input on
timeliness standards for fully FFS States
that would mirror those proposed in the
Managed Care proposed rule, creating
additional alignment between the
delivery systems, we were mindful of
the volume of proposed changes that
would require State resources for
implementation. Therefore, we chose to
maintain our goal with the FFS
provisions of this access rule to replace
the previous AMRP process, and we
believed that timeliness standards were
better suited to a larger, ongoing access
strategy, to be considered and proposed
in future rulemaking. Nevertheless, we
saw value in gauging the appetite for
CMS to adopt timeliness standards in
fully FFS States, and as such included
a short section about the possibility of
those standards in the fully FFS context
in the proposed rule. Although we are
not finalizing any FFS timeliness
standards in this final rule, we intend to
propose them in future rulemaking,
informed by the comments received on
this discussion in the proposed rule.
Additionally, by keeping this current
rulemaking focused on replacing the
previous AMRP process and not
implementing FFS timeliness standards
at this time, we afford ourselves an
opportunity to observe and learn from
those standards being established in
managed care (and in the marketplace).
Those experiences will provide greater
insights into how to best propose these
standards in FFS and provide time to
engage with interested parties on how
we might best include newly proposed
FFS timeliness standards in existing
requirements, including those we are
finalizing in this rule, mitigating
unnecessary burden on States.
We received public comments in
response to this request for comment.
The following is a summary of the
comments we received and our
responses.
Comment: Several commenters noted
general support for timeliness standards
for fully FFS States. Generally, these
commenters agreed that there is value in
aligning access monitoring strategies
across delivery systems so that all
Medicaid beneficiaries would benefit
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
from a new policy, and that these
standards could improve access by
confirming whether beneficiaries are
actually able to access care in a timely
manner. Some commenters had
suggestions if CMS were to adopt
timeliness standards in FFS, such as
phasing in the requirements over time
or by service, collecting information on
geographic variations in wait times, and
either applying the standards to all FFS
programs or allowing exception for
States with minimal covered services
delivered through FFS. Others cited
concerns that they would want a future
proposal to address, such as establishing
protections for providers who do not
have direct control over their
scheduling. Commenters varied on
whether they believed providers should
have to perform any additional work to
meet new standards, with one
requesting that providers, not just
States, be held accountable for outcomes
based on these standards, while another
commenter wanted to ensure these
requirements would not add any burden
on providers. One commenter suggested
including provider surveys in addition
to participant surveys.
Response: We appreciate the support
expressed by a number of commenters
for the concept of applying timeliness
standards in fully FFS delivery systems
as a further means to ensure beneficiary
access to covered services. We are also
grateful for the suggestions that will
allow us to formulate future proposed
rulemaking that considers various needs
and concerns. We note that the request
for comment was with respect to fully
FFS States (that deliver no services
through managed care), but we will
consider for future rulemaking whether
to expand on that limit, for example,
applying standards to States that cover
only a small number of services through
managed care delivery, to apply them to
FFS generally, or to maintain the focus
on fully FFS States. We intend to use
the experience of the managed care
plans and the States implementing
timeliness requirements to assess things
like a phased-in approach, or whether
such standards should be proposed for
FFS delivery systems in non-fully FFS
States.
Comment: We received a number of
comments expressing general
opposition to establishing timeliness
standards for services delivered on a
FFS basis, particularly in the context of
implementing them simultaneously
with the other access provisions in the
proposed rule. These commenters
expressed concern about the burden,
both in time and cost, of establishing the
necessary administrative infrastructure
to meet timeliness requirements as well
PO 00000
Frm 00145
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40685
as the requirements proposed in the
proposed rule. One commenter
suggested CMS explore how these areas
could be better monitored using existing
data collections and processes. Another
pointed out the differences in available
resources between managed care and
FFS, such as increased matching rates
associated with managed care External
Quality Review that does not exist with
respect to FFS Medicaid, making FFS
timeliness standards more cost
prohibitive to implement. Another
commenter pointed out that in FFS
delivery systems, States would not
know whether wait time issues
identified through monitoring were
specific to Medicaid or whether similar
wait time issues were encountered by
other patients with other payers.
Response: We understand the
concerns about burden on States, and
for that reason we limited the proposed
rule and are only finalizing provisions
that, generally, serve to replace the
previous AMRP process. We see value
in the oversight and positive program
outcomes that could be achieved
through proposing and implementing
FFS timeliness standards in the future,
and also understand there will be
differences between managed care and
FFS that create unique issues to address
in any future proposal. For example,
there are differences in how providers
interact with plans in a managed care
system versus how they interact with
the State Medicaid agency in a FFS
system. There are also differences in the
idea of a ‘‘network’’ between these
delivery models that may impact how
we would assess network adequacy. We
will explore how we can best support
States with the administrative burden,
and how we can establish standards that
identify problems unique to providing
services to Medicaid beneficiaries.
Comment: Many commenters
expressed support for specific aspects of
our request, such as for establishing
wait time standards in a FFS delivery
system or utilizing secret shopper
surveys for oversight. These
commenters generally pointed to the
access improvements such standards
can provide, as they would highlight
where there are deficiencies in finding
available providers. One commenter
shared personal experience of longer
wait times as a Medicaid beneficiary
than those experienced by nonMedicaid enrollees. One commenter
shared suggestions regarding which
benefit categories needed more focus,
both for oversight and in length of wait
times, and this commenter along with a
couple others encouraged CMS to align
with the Health Insurance
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
40686
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
Marketplace®.187 Another commenter
cautioned that provider shortages must
be addressed as part of the overall
access strategy.
Response: We appreciate hearing from
commenters on the specifics of the
timeliness standards request for
comments, as we hope to use this
feedback to inform and enhance a future
set of proposals. We also fully intend to
include lessons from the experience of
the marketplace and Medicaid managed
care in proposing these future standards
for the FFS delivery system and will
continue to engage with interested
parties between now and when we
undertake future rulemaking on this
topic. We agree that provider shortages
present a challenge to access and the
efficacy of wait time standards, and we
will examine how best to acknowledge
that reality while holding States and
providers to appropriate standards.
Comment: Several commenters
opposed the specific standards listed in
our request for comment. One
encouraged CMS to achieve its access
goals through a focus on payment
adequacy rather than wait times.
Similarly, another requested CMS allow
States to provide verification and
assurances of sufficient access through
other, existing data collection
mechanisms. Another stated wait time
standards that do not account for
differences in provider availability, as in
whether there are sufficient providers in
a geographic area to meet the standards
based on the beneficiary population in
that area, would not achieve the desired
effect of increasing access. One
commenter expressed that a secret
survey process would be duplicative of
existing directory review processes
already undertaken by States and would
also force States to switch vendors from
an existing outside entity performing
the role, and stated CMS should instead
allow States to continue with current
practices that achieve a similar purpose.
Another questioned the data integrity of
a secret survey approach to oversight,
stating there are inherent challenges in
collecting consistent information.
Response: We intend to make every
effort to utilize existing processes and to
mitigate duplication wherever possible
when we propose FFS timeliness
standards in the future. However, we are
exploring proposing these standards
because, in our view, appointment wait
time maximums and secret shopper
surveys may provide for unique and
valuable oversight of access that we may
wish to propose in the future. As stated
187 Health Insurance Marketplace® is a registered
service mark of the US Department of Health &
Human Services.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
previously, in this rule we prioritized a
replacement for an existing rate-based
process, but our evaluation and
enhancement of means to ensure
beneficiary access will be ongoing. We
will utilize lessons learned from the
implementation of timeliness standards
under managed care to inform our
future FFS proposals.
Comment: Some commenters were
unclear as to whether CMS was
proposing to implement the timeliness
standards for fully FFS States as
proposed in the Managed Care proposed
rule. One commenter was concerned
how and when CMS would
communicate to States that these
requirements had taken effect. Another
pointed out specifically that CMS had
included preamble language without
including proposed regulatory text or
burden estimates, which they noted
would be significant. The commenter
was concerned that the public had not
been afforded a meaningful opportunity
for notice and comment.
Response: We apologize for the
confusion experienced by some as to
whether this section of the rule was
intended as a proposed policy. This
discussion in the proposed rule was a
request for comment, not a proposed
policy. We intend to propose these
timeliness standards under FFS in
future rulemaking, affording States and
other interested parties the ability to
examine a complete proposal and
provide comments that we would
consider in a subsequent finalization
decision. We are not finalizing any
timeliness standards for FFS delivery
systems in this final rule.
2. Documentation of Access to Care and
Service Payment Rates (§ 447.203(b))
We proposed to rescind § 447.203(b)
in its entirety and replace it with new
requirements to ensure FFS Medicaid
payment rate adequacy, including a new
process to promote payment rate
transparency. This new proposed
process would require States to publish
their FFS Medicaid payment rates in a
clearly accessible, public location on the
State’s website, as described later in this
section. Then, for certain services,
States would be required to conduct a
comparative payment rate analysis
between the States’ Medicaid payment
rates and Medicare rates or provide a
payment rate disclosure for certain
HCBS that would permit CMS to
develop and publish HCBS payment
benchmark data.
a. Payment Rate Transparency
§ 447.203(b)(1)
In paragraph (b)(1), we proposed to
require the State agency to publish all
PO 00000
Frm 00146
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
Medicaid FFS payment rates on a
website developed and maintained by
the single State agency that is accessible
to the general public. We proposed that
published Medicaid FFS payment rates
would include fee schedule payment
rates made to providers delivering
Medicaid services to Medicaid
beneficiaries through a FFS delivery
system. We also proposed to require that
the website be easily reached from a
hyperlink on the State Medicaid
agency’s website.
Within this payment rate publication,
we proposed that FFS Medicaid
payment rates must be organized in
such a way that a member of the public
can readily determine the amount that
Medicaid would pay for the service and,
in the case of a bundled or similar
payment methodology, identify each
constituent service included within the
rate and how much of the bundled
payment is allocated to each constituent
service under the State’s methodology.
We also proposed that, if the rates vary,
the State must separately identify the
Medicaid FFS payment rates by
population (pediatric and adult),
provider type, and geographical
location, as applicable.
We noted that longstanding legal
requirements to provide effective
communication with individuals with
disabilities and the obligation to take
reasonable steps to provide meaningful
access to individuals with limited
English proficiency also apply to the
State’s website containing Medicaid FFS
payment rate information. Under Title II
of the Americans with Disabilities Act
of 1990, section 504 of the
Rehabilitation Act, section 1557 of the
Affordable Care Act, and implementing
regulations, qualified individuals with
disabilities may not be excluded from
participation in, or denied the benefits
of any programs or activities of the
covered entity, or otherwise be
subjected to discrimination by any
covered entity, on the basis of disability,
and programs must be accessible to
people with disabilities.188 Individuals
with disabilities are entitled to
communication that is as effective as
communication for people without
disabilities, including through the
provision of auxiliary aids and
services.189 Section 1557 of the
Affordable Care Act requires recipients
of Federal financial assistance,
including State Medicaid programs, to
take reasonable steps to provide
188 29 U.S.C. 794; 42 U.S.C. 18116(a); 42 U.S.C.
12132; 28 CFR 35.130(a); 45 CFR 84.4 (a); 45 CFR
92.2(b).
189 28 CFR 35.160; 45 CFR 92.102; see also 45
CFR 84.52(d).
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
meaningful access to their health
programs or activities for individuals
with limited English proficiency, which
may include the provision of
interpreting services and translations
when reasonable.190
We proposed that for States that pay
varying Medicaid FFS payment rates by
population (pediatric and adult),
provider type, and geographical
location, as applicable, those States
would need to separately identify their
Medicaid FFS payment rates in the
payment rate transparency publication
by each grouping or multiple groupings,
when applicable to a State’s program. In
the event rates vary according to these
factors, as later discussed in this final
rule, our intent is that a member of the
public be readily able to determine the
payment amount that will be made,
accounting for all relevant
circumstances. For example, a State that
varies their Medicaid FFS payment rates
by population may pay for a service
identified by code 99202 when provided
to a child at a rate of $110.00 and when
provided to an adult at a rate of $80.00.
Because the Medicaid FFS payment
rates vary based on population, both of
these Medicaid FFS payment rates
would need to be included separately as
Medicaid FFS payment rates for 99202
in the State’s payment rate transparency
publication. As another example, a State
that varies their Medicaid FFS payment
rates by provider type may pay for
99202 when delivered by a physician at
a rate of $50.00, and when delivered by
a nurse practitioner or physician
assistant at a rate of $45.00.
In the proposed rule, we
acknowledged that we are aware that
some State plans include language that
non-physician practitioners (NPPs),
such as a nurse practitioner or physician
assistant, are paid a percentage of the
State’s fee schedule rate. Because the
Medicaid FFS payment rates vary by
provider type, both of the Medicaid FFS
payment rates in both situations (fee
schedule rates of $50.00 and $45.00)
would need to be separately identified
as Medicaid FFS payment rates for
99202 in the State’s payment rate
transparency publication, regardless of
whether the State has individually
specified each amount certain in its
approved payment schedule or has State
plan language specifying the nurse
practitioner or physician assistant rate
as a percentage of the physician rate.
Additionally, for example, a State that
varies their Medicaid FFS payment rates
190 45 CFR 92.101; see also https://www.hhs.gov/
civil-rights/for-providers/laws-regulationsguidance/guidance-federal-financial-assistancetitle-vi/.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
by geographical location may pay for
99202 delivered in a rural area at a rate
of $70, in an urban or non-rural area as
a rate of $60, and in a major
metropolitan area as a rate of $50. We
are also aware that States may vary their
Medicaid FFS payment rates by
geographical location by zip code, by
metropolitan or micropolitan areas, or
other geographical location breakdowns
determined by the State. Because the
Medicaid FFS payment rates vary based
on geographical location, all Medicaid
FFS payment rates based on
geographical location would need to be
included separately as Medicaid FFS
payment rates for 99202 in the State’s
payment rate transparency publication.
For a State that varies its Medicaid
FFS payment rates by any combination
of these groupings, then the payment
rate transparency publication would be
required to reflect these multiple
groupings. For example, the State would
be required to separately identify the
rate for a physician billing 99202
provided to a child in a rural area, the
rate for a nurse practitioner billing
99202 provided to a child in a rural
area, the rate for a physician billing
99202 provided to an adult in a rural
area, the rate for a nurse practitioner
billing 99202 provided to an adult in a
rural area, the rate for a physician
billing 99202 provided to a child in an
urban area, the rate for a nurse
practitioner billing 99202 provided to a
child in an urban area, and so on. We
proposed that this information would be
required to be presented clearly so that
a member of the public can readily
determine the payment rate for a service
that would be paid for each grouping or
combination of groupings (population
(pediatric and adult), provider type, and
geographical location), as applicable.
We acknowledged that States may also
pay a single Statewide rate regardless of
population (pediatric and adult),
provider type, and geographical
location, and as such would only need
to list the single Statewide rate in their
payment rate transparency publication.
We acknowledged that there may be
additional burden associated with our
proposal that the payment rate
transparency publication include a
payment rate breakdown by population
(pediatric and adult), provider type, and
geographical location, as applicable,
when States’ Medicaid FFS payment
rates vary based on these groupings.
Despite the additional burden, we noted
our belief that the additional level of
granularity in the payment rate
transparency publication is important
for ensuring compliance with section
1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act, given State
Medicaid programs rely on multiple
PO 00000
Frm 00147
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40687
provider types to deliver similar
services to Medicaid beneficiaries of all
ages, across multiple Medicaid benefit
categories, throughout each area of each
State.
We further proposed that Medicaid
FFS payment rates published under the
proposed payment rate transparency
requirement would only include fee
schedule payment rates made to
providers delivering Medicaid services
to Medicaid beneficiaries through a FFS
delivery system. To ensure maximum
transparency in the case of a bundled
fee schedule payment rate or rate
determined by a similar payment
methodology where a single payment
rate is used to pay for multiple services,
we proposed that the State must identify
each constituent service included in the
bundled fee schedule payment rate or
rate determined by a similar payment
methodology. We also proposed that the
State must identify how much of the
bundled fee schedule payment rate or
rate determined by a similar payment
methodology is allocated to each
constituent service under the State’s
payment methodology. For example, if a
State’s fee schedule lists a bundled fee
schedule rate that pays for day
treatment under the rehabilitation
benefit and the following services are
included in the day treatment bundle:
community based psychiatric
rehabilitation and support services,
individual therapy, and group therapy,
then the State would need to identify
community based psychiatric
rehabilitation and support services,
individual therapy, and group therapy
separately and each portion of the
bundled fee schedule payment rate for
day treatment that is allocated to
community based psychiatric
rehabilitation and support services,
individual therapy, and group therapy.
We proposed to require States identify
the portion of the bundled fee that is
allocable to each constituent service
included in the bundled fee schedule
payment rate, which would add an
additional level of granularity to the
payment rate transparency publication
to enable a member of the public to
readily be able to determine the
payment amount that would be made
for a service, accounting for all relevant
circumstances, including the payment
rates for each constituent service within
a bundle and as a standalone service.
We also proposed to require that the
website be easily reached from a
hyperlink to ensure transparency of
payment rate information is available to
beneficiaries, providers, CMS, and other
interested parties.
In the proposed rule, we proposed the
initial publication of Medicaid FFS
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
40688
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
payment rates would occur no later than
January 1, 2026, and include approved
Medicaid FFS payment rates in effect as
of that date, January 1, 2026. We
proposed this timeframe to provide
States with at least 2 years from the
possible effective date of the final rule,
if this proposal were finalized, to
comply with the payment rate
transparency requirement. We
explained that the proposed timeframe
would initially set a consistent baseline
for all States to first publish their
payment rate transparency information
and then set a clear schedule for States
to update their payment rates based on
the cadence of the individual States’
payment rate changes.
We noted that the same initial
publication due date for all States to
publish their payment rates would
promote comparability between States’
payment rate transparency publications.
In proposing an initial due date
applicable to all States, we reasoned
that, once States would begin making
updates to their payment rate
transparency publications, there would
be a clear distinction between States
that have recently updated their
payment rates and States that have long
maintained the same payment rates. For
example, say two States initially publish
their payment rates for E/M CPT code
99202 (office or outpatient visit for a
new patient) at $50. One State annually
increases its payment rate by 5 percent
over the next 2 years, and would update
its payment rate transparency
publication accordingly in 2027 with a
payment rate of $52.50, then in 2028
with a payment rate of $55.13, while the
other State’s payment rate for the same
service remains at $50 in 2027 and
2028. The transparency of a State’s
recent payment rates including the date
the payment rates were last updated on
the State Medicaid agency’s website, as
discussed later, as well as the ability to
compare payment rates between States
on accessible and easily reachable
websites, highlights how the proposed
payment rate transparency would help
to ensure that Medicaid payment rate
information is available to beneficiaries,
providers, CMS, and other interested
parties for the purposes of assessing
access to care issues to better ensure
compliance with section 1902(a)(30)(A)
of the Act.
We also proposed that the initial
publication include approved Medicaid
FFS payment rates in effect as of
January 1, 2026. We proposed this
language to narrow the scope of the
publication to CMS-approved payment
rates and methodologies, thereby
excluding any rate changes for which a
SPA or similar amendment request is
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
pending CMS review or approval. SPAs
are submitted throughout the year, can
include retroactive effective dates, and
are subject to a CMS review period that
varies in duration.191 192
As discussed later in this final rule
regarding paragraph (b)(2) and (b)(3), we
encouraged States to use the proposed
payment rate transparency publication
as a source of Medicaid payment rate
data for compliance with the paragraph
(b)(3)(i)(B) proposed comparative
payment rate analysis and paragraph
(b)(3)(ii)(B) proposed payment rate
disclosure requirements. However, we
noted that the comparative payment rate
analysis and payment rate disclosure
requirements would look to rates in
effect one year before the publication of
the required analysis or disclosure. We
include a more in-depth discussion of
the timeframes for publication of the
comparative payment rate analysis and
payment rate disclosure in paragraph
(b)(4) later in this final rule, where we
note that the 1-year shift in timeframe
is necessitated by the timing of when
Medicare publishes their payment rates
in November and the rates taking effect
on January 1, leaving insufficient time
for CMS to publish the code list for
States to use for the comparative
payment rate analysis and for States
develop and publish their comparative
payment rate analysis by January 1. We
noted that the ongoing payment
transparency publication requirements
would allow the public to view readily
available, current Medicaid payment
rates at all times, even if slightly older
Medicaid payment rate information
must be used for comparative payment
rate analyses due to the cadence of
Medicare payment rate changes as well
as the payment rate disclosure. We are
cognizant that the payment rate
disclosure does not depend on the
availability of Medicare payment rates;
however, we proposed to provide States
with the same amount of time to comply
with both the proposed comparative
191 In accordance with 42 CFR 430.20, an
approved SPA can be effective no earlier than the
first day of the calendar quarter in which an
approvable amendment is submitted. For example,
a SPA submitted on September 30th can be
retroactively effective to July 1st.
192 In accordance with 42 CFR 430.16, a SPA will
be considered approved unless CMS, within 90
days after submission, requests additional
information or disapproves the SPA. When
additional information is requested by CMS and the
State has respond to the request, CMS will then
have another 90 days to either approve, disapprove,
and request the State withdraw the SPA or the
State’s response to the request for additional
information. This review period includes two 90day review periods plus additional time when CMS
has requested additional information which can
result is a wide variety of approval timeframes.
PO 00000
Frm 00148
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
payment rate analysis and payment rate
disclosure requirements.
We stated that, if this proposal were
finalized at a time that would not allow
for States to have a period of at least 2
years between the effective date of the
final rule and the proposed January 1,
2026, due date for the initial publication
of Medicaid FFS payment rates, then we
proposed an alternative date of July 1,
2026, for the initial publication of
Medicaid FFS payment rates and for the
initial publication to include approved
Medicaid FFS payment rates as of that
date, July 1, 2026. This shift would
allow more than 2 years from the
effective date of this final rule for States
to comply with the payment rate
transparency requirements.
We proposed to require the that the
single State agency include the date the
payment rates were last updated on the
State Medicaid agency’s website. We
also proposed to require that the single
State agency ensure that Medicaid FFS
payment rates are kept current where
any necessary updates to the State fee
schedules made no later than 1 month
following the date of CMS approval of
the SPA, section 1915(c) HCBS waiver,
or similar amendment revising the
provider payment rate or methodology.
Finally, in paragraph (b)(1), we
proposed that, in the event of a payment
rate change that occurs in accordance
with a previously approved rate
methodology, the State would be
required to update its payment rate
transparency publication no later than 1
month after the effective date of the
most recent update to the payment rate.
This provision is intended to capture
Medicaid FFS payment rate changes
that occur because of previously
approved SPAs containing payment rate
methodologies. For example, if a State
sets its Medicaid payment rates for
Durable Medical Equipment,
Prosthetics, Orthotics and Supplies
(DMEPOS) at a percentage of the most
recent Medicare fee schedule rate, then
the State’s payment rate would change
when Medicare adopts a new fee
schedule rate through the quarterly
publications of the Medicare DMEPOS
fee schedule, unless otherwise specified
in the approved State plan methodology
that the State implements a specific
quarterly publication, for example, the
most recent April Medicare DMEPOS
fee schedule. Therefore, the State’s
Medicaid FFS payment rate
automatically updates when Medicare
publishes a new fee schedule, without
the submission of a SPA because the
State’s methodology pays a percentage
of the most recent State plan-specified
Medicare fee schedule rate. In this
example, the State would need to
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
update its Medicaid FFS payment rates
in the payment rate transparency
publication no later than 1 month after
the effective date of the most recent
update to the Medicare fee schedule
payment rate made applicable under the
approved State plan payment
methodology.
While there is no current Federal
requirement for States to consistently
publish their rates in a publicly
accessible manner, we noted our
awareness that most States already
publish at least some of their payment
rates through FFS rate schedules on
State agency websites. Currently, rate
information may not be easily obtained
from each State’s website in its current
publication form, making it difficult to
understand the amounts that States pay
providers for items and services
furnished to Medicaid beneficiaries and
to compare Medicaid payment rates to
other health care payer rates or across
States. However, through this proposal,
we sought to ensure all States do so in
a format that is publicly accessible and
where all Medicaid FFS payment rates
can be easily located and understood.
The new transparency requirements
under this final rule help to ensure that
interested parties have access to
updated payment rate schedules and
can conduct analyses that would
provide insights into how State
Medicaid payment rates compare to, for
example, Medicare payment rates and
other States’ Medicaid payment rates.
The policy intends to help ensure that
payments are transparent and clearly
understandable to beneficiaries,
providers, CMS, and other interested
parties. We solicited comments on the
proposed requirement for States to
publish their Medicaid FFS payment
rates for all services paid on a fee
schedule, the proposed structure for
Medicaid FFS payment rate
transparency publication on the State’s
website, and the timing of the
publication of and updates to the State’s
Medicaid FFS payment rates for the
proposed payment rate transparency
requirements in § 447.203(b)(1).
We received public comments on
these provisions. The following is a
summary of the comments we received
and our responses.
Comment: Commenters
overwhelmingly supported the
proposed payment rate transparency
provision at § 447.203(b)(1) in its
entirety. A couple of commenters
specifically expressed support for
ensuring the State’s website where the
payment rate transparency is published
is fully accessible and provides
meaningful access for individuals with
limited English proficiency.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
Additionally, a couple of commenters
stated that their State already publishes
their fee schedules as proposed by the
payment rate transparency
requirements.
However, a couple of commenters
expressed opposition to the proposed
payment rate transparency provision in
its entirety. Commenters in opposition
stated the proposed payment rate
transparency requirements would be
administratively burdensome for States
and that the payment rate transparency
publication would not result in a
meaningful access analysis. One
commenter questioned CMS’ authority
to require States to publish their
payment rates because section
1902(a)(30) of the Act does not
explicitly grant CMS this authority.
Response: We thank the commenters
for their support of the proposed
payment rate transparency provision at
§ 447.203(b)(1). We are finalizing the
payment rate transparency provisions
by adding and deleting regulatory
language for clarification, making minor
revisions to the organizational structure,
updating the required timeframe for
compliance and for updating payment
rates after SPA or other payment
authority approval, and incorporating a
technical change to account for States
submitting SPAs with prospective
effective dates. We list and describe the
specific revisions we made to the
regulatory language for the payment rate
transparency provision at
§ 447.203(b)(1) at the end of this section
of responses to comments. The policies
in this final rule allow flexibility that
we believe will allow some States to use
existing fee schedule publications for
compliance, and we expect additional
States will only need minor revisions.
We encourage States that already
publish their fee schedules to review the
final regulatory language and reach out
to CMS with any questions regarding
compliance.
We disagree with the commenters
regarding administrative burden of the
payment rate transparency publication.
As documented in section III. of this
final rule, the FFS provisions, including
the payment rate transparency,
comparative payment rate analysis, and
payment rate disclosure requirements
(§ 447.203(b)(1) through (5)), interested
parties’ advisory group requirements
(§ 447.203(b)(6)), and State analysis
procedures for payment rate reductions
or payment restructuring (§ 447.203(c)),
finalized in this rule are expected to
result in a net burden reduction on
States compared to the previous AMRP
requirements. Additionally, as
addressed in another comment response
generally discussing commenters’
PO 00000
Frm 00149
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40689
concerns about State burden, we have
described numerous flexibilities States
will have for compliance with this final
rule. Specifically for the payment rate
transparency publication, and as
discussed in a later response to
comments, States have flexibility to (1)
organize and format their publication,
so that they can use existing fee
schedule publications for compliance
(assuming all requirements in
§ 447.203(b)(1) are met); (2) utilize
contractors or other third party websites
to publish the payment rate
transparency publication on (however,
we remind States that they are still
requiring to publish the hyperlink to the
website where the publication is located
on the State Medicaid agency’s website
as required in § 447.203(b)(1)(ii) of this
final rule); and (3) for the initial
publication, if necessary historical
information about bundled payment
rates is unavailable to the State, then the
State does not need to include the
bundled payment rate breakdown as
required in § 447.203(b)(1)(iv) of this
final rule (however, we remind States
that upon approval of a SPA that revised
the bundled payment rate, the State will
be required to update the publication to
comply with § 447.203(b)(1)(iv)).
Additionally, we are providing
examples of payment rates that are not
subject to the payment rate transparency
publication and an illustrative example
of a compliant payment rate
transparency (including to meet
accessibility standards) through
subregulatory guidance issued prior to
the effective date of this final rule. We
expect these flexibilities and
clarifications to minimize the State
administrative burden commenters
expressed concern about, which
potentially stemmed from an imprecise
understanding of the Medicaid FFS fee
schedule payment rates that are
required to be published in the payment
rate transparency publication. Finally,
we would expect that States already
have the data for the payment rate
transparency publication readily
available through existing fee schedules,
SPAs, or other internal documentation,
so the work to compile that data into a
format that complies with this final rule
should require minimal effort.
To clarify, the payment rate
transparency publication is not an
analysis requirement, but a transparency
requirement for States to publish their
Medicaid FFS fee schedule payment
rates, as discussed in detail in a later
response to comments in this section.
However, an analysis component is
being finalized in § 447.203(b)(2) and
(3) called the comparative payment rate
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
40690
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
analysis, which we believe will result in
a meaningful access analysis because it
requires States to compare certain of
their Medicaid FFS payment rates to the
Medicare non-facility payment rate as
established in the annual Medicare PFS
final rule for a calendar year. This
access analysis will help States and
CMS to assess compliance with section
1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act where
Medicare payment rates serve as a
benchmark for comparing Medicaid
payment rates to another of the nation’s
large public health coverage programs.
As described in the proposed rule and
in greater detail later in this final rule,
Medicare and Medicaid programs cover
and pay for services provided to
beneficiaries residing in every State and
territory of the United States, Medicare
payment rates are publicly available,
and broad provider acceptance of
Medicare makes Medicare non-facility
payment rates as established on the
Medicare PFS for a calendar year an
available and reliable comparison point
for States to use in the comparative
payment rate analysis.193
We disagree that we do not have the
authority to require States to publish
their payment rates. As discussed in the
proposed rule, payment rate
transparency is a critical component of
assessing compliance with section
1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act, which
requires that State plans assure that
payments are consistent with efficiency,
economy, and quality of care and are
sufficient to enlist enough providers so
that care and services are available
under the plan at least to the extent that
such care and services are available to
the general population in the geographic
area.194 Transparency, particularly the
requirement that States must publicly
publish their payment rates, helps to
ensure that interested parties have basic
information available to them to
understand Medicaid payment levels
and the associated effects of payment
rates on access to care so that they may
raise concerns to State Medicaid
agencies via the various forms of public
process available to interested parties.
As noted in the proposed rule, most
States already published at least some of
their payments through FFS rate
schedule on State agency websites.195
Our efforts finalized in this rule will
help ensure all States publish their
payment rates consistently and
accessibly so interested parties have
fundamental information about payment
rates and can utilize existing public
processes to raise concerns about access.
193 88
FR 27960 at 28011.
FR 27960 at 27967.
195 88 FR 27960 at 28000.
194 88
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
Additionally, the Supreme Court’s
Armstrong decision placed added
importance on CMS’ determinations, as
the responsible Federal agency,
regarding the sufficiency of Medicaid
payment rates. The payment rate
transparency requirements included in
this final rule reflect that statutory
responsibility to ensure compliance
with section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act.
We also note that the previous AMRP
process that was in effect prior to this
final rule established a transparent datadriven process to measure access to care
in States, including oversight of
provider payment rates, actual or
estimated levels of provider payment
available from other payers, and the
percentage comparison of Medicaid
payment rates to other public and
private health insurer payment rates.
This final rule merely streamlines the
approach under the same statutory
authority and shared responsibility that
applied for the previous AMRP process.
We remind States of longstanding,
general requirement for the State to
maintain statistical, fiscal, and other
records necessary for reporting and
accountability under § 431.17(b)(2).
Comment: Some commenters
expressed concerns about the burden
associated with the payment rate
transparency publication. They
specifically cited concern about meeting
strict State-level website accessibility
requirements, extensive changes that
could be needed to existing claims
payment systems (that is, for a State that
does not currently include beneficiary
copayment information on their existing
fee schedules, the State may need to
make change requests of their contractor
to modify their claims payment system
to produce the Medicaid payment
information required in the payment
rate transparency publication to include
the total payment amount a provider
would receive inclusive of beneficiary
cost sharing), conducting research on
when payment rates were last updated,
and monthly monitoring of Medicare
rates to ensure State fee schedule rates
set at a percentage of Medicare are
updated timely.
Response: As described in the
proposed rule, longstanding legal
requirements to provide effective
communication with individuals with
disabilities and the obligation to take
reasonable steps to provide meaningful
access to individuals with limited
English proficiency also apply to the
websites containing Medicaid FFS
payment rate information. These
requirements apply to all State agency,
contractor, or other third-party websites
and any burden associated with meeting
those Federal obligations is not created
PO 00000
Frm 00150
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
by policies finalized in this rule. With
respect to any State-level accessibility
requirements that might exceed Federal
requirements, we refer the commenter to
the State Medicaid agency or other
agency responsible for compliance with
State accessibility requirements for
guidance or technical assistance
concerning State-imposed accessibility
requirements.
Regarding commenters’ concerns that
States would need to change existing
claims payment systems (that is, the
State may need to make change requests
of their contractor to modify their
claims payment system to produce the
Medicaid payment information required
for the payment rate transparency
publication that includes beneficiary
cost sharing in fee schedule amounts),
we want to clarify State claiming and
payment systems, and the output of
these systems, generally are not subject
to the payment rate transparency
publication requirements as the
provision only applies to Medicaid FFS
fee schedule payment rates. We do not
anticipate it would be unduly
burdensome for a State to maintain its
Medicaid FFS fee schedules in an
appropriate format outside of its
claiming and payment systems. States
are not required to publish claims data
or data about actual payments made to
providers under the payment rate
transparency publication provision.
Commenters were concerned about
whether beneficiary cost sharing
information should be included in the
payment rate transparency publication.
To clarify, the payment rates published
under § 447.203(b)(1)(i) must be
inclusive of the payment amount from
the Medicaid agency plus any
applicable coinsurance and deductibles
to the extent that a beneficiary is
expected to be liable for those
payments. By requiring States to publish
the payment amount the Medicaid
agency would pay and any beneficiary
cost sharing as a single payment
amount, we focus on the total Medicaid
payment amount a provider would
expect to receive for furnishing a given
service to a Medicaid beneficiary and
which is therefore most relevant to a
provider’s decision to accept the
Medicaid payment rate, thereby
furthering our section 1902(a)(30)(A)
access goals to ensure payment rates are
sufficient to enlist enough providers so
that care and services are available
under the plan at least to the extent that
such care and services are available to
the general population in the geographic
area. Furthermore, this representation of
payment rates is consistent with the
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
comparative payment rate analysis,196
which minimizes burden on States by
requiring the Medicaid FFS fee schedule
payment rate be displayed in the same
way for both publications. Additionally,
we recognize that beneficiary cost
sharing amounts can vary depending on
the State Medicaid program and the
status of the Medicaid enrollee.
Therefore, we expect States with costsharing requirements could experience
additional burden in complying with
the payment rate transparency
publication, if States were required to
remove variable cost sharing amount
from the Medicaid FFS fee schedule
payment rate for each service subject to
the publication.
Regarding commenters’ concerns
about conducting research on when
payment rates were last updated, we
want to clarify that the requirement to
include the date the rates were last
updated refers to a date for the website
publication. In other words, the date
should provide assurance that the rates
on the website are current as of the
specified date. We do not expect, nor
did we propose, States to examine
historical records to find the dates every
rate was last updated. However, if a
State wishes to include that information
for all or a subset of published rates, it
can.
Regarding commenters’ concerns
about monthly monitoring of Medicare
rates to ensure the payment rate
transparency publication is up to date,
firstly, to clarify, only States that set
their Medicaid payment rates at a
percentage of a Medicare payment rate
would be affected by this consideration.
For those States that set their Medicaid
payments rates as a percentage of a
Medicare payment rate, we expect the
State to already be monitoring changes
in Medicare rates in accordance with
their approved payment methodology
and §§ 430.10 and 430.20 and part 447,
subpart B, which require States to pay
the approved State plan payment rates
in their State plan effective on or after
the approved effective date of the State
plan provision. Therefore, if a State’s
approved State plan pays a rate based
on the most current Medicare payment
rate for a particular service, then
payment of any rate outside of the
approved State plan methodology
would result in a State plan compliance
issue. We expect that States with such
payment methodologies routinely are
monitoring Medicare payment rates to
ensure that their Medicaid payment
rates are updated according to the
approved methodology. Medicare fee
schedule updates are well documented
196 88
197 https://www.cms.gov/medicare/payment/feeschedules.
FR 27960 at 28013.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
and accessible to States on cms.gov,
even in the event of a change to a
Medicare payment rate outside the
usual cadence of Medicare updates for
that rate (an off-cycle update) and
keeping up with Medicare fee schedule
updates is critical for ensuring a State’s
payment rate transparency publication
is accurate and updated timely.197
Comment: A few commenters
requested clarification on the format of
the payment rate transparency
publication, particularly if Medicaid
FFS payment rates should be organized
by CPT code.
Response: In this final rule, in regard
to the payment rate transparency
provision, we are not requiring States to
publish their payment rates by CPT/
HCPCS code, which is required in the
comparative payment rate analysis
discussed later in this section. However,
we encourage States to consider
organizing their publication by CPT/
HCPCS code, due to the common use of
CPT/HCPCS for billing for medical
services across the country, including in
State Medicaid programs. The goal of
the payment rate transparency
publication is to ensure all States
publish their Medicaid FFS fee schedule
payment rates in a format that is
publicly accessible and where all these
rates can be easily located and
understood. States can determine what
organizational and formatting structure
is most suitable for organizing rates in
a manner that will be easily understood
by providers and beneficiaries.
Comment: A couple of commenters
requested clarification on the
requirement that States separately
identify Medicaid FFS fee schedule
payment rates by population,
specifically inquiring if ‘‘population’’
referred to beneficiary demographics or
waiver/program population.
Response: As indicated in the
regulation text, population refers to
beneficiary demographics, specifically
adult and pediatric populations. Under
this final rule, States will be required to
publish their Medicaid FFS fee schedule
payment rates separately identified by
rates paid for the adult population and
the pediatric population, if the rates
differ in the State. As stated in the
proposed rule, we acknowledge that a
State may pay a single Statewide rate
regardless of population, provider type,
or geographical location, and such a
State would only need to list the single
Statewide rate in its payment rate
transparency publication. We also
acknowledge that States define pediatric
differently (such as, 18 years old or
Jkt 262001
PO 00000
Frm 00151
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40691
younger, 19 years old or younger, and
21 years old or younger) and we
encourage States to disclose the age
range the State’s Medicaid program uses
in the payment rate transparency
publication for transparency purposes.
Comment: Some commenters
requested clarification regarding which
payments are subject to the payment
rate transparency requirements outlined
in paragraph (b)(1). Multiple
commenters questioned if the following
payment methodologies would be
subject to the payment rate transparency
requirements under paragraph (b)(1):
manually priced items (for example,
physician administered drugs),
provider-specific rates (for example,
PPS rates typically paid to FQHCs or allinclusive per-visit rates typically paid to
clinics (we assume commenters meant
clinics as defined in § 440.90)), per diem
rates, cost and cost-based payment
methodologies (including interim
payments) typically paid to facilitybased providers, and negotiated rates.
Additionally, many commenters
questioned if disproportionate share
hospital (DSH) payments, FFS
supplemental payments, or managed
care State directed payments (SDPs)
would be included in the payment rate
transparency publication. A couple of
commenters stated that only requiring
States to publish base payment rates
would not provide a member of the
public with the ability to readily
determine the amount Medicaid would
pay for a service because excluding DSH
payments and supplemental payments
is an inaccurate, incomplete, and
misleading representation of a Medicaid
provider’s actual, overall payments from
the Medicaid program.
Response: In § 447.203(b)(1) of the
proposed rule, we proposed that ‘‘[t]h
State agency is required to publish all
Medicaid fee-for-service payment rates
. . . . Published Medicaid [FFS]
payment rates include fee schedule
payment rates made to providers
delivering Medicaid services to
Medicaid beneficiaries through a [FFS]
delivery system.’’ We acknowledge that
this language was not clear that we
intended to require the publication
requirement to include only Medicaid
FFS fee schedule payment rates.
Accordingly, in this final rule, we have
made some revisions to the proposed
regulatory language in § 447.203(b)(1) to
change the organizational structure of
(b)(1) by adding romanettes and clarify
that only Medicaid FFS fee schedule
payment rates are required to be
published in the payment rate
transparency publication. Throughout
(b)(1), references to ‘‘fee schedule
payment’’ were replaced with
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
40692
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
‘‘Medicaid fee-for-service fee schedule
payment rates’’ for clarity and
consistency. Therefore, in (b)(1) we state
that, the State agency is required to
publish all Medicaid FFS fee schedule
payment rates. Further, in
§ 447.203(b)(1)(i), we specify that, ‘‘for
purposes of paragraph (b)(1), the
payment rates that the State agency is
required to publish are Medicaid fee-forservice fee schedule payment rates
made to providers delivering Medicaid
services to Medicaid beneficiaries
through a fee-for-service delivery
system.’’
We would like to clarify which
Medicaid FFS fee schedule payment
rates are subject to the payment rate
transparency provisions in § 447.203(b).
Medicaid FFS fee schedule payment
rates are payment amounts made to a
provider, known in advance of a
provider delivering a service to a
beneficiary by reference to a fee
schedule. A fee schedule is a list, table,
or similar presentation of covered
services and associated payment
amounts that are generally determined
at the State’s discretion. We also
consider a State to use a fee schedule
when the State has not yet organized its
payment amounts into such a
straightforward list, table, or similar
presentation, but under the State’s
approved payment methodology, the
State determines payment rates based
on the application of a mathematical
formula to another fee schedule or other
reference rate stated as an amount
certain. In other words, a fee schedule
that utilizes a formula, but has not yet
been organized into a list, table, or
similar presentation of covered services
and associated payment amounts, is
included in the scope of fee schedules
subject to the payment rate transparency
provisions. For example, a Medicaid
payment methodology that provides for
payment at 80 percent of the
corresponding Medicare PFS rate would
constitute a Medicaid fee schedule
payment methodology because it
applies a formula to a fee schedule to
produce a fee schedule payment rate
that is known in advance of a provider
delivering the service. This formula
reflects that the State’s fee schedule
payment methodology starts with the
Medicare PFS fee schedule, then
reduces the fee schedule amount to 80
percent of the Medicare PFS amount to
arrive at the Medicaid fee schedule
payment rate. States that utilize the
previously described formula-based
methodology that may not currently
publish these payment rates on a fee
schedule will be required to publish the
actual payment amounts as determined
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
by their formula in the payment rate
transparency publication under this
final rule. This final rule focuses on
ensuring transparency of Medicaid FFS
fee schedule payment rates so that they
are ‘‘. . . organized in such a way that
a member of the public can readily
determine the amount that Medicaid
would pay for the service,’’ as stated in
the proposed regulatory language in
§ 447.203(b)(1), which we are finalizing
in § 447.203(b)(1)(iii) of this final rule
with a slight modification to replace
‘‘the service’’ with ‘‘a given service.’’
Merely publishing the mathematical
formula that a member of the public
would need to use to calculate each
payment rate the State has set for a
particular service would not meet this
requirement of this final rule. To
summarize, fee schedule payment
methodologies that utilize a formula
applied to another fee schedule are
included in the scope of fee schedules,
and the payment rate transparency
publication must reflect the actual fee
schedule payment rate amounts.
Certain bundled payment rates (as
discussed later in this comment
response) and PPS rates for inpatient
hospital, outpatient hospital, and
nursing facility services are considered
fee schedules payment rates subject to
the payment rate transparency
publication because these payment
amounts are also known in advance of
a provider delivering a service to a
beneficiary and are stated (or can
readily be stated) as a list, table, or
similar presentation.
We recognize that PPS rates are
utilized in different contexts in
Medicaid to pay for various services
(including for services of FQHCs, RHCs,
inpatient hospitals, outpatient hospitals,
inpatient psychiatric facilities, inpatient
rehabilitation facilities, long-term care
hospitals, and nursing facilities) and can
be calculated differently, depending on
the service. PPS rates in Medicaid used
to pay for services provided by inpatient
hospitals, outpatient hospitals, inpatient
psychiatric facilities, inpatient
rehabilitation facilities, long-term care
hospitals, and nursing facilities would
be included. In the context of payment
rates to hospitals and nursing facilities,
the term ‘‘encounter rate’’ or ‘‘per diem
rate’’ can also be used to describe the
PPS rate received by these providers.
This term generally describes a daily
payment rate that is paid to a hospital
or nursing facility during a patient’s
admission to a hospital or nursing
facility. In this situation, the PPS
payment methodology typically makes
payment based on a predetermined,
fixed amount. States often use or model
their payment methodologies after
PO 00000
Frm 00152
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
Medicare’s prospective payment
systems to pay for outpatient hospital,
inpatient hospital, and nursing facility
services. In these situations, under
Medicare’s prospective payment
systems, Medicare typically pays
providers for a particular service an
amount derived based on the services
expected to be received during a visit or
course of treatment (for more complex
conditions). For example, under the
Medicare IPPS, payment is made based
on the Diagnosis Related Group (DRG)
to which the patient discharge is
assigned. States also often use other
grouping systems, such as Medicare’s
PDPM for nursing facilities, Ambulatory
Payment Classifications under
Medicare’s hospital outpatient PPS for
hospital outpatient services items, or
Medicare’s End Stage Renal Disease PPS
for facilities or hospital-based providers
that furnish dialysis services and
supplies. These PPS rates for inpatient
hospital, outpatient hospital, and
nursing facility services are paid to most
hospitals and nursing facilities and are
typically known in advance of a health
care provider delivering a service to a
beneficiary. Therefore, these types of
PPS rates would be subject to the
payment rate transparency publication
in this final rule.
In contrast, FQHCs and RHCs are paid
PPS rates that are developed under a
methodology that is statutorily
mandated under section 1902(bb) of the
Act, which generally requires that
FQHCs and RHCs receive a per visit, or
encounter, rate that is provider-specific
and must be based on a health center’s
unique cost and visit data.198 This
requirement creates a payment rate floor
where FQHC and RHCs cannot be paid
less than the PPS rate developed under
this statutorily mandated methodology.
Because this statutory payment floor is
set by Congress, FQHC and RHC
payment rates are uniquely situated in
a manner that does not exist for other
Medicaid payment rates under State
discretion.199 Although States must
comply with section 1902(a)(30)(A) of
the Act, this statutory provision does
198 In the context of payment rates to FQHCs and
RHCs, the terms ‘‘encounter rate,’’ ‘‘per visit rate,’’
and ‘‘provider-specific rate’’ can also be used to
describe the PPS payment rate.
199 We acknowledge that Medicaid payment rates
for hospice services also have a statutorily
mandated payment floor: the Medicaid hospice
payment rates are calculated based on the annual
hospice rates established under Medicare. These
rates are authorized by section 1814(i)(1)(C)(ii) of
the Act, which also provides for an annual increase
in payment rates for hospice care services.
However, we do not believe these rates would be
burdensome on States to include because they are
paid to all Medicaid participating hospice providers
and are therefore not carving them out of this
requirement.
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
not set a specific payment rate floor.
Therefore, because of the unique
provider-specific payment floor
mandated by Congress for FQHCs and
RHCs, we believe access concerns
related to payment rates for FQHCs and
RHCs are attenuated and as such, we are
not including FQHC and RHC PPS rates
in the payment rate transparency
publication requirement. Furthermore,
because the FQHC and RHC PPS rates
are provider-specific based on an
individual provider’s costs and scope of
service and required to be paid by States
as a floor set by Congress, we generally
do not believe that publication of the
individual providers’ payment rates as
part of the payment rate transparency
provision finalized in this rule would
not result in actionable information for
CMS to consider in ensuring
compliance with section 1902(a)(30)(A)
of the Act as intended through this final
rule at this time.
In addition, if we were to require
States to also publish FQHC and RHC
PPS rates, we would expect a significant
increase in burden on States in meeting
this requirement. FQHC and RHC PPS
rates are unique to each FQHC and RHC
in a State (rather than a single fee
schedule rate that Medicaid would pay
for a given service to any provider in a
State) and, therefore, publicizing the
FQHC and RHC rates would represent a
sharp increase in States’ efforts for rates
that are less concerning to CMS due to
the statutory payment floor in section
1902(bb) of the Act. We do not believe
the increase in burden is justifiable
given our aim to balance Federal and
State administrative burden with our
shared obligation to ensure compliance
with section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act
with this final rule. Finally, and as
discussed in detail in an earlier
response to comments in this section,
like all State plan services for which the
State proposes a rate reduction or
restructuring in circumstances where
the changes could result in reduced
access, FQHC and RHC services are
subject to the access analyses in
§ 447.203(c) for proposed rate
reductions and restructuring.
Certain FFS VBP payment
methodologies are also fee schedule
payment methodologies, even if the
exact dollar amount that a particular
provider will receive for a given service
is not known in advance because of the
need to adjust for metric-based
performance. In such a case, a State
might have an approved FFS VBP
payment methodology in the State plan
that includes a 2 percent withhold of
the fee schedule payment amount and
the potential for an additional 3 percent
bonus to the provider based on the
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
provider’s performance for the year on
certain quality measures. Assuming the
State’s payment methodology starts with
a base payment of 80 percent of the
Medicare PFS payment amount, the
provider’s minimum payment for the
service would be .98 * (PFS * .80), and
the maximum payment (achieved
through a retrospective true-up payment
based on final quality performance for
the year) would be 1.03 * (PFS * .80).
The provider’s minimum and maximum
possible payment amounts are known in
advance (2 percent less than the
Medicaid fee schedule amount, and 3
percent more, respectively) and are
based on the application of a formula to
a fee schedule. We also consider this
type of FFS VBP arrangement to
constitute a fee schedule payment
methodology, because although the
State does not know in advance the final
payment amount a given provider will
receive for a particular service (since the
provider’s quality performance is not
known in advance), the minimum
payment amount is calculable in
advance based on the application of a
mathematical formula to a fee schedule
amount. We expect the State to use the
minimum payment amount for purposes
of the requirements of § 447.203(b),
because this is the amount that a
provider is assured to receive for
furnishing the service. At State option,
the State could also include information
on the maximum payment amount the
provider might receive under the FFS
VBP payment methodology.
We would also like to clarify what
payments are not subject to the payment
rate transparency publication provision.
Payment rates that are not subject to the
transparency provisions include those
where the minimum fee schedule
payment is not known in advance of a
provider delivering a service to a
beneficiary because certain variables
required for the payment calculation are
unknown until after the provider has
delivered the service. For example, costbased and reconciled cost payment
methodologies (including those that
involve interim payments) are not
subject to the payment rate transparency
provisions because actual cost is
unknown until the end of the provider’s
reporting period. As another example,
FFS supplemental payment
methodologies are not subject to the
payment rate transparency publication
provision because these methodologies
often utilize variables, such as claims
volume or number of qualifying
providers, for dividing up a predetermined payment pool, and actual
supplemental payment amounts are
PO 00000
Frm 00153
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40693
unknown until the end of the provider’s
(or providers’) reporting period.
While a relatively simple FFS VBP
payment methodology (such as the one
discussed earlier in this response, with
a bonus and withhold percentage added
to or subtracted from a fee schedule rate
based on provider performance) is
considered to result in a fee schedule
payment rate subject to the payment rate
publication requirement, we
acknowledge that some States already
utilize more complex FFS VBP payment
methodologies (including episodes of
care 200 and integrated care models 201)
that utilize quality and cost measures to
determine the provider’s unique
payment amount. Providers who
participate in one of these complex VBP
payment arrangements generally report
quality and cost data to the State at the
end of the provider’s reporting period
and then the State uses that data to
determine the provider’s payment
amount after the provider has furnished
services. Excluding complex VBP
payment methodologies from the
payment rate transparency publication
balances burden on States to publish the
required information with the ability of
interested parties to understand key
Medicaid payment levels so that they
may raise concerns to State Medicaid
agencies. If we were to require States to
publish payment rates determined by
complex FFS VBP payment
methodologies, it would be burdensome
on States, as these payment rates are
200 We consider episodes of care to be a complex
VBP because the payment methodology determines
the total payment by comparing the provider’s cost
of care for an episode to the State determined
thresholds for how much the State expects a
provider to spend on an episode. The provider’s
cost of care is an unknown variable that can be
higher, the same, or lower than the State’s threshold
and will vary from provider to provider and episode
to episode. Therefore, the unknown amount of a
provider’s cost of care for an episode relative to the
State’s threshold affects the actual payment the
provider will receive for delivering a service,
creating a situation where the State is unable to
reasonably know a provider’s payment in advance.
201 We consider integrated care models to be a
complex VBP because the payment methodologies
used in these models, for example, shared savings
methodologies, determine the total payment by
comparing the provider’s cost of care to the State
determined total cost of care benchmark for how
much the State expects a provider to spend. The
provider’s cost of care is an unknown variable that
can be higher, the same, or lower than the State’s
threshold and will vary from provider to provider.
Additionally, States can apply risk and gain-sharing
arrangements that decreases or increases provider’s
payment rate based on their performance in meeting
specific quality goals. Therefore, the unknown
amount of a provider’s cost of care relative to the
State’s total cost of care benchmark and additional
decreases or increases to payment rates based on
performance meeting quality goals affects the actual
payment the provider will receive for delivering a
service, creating a situation where the State is
unable to reasonably know a provider’s payment in
advance.
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
40694
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
unique to the provider and are
determined using variables (the
provider’s quality performance and cost
of furnishing services) that are unknown
until after a provider’s reporting period
has ended. As these measures are
generally unknown until after the
provider’s reporting period has ended,
the State does not know a provider’s
payment in advance. Therefore,
complex VBP payment methodologies
as previously described are not fee
schedule payment methodologies
within the meaning of this final rule
that are subject to the payment rate
transparency provision.
We also recognize that an advanced
payment methodology, as described in
SMDL 20–004, could utilize fee
schedule payments within the meaning
of this final rule.202 For example, a State
could calculate an advanced payment of
$10,000 for a provider that is expected
to furnish 1,000 services and each
service is paid at a fee schedule
payment rate of $10. The advanced
payment amount was originally
determined by a fee schedule payment
rate, which is known in advance of a
provider delivering a service to a
beneficiary, and therefore these rates
would appear to be covered by this
requirement. However, there are also
features of certain advanced payment
methodologies that could place them
outside the scope of this requirement.
For example, an advanced payment
methodology that permits States to
include risk adjustments and quality
performance adjustments to the
advanced payment amount, and/or
requires the State to perform a
reconciliation to the actual number of
claims, could mean that the Medicaid
payment amount that the provider could
expect to receive could not be known in
advance. At the time of publication of
this final rule, there are no approved
SPAs that utilize an advanced payment
methodology as discussed in SMDL 20–
004, so we are unable to state
definitively whether any advanced
payment methodology that may be used
in FFS Medicaid pursuant to a future
SPA would be subject to the payment
rate transparency publication
requirement. Without implementation
experience of advanced payment
methodologies, we will review future
advanced payment methodologies on a
case-by-case basis to determine if the
methodology uses a fee schedule
payment methodology within the
meaning of this final rule. We encourage
States that propose advanced payment
methodology after finalization of this
202 https://www.medicaid.gov/sites/default/files/
2020-09/smd20004.pdf.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
rule to reach out to CMS for technical
assistance on determining whether
advanced payment amounts are subject
to the payment rate transparency
publication requirements.
We interpret the commenter’s
reference to ‘‘manually priced items’’ to
mean a provider payment rate that the
State determines after a service or item
has been delivered to a beneficiary and
the provider has billed for it. For
example, certain durable medical
equipment items that are infrequently
furnished to beneficiaries may be paid
at the manufacturer’s suggested retail
price minus a percentage. This is
described in the approved State plan,
and when such an item is furnished to
a beneficiary, the State must manually
adjust the amount paid for the claim to
equal the manufacturer’s suggested
retail price minus the percentage listed
in the State plan, rather than pay a
particular Medicaid FFS fee schedule
payment rate. Because these services
and items are infrequently furnished
and States manually price each service
and item as they are delivered to the
beneficiary, we understand that it
would be impractical and burdensome
on States to maintain current lists of the
manufacturer’s suggested retail price for
all potential items or services a
beneficiary might require and a provider
may bill for, and that States often source
these items and services from multiple
manufacturers. Therefore, for the
purposes of the payment rate
transparency publication, we consider
manually priced payment
methodologies that utilize the
manufacturer’s suggested retail price to
result in a payment amount that is not
known in advance of a provider
delivering a service or item to a
beneficiary, and thus not to be a fee
schedule payment methodology subject
to the payment rate transparency
publication requirements.
We interpret the commenter’s
reference to ‘‘negotiated rates’’ to mean
a provider payment rate where the
individual provider’s final payment rate
is agreed upon through negotiation with
the State Medicaid agency. For example,
negotiated rates may be offered by a
State when a particular service has very
low utilization, a custom item is
required (for example, certain
wheelchairs), or the State does not have
information needed to establish a
payment rate under an approved State
plan payment methodology (for
example, information from other payers,
such as Medicare or the State’s
employee health insurance on how
much they pay for the service or item)
to establish a fixed payment rate. In
these instances, generally, the State has
PO 00000
Frm 00154
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
not developed a rate prior to service
delivery; payment for the service or item
on a case-by-case-basis in the
circumstances does not constitute a fee
schedule payment methodology.
Additionally, DSH payments and
supplemental payments are not subject
to the payment rate transparency
publication requirement because they
do not fall into the description of
Medicaid FFS fee schedule payment
rates for purposes of the payment rate
transparency provision in
§ 447.203(b)(1). Finally, SDPs in
Medicaid managed care delivery
systems are outside the scope of
§ 447.203(b)(1)(i), which is specific to
the FFS delivery system.
We invite States to reach out to CMS
for technical assistance if they have a
FFS payment rate or methodology that
may not clearly align with the previous
descriptions and examples of Medicaid
FFS fee schedule payment rates that are
subject to the payment rate transparency
publication provision, and other
payment methodologies that are not.
We disagree with commenters that
that only requiring States to publish
base payment rates would not provide a
member of the public with the ability to
readily determine the amount Medicaid
would pay for a service. To clarify, we
did not intend for the payment rate
transparency publication to reflect the
entire universe of payments a provider
may receive. Setting the scope of the
publication to Medicaid FFS fee
schedule payment rates, as previously
discussed in this response to
commenters, balances burden on States
to publish the required information with
the ability of interested parties to
understand key Medicaid payment
levels so that they may raise concerns to
State Medicaid agencies. If we were to
require States to also include DSH
payments and supplemental payments
along with the Medicaid FFS fee
schedule payment rates, it would
significantly increase burden on States
and might not result in the public
clearly understanding the amount that
any given provider could expect to
receive for furnishing the service to a
Medicaid beneficiary, as DSH payments
and supplemental payments are
generally paid on a provider-level basis
rather than a service-level basis, and not
all providers of a given service will
qualify for these payments.
Comment: One commenter requested
clarification regarding whether payment
rates paid to the direct support
workforce are subject to the payment
rate transparency publication
requirements. Another commenter
questioned if self-directed service
payment rates should be published
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
separately from agency model personal
care services.
Response: We interpret the
commenter’s reference to ‘‘the direct
support workforce’’ to generally mean
the direct support workers or direct
support professionals that provide
hands-on and in-person Medicaid
services to beneficiaries. To the extent a
State’s payment rates to direct support
workforce utilize Medicaid FFS fee
schedule payment rates within the
meaning of this final rule, as discussed
in detail in an earlier response to
comments in this section, those
payment rates would be subject to
payment rate transparency requirements
under § 447.203(b)(1).
Regarding self-directed service
payment rates being separately
published from agency model personal
care services, we assume the commenter
was referring to self-directed models
with service budget and agencyprovider models authorized under 42
CFR 441.545. We would like to clarify
that, to the extent a State pays an
agency-provider a Medicaid FFS fee
schedule payment rate as discussed in
detail in an earlier response to
comments in this section, then those
payment rates are subject to the
payment rate transparency requirements
in § 447.203(b)(1). Self-directed models
with service budget 203 are not subject to
the payment rate transparency
publication requirement in
§ 447.203(b)(1). As previously stated,
payment rates that are not subject to the
payment rate transparency publication
requirement include those that that are
not known in advance of a provider
delivering a service to a beneficiary.
Under the self-directed model with
service budget, the State only sets the
beneficiary’s overall service budget, and
the beneficiary negotiates the payment
rate with the direct support worker;
therefore, the State is not setting the
payment rate and does not know in
advance what rate the direct service
worker will be paid for furnishing
services to the beneficiary. This does
not constitute a fee schedule payment
methodology for purposes of the
payment rate transparency publication
requirement, and as such these types of
payment rates are excluded from the
publication requirement. We further
203 Self-directed services are paid for using an
individualized budget. States are required to
describe the method for calculating the dollar
values of individual budgets based on reliable costs
and service utilization, define a process for making
adjustments to the budget when changes in
participants’ person-centered service plans occur,
and define a procedure to evaluate participants’
expenditures. https://www.medicaid.gov/medicaid/
long-term-services-supports/self-directed-services/
index.html.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
clarify that we do not expect States to
list each beneficiary’s individual selfdirected service budget in the payment
rate transparency publication.
Comment: One commenter expressed
concern that requiring States to publish
all Medicaid FFS payment rates online
could have unintended consequences,
such as beneficiary confusion about
how much their copayment amount
would be if it was included on the
State’s fee schedule which typically lists
the amount allowed for the service, as
well as State burden from increased
documentation on the State’s website.
The commenter recommended CMS
permit States to provide easily
accessible links where the fee schedules
are located to copayment information
already available to providers and
clients in a clear and concise manner.
Response: We understand
commenters’ concerns about the effects
of the payment rate transparency
publication in practice. Regarding
commenters’ concerns about beneficiary
confusion, we want to clarify that the
payment rates published under
§ 447.203(b)(1)(i) must be inclusive of
the payment amount from the Medicaid
agency plus any applicable coinsurance
and deductibles to the extent that a
beneficiary is expected to be liable for
those payments, as discussed earlier in
a response to comments this section. We
encourage States, as part of transparency
efforts, to include in the payment rate
transparency publication a link to the
page on the website where existing
beneficiary cost sharing information is
located so beneficiaries and other
interested parties will be able to easily
access this existing source of
information about beneficiary cost
sharing obligations. Additionally,
regarding commenters’ concerns about
burden from increased documentation
on the State’s website, as documented in
section III. of this final rule, the FFS
provisions, including the payment rate
transparency, comparative payment rate
analysis, and payment rate disclosure
requirements (§ 447.203(b)(1) through
(5)), interested parties’ advisory group
requirements (§ 447.203(b)(6)), and
State analysis procedures for payment
rate reductions or payment restructuring
(§ 447.203(c)), are expected to result in
a net burden reduction on States
compared to the previous AMRP
requirements. With the finalization of
the provisions in this rule, we aim to
balance Federal and State
administrative burden with our shared
obligation to ensure compliance with
section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act (and
our obligation to oversee State
compliance with the same). As
previously stated, States also have the
PO 00000
Frm 00155
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40695
flexibility to utilize contractors or other
third-party websites to publish the
payment rate transparency publication
on (however, we remind States that they
are still requiring to publish the
hyperlink to the website where the
publication is located on the State
Medicaid agency’s website as required
in § 447.203(b)(1)(ii) of this final rule).
Comment: One commenter requested
clarification on the 1-month update
requirement for the payment rate
transparency requirement. The
commenter stated that there are
instances where SPAs are submitted
with prospective effective dates or
where States may face a delayed
operationalization in their claims
system that includes approved rate
changes. The commenter noted that, in
both instances under the proposed
regulatory language for the payment rate
transparency requirement, a State would
be expected to publish rates that are not
yet in effect or not currently being paid
to providers. The commenter suggested
revising the regulatory language to
require States update rate changes in the
payment rate transparency publication
within 1 month of CMS approval of a
SPA, the effective date of payment rate
changes, or the date system changes are
operationalized by a State, whichever
date occurs latest. Additionally, one
commenter suggested extending the
requirement for updates to the payment
rate transparency publication to 2
months instead of 1 month as proposed.
Response: In response to comments,
we have revised the regulatory language
to account for SPAs with prospective
effective dates. As finalized in this rule,
§ 447.203(b)(1)(vi) now states, ‘‘[t]he
agency is required to include the date
the payment rates were last updated on
the State Medicaid agency’s website and
to ensure these data are kept current
where any necessary update must be
made no later than 1 month following
the latter of the date of CMS approval
of the State plan amendment, section
1915(c) HCBS waiver amendment, or
similar amendment revising the
provider payment rate or methodology,
or the effective date of the approved
amendment.’’ We are adding this
language as a technical change to
account for States submitting SPAs with
prospective effective dates as the
proposed regulatory language would
have required State to publish payment
rates in the payment rate transparency
publication that were approved, but not
yet effective. We thank the commenter
for pointing out this possibility, and we
believe this change will ensure a State’s
payment rate transparency publication
is as current as possible, and accurate
once published.
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
40696
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
However, we have not included
regulatory language to account for
system changes with a delayed
operationalization date as suggested by
this commenter. In accordance with
§§ 430.10 and 430.20 and part 447,
subpart B, States are required to pay the
approved State plan payment rates in
their State plan effective on or after the
approved effective date. Therefore,
payment of any rate outside of the
approved State plan would result in a
State plan compliance issue, and noncompliance is not a circumstance we
would accommodate in regulations. We
have also not extended the timeframe
from 1 month to 2 months for States to
update their payment rate transparency
publications after a payment rate
change. States are aware that a payment
rate change is forthcoming and its
requested effective date when they
submit a SPA, and as such, we believe
1 month is more than sufficient to
update the payment rate transparency
publication. We invite States to reach
out to CMS for technical guidance
regarding any technological or
operational limitations that may impact
a State’s compliance with the payment
rate transparency publication
requirement.
Comment: We received a few
comments expressing concern about
which bundled payment rates would be
subject to the payment rate transparency
publication as well as concern about the
burden imposed on States from
operational challenges to break down
bundled payment rates into constituent
services and rates allocated to each
constituent service in the bundle. These
commenters also requested clarification
on how States will be required to
publish bundled payment rates in the
payment rate transparency publication.
Commenters requested clarification
regarding the following instances where
bundled payment rates are used by
States: team-based services, providerspecific rates (for example, PPS rates
typically paid for FQHC and RHC
services or an encounter rate typically
paid to clinics for clinic services (we
assume commenters meant clinic
services as defined in § 440.90) and
CCBHC services), and per diem rates
paid for facility or institutional (that is,
hospital and nursing facility) services.
These commenters stated that this
requirement would be burdensome,
operationally difficult, or not feasible
because individual rates for constituent
services within the bundle do not exist
or bundled rates are established on a
provider-specific basis using providerspecific historical cost data and
inflationary adjustments. These
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
commenters requested further
clarification regarding a definition of
constituent services, how States should
unbundle rates and services from a
bundled rate, as well as additional
explanation of the value CMS believes
this requirement will contribute to the
Medicaid program. They encouraged
CMS to explicitly exempt facility and
institutional providers from the
payment rate transparency publication
requirements.
Response: Bundled payments are a
versatile payment methodology that
States can utilize within and across
numerous Medicaid benefit categories.
Bundled payments are generally
developed using State-specific
assumptions about the type, quantity,
and intensity of services included in the
bundle, and generally are based on the
payment rates for the individual
constituent services when they are
furnished outside the bundled rate.
In this final rule, we clarify bundled
payment rates that are subject to the
requirement in the payment rate
transparency publication provision that
States identify how much of the
bundled fee schedule payment rate is
allocated to each constituent service
under the State’s payment methodology.
In the case of a bundled payment
methodology, the State must publish the
Medicaid FFS bundled payment rate
and, where the bundled payment rate is
based on fee schedule payment rates for
each constituent service, must identify
each constituent service included
within the rate and how much of the
bundled payment rate is allocated to
each constituent service under the
State’s methodology.
To explain further, the bundled
payment rates that are subject to this
requirement are State-developed
payment rates that provide a single
payment rate for furnishing a bundle of
services, including multiple units of
service, multiple services within a
single benefit category, or multiple
services across multiple benefit
categories. In any of these instances,
multiple providers and provider types
could contribute to a bundle of services,
which is what we interpret the comment
about team-based services to mean.
Bundled payment rates that are based
on fee schedule payment rates for each
constituent service are subject to the
requirement to identify each constituent
service included within the rate and
how much of the bundled payment rate
is allocated to each constituent service
under the State’s methodology.
States can develop bundled payment
rates for multiple units of a single
service, for example, by setting a daily
rate for up to 4 hours of personal care
PO 00000
Frm 00156
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
services a day that includes multiple 15minute units of personal care services
for which there is a fee schedule
payment rate. States can also develop a
bundled payment rate for multiple
services within a single benefit category.
For example, within the rehabilitative
services Medicaid benefit, a daily rate
for assertive community treatment,
which can include constituent services
set at fee schedule payment rates for
assessments, care coordination, crisis
intervention, therapy, and medication
management, is considered a bundled
rate. Finally, States can also develop a
bundled payment rate for one or more
services across multiple benefit
categories. For example, a daily rate that
includes constituent services set at fee
schedule payment rates for up to 2
hours of personal care services, up to 2
hours of targeted case management
services, and 1 hour of physical therapy
services is considered a bundled rate.
As all of these examples describe
bundled payment rates comprised of
constituent services that are based on
fee schedule payment rates, they are
subject to the bundled rate breakdown
requirement in the payment rate
transparency provision. Later in this
response, we will discuss how States are
required to allocate the bundled
payment rate to each constituent service
under the State’s methodology.
Within a bundled payment rate, a
constituent service is a Medicaidcovered service included in a bundle of
multiple units of service and/or
multiple services. These constituent
services within the bundled payment
rate must correspond to service
descriptions in section 3.1–A of the
State plan, which describes covered
services. When initially adding a
bundled payment rate to the State plan,
States are required to separately list out
each constituent service included in the
bundle to ensure that non-covered
services are not included in the bundled
rate.204 For example, a bundle for
assertive community treatment covered
under the rehabilitative services State
plan benefit should not include room
and board, as rehabilitative services are
not covered in institutional settings.
Therefore, ‘‘room and board’’ is a noncovered service under the rehabilitative
services benefit and would not be a
constituent service in the bundled
payment rate.
We also clarify payment rates that pay
for various services and could be
considered a bundled payment rate that
204 https://www.medicaid.gov/sites/default/files/
state-resource-center/downloads/spa-and-1915waiver-processing/bundled-rate-paymentmethodology.pdf.
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
are not subject to the requirement in the
payment rate transparency publication
provision. For purposes of the
requirement of this final rule, this
bundled payment rate breakdown
requirement only applies to bundled
payment rates that are based on fee
schedule payment rates for each
constituent service. Payment rate
methodologies that do not utilize fee
schedule payment rates for each
constituent service to create a single
State-developed bundled payment rate
to pay for a combination of services,
including multiple units of the same
service, multiple services within a
single benefit category, or multiple
services across multiple benefit
categories, are not subject to the
bundled rate breakdown requirement in
the payment rate transparency
publication provision. For example,
prospective payment system rates that
States use to pay for services provided
in inpatient hospitals, outpatient
hospitals, inpatient psychiatric
facilities, inpatient rehabilitation
facilities, long-term care hospitals, and
nursing facilities are not subject to the
bundled rate breakdown requirement,
because these PPS rates (as previously
mentioned, in the context of payment
rates to hospitals and nursing facilities,
the terms ‘‘encounter rate’’ or ‘‘per diem
rate’’ can also be used to describe the
prospective payment system rate
received by these providers) do not
utilize fee schedule payment rates to
create a single payment rate to pay for
a bundle of services. These PPS
payment methodologies generally pay
providers an amount derived based on
a formula that accounts for the resources
required to treat a patient, such as the
patient’s condition (that is, illness
severity or clinical diagnosis), the
provider’s operating costs (that is, labor,
supplies, insurance), and adjustment
factors (that is, cost of living, case-mix,
State determined factors), such as when
an individual has an inpatient hospital
stay for knee replacement surgery.
While these PPS rates generally are
subject to the payment rate transparency
publication requirement in this final
rule because they are typically known in
advance of a provider delivering a
service to a beneficiary, they are not
subject to the breakdown requirement to
the extent they do not utilize
exclusively fee schedule payment rates
to create a single payment rate for the
bundle of services. Therefore, if we were
to require States to also break down PPS
rates, it would significantly increase
burden on States and might not result in
the public clearly understanding the
amount that any given provider could
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
expect to receive for the furnishing the
services to a Medicaid beneficiary, as
PPS rates are generally not determined
based only on payment rates for
constituent services within the meaning
of this final rule. We believe a fee
schedule payment rate for each
constituent service is needed to enable
the State to perform a straightforward
and reliable allocation of the bundled
payment rate to each included service.
Therefore, because PPS rates are not
determined based on fee schedule
payment rates for each constituent
service within the meaning of this final
rule, States do not need to identify each
constituent service included within a
PPS rate and how much of the PPS rate
is allocated to each constituent service
under the State’s methodology. In
response to the comment asking about
FQHC and RHC PPS rates, please see the
discussion earlier in this section
explaining why these rates are carved
out of this requirement due to the
statutory floor for rates and
consideration of potentially undue
burden on States.
Regarding whether payment rates for
CCBHC services are subject to the
bundled payment rate breakdown
requirement, PPS rates for CCBHC
demonstration services authorized
under section 223 of the Protecting
Access to Medicare Act of 2014 are not
subject to the payment rate transparency
publication requirement, including the
bundled rate breakdown requirement,
because these payments rates are
outside of Medicaid FFS State plan
authority. For CCBHC services covered
and paid for under Medicaid FFS State
plan authority, States that use Medicaid
FFS fee schedule rates within the
meaning of this rule to pay for CCBHC
services must include these payment
rates in the payment rate transparency
provisions. Additionally, Medicaid FFS
fee schedule rates that are bundled
payment rates within the meaning of
this rule paid to clinics (as defined in
§ 440.90), are subject to the bundled rate
breakdown requirement.
Based on this, if a State determines a
bundled payment rate is subject to the
bundled payment rate breakdown
requirement, we will now discuss how
to allocate the bundled payment rate to
each constituent service under the
State’s methodology. States have
flexibility in determining the
assumptions regarding the type,
quantity, intensity, and price of the
constituent services that they factor into
the initial development of a bundled
rate.205 When States establish the
205 For new bundled rates, CMS requests
information on how States developed the rates,
PO 00000
Frm 00157
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40697
payment rate for a bundle, States may
include the current fee schedule
payment rates for the constituent
services to determine the total bundled
rate. For example, a State might pay a
$480 bundled rate for assertive
community treatment, based on the
application of a small discount factor to
the fee schedule payment rates for all of
the constituent services (assessments,
care coordination, crisis intervention,
therapy, and medication management).
In this scenario, the State’s fee schedule
payment rates might be $50 for an
assessment, $30 for care coordination,
$200 for crisis intervention, $200 for 2
hours of individual therapy, and $20 for
medication management. Separately, the
State would pay a total of $500 for all
of these services; however, the State
might determine that a provider likely
would realize efficiencies from
providing the services together in a
coordinated fashion, and so might
reduce the bundled payment rate by 4
percent to account for these expected
savings. Thus, the State’s bundled
payment rate would be $480, which
would be allocated as follows: $480 *
($50/$500) = $48 for assessment; $480 *
($30/$500) = $28.80 for care
coordination; $480 * ($200/$500) = $192
for crisis intervention; $480 * ($200/
$500) = $192 for 2 hours of individual
therapy; and $480 * ($20/$500) = $19.20
for medication management. In this
example, the State would identify each
of these constituent services and use
these allocation amounts to meet the
requirements finalized in paragraph
(b)(1)(iv).
In response to commenters’ request
for an explanation of the value CMS
believes the bundled payment rate
breakdown requirement will contribute
to the Medicaid program, our rationale
is the same as for this payment rate
publication requirement generally.
Bundled rates are not inherently
transparent, and in order to achieve the
same goal of transparency in service of
ensuring adequate access to covered
care and services, it is important for
interested parties to know what is
covered in a bundled rate and how
much of the bundle is attributable to
each constituent service, which
provides information relevant to
whether the bundled rate is adequate in
relation to its constituent services and
enables comparison to how the
constituent services are paid when
including: assumptions regarding the type,
quantity, intensity, and price of the component
services typically provided to support the economy
and efficiency of the rate. https://
www.medicaid.gov/sites/default/files/stateresource-center/downloads/spa-and-1915-waiverprocessing/bundled-rate-payment-methodology.pdf.
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
40698
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
furnished outside the bundle. Our
primary goal with the payment rate
transparency publication is ensuring
Medicaid payment rates are publicly
available in such a way that a member
of the public can readily determine the
amount that Medicaid would pay for a
given service. Transparency helps to
ensure that interested parties have basic
information available to them to
understand Medicaid payment levels
and the associated effects of payment
rates on access to care so that they may
raise concerns to State Medicaid
agencies via the various forms of public
process available to interested parties.
In response to commenters’ concerns
that the bundled payment rate
breakdown provision would be
burdensome, operationally difficult, or
not feasible because individual rates for
constituent services within the bundle
do not exist, we are providing guidance
on how States are expected to address
these circumstances. We acknowledge
there are instances where States may
have bundled payment rates that have
been in place for many years, even
decades, and the State currently does
not have available information about
how the payment rates were developed.
Therefore, the State may lack historical
data to perform a reasonable allocation
of the bundled payment rate to
constituent services. We also recognize
there are instances where States
utilizing bundled payment rates do not
permit providers to bill for the
constituent services separately. In this
instance, States may no longer regularly
update the fee schedule amounts for the
constituent services included in the
bundled payment rate because the
bundle is primarily how the services are
delivered and billed by providers.
Therefore, the current fee schedule
payment rates for the constituent
services do not reflect how the State
would pay for the constituent services
outside of the bundle.
States have flexibility in determining
how best to allocate the bundled
payment rate to each constituent service
in these scenarios. Should a State not
have certain historical data about the
bundled payment rate available, we are
offering a few solutions for the State to
consider. If a State can reasonably
calculate missing rates, we expect them
to do so for the purposes of completing
the bundled payment rate allocation.
For example, a State may have a
bundled payment rate that includes five
constituent services, which the State
knows was calculated by summing the
undiscounted fee schedule payment
rates for each of the five constituent
services. Today, the State may be unable
to locate the fee schedule amount for
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
one of the constituent services. In this
instance, we would expect the State to
reasonably deduce the allocated rate for
the fifth constituent service by summing
the four known rates for the four
constituent services and subtracting that
amount from the total bundled payment
rate. If a State cannot calculate a missing
portion of a bundled payment rate, they
may use current fee schedule rates. For
example, a State may have a bundled
payment rate, but it does not have
historical information about how the
bundled payment rate was originally
calculated from the constituent services.
In this instance, we would expect the
State to use the current fee schedule
rates for the constituent services
included in the bundle to allocate the
bundled payment rate for the payment
rate transparency publication.
Regardless of the approach States utilize
to allocate the bundled payment rate to
the constituent services, we expect
States to include a description of how
the bundled payment rate was allocated
in the payment rate transparency
publication to ensure that a member of
the public can readily determine the
amount that Medicaid would pay for the
bundled service and understand how
the State has accomplished a reasonable
allocation of this amount to each
constituent service included in the
bundle, as required in
§ 447.203(b)(1)(iii).
In situations where the State cannot
reasonably deduce how to allocate the
bundled payment rate to the constituent
services included in the bundle or the
current fee schedule rates for the
constituent services do not serve as a
reasonable proxy to determine the
allocation of the bundled payment rate
to its constituent services, we invite
States to reach out to us for technical
assistance on how to comply with
§ 447.203(b)(1)(iv) on a case-by-case
basis. We expect this guidance to
provide States with relief from burden
associated with allocating the bundled
payment rate to constituent services
when historical information is
unavailable, including in certain
situations raised by commenters where
individual historical rates for
constituent services within the bundle
are no longer available. Regardless of
how a State chooses to address a lack of
data related to a bundled payment rate,
we expect the State to update the
payment rate transparency publication
with an accurate allocation information
following the effective date or CMS
approval date of a SPA, a section
1915(c) HCBS waiver amendment, or
similar amendment amending the
bundled payment rate in question in
PO 00000
Frm 00158
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
accordance with § 447.203(b)(1)(vi).
These processes require the State to
provide information about the fee
schedule payment rates for the
constituent services included in the
bundle, therefore making available the
necessary data to perform an allocation
for the payment rate transparency
publication.
We also invite States to contact CMS
for technical assistance if they have a
bundled payment methodology that
does not clearly align with the previous
descriptions and examples of bundled
payment rates that are and are not
subject to the bundled payment rate
breakdown requirement. We also
encourage States to review our existing
Bundled Rate Payment Methodology
resource on Medicaid.gov for more
information about bundled payment
methodologies.206
Regarding commenters’ concerns
about burden on States to break down
institutional services bundled payment
rates into constituent services in the
payment rate transparency publication,
we understand these concerns were
primarily about operational challenges
States would face if rates paid to
hospitals and nursing facilities, as well
as cost-based rates generally, were
subject to this provision. As previously
discussed in this response, PPS rates
that are not determined based on fee
schedule payment rates for each
constituent service within the meaning
of this final rule are not subject to the
bundled rate breakdown requirement in
§ 447.203(b)(1)(iv); however, PPS rates
generally are considered Medicaid FFS
fee schedule payment rates in the
context of this rule and are required to
be published in the payment rate
transparency publication under
§ 447.203(b)(1) as finalized in this rule.
Also previously discussed in this
response, PPS rates for FQHCs and
RHCs are not subject to the bundled rate
breakdown requirement in
§ 447.203(b)(1)(iv) because these
payment rates are not subject to the
payment rate transparency publication
requirement under § 447.203(b)(1).
In this final rule, we are revising the
regulatory language to make clear what
bundled payment rates are subject to the
constituent service allocation, or
breakdown, requirement. We proposed
in § 447.203(b)(1) to provide that the
State must, ‘‘. . . in the case of a
bundled or similar payment
methodology, identify each constituent
service included within the rate and
206 https://www.medicaid.gov/sites/default/files/
state-resource-center/downloads/spa-and-1915waiver-processing/bundled-rate-paymentmethodology.pdf.
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
how much of the bundled payment rate
is allocated to each constituent service
under the State’s methodology.’’ We are
finalizing § 447.203(b)(1)(iv) to state, ‘‘In
the case of a bundled payment
methodology, the State must publish the
Medicaid fee-for-service bundled
payment rate and, where the bundled
payment rate is based on fee schedule
payment rates for each constituent
service, must identify each constituent
service included within the rate and
how much of the bundled payment is
allocated to each constituent service
under the State’s methodology.’’ (new
language identified in bold). We also
deleted ‘‘or similar’’ from ‘‘In the case
of a bundled payment methodology
. . .’’ because we determined that this
language is unnecessary and potentially
confusing; instead, in this final rule, we
are clarifying specifically which
bundled payment rates are subject to the
requirement to identify each constituent
service included within the rate and
how much of the bundled payment is
allocated to each constituent service
under the State’s methodology.
Comment: Several commenters
offered suggestions and
recommendations for the proposed
payment rate transparency
requirements. These suggestions and
recommendations include linking
together FFS and managed care plan
web pages for full transparency,
allowing State contractors to publish the
State’s payment rates, requiring the
published format of the payment rates
be ready for data analysis, requiring
States to publish information about
payment rate models and methodologies
(that is, payment rate development
information, potentially including cost
factors and assumptions underlying a
rate, such as wages, employee-related
expenses, program-related expenses,
and general and administrative
expenses) as well as the frequency and
processes for rate reviews, and requiring
States publish additional granular data,
particularly for dental services (for
example, utilization, median payment
rates, and service frequency).
Response: We appreciate commenters’
suggestions and recommendations for
the payment rate transparency
publication requirement. While the
transparency provisions in the Managed
Care final rule (as published elsewhere
in this Federal Register) and this final
rule share a similar goal, we are not
incorporating the suggestion to require
States to link together FFS and managed
care plan web pages for full
transparency because there is often no
relationship between FFS Medicaid
payment rates and managed care plan
provider rates, as the rates are
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
determined through different processes,
subject to different Federal
requirements, and States, managed care
plans, and CMS assess access to care
differently for FFS and managed care.
Therefore, we believe that requiring
States link their FFS payment rate
transparency publication websites with
managed care plan web pages would not
provide beneficiaries, providers, CMS,
and other interested parties with
relevant payment information for the
purposes of assessing access to care
issues to better ensure compliance of
FFS payment rates with section
1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act.
As discussed in an earlier response to
comments in this section, we have
revised the regulatory language in
§ 447.203(b)(1) from what we originally
proposed to permit States the flexibility
to continue to utilize contractors and
other third parties for developing and
publishing their fee schedules on behalf
of the State. Specifically, in
§ 447.203(b)(1), we deleted the language
requiring that the website where
Medicaid fee-for-service fee schedule
payment rates be published be
‘‘developed and maintained by the
single State agency.’’ As finalized,
§ 447.203(b)(1) requires the State ‘‘. . .
publish all Medicaid fee-for-service fee
schedule payment rates on a website
that is accessible to the general public.’’
We continue to require that ‘‘The
website where the State agency
publishes its Medicaid fee-for-service
payment rates must be easily reached
from a hyperlink on the State Medicaid
agency’s website.’’ in § 447.203(b)(1)(ii).
We are not incorporating the
suggestion to require the format of the
payment rate transparency publication
be ready for any particular form of data
analysis. Our primary goal with the
payment rate transparency publication
is ensuring Medicaid payment rates are
publicly available in such a way that a
member of the public can readily
determine the amount that Medicaid
would pay for a given service.
Transparency helps to ensure that
interested parties have basic
information available to them to
understand Medicaid payment levels
and the associated effects of payment
rates on access to care so that they may
raise concerns to State Medicaid
agencies via the various forms of public
process available to interested parties.
Transparency will provide us and other
interested parties with information
necessary that is not currently available
at all or not available in a clear and
accessible format for us to ensure the
payment rates for consistency with
efficiency, economy, and quality of care
and are sufficient to enlist enough
PO 00000
Frm 00159
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40699
providers so that care and services are
available under the plan at least to the
extent that such care and services are
available to the general population in
the geographic area. The payment rate
transparency publication is the first step
in ensuring payment rate data is
transparent, then the comparative
payment rate analysis is the next step in
analyzing the payment rate data relative
to Medicare as a benchmark.
Additionally, given the requirements
that the payment rate transparency
publications be publicly available, clear,
and accessible, we anticipate that
various interested parties will be able to
adapt the published information
manually or through technological
means so that it is suited to any analysis
they wish to perform.
We are not incorporating the
suggestion to require States to publish
information about payment rate models
and methodologies (that is, payment
rate development information,
potentially including cost factors and
assumptions underlying a rate, such as
wages, employee-related expenses,
program-related expenses, and general
and administrative expenses), the
frequency and processes for rate
reviews, or additional granular data,
particularly for dental services (for
example, utilization, median payment
rates, and service frequency), because
we want our initial focus to be on
establishing the new payment rate
transparency publication, comparative
payment rate analysis, and payment rate
disclosure requirements, providing
States with support during the
compliance period, and ensuring these
data are available to beneficiaries,
providers, CMS, and other interested
parties for the purposes of assessing
access to care issues. While the payment
rate transparency publication does not
require additional granular data outside
of payment rate variations by
population (pediatric and adult),
provider type, and geographical
location, we would like to note that
utilization in the form of the number of
Medicaid-paid claims and the number
of Medicaid enrolled beneficiaries who
received a service is required to be
included in the comparative payment
rate analysis and payment rate
disclosure; however, these requirements
do not include dental services. We
acknowledge that the commenters’
suggestions would add relevant and
beneficial context to the payment rate
information required to be published by
States in this final rule. Given that our
work to better ensure access in the
Medicaid program is ongoing, we intend
to gain implementation experience with
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
40700
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
this final rule, and we will consider the
recommendations provided on the
proposed rule to help inform any future
rulemaking in this area, as appropriate.
While we are not adopting all of these
suggestions and recommendations, we
note that States have the flexibility to
add the elements described to their
payment rate transparency publications
if they so choose.
We believe that there are minimal
qualities that the website containing the
payment rate transparency publication
necessarily must include, such as being
able to function quickly and as an
average user would expect; requiring
minimal, logical navigation steps; taking
reasonable steps to provide meaningful
access to individuals with limited
English proficiency; and ensuring
accessibility for persons with
disabilities in accordance with section
504 of the Rehabilitation Act and Title
II of the ADA. An example of this
includes a single web page clearly
listing the names of the State’s
published fee schedules (such as
Physician Fee Schedule, Rehabilitation
Services Fee Schedule, etc.)) as links
that transport the user to the relevant
State fee schedule file, which file
should be in a commonly accessible file
format that generally can be viewed
within a web browser without requiring
the user to download a file for viewing
in separate software. In this example,
there is no unnecessary burden
(including requiring payment (paywall))
creation of an account and/or password
to view the web page, or need to install
additional software to view the files) on
the individual to trying to view the
published fee schedules. We invite
States to reach out to CMS for technical
guidance regarding compliance with the
payment rate transparency publication
requirement. We also encourage States
to review the subregulatory guidance,
which includes an example of what a
compliant payment rate transparency
publication might look like, that we will
issue prior to the effective date of this
final rule.
Comment: A few commenters
suggested narrowing the scope of the
payment rate transparency requirement.
Commenters recommended narrowing
the scope by requiring publication of
payment rate transparency information
only about a representative subset of
services, a State’s most common
provider types and covered services, or
the same CMS-published list of E/M
codes that we proposed for the
comparative payment rate analysis
requirement. A subset of these
commenters suggested that, once States
have acclimated to the requirements of
payment rate transparency, then CMS
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
could expand the requirement gradually
to include all Medicaid FFS payment
rates, to ease burden on States.
Response: We appreciate the
commenters’ suggestions on narrowing
the scope of the payment rate
transparency requirement; however, we
are not changing the scope in this final
rule. As previously discussed in detail
in an earlier response to comments in
this section, for purposes of the
payment rate transparency provision in
§ 447.203(b)(1), Medicaid FFS fee
schedule payment rates are FFS
payment amounts made to a provider,
and known in advance of a provider
delivering a service to a beneficiary by
reference to a fee schedule. While we
understand the broad scope of included
rates will require some work for many
States to implement, we believe the time
between the effective date of this final
rule and the applicability date of July 1,
2026, for the first publication of
payment rate transparency information
is sufficient for these requirements.
Given that our work to better ensure
access in the Medicaid program is
ongoing, we intend to gain
implementation experience with this
final rule, and we will consider the
recommendations provided on the
proposed rule to help inform any future
rulemaking in this area, as appropriate.
Comment: One commenter suggested
requiring States identify an additional
level of payment rate variation within
the population (pediatric and adult)
where, within the pediatric population,
Medicaid and CHIP pay different rates,
which should be disclosed separately in
the payment rate transparency
publication.
Response: We appreciate the
commenter’s suggestion; however, we
are not including a requirement that
States break down payment rates to
include separate Medicaid and CHIP
payment rate information within the
pediatric population payment rate
reporting. Regulations applicable to
CHIP under 42 CFR part 457 and
relevant guidance are beyond the scope
of this rulemaking. After obtaining
implementation experience with these
new policies, we will consider
proposing to require States to identify
additional levels of payment rate
variations in the Medicaid FFS payment
rate transparency publication through
future rulemaking.
Comment: One commenter suggested
applying the payment rate transparency
requirements to all Medicaid HCBS
programs.
Response: To the extent a State’s
Medicaid HCBS program utilizes
Medicaid FFS fee schedule payment
rates within the meaning of this final
PO 00000
Frm 00160
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
rule, as discussed in detail earlier in this
section, those payment rates would be
subject to payment rate transparency
publication requirements described in
§ 447.203(b)(1). Additionally, we are
finalizing a similar provision to the
Medicaid FFS fee schedule payment
rate transparency requirement for HCBS
direct care worker compensation
elsewhere in this final rule. The HCBS
Payment Adequacy and Reporting
requirements in this final rule require
that States report annually, in the
aggregate for each service, on the
percent of payments for homemaker,
home health aide, personal care, and
habilitation services that are spent on
compensation for direct care workers,
and separately report on payments for
such services when they are selfdirected and facility-based.
Comment: One commenter suggested
collecting provider-level data on all
payments, not just fee schedule
payment rates, as well as the source(s)
of non-Federal share for payments, to
determine net Medicaid payments (total
Medicaid provider payments received
minus the provider’s contributions to
the non-Federal share through
mechanisms including provider-related
donations, health care-related taxes,
intergovernmental transfers, and
certified public expenditures) to each
provider.
Response: Existing UPL and the
supplemental payment reporting
requirements under section 1903(bb) of
the Act, as established by Division CC,
Title II, Section 202 of the Consolidated
Appropriations Act, 2021 (CAA) (Pub L.
116–260),) already require States to
submit provider-level payment data for
certain services to CMS. Therefore, we
are not incorporating the suggestion to
collect provider-level data on all
payments because this would be
duplicative of existing requirements and
because that is not the intention of the
payment rate transparency publication
requirement. While we do collect
information about the non-Federal share
through SPA reviews, regulatory
requirements regarding collection of
non-Federal share data are beyond the
scope of this rulemaking.
Comment: A couple of commenters
stated that dually eligible beneficiaries
and their providers face unique issues
when accessing and delivering
Medicaid services (such as beneficiaries
facing worse outcomes and having
complex needs that require providers to
coordinate and deliver specialized care)
and requested CMS include additional
provisions in the payment rate
transparency publication requirements
specifically for this group. One
commenter suggested CMS require the
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
payment rate transparency publication,
comparative payment rate analysis, and
payment rate disclosure address the
experience of people who are dualeligible and include factors related to
Medicare coverage. Another commenter
suggested requiring that the payment
rates be disaggregated for the purposes
of comparing providers serving dually
eligible beneficiaries from those serving
Medicare-only or Medicaid-only
beneficiaries to ensure differences in
access to care and payment rates are
documented. The commenter also
recommended the payment rate
transparency publication identify when
Medicaid is the primary or secondary
payer in the context of a State’s lesserof payment policies (that is, for dually
eligible Qualified Medicare
Beneficiaries, States are obligated to pay
Medicare providers for deductibles and
co-insurance after Medicare has paid;
however, States limit those payments to
the lesser of the Medicaid rate for the
service or the Medicare co-insurance
amount).
Response: We appreciate the
commenters’ concern for and
suggestions on how we might evaluate
access to care for dually eligible
beneficiaries. We are not incorporating
the suggestion to require the payment
rate transparency publication,
comparative payment rate analysis, and
payment rate disclosure address the
experience of people who are dualeligible and include factors related to
Medicare coverage because these
provisions focus on requiring States to
publish and analyze quantitative data
(such as, payment rates, claims volume,
beneficiary counts) to assess access to
care, rather than qualitive data (such as,
surveys on beneficiary experience). We
are also not incorporating the suggestion
to identify when Medicaid is the
primary or secondary payer in the
context of a State’s lesser-of payment
policies in the payment rate
transparency publication because we
remain focused on the transparency of
States’ payment rates, rather than States’
payment policies, as a method of
assessing consistency with section
1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act. Additionally,
we are not incorporating the suggestion
to require States disaggregate their
Medicaid FFS fee schedule payment
rates for providers serving dually
eligible beneficiaries from those serving
Medicare-only or Medicaid-only
beneficiaries because we want our
initial focus to be on establishing the
new payment rate transparency,
comparative payment rate analysis, and
payment rate disclosure requirements,
providing States with support during
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
the compliance period, and ensuring the
data required under this final rule are to
beneficiaries, providers, CMS, and other
interested parties for the purpose of
assessing access to care issues. We
believe that payment rate breakdowns
by population (pediatric and adult),
provider type, and geographical location
will provide a sufficient amount of
transparency to ensure that interested
parties have basic information available
to them to understand Medicaid
payment levels and the associated
effects of payment rates on access to
care so that they may raise concerns to
State Medicaid agencies via the various
forms of public processes available to
interested parties.
Monitoring access to care is an
ongoing priority of the agency and we
will continue to work with States and
other interested parties as we seek to
expand access monitoring in the future,
including potentially through future
rulemaking. However, we remain
focused on maintaining a balance in
Federal and State administrative burden
with our shared obligation to ensure
compliance with section 1902(a)(30)(A)
of the Act (and our obligation to oversee
State compliance with the same).
Comment: A couple of commenters
recommended that the payment rate
transparency requirements under
§ 447.203(b) be applied to payment rates
for services delivered to beneficiaries
through managed care to ensure
managed care plan rates are published
publicly.
Response: While we appreciate the
value in transparency of provider
payment rates in managed care delivery
systems, regulations applicable to
managed care under 42 CFR parts 438
and 457 are beyond the scope of this
rulemaking.
Comment: One commenter requested
CMS work with States to correct
deficient payment rates once identified
by the transparency requirements.
Response: To clarify, the provisions in
this final rule do not require States to
change their provider payment rates.
The goal of the payment rate
transparency publication is to ensure all
States publish their Medicaid FFS fee
schedule payment rates in a format that
is publicly accessible and where all
Medicaid FFS fee schedule payment
rates can be easily located and
understood.
Transparency, particularly the
requirement that States must publicly
publish their Medicaid FFS fee schedule
payment rates, helps to ensure that
interested parties have basic
information available to them to
understand Medicaid payment levels
and the associated effects of payment
PO 00000
Frm 00161
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40701
rates on access to care so that they may
raise concerns to State Medicaid
agencies via the various forms of public
process available to interested parties.
We will utilize the information in the
payment rate transparency publication
during SPA reviews and other situations
when States are proposing provider
payment rate changes for services
included in the publication and when
the public process in § 447.204 is used
to raise access to care issues related to
possible deficient payment rates for
services included in the publication.
After consideration of public
comments, we are finalizing all
provisions under § 447.203(b)(1) as
proposed, apart from the following
changes:
• Updated the organizational
structure of (b)(1) to add romanettes.
• Added clarifying language to the
proposed language stating what
Medicaid FFS payment rates need to be
published.
++ In paragraph (b)(1), the proposed
language was revised from ‘‘The State
agency is required to publish all
Medicaid fee-for-service payment rates
. . .’’ to finalize the language as ‘‘The
State agency is required to publish all
Medicaid fee-for-service fee schedule
payment rates . . .’’ (new language
identified in bold)
++ In paragraph (b)(1)(i), the
proposed language was revised from
‘‘Published Medicaid fee-for-service
payment rates include fee schedule
payment rates . . .’’ to finalize the
language as ‘‘For purposes of paragraph
(b)(1), the payment rates that the State
agency is required to publish are
Medicaid fee-for-service payment rates
. . .’’ (new language identified in bold)
• Deleted the proposed language
specifying that the payment rate
transparency must be developed and
maintained on the State Medicaid
agency’s website. The proposed
language was revised from ‘‘The State
agency is required to publish all
Medicaid fee-for-service payment rates
on a website developed and maintained
by the single State agency that is
accessible to the general public’’ to
finalize the language as ‘‘The State
agency is required to publish all
Medicaid fee-for-service payment rates
on a website that is accessible to the
general public.’’ in paragraph (b)(1).
• Revised the proposed language
about a member of the public being able
to readily determine the payment
amount for a service from ‘‘Medicaid
fee-for-service payment rates must be
organized in such a way that a member
of the public can readily determine the
amount that Medicaid would pay for the
service’’ to finalize the language as
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
40702
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
‘‘Medicaid fee-for-service payment rates
must be organized in such a way that a
member of the public can readily
determine the amount that Medicaid
would pay for a given service.’’ in
paragraph (b)(1)(iii). (new language
identified in bold)
• Revised the proposed language
about bundled payment rates from ‘‘. . .
in the case of a bundled or similar
payment methodology, identify each
constituent service included within the
rate and how much of the bundled
payment is allocated to each constituent
service under the State’s methodology’’
to:
++ Delete ‘‘or similar’’ from ‘‘In the
case of a bundled or similar payment
methodology . . .’’
++ Add ‘‘the State must publish the
Medicaid fee-for-service bundled
payment rate and, where the bundled
payment rate is based on fee schedule
payment rates for each constituent
service, must . . .’’
The language is finalized as ‘‘In the
case of a bundled payment
methodology, the State must publish the
Medicaid fee-for-service bundled
payment rate and, where the bundled
payment rate is based on fee schedule
payment rates for each constituent
service, must identify each constituent
service included within the rate and
how much of the bundled payment is
allocated to each constituent service
under the State’s methodology.’’ in
paragraph (b)(1)(iv). (new language
identified in bold)
• Revised the applicability date for
this section from the proposed January
1, 2026, to require that the initial
publication of the Medicaid FFS
payment rates shall occur no later than
July 1, 2026, and include approved
Medicaid FFS payment rates in effect as
of July 1, 2026, in paragraph (b)(1)(vi).
• Revised the proposed language
about updating the publication after
SPA approval from ‘‘The agency is
required to include the date the
payment rates were last updated on the
State Medicaid agency’s website and to
ensure these data are kept current where
any necessary update must be made no
later than 1 month following the date of
CMS approval of the State plan
amendment, section 1915(c) HCBS
waiver amendment, or similar
amendment revising the provider
payment rate or methodology.’’ to
finalize the language as ‘‘The agency is
required to include the date the
payment rates were last updated on the
State Medicaid agency’s website and to
ensure these data are kept current,
where any necessary update must be
made no later than 1 month following
the latter of the date of CMS approval
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
of the State plan amendment, section
1915(c) HCBS waiver amendment, or
similar amendment revising the
provider payment rate or methodology,
or the effective date of the approved
amendment.’’ in paragraph (b)(1)(vi).
(new language identified in bold)
b. Comparative Payment Rate Analysis
and Payment Rate Disclosure
§ 447.203(b)(2) Through (5)
In paragraph (b)(2), we proposed to
require States to develop and publish a
comparative payment rate analysis of
Medicaid payment rates for certain
specified services, and a payment rate
disclosure for certain HCBS. We
specified the categories of services that
States would be required to include in
a comparative payment rate analysis
and payment rate disclosure of
Medicaid payment rates. Specifically,
we proposed that for each of the
categories of services in paragraphs
(b)(2)(i) through (iii), each State agency
would be required to develop and
publish a comparative payment rate
analysis of Medicaid payment rates as
specified in proposed § 447.203(b)(3).
We also proposed that for each of the
categories of services in paragraph
(b)(2)(iv), each State agency would be
required to develop and publish a
payment rate disclosure of Medicaid
payment rates as specified in proposed
§ 447.203(b)(3). We proposed for both
the comparative payment rate analysis
and payment rate disclosure that, if the
rates vary, the State must separately
identify the payment rates by
population (pediatric and adult),
provider type, and geographical
location, as applicable. The categories of
services listed in paragraph (b)(2)
include: primary care services;
obstetrical and gynecological services;
outpatient mental health and substance
use disorder services; and personal care,
home health aide, and homemaker
services, as specified in § 440.180(b)(2)
through (4), provided by individual
providers and providers employed by an
agency.
In paragraph (b)(2), we proposed to
require States separately identify the
payment rates in the comparative
payment rate analysis and payment rate
disclosure, if the rates vary, by
population (pediatric and adult),
provider type, and geographical
location, as applicable. These proposed
breakdowns of the Medicaid payment
rates, similar to how we proposed
payment rates would be broken down in
the payment rate transparency
publication under proposed
§ 447.203(b)(1), would apply to all
proposed categories of services listed in
paragraph (b)(2): primary care services,
PO 00000
Frm 00162
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
obstetrical and gynecological services,
outpatient mental health and substance
use disorder services, and personal care,
home health aide, and homemaker
services provided by individual
providers and providers employed by an
agency.
We acknowledged that not all States
pay varied payment rates by population
(pediatric and adult), provider type, and
geographical location, which is why we
have included language ‘‘if the rates
vary’’ and ‘‘as applicable’’ in the
proposed regulatory text. We included
this language in the proposed regulatory
text to ensure the comparative payment
rate analysis and payment rate
disclosure capture all Medicaid
payment rates, including when States
pay varied payment rates by population
(pediatric and adult), provider type, and
geographical location. We also included
proposed regulatory text for the
payment rate disclosure to ensure that
the average hourly payment rates for
personal care, home health aide, and
homemaker services provided by
individual providers and providers
employed by an agency would be
separately identified for payments made
to individual providers and to providers
employed by an agency, if the rates
vary, as later discussed in connection
with § 447.203(b)(3)(ii). For States that
do not pay varied payment rates by
population (pediatric and adult),
provider type, and geographical location
and pay a single Statewide payment rate
for a single service, then the
comparative payment rate analysis and
payment rate disclosure would only
need to include the State’s single
Statewide payment rate.
We proposed to include a breakdown
of Medicaid payment rates by
population (pediatric and adult),
provider type, and geographical
location, as applicable, on the Medicaid
side of the comparative payment rate
analysis in paragraph (b)(2) to align with
the proposed payment rate transparency
provision, to account for State Medicaid
programs that pay variable Medicaid
payment rates by population (pediatric
and adult), provider type, and
geographical location, and to help
ensure the State’s comparative payment
rate analyses accurately align with
Medicare. Following the initial year that
the proposed provisions proposed
would be in effect, these provisions
would align with and build on the
payment rate transparency requirements
described in § 447.203(b)(1), because
States could source the codes and their
corresponding Medicaid payment rates
that the State already would publish to
meet the payment rate transparency
requirements.
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
We explained that these proposed
provisions are intended to help ensure
that the State’s comparative payment
rate analysis contains the highest level
of granularity in each proposed aspect
by considering and accounting for any
variation in Medicaid payment rates by
population (pediatric and adult),
provider type, and geographical
location, as previously required in the
AMRP process under § 447.203(b)(1)(iv)
and (v), and (b)(3). Additionally,
Medicare varies payment rates for
certain NPPs (nurse practitioners,
physician assistants, and clinical nurse
specialists) by paying them 85 percent
of the full Medicare PFS amount and
varies their payment rates by
geographical location through
calculated adjustments to the pricing
amounts to reflect the variation in
practice costs from one geographical
location to another; therefore, we
explained that the comparative payment
rate analysis accounting for these
payment rate variations is crucial to
ensuring the Medicaid FFS payment
rates accurately align with FFS
Medicare PFS rates.207 Medicare
payment variations for provider type
and geographical location would be
directly compared with State Medicaid
payment rates that also apply the same
payment variations, in addition to
payment variation by population
(pediatric and adult) which is unique to
Medicaid, yet an important payment
variation to take into consideration
when striving for transparency of
Medicaid payment rates. For States that
do not pay varied payment rates by
population (pediatric and adult),
provider type, or geographical location
and pay a single Statewide payment rate
for a single service, Medicare payment
variations for provider type and
geographical location would be
considered by calculating a Statewide
average of Medicare PFS rates which is
later discussed in this final rule.
Similar to the payment rate
transparency publication, we
acknowledged that there may be
additional burden associated with our
proposal that the payment rate
transparency publication and the
comparative payment rate analysis
include a payment rate breakdown by
population (pediatric and adult),
provider type, and geographical
location, as applicable, when States’
payment rates vary based on these
groupings. However, we believe that any
approach to requiring a comparative
payment rate analysis would involve
207 https://www.medpac.gov/wp-content/uploads/
2021/11/MedPAC_Payment_Basics_22_Physician_
FINAL_SEC.pdf.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
21:08 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
some level of burden that is greater for
States that choose to employ these
payment rate differentials, since any
comparison methodology would need to
take account—through a separate
comparison, weighted average, or other
mathematically reasonable approach—
of all rates paid under the Medicaid
program for a given service. In all
events, we believe this proposal would
create an additional level of granularity
in the analysis that is important for
ensuring compliance with section
1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act. We noted that
multiple types of providers, for
example, physicians, physician
assistants, and nurse practitioners, are
delivering similar services to Medicaid
beneficiaries of all ages, across multiple
Medicaid benefit categories, throughout
each State.
Section 1902(a)(30)(A) requires ‘‘. . .
that payments are consistent with
efficiency, economy, and quality of care
and are sufficient to enlist enough
providers so that care and services are
available under the plan at least to the
extent that such care and services are
available to the general population in
the geographic area,’’ and we noted our
belief that having sufficient access to a
variety of provider types is important to
ensuring access for Medicaid
beneficiaries meets this statutory
standard. For example, a targeted
payment rate reduction to nurse
practitioners, who are often paid less
than 100 percent of the State’s physician
fee schedule rate, could have a negative
impact on access to care for services
provided by nurse practitioners, but this
reduction would not directly impact
physicians or their willingness to
participate in Medicaid and furnish
services to beneficiaries. By proposing
that the comparative payment rate
analysis include a breakdown by
provider type, where States distinguish
payment rates for a service by provider
type, we explained that the analysis
would capture this payment rate
variation among providers of the same
services and provide us with a granular
level of information to aid in
determining if access to care is
sufficient, particularly in cases where
beneficiaries depend to a large extent on
the particular provider type(s) that
would be affected by the proposed rate
change for the covered service(s).
We identified payment rate variation
by population (pediatric and adult),
provider type, and geographical location
as the most commonly applied
adjustments to payment rates that
overlap between FFS Medicaid and
Medicare and could be readily broken
down into separately identified
payment rates for comparison in the
PO 00000
Frm 00163
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40703
comparative payment rate analysis. For
transparency purposes and to help to
ensure the comparative payment rate
analysis is conducted at a granular level
of analysis, we explained our belief that
it is important for the State to separately
identify their rates, if the rates vary, by
population (pediatric and adult),
provider type, and geographical
location, as applicable. We solicited
comments on the proposal to require the
comparative payment rate analysis to
include, if the rates vary, separate
identification of payment rates by
population (pediatric and adult),
provider type, and geographical
location, as applicable, in the
comparative payment rate analysis in
proposed § 447.203(b)(2).
We acknowledged that States may
apply additional payment adjustments
or factors, for example, the Consumer
Price Index, Medicare Economic Index,
or State-determined inflationary factors
or budget neutrality factors, to their
Medicaid payment rates other than
population (pediatric and adult),
provider type, and geographical
location. We stated that we expect any
other additional payment adjustments
and factors to already be included in the
State’s published Medicaid fee schedule
rate or calculable from the State plan,
because § 430.10 requires the State plan
to be a ‘‘comprehensive written
statement . . . contain[ing] all
information necessary for CMS to
determine whether the plan can be
approved to serve as a basis for . . . FFP
. . .’’ Therefore, for States paying for
services with a fee schedule payment
rate, the Medicaid fee schedule is the
sole source of information for providers
to locate their final payment rate for
Medicaid services provided to Medicaid
beneficiaries under a FFS delivery
system. For States with a rate-setting
methodology where the approved State
plan describes how rates are set based
upon a fee schedule (for example,
payment for NPPs are set a percentage
of a certain published Medicaid fee
schedule), the Medicaid fee schedule
would again be the source of
information for providers to identify the
relevant starting payment rate and apply
the rate-setting methodology described
in the State plan to ascertain their
Medicaid payment.208 We solicited
comments on any additional types of
payment adjustments or factors States
make to their Medicaid payment rates as
listed on their State fee schedules that
should be identified in the comparative
payment rate analysis that we have not
208 https://www.medicaid.gov/state-resourcecenter/downloads/spa-and-1915-waiver-processing/
fed-req-pymt-methodologies.docx.
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
40704
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
already discussed in § 447.203(b)(i)(B)
of this final rule, and how the inclusion
of any such additional adjustments or
factors should be considered in the
development of the Medicare PFS rate
to compare Medicaid payment rates to,
as later described in
§ 447.203(b)(3)(i)(C), of this final rule.
In paragraphs (b)(2)(i) through (iv), we
proposed that primary care services,
obstetrical and gynecological services,
and outpatient behavioral health
services would be subject to a
comparative payment rate analysis of
Medicaid payment rates and personal
care, home health aide, and homemaker
services provided by individual
providers and providers employed by an
agency would be subject to a payment
rate disclosure of Medicaid payment
rates. We begin with a discussion about
the importance of primary care services,
obstetrical and gynecological services,
and outpatient behavioral health
services as proposed in
§ 447.203(b)(2)(i) through (iii), and the
reason for their inclusion in this
proposed requirement. Then, we will
discuss the importance and justification
for including personal care, home health
aide, and homemaker services provided
by individual providers and providers
employed by an agency as proposed in
§ 447.203(b)(2)(iv).
In § 447.203(b)(2)(i) through (iii), we
proposed to require primary care
services, obstetrical and gynecological
services, and outpatient mental health
and substance use disorder services be
included in the comparative payment
rate analysis, because we believe that
these categories of services are critical
preventive, routine, and acute medical
services in and of themselves, and that
they often serve as gateways to access to
other needed medical services,
including specialist services, laboratory
and x-ray services, prescription drugs,
and other mandatory and optional
Medicaid benefits that States cover.
Including these categories of services in
the comparative payment rate analysis
would require States to closely examine
their Medicaid FFS payment rates to
comply with section 1902(a)(30)(A) of
the Act. As described in the recent key
findings from public comments on the
February 2022 RFI that we published,
payment rates are a key driver of
provider participation in the Medicaid
program.209 By proposing that States
compare their Medicaid payment rates
for primary care services, obstetrical and
209 Summary of Public Comments in response to
the CMS 2022 Request for Information: Access to
Coverage and Care in Medicaid & CHIP. December
2022. For the report, see https://www.medicaid.gov/
medicaid/access-care/downloads/access-rfi-2022report.pdf.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
gynecological services, and outpatient
mental health and substance use
disorder services to Medicare payment
rates, States would be required to
analyze if and how their payments are
consistent with efficiency, economy,
and quality of care and are sufficient to
enlist enough providers so that care and
services are available under the plan at
least to the extent that such care and
services are available to the general
population in the geographic area.
In the proposed rule, we noted our
belief that Medicare payment rates for
these services are likely to serve as a
reliable benchmark for a level of
payment sufficient to enlist providers to
furnish the relevant services to a
beneficiary because Medicare delivers
services through a FFS delivery system
across all geographical regions of the US
and historically, the vast majority of
physicians accept new Medicare
patients, with extremely low rates of
physicians opting out of the Medicare
program, suggesting that Medicare’s
payment rates are generally consistent
with a high level of physician
willingness to accept new Medicare
patients.210 Additionally, Medicare
payment rates are publicly published in
an accessible and consistent format by
CMS making Medicare payment rates an
available and reliable comparison point
for States, rather than private payer data
which typically is considered
proprietary information and not
generally available to the public.
Therefore, we explained that the
proposed requirement that States
develop and publish a comparative
payment rate analysis would enable
States, CMS, and other interested parties
to closely examine the relationship
between State Medicaid FFS payment
rates and those paid by Medicare. This
analysis would continually help States
to ensure that their Medicaid payment
rates are set at a level that is likely
sufficient to meet the statutory access
standard under section 1902(a)(30)(A) of
the Act that payments be sufficient to
enlist enough providers so that care and
services are available under the plan at
least to the extent that such care and
210 Physicians and practitioners who do not wish
to enroll in the Medicare program may ‘‘opt-out’’ of
Medicare. This means that neither the physician,
nor the beneficiary submits the bill to Medicare for
services rendered. Instead, the beneficiary pays the
physician out-of-pocket and neither party is
reimbursed by Medicare. A private contract is
signed between the physician and the beneficiary
that states that neither one can receive payment
from Medicare for the services that were performed.
See https://data.cms.gov/provider-characteristics/
medicare-provider-supplier-enrollment/opt-outaffidavits.
PO 00000
Frm 00164
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
services are available to the general
population in the geographic area.
We noted our belief that the
comparative payment rate analysis
would provide States, CMS, and other
interested parties with clear and concise
information for identifying when there
is a potential access to care issue, such
as Medicaid payment rates not keeping
pace with changes in corresponding
Medicare rates and decreases in claims
volume and beneficiary utilization of
services. As discussed later in this
section, numerous studies have found a
relationship between Medicaid payment
rates and provider participation in the
Medicaid program and, given the
statutory standard of ensuring access for
Medicaid beneficiaries, a comparison of
Medicaid payment rates to other payer
rates, particularly Medicare payment
rates as justified later in this rule, is an
important barometer of whether State
payment rates and policies are sufficient
for meeting the statutory access
standard under section 1902(a)(30)(A) of
the Act.
We proposed to focus on these
particular services because they are
critical medical services and of great
importance to overall beneficiary health.
Beginning with primary care, these
services provide access to preventative
services and facilitate the development
of crucial doctor-patient relationships.
Primary care providers often deliver
preventive health care services,
including immunizations, screenings for
common chronic and infectious diseases
and cancers, clinical and behavioral
interventions to manage chronic disease
and reduce associated risks, and
counseling to support healthy living and
self-management of chronic diseases;
Medicaid coverage of preventative
health care services promotes disease
prevention which is critical to helping
people live longer, healthier lives.211
Accessing primary care services can
often result in beneficiaries receiving
referrals or recommendations to
schedule an appointment with
physician specialists, such as
gastroenterologists or neurologists, that
they would not be able to obtain
without the referral or recommendation
by the primary care physician.
Additionally, primary care physicians
provide beneficiaries with orders for
laboratory and x-ray services as well as
prescriptions for necessary medications
that a beneficiary would not be able to
access without the primary care
physician. Research over the last
century has shown that the impact of
the doctor-patient relationship on
211 https://www.medicaid.gov/medicaid/benefits/
prevention/.
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
patient’s health care experience, health
outcomes, and health care costs
exists 212 and more recent studies have
shown that the quality of the physicianpatient relationship is positively
associated with functional health among
patients.213 Another study found that
higher primary care payment rates
reduced mental illness and substance
use disorders among non-elderly adult
Medicaid enrollees, suggesting that
positive spillover from increasing
primary care rates also positively
impacted behavioral health
outcomes.214 Lastly, research has shown
that a reduction in barriers to accessing
primary care services has been
associated with helping reduce health
disparities and the risk of poor health
outcomes.215 216 These examples
illustrate how crucial access to primary
care services is for overall beneficiary
health and to enable access to other
medical services. We solicited
comments on primary care services as
one of the proposed categories of
services subject to the comparative
payment rate analysis requirements in
proposed § 447.203(b)(2)(i).
Similar to primary care services, both
obstetrical and gynecological services
and outpatient behavioral health
services provide access to preventive
and screening services unique to each
respective field. A well-woman visit to
an obstetrician–gynecologist often
provides access to screenings for
cervical and breast cancer; screenings
for Rh(D) incompatibility, syphilis
infection, and hepatitis B virus infection
in pregnant persons; monitoring for
healthy weight and weight gain in
pregnancy; immunization against the
human papillomavirus infection; and
perinatal depression screenings among
other recommended preventive
services.217 218 Behavioral health care
212 Cockerham, W.C. (2021). The Wiley Blackwell
Companion to Medical Sociology (1st ed.). John
Wiley & Sons.
213 Olaisen, R.H., Schluchter, M.D., Flocke, S.A.,
Smyth, K.A., Koroukian, S.M., & Stange, K.C.
(2020). Assessing the longitudinal impact of
physician-patient relationship on Functional
Health. The Annals of Family Medicine, 18(5), 422–
429. https://doi.org/10.1370/afm.2554.
214 Maclean, Johanna Catherine, McCleallan,
Chandler, Pesko, Michael F., and Polsky, Daniel.
(2023). Medicaid reimbursement rates for primary
care services and behavioral health outcomes.
Health economics, 1–37. https://doi.org/10.1002/
hec.4646.
215 Starfield, B., Shi, L., & Macinko, J. (2005).
Contribution of primary care to health systems and
health. The Milbank quarterly, 83(3), 457–502.
https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1468-0009.2005.00409.x.
216 https://health.gov/healthypeople/priorityareas/social-determinants-health/literaturesummaries/access-primary-care.
217 Rh(D) incompatibility is a preventable
pregnancy compilation where a woman who is Rh
negative is carrying a fetus that is Rh positive (Rh
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
promotes mental health, resilience, and
wellbeing; the treatment of mental and
substance use disorders; and the
support of those who experience and/or
are in recovery from these conditions,
along with their families and
communities. Outpatient behavioral
health services can overlap with
preventative primary care and
obstetrical and gynecological services,
for example screening for depression in
adults and perinatal depression
screenings, but also provide unique
preventive and screening services such
as screenings for unhealthy alcohol use
in adolescents and adults, anxiety in
children and adolescents, and eating
disorders in adolescents and adults,
among other recommended preventive
services.219
The US is simultaneously
experiencing a maternal health crisis
and mental health crisis, putting
providers of obstetrical and
gynecological and outpatient behavioral
health services, respectively, at the
forefront.220 221 According to Medicaid
and CHIP Payment and Access
Commission (MACPAC), ‘‘Medicaid
plays a key role in providing maternityrelated services for pregnant women,
paying for slightly less than half of all
births nationally in 2018.’’ 222 Given
Medicaid’s significant role in maternal
health during a time when maternal
mortality rates in the US continue to
worsen and the racial disparities among
mothers continues to widen,223 224
accessing obstetrical and gynecological
care, including care before, during, and
after pregnancy is crucial to positive
factor is a protein that can be found on the surface
of red blood cells). When the blood of an Rhpositive fetus gets into the bloodstream of an Rhnegative woman, her body will recognize that the
Rh-positive blood is not hers. Her body will try to
destroy it by making anti-Rh antibodies. These
antibodies can cross the placenta and attack the
fetus’s blood cells. This can lead to serious health
problems, even death, for a fetus or a newborn.
Prevention of Rh(D) incompatibility requires
screening for Rh negative early in pregnancy (or
before pregnancy) and, if needed, giving a
medication to prevent antibodies from forming.
218 https://www.acog.org/clinical/clinicalguidance/committee-opinion/articles/2018/10/wellwoman-visit.
219 https://www.uspreventiveservicestaskforce.
org/uspstf/topic_search_results?topic_status=P.
220 https://www.whitehouse.gov/wp-content/
uploads/2022/06/Maternal-Health-Blueprint.pdf.
221 https://www.whitehouse.gov/briefing-room/
statements-releases/2022/05/31/fact-sheet-bidenharris-administration-highlights-strategy-toaddress-the-national-mental-health-crisis/.
222 https://www.macpac.gov/wp-content/uploads/
2020/01/Medicaid%E2%80%99s-Role-inFinancing-Maternity-Care.pdf.
223 https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/data/hestat/
maternal-mortality/2020/maternal-mortality-rates2020.htm.
224 https://www.nytimes.com/2022/02/23/health/
maternal-deaths-pandemic.html?smid=url-share.
PO 00000
Frm 00165
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40705
maternal and infant outcomes.225 We
solicited comments on obstetrical and
gynecological services as one of the
proposed categories of services subject
to the comparative payment rate
analysis requirements in proposed
§ 447.203(b)(2)(ii).
Improving access to behavioral health
services is a critical, national issue
facing all payors, particularly for
Medicaid which plays a crucial role in
mental health care access as the single
largest payer of services and has a
growing role in payment for substance
use disorder services, in part due to
Medicaid expansion and various efforts
by Congress to improve access to
behavioral health services.226 227 Several
studies have found an association
between reducing the uninsured rate
through increased Medicaid enrollment
and improved and expanded access to
critically needed behavioral health
services.228 Numerous studies have
found positive outcomes associated
with Medicaid expansion: increases in
the insured rate and access to care and
medications for adults with depression,
increases in coverage rates and a greater
likelihood of being diagnosed with a
mental health condition as well as the
use of prescription medications for a
mental health condition for college
students from disadvantaged
backgrounds,229 and a decrease in
delayed or forgone necessary care in a
nationally representative sample of nonelderly adults with serious
psychological distress.230 While
individuals who are covered by
Medicaid have better access to
behavioral health services compared to
people who are uninsured, some
coverage gaps remain in access to
behavioral health care for many people,
including those with Medicaid.
In the proposed rule, we noted that
some of the barriers to accessing
225 https://www.cms.gov/About-CMS/AgencyInformation/OMH/equity-initiatives/rural-health/
09032019-Maternal-Health-Care-in-RuralCommunities.pdf.
226 https://www.medicaid.gov/medicaid/accesscare/downloads/coverage-and-behavioral-healthdata-spotlight.pdf.
227 https://www.medicaid.gov/medicaid/benefits/
behavioral-health-services/.
228 https://www.cbpp.org/research/health/toimprove-behavioral-health-start-by-closing-themedicaid-coverage-gap.
229 Cowan, Benjamin W. & Hao, Zhuang. (2021).
Medicaid expansion and the mental health of
college students. Health economics, 30(6), 1306–
1327. https://www.nber.org/system/files/working_
papers/w27306/w27306.pdf.
230 Novak, P., Anderson, A.C., & Chen, J. (2018).
Changes in Health Insurance Coverage and Barriers
to Health Care Access Among Individuals with
Serious Psychological Distress Following the
Affordable Care Act. Administration and policy in
mental health, 45(6), 924–932. https://doi.org/
10.1007/s10488-018-0875-9.
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
40706
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
behavioral health treatment in Medicaid
reflect larger system-wide access
problems: overall shortage of behavioral
health providers in the United States
and relatively small number of
psychiatrists who accept any form of
insurance or participate in health
coverage programs.231 Particularly for
outpatient behavioral health services for
Medicaid beneficiaries, one reason
physicians are unwilling to accept
Medicaid patients is because of low
Medicaid payment rates.232 One study
found evidence of low Medicaid
payment rates by examining outpatient
Medicaid claims data from 2014 in 11
States with a primary behavioral health
diagnosis and an evaluation and
management (E/M) procedure code of
99213 (Established patient office visit,
20–29 minutes) or 99214 (Established
patient office visit, 30–39 minutes) and
found that psychiatrists in nine States
were paid less, on average, than primary
care physicians.233 These pieces of
research and data about the importance
of outpatient behavioral health services
and the existing challenges beneficiaries
face in trying to access outpatient
behavioral health services underscore
how crucial access to outpatient
behavioral health services is, and that
adequate Medicaid payment rates for
these services is likely to be an
important driver of access for
beneficiaries. We solicited comments on
outpatient behavioral health services as
one of the proposed categories of
services subject to the comparative
payment rate analysis requirements in
proposed § 447.203(b)(2)(iii) which we
are finalizing as ‘‘Outpatient mental
health and substance use disorder
services.’’
In § 447.203(b)(2)(iv), we proposed to
require personal care, home health aide,
and homemaker services provided by
individual providers and providers
employed by an agency in the payment
rate disclosure requirements proposed
in § 447.203(b)(3)(ii). We noted that
many HCBS providers nationwide are
facing workforce shortages and high
staff turnover that have been
exacerbated by the COVID–19
pandemic, and these issues and related
difficulty accessing HCBS can lead to
higher rates of costly, institutional stays
231 https://www.kff.org/medicaid/issue-brief/
medicaids-role-in-financing-behavioral-healthservices-for-low-income-individuals/.
232 https://www.healthaffairs.org/do/10.1377/
forefront.20190401.678690/full/.
233 Mark, Tami L., Parish, William, Zarkin, Gary
A., and Weber, Ellen (2020). Comparison of
Medicaid Reimbursements for Psychiatrists and
Primary Care Physicians. Psychiatry services 71(9),
947–950. https://doi.org/10.1176/appi.ps.
202000062.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
for beneficiaries.234 As with any covered
service, the supply of HCBS providers
has a direct and immediate impact on
beneficiaries’ ability to access high
quality HCBS, therefore, we included
special considerations for LTSS,
specifically HCBS, through two
proposed provisions in § 447.203. The
first provision in proposed paragraph
(b)(2)(iv) would require States to
include personal care, home health aide,
and homemaker services provided by
individual providers and providers
employed by an agency to be included
in the payment rate disclosure in
proposed paragraph (b)(3)(ii). The
second provision in paragraph (b)(6),
discussed in the next section, would
require States to establish an interested
parties’ advisory committee to advise
and consult on rates paid to certain
HCBS providers. We explained that this
provision is intended to help
contextualize lived experience of direct
care workers and beneficiaries who
receive the services they deliver by
providing direct care workers,
beneficiaries and their authorized
representatives, and other interested
parties with the ability to make
recommendations to the State Medicaid
agency regarding the sufficiency of
Medicaid payment rates for these
specified services to help ensure
sufficient provider participation so that
these HCBS are accessible to
beneficiaries consistent with section
1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act.
The proposed payment rate disclosure
would require States to publish the
average hourly payment rates made to
individual providers and to providers
employed by an agency, separately, if
the rates vary, for each category of
services specified in § 447.203(b)(2)(iv).
No comparison to Medicare payment
rates would be required in recognition
that Medicare generally does not cover
and pay for these services, and when
these services are covered and paid for
by Medicare, the services are very
limited and provided on a short-term
basis, rather than long-term basis as
with Medicaid HCBS. While Medicare
covers part-time or intermittent home
health aide services (only if a Medicare
beneficiary is also getting other skilled
services like nursing and/or therapy at
the same time) under Medicare Part A
(Hospital Insurance) or Medicare Part B
(Medical Insurance), Medicare does not
234 https://www.kff.org/coronavirus-covid-19/
event/march-30-web-event-unsung-heroes-thecrucial-role-and-tenuous-circumstances-of-homehealth-aides-during-the-pandemic/; https://
www.macpac.gov/wp-content/uploads/2022/03/
MACPAC-brief-on-HCBS-workforce.pdf.
PO 00000
Frm 00166
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
cover personal care or homemaker
services.235
We proposed to require these services
be subject to a payment rate disclosure
because this rule aims to standardize
data and monitoring across service
delivery systems with the goal of
improving access to care. To remain
consistent with the proposed HCBS
provisions at § 441.311(d)(2) and (e),
where we proposed to require annual
State reporting on access and payment
adequacy metrics for homemaker, home
health aide, and personal care services,
we proposed to include these services,
provided by individual providers and
providers employed by an agency in the
FFS payment rate disclosure proposed
in 447.203(b)(2). We explained that we
selected these specific services because
we expect them to be most commonly
conducted in individuals’ homes and
general community settings and,
therefore, constitute the vast majority of
FFS payments for direct care workers
delivering services under FFS. We
acknowledged that the proposed
analyses required of States in the HCBS
provisions at § 441.311(d)(2) and (e) and
in the FFS provisions at § 447.203(b)(2)
are different, although, unique to
assessing access in each program and
delivery system. We proposed to
include personal care, home health aide,
and homemaker services for consistency
with HCBS access and payment
adequacy provisions, and also to
include these services in the proposed
provisions of § 447.203(b)(2) to require
States to conduct and publish a
payment rate disclosure. We noted our
belief the latter proposal is important
because the payment rate disclosure of
personal care, home health aide, and
homemaker services would provide
CMS with sufficient information,
including average hourly payment rates,
claims volume, and number of Medicaid
enrolled beneficiaries who received a
service as specified in proposed
§ 447.203(b)(3)(ii), from States for
ensuring compliance with section
1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act, which
requires that payments be consistent
with efficiency, economy, and quality of
care and sufficient to enlist enough
providers so that care and services are
available under the plan at least to the
extent that such care and services are
available to the general population in
the geographic area.
Additionally, we explained that this
proposal to include personal care, home
health aide, and homemaker services
provided by individual providers and
providers employed by an agency is
235 https://www.medicare.gov/coverage/homehealth-services.
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
supported by the statutory mandate at
section 2402(a) of the Affordable Care
Act. Among other things, section
2402(a) of the Affordable Care Act
directs the Secretary to promulgate
regulations ensuring that all States
develop service systems that ensure that
there is an adequate number of qualified
direct care workers to provide selfdirected services. We solicited
comments on personal care, home
health aide, and homemaker services
provided by individual providers and
providers employed by an agency as the
proposed categories of services subject
to the payment rate disclosure
requirements in proposed
§ 447.203(b)(2)(iv).
After discussing our proposed
categories of services for the
comparative payment rate analysis and
payment rate disclosure requirements,
we discussed the similarities and
differences between the proposed rule
and services previously included in the
AMRP requirements. We explained that
while the proposed rule would
eliminate the previous triennial AMRP
process, there are some similarities
between the service categories for which
we proposed to require a comparative
payment rate analysis or payment rate
disclosure in § 447.203(b)(2) and those
subject to the previous AMRP
requirements under § 447.203(b)(5)(ii).
Specifically, § 447.203(b)(5)(ii)(A)
previous required the State agency to
use data collected through the previous
AMRP process to provide a separate
analysis for each provider type and site
of service for primary care services
(including those provided by a
physician, FQHC, clinic, or dental care).
We proposed the comparative payment
rate analysis include primary care
services, without any parenthetical
description. We explained our belief
this is appropriate because the proposed
rule includes a comparative payment
rate analysis that is at the Current
Procedural Terminology (CPT) or
Healthcare Common Procedure Coding
System (HCPCS) code level, as
applicable, the specifics for which are
discussed later in this section. This
approach requires States to perform less
sub-categorization of the data analysis,
and as discussed later, the analysis
would exclude FQHCs and clinics.
We explained that the previous AMRP
process also includes in
§ 447.203(b)(5)(ii)(C) behavioral health
services (including mental health and
substance use disorder); however, we
proposed that the comparative payment
rate analysis only would include
outpatient behavioral health services to
narrow the scope of the analysis by
excluding inpatient behavioral health
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
services (including inpatient behavioral
health services furnished in psychiatric
residential treatment facilities,
institutions for mental diseases, and
psychiatric hospitals). While we
acknowledged that behavioral health
services encompass a broad range of
services provided in a wide variety of
settings, from outpatient screenings in a
physician’s office to inpatient hospital
treatment, we proposed to narrow the
scope of behavioral health services to
outpatient services only to focus the
comparative payment rate analysis on
ambulatory care provided by
practitioners in an office-based setting
without duplicating existing
requirements, or analysis that must be
completed to satisfy existing
requirements, for upper payment limits
(UPL) and the supplemental payment
reporting requirements under section
1903(bb) of the Act, as established by
Division CC, Title II, Section 202 of the
CAA, 2021.
The proposed categories of services
are delivered as ambulatory care where
the patient does not need to be
hospitalized to receive the service being
delivered. Particularly for behavioral
health services, we proposed to narrow
the scope to outpatient behavioral
health services to maintain consistency
within the categories of service included
in the proposed comparative payment
rate analysis and payment rate
disclosure all being classified as
ambulatory care. Additionally, as
discussed further in this section of the
final rule, we proposed that the
comparative payment rate analysis
would be conducted on a CPT/HCPCS
code level, focusing on E/M codes. By
narrowing the comparative payment rate
analysis to E/M CPT/HCPCS codes, we
proposed States’ analyses includes a
broad range of core services which
would cover a variety of commonly
provided services that fall into the
categories of service proposed in
paragraphs (b)(2)(i) through (iii). To
balance State administrative burden
with our oversight of State compliance
with the access requirement in section
1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act, we also
proposed to limit the services to those
delivered primarily by physicians and
NPPs in an office-based setting for
primary care, obstetrical and
gynecological, and outpatient behavioral
health services. By excluding facilitybased services, particularly inpatient
behavioral health services, we explained
our intent to ensure the same E/M CPT/
HCPCS code-level methodology could
be used for all categories of services
included in the proposed comparative
payment rate analysis, including the use
PO 00000
Frm 00167
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40707
of E/M CPT/HCPCS codes used for
outpatient behavioral health services.
Rather than fee schedule rates, States
often pay for inpatient behavioral health
services using prospective payment rate
methodologies, such as DRGs, or interim
payment methodologies that are
reconciled to actual cost.236 These
methodologies pay for a variety of
services delivered by multiple providers
that a patient receives during an
inpatient hospital stay, rather than a
single ambulatory service billed by a
single provider using a single CPT/
HCPCS code. Variations in these
payment methodologies and what is
included in the rate could complicate
the proposed comparison to FFS
Medicare rates for the services
identified in paragraphs (b)(2)(i) through
(iii) and could frustrate comparisons
between States and sometimes even
within a single State. Therefore, we
explained that we do not believe the E/
M CPT/HCPCS code level methodology
proposed for the comparative payment
rate analysis would be feasible for
inpatient behavioral health services or
other inpatient and facility-based
services in general.
While we considered including
inpatient behavioral health services as
one of the proposed categories of
services in the comparative payment
rate analysis, we ultimately did not
because we already collect and review
Medicaid and Medicare payment rate
data for inpatient behavioral health
services through annual UPL and
supplemental payment reporting
requirements under section 1903(bb) of
the Act. SMDL 13–003 discusses the
annual submission of State UPL
demonstrations for inpatient hospital
services, among other services,
including a complete data set of
payments to Medicaid providers and a
reasonable estimate of what Medicare
would have paid for the same
services.237 238 UPL requirements go
beyond the proposed requirements by
requiring States to annually submit the
following data for all inpatient hospital
services, depending on the State’s UPL
methodology, on a provider level basis:
236 https://www.cms.gov/icd10m/version37fullcode-cms/fullcode_cms/Design_and_
development_of_the_Diagnosis_Related_Group_
(DRGs).pdf.
237 https://www.medicaid.gov/sites/default/files/
Federal-Policy-Guidance/Downloads/SMD-13-00302.pdf.
238 If a State’s payment methodology describes
payment at no more than 100 percent of the
Medicare rate for the period covered by the UPL,
then the State does not need to submit a
demonstration. See FAQ ID: 92201. https://
www.medicaid.gov/faq/?search_api_
fulltext=ID%3A92201&sort_by=field_faq_
date&sort_order=DESC.
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
40708
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
Medicaid charges, Medicaid base
payments, Medicaid supplemental
payments, Medicaid discharges,
Medicaid case mix index, Medicaid
inflation factors, other adjustments to
Medicaid payments, Medicaid days,
Medicare costs, Medicare payments,
Medicare discharges, Medicare case mix
index, Medicare days, UPL inflation
factors, Medicaid provider tax cost, and
other adjustments to the UPL amount. If
we proposed and finalized inpatient
behavioral health services as one of the
categories of services subject to the
comparative payment rate analysis, then
this final rule would require States to
biennially submit the following data for
only inpatient behavioral health
services on a CPT/HCPCS code level
basis: base Medicaid FFS fee schedule
payment rate for select E/M CPT/HCPCS
codes (accounting for rate variation
based on population (pediatric and
adult), provider type, and geographical
location, as applicable), the
corresponding Medicare payment rates,
Medicaid base payment rate as a
percentage of Medicare payment rate,
and the number of Medicaid-paid
claims. While the UPL requires
aggregated total payment and cost data
at the provider level and the proposed
comparative payment rate analysis calls
for more granular base payment data at
the CPT/HCPCS code level, the UPL
overall requires aggregate Medicaid
provider payment data for both base and
supplemental payments as well as more
detailed data for calculating what
Medicare would have paid as the upper
payment amount. Therefore, we
explained that proposing to require
States include Medicaid and Medicare
payment rate data for inpatient
behavioral health services in the
comparative payment rate analysis
would be duplicative of existing UPL
requirements that are inclusive of and
more comprehensive than the payment
information proposed in the
comparative payment rate analysis.
Additionally, section 1903(bb) of the
Act requires us to establish a Medicaid
supplemental payment reporting system
that collects detailed information on
State Medicaid supplemental payments,
including total quarterly supplemental
payment expenditures per provider;
information on base payments made to
providers that have received a
supplemental payment; and narrative
information describing the methodology
used to calculate a provider’s payment,
criteria used to determine which
providers qualify to receive a payment,
and explanation describing how the
supplemental payments comply with
section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
Section 1903(bb)(1)(C) of the Act
requires us to make State-reported
supplemental payment information
publicly available. For States making or
wishing to make supplemental
payments, including for inpatient
behavioral health services, States must
report supplemental payment
information to us, and we must make
that information public and, therefore,
transparent. Although the proposed rule
sought to increase transparency, with
the proposed provisions under
§ 447.203(b)(1) through (5) focusing on
transparency of FFS base Medicaid FFS
fee schedule payment rate, including
inpatient behavioral health services as a
category of service in § 447.203(b)(2)
subject to the comparative payment rate
analysis would be duplicative of the
existing upper payment limit and
supplemental payment reporting
requirements, which capture and make
transparent base and supplemental
payment information for inpatient
behavioral health services. However, we
solicited comments regarding our
decision not to include inpatient
behavioral health services as one of the
categories of services subject to the
comparative payment rate analysis
requirements in proposed
§ 447.203(b)(2) in the final rule, should
we finalize the comparative payment
rate analysis proposal.
The AMRP process also previously
included in § 447.203(b)(5)(ii)(D) preand post-natal obstetric services
including labor and delivery; we
proposed to include these services in
the comparative payment rate analysis
requirements under proposed
§ 447.203(b)(2)(ii), but we explained in
the proposed rule that we intended to
broaden the scope of this category of
services to include both obstetrical and
gynecological services. This expanded
proposed provision would capture a
wider array of services, both obstetrical
and gynecological services, for States
and CMS to assess and ensure access to
care in Medicaid FFS is at least as great
for beneficiaries as is generally available
to the general population in the
geographic area, as required by with
section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act. Lastly,
similar to previous § 447.203(b)(5)(ii)(E),
which specifies that home health
services were included in the previous
AMRP process, we proposed to include
personal care, home health aide, and
homemaker services, provided by
individual providers and providers
employed by an agency. This refined
proposed provision would help ensure
a more standardized effort to monitor
access across Medicaid delivery
systems, including for Medicaid-
PO 00000
Frm 00168
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
covered LTSS. We explained our belief
that this proposal also would address
public comments received in response
to the February 2022 RFI.239 Many
commenters highlighted the workforce
crisis among direct care workers and the
impact on HCBS. Specifically,
commenters indicated that direct care
workers receive low payment rates, and
for agency-employed direct care
workers, home health agencies often cite
low Medicaid payment as a barrier to
raising wages for workers. Commenters
suggested that States should be
collecting and reporting to CMS the
average of direct care worker wages
while emphasizing the importance of
data transparency and timeliness. We
explained that we were responding to
these public comments by proposing to
require States to transparently publish a
payment rate disclosure that collects
and reports the average hourly rate paid
to individual providers and providers
employed by an agency for services
provided by certain direct care workers
(personal care, home health aide, and
homemaker services).
In public comments that we received
during the public comment period for
the 2015 final rule with comment
period, many commenters requested
that we require States to publish access
to care analyses for pediatric services,
including pediatric primary care,
behavioral health, and dental care. At
the time, we responded that pediatric
services did not need to be specified in
the required service categories because
States were already required through
§ 447.203(b)(1)(iv) to consider the
characteristics of the beneficiary
population, ‘‘including . . . payment
variations for pediatric and adult
populations,’’ within the previous
AMRPs.240 Although we proposed to
eliminate the previous AMRP
requirements, we noted that the
proposed rule would continue to
include special considerations for
pediatric populations that are addressed
in the discussion of proposed
§ 447.203(b)(2).
We proposed to eliminate the
following from the previous AMRP
process without replacement in the
comparative payment rate analysis
requirement, § 447.203(b)(5)(ii)(F): Any
additional types of services for which a
review is required under previous
§ 447.203(b)(6); § 447.203(b)(5)(ii)(G):
Additional types of services for which
239 Summary of Public Comments in response to
the CMS 2022 Request for Information: Access to
Coverage and Care in Medicaid & CHIP. December
2022. For the report, see https://www.medicaid.gov/
medicaid/access-care/downloads/access-rfi-2022report.pdf.
240 80 CFR 67576 at 67592.
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
the State or CMS has received a
significantly higher than usual volume
of beneficiary, provider or other
interested party access complaints for a
geographic area, including complaints
received through the mechanisms for
beneficiary input consistent with
previous § 447.203(b)(7); and
§ 447.203(b)(5)(ii)(H): Additional types
of services selected by the State.
We proposed to eliminate
§ 447.203(b)(5)(ii)(F) and (G) without a
direct replacement because the
proposed State Analysis Procedures for
Rate Reduction or Restructuring
described in § 447.203(c) are inclusive
of and more refined than the previous
AMRP requirements for additional types
of services for which a review is
required under previous § 447.203(b)(6).
Specifically, as discussed later in this
section, we proposed in § 447.203(c)(1)
that States seeking to reduce provider
payment rates or restructure provider
payments would be required to provide
written assurance and relevant
supporting documentation that three
conditions are met to qualify for a
streamlined SPA review process,
including that required public processes
yielded no significant access to care
concerns for beneficiaries, providers, or
other interested parties, or if such
processes did yield concerns, that the
State can reasonably respond to or
mitigate them, as appropriate. If the
State is unable to meet all three of the
proposed conditions for streamlined
SPA review, including the absence of or
ability to appropriately address any
access concern raised through public
processes, then the State would be
required to submit additional
information to support that its SPA is
consistent with the access requirement
in section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act, as
proposed in § 447.203(c)(2). We
proposed to modify this aspect of the
previous AMRP process, because our
implementation experience since the
2017 SMDL has shown that States
typically have been able to work
directly with the public (including
beneficiaries and beneficiary advocacy
groups, and providers) to resolve access
concerns, which emphasizes that public
feedback continues to be a valuable
source of knowledge regarding access in
Medicaid. We explained our belief that
this experience demonstrates that public
processes that occur before the
submission of a payment SPA to CMS
often resolve initial access concerns,
and where concerns persist, they will be
addressed through the SPA submission
and our review process, as provided in
proposed § 447.203(c). Rather than
services affected by proposed provider
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
rate reductions or restructurings
(previous § 447.203(b)(5)(ii)(F)) and
services for which the State or CMS
received significantly higher than usual
volume of complaints (previous
§ 447.203(b)(5)(ii)(G)) being addressed
through the previous AMRP process,
these services subject to rate reductions
or restructurings and services where a
high volume of complaints have been
expressed would now be addressed by
the State analysis procedures in
proposed § 447.203(c). We noted our
belief that this approach would ensure
public feedback is fully considered in
the context of a payment SPA, without
the need to specifically require a
comparative payment rate analysis for
the service(s) subject to payment rate
reduction or restructuring under
proposed § 447.203(b)(2).
Lastly, we proposed to eliminate
previous § 447.203(b)(5)(ii)(H), requiring
the previous AMRP process to include
analysis regarding ‘‘Additional types of
services selected by the State,’’ without
a direct replacement because our
implementation experience has shown
that the majority of States did not select
additional types of service to include in
their previous AMRPs beyond the
required services § 447.203(b)(5)(ii)(A)
through (G). When assessing which
services to include in the proposed rule,
we determined that the absence of an
open-ended type of service option,
similar to § 447.203(b)(5)(ii)(H) is
unlikely to affect the quality of the
analysis we proposed to require and
therefore, we did not include it in the
proposed set of services for the
comparative payment rate analysis.
These proposed shifts in policy were
informed by our implementation
experience and our consideration of
State concerns about the burden and
value of the previous AMRP process.
In paragraph (b)(3), we proposed that
the State agency would be required to
develop and publish, consistent with
the publication requirements described
in proposed § 447.203(b)(1) for payment
rate transparency data, a comparative
payment rate analysis and payment rate
disclosure. This comparative payment
rate analysis is divided into two
sections based on the categories of
services and the organization of each
analysis or disclosure. Paragraph
(b)(3)(i) describes the comparative
payment rate analysis for the categories
of services described in paragraphs
(b)(2)(i) through (iii): primary care
services, obstetrical and gynecological
services, and outpatient behavioral
health services. Paragraph (b)(3)(ii)
describes the payment rate disclosure
for the categories of service described in
paragraphs (b)(2)(iv): personal care,
PO 00000
Frm 00169
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40709
home health aide, and homemaker
services provided by individual
providers and providers employed by an
agency.
Specifically, in paragraph (b)(3)(i), we
proposed that for the categories of
service described in paragraphs (b)(2)(i)
through (iii), the State’s analysis would
compare the State’s Medicaid FFS
payment rates to the most recently
published Medicare payment rates
effective for the same time period for the
E/M CPT/HCPCS codes applicable to
the category of service. The proposed
comparative payment rate analysis of
FFS Medicaid payment rates to FFS
Medicare payment rates would be
conducted on a code-by-code basis at
the CPT/HCPCS code level using the
most current set of codes published by
us. We explained that this proposal is
intended to provide an understanding of
how Medicaid payment rates compare
to the payment rates established and
updated under the FFS Medicare
program.
We stated that we would expect to
publish the E/M CPT/HCPCS codes to
be used for the comparative payment
rate analysis in subregulatory guidance
along with the final rule, if this proposal
is finalized. We proposed that we would
identify E/M CPT/HCPCS codes to be
included in the comparative payment
rate analysis based on the following
criteria: the code is effective for the
same time period of the comparative
payment rate analysis; the code is
classified as an E/M CPT/HCPCS code
by the American Medical Association
(AMA) CPT Editorial Panel; the code is
included on the Berenson-Eggers Type
of Service (BETOS) code list effective
for the same time period as the
comparative payment rate analysis and
falls into the E/M family grouping and
families and subfamilies for primary
care services, obstetrics and
gynecological services, and outpatient
behavioral services (now called
outpatient mental health and substance
use disorder services in this final rule);
and the code has an A (Active), N (NonCovered), R (Restricted), or T
(Injections) code status on the Medicare
PFS with a Medicare established
relative value unit (RVU) and payment
amount for the same time period of the
comparative payment rate
analysis.241 242 243
The CMS-published list of E/M CPT/
HCPCS codes subject to the comparative
241 https://www.ama-assn.org/practicemanagement/cpt/cpt-evaluation-and-management.
242 https://data.cms.gov/provider-summary-bytype-of-service/provider-service-classifications/
restructured-betos-classification-system.
243 https://www.cms.gov/medicare/medicare-feefor-service-payment/physicianfeesched.
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
40710
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
payment rate analysis would classify
each E/M CPT/HCPCS code into a
corresponding category of service as
described in proposed § 447.203(b)(2)(i)
through (iii). As previously discussed,
by narrowing the comparative payment
rate analysis to CMS-specified E/M
CPT/HCPCS codes, we proposed States’
analyses include a broad range of core
services that would cover a variety of
commonly provided services that fall
into the categories of service proposed
in paragraphs (b)(2)(i) through (iii),
while also limiting the services to those
delivered primarily by physicians and
NPPs in an office-based setting. Based
on the categories of services specified in
proposed § 447.203(b)(2)(i) through (iii),
we stated that we would expect the
selected E/M CPT/HCPCS codes to fall
under mandatory Medicaid benefit
categories, and therefore, that all States
would cover and pay for the selected E/
M CPT/HCPCS codes. To clarify, we did
not narrow the list of E/M CPT/HCPCS
codes on the basis of Medicare coverage
of a particular code. We are cognizant
that codes with N (Non-Covered), R
(Restricted), or T code statuses have
limited or no Medicare coverage;
however, Medicare may establish RVUs,
and payment amounts for these codes.
Therefore, when Medicare does
establish RVUs and payment amounts
for codes with N (Non-Covered), R
(Restricted), or T (Injections) code
statuses on the Medicare PFS, we
proposed to include these codes in the
comparative payment rate analysis to
ensure the analysis includes a
comprehensive set of codes, for example
pediatric services, including well child
visits (for example, 99381 through
99384), that are commonly provided
services that fall into the categories of
service proposed in paragraphs (b)(2)(i)
through (iii) and delivered primarily by
physicians and NPPs in an office-based
setting, as previously described.
We proposed that the comparative
payment rate analysis would be updated
no less than every 2 years. Therefore,
prior to the start of the calendar year in
which States would be required to
update their comparative payment rate
analysis, we noted our intent to publish
an updated list of E/M CPT/HCPCS
codes for States to use for their
comparative payment rate analysis
updates through subregulatory
guidance. The updated list of E/M CPT/
HCPCS codes would include changes
made by the AMA CPT Editorial Panel
(such as additions, removals, or
amendments to a code definition where
there is a change in the set of codes
classified as an E/M CPT/HCPCS code
billable for primary care services,
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
obstetrics and gynecological services, or
outpatient behavioral services) and
changes to the Medicare PFS based on
the most recent Medicare PFS final rule
(such as changes in code status or
creation of Medicare-specific codes).244
We explained that we would intend to
publish the initial and subsequent
updates of the list of E/M CPT/HCPCS
codes subject to the comparative
payment rate analysis in a timely
manner that allows States
approximately one full calendar year
between the publication of the CMSpublished list of E/M CPT/HCPCS codes
and the due date of the comparative
payment rate analysis. We may issue a
correction to the Medicare PFS after the
final rule is in effect, and this correction
may impact our published list of E/M
CPT/HCPCS codes. In this instance, for
codes included on our published list of
E/M CPT/HCPCS codes that are affected
by a correction to the most recent
Medicaid PFS final rule, we may add or
remove an E/M CPT/HCPCS code from
the published list, as appropriate,
depending on the change to the
Medicare PFS. Alternatively, depending
on the nature of the change, we stated
that we would expect States to
accurately identify which code(s) are
used in the Medicaid program during
the relevant period that best correspond
to the CMS-identified E/M CPT/HCPCS
code(s) affected by the Medicare PFS
correction. We would expect States to
rely on the CMS published list of E/M
CPT/HCPCS codes subject to the
comparative payment rate analysis for
complying with the proposed
requirements in paragraphs (b)(2)
through (4).
We acknowledged that there are
limitations to relying on E/M CPT/
HCPCS codes to select payment rates for
comparative payment rate analysis to
aid States, CMS, and other interested
parties in assessing if payments are
consistent with efficiency, economy,
and quality of care and are sufficient to
enlist enough providers so that care and
services are available under the plan at
least to the extent that such care and
services are available to the general
population in the geographic area.
Providers across the country and within
each State deliver a variety of services
to patients, including individuals with
public and private sources of coverage,
and then bill them under a narrow
subset of CPT/HCPCS codes that fit into
the E/M classification as determined by
the AMA CPT Editorial Panel. The
actual services delivered can require a
244 https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Feefor-Service-Payment/PhysicianFeeSched/PFSFederal-Regulation-Notices.
PO 00000
Frm 00170
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
wide array of time, skills, and
experience of the provider which must
be represented by a single five-digit
code for billing to receive payment for
the services delivered. While there are
general principles that guide providers
in billing the most representative E/M
CPT/HCPCS code for the service they
delivered, two providers might perform
substantially similar activities when
delivering services and yet bill different
E/M CPT/HCPCS codes for those
activities, or bill the same E/M CPT/
HCPCS code for furnishing two very
different services. The E/M CPT/HCPCS
code itself is not a tool for capturing the
exact service that was delivered, but
medical documentation helps support
the billing of a particular E/M CPT/
HCPCS code.
Although they do not encompass all
Medicaid services covered and paid for
in the Medicaid program which are
subject to the requirements in section
1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act, E/M CPT/
HCPCS codes are some of the most
commonly billed codes and including
them in the comparative payment rate
analysis would allow us to uniformly
compare Medicaid payment rates for
these codes to Medicare PFS rates. As
such, to balance administrative burden
on States and our enforcement
responsibilities, we proposed to use E/
M CPT/HCPCS codes in the comparative
payment rate analysis to limit the
analysis to how much Medicaid and the
FFS Medicare program would pay for
services that can be classified into a
particular E/M CPT/HCPCS code. We
solicited comments on the proposed
comparative payment rate analysis
requirement in § 447.203(b)(3)(i),
including the proposed requirement to
conduct the analysis at the CPT/HCPCS
code level, the proposed criteria that we
would apply in selecting E/M CPT/
HCPCS codes for inclusion in the
required analysis, and the proposed
requirement for States to compare
Medicaid payment rates for the selected
E/M CPT/HCPCS codes to the most
recently published Medicare nonfacility payment rate as established in
the annual Medicare PFS final rule
effective for the same time period,
which is discussed in more detail later
in this rule when describing the
proposed provisions of
§ 447.203(b)(3)(i)(C).
In paragraph (b)(3)(i), we further
proposed that the State’s comparative
payment rate analysis would be
required to meet the following
requirements: (A) the analysis must be
organized by category of service as
described in § 447.203(b)(2)(i) through
(iii); (B) the analysis must clearly
identify the base Medicaid FFS fee
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
schedule payment rate for each E/M
CPT/HCPCS code identified by us under
the applicable category of service,
including, if the rates vary, separate
identification of the payment rates by
population (pediatric and adult),
provider type, and geographical
location, as applicable; (C) the analysis
must clearly identify the Medicare PFS
non-facility payment rates effective for
the same time period for the same set of
E/M CPT/HCPCS codes, and for the
same geographical location as the base
Medicaid FFS fee schedule payment
rate, that correspond to the Medicaid
payment rates identified under
paragraph (b)(3)(i)(B); (D) the analysis
must specify the Medicaid payment rate
identified under paragraph (b)(3)(i)(B) as
a percentage of the Medicare payment
rate identified under paragraph
(b)(3)(i)(C) for each of the services for
which the Medicaid payment rate is
published under paragraph (b)(3)(i)(B);
and (E) the analysis must specify the
number of Medicaid-paid claims within
a calendar year for each of the services
for which the Medicaid payment rate is
published under paragraph (b)(3)(i)(B).
We solicited comments on the proposed
requirements and content of the items in
proposed § 447.203(b)(3)(i)(A) through
(E).
In paragraph (b)(3)(i)(A), we proposed
to require States to organize their
comparative payment rate analysis by
the service categories described in
paragraphs (b)(2)(i) through (iii). We
explained that this proposed
requirement is included to ensure the
analysis breaks out the payment rates
for primary care services, obstetrical and
gynecological services, and outpatient
behavioral health services separately for
individual analyses of the payment rates
for each CMS-selected E/M CPT/HCPCS
code, grouped by category of service.
We solicited comments on the proposed
requirement for States to break out their
payment rates at the CPT/HCPCS code
level for primary care services,
obstetrical and gynecological services,
and outpatient behavioral health
services, separately, in the comparative
payment rate analysis as specified in
proposed § 447.203(b)(3)(i)(A).
In paragraph (b)(3)(i)(B), after
organizing the analysis by
§ 447.203(b)(2)(i) through (iii) categories
of service and CMS-specified E/M CPT/
HCPCS code, we proposed to require
States to clearly identify the Medicaid
base payment rate for each code,
including, if the rates vary, separate
identification of the payment rates by
population (pediatric and adult),
provider type, and geographical
location, as applicable. We proposed
that the Medicaid base payment rate in
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
the comparative payment rate analysis
would only include the State’s Medicaid
fee schedule rate, that is, the State’s
Medicaid base rate for each E/M CPT/
HCPCS code. By specifying the services
included in the comparative payment
rate analysis by E/M CPT/HCPCS code,
we noted that we would expect the
Medicaid base payment rate in the
comparative payment rate analysis to
only include the State’s Medicaid fee
schedule rate for that particular E/M
CPT/HCPCS code as published on the
State’s Medicaid fee schedule effective
for the same time period covered by the
comparative payment rate analysis. As
an example, the State’s Medicaid fee
schedule rate as published on the
Medicaid fee schedule effective for the
time period of the comparative payment
rate analysis for 99202 is listed as
$50.00. This rate would be the Medicaid
base payment rate in the State’s
comparative payment rate analysis for
comparison to the Medicare non-facility
rate, which is discussed later in this
section.
Medicaid base payment rates are
typically determined through one of
three methods: the resource-based
relative value scale (RBRVS), a
percentage of Medicare’s fee, or a Statedeveloped fee schedule using local
factors.245 The RBRVS system, initially
developed for the Medicare program,
assigns a relative value to every
physician procedure based on the
complexity of the procedure, practice
expense, and malpractice expense.
States may also adopt the Medicare fee
schedule rate, which is also based on
RBRVS, but select a fixed percentage of
the Medicare amount to pay for
Medicaid services. States can develop
their own PFSs, typically determined
based on market value or an internal
process, and often do this in situations
where there is no Medicare or private
payer equivalent or when an alternate
payment methodology is necessary for
programmatic reasons. States often
adjust their payment rates based on
provider type, geography, site of
services, patient age, and in-State or outof-State provider status. Additionally,
base Medicaid FFS fee schedule
payment rate can be paid to physicians
in a variety of settings, including
clinics, community health centers, and
private offices.
We acknowledged that only including
Medicaid base payments in the analysis
does not necessarily represent all of a
provider’s revenues that may be related
to furnishing services to Medicaid
245 https://www.macpac.gov/wp-content/uploads/
2017/02/Medicaid-Physician-Fee-for-ServicePayment-Policy.pdf.
PO 00000
Frm 00171
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40711
beneficiaries, and that other revenues
not included in the proposed
comparative analysis may be relevant to
a provider’s willingness to participate in
Medicaid (such as beneficiary cost
sharing payments, and supplemental
payments). We discussed that public
comments we received on the 2011
proposed rule and responded to in the
2015 final rule with comment period
regarding the previous AMRPs
expressed differing views regarding
which provider ‘‘revenues’’ should be
included within comparisons of
Medicaid to Medicare payment rates.
One commenter ‘‘noted that the
preamble of the 2011 proposed rule
refers to ‘payments’ and ‘rates’
interchangeably but that courts have
defined payments to include all
Medicaid provider revenues rather than
only Medicaid FFS rates.’’ The
commenter stated that if the final rule
consider[ed] all Medicaid revenues
received by providers, States may be
challenged to make any change to the
Medicaid program that might reduce
provider revenues.’’ 246 We proposed to
narrow the base Medicaid FFS fee
schedule payment rate to the amount
listed on the State’s fee schedule in
order for the comparative payment rate
analysis to accurately and analogously
compare Medicaid fee schedule rates to
Medicare non-facility payment rate as
established in the annual Medicare PFS
final rule for a calendar year.
We explained our belief that this
approach would represent the best way
to create a consistent metric across
States against which to evaluate access.
Specifically, we did not propose to
include supplemental payments in the
comparative payment rate analysis.
Requiring supplemental payment data
be collected and included under this
rule would be duplicative of existing
requirements. State supplemental
payment and DSH payment data are
already subject to our review in various
forms, such as through DSH audits for
DSH payments, and through annual
upper payment limits demonstrations,
and through supplemental payment
reporting under section 1903(bb) of the
Act.247 248 As such, we explained that
246 80
FR 67576 at 67581.
State Medicaid Director Letter: SMDL
13–003. March 2013. Federal and State Oversight of
Medicaid Expenditures. Available at https://
www.medicaid.gov/sites/default/files/FederalPolicy-Guidance/Downloads/SMD-13-003-02.pdf.
248 CMS State Medicaid Director Letter: SMDL
21–006. December 2021. New Supplemental
Payment Reporting and Medicaid Disproportionate
Share Hospital Requirements under the
Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2021. Available
at https://www.medicaid.gov/federal-policyguidance/downloads/smd21006.pdf.
247 CMS
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
40712
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
we do not see a need to add additional
reporting requirements concerning
supplemental payments as part of the
proposals in this rulemaking to allow us
the opportunity to review the data. Also,
supplemental payments are often made
for specific Medicaid-covered services
and targeted to a subset of Medicaidparticipating providers; not all
Medicaid-participating providers, and
not all providers of a given Medicaidcovered service, may receive
supplemental payments in a State.
Therefore, including supplemental
payments in the comparative payment
rate analysis would create additional
burden for States without then also
providing an accurate benchmark of
how payments may affect beneficiary
access due to the potentially varied and
uneven distribution of supplemental
payments. Accordingly, we proposed to
require that States conduct the
comparative payment rate analysis for
only Medicaid base payment rates for
selected E/M CPT/HCPCS codes. For
each proposed category of service listed
in paragraphs (b)(2)(i) through (iii), this
would result in a transparent and
parallel comparison of Medicaid base
payment rates that all Medicaidparticipating providers of the service
would receive to the payment rates that
Medicare would pay for the same E/M
CPT/HCPCS codes.
Additionally, in paragraph (b)(3)(i)(B),
we proposed that, if the States’ payment
rates vary, the Medicaid base payment
rates must include a breakdown by
payment rates paid to providers
delivering services to pediatric and
adult populations, by provider type, and
geographical location, as applicable, to
capture this potential variation in the
State’s payment rates. This proposed
provision to breakdown the Medicaid
payment rate is first stated in proposed
paragraph (b)(2) and carried through in
proposed paragraph (b)(3)(i)(B) to
provide clarity to States about how the
Medicaid payment rate should be
reported in the comparative payment
rate analysis.
In paragraph (b)(3)(i)(C), we proposed
to require States’ comparative payment
rate analysis clearly identify the
Medicare non-facility payment rates as
established in the annual Medicare PFS
final rule effective for the same time
period for the same set of E/M CPT/
HCPCS codes, and for the same
geographical location, that correspond
to the Medicaid payment rates
identified under paragraph (b)(3)(i)(B),
including separate identification of the
payment rates by provider type. We did
not propose to establish a threshold
percentage of Medicare non-facility
payment rates that States would be
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
required to meet when setting their
Medicaid payment rates. Rather, we
proposed to use Medicare non-facility
payment rates as established in the
Medicare PFS final rule for a calendar
year as a benchmark to which States
would compare their Medicaid payment
rates to inform their and our assessment
of whether the State’s payment rates are
compliant with section 1902(a)(30)(A) of
the Act. We explained that
benchmarking against FFS Medicare,
another of the nation’s large public
health coverage programs, serves as an
important data point in determining
whether payment rates are likely to be
sufficient to ensure access for Medicaid
beneficiaries at least as great as for the
general population in the geographic
area, and whether any identified access
concerns may be related to payment
sufficiency. Similar to Medicaid,
Medicare provides health coverage for a
significant number of Americans across
the country. In December 2023, total
Medicaid enrollment was at 77.9
million individuals 249 while total
Medicare enrollment was at 66.8 million
individuals.250 251 Both the Medicare
and Medicaid programs cover and pay
for services provided to beneficiaries
residing in every State and territory of
the United States. As previously
described, Medicare non-facility
payment rates as established in the
annual Medicare PFS final rule for a
calendar year for covered, non-covered,
and limited coverage services generally
are determined on a national level as
well as adjusted to reflect the variation
in practice costs from one geographical
location to another. Medicare also
ensures that their payment rate data are
publicly available in a format that can
be analyzed. The accessibility and
consistency of the Medicare non-facility
payment rates as established in the
annual Medicare PFS final rule for a
249 https://www.medicaid.gov/medicaid/nationalmedicaid-chip-program-information/downloads/
December-2022-medicaid-chip-enrollment-trendsnapshot.pdf.
250 Total Medicare enrollment equals the Tot_
Benes variable in the Medicare Monthly Enrollment
Data for December (Month) 2023 (Year) at the
national level (Bene_Geo_Lvl). Tot_Benes is a count
of all Medicare beneficiaries, including
beneficiaries with Original Medicare and
beneficiaries with Medicare Advantage and Other
Health Plans. We utilized the count of all Medicare
beneficiaries because Original Medicare, Medicare
Advantage, and other Health Plans offer fee-forservice payments to providers. See the Medicare
Monthly Enrollment Data Dictionary for more
information about the variables in the Medicare
Monthly Enrollment Data: https://data.cms.gov/
sites/default/files/2023-02/1ec24f76-9964-4d009e9a-78bd556b7223/Medicare%20Monthly%20
Enrollment_Data_Dictionary%2020230131_508.pdf.
251 https://data.cms.gov/summary-statistics-onbeneficiary-enrollment/medicare-and-medicaidreports/medicare-monthly-enrollment.
PO 00000
Frm 00172
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
calendar year, compared to negotiated
private health insurance payment rates
that typically are considered proprietary
information and, therefore, not generally
available to the public, makes Medicare
non-facility payment rates as
established in the annual Medicare PFS
final rule for a calendar year an
available and reliable comparison point
for States to use in the comparative
payment rate analysis.
Additionally, Medicare is widely
accepted nationwide according to recent
findings from the National Electronic
Health Records Survey. In 2019, 95
percent of physicians accepting new
patients overall, and 89 percent of
office-based physicians, were accepting
new Medicare patients, and the
percentage of office-based physicians
accepting new Medicare patients has
remained stable since 2011 when the
value was 88 percent, with modest
fluctuations in the years in between.252
In regards to physician specialties that
align with the categories of services in
this rule, 81 percent of general practice/
family medicine physicians and 81
percent of physicians specializing in
internal medicine were accepting new
Medicare patients, 93 percent of
physicians specializing obstetrics and
gynecology were accepting new
Medicare patients, and 60 percent of
psychiatrists were accepting new
Medicare patients in 2019. Although the
percentage of psychiatrists who accept
Medicare is lower than other types of
physicians providing services included
in the comparative payment rate
analysis, this circumstance is not
unique to Medicare amongst payers. For
example, 60 percent of psychiatrists
were also accepting new privately
insured patients in 2019.253 Therefore,
the decreased rate of acceptance by
psychiatrists relative to certain other
physician specialists does not make
Medicare an inappropriate benchmark
when evaluated against other options
for comparison.254
Historically, Medicare has low rates of
physicians formally opting out of the
Medicare program with 1 percent of
physicians consistently opting out
between 2013 and 2019 and of that 1
percent of physicians opting out of
Medicare, 42 percent were
252 https://www.kff.org/medicare/issue-brief/
most-office-based-physicians-accept-new-patientsincluding-patients-with-medicare-and-privateinsurance/.
253 https://www.kff.org/medicare/issue-brief/
most-office-based-physicians-accept-new-patientsincluding-patients-with-medicare-and-privateinsurance/.
254 https://www.kff.org/medicare/issue-brief/faqson-mental-health-and-substance-use-disordercoverage-in-medicare/.
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
psychiatrists.255 This information
suggests that Medicare’s payment rates
generally are consistent with a high
level of physician willingness to accept
new Medicare patients, with the vast
majority of physicians willing to accept
Medicare’s payment rates. For the
reasons previously described, we
proposed to use Medicare non-facility
payment rates as established in the
annual Medicare PFS final rule for a
calendar year as a national benchmark
for States to compare their Medicaid
payment rates in the comparative
payment rate analysis because we
believe that the Medicare payment rates
for these services are likely to serve as
a reliable benchmark for a level of
payment sufficient to enlist providers to
furnish the relevant services to an
individual. We solicited comments on
the proposed use of Medicare nonfacility payment rates as established in
the annual Medicare PFS final rule for
a calendar year as a benchmark for
States to compare their Medicaid
payment rates to in the comparative
payment rate analysis requirements in
proposed § 447.203(b)(3)(i) to help
assess if Medicaid payments are
consistent with efficiency, economy,
and quality of care and are sufficient to
enlist enough providers so that care and
services are available under the plan at
least to the extent that such care and
services are available to the general
population in the geographic area.
In paragraph (b)(3)(i)(C), we proposed
to require States to compare their
Medicaid payment rates to the Medicare
non-facility payment rates as
established in the annual Medicare PFS
final rule effective for the same time
period as the same set of E/M CPT/
HCPCS codes paid under Medicaid as
specified under paragraph (b)(3)(i)(B) of
this section, including separate
identification of the payment rates by
provider type. We proposed to require
States to compare their payment rates to
the corresponding Medicare PFS nonfacility rates because we are seeking a
payment analysis that compares
Medicaid payment rates to Medicare
payment rates at comparable location of
service delivery (that is, in a non-clinic,
255 Physicians and practitioners who do not wish
to enroll in the Medicare program may ‘‘opt-out’’ of
Medicare. This means that neither the physician,
nor the beneficiary submits the bill to Medicare for
services rendered. Instead, the beneficiary pays the
physician out-of-pocket and neither party is
reimbursed by Medicare. A private contract is
signed between the physician and the beneficiary
that states that neither one can receive payment
from Medicare for the services that were performed.
See 2022 opt-out affidavit data published by the
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid services: https://
data.cms.gov/provider-characteristics/medicareprovider-supplier-enrollment/opt-out-affidavits.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
non-hospital, ambulatory setting such as
a physician’s office). States often pay
physicians operating in an office based
on their Medicaid fee schedule whereas
they may pay physicians operating in
hospitals or clinics using an encounter
rate. The Medicaid fee schedule rate
typically reflects payment for an
individual service that was rendered, for
example, an office visit that is billed as
a single CPT/HCPCS code. An
encounter rate often reflects
reimbursement for total facility-specific
costs divided by the number of
encounters to calculate a per visit or per
encounter rate that is paid to the facility
for all services received during an
encounter, regardless of which specific
services are provided during a particular
encounter. For example, the same
encounter rate may be paid for a
beneficiary who has an office visit with
a physician, a dental examination and
cleaning from a dentist, and laboratory
tests and for a beneficiary who receives
an office visit with a physician and xrays. Encounter rates are typically paid
to facilities, such as hospitals, FQHCs,
RHCs, or clinics, many of which
function as safety net providers that
offer a wide variety of medical services.
Within the Medicaid program,
encounter rates can vary widely in the
rate itself and services paid for through
the encounter rate. We explained that
States demonstrating the economy and
efficiency of their encounter rates would
be an entirely different exercise to the
fee schedule rate comparison proposed
in this rule because encounter rates are
often based on costs unique to the
provider, and States often require
providers to submit cost reports to
States for review to support payment of
the encounter rate. Comparing cost
between the Medicaid and Medicare
program would require a different
methodology, policies, and oversight
than the comparative payment rate
analysis requirement that we proposed
due to the differences within and
between each program. While the
Medicare program has a broad, national
policy for calculating encounter rates for
providers, including prospective
payment systems for hospitals, FQHCs,
and other types of facilities, Medicare
calculates these encounter rates
differently than States may calculate
analogous rates in Medicaid. Therefore,
we explained that disaggregating each of
their encounter rates and services
covered in each encounter rate to
compare to Medicare’s encounter rates
would be challenging for States.
From that logic, we likewise
determined that the Medicare nonfacility payment rates as established in
PO 00000
Frm 00173
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40713
the annual Medicare PFS final rule for
a calendar year would afford the best
point of comparison because it is the
most accurate and most analogous
comparison of a service-based access
analysis using Medicare non-facility
payment rates as established in the
annual Medicare PFS final rule for a
calendar year as a benchmark to
compare Medicaid fee schedule rates on
a CPT/HCPCS code level basis, as
opposed to an encounter rate which
could include any number of services or
specialties. The Medicare non-facility
payment rate as established in the
annual Medicare PFS final rule for a
calendar year is described as ‘‘. . . the
fee schedule amount when a physician
performs a procedure in a non-facility
setting such as the office’’ and
‘‘[g]enerally, Medicare gives higher
payments to physicians and other health
care professionals for procedures
performed in their offices [compared to
those performed elsewhere] because
they must supply clinical staff, supplies,
and equipment.’’ 256 As such, we stated
our belief that the Medicaid fee
schedule best represents the payment
intended to pay physicians and nonphysician practitioners for delivery of
individual services in an office (nonfacility) setting, and the Medicare nonfacility payment rate as established in
the annual Medicare PFS final rule for
a calendar year represents the best
equivalent to that amount and
consideration.
For the purposes of the comparative
payment rate analysis, we explained in
the proposed rule that we would expect
States to source the Medicare nonfacility payment rate from the published
Medicare fee schedule amounts that are
established in the annual Medicare PFS
final rule through one or both of the
following sources: the Physician Fee
Schedule Look-Up Tool 257 on cms.gov
or Excel file downloads of the Medicare
PFS Relative Value with Conversion
Factor files 258 for the relevant calendar
year from cms.gov. We acknowledge
that the Physician Fee Schedule LookUp Tool is a display tool that functions
as a helpful aid for physicians and NPPs
as a way to quickly look up PFS
payment rates, but does not provide
official payment rate information. While
we encouraged States to begin sourcing
Medicare non-facility payment rates
from the Physician Fee Schedule LookUp Tool and utilize the Physician Fee
256 https://www.cms.gov/files/document/
physician-fee-schedule-guide.pdf.
257 https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Feefor-Service-Payment/PFSlookup.
258 https://www.cms.gov/medicare/medicare-feefor-service-payment/physicianfeesched/pfs-relativevalue-files.
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
40714
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Schedule Guide for instructions on
using the Look-Up Tool in the proposed
rule, we would like to clarify in this
final rule that States should first
download and review the Medicare PFS
Relative Value with Conversion Factor
File where States can find the necessary
information for calculating Medicare
non-facility payment rates as
established in the annual Medicare PFS
final rule for a calendar year. With the
publication of this final rule, we have
also issued subregulatory guidance,
which includes an instructional guide
for identifying, downloading, and using
the relevant Excel files for calculating
the Medicare non-facility payment rates
as established in the annual Medicare
PFS final rule for a calendar year that
States will need to include in their
comparative payment rate analysis.
Statutory provisions at section 1848 of
the Act and regulatory provisions at 42
CFR 414.20 259 require that most
physician services provided in Medicare
are paid under the Medicare PFS. The
fee schedule amounts are established for
each service, generally described by a
particular procedure code (including
HCPCS, CPT, and CDT) using resourcebased inputs to establish relative value
units (RVUs) in three components of a
procedure: work, practice expense, and
malpractice. The three component RVUs
for each service are adjusted using CMScalculated geographic practice cost
indexes (GPCIs) that reflect geographic
cost differences in each fee schedule
area as compared to the national
average.260 261
For many services, the Medicare PFS
also includes separate fee schedule
amounts based on the site of service
(non-facility versus facility setting). The
applicable PFS the rate for a service,
facility or non-facility, is based on the
setting where the beneficiary received
the face-to-face encounter with the
billing practitioner, which is indicated
on the claim form by a place of service
(POS) code. We proposed States use the
Medicare non-facility payment rate as
established in the annual Medicare PFS
final rule for a calendar year in the
comparative payment rate analysis. We
directed States to the Excel file
downloads of the ‘‘PFS Relative Value
Files’’ which include the RVUs, GPCIs,
259 The Medicare Claims Processing Manual
contains additional information about physician
service payments in Medicare that are based on the
cited statutory and regulatory requirements. https://
www.cms.gov/regulations-and-guidance/guidance/
manuals/internet-only-manuals-ioms-items/
cms018912.
260 https://www.cms.gov/regulations-andguidance/guidance/manuals/downloads/
clm104c12.pdf.
261 https://www.cms.gov/medicare/physician-feeschedule/search/overview.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
and the ‘‘National Physician Fee
Schedule Relative Value File Calendar
Year 2023’’ file which contains the
associated relative value units (RVUs), a
fee schedule status indicator, and
various payment policy indicators
needed for payment adjustment (for
example, payment of assistant at
surgery, team surgery, or bilateral
surgery). We stated that we would
expect States to use the formula for the
Non-Facility Pricing Amount in
‘‘National Physician Fee Schedule
Relative Value File Calendar Year 2023’’
file to calculate the ‘‘Non-Facility Price’’
using the RVUs, GPCIs, and conversion
factors for codes not available in the
Look-Up Tool.
We explained that Medicaid FFS feeschedule payment rates should be
representative of the total computable
payment amount a provider would
expect to receive as payment-in-full for
the provision of Medicaid services to
individual beneficiaries. Section 447.15
defines payment-in-full as ‘‘the amounts
paid by the agency plus any deductible,
coinsurance or copayment required by
the plan to be paid by the individual.’’
Therefore, the State’s Medicaid base
payment rates used for comparison
should be inclusive of total base
payment from the Medicaid agency plus
any applicable coinsurance and
deductibles to the extent that a
beneficiary is expected to be liable for
those payments. If a State Medicaid fee
schedule does not include these
additional beneficiary cost-sharing
payment amounts, then the Medicaid
fee schedule amounts would need to be
modified to align with the inclusion of
expected beneficiary cost sharing in
Medicare’s non-facility payment rates as
established in the annual Medicare PFS
final rule for a calendar year.262
In paragraph (b)(3)(i)(C), we proposed
that the Medicare non-facility payment
rates as established in the annual
Medicare PFS final rule must be
effective for the same time period for the
same set of E/M CPT/HCPCS codes that
correspond to the base Medicaid FFS fee
schedule payment rate identified under
paragraph (b)(3)(i)(B). We included this
language to ensure the comparative
payment rate analysis is as accurate and
analogous as possible by proposing that
the Medicaid and Medicare payment
rates that are effective during the same
time period for the same set of E/M
CPT/HCPCS codes. As later described in
this rule, in paragraph (b)(4), we
proposed the initial comparative
262 According to the Medicare Physician Fee
Schedule Guide, for most codes, Medicare pays
80% of the amount listed and the beneficiary is
responsible for 20 percent.
PO 00000
Frm 00174
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
payment rate analysis and payment rate
disclosure of Medicaid payment rates
would be a retroactive analysis of
payment rates that are in effect as of
January 1, 2025, with the analysis and
disclosure published no later than
January 1, 2026. For example, the first
comparative payment rate analysis a
State develops and publishes would
compare base Medicaid FFS fee
schedule payment rate in effect as of
January 1, 2025, to the Medicare nonfacility payment rates as established in
the annual Medicare PFS final rule
effective January 1, 2025, to ensure the
Medicare non-facility payment rates are
effective for the same time period for the
same set of E/M CPT/HCPCS codes that
correspond to the Medicaid FFS fee
schedule payment rate identified under
paragraph (b)(3)(i)(B).
Additionally, in paragraph (b)(3)(i)(C),
we proposed that the Medicare nonfacility payment rates as established in
the annual Medicare PFS final rule used
for the comparison must be for the same
geographical location as the Medicaid
FFS fee schedule payment rate. For
States that pay Medicaid payment rates
based on geographical location (for
example, payment rates that vary by
rural or non-rural location, by zip code,
or by metropolitan statistical area), we
proposed that States’ comparative
payment rate analyses would need to
use the Medicare non-facility payment
rates as established in the annual
Medicare PFS final rule for a calendar
year for the same geographical location
as the Medicaid FFS fee schedule
payment rate to achieve an equivalent
comparison. We stated that we would
expect States to review Medicare’s
published listing of the current PFS
locality structure organized by State,
locality area, and when applicable,
counties assigned to each locality area
and identify the comparable Medicare
locality area for the same geographical
area as the Medicaid FFS fee schedule
payment rate.263
We recognized that States that make
Medicaid payment based on
geographical location may not use the
same locality areas as Medicare. For
example, a State may use its own Statedetermined geographical designations,
resulting in 5 geographical areas in the
State for purposes of Medicaid payment
while Medicare recognizes 3 locality
areas for the State based on
Metropolitan Statistical Area (MSA)
delineations determined by the US
Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) that are the result of the
application of published standards to
263 https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Feefor-Service-Payment/PhysicianFeeSched/Locality.
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
Census Bureau data.264 In this instance,
we would expect the State to determine
an appropriate method to accomplish
the comparative payment rate analysis
that aligns the geographic area covered
by each payer’s rate as closely as
reasonably feasible. For example, if the
State identifies two geographic areas for
Medicaid payment purposes that are
contained almost entirely within one
Medicare geographic area, then the State
reasonably could determine to use the
same Medicare non-facility payment
rate as established in the annual
Medicare PFS final rule in the
comparative payment rate analysis for
each Medicaid geographic area. As
another example, if the State defined a
single geographic area for Medicaid
payment purposes that contained two
Medicare geographic areas, then the
State might determine a reasonable
method to weight the two Medicare
payment rates applicable within the
Medicaid geographic area, and then
compare the Medicaid payment rate for
the Medicaid-defined geographic area to
this weighted average of Medicare
payment rates. Alternatively, as
discussed in the next paragraph, the
State could determine to use the
unweighted arithmetic mean of the two
Medicare payment rates applicable
within the Medicaid-defined geographic
area. We solicited comments on the
proposed use of Medicare non-facility
payment rates as established in the
annual Medicare PFS final rule for a
calendar year as a benchmark for States
to compare their Medicaid payment
rates to in the comparative payment rate
analysis requirements in proposed
§ 447.203(b)(3)(i) to help assess if
Medicaid payments are consistent with
efficiency, economy, and quality of care
and are sufficient to enlist enough
providers so that care and services are
available under the plan at least to the
extent that such care and services are
available to the general population in
the geographic area.
We noted our awareness that States
may not determine their payment rates
by geographical location. For States that
do not pay Medicaid payment rates
based on geographical location, we
proposed that States compare their
Medicaid payment rates (separately
identified by population, pediatric and
adult, and provider type, as applicable)
to the Statewide average of Medicare
non-facility payment rates as
established in the annual Medicare PFS
final rule for a calendar year for a
particular CPT/HCPCS code. The
Statewide average of the Medicare non264 https://www.census.gov/programs-surveys/
metro-micro/about/delineation-files.html.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
facility payment rates as established in
the annual Medicare PFS final rule for
a calendar year for a particular CPT/
HCPCS code would be calculated as a
simple average or arithmetic mean
where all Medicare non-facility
payment rates as established in the
annual Medicare PFS final rule for a
calendar year for a particular CPT/
HCPCS code for a particular State would
be summed and divided by the number
of all Medicare non-facility payment
rates as established in the annual
Medicare PFS final rule for a calendar
year for a particular CPT/HCPCS code
for a particular State. This calculated
Statewide average of the Medicare nonfacility payment rates as established in
the annual Medicare PFS final rule for
a calendar year would be calculated for
each CPT/HCPCS code subject to the
comparative payment rate analysis
using the Non-Facility Price for each
locality in the State as established in the
annual Medicare PFS final rule for a
calendar year. As previously mentioned,
Medicare has published a listing of the
current PFS locality structure organized
by State, locality area, and when
applicable, counties assigned to each
locality area, and we would expect
States to use this listing to identify the
Medicare locality areas in their State.
For example, the Specific Medicare
Administrative Contractor (MAC) for
Maryland is 12302 and there are two
Specific Locality codes, 1230201 for
BALTIMORE/SURR. CNTYS and
1230299 for REST OF STATE. After
downloading and reviewing the CY
2023 Medicare PFS Relative Value Files
to identify the Medicare Non-Facility
Price(s) for CY 2023 for 99202 in the
Specific MAC locality code for
Maryland (12302 MARYLAND), the
following information can be obtained:
Medicare Non-Facility Price of $77.82
for BALTIMORE/SURR. CNTYS and
$74.31 for REST OF STATE.265 These
two Medicare Non-Facility Price(s)
would be averaged to obtain a
calculated Statewide average for
Maryland of $76.07.
For States that do not determine their
payment rates by geographical location,
we proposed that States would use the
Statewide average of the Medicare NonFacility Price(s) as listed on the PFS, as
previously described, because it ensures
consistency across all States’
comparative payment rate analysis,
aligns with the geographic area
requirement of section 1902(a)(30)(A) of
the Act, and ensures the Medicare nonfacility payment rates as established in
265 https://www.cms.gov/medicare/physician-feeschedule/search?Y=0&T=4&HT=0&CT=1&
H1=99202&C=43&M=5.
PO 00000
Frm 00175
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40715
the annual Medicare PFS final rule for
a calendar year that States use in their
comparative payment rate analysis
accurately reflect how Medicare pays for
services. We explained that this
proposal would ensure that all States’
comparative payment rate analyses
consistently include Medicare
geographical payment rate adjustments
as proposed in paragraph (b)(3)(i)(C). As
previously discussed, we proposed that
States that do pay varying rates by
geographical location would need to
identify the comparable Medicare
locality area for the same geographical
area as their Medicaid FFS fee schedule
payment rate. However, for States that
do not pay varying rates by geographical
location, at the operational level, the
State is effectively paying a Statewide
Medicaid payment rate, regardless of
geographical location, that cannot be
matched to a Medicare non-facility
payment rate as established in the
annual Medicare PFS final rule for a
calendar year in a comparable Medicare
locality area for the same geographical
area as the Medicaid FFS fee schedule
payment rate. Therefore, to consistently
apply the proposed provision that the
Medicare non-facility payment rate as
established in the annual Medicare PFS
final rule for a calendar year must be for
the same geographical location as the
Medicaid FFS fee schedule payment
rate, States that do not pay varying rates
by geographical location would be
required to calculate a Statewide
average of the Medicare non-facility
payment rates as established in the
annual Medicare PFS final rule for a
calendar year to compare the State’s
Statewide Medicaid payment rate.
Additionally, we proposed that States
that do not determine their payment
rates by geographical location should
use the Statewide average of the
Medicare non-facility payment rates as
established in the annual Medicare PFS
final rule for a calendar year to align the
implementing regulatory text with the
statute’s geographic area requirement in
section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act.
Section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act
requires that Medicaid payments are
sufficient to enlist enough providers so
that care and services are available
under the plan at least to the extent that
such care and services are available to
the general population in the geographic
area. Therefore, the proposed provisions
of this rule, which are implementing
section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act, must
include a method of ensuring we have
sufficient information for determining
sufficiency of access to care as
compared to the general population in
the geographic area. As we have
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
40716
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
proposed to use Medicare non-facility
payment rates as a benchmark for
comparing Medicaid FFS fee schedule
payment rate, we believe that utilizing
a Statewide average of Medicare nonfacility payment rates as established in
the annual Medicare PFS final rule for
a calendar year for States that do not
pay varying rates by geographical
location would align the geographic area
requirement of section 1902(a)(30)(A) of
the Act, treating the entire State
(throughout which the Medicaid base
payment rate applies uniformly) as the
relevant geographic area.
We considered requiring States
weight the Statewide average of the
Medicare non-facility payment rates as
established in the annual Medicare PFS
final rule for a calendar year by the
proportion of the Medicare beneficiary
population covered by each rate, but we
did not propose this due to the
additional administrative burden this
would create for States complying with
the proposed comparative payment rate
analysis as well as limited availability of
Medicare beneficiary and claims data
necessary to weight the Statewide
average of the Medicare non-facility
payment rates as established in the
annual Medicare PFS final rule for a
calendar year in this manner. As
proposed, States that do not determine
their payment rates by geographical
location would be required to consider
Medicare’s geographically determined
payment rates by Statewide average of
the Medicare non-facility payment rates
as established in the annual Medicare
PFS final rule for a calendar year. We
explained our belief that an additional
step to weight the Statewide average by
the proportion of the Medicare
beneficiary population covered by each
rate would not result in a practical
version of the Medicare non-facility
payment rate as established in the
annual Medicare PFS final rule for a
calendar year for purposes of the
comparative payment rate analysis.
Additionally, requiring only States that
do not determine their payment rates by
geographical location to weight
Medicare payment rates in this manner
would result in additional
administrative burden for such States
that is not imposed on States that do
determine their Medicaid payment rates
by geographical location. Additionally,
in order to accurately weight the
Statewide average of the Medicare nonfacility payment rates as established in
the annual Medicare PFS final rule for
a calendar year by the proportion of the
Medicare beneficiary population
covered by each rate, States would
likely require Medicare-paid claims data
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
for each code subject to the comparative
payment rate analysis, broken down by
each of the comparable Medicare
locality areas for the same geographical
area as the Medicaid FFS fee schedule
payment rate that are included in the
Statewide average of Medicare nonfacility payment rates as established in
the annual Medicare PFS final rule for
a calendar year. While total Medicare
beneficiary enrollment data broken
down by State and county level is
publicly available on data.cms.gov,
Medicare-paid claims data broken down
by the Medicare locality areas used in
the Medicare PFS and by code level is
not published by CMS and would be
inaccessible for the State to use in
weighting the Statewide average of the
Medicare non-facility payment rates as
established in the annual Medicare PFS
final rule for a calendar year by the
proportion of the Medicare beneficiary
population covered by each rate.
Accordingly, we explained our belief
that, for States that do not determine
their Medicaid payment rates by
geographical location, calculating a
simple Statewide average of the
Medicare non-facility rates in the State
would ensure consistency across all
States’ comparative payment rate
analyses, align with the geographic area
requirement of section 1902(a)(30)(A) of
the Act, and ensure the Medicare nonfacility payment rates as established in
the annual Medicare PFS final rule for
a calendar year that States use in their
comparative payment rate analyses
accurately reflect how Medicare pays for
services. We solicited comments
regarding our decision not to propose
requiring States that do not pay varying
Medicaid rates by geographical location
to weight the Statewide average of the
Medicare non-facility payment rates as
established in the annual Medicare PFS
final rule for a calendar year by the
distribution of Medicare beneficiaries in
the State.
Furthermore, in paragraph (b)(3)(i)(C),
we proposed that the Medicare nonfacility payment rate as established in
the annual Medicare PFS final rule must
separately identify the payment rates by
provider type. We previously discussed
that some States and Medicare pay a
percentage less than 100 percent of their
fee schedule payment rates to NPPs,
including, for example, nurse
practitioners, physician assistants, and
clinical nurse specialists. To ensure a
State’s comparative payment rate
analysis is as accurate as possible when
comparing their Medicaid payment rates
to Medicare, we proposed that States
include a breakdown of Medicare’s nonfacility payment rates by provider type.
PO 00000
Frm 00176
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
The proposed breakdown of Medicare’s
payment rates by provider type would
be required for all States, regardless of
whether or how the State’s Medicaid
payment rates vary by provider type,
because it ensures the comparative
payment rate analysis accurately reflects
this existing Medicare payment policy
on the Medicare side of the analysis.
Therefore, every comparative payment
rate analysis would include the
following Medicare non-facility
payment rates as established in the
annual Medicare PFS final rule for a
calendar year for the same set of E/M
CPT/HCPCS codes paid under Medicaid
as described in § 447.203(b)(3)(i)(B): the
non-facility payment rate as established
in the annual Medicare PFS rate as the
Medicare payment rate for physicians
and the non-facility payment rate as
listed on Medicare PFS rate multiplied
by 0.85 as the Medicare payment rate for
NPPs.
As previously mentioned in this final
rule, Medicare pays nurse practitioners,
physician assistants, and clinical nurse
specialists at 85 percent of the Medicare
PFS rate. Medicare implements a
payment policy where the fee schedule
amounts, including the Medicare nonfacility payment rates as established in
the annual Medicare PFS final rule for
a calendar year, are reduced to 85
percent when billed by NPPs, including
nurse practitioners, physician assistants,
and clinical nurse specialists, whereas
physicians are paid 100 percent of the
fee schedule amounts Medicare nonfacility payment rate as established in
the annual Medicare PFS final rule for
a calendar year.266 As proposed, States’
comparative payment rate analysis
would need to match their Medicaid
payment rates for each provider type to
the corresponding Medicare non-facility
payment rates as established in the
annual Medicare PFS final rule for a
calendar year for each provider type,
regardless of the State paying varying or
the same payment rates to their
providers for the same service. As an
example of a State that pays varying
rates based on provider type, if a State’s
Medicaid fee schedule lists a rate of
$100.00 when a physician delivers and
bills for 99202, then the $100.00
Medicaid base payment rate would be
compared to 100 percent of the
Medicare non-facility payment rate as
established in the annual Medicare PFS
final rule for a calendar year. If the same
State’s Medicaid fee schedule lists a rate
of $75 when a nurse practitioner
delivers and bills for 99202 (or the
State’s current approved State plan
266 https://www.cms.gov/files/document/
physician-fee-schedule-guide.pdf.
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
language states that a nurse practitioner
is paid 75 percent of the State’s
Medicaid fee schedule rate), then the
$75 Medicaid base payment rate would
be compared to the Medicare nonfacility payment rate as established in
the annual Medicare PFS final rule for
a calendar year multiplied by 0.85. Both
Medicare non-facility payments rates
would need to account for any
applicable geographical variation,
including the Non-Facility Price
Medicare non-facility payment rate as
established in the annual Medicare PFS
final rule for a calendar year for each
relevant locality area or the calculated
Statewide average of the Non-Facility
Price Medicare non-facility payment
rate as established in the annual
Medicare PFS final rule for a calendar
year for all relevant areas of a State, as
previously discussed in this section, for
an accurate comparison to the
corresponding Medicaid payment rate.
Alternatively, if a State pays the same
$80 Medicaid base payment rate for the
service when delivered by physicians
and by nurse practitioners, then the $80
would be listed separately for
physicians and nurse practitioners as
the Medicaid base payment rate and
compared to the Medicare non-facility
payment rate as established in the
annual Medicare PFS final rule for a
calendar year for physicians and the
Medicare non-facility payment rate as
established in the annual Medicare PFS
final rule for a calendar year multiplied
by 0.85 for nurse practitioners.
This granular level of comparison
provides States with the opportunity to
benchmark their Medicaid payment
rates against Medicare as part of the
State’s and our process for ensuring
compliance with section 1902(a)(30)(A)
of the Act. For example, a State’s
comparative payment rate analysis may
show that the State’s Medicaid base
payment rate for physicians is 80
percent of the Medicare non-facility
payment rate as established in the
annual Medicare PFS final rule for a
calendar year and their Medicaid base
payment rate for nurse practitioners is
71 percent of the Medicare non-facility
payment rate for NPPs, because the
State pays a reduced rate to nurse
practitioners. Although Medicare also
pays a reduced rate to nurse
practitioners, the reduced rate the State
pays to nurse practitioners compared to
Medicare’s reduced rate is still a lower
percentage than the physician rate.
However, another State’s comparative
payment rate analysis may show that
the State’s Medicaid base payment rate
for physicians is 95 percent of the
Medicare non-facility payment rate as
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
established in the annual Medicare PFS
final rule for a calendar year and their
Medicaid base payment rate for nurse
practitioners is 110 percent of the
Medicare non-facility payment rate
because the State pays all providers the
same Medicaid base payment rate while
Medicare pays a reduced rate of 85
percent of the Medicare non-facility
payment rate as established in the
annual Medicare PFS final rule for a
calendar year when the service is
furnished by an NPP. By conducting
this level of analysis through the
comparative payment rate analysis,
States would be able to pinpoint where
there may be existing or potential future
access to care concerns rooted in
payment rates. We solicited comments
on the proposed requirement for States
to compare their Medicaid payment
rates to the Medicare non-facility
payment rate as established in the
annual Medicare PFS final rule for a
calendar year, effective for the same
time period for the same set of E/M
CPT/HCPCS codes, and for the same
geographical location as the Medicaid
FFS fee schedule payment rate, that
correspond to the Medicaid FFS fee
schedule payment rate identified under
paragraph (b)(3)(i)(B) of this section,
including separate identification of the
payment rates by provider type, as
proposed in § 447.203(b)(3)(i)(C).
In paragraph (b)(3)(i)(D), we proposed
to require States specify the Medicaid
base payment rate identified under
proposed § 447.203(b)(3)(i)(B) as a
percentage of the Medicare non-facility
payment rate as established in the
annual Medicare PFS final rule
identified under proposed
§ 447.203(b)(3)(i)(C) for each of the
services for which the Medicaid base
payment rate is published under
proposed § 447.203(b)(3)(i)(B). For each
E/M CPT/HCPCS code that we select,
we proposed that States would calculate
each Medicaid base payment rate as
specified in paragraph (b)(3)(i)(B) as a
percentage of the corresponding
Medicare non-facility payment rate as
established in the annual Medicare PFS
final rule specified in paragraph
(b)(3)(i)(C). Both rates would be required
to be effective for the same time period
of the comparative payment rate
analysis. As previous components of the
proposed comparative payment rate
analysis have considered variance in
payment rates based on population the
service is delivered to (adult or
pediatric), provider type, and
geographical location to extract the most
granular and accurate Medicaid and
Medicare payment rate data, we
proposed that States would calculate the
PO 00000
Frm 00177
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40717
Medicaid base payment rate as a
percentage of the Medicare non-facility
payment rate as established in the
annual Medicare PFS final rule in the
comparative payment rate analysis to
obtain an informative metric that can be
used in the State’s and our assessment
of whether the State’s payment rates are
compliant with section 1902(a)(30)(A) of
the Act. As previously discussed,
benchmarking against Medicare serves
as an important data point in
determining whether payment rates are
likely to be sufficient to ensure access
for Medicaid beneficiaries at least as
great as for the general population in the
geographic area, and whether any
identified access concerns may be
related to payment sufficiency. We
proposed that States would calculate
their Medicaid payment rates as a
percentage of the Medicare non-facility
payment rate as established in the
annual Medicare PFS final rule because
it is a common, simple, and informative
statistic that can provide us with a
gauge of how Medicaid payment rates
compare to Medicare non-facility
payment rates in the same geographic
area. Initially and over time, States,
CMS, and other interested parties would
be able to compare the State’s Medicaid
payment rates as a percentage of
Medicare’s non-facility payment rates to
identify how the percentage changes
over time, in view of changes that may
take place to the Medicaid and/or the
Medicare payment rate. We explained
that being able to track and analyze the
change in percentage over time would
help States and CMS identify possible
access concerns that may be related to
payment insufficiency.
We noted that the organization and
content of the comparative payment rate
analysis, including the expression of the
Medicaid base payment rate as a
percentage of the Medicare payment
rate, can provide us with a great deal of
information about access in the State.
For example, we would be able to
identify when and how the Medicaid
base payment rate as a percentage of the
Medicare non-facility payment rate as
established in the annual Medicare PFS
final rule for E/M CPT/HCPCS codes for
primary care services may decrease over
time if Medicare adjusts its rates and a
State does not and use this information
to more closely examine for possible
access concerns. This type of analysis
would provide us with actionable
information to help ensure consistency
with section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act
by using Medicare non-facility payment
rates as established in the annual
Medicare PFS final rule for a calendar
year paid across the same geographical
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
40718
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
areas of the State as a point of
comparison for payment rate sufficiency
as a critical element of beneficiary
access to care. When explaining the
rationale for proposing to use Medicare
non-facility payment rates as
established in the annual Medicare PFS
final rule for a calendar year for
comparison earlier in this rule, we
emphasized the ability to demonstrate
to States that certain Medicaid payment
rates have not kept pace with changes
to Medicare non-facility payment rates
and how the comparative payment rate
analysis would help them identify areas
where they also might want to consider
rate increases that address market
changes. We solicited comments on the
proposed requirement for States to
calculate their Medicaid payment rates
as a percentage of the Medicare nonfacility payment rate for each of the
services for which the Medicaid base
payment rate is published under
proposed paragraph (b)(3)(i)(B), as
described in proposed
§ 447.203(b)(3)(i)(D). We also solicited
comments on any challenges States
might encounter when comparing their
Medicaid payment rates to Medicare
non-facility payment rates as
established in the annual Medicare PFS
final rule for a calendar year under
proposed § 447.203(b)(3)(i)(D),
particularly for any of the proposed
categories of service in paragraphs
(b)(2)(i) through (iii), as well as
suggestions for an alternative
comparative analysis that might be more
helpful, or less burdensome and equally
helpful, for States, CMS, and other
interested parties to assess whether a
State’s Medicaid payment rates are
consistent with the access standard in
section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act.
We noted our awareness in the
proposed rule that provider payment
rates are an important factor influencing
beneficiary access; as expressly
indicated in section 1902(a)(30)(A) of
the Act, insufficient provider payment
rates are not likely to enlist enough
providers willing to serve Medicaid
beneficiaries to ensure broad access to
care; however, there may be situations
where access issues are principally due
to other causes. For example, even if
Medicaid payment rates are generally
consistent with amounts paid by
Medicare (and those amounts have been
sufficient to ensure broad access to
services for Medicare beneficiaries),
Medicaid beneficiaries may have
difficulty scheduling behavioral health
care appointments because the overall
number of behavioral health providers
within a State is not sufficient to meet
the demands of the general population.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
Therefore, a State’s rates may be
consistent with the requirements of
section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act even
when access concerns exist, and States
and CMS may need to examine other
strategies to improve access to care
beyond payment rate increases. By
contrast, comparing a State’s Medicaid
behavioral health payment rates to
Medicare may demonstrate that the
State’s rates fall far below Medicare
non-facility payment rates as
established in the annual Medicare PFS
final rule for a calendar year, which
would likely impede beneficiaries from
accessing needed care when the demand
already exceeds the supply of providers
within a State. In that case, States may
need to evaluate budget priorities and
take steps to ensure behavioral health
rates are consistent with section
1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act.
Lastly, in paragraph (b)(3)(i)(E), we
proposed to require States to specify in
their comparative payment rate analyses
the number of Medicaid-paid claims
and the number of Medicaid enrolled
beneficiaries who received a service
within a calendar year for each of the
services for which the Medicaid base
payment rate is published under
paragraph (b)(3)(i)(B). The previous
components of the comparative
payment rate analysis focus on the
State’s payment rate for the E/M CPT/
HCPCS code and comparing the
Medicaid base payment rate to the
Medicare non-facility payment rate as
established in the annual Medicare PFS
final rule for a calendar year for the
same code (separately, for each
Medicaid base payment rate by
population (adult or pediatric), provider
type, and geographic area, as
applicable). This component examines
the Medicaid-paid claims volume of
each E/M CPT/HCPCS code included in
the comparative payment rate analysis
relative to the number of Medicaid
enrolled beneficiaries receiving each
service within a calendar year. We
proposed to limit the claims volume
data to Medicaid-paid claims, and the
number of beneficiaries would be
limited to Medicaid-enrolled
beneficiaries who received a service in
the calendar year of the comparative
payment rate analysis, where the service
would fall into the list of CMSidentified E/M CPT/HCPCS code(s). In
other words, a beneficiary would be
counted in the comparative payment
rate analysis for a particular calendar
year when the beneficiary received a
service that is included in one of the
categories of services described in
paragraphs (b)(2)(i) through (iii) for
which the State has a Medicaid base
PO 00000
Frm 00178
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
payment rate (the number of Medicaidenrolled beneficiaries who received a
service). A claim would be counted in
the comparative payment rate analysis
for a particular calendar year when that
beneficiary had a claim submitted on
their behalf by a provider who billed
one of the codes from the list of CMSidentified E/M CPT/HCPCS code(s) to
the State and the State paid the claim
(number of Medicaid-paid claims). With
the proposal, we explained that we were
seeking to ensure the comparative
payment rate analysis reflects actual
services received by beneficiaries and
paid for by the State or realized
access.267
We considered but did not propose
requiring States to identify the number
of unique Medicaid-paid claims and the
number of unique Medicaid-enrolled
beneficiaries who received a service
within a calendar year for each of the
services for which the Medicaid base
payment rate is published pursuant to
paragraph (b)(3)(i)(B). We considered
this detail in order to identify the
unique, or deduplicated, number of
beneficiaries who received a service that
falls into one of the categories of
services described in in paragraph
(b)(2)(i) through (iii) in a calendar year.
For example, if a beneficiary has 6 visits
to their primary care provider in a
calendar year and the provider bills 6
claims with 99202 for the same
beneficiary, then the beneficiary and
claims for 99202 would only be counted
as one claim and one beneficiary.
Therefore, we chose not to propose this
aspect because we intend for the
comparative payment rate analysis to
capture the total amount of actual
services received by beneficiaries and
paid for by the State. We solicited
comments regarding our decision not to
propose that States would identify the
number of unique Medicaid-paid claims
and the number of unique Medicaid
enrolled beneficiaries who received a
service within a calendar year for each
of the services for which the Medicaid
base payment rate is published pursuant
to paragraph (b)(3)(i)(B) in the
comparative payment rate analysis as
proposed in § 447.203(b)(3)(i)(E).
We also considered but did not
propose to require States to identify the
total Medicaid-enrolled population who
could potentially receive a service
within a calendar year for each of the
services for which the Medicaid base
267 Andersen, R.M., and P.L. Davidson (2007).
Improving access to care in America: Individual
and contextual indicators. In Changing the U.S.
health care system: Key issues in health services
policy and management, 3rd edition, Andersen,
R.M., T.H. Rice, and G.F. Kominski, eds. San
Francisco, CA: John Wiley & Sons.
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
payment rate is published under
paragraph (b)(3)(i)(B), in addition to the
proposed requirement for States to
identify the number of Medicaidenrolled beneficiaries who received a
service. This additional data element in
the comparative payment rate analysis
would reflect the number of Medicaidenrolled beneficiaries who could have
received a service, or potential access,
in comparison to the number of
Medicaid-enrolled beneficiaries who
actually received a service. We did not
propose this aspect because this could
result in additional administrative
burden on the State, as we already
collect and publish similar data through
Medicaid and CHIP Enrollment Trends
Snapshots published on Medicaid.gov.
We also solicited comments regarding
our decision not to propose that States
would identify the total Medicaidenrolled population who could receive
a service within a calendar year for each
of the services for which the Medicaid
base payment rate is published pursuant
to paragraph (b)(3)(i)(B) in the
comparative payment rate analysis as
proposed in § 447.203(b)(3)(i)(E).
We proposed to include beneficiary
and claims information in the
comparative payment rate analysis to
contextualize the payment rates in the
analysis, and to be able to identify
longitudinal changes in Medicaid
service volume in the context of the
Medicaid beneficiary population
receiving services, since utilization
changes could be an indication of an
access to care issue. For example, a
decrease in the number of Medicaidpaid claims for primary care services
furnished to Medicaid beneficiaries in
an area (when the number of Medicaidenrolled beneficiaries who received
primary care services in the area is
constant or increasing) could be an
indication of an access to care issue.
Without additional context provided by
the number of Medicaid enrolled
beneficiaries who received a service,
changes in claims volume could be
attributed to a variety of changes in the
beneficiary population, such as a
temporary loss of coverage when
enrollees disenroll and then re-enroll
within a short period of time.
Further, if the Medicaid base payment
rate for the services with decreasing
Medicaid service volume has failed to
keep pace with the corresponding
Medicare non-facility payment rate as
established in the annual Medicare PFS
final rule for a calendar year over the
period of decrease in utilization (as
reflected in changes in the Medicaid
base payment rate expressed as a
percentage of the Medicare non-facility
payment rate as required under
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
proposed § 447.203(b)(3)(i)(D)), then we
would be concerned and would further
scrutinize whether any access to care
issue might be caused by insufficient
Medicaid payment rates for the relevant
services. With each biennial publication
of the State’s comparative payment rate
analysis, as proposed in § 447.203(b)(4),
discussed later in this section, States
and CMS would be able to compare the
number of paid claims in the context of
the number of Medicaid enrolled
beneficiaries receiving services within a
calendar year for the services subject to
the comparative payment rate analysis
with previous years’ comparative
payment rate analyses. Collecting and
comparing the number of paid claims
data in the context of the number of
Medicaid enrolled beneficiaries
receiving services alongside Medicaid
base payment rate data may reveal
trends where an increase in the
Medicaid base payment rate is
correlated with an increase in service
volume and utilization, or vice versa
with a decrease in the Medicaid base
payment rate correlated with a decrease
in service volume and utilization. As
claims utilization and number of
Medicaid enrolled beneficiaries
receiving services are only correlating
trends, we acknowledge that there may
be other contextualizing factors outside
of the comparative payment rate
analysis that affect changes in service
volume and utilization, and we would
(and would expect States and other
interested parties to) take such
additional factors into account in
analyzing and ascribing significance to
changes in service volume and
utilization. We are solicited comments
on the proposed requirement for States
to include the number of Medicaid-paid
claims and the number of Medicaid
enrolled beneficiaries who received a
service within a calendar year for which
the Medicaid base payment rate is
published under proposed paragraph
(b)(3)(i)(B), as specified in proposed
§ 447.203(b)(3)(i)(E).
We noted our belief that the
comparative payment rate analysis
proposed in paragraph (b)(3) is needed
to best enable us to ensure State
compliance with the requirement in
section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act that
payments are sufficient to enlist enough
providers so that care and services are
available to Medicaid beneficiaries at
least to the extent they are available to
the general population in the geographic
area. As demonstrated by the findings of
Sloan, et al.,268 which have since been
268 Sloan, F. et al ‘‘Physician Participation in
State Medicaid Programs.’’ The Journal of Human
Resources, Volume 13, Supplement: National
PO 00000
Frm 00179
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40719
supported and expanded upon by
numerous researchers, multiple studies
examining the relationship between
Medicaid payment and physician
participation,269 270 at the State level,271
and among specific provider types,272 273
have found a direct, positive association
between Medicaid payment rates and
provider participation in the Medicaid
program. While multiple factors may
influence provider enrollment (such as
administrative burden), section
1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act specifically
concerns the sufficiency of provider
payment rates. Given this statutory
requirement, a comparison of Medicaid
payment rates to other payer rates is an
important barometer of whether State
payment policies are likely to support
the statutory standard of ensuring access
for Medicaid beneficiaries such that
covered care and services are available
to them at least to the extent that the
same care and services are available to
the general population in the geographic
area.
The AMRP requirements previous
addressed this standard under section
1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act by requiring
States to compare Medicaid payment
rates to the payment rates of other
public and private payers in current
Bureau of Economic Research Conference on the
Economics of Physician and Patient Behavior, 1978,
p. 211–245. https://www.jstor.org/stable/
145253?seq=1#metadata_info_tab_contents.
Accessed August 16, 2022.
269 Chen, A. ‘‘Do the Poor Benefit from More
Generous Medicaid Policies’’ SSRN Electronic
Journal, January 2014., p. 1–46. https://papers.
ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=2444286.
Accessed June 16, 2022.
270 Holgash, K. and Martha Heberlein, ‘‘Physician
Acceptance of New Medicaid Patients: What
Matters and What Doesn’t’’ Health Affairs, April 10,
2019. https://www.healthaffairs.org/do/10.1377/
forefront.20190401.678690/#:∼:text=Physicians
%E2%80%99%20acceptance%20of%20new
%20Medicaid%20patients%20is%20only,of%20
Medicaid%20patients%20
already%20in%20the%20physician
%E2%80%99s%20care. Accessed June 16, 2022.
271 Fakhraei, H. ‘‘Payments for Physician
Services: An analysis of Maryland Medicaid
Reimbursement Rates’’ International Journal of
Healthcare Technology and Management, Volume
7, Numbers 1–2, January 2005, p. 129–142. https://
www.researchgate.net/publication/228637758_
Payments_for_physician_services_An_analysis_of_
Maryland_Medicaid_reimbursement_rates.
Accessed June 16, 2022.
272 Berman, S., et al. ‘‘Factors that Influence the
Willingness of Private Primary Care Pediatricians to
Accept More Medicaid Patients,’’ Pediatrics,
Volume 110, Issue 2, August 2002, p. 239–248.
https://publications.aap.org/pediatrics/articleabstract/110/2/239/64380/Factors-That-Influencethe-Willingness-of-Private?redirectedFrom=fulltext?
autologincheck=redirected. Accessed June 16, 2022.
273 Suk-fong S., Tang, et al ‘‘Increased Medicaid
Payment and Participation by Office-Based Primary
Care Pediatricians,’’ Pediatrics, Volume 141,
number 1, January 2018, p. 1–9. https://
publications.aap.org/pediatrics/article/141/1/
e20172570/37705/Increased-Medicaid-Paymentand-Participation-by. Accessed June 16, 2022.
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
40720
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
§ 447.203(b)(1)(v) and (b)(3). While we
proposed to eliminate the previous
AMRP requirements, we noted our
belief that our proposal to require States
to compare their Medicaid payment
rates for services under specified E/M
CPT/HCPCS codes against Medicare
non-facility payment rates as
established in the annual Medicare PFS
final rule for a calendar year for the
same codes, as described in
§ 447.203(b)(3), would well position
States and CMS to continue to meet the
statutory access requirement. Some
studies examining the relationship
between provider payments and various
access measures have quantified the
relationship between the MedicaidMedicare payment ratio and access
measures. Two studies observed that
increases in the Medicaid-Medicare
payment ratio is associated with higher
physician acceptance rates of new
Medicaid patients and with an
increased probability of a beneficiary
having an office-based physician as the
patient’s usual source of care.274 275 We
explained that these studies led us to
conclude that Medicare non-facility
payment rates as established in the
annual Medicare PFS final rule for a
calendar year are likely to be a sufficient
benchmark for evaluating access to care,
particularly ambulatory physician
services, based on provider payment
rates.
By comparing FFS Medicaid payment
rates to corresponding FFS Medicare
non-facility payment rates as
established in the annual Medicare PFS
final rule for a calendar year, where
Medicare is a public payer with large
populations of beneficiaries and
participating providers whose payment
rates are readily available, we aim to
establish a uniform benchmarking
approach that allows for more
meaningful oversight and transparency
and reduces the burden on States and
CMS relative to the previous AMRP
requirements that do not impose
specific methodological standards for
comparing payment rates and that
contemplate the availability of private
payer rate information that has proven
difficult for States to obtain due to its
often proprietary nature. We noted that
this aspect of the proposal specifically
responds to States’ expressed concerns
that the previous AMRP requirement to
include ‘‘actual or estimated levels of
provider payment available from other
payers, including other public and
private payers’’ was challenging to
accomplish based on the general
274 Holgash, K. and Martha Heberlein, Health
Affairs, April 10, 2019.
275 Cohen, J.W., Inquiry, Fall 1993.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
unavailability of this information, as
discussed elsewhere in this final rule.
Following the 2011 proposed rule,
and as addressed by us through public
comment response in the 2015 final rule
with comment period, States expressed
concerns that private payer payment
rates were proprietary information and
not available to them and that large
private plans did not exist within some
States so there were no private payer
rates to compare to, therefore, the State
would need to rely on State employee
health plans or non-profit insurer
rates.276 States also expressed that other
payer data, including public and private
payers, in general may be unsound for
comparisons because of a lack of
transparency about the payment data
States would have compared their
Medicaid payment rates to. We
discussed how, since 2016, we have
learned a great deal from our
implementation experience of the
previous AMRP process. We have
learned that very few States were able
to include even limited private payer
data in their previous AMRPs. States
that were able include private payer
data were only able to do so because the
State had existing Statewide all payer
claiming or rate-setting systems, which
gave them access to private payer data
in their State, or the State previously
based their State plan payment rates off
of information about other payers (such
as the American Dental Association’s
Survey of Dental Fees) that gave them
access to private payer data.277 Based on
our implementation experience and
concerns from States about the previous
requirement in § 447.203(b)(1)(v) to
obtain private payer data, we proposed
to require States only compare their
Medicaid payment rates to Medicare’s,
for which payment data are readily and
publicly available.
Next, in paragraph (b)(3)(ii), we
proposed that for each category of
services described in proposed
paragraph (b)(2)(iv), the State agency
would be required to publish a payment
rate disclosure that expresses the State’s
payment rates as the average hourly
payment rates, separately identified for
payments made to individual providers
and to providers employed by an
agency, if the rates differ. The payment
rate disclosure would be required to
meet specified requirements. We
276 Alaska Department of Health and Social
Services, Comment Letter on 2011 Proposed Rule
(July 7, 2011), https://www.regulations.gov/
comment/CMS-2011-0062-0102.
277 https://www.medicaid.gov/sites/default/files/
2019-12/co-amrp-2016.pdf, https://
www.medicaid.gov/sites/default/files/2019-12/mdamrp-16.pdf, https://www.medicaid.gov/sites/
default/files/2019-12/sd-amrp-16.pdf.
PO 00000
Frm 00180
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
explained that we intended this
proposal to remain consistent with the
proposed HCBS provisions at
§ 441.311(d)(2) and (e) and to take
specific action regarding direct care
workers per Section 2402(a) of the
Affordable Care Act. HCBS and direct
care workers that deliver these services
are unique to Medicaid and often not
covered by other payers, which is why
we proposed a different analysis of
payment rates for providers of these
services that does not involve a
comparison to Medicare. As previously
stated, Medicare covers part-time or
intermittent home health aide services
(only if a Medicare beneficiary is also
getting other skilled services like
nursing and/or therapy at the same
time) under Medicare Part A (Hospital
Insurance) or Medicare Part B (Medical
Insurance); however, Medicare does not
cover personal care or homemaker
services. Therefore, comparing personal
care and homemaker services to
Medicare, as we proposed in paragraph
(b)(3)(i) for other specified categories of
services, would not be feasible for
States, and a comparison of Medicaid
home health aide payment rates to
analogous rates for Medicare would be
of limited utility given the differences in
circumstances when Medicaid and
Medicare may pay for such services.
As previously discussed, private
payer data are often considered
proprietary and not available to States,
thereby eliminating private payers as
feasible point of comparison. Even if
private payer payment rate data were
more readily available, like Medicare,
many private payers do not cover HCBS
as HCBS is unique to the Medicaid
program, leaving Medicaid as the largest
or the only payer for personal care,
home health aide, and homemaker
services. Given Medicaid’s status as the
most important payer for HCBS, we
believe that scrutiny of Medicaid HCBS
payment rates themselves, rather than a
comparison to other payer rates that
frequently do not exist, is most
important in ascertaining whether such
Medicaid payment rates are sufficient to
enlist adequate providers so that the
specified services are available to
Medicaid beneficiaries at least to the
same extent as to the general population
in the geographic area. We acknowledge
that individuals without insurance may
self-pay for medical services provided
in their home or community; however,
similar to private payer data, self-pay
data is unlikely to be available to States.
Because HCBS coverage is unique to
Medicaid, Medicaid beneficiaries are
generally the only individuals in a given
geographic area with access to HCBS.
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
Through the proposed payment rate
disclosure, Medicaid payments rates
would be transparent and comparable
among States and would assist States to
analyze if and how their payment rates
are compliant with section
1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act.
As noted previously in this section,
we proposed to require States to express
their rates separately as the average
hourly payments made to individual
providers and providers employed by an
agency, if the rates differ, as applicable
for each category of service specified in
proposed § 447.203(b)(2)(iv). We noted
our belief that expressing the data in
this manner would best account for
variations in types and levels of
payment that may occur in different
settings and employment arrangements.
Individual providers are often selfemployed or contract directly with the
State to deliver services as a Medicaid
provider while providers employed by
an agency are employed by the agency,
which works directly with the Medicaid
agency to provide Medicaid services.
These differences in employment
arrangements often include differences
in the hourly rate a provider would
receive for services delivered, for
example, providers employed by an
agency typically receive benefits, such
as health insurance, and the cost of
those benefits is factored into the hourly
rate that the State pays for the services
delivered by providers employed by an
agency (even though the employed
provider does not retain the entire
amount as direct monetary
compensation). However, these benefits
are not always available for individual
providers who may need to separately
purchase a marketplace health plan or
be able to opt into the State-employee
health plan, for example. Therefore, the
provider employed by an agency
potentially could receive a higher
hourly rate because benefits are factored
into the hourly rate they receive for
delivering services, whereas the
individual provider might be paid a rate
that does not reflect employment
benefits.
With States expressing their payment
rates separately as the average hourly
payment rate made to individual and
agency employed providers for personal
care, home health aide, and homemaker
services, States, CMS, and other
interested parties would be able to
compare payment rates among State
Medicaid programs. Such comparisons
may be particularly relevant for States
in close geographical proximity to each
other or that otherwise may compete to
attract providers of the services
specified in proposed paragraph
(b)(2)(iv) or where such providers may
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
experience similar costs or other
incentives to provide such services. For
example, from reviewing all States’
payment rate analyses for personal care,
home health aide, and homemaker
services, we would be able to learn that
two neighboring States have similar
hourly rates for providers of these
services, but a third neighboring State
has much lower hourly rates than both
of its neighbors. This information could
highlight a potential access issue, since
providers in the third State might have
an economic incentive to move to one
of the two neighboring States where
they could receive higher payments for
furnishing the same services. Such
movement could result in beneficiaries
in the third State having difficulty
accessing covered services, compared to
the general population in the tri-State
geographic area.
In paragraph (b)(3)(ii), we proposed
that the State’s payment rate disclosure
must meet the following requirements:
(A) the State must organize the payment
rate disclosure by category of service as
specified in proposed paragraph
(b)(2)(iv); (B) the disclosure must
identify the average hourly payment
rates, including, if the rates vary,
separate identification of the average
hourly payment rates for payments
made to individual providers and to
providers employed by an agency by
population (pediatric and adult),
provider type, and geographical
location, as applicable; and (C) the
disclosure must identify the number of
Medicaid-paid claims and the number
of Medicaid enrolled beneficiaries who
received a service within a calendar
year for each of the services for which
the Medicaid base payment rate is
published under proposed paragraph
(b)(3)(ii)(B). We solicited comments on
the proposed requirements and content
of the items in proposed
§ 447.203(b)(3)(ii)(A) through (C).
In paragraph (b)(3)(ii)(A), we
proposed to require States to organize
their payment rate disclosures by each
of the categories of services specified in
proposed paragraph (b)(2)(iv), that is, to
break out the payment rates for personal
care, home health aide, and homemaker
services provided by individual
providers and providers employed by an
agency, separately for individual
analyses of the payment rates for each
category of service and type of
employment structure. We solicited
comments on the proposed requirement
for States to break out their payment
rates for personal care, home health
aide, and homemaker services
separately for individual analyses of the
payment rates for each category of
service in the comparative payment rate
PO 00000
Frm 00181
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40721
analysis, as described in proposed
§ 447.203(b)(3)(ii)(A).
In paragraph (b)(3)(ii)(B), we proposed
to require States identify in their
disclosure the Medicaid average hourly
payment rates by applicable category of
service, including, if the rates vary,
separate identification of the average
hourly payment rates for payments
made to individual providers and to
providers employed by an agency, as
well as by population (pediatric and
adult), provider type, and geographical
location, as applicable. Given that direct
care workers deliver unique services in
Medicaid that are often not covered by
other payers, we proposed to require a
payment rate disclosure, instead of
comparative payment rate analysis. To
be clear, we did not propose to require
a State’s payment rate disclosure for
personal care, home health aide, and
homemaker services be broken down
and organized by E/M CPT/HCPCS
codes, nor did we propose States
compare their Medicaid payment rates
to Medicare for these services.
We proposed to require States to
calculate their Medicaid average hourly
payment rates made to providers of
personal care, home health aide, and
homemaker services, separately, for
each of these categories of services, by
provider employment structures
(individual providers and agency
employed providers). For each of the
categories of services in paragraph
(b)(3)(ii)(A), one Medicaid average
hourly payment rate would be
calculated as a simple average
(arithmetic mean) where all payment
rates would be adjusted to an hourly
figure, summed, then divided by the
number of all hourly payment rates. As
an example, the State’s Medicaid
average hourly payment rate for
personal care providers may be $10.50
while the average hourly payment rate
for a home health aide is $15.00. A more
granular analysis may show that within
personal care providers receiving a
payment rate of $10.50, an individual
personal care provider is paid an
average hourly payment rate of $9.00,
while a personal care provider
employed by an agency is paid an
average hourly payment rate of $12.00
for the same type of service. Similarly
for home health aides, a more granular
analysis may show that within home
health aides receiving a payment rate of
$15.00, an individual home health aide
is paid an average hourly payment rate
of $13.00, while a home health aide
employed by an agency is paid an
average hourly payment rate of $17.00.
We explained that we understand that
States may set payment rates for
personal care, home health aide, and
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
40722
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
homemaker services based on a
particular unit of time for delivering the
service, and that time may not be in
hourly increments. For example,
different States might pay for personal
care services using 15-minute
increments, on an hourly basis, through
a daily rate, or based on a 24-hour
period. By proposing to require States to
represent their rates as an hourly
payment rate, we would be able to
standardize the unit (hourly) and
payment rate for comparison across
States, rather than comparing to
Medicare. To the extent a State pays for
personal care, home health aide, or
homemaker services on an hourly basis,
the State would simply use that hourly
rate in its Medicaid average hourly
payment rate calculation of each
respective category of service. However,
if for example a State pays for personal
care, home health aide, or homemaker
services on a daily basis, we would
expect the State to divide that rate by
the number of hours covered by the rate.
Additionally, and similar to proposed
paragraph (b)(3)(i)(E), we proposed in
paragraph (b)(3)(ii)(B), that, if the States’
Medicaid average hourly payment rates
vary, the rates must separately identify
the average hourly payment rates for
payments made to individual providers
and to providers employed by an
agency, by population (pediatric and
adult), provider type, and geographical
location, as applicable. We included
this proposed provision with the intent
of ensuring the payment rate disclosure
contains the highest level of granularity
in each element. As previously
discussed, States may pay providers
different payment rates for billing the
same service based on the population
being served, provider type, and
geographical location of where the
service is delivered. We solicited
comments on the proposed requirement
for States to calculate the Medicaid
average hourly payment rate made
separately to individual providers and
to agency employed providers, which
accounts for variation in payment rates
by population (pediatric and adult),
provider type, and geographical
location, as applicable, in the payment
rate disclosure.
In paragraph (b)(3)(ii)(C), we proposed
to require that the State disclosure must
identify the number of Medicaid-paid
claims and the number of Medicaid
enrolled beneficiaries who received a
service within a calendar year for each
of the services for which the Medicaid
payment rate is published under
proposed paragraph (b)(3)(ii)(B), so that
States, CMS, and other interested parties
would be able to contextualize the
previously described payment rate
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
information with information about the
volume of paid claims and number of
beneficiaries receiving personal care,
home health aide, and homemaker
services.
We proposed that the number of
Medicaid-paid claims and number of
Medicaid enrolled beneficiaries who
received a service be reported under the
same breakdown as paragraph (b)(3)(ii),
where the State provides the number of
paid claims and number of beneficiaries
receiving services from individual
providers versus agency-employed
providers of personal care, home health
aide services, and homemaker services.
As with the comparative payment rate
analysis, we proposed the claims
volume data would be limited to
Medicaid-paid claims and the number
of beneficiaries would be limited to
Medicaid enrolled beneficiaries who
received a service in the calendar year
of the payment rate disclosure, where
the services fall into the categories of
service for which the average hourly
payment rates are published pursuant to
paragraph (b)(3)(ii)(B). In other words,
the beneficiary would be counted in the
payment rate disclosure for a particular
calendar year when the beneficiary
received a service that is included in
one of the categories of services
described in paragraph (b)(2)(iv) for
which the State has calculated average
hourly payment rates (the number of
Medicaid enrolled beneficiaries who
received a service). A claim would be
counted when that beneficiary had a
claim submitted on their behalf by a
provider who billed for one of the
categories of services described in
paragraph (b)(2)(iv) and the State paid
the claim (number of Medicaid-paid
claims). We noted we were seeking to
ensure the payment rate disclosure
reflects actual services received by
beneficiaries and paid for by the State,
or realized access.278
Similar to the comparative payment
rate analysis, we considered but did not
propose requiring States to identify the
number of unique Medicaid-paid claims
and the number of unique Medicaid
enrolled beneficiaries who received a
service within a calendar year for each
of the services for which the average
hourly payment rates are published
pursuant to paragraph (b)(3)(ii)(B). We
also considered but did not propose to
require States to identify the total
Medicaid enrolled population who
278 Andersen, R.M., and P.L. Davidson. 2007.
Improving access to care in America: Individual
and contextual indicators. In Changing the U.S.
health care system: Key issues in health services
policy and management, 3rd edition, Andersen,
R.M., T.H. Rice, and G.F. Kominski, eds. San
Francisco, CA: John Wiley & Sons.
PO 00000
Frm 00182
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
could receive a service within a
calendar year for each of the services for
which the average hourly payment rates
are published pursuant to paragraph
(b)(3)(ii)(B) in addition to proposing
States identify the number of Medicaid
enrolled beneficiaries who received a
service. As discussed in the comparative
payment rate discussion, we solicited
comments on our decision not to require
these levels of detail for the payment
rate disclosure.
Also similar to the comparative
payment rate analysis requirement
under proposed paragraph (b)(3)(i)(E),
we explained that this disclosure
element would help States, CMS, and
other interested parties identify
longitudinal changes in Medicaid
service volume and beneficiary
utilization that may be an indication of
an access to care issue. Again, with each
biennial publication of the State’s
comparative payment rate analysis and
payment rate disclosure, States and
CMS would be able to compare the
number of Medicaid-paid claims and
number of Medicaid enrolled
beneficiaries who received a service
within a calendar year for services
subject to the payment rate disclosure
with previous years’ disclosures.
Collecting and comparing data on the
number of paid claims and number of
Medicaid enrolled beneficiaries
alongside Medicaid average hourly
payment rate data may reveal trends,
such as where a provider type that
previously delivered a low volume of
services to beneficiaries has increased
their volume of services delivered after
receiving an increase in their payment
rate.
We acknowledged that one limitation
of using the average hourly payment
rate is that the statistic is sensitive to
highs and lows, so one provider
receiving an increase in their average
hourly payment rate would bring up the
average overall while other providers
may not see an improvement. As these
are only correlating trends, we also
acknowledged that there may be other
contextualizing factors outside of the
payment rate disclosure that may affect
changes in service volume and
utilization. We solicited comments on
the proposed requirement for States to
include the number of Medicaid-paid
claims and number of Medicaid
enrolled beneficiaries who received a
service within a calendar year for which
the Medicaid payment rate is published
under paragraph (b)(3)(ii)(B), as
specified in proposed
§ 447.203(b)(3)(ii)(C).
Additionally, in recognition of the
importance of services provided to
individuals with intellectual or
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
developmental disabilities and in an
effort to remain consistent with the
proposed HCBS payment adequacy
provisions at § 441.302(k) (discussed in
section II.B.5 of this rule), we solicited
comments on whether we should
propose a similar provision that would
require at least 80 percent of all
Medicaid FFS payments with respect to
personal care, home health aide, and
homemaker services provided by
individual providers and providers
employed by an agency must be spent
on compensation for direct care
workers. In this final rule, we want to
clarify that this request for comment
was distinct from the proposal at
§ 441.302(k) as discussed in section
II.B.5 of this rule. The payment
adequacy provision finalized in
§ 441.302(k) is applicable to rates for
certain specified services authorized
under section 1915(c) of the Act, as well
as sections 1915(j), (k), and (i) of the Act
as finalized at §§ 441.464(f), 441.570(f),
and 441.745(a)(1)(vi), respectively. The
request for comment in this section of
the rule considered expanding that
requirement to Medicaid FFS payments
under FFS State plan authority.
In paragraph (b)(4), we proposed to
require the State agency to publish the
initial comparative payment rate
analysis and payment rate disclosure of
its Medicaid payments in effect as of
January 1, 2025, as required under
§ 447.203(b)(2) and (b)(3), by no later
than January 1, 2026. Thereafter, the
State agency would be required to
update the comparative payment rate
analysis and payment rate disclosure no
less than every 2 years, by no later than
January 1 of the second year following
the most recent update. The
comparative payment rate analysis and
payment rate disclosure would be
required to be published consistent with
the publication requirements described
in proposed § 447.203(b)(1) for payment
rate transparency data.
As previously discussed in this final
rule, we proposed that the Medicaid
payment rates included in the initial
comparative payment rate analysis and
payment rate disclosure would be those
in effect as of January 1, 2025.
Specifically, for the comparative
payment rate analysis, we proposed
States would conduct a retrospective
analysis to ensure CMS can publish the
list of E/M CPT/HCPCS codes for the
comparative payment rate analysis and
States have timely access to all
information required to complete
comparative payment rate analysis. As
described in paragraph (b)(3)(i)(C), we
proposed States would compare their
Medicaid payment rates to the Medicare
non-facility payment rates as
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
established in the annual Medicare PFS
final rule effective for the same time
period for the same set of E/M CPT/
HCPCS codes, therefore, the Medicare
non-facility payment rates as published
on the Medicare PFS for the same time
period as the State’s Medicaid payment
rates would need to be available to
States in a timely manner for their
analysis and disclosure to be conducted
and published as described in paragraph
(b)(4). Medicare publishes its annual
PFS final rule in November of each year
and the Medicare non-facility payment
rates as established in the annual
Medicare PFS final rule for a calendar
year are effective the following January
1. For example, the 2025 Medicare PFS
final rule would be published in
November 2024 and the Medicare nonfacility payment rates as established in
the annual Medicare PFS final rule
would be effective January 1, 2025, so
States would compare their Medicaid
payment rates effective as of January 1,
2025, to the Medicare PFS payment
rates effective January 1, 2025, when
submitting the initial comparative
payment rate analysis that we proposed
would be due on January 1, 2026.
Also, previously discussed in this
final rule, we noted our intent to
publish the initial and subsequent
updates to the list of E/M CPT/HCPCS
codes subject to the comparative
payment rate analysis in a timely
manner that allows States
approximately one full calendar year
between the publication of the CMSpublished list of E/M CPT/HCPCS codes
and the due date of the comparative
payment rate analysis. Because the list
of E/M CPT/HCPCS codes is derived
from the relevant calendar year’s
Medicare PFS, the Medicare non-facility
payment rates as established in the
annual Medicare PFS final rule that the
State would need to include in their
comparative payment rate analysis
would also be available to States. We
explained that we expect approximately
one full calendar year of the CMSpublished list of E/M CPT/HCPCS codes
and Medicare non-facility payment rates
as established in the annual Medicare
PFS final rule for a calendar year being
available to States would provide the
States with sufficient time to develop
and publish their comparative payment
rate analyses as described in paragraph
(b)(4). We considered proposing the
same due date and effective time period
for Medicaid and Medicare payment
rates where the initial publication of the
comparative payment rate analysis
would be due January 1, 2026, and
would contain payment rates effective
January 1, 2026; however, we believe a
PO 00000
Frm 00183
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40723
2-month time period between Medicare
publishing its PFS payment rates in
November and the PFS payment rates
taking effect on January 1 would be an
insufficient amount of time for CMS to
publish the list of E/M CPT/HCPCS
codes subject to the comparative
payment rate analysis and for States to
develop and publish their comparative
payment rate analyses by January 1.
While the proposed payment rate
disclosure would not require a
comparison to Medicare, we proposed
to use the same due date and effective
period of Medicaid payment rates for
both the proposed comparative payment
rate analysis and payment rate
disclosure to maintain consistency.
We noted our expectation the
proposed initial publication timeframe
would provide sufficient time for States
to gather necessary data, perform, and
publish the first required comparative
payment rate analysis and payment rate
disclosure. We determined this
timeframe was sufficient based on
implementation experience from the
previous AMRP process, where we
initially proposed a 6-month timeframe
between the January 4, 2016, effective
date of the 2015 final rule with
comment period in the Federal Register,
and the due date of the first AMRP, July
1, 2016. At the time, we believed that
this timeframe would be sufficient for
States to conduct their first review for
service categories newly subject to
ongoing AMRP requirements; however,
after receiving several public comments
from States on the 2015 final rule with
comment period that State agency staff
may have difficulty developing and
submitting the initial AMRPs within the
July 1, 2016 timeframe, we modified the
policy as finalized in the 2016 final
rule.279 Specifically, we revised the
deadline for submission of the initial
AMRP until October 1, 2016 and we
made a conforming change to the
deadline for submission in subsequent
review periods at § 447.203(b)(5)(i) to
October 1.280 We also found that,
despite this additional time, some State
were still late in submitting their first
AMRP to us. Therefore, we noted our
belief that a proposed initial publication
date of January 1, 2026, thereby
providing States with approximately 2
years between the effective date of the
final rule and the due date of the first
comparative payment rate analysis and
payment rate disclosure, would be
sufficient. In alignment with the
proposed payment rate transparency
requirements, we proposed an alternate
date if this rule is finalized at a time that
279 81
280 81
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
FR 21479 at 21479–21480.
FR 21479 at 21480.
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
40724
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
does not allow for States to have a
period of 2 years from the effective date
of the final rule and the proposed
January 1, 2026, date to publish the
initial comparative payment rate
analysis and payment rate disclosure.
We proposed an alternative date of July
1, 2026, for the initial comparative
payment rate analysis and payment rate
disclosure and for the initial
comparative payment rate analysis and
payment rate disclosure to include
Medicaid payment rates approved as of
July 1, 2025, to allow more time for
States to comply with the initial
comparative payment rate analysis and
payment rate disclosure requirements.
We acknowledged that the date of the
initial comparative payment rate
analysis and payment rate disclosure
publication would be subject to change
based on the final rule publication
schedule and effective date. If further
adjustment is necessary beyond the July
1, 2026, timeframe to allow more time
for States to comply with the payment
rate transparency requirements, then we
proposed that we would adjust date of
the initial payment rate transparency
publication in 6-month intervals, as
appropriate.
Also, in § 447.203(b)(4), we proposed
to require the State agency to update the
comparative payment rate analysis and
payment rate disclosure no less than
every 2 years, by no later than January
1 of the second year following the most
recent update. We proposed that the
comparative payment rate analysis and
payment rate disclosure would be
required to be published consistent with
the publication requirements described
in proposed paragraph (b)(1) for
payment rate transparency data. After
publication of the 2011 proposed rule,
and as we worked with States to
implement the previous AMRP
requirements after publication of the
2015 final rule with comment period,
many States expressed concerns that the
previous requirements of § 447.203,
specifically those in previous
§ 447.203(b)(6) imposed additional
analysis and monitoring requirements in
the case of provider rate reductions or
restructurings that could result in
diminished access, were overly
burdensome. As described in the 2018
and 2019 proposed rules, ‘‘a number of
States expressed concern regarding the
administrative burden associated with
the requirements of § 447.203,
particularly those States with a very
high beneficiary enrollment in
comprehensive, risk-based managed
care and a limited number of
beneficiaries receiving care through a
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
FFS delivery system.’’ 281 282
Additionally, from our implementation
experience, we learned that the triennial
due date for updated AMRPs required
by previous § 447.203(b)(5)(ii) was too
infrequent for States or CMS to identify
and act on access concerns identified by
the previous AMRPs. For example, one
State timely submitted its initial
ongoing AMRP on October 1, 2016,
consistent with the requirements in
§ 447.203(b)(1) through (5), and timely
submitted its first AMRP update (the
next ongoing AMRP) 3 years later, on
October 1, 2019. The 2016 AMRP
included data about beneficiary
utilization and Medicaid-participating
providers accepting new Medicaid
patients from 2014 to 2015 (the most
recent data available at the time the
State was developing the AMRP), while
the 2019 AMRP update included similar
data for 2016 to 2017 (the most recent
data then available). The 2019 AMRP
showed that the number of Medicaidparticipating providers accepting new
Medicaid patients significantly dropped
in 2016, and the State received a
considerable number of public
comments during the 30-day public
comment period for the 2019 AMRP
update prior to submission to us per the
requirements in § 447.203(b) and (b)(2).
This data lag between a drop in
Medicaid-participating providers
accepting new Medicaid patients in
2016 and CMS receiving the next AMRP
update with information about related
concerns in 2019 illustrates how the
infrequency of the triennial due date for
the AMRP updates could allow a
potential access concern to develop
without notice by the State or CMS in
between the due dates of the ongoing
AMRP updates. Although
§ 447.203(b)(7) previously required
States to have ongoing mechanisms for
beneficiary and provider input on
access to care, and States are expected
to promptly respond to concerns
expressed through these mechanisms
that cite specific access problems,
beneficiaries and providers themselves
may not be aware of even widespread
access issues if such issues are not
noticed before published data reveal
them.
We also learned from our previous
AMRP implementation experience that
the timing of the ongoing AMRP
submissions required by previous
§ 447.203(b)(5)(ii) and access reviews
associated with rate reduction or
restructuring SPA submissions required
by § 447.203(b)(6) have led to confusion
about the due date and scope of routine,
281 83
282 84
PO 00000
FR 12696 at 12697.
FR 33722 at 33723.
Frm 00184
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
ongoing AMRP updates and SPAconnected access review submissions,
particularly when States were required
to submit access reviews within the 3year period between AMRP updates
when proposing a rate reduction or
restructuring SPA, per the requirements
in previous § 447.203(b)(6). For
example, one State timely submitted its
initial ongoing AMRP on October 1,
2016, consistent with the requirements
in § 447.203(b)(1) through (5), then the
State submitted a SPA that proposed to
reduce provider payment rates for
physical therapy services with an
effective date of July 1, 2018, along with
an access review for the affected service
completed within the prior 12 months,
consistent with the requirements in
§ 447.203(b)(6). The State’s access
review submission consisted of its 2016
AMRP submission, updated with data
from the 12 months prior to this SPA
submission, with the addition of
physical therapy services for which the
SPA proposed to reduce rates. Because
the State submitted an updated version
of its 2016 AMRP in 2018 in support of
the SPA submission, the State was
confused whether its next AMRP update
submission was due in 2019 (3 years
from 2016), or in 2021 (3 years from
2018). Based on the infrequency of a
triennial due date for AMRP updates
and the numerous instances of similar
State confusion during the
implementation process for the previous
AMRPs, we identified that the triennial
timeframe was insufficient for the
proposed comparative payment rate
analysis and payment rate disclosure.
As we considered a new timeframe for
updates to the comparative payment
rate analysis and payment rate
disclosure to propose in this
rulemaking, we initially considered
proposing to require annual updates.
However, we explained our belief that
annual updates would add unnecessary
administrative burden as annual
updates would be too frequent because
many States do not update their
Medicaid fee schedule rates for the
codes subject to the comparative
payment rate analysis and payment rate
disclosure on an annual basis. As
proposed, the categories of services
subject to the proposed comparative
payment rate analysis and payment rate
disclosure are for office-based visits
and, in our experience, the Medicaid
payment rates generally do not change
much over time due to the nature of an
office visit.283 Office visits primarily
283 We acknowledged that Medicaid primary care
payment increase, a provision in the Patient
Protection and Affordable Care Act (ACA, Pub. L.
111–148, as amended), temporarily raised Medicaid
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
include vital signs being taken and the
time a patient meets with a physician or
NPP; therefore, States would likely have
a considerable amount of historical
payment data for supporting the current
payment rates for such services. Given
the relatively stable nature of payment
rates for office visits, our proposal
aimed to help ensure the impact of the
comparative payment rate analysis is
maximized for ensuring compliance
with section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act
while minimizing unnecessary burden
on States by holding all States to a
proposed update frequency of 2 years to
capture all Medicaid (and
corresponding Medicare) payment rate
changes.
As the proposed rule sought to reduce
the amount of administrative burden
from the previous AMRP process on
States while also fulfilling our oversight
responsibilities, we explained our belief
that updating the comparative payment
rate analysis and payment rate
disclosure no less than every 2 years
would achieve an appropriate balance
between administrative burden and our
oversight responsibilities with regard to
section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act. We
noted our intent for the comparative
payment rate analysis and payment rate
disclosure States develop and publish to
be time-sensitive and useful sources of
information and analysis to help ensure
compliance with section 1902(a)(30)(A)
of the Act. If this proposal is finalized,
we stated that both the comparative
payment rate analysis and payment rate
disclosure would provide the State,
CMS, and other interested parties with
cross-sectional data of Medicaid
payment rates at various points in time.
This data could be used to track
Medicaid payment rates over time as a
raw dollar amount and as a percentage
of Medicare non-facility payment as
established in the annual Medicare PFS
final rule for a calendar year, as well as
changes in the number of Medicaid-paid
claims volume and number of Medicaid
enrolled beneficiaries who receive a
service over time. The availability of
this data could be used to inform State
policy changes, to compare payment
rates across States, or for research on
Medicaid payment rates and policies.
While we noted our belief that the
comparative payment rate analysis and
payment rate disclosure would provide
physician fees for evaluation and management
services (Current Procedural Terminology codes
99201–99499) and vaccine administration services
and counseling related to children’s vaccines
(Current Procedural Terminology codes 90460,
90461, and 90471–90474). This provision expired
on December 31, 2014. https://www.macpac.gov/
wp-content/uploads/2015/03/An-Update-on-theMedicaid-Primary-Care-Payment-Increase.pdf.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
useful and actionable information to
States, we explained that we did not
want to overburden States with annual
updates to the comparative payment
rate analysis and payment rate
disclosure. As we proposed to replace
the previous triennial AMRP process
with less administratively burdensome
processes (payment rate transparency
publication, comparative payment rate
analysis, payment rate disclosure, and
State analysis procedures for rate
reductions and restructurings) for
ensuring compliance with section
1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act, we stated our
belief that annual updates to the
comparative payment rate analysis and
payment rate disclosure would negate at
least a portion of the decrease in
administrative burden from eliminating
the previous AMRP process.
With careful consideration, we stated
our belief that our proposal to require
updates to the comparative payment
rate analysis and payment rate
disclosure to occur no less than every 2
years is reasonable. We noted our
expectation that the proposed biennial
publication requirement for the
comparative payment rate analysis and
payment rate disclosure after the initial
publication date would be feasible for
State agencies, provide a straightforward
timeline for updates, limit unnecessary
State burden, help ensure public
payment rate transparency, and enable
us to conduct required oversight. We
solicited comments on the proposed
timeframe for the initial publication and
biennial update requirements for the
comparative payment rate analysis and
payment rate disclosure as proposed in
§ 447.203(b)(4).
Lastly, we also proposed in paragraph
(b)(4) to require States to publish the
comparative payment rate analysis and
payment rate disclosure consistent with
the publication requirements described
in proposed paragraph (b)(1) for
payment rate transparency data.
Paragraph (b)(1) would require the
website developed and maintained by
the single State Agency to be accessible
to the general public. We proposed
States utilize the same website
developed and maintained by the single
State Agency to publish their Medicaid
FFS payment rates and their
comparative payment rate analysis and
payment rate disclosure. We solicited
comments on the proposed required
location for States to publish their
comparative payment rate analysis and
payment rate disclosure proposed in
§ 447.203(b)(4).
In § 447.203(b)(5), we proposed a
mechanism to ensure compliance with
paragraphs (b)(1) through (b)(4).
Specifically, we proposed that, if a State
PO 00000
Frm 00185
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40725
fails to comply with the payment rate
transparency and comparative payment
rate analysis and payment rate
disclosure requirements in paragraphs
(b)(1) through (b)(4) of proposed
§ 447.203, including requirements for
the time and manner of publication,
that, under section 1904 of the Act and
procedures set forth in regulations at 42
CFR part 430 subparts C and D, future
grant awards may be reduced by the
amount of FFP we estimate is
attributable to the State’s administrative
expenditures relative to the total
expenditures for the categories of
services specified in paragraph (b)(2) of
proposed § 447.203 for which the State
has failed to comply with applicable
requirements, until such time as the
State complies with the requirements.
We also proposed that unless otherwise
prohibited by law, FFP for deferred
expenditures would be released after the
State has fully complied with all
applicable requirements. We explained
that this proposed enforcement
mechanism is similar in structure to the
mechanism that applies with respect to
the Medicaid DSH reporting
requirements in § 447.299(e), which
specifies that State failure to comply
with reporting requirements will lead to
future grant award reductions in the
amount of FFP CMS estimates is
attributable to expenditures made for
payments to the DSH hospitals as to
which the State has not reported
properly. We proposed this longstanding and effective enforcement
mechanism because we believed it is
proportionate and clear, and to remain
consistent with other compliance
actions we take for State noncompliance with statutory and
regulatory requirements. We solicited
comments on the proposed method for
ensuring compliance with the payment
rate transparency and comparative
payment rate analysis and payment rate
disclosure requirements, as specified in
proposed § 447.203(b)(5).
We received public comments on
these proposed provisions. The
following is a summary of the comments
we received and our responses.
Comparative Payment Rate Analysis
Comments and Responses
Comment: Among comments received
on the comparative payment rate
analysis, the majority of commenters
generally supported the proposal to
require States to develop and publish a
comparative payment rate analysis of
Medicaid payment rates for certain
categories of services. These
commenters specifically supported the
proposed categories of services,
comparing only base payment rates,
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
40726
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
breakdown of Medicaid payment rates
by population (pediatric and adult), use
of Medicare non-facility rates as a
benchmark for comparing Medicaid
rates, and number of Medicaid services
as a data element in the comparative
payment rate analysis. Commenters in
support of the comparative payment rate
analysis agreed with CMS that the
analysis requirement would help to
ensure necessary information,
specifically Medicaid payment rates and
the comparison to Medicare, is available
to CMS for ensuring compliance with
section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act and to
interested parties for raising access to
care concerns through public processes.
However, a couple of commenters
expressed opposition to the proposed
comparative payment rate analysis.
Commenters in opposition stated the
proposed comparative payment rate
analysis requirements would be
administratively burdensome on States
and create challenges for States in
benchmarking services to Medicare
because Medicare uses a rate setting
methodology that is different from each
State’s Medicaid program. These
commenters expressed concerns about
the burden associated with the
comparative payment rate analysis,
specifically about further burden on
States that do not use the same
procedure/diagnostics codes or same
payment methodologies as Medicare, as
well as data challenges to stratify State
payment rates by population, provider
type, and geographic location, and
challenges of comparing community
mental health center payment rates to
the Medicare equivalent.
Response: We appreciate the
commenters’ support of the comparative
payment rate analysis at
§ 447.203(b)(3)(i). We are finalizing the
comparative payment rate analysis
provisions as proposed apart from some
minor revisions that ensure clarity and
consistent terminology throughout
§ 447.203(b), as well as update the name
of ‘‘outpatient behavioral health
services’’ to ‘‘outpatient mental health
and substance use disorder services’’
and the compliance timeframe, as
discussed earlier in this section. We list
and describe the specific revisions we
made to the regulatory language for the
comparative payment rate analysis
provision at § 447.203(b)(2) through
(b)(5) at the end of this section of
responses to comments.
We disagree with commenters
regarding burden of the comparative
payment rate analysis and challenges
benchmarking services to Medicare. As
documented in section III. of this final
rule, the FFS provisions, including the
payment rate transparency, comparative
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
payment rate analysis, and payment rate
disclosure requirements (§ 447.203(b)(1)
through (5)), interested parties’ advisory
group requirements (§ 447.203(b)(6)),
and State analysis procedures for
payment rate reductions or payment
restructuring (§ 447.203(c)), are
expected to result in a net burden
reduction on States compared to the
previous AMRP requirements.
Additionally, as addressed in another
comment response generally discussing
commenters’ concerns about State
burden, we have described numerous
flexibilities States have for compliance
with this final rule. Specifically for the
comparative payment rate analysis,
States have flexibility to (1) utilize
contractors or other third party websites
to publish the payment rate
transparency publication on (however,
we remind States that they are still
requiring to publish the hyperlink to the
website where the publication is located
on the State Medicaid agency’s website
as required in § 447.203(b)(1)(ii) of this
final rule); and (2) for the requirement
that States break down their payment
rates by geographical location, as
applicable, States have the flexibility to
determine an appropriate method to
accomplish the comparative payment
rate analysis that aligns the geographic
area covered by each payer’s rate as
closely as reasonably feasible.
Additionally, we are providing an
example list that defines the categories
of services subject to the comparative
payment rate analysis through the finite
number of E/M CPT/HCPCS codes in
the list, if it were in effect for CY 2023
and an illustrative example of a
compliant comparative payment rate
analysis (including to meet accessibility
standards) through subregulatory
guidance that we will issue prior to the
effective date of this final rule.
We do not expect States to experience
excessive burden or challenges in
benchmarking services to Medicare
because we will issue subregulatory
guidance prior to the effective date of
this final rule, including a hypothetical
example list of the CMS-published list
of E/M CPT/HCPCS codes that would be
subject to the comparative payment rate
analysis, if the comparative rate analysis
requirements were applicable with
respect to payment rates in effect for CY
2023, where all codes on the CMSpublished list of E/M CPT/HCPCS codes
have an existing Medicare payment rate.
By ensuring there is an existing
Medicare payment rate for States to
compare their Medicaid payment rate to
and providing States with information
about where and how to find the
Medicare non-facility payment rate as
PO 00000
Frm 00186
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
established in the annual Medicare PFS
final rule for a calendar year for these
codes to include in their analysis (that
is, through Excel file downloads of the
Medicare PFS Relative Value Files),284
we do not expect States to face
challenges with identifying the
applicable Medicare benchmark rates.
Regarding States that do not use same
procedure/diagnostics codes as
Medicare, as described in the proposed
rule, E/M CPT/HCPCS codes are
comprised of primarily preventive
services which are generally some of the
most commonly billed codes in the
U.S.,285 therefore, we do not believe
there will be issues with States not
using the same procedure/diagnostics
codes as Medicare. However, we
recognize that States may amend
existing CPT/HCPCS codes with
additional numbers or letters for
processing in their own claims system.
If a State does not use the exact code
included in the CMS-published list of E/
M CPT/HCPCS codes, then we expect
the State to review the CMS-published
list of E/M CPT/HCPCS codes and
identify which of their codes are most
comparable for purposes of the
comparative payment rate analysis. We
anticipate States may need to review
code descriptions as part of the process
of identifying which codes on the CMSpublished list of E/M CPT/HCPCS codes
are comparable to the codes that States
utilizes.
Regarding States that expect to
experience challenges benchmarking
services to Medicare because they do
not use the same payment
methodologies as Medicare, while
Medicare and State Medicaid agencies
may use different methodologies to
determine the rate published on their
fee schedules, the comparative payment
rate analysis only requires the base
Medicaid FFS fee schedule payment
rates as published on the State’s fee
schedule and Medicare’s rate as
published on the PFS for a particular
code to be published in the analysis.
The methodology to determine the
payment rate is not relevant to the
comparative payment rate analysis,
therefore, having different
methodologies to determine the rate
does not affect a States’ ability to
comply with the comparative payment
rate analysis requirements. Under the
comparative payment rate analysis
requirements we are finalizing in this
final rule, Medicare rates serve as a
benchmark to which States will
compare certain of their base Medicaid
FFS fee schedule payment rates to
284 88
285 88
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
FR 27960 at 28012.
FR 27960 at 28009.
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
inform their and our assessment of
whether the State’s payment rates are
compliant with section 1902(a)(30)(A) of
the Act.
Regarding commenters’ concerns
about data challenges to stratify State
payment rates by population, provider
type, and geographic location for the
comparative payment rate analysis, we
acknowledge that not all States pay
varied payment rates by population
(pediatric and adult), provider type, and
geographical location, which is why we
proposed and are finalizing language
noting ‘‘if the rates vary’’ and ‘‘as
applicable’’ in the regulatory text.
Therefore, States that do not pay varied
payment rates by population (pediatric
and adult), provider type, and
geographical location will not need to
list varied rates based on factors that the
State does not use in its rates. For
example, a State that pays different rates
by population (pediatric and adult) but
does not vary the rates by provider type
or geographic location will list separate
payment rates for services furnished to
a pediatric and to an adult beneficiary,
but will not list separate rates based on
provider type or geographical location.
If the State pays a single Statewide
payment rate for a single service, the
State will only include the State’s single
Statewide payment rate in the
comparative payment rate analysis. For
States that do pay varied payment rates
by population (pediatric and adult),
provider type, and geographical
location, in accordance with § 430.10
and given that States are the stewards of
setting and maintaining Medicaid FFS
payment rates, States are required to
maintain sufficient records about
current payment rates, including when
payment rates vary, to enable them to
meet the comparative payment rate
analysis requirements of this final rule.
Regarding the commenter’s concerns
about comparing community mental
health center payments to Medicare
rates, we would like to clarify that
mental health services provided in a
facility-based setting, such as FQHC,
RHC, CCBHC, or clinics (as defined in
§ 440.90) are excluded from the
comparative payment rate analysis due
to the challenges we expect States to
face in disaggregating their rates
(including PPS rates paid to FQHCs or
RHCs which are often paid encounter,
per visit, or provider-specific rates and
all-inclusive per-visit rates, encounter
rates, per visit rates, or provider-specific
rates paid to clinics (as defined in
§ 440.90)) for comparison to Medicare,
as discussed in the proposed rule.286
286 88
FR 27960 at 28011–28012.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
Comment: We received a comment
requesting clarification about the entity
responsible for publishing the
comparative payment rate analysis.
Response: The State agency is
required to publish a hyperlink where
the comparative, as well as the payment
rate disclosure and payment rate
transparency publication, on the State
Medicaid agency’s website. As finalized
in this rule, § 447.203(b)(3) requires that
States’ comparative payment rate
analysis, as well as payment rate
disclosure, must be published
consistent with the publication
requirements in paragraphs (b)(1) and
(b)(1)(ii). Paragraph (b)(1) requires the
State ‘‘. . . publish all Medicaid fee-forservice fee schedule payment rates on a
website that is accessible to the general
public.’’ As discussed in an earlier
response to comments in this section,
this language has been revised from
what we originally proposed to permit
States the flexibility to continue to
utilize contractors and other third
parties for developing and publishing
their fee schedules on behalf of the
State. We continue to require that ‘‘[t]he
website where the State agency
publishes its Medicaid fee-for-service
payment rates must be easily reached
from a hyperlink on the State Medicaid
agency’s website.’’ in § 447.203(b)(1)(ii).
Comment: One commenter requested
clarification regarding how the
comparative payment rate analysis will
be organized, particularly if the FFS
rates included in the analysis would be
organized by CPT code.
Response: As finalized by this rule,
§ 447.203(b)(3)(i) requires that ‘‘State[s]
must conduct the comparative payment
rate analysis at the Current Procedural
Terminology (CPT) or Healthcare
Common Procedure Coding System
(HCPCS) code level, as applicable, using
the most current set of codes published
by CMS . . .’’ As such, the publication
is required to be organized at the CPT
level. However, to the extent there are
differences in a State’s rates based on
population (pediatric and adult),
provider type, and geographical
location, the publication may need to
have multiple CPT-level rate
comparisons to account for each
differing rate.
Comment: One commenter raised
concerns regarding the accessibility of
the comparative payment rate analysis
due to the extensive amount of data,
which may be overwhelming and
difficult for individuals to understand,
for example individuals with
disabilities and those who use screen
readers. The commenter recommended
that CMS require the analysis and
disclosure be contained in a designated
PO 00000
Frm 00187
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40727
website, rather than linked from the
State Medicaid agency’s website to
avoid creating potential confusion. They
further recommended CMS require
States include plain language
descriptions of the published payment
rate data to ensure the analysis is
accessible for individuals with
disabilities.
Response: We understand the concern
that the amount of data in the analysis
could prove overwhelming to some
individuals. However, we believe it is
important for these data to be easily
reached for those interested parties that
are trying to locate it. Transparency,
particularly the requirement that States
must publicly publish their payment
rates, helps to ensure that interested
parties have basic information available
to them to understand Medicaid
payment levels and the associated
effects of payment rates on access to
care so that they may raise concerns to
State Medicaid agencies via the various
forms of public processes available to
interested parties. Therefore, as
finalized in this rule, § 447.203(b)(1)
requires the State ‘‘. . . publish all
Medicaid fee-for-service fee schedule
payment rates on a website that is
accessible to the general public.’’ As
discussed in an earlier response to
comments in this section, this language
has been revised from what we
originally proposed to permit States the
flexibility to continue to utilize
contractors and other third parties for
developing and publishing their fee
schedules on behalf of the State. We
continue to require at § 447.203(b)(1)(ii)
that the website where the State agency
publishes its Medicaid FFS payment
rates must be easily reached from a
hyperlink on the State Medicaid
agency’s website.
As described in the proposed rule,
longstanding legal requirements to
provide effective communication with
individuals with disabilities and the
obligation to take reasonable steps to
provide meaningful access to
individuals with limited English
proficiency also apply to the State’s
website containing Medicaid FFS
payment rate information. We invite
States to reach out to CMS for technical
guidance regarding compliance with the
comparative payment rate analysis. We
also encourage States to review the
subregulatory guidance, which includes
an example of what a compliant
comparative payment rate analysis
might look like, that will be issued prior
to the effective date of this final rule.
Comment: A couple of commenters
suggested that the proposed breakdown
of the comparative payment rate
analysis would result in an
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
40728
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
overwhelming volume of information
for the average individual viewing the
data. One commenter suggested
requiring States to report the aggregate
fee schedule rate, instead of breaking
down a State’s payment rates by
categories of services in addition to
population, provider type and
geographic location to ensure data is
accessible and meaningful to someone
viewing the data.
Response: We understand the
commenters’ concerns about the
potential for the comparative payment
rate analysis to contain a large amount
of information. However, the level of
detail we are requiring will afford
States, CMS, and the public the best
opportunity to assess individual rates
and how they might impact access to
certain services. Our hope is that the
requirements and guidance around the
elements to include, and the
consistency this will create across
States, will make the data readily
navigable and understandable, even
though a high volume of information
may need to be presented to account for
the array of services subject to the
comparative payment rate analysis
requirement and the potential
complexity of the State’s payment rate
structure.
We assume the commenter who
suggested an aggregated fee schedule
rate meant we should only require
States publish a single Statewide
payment rate or a calculated Statewide
average Medicaid payment rate if they
do have varying payment rates for a
service by population (pediatric and
adult), provider type, and/or geographic
location. We are not adopting this
suggestion because only requiring an
aggregated fee schedule rate would lose
the opportunity for States, CMS, and the
public to contextualize payment rates
and how they might be impacting access
for different populations in different
geographical areas, or for beneficiaries
seeking services from particular
provider types. However, we note that
States have the flexibility to add an
aggregated fee schedule rate in addition
to breaking down a State’s payment
rates for a given service by population
(pediatric and adult), provider type, and
geographic location, as applicable, with
their comparative payment rate analysis
if they so choose. If a State utilizes this
flexibility to include this or optional
additional information, then required
data elements in § 447.203(b)(2) through
(3) must be listed first on the State’s
website to ensure the analysis presents
payment rate information in a clear and
accurate way, particularly for States that
do pay varied rates based on population
(pediatric and adult), provider type,
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
and/or geographic location and opted to
include an aggregated fee schedule rate
(that is, a calculated Statewide average
Medicaid payment rate).
The previous AMRP process
established a transparent data-driven
process to measure access to care in
States; however, during the
implementation period, we found that
States produced varied AMRPs that
were difficult to interpret or to use in
assessing compliance with section
1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act. With this final
rule, we are focusing on payment rate
transparency and streamlining
information States are required to
publish. Therefore, we expect the
comparative payment rate analysis to be
easier to understand and more
consistent across States than the
previous AMRPs.
Comment: A few commenters
suggested narrowing the scope of the
comparative payment rate analysis to a
representative subset of services or
commonly used services with a
Medicare equivalent. On the other hand,
one commenter stated that limiting the
scope of the comparative payment rate
analysis to E/M codes would not be
adequate to meaningfully assess access
to care for all services under the
proposed categories of services.
Response: We appreciate the
commenters’ suggestions on the scope of
the comparative payment rate analysis.
Prior to the effective date of this final
rule, we will issue subregulatory
guidance, including a hypothetical
example list of the E/M CPT/HCPCS
codes that would be subject to the
comparative payment rate analysis, if
the comparative rate analysis
requirements were applicable with
respect to payment rates in effect for CY
2023. The initial CMS-published list of
the E/M CPT/HCPCS codes to be
published no later than July 1, 2025,
will contain a finite number of E/M
CPT/HCPCS codes subject to the initial
comparative payment rate analysis.
While the commenters did not specify
their recommendation for what a
representative subset of services would
include or how they would identify
commonly provided services with a
Medicare equivalent, we believe the
criteria we used to select the E/M CPT/
HCPCS codes for the comparative
payment rate analysis 287 fulfills these
commenters’ suggestion for a
representative set of commonly
provided services with Medicare
payment rates for comparison. We
believe the categories of services
included in the rule (primary care
services, obstetrical and gynecological
services, and outpatient mental health
and substance use disorder services) are
a representative subset of Medicaid
services available to beneficiaries that
are of great importance to overall
beneficiary health, as described in the
proposed rule.288 Additionally, E/M
CPT/HCPCS codes are some of the most
commonly billed codes and one of the
criteria in the CMS-published list of the
E/M CPT/HCPCS codes is that the
Medicare PFS has a payment amount on
the fee schedule, therefore, we believe
our list of codes includes commonly
used services with a Medicare
equivalent payment rate.
Also as previously discussed in detail
in an earlier response to comments in
this section, for purposes of the
payment rate transparency provision in
§ 447.203(b)(1), Medicaid FFS fee
schedule payment rates are FFS
payment amounts made to a provider,
and known in advance of a provider
delivering a service to a beneficiary by
reference to a fee schedule. For
consistency, we are using the same
description of Medicaid FFS fee
schedule payment rates to describe the
payment rates that need to be included
in the comparative payment rate
analysis in paragraph (b)(3)(ii)(B) of this
section which would also consider
bundled payment rates to be Medicaid
FFS fee schedule payment rates for the
purposes of the comparative payment
rate analysis. We would also like to
clarify that while prospective payment
system rates for services provided in
inpatient hospitals, outpatient hospitals,
inpatient psychiatric facilities, inpatient
rehabilitation facilities, long-term care
hospitals, and nursing facilities are
subject to the payment rate transparency
publication, these rates are effectively
excluded from the comparative payment
rate analysis because of the criteria we
discussed in the proposed rule that we
used to identify which CPT/HCPCS
codes would be subject to the analysis
(that is, the code is classified as an E/
M CPT/HCPCS code by the AMA CPT
Editorial Panel and the code has an A
(Active), N (Non-Covered), R
(Restricted), or T (Injections) code status
on the Medicare PFS with a Medicare
established RVU and payment amount
for the same time period of the
comparative payment rate analysis).289
Prospective payment system rates are
generally used to pay for institutional
services (for example, hospitals and
nursing facilities) where E/M services
are not provided. Prospective payment
system rates are also not listed on the
Medicare PFS because they do not pay
288 88
287 88
PO 00000
FR 27960 at 28008.
Frm 00188
Fmt 4701
289 88
Sfmt 4700
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
FR 27960 at 28003.
FR 27960 at 28008.
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
for a single code, and therefore, they
would not have a code or a payment rate
on the PFS. Also, as discussed in an
earlier response to comments, PPS rates
for FQHCs and RHCs are not subject to
the payment rate transparency
publication requirement under
§ 447.203(b)(1). Rather than further
broadening the services subject to the
comparative payment rate analysis
requirement, we want our initial focus
of this rulemaking to be on establishing
the new payment rate transparency,
comparative payment rate analysis, and
payment rate disclosure requirements,
providing States with support during
the compliance period, and ensuring
these data are available to beneficiaries,
providers, CMS, and other interested
parties for the purposes of assessing
access to care issues.
We disagree with the commenter that
our scope of services subject to the
comparative payment rate analysis will
not provide a meaningful assessment of
access. To reemphasize, we believe this
list of codes, including primary care
services, obstetrical and gynecological
services, and outpatient mental health
and substance use disorder services, are
critical medical services and of great
importance to overall beneficiary health,
as described in the proposed rule.290 We
acknowledge that the code list is limited
to services delivered in an ambulatory
setting, such as a physician’s office, and
services that are paid a Medicaid FFS
fee schedule rate within the meaning of
this final rule. Therefore, the code list
for the comparative payment rate
analysis excludes services delivered in
a facility setting and/or services States
pay for using a prospective payment
system, for example hospitals, nursing
facilities, FQHCs, and RHCs; however,
we believe these limitations are
appropriate to balance administrative
burden on States and our enforcement
responsibilities. As previously
discussed, we believe that asking States
to disaggregate their prospective
payment system rates for facility-based
services to compare to Medicare’s
prospective payment system rates often
would be challenging for States. Given
that our work to better ensure access in
the Medicaid program is ongoing, we
intend to gain implementation
experience with this final rule, and we
will consider the recommendations
provided on the proposed rule to help
inform any future rulemaking in this
area, as appropriate.
Comment: A couple of commenters
suggested aligning the proposed
categories of services with Medicaid
service categories as defined in statute
290 88
FR 27960 at 28003.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
and regulation to minimize confusion
and ambiguity about the services subject
to the comparative payment rate
analysis. Another commenter suggested,
rather than requiring a specified set of
services, that CMS require the
comparative payment rate analysis
based on the percentage of services paid
for by the State (that is, each State
would include the services they pay the
most for in their Medicaid program).
Response: We understand
commenters’ concerns about possible
confusion of the categories of services
subject to the comparative payment rate
analysis that do not align directly with
a Medicaid services category. Prior to
the effective date of this final rule, we
will issue subregulatory guidance
including a hypothetical example list of
the E/M CPT/HCPCS codes that would
be subject to the comparative payment
rate analysis, if the comparative rate
analysis requirements were applicable
with respect to payment rates in effect
for CY 2023. This example list defines
the categories of services subject to the
comparative payment rate analysis
through the finite number of E/M CPT/
HCPCS codes in the list, if it were in
effect for CY 2023. The initial CMSpublished list of the E/M CPT/HCPCS
codes actually subject to the
comparative payment rate analysis will
be published no later than July 1, 2025.
We believe this list of codes will
eliminate any confusion and ambiguity
commenters expressed in response to
the proposed rule because it will
contain the actual E/M CPT/HCPCS
codes subject to the initial comparative
payment rate analysis. We will only be
including codes that satisfy all the
defined criteria set forth in this rule.
This list will be updated every other
year after 2025, that is, July 1, 2027,
2029, so on and so forth. We expect
States to review the CMS-published list
of the E/M CPT/HCPCS codes to
identify the base Medicaid FFS fee
schedule payment rate as specified in
§ 447.203(b)(3)(i)(B) that is required to
be included in the comparative payment
rate analysis.
We are not adopting the commenter’s
suggestion to require the comparative
payment rate analysis be based on the
percentage of services paid for by the
State (that is, each State would include
the services they pay the most for in
their Medicaid program), rather than
requiring a specified set of services. In
the comparative payment rate analysis,
we are striving for consistency and
comparability between States and
Medicare, therefore, we have decided to
require States use the same categories of
services and CMS published list of E/M
CPT/HCPCS codes for the analysis.
PO 00000
Frm 00189
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40729
Comment: A couple of commenters
suggested alternative terms for the
categories of services in the proposed
rule. One commenter recommended
using the terms ‘‘substance use disorder
and mental health services’’ in place of
‘‘behavioral health services’’ and
requiring the comparative payment rate
analysis include separate analyses for
each condition. Another commenter
suggested using gender-inclusive
language such as ‘‘reproductive and
sexual health services’’ in place of
‘‘obstetrical and gynecological services’’
as a category of services in the
comparative payment rate analysis.
Response: We appreciate the
commenters’ suggestions. We
understand and appreciate the
commenter’s request for further
granularity in the comparative payment
rate analysis by specifying ‘‘substance
use disorder and mental health
services’’ in place of ‘‘behavioral health
services.’’ We have decided to revise the
outpatient behavioral health services
category of service in § 447.203(b)(2)(iii)
and finalize it as ‘‘Outpatient mental
health and substance use disorder
services.’’ While this revision does not
change the criteria used to identify the
discrete codes included in the BETOS
E/M family grouping and families and
subfamilies for the CMS published list
of E/M CPT/HCPCS subject to the
comparative payment rate analysis, this
revision does ensure this final rule is
consistent with the services in the
Managed Care final rule (as published
elsewhere in this Federal Register) for
consistency across Medicaid FFS and
managed care delivery systems and
reflects a more granular level of service
description as suggested by the
commenter.
We agree with the importance of
gender-inclusive language, where
appropriate. However, current medical
and procedural terminology generally
still uses the terminology ‘‘obstetrical
and gynecological services.’’ We
determined consistent language would
provide interested parties the most
clarity. Additionally, we selected
obstetrical and gynecological services as
a category of service due Medicaid’s key
role in providing and paying for
maternity-related services for pregnant
women during a maternal health crisis
in the US.291 We acknowledge that
using the term ‘‘reproductive and sexual
health services’’ would be inclusive of
more services, that is, male reproductive
services in addition to pregnancy and
female reproductive services. However,
if we were to utilize the term
‘‘reproductive and sexual health
291 88
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
FR 27960 at 28004.
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
40730
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
services’’ then this would expand the
number of services that would be
subject to comparative rate analysis and
increase burden on States complying
with the analysis. We want our initial
focus to be on establishing the new
payment rate transparency, comparative
payment rate analysis, and payment rate
disclosure requirements, providing
States with support during the
compliance period, and ensuring these
data are available to beneficiaries,
providers, CMS, and other interested
parties for the purposes of assessing
access to care issues. Therefore, we are
finalizing ‘‘obstetrical and gynecological
services’’ as a category of service in
§ 447.203(b)(2)(ii) subject to the
comparative payment rate analysis.
Given that our work to better ensure
access in the Medicaid program is
ongoing, we intend to gain
implementation experience with this
final rule, and we will consider the
recommendations provided on the
proposed rule to help inform any future
rulemaking in this area, as appropriate.
Comment: A couple of commenters
raised concerns about inpatient
behavioral health services not being a
category of service in the comparative
payment rate analysis. One of those
commenters disagreed with CMS’
justification that including inpatient
behavioral health services would be
duplicative of the information captured
through UPL demonstrations because
UPL demonstrations do not include the
same level of analysis as proposed in
the comparative payment rate analysis.
In particular, the commenter stated that
UPL demonstrations do not ensure
hospital base payments are adequate, do
not track if Medicaid payments align
with Medicare payment rate increases,
and the new supplemental payment
reporting requirements established by
the CAA, 2021 focus on supplemental
payments, rather than base payments.
Additionally, one commenter
recommended that, if inpatient
behavioral health services are not
subject to the comparative payment rate
analysis, CMS take alternative steps to
assess access to inpatient behavioral
health services, such as monitoring care
transitions between inpatient and
outpatient facilities during temporary or
permanent transitions to inpatient care.
Response: We understand the
commenters’ concerns about excluding
inpatient behavioral health services
from the categories of services subject to
the comparative payment rate analysis.
We acknowledge the importance of
inpatient behavioral health services in
the spectrum of behavioral health
services for which coverage is available
under the Medicaid program. As
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
discussed in the proposed rule, we
recognize that Medicaid plays a crucial
role in mental health care access as the
single largest payer of these services
with a growing role in payment for
substance use disorder services, in part
due to Medicaid expansion and various
efforts by Congress to improve access to
mental health and substance use
disorder services.292 In this final rule,
we are revising the outpatient
behavioral health services category of
service in § 447.203(b)(2)(iii) and
finalizing it as ‘‘Outpatient mental
health and substance use disorder
services.’’ While the scope of the
comparative payment rate analysis
requirement is limited to outpatient
mental health and substance use
disorder services, to the extent States
pay for inpatient behavioral health
services (including inpatient services
furnished in psychiatric residential
treatment facilities, institutions for
mental diseases, and psychiatric
hospitals) with a Medicaid FFS fee
schedule payment rate that falls within
the meaning of this rule, as discussed in
an earlier response to comments in this
section, then those payment rates would
be subject to the payment rate
transparency publication. In addition to
subjecting certain inpatient behavioral
health payment rates to the payment
rate transparency publication
requirement, we already collect and
review Medicaid and Medicare payment
rate data for inpatient behavioral health
services through annual UPL
demonstrations and supplemental
payment reporting requirements under
section 1903(bb) of the Act. We
recognize UPL data are not an exact
duplicate of the data required under the
policies we are finalizing in this rule.
With this final rule, our focus is on
improving our oversight of Medicaid
payment rates to identify where rates
may be negatively impacting access to
care while minimizing burden imposed
on States, which requires us to prioritize
areas of focus. Although the UPL and
the supplemental payment reporting
requirements under section 1903(bb) of
the Act represent a different array of
data, they still afford us an opportunity
for payment oversight. Therefore, we
chose to focus on services and rates not
covered by those requirements.
We disagree with the commenter that
UPL demonstrations do not ensure
hospital base payments are adequate
and do not track if Medicaid payments
align with Medicare payment rate
increases. We began requiring annual
UPL demonstrations in 2013 to ensure
CMS and States have a better
292 88
PO 00000
FR 27960 at 28004.
Frm 00190
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
understanding of the variables
surrounding rate levels, supplemental
payments and total providers
participating in the Medicare and
Medicaid programs and the funding
supporting each of the payments subject
to UPL demonstrations.293 UPL
demonstrations are a comparison of
total Medicaid payments for a
particularly benefit category to a
reasonable estimate of what Medicare
would have paid. Therefore, UPL
demonstrations fundamentally track if
Medicaid payments align with Medicare
payment rates at an aggregate level and
provide CMS with important
information for assessing if payment
rates comply with economy and
efficiency provisions at section
1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act, specifically
how total Medicaid payments compare
to what Medicare would have paid for
similar services where Medicare acts as
a payment limit, or ceiling, for
economic and efficient. We do
acknowledge that the new supplemental
payment reporting requirements under
section 1903(bb) of the Act focus on
supplemental payments, rather than
base payments; however, base payment
data continues to be collected through
UPL demonstrations, providing us, in
the aggregate, with detailed information
about both base and supplemental
payments for hospitals.
Additionally, the comparative
payment rate analysis utilizes Medicare
rates as a benchmark to which States
will compare their Medicaid FFS fee
schedule payment rate to inform their
and our assessment of whether the
State’s payment rates are compliant
with section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act.
We are not requiring States to meet a
threshold percentage of Medicare nonfacility payment rates as established in
the annual Medicare PFS final rule for
a calendar year or align with Medicare
payment rate increases.
We acknowledge the commenter’s
request for CMS to take alternative steps
to assess access to inpatient behavioral
health services, such as monitoring care
transitions between inpatient and
outpatient facilities during temporary or
permanent transitions to inpatient care.
We want our initial focus to be on
establishing the new payment rate
transparency, comparative payment rate
analysis, and payment rate disclosure
requirements, providing States with
support during the compliance period,
and ensuring these data are available to
beneficiaries, providers, CMS, and other
interested parties for the purposes of
293 https://www.medicaid.gov/sites/default/files/
Federal-Policy-Guidance/Downloads/SMD-13-00302.pdf.
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
assessing access to care issues. Given
that our work to better ensure access in
the Medicaid program is ongoing, we
intend to gain implementation
experience with this final rule, and we
will consider the recommendations
provided on the proposed rule to help
inform any future rulemaking in this
area, as appropriate. We are committed
to helping States and their providers
undertake efforts to improve transitions
and improve medical and LTSS
coordination by providing technical
assistance, resources, and facilitating
the exchange of information about
promising practices of high quality, high
impact, and effective care transition
models and processes and we encourage
States to review existing resources about
improving care transitions on
Medicaid.gov.294
Comment: Some commenters
submitted comments about behavioral
health services as a category of service
in the comparative payment rate
analysis. A few commenters suggested
particular or additional categories of
services for behavioral health services,
including inpatient behavioral health
services, substance use disorder
services, mental health services,
intensive outpatient services, partial
hospitalization care, opioid treatment
programs, services delivered by
providers who do not bill E/M codes,
and specialist services provided to
individuals with chronic diseases and
disabilities. These commenters also
suggested including codes outside of the
E/M category, such as ‘‘H’’ HCPCS codes
that psychologists, social workers, and
marriage and family therapists often bill
to ensure a comprehensive analysis of
behavioral health services in the
comparative payment rate analysis.
Response: We appreciate commenters’
suggestion for the comparative payment
rate analysis. As stated previously, we
are excluding inpatient behavioral
health services because existing UPL
and supplemental payment reporting
requirements under section 1903(bb) of
the Act provide for payment oversight
for inpatient behavioral health services,
and with the provisions of this final
rule, we chose to focus on services and
payment rates not covered by those
requirements. Additionally, we are not
considering behavioral health services,
now called outpatient mental health and
substance use disorder services in this
final rule, outside the E/M category as
suggested by commenters because E/M
CPT/HCPCS codes are some of the most
commonly billed codes and including
294 https://www.medicaid.gov/medicaid/qualityof-care/quality-improvement-initiatives/improvingcare-transitions/.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
them in the comparative payment rate
analysis would allow us to uniformly
compare Medicaid payment rates for
these codes to Medicare PFS rates. If we
were to expand outside of E/M category
of codes, then it is possible Medicare
may not have rates established on the
Medicare PFS for States to compare
their base Medicaid FFS fee schedule
payment rates too in the comparative
payment rate analysis. Based on the
criteria used to narrow the scope of the
comparative payment rate analysis, we
are requiting that the code has an A
(Active), N (Non-Covered), R
(Restricted), or T (Injections) code status
on the Medicare PFS with a Medicare
established RVU and payment amount
for the same time period of the
comparative payment rate analysis as
well as the code must be included in the
BETOS Classification System which
only includes Psychotherapy—Group
and Psychotherapy—Nongroup (family)
under the E/M (category), Behavioral
Health Services (subcategory).
Psychotherapy is a type of treatment, or
service, that can help individuals
experiencing a wide array of mental
health conditions and emotional
challenges, including substance use
disorder and mental health.295 While
the CMS published list of E/M CPT/
HCPCS codes will not specifically
include intensive outpatient services,
partial hospitalization care, opioid
treatment programs, services delivered
by providers who do not bill E/M codes,
specialist services provided to
individuals with chronic diseases and
disabilities, or H codes for Alcohol and
Drug Abuse Treatment 296 as suggested
by commenters, we believe the services
included on the CMS published list of
E/M CPT/HCPCS codes are critical
medical services and of great
importance to overall beneficiary health,
as described in the proposed rule.297 As
previously discussed, the CMS
published list of E/M CPT/HCPCS codes
narrows the scope of the comparative
payment rate analysis to selected
services delivered in an ambulatory
setting, such as a physician’s office, and
services that are paid a Medicaid FFS
fee schedule rate within the meaning of
this final rule to balance administrative
burden on States and our enforcement
responsibilities. Given that our work to
better ensure access in the Medicaid
program is ongoing, we intend to gain
implementation experience with this
final rule, and we will consider the
295 https://www.psychiatry.org/patients-families/
psychotherapy.
296 https://www.aapc.com/codes/hcpcs-codesrange/.
297 88 FR 27960 at 28003.
PO 00000
Frm 00191
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40731
recommendations provided on the
proposed rule to help inform any future
rulemaking in this area, as appropriate.
Comment: A couple of commenters
expressed concerns regarding the
exclusion of facility-based services from
the comparative payment rate analysis.
These commenters requested CMS
consider additional provisions for
services that are delivered by facilitybased providers, which are often paid
via an encounter rate, reimbursement of
actual cost, or cost-based payment
methodologies. One commenter
suggested requiring States that pay for
behavioral health services using costbased payment methodologies publish
the provider’s payment rate compared to
provider’s actual incurred cost because
States are already collecting this
information from providers as it is
necessary for the State’s cost-based
payment methodology.
Response: We appreciate the
commenter’s suggestions. We assume by
encounter rate that the commenters
were referring more broadly to PPS rates
paid to both institutional facilities, such
as hospitals and nursing facilities which
are often paid encounter or per diem
rates, as well as non-institutional
facilities, such as FQHCs or RHCs which
are often paid encounter, per visit, or
provider-specific rates, as discussed in
detail in an earlier response to
comments in this section. We did not
propose and are not finalizing in this
rule the requirement that States
disaggregate each of their PPS rates
(including encounter, per diem, per
visit, and provider-specific rates) and
services covered in each rate to compare
to Medicare’s prospective payment
system rates when Medicare pays a
prospective payment system rate for the
same service. Likewise, we also did not
propose and are not finalizing in this
rule the requirement that States publish
cost reports or provider’s unique cost
information when the State’s
methodology is reimbursement of actual
cost or cost-based methodologies and
services covered in the reimbursement
methodology to compare to actual
incurred cost. Therefore, any policies
that require States to disaggregate each
of their PPS rates and services covered
in each PPS rate or publish cost reports
or provider’s unique cost information in
order to compare to Medicare’s
prospective payment system rates or the
commenter’s suggestion to compare to
actual incurred cost, would be
challenging for States because we would
require a different methodology,
policies, and oversight relative to the
comparative payment rate analysis, as
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
40732
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
discussed in the proposed rule.298 As
we are seeking an appropriate balance
between administrative burden and our
oversight responsibilities with regard to
section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act,
requiring States to publish cost-based
Medicaid payments as well as actual,
incurred cost for each unique provider
would impose more burden on States
that was not accounted for in the
proposed rule. Given that our work to
better ensure access in the Medicaid
program is ongoing, we intend to gain
implementation experience with this
final rule, and we will consider the
recommendations provided on the
proposed rule to help inform any future
rulemaking in this area, as appropriate.
Comment: Several commenters
recommended changes to the analysis,
such as additional categories of services
or revisions to the proposed categories
of services subject to the comparative
payment rate analysis. While some
commenters generally recommended
expanding the categories of services,
including all mandatory Medicaid
services, other commenters
recommended specific additional
categories of services, provider types, or
costs such as supplies. Those
recommendations included: physician
specialist services and specialty/
specialist care (for example, cancer
care); subspecialty services (for
example, pediatric ophthalmology);
services provided by NPPs; services
delivered in clinics and other settings;
prosthetic supplies (for example,
ostomy and urological supplies), home
health services (for example,
homemaker and home health aide),
sexual and reproductive health services
(for example, midwives, doulas,
providers who primarily serve the
sexual and reproductive health needs of
people assigned male at birth, etc.);
dental and oral health services
(including pediatric dentistry), ground
emergency medical transportation
services; cell and gene therapies;
hospital and emergency department
services; vaccine administration
services; and habilitation and
rehabilitation services provided by
physical therapists. Commenters also
suggested processes to add services
when certain criteria are met, for
example, adding any service to the
comparative payment rate analysis
when access concerns are raised or
identified.
Response: We thank the commenters
for the many recommendations for
additional or alternate categories of
service. In order to balance Federal and
State administrative burden with our
shared obligation to ensure compliance
with section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act
(and our obligation to oversee State
compliance with the same), we are
finalizing this rule with a narrow scope
of categories of services subject to the
comparative payment rate analysis and
not including additional categories of
services suggested by commenters. As
discussed in the proposed rule, we
chose primary care services, obstetrical
and gynecological services, and
outpatient behavioral health services
(which we are finalizing as outpatient
mental health and substance use
disorder services) because they are
critical medical services and of great
importance to overall beneficiary
health.299 Primary care providers often
deliver preventative health care
services, write referrals or
recommendations to schedule an
appointment with physician specialists,
and write orders for lab and x-ray
services and prescriptions that a
beneficiary would not be able to access
without the primary care provider,
therefore, access to a primary care
provider is often a gateway to accessing
other care. Obstetrical and gynecological
providers and behavioral health
providers also deliver preventive
services respective to their field, such as
well-woman visits and screenings for
behavioral health conditions (such as
alcohol disorders, anxiety, and eating
disorders), respectively. As described in
the proposed rule, the U.S. is
simultaneously experiencing a maternal
health crisis and mental health crisis,
putting providers of obstetrical and
gynecological and mental health and
substance use disorder services at the
forefront.300
We clarify that we did propose to
include in the comparative payment rate
analysis a couple of the services
commenters suggested: care delivered
by NPPs, and sexual and reproductive
health services (to the extent these are
included within the category of
obstetrical and gynecological services).
If a State’s base Medicaid FFS fee
schedule payment rate varies by
provider type for a particular code
subject to the comparative payment rate
analysis, then the payment rates must be
separately identified by provider type,
including, but not limited to, physician,
nurse practitioner, and physician
assistant, as specified in
§ 447.203(b)(3)(i)(B). While we are not
including the broader category of sexual
and reproductive health services,
obstetrical and gynecological services
are one of the categories of services
299 88
298 88
FR 27960 at 28012.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
300 88
Jkt 262001
PO 00000
FR 27960 at 28003.
FR 27960 at 28004.
Frm 00192
Fmt 4701
subject to the analysis. Lastly,
homemaker and home health aide
services are subject to the payment rate
disclosure, but not the comparative
payment rate analysis because of a lack
of comparable Medicare payment rate.
Finally, we are not including the
following services suggested by
commenters in the comparative
payment rate analysis: services
delivered in clinics and other settings
(as the commenter did not specify, we
assume the commenter meant settings
similar to clinics (as defined in
§ 440.90)), sexual and reproductive
health services (for example, midwives,
doulas, providers who primarily serve
the sexual and reproductive health
needs of people assigned male at birth,
etc.) to the extent these are not included
within the category of obstetrical and
gynecological services, hospital and
emergency department services, and
medical supplies. Our current access
strategy focuses broadly on Medicaid
FFS fee schedule payment rates for
outpatient practitioner services. As
described in the proposed rule,
encounter rates (generally based on total
facility-specific costs divided by the
number of encounters to calculate a per
visit or per encounter rate that is paid
to the facility for all services received
during an encounter, regardless of
which specific services are provided
during a particular encounter) are
typically paid to facilities, such as
hospitals, FQHCs, RHCs, and clinics,
and proposing States demonstrate the
economy and efficiency of their
encounter rates would be an entirely
different exercise to the comparative
payment rate analysis.301 Therefore, we
are not including services delivered in
clinics and other settings (as the
commenter did not specify, we assume
the commenter meant settings similar to
clinics (as defined in § 440.90)) or
hospital and emergency department
services in the comparative payment
rate analysis. As previously stated,
obstetrical and gynecological services
are one of the categories of services
subject to the analysis, but we are not
including the broader category of sexual
and reproductive health services
because our focus in this rule is
ensuring access to care to services that
can most directly respond to the
maternal health crisis occurring the U.S.
As Medicaid plays a key role in
providing and paying for maternityrelated services for pregnant women,
obstetrical and gynecological services
generally represent the services received
before, during, and after pregnancy.302
301 88
302 88
Sfmt 4700
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
FR 27960 at 28012.
FR 27960 at 28004.
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
We note that one of the criteria used to
narrow the CMS published list of E/M
CPT/HCPCS codes requires that the
code is included on the Berenson-Eggers
Type of Service (BETOS) code list
effective for the same time period as the
comparative payment rate analysis and
falls into the E/M family grouping and
families and subfamilies for obstetrics
and gynecological services; this
includes prostate cancer screenings
(G0102). Additionally, our current
access strategy focuses on Medicaid FFS
fee schedule payment rates for the
provision of outpatient practitioner
services, rather than medical supplies.
We are also not including the
suggestion to create processes to add
services to the comparative payment
rate analysis when certain criteria are
met, for example, adding any service to
the comparative payment rate analysis
when access concerns are raised or
identified, because these situations will
generally trigger the processes in
§ 447.203(c) which include similar
requirements to the comparative
payment rate analysis (that is, requiring
State publish or submit information to
CMS about Medicaid payment rates,
number of Medicaid beneficiaries
receiving services, and number of
Medicaid services furnished/paid
claims). Given that our work to better
ensure access in the Medicaid program
is ongoing, we intend to gain
implementation experience with this
final rule, and we will consider the
recommendations provided on the
proposed rule to help inform any future
rulemaking in this area, as appropriate.
Comment: A few commenters
submitted specific CPT/HCPCS codes
and services for CMS’ consideration
when developing the CMS-published
list of E/M CPT/HCPCS codes subject to
the comparative payment rate analysis.
These codes and services included
specific obstetric codes including
surgical procedures billed by providers
of obstetric-gynecological services,
reproductive care codes, pediatric
ophthalmology codes including surgical
procedures and clinical evaluations,
vaccine administration, and other E/M
codes. We also received requests to
require analysis of the most frequently
billed surgical codes for obstetricalgynecological services, as well as
behavioral health services that do not
have E/M codes or a Medicare analog.
Response: We appreciate the
commenters’ suggestions. Prior to the
effective date of this final rule, we will
issue subregulatory guidance including
a hypothetical example list of the E/M
CPT/HCPCS codes that would be subject
to the comparative payment rate
analysis, if the comparative rate analysis
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
requirements were applicable with
respect to payment rates in effect for CY
2023. This example list defines the
categories of services subject to the
comparative payment rate analysis
through the finite number of E/M CPT/
HCPCS codes in the list, if it were in
effect for CY 2023. Several of the
commenter’s suggested codes are
included in the example list; however,
this list is subject to change when the
first CMS-published list of the E/M
CPT/HCPCS codes subject to the
comparative payment rate analysis for
CY 2025 is published no later than July
1, 2025. Of the specific codes suggested
by commenters, we can confirm that the
following codes would be included in
the CMS published list of E/M CPT/
HCPCS codes subject to the analysis, if
it were in effect for CY 2023: CPT
59400–59612, 58300–58301, 59120–
59160, 59812–59857, 99401–99404,
90832–90853, 90791–90792, 96158, and
96165. Because of the criteria outlined
in the proposed rule intended to narrow
the scope of codes subject to the
comparative payment rate analysis, CPT
59852 and 59857, peer support services,
psychosocial rehab, and assertive
community treatment, as well as
vaccine administration codes are
excluded from the comparative payment
rate analysis due to their classification
outside of the BETOS Classification
System as E/M codes that are primary
care, obstetrical and gynecological
services, or outpatient mental health
and substance use disorder services.
Additionally, pediatric ophthalmology
surgical procedures and the top 10
surgical codes billed by obstetriciangynecologists to the Medicaid program
are excluded from the analysis because
one of the criteria used to narrow the
scope of the comparative payment rate
analysis was that for a code to be
included on the CMS published list of
E/M CPT/HCPCS codes, the code has to
be included on the Berenson-Eggers
Type of Service (BETOS) code list
effective for the same time period as the
comparative payment rate analysis and
falls into the E/M family grouping and
families and subfamilies for primary
care services, obstetrics and
gynecological services, and outpatient
behavioral services (now called
outpatient mental health and substance
use disorder services in this final rule).
E/M CPT/HCPCS codes are some of the
most commonly billed codes and
including them in the comparative
payment rate analysis would allow us to
uniformly compare Medicaid payment
rates for these codes to Medicare PFS
rates. Therefore, we narrowed the scope
of codes to just E/M codes and surgical
PO 00000
Frm 00193
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40733
codes fall outside of this scope. As
described in the proposed rule, the
following criteria were used to identify
the E/M CPT/HCPCS codes to be
included in the comparative payment
rate analysis: the code is effective for the
same time period of the comparative
payment rate analysis; the code is
classified as an E/M CPT/HCPCS code
by the AMA CPT Editorial Panel; the
code is included on the Berenson-Eggers
Type of Service (BETOS) code list
effective for the same time period as the
comparative payment rate analysis and
falls into the E/M family grouping and
families and subfamilies for primary
care services, obstetrics and
gynecological services, and outpatient
behavioral services (now called
outpatient mental health and substance
use disorder services in this final rule);
and the code has an A (Active), N (NonCovered), R (Restricted), or T
(Injections) code status on the Medicare
PFS with a Medicare established RVU
and payment amount for the same time
period of the comparative payment rate
analysis. As discussed in an earlier
response to comments in this section,
the revision from outpatient behavioral
services to outpatient mental health and
substance use disorder services does not
change the criteria used to identify the
discrete codes included in the BETOS
E/M family grouping and families and
subfamilies for the CMS published list
of E/M CPT/HCPCS subject to the
comparative payment rate analysis.
While the payment rate transparency
publication does not require a
comparison to the Medicare non-facility
payment rate as established in the
annual Medicare PFS final rule for a
calendar year, it does require
transparency of Medicaid payment rates
by requiring States publicly publish all
Medicaid FFS fee schedule payment
rates, which will often include a
number of the services requested by
commenters to be subject to the
comparative payment rate analysis. Our
primary goal with the payment rate
transparency publication is ensuring
Medicaid payment rates are publicly
available in such a way that a member
of the public can readily determine the
amount that Medicaid would pay for a
given service. Transparency helps to
ensure that interested parties have basic
information available to them to
understand Medicaid payment levels
and the associated effects of payment
rates on access to care so that they may
raise concerns to State Medicaid
agencies via the various forms of public
process available to interested parties.
Given that our work to better ensure
access in the Medicaid program is
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
40734
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
ongoing, we intend to gain
implementation experience with this
final rule, and we will consider the
recommendations provided on the
proposed rule to help inform any future
rulemaking in this area, as appropriate.
Comment: A few commenters
suggested additional data elements and
analyses for the comparative payment
rate analysis. A couple of commenters
suggested data elements specifically for
comparing FQHC and non-FQHC
settings: number of primary care claims
provided in FQHC and non-FQHC
settings, number of patients served in
FQHC and non-FQHC settings, total
spending in FQHC and non-FQHC
settings. Commenters also suggested
data elements specifically for nursing
facility payments, such as comparing
payments to total cost of care,
examining the relationship between
payments and quality of care and health
disparities in nursing facilities, and
trend data on medical inflation and
practice costs.
Response: We appreciate commenters’
suggestions for the comparative
payment rate analysis. As described in
the proposed rule, we excluded
encounter rates often paid for facilitybased services, including FQHC and
nursing facility services, from the
comparative payment rate analysis due
to the challenges we expect States to
face in disaggregating encounter rates
for comparison to Medicare. While we
are not adopting these suggestions, we
note that States have the flexibility to
add the elements described to their
comparative payment rate analysis if
they so choose. We would encourage
any State choosing to disclose
additional comparative payment rate
analysis for facility-based services also
to publish detailed information about
the State’s methodology for
disaggregating its payment rates, as
applicable, and identifying analogous
Medicare payment rates for comparison.
Comment: We received a few
comments in response to our
consideration of requiring States to
identify the number of unique
Medicaid-paid claims and the number
of unique Medicaid-enrolled
beneficiaries who received a service
within a calendar year for each of the
services for which the Medicaid base
payment rate is published pursuant to
paragraph (b)(3)(i)(B). We received one
comment that opposed requiring the
unique number of claims and
beneficiaries while a few commenters
encouraged CMS to require this data
element to improve the collection and
quality of data on Medicaid service
utilization.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
Response: We appreciate the
commenters’ feedback. As described in
the proposed rule, we considered but
did not propose requiring States to
identify the number of unique
Medicaid-paid claims and the number
of unique Medicaid-enrolled
beneficiaries who received a service
within a calendar year.303 Upon further
review, we determined the request
regarding unique beneficiaries was
inaccurately framed, as a beneficiary
would not duplicate. Nevertheless, we
decided not to require States to identify
the number of Medicaid-paid claims
(bold added to highlight the difference
between data element we considered
and the data element we are finalizing
in this rule). Instead, we are finalizing
the comparative payment rate analysis
to require States to include the number
of Medicaid-paid claims (which may
duplicate codes) and the number of
Medicaid-enrolled beneficiaries who
received a service within a calendar
year for each of the services for which
the base Medicaid FFS fee schedule
payment rate is published pursuant to
paragraph (b)(3)(i)(B) of this section, as
proposed. Although we do see value in
obtaining unique, or deduplicated,
claims counts, we did not propose this
data element because we intend for the
comparative payment rate analysis to
capture the total amount of actual
services received by beneficiaries and
paid for by the State. To illustrate, and
to correct the example provided in the
proposed rule, for a beneficiary with 6
visits to their primary care provider in
a calendar year where the provider bills
6 claims with CPT code 99202 for the
same beneficiary, the State is required to
report 6 claims for CPT code 99202. The
beneficiary count would remain 1. If 6
separate beneficiaries each received a
service and the provider bills CPT code
99202 for all of them, the claims count
would still be 6, but the beneficiary
count would also be 6. Given that our
access work is ongoing, we intend to
gain implementation experience with
this final rule, and we will consider the
recommendations provided on the
proposed rule for any additional
changes we may propose through future
rulemaking.
Comment: One commenter
recommended CMS allow States to have
a 6-month period to account for lags in
claims reporting by providers and States
paying providers’ claims for codes
required to be in the comparative
payment rate analysis.
Response: We believe the commenter
was referring to the claims run out
period where a State may not have
303 88
PO 00000
FR 27960 at 28016.
Frm 00194
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
received all of their providers’ claims
for the codes subject to the comparative
payment rate analysis by the time the
analysis is due, which could result in an
undercount of both claims for services
furnished and beneficiaries who
received a service during the year. In
response to comments and based on the
timing of this final rule, we have revised
the timeframes for the comparative
payment rate analysis. The regulatory
language finalized in this rule at
paragraph (b)(4) now states the
following, ‘‘[t]he State agency must
publish the initial comparative payment
rate analysis and payment rate
disclosure of its Medicaid payment rates
in effect as of July 1, 2025, as required
under paragraphs (b)(2) and (3) of this
section, by no later than July 1, 2026.
Thereafter, the State agency must
update the comparative payment rate
analysis and payment rate disclosure no
less than every 2 years, by no later than
July 1 of the second year following the
most recent update.’’ Therefore, for the
initial comparative payment rate
analysis, States will need to include
their claims and beneficiary data
required in paragraph (b)(3)(i)(E) for CY
2025 in the analysis to be published no
later than July 1, 2026. This timing
provides a 6-month period for claims
run out, as requested by the commenter.
Comment: One commenter raised
concerns regarding the requirement to
separately identify the base Medicaid
FFS fee schedule payment rate by
provider type without the inclusion of
an additional analysis to assess whether
the State’s rate setting process complies
with the Mental Health Parity and
Addiction Equity Act (MHPAEA or the
Parity Act).
Response: CMS works closely with
State Medicaid agencies to ensure
compliance with MHPAEA in Medicaid
managed care arrangements, Medicaid
alternative benefit plans (managed care
and FFS), and CHIP benefits (managed
care and FFS) whenever changes to
coverage of mental health or SUD
benefits are proposed by States. Parity
requirements do not apply to MH or
SUD benefits for enrollees who receive
only Medicaid non-ABP FFS State plan
coverage; however, CMS encourages
States to comply with parity for all
Medicaid beneficiaries.304 305 Congress
has not extended MHPAEA
requirements to non-ABP Medicaid
benefits provided solely through FFS
delivery systems. Nonetheless, we
encourage our State Medicaid agency
304 https://www.medicaid.gov/medicaid/benefits/
behavioral-health-services/parity/.
305 https://www.medicaid.gov/sites/default/files/
2023–09/cmcs-mental-health-parity-092023.pdf.
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
partners to ensure their non-ABP FFS
benefits voluntarily comply with
MHPAEA. Moreover, CMS reviews State
proposals regarding rate reductions or
restructuring to ensure compliance with
overarching requirements under section
1902(a)(30)(A) of the Social Security Act
‘‘to assure that payments are consistent
with efficiency, economy, and quality of
care and are sufficient to enlist enough
providers so that care and services are
available under the plan, at least to the
extent that such care and services are
available to the general population in
the geographic area.’’ This review thus
helps promote the fundamental
objective of MHPAEA to ensure access
to mental health and substance use
disorder treatment services.
Comment: One commenter requested
clarification about the Medicare rate to
be used in the comparative payment rate
analysis.
Response: As finalized by this rule,
§ 447.203(b)(3)(i)(C) requires States to
compare their base Medicaid FFS fee
schedule payment rate to the Medicare
non-facility payment rates as
established in the annual Medicare PFS
final rule effective for the same time
period for the same set of E/M CPT/
HCPCS codes, and for the same
geographical location as the base
Medicaid FFS fee schedule payment
rate, that correspond to the base
Medicaid FFS fee schedule payment
rate rates identified under paragraph
(b)(3)(i)(B) of this section, including
separate identification of the payment
rates by provider type. That is, States
are required to compare their base
Medicaid FFS fee schedule payment
rates to the corresponding Medicare
non-facility payment rate as established
in the annual Medicare PFS final rule
for a calendar year. As described in the
proposed rule, we expected States to
source the Medicare non-facility
payment rate as established in the
annual Medicare PFS final rule for a
calendar year from the published
Medicare fee schedule amounts on the
Medicare PFS through one or both of the
following sources: the Physician Fee
Schedule Look-Up Tool 306 on cms.gov
or Excel file downloads of the Medicare
PFS Relative Value Files 307 for the
relevant calendar year from cms.gov. We
acknowledge that the Physician Fee
Schedule Look-Up Tool is a display tool
that functions as a helpful aid for
physicians and NPPs as a way to
quickly look up PFS payment rates, but
306 https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Feefor-Service-Payment/PFSlookup.
307 https://www.cms.gov/medicare/medicare-feefor-service-payment/physicianfeesched/pfs-relativevalue-files.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
does not provide official payment rate
information. While we encouraged
States to begin sourcing Medicare non
facility payment rates from the
Physician Fee Schedule Look-Up Tool
and utilize the Physician Fee Schedule
Guide for instructions on using the
Look-Up Tool in the proposed rule, we
would like to clarify in this final rule
that States should first by downloading
and reviewing the Medicare PFS
Relative Value with Conversion Factor
File where States can find the necessary
information for calculating Medicare
non facility payment rates. Prior to the
effective date of this final rule, we will
issue subregulatory guidance, which
includes an instructional guide for
identifying, downloading, and using the
relevant Excel files for calculating the
Medicare non-facility payment rates as
established in the annual Medicare PFS
final rule for a calendar year that States
will need to include in their
comparative payment rate analysis.
Therefore, for the initial comparative
payment rate analysis, after Medicare’s
publication of the CY 2025 Physician
Fee Schedule rate by November 2024,
we encourage States to begin sourcing
Medicare non-facility payment rates as
established in the annual Medicare PFS
final rule for CY 2025 by downloading
and reviewing the CY 2025 Medicare
PFS Relative Value with Conversion
Factor File from cms.gov.308
Comment: While we received
overwhelming support from
commenters for proposing to use
Medicare non-facility rates for
comparison to Medicaid rates in the
comparative payment rate analysis,
some commenters expressed concerns
or suggested alternative comparison
points. Many commenters stated that
Medicare payment rates are low and
have not kept up with inflation;
therefore, these commenters stated that
Medicare is not an appropriate
comparison point for payment rates for
many services, including dental,
anesthesiology, and physical therapy.
Some commenters stated that there is
limited comparability between
Medicaid and Medicare due to the
differences in coverage of services and
populations (for example, Medicare’s
limited coverage of pediatric services,
behavioral health services (including
substance use disorder and mental
health care), and dental care) which
results in fundamentally different
payment rate methodologies. A few
commenters expressed that Medicare is
not a perfect comparator and should not
308 https://www.cms.gov/medicare/medicare-fee-
for-service-payment/physicianfeesched/pfs-relativevalue-files.
PO 00000
Frm 00195
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40735
be used as the standard for adequacy of
Medicaid payment rates, but agreed it
was a useful starting place because
Medicare rates are publicly available.
One commenter stated that States
aligning Medicaid payment rates with
Medicare rates for psychiatrist services
as well as decreasing administrative
burden could help encourage more
providers to enroll in Medicaid.
Many commenters who opposed
using Medicare non-facility rates for the
comparative payment rate analysis
offered alternative suggestions for States
to compare their payment rates to.
Several commenters suggested private
payer rates. One commenter suggested
Medicaid rates from geographically
similar States that CMS identifies for
States. A few commenters suggested
rates from Federal or State employee
dental plans. Two commenters
suggested FAIR Health data 309
(particularly for dental services). One
commenter suggested Medicare
Advantage for dental, vision, and
hearing services. We also received a
comment suggesting CMS develop an
alternative to Medicare as a point of
comparison in the comparative payment
rate analysis, particularly for inpatient
administered therapies that are paid
using DRGs.
Response: We thank the commenters
for their support of using the Medicare
non-facility rates for comparison to
Medicaid rates in the comparative
payment rate analysis. We understand
the commenters’ concerns about using
Medicare as a benchmark for Medicaid
rates to be compared to in the
comparative payment rate analysis;
however, we do not agree that Medicare
payment rates are low and have not kept
up with inflation. As described in the
proposed rule, Medicare PFS payment
rates are established for each service,
generally described by a particular
procedure code (including HCPCS, CPT,
and CDT),) using resource-based inputs
to establish RVUs in three components
of a procedure: work, practice expense,
and malpractice. The three component
RVUs for each service are adjusted using
CMS-calculated geographic practice cost
indexes (GPCIs) that reflect geographic
cost differences in each fee schedule
area as compared to the national
average.310 The Medicare PFS is revised
annually by CMS ensure that our
payment systems are updated to reflect
changes in medical practice and the
309 We assume the commenter was referring to
https://www.fairhealth.org/.
310 88 FR 27960 at 28012. Note this language has
been revised for accuracy in this final rule,
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
40736
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
relative value of services, as well as
changes in the statute.311
With regard to commenters who
raised concerns about using Medicare as
a point of comparison, we disagree with
the commenter that differences in
coverage and populations limits
comparability between Medicare and
Medicaid in any way that would make
Medicare an inappropriate comparator.
As described in the proposed rule,
Medicare non-facility payment rates as
established in the annual Medicare PFS
final rule for a calendar year are utilized
in this rule as a benchmark to compare
Medicaid fee schedule rates on a CPT/
HCPCS code level basis.312 Medicare
PFS payment rates simply serve as a
point of comparison for CMS to
consider in assessing if Medicaid
payments are consistent with section
1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act. Differences in
the methodology that Medicare uses and
States use to determine their FFS fee
schedule payment rates does not
compromise the value of Medicare as a
reliable benchmark for assessing
payment rate sufficiency for enlisting
providers to furnish services to an
individual, as required by section
1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act. As described
in the proposed rule, Medicare and
Medicaid programs cover and pay for
services provided to beneficiaries
residing in every State and territory of
the United States, Medicare payment
rates are publicly available, and broad
provider acceptance of Medicare makes
Medicare non-facility payment rates as
established on the Medicare PFS for a
calendar year an available and reliable
comparison point for States to use in the
comparative payment rate analysis.313
Also as described in the proposed rule,
base Medicaid FFS fee schedule
payment rate are typically determined
through one of three methods: the
resource-based relative value scale
(RBRVS), a percentage of Medicare’s fee,
or a State-developed fee schedule using
local factors.314 The RBRVS system,
initially developed for the Medicare
program, assigns a relative value to
every physician procedure based on the
complexity of the procedure, practice
expense, and malpractice expense.
States may also adopt the Medicare fee
schedule rate, which is based on
RBRVS, but select a fixed percentage of
the Medicare amount to pay for
Medicaid services. States can develop
their own fee schedules, typically
311 https://www.federalregister.gov/documents/
2023/11/16/2023-24184/medicare-and-medicaidprograms-cy-2024-payment-policies-under-thephysician-fee-schedule-and-other.
312 88 FR 27960 at 28012.
313 88 FR 27960 at 28011.
314 88 FR 27960 at 28010.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
determined based on market value or an
internal process, and often do this in
situations where there is no Medicare or
private payer equivalent or when an
alternate payment methodology is
necessary for programmatic reasons.
Again, one of the criteria for including
codes on the CMS-published list of E/
M CPT/HCPCS codes subject to the
comparative payment rate analysis is
that there must be a payment rate on the
Medicare PFS so States have a Medicare
payment rate to compare their Medicaid
base payment to.
We also disagree with commenters
that there is limited comparability
between Medicaid and Medicare due to
the differences in coverage of services
and populations. We acknowledge that
Medicare and Medicaid vary in terms of
covered services and populations
served; however, the Medicare PFS
includes payment rates for covered,
non-covered, and limited coverage
services and applies the same resourcebased formula to ensure all PFS rates are
determined on a national level as well
as adjusted to reflect the variation in
practice costs from one geographical
location to another. As described in the
proposed rule, Medicare PFS nonfacility rates serves as a reliable
benchmark for assessing the level of
payment sufficiency to enlist providers
to furnish the relevant services to an
individual for the following reasons.315
As we have narrowed the scope of the
comparative payment rate analysis to E/
M CPT/HCPCS codes, Medicare PFS
non-facility payment rates are
comparable to Medicaid FFS fee
schedule payment rates because both fee
schedule rates are generally for services
provided in a physician’s office and
specify the rate paid to a provider for
delivering an individual service (that is,
a single FFS payment for a single
service, rather than an encounter rate
paying for any number for services). The
accessibility and consistent format of
the published Medicare non-facility
payment rates as established in the
annual Medicare PFS final rule for a
calendar year makes these rates an
available and reliable comparison point
for States to use in the comparative
payment rate analysis for the foreseeable
future as the Medicare PFS is free to the
public, updated on an annual basis, and
posted online on an easily located
website, relative to private payer rates
that States would need to request access
to and perhaps pay for the information.
Medicare also has a low rate of
physicians formally opting out of the
program, suggesting that Medicare’s
payment rates generally are consistent
315 88
PO 00000
FR 27960 at 28011.
Frm 00196
Fmt 4701
with a high level of physician
willingness to furnish services to
Medicare patients, with the vast
majority of physicians willing to accept
Medicare’s payment rates. Additionally,
Medicare is another of the nation’s large
public health coverage programs which
serves as an important data point in
determining whether payment rates are
likely to be sufficient to ensure access
for Medicaid beneficiaries at least as
great as for the general population in the
geographic area, and whether any
identified access concerns may be
related to payment sufficiency.
We appreciate commenters’
alternative suggestions to using
Medicare as a benchmark in the
comparative payment rate analysis;
however, we are not incorporating these
suggestions due to the following
reasons. As discussed in the proposed
rule, we learned from our
implementation experience with the
previous AMRP process that very few
States were able to include even limited
private payer data in their AMRPs due
to the payment data being proprietary or
unsound due to a lack of transparency
about the construction of the payment
data or because States did not have large
private plans in their State so there were
no private payer rates to compare to.
This resulted in States being unable
fully to comply with the previous
AMRP regulations, to the extent they
required an analysis that included
private payer rate information.316
Without this final rule, requiring States
to compare their Medicaid rates to
geographically similar States would not
be possible because not all States
currently post their Medicaid FFS fee
schedule payment rates in a transparent
and consistent format that would permit
data analysis among States. While some
States were able to compare their
payment rates to other States’ rates in
their previous AMRPs, this was
inconsistent across AMRPs and risked a
subjective comparison where States
selected which rates and States they
compared themselves to. Requiring a
comparison to Medicare ensures all
States are using the same consistent data
point to compare their rates to.
Regarding the suggestion that CMS
could identify the geographically
similar States for States to compare their
payment rates to, this would require a
different approach than what we
proposed due to the variation across
State Medicaid programs and would
require careful consideration and policy
development to ensure that any
proposal would be consistent with the
statutory requirement in section
316 88
Sfmt 4700
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
FR 27960 at 28018.
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act that looks to
the ‘‘geographic area’’ in determining
whether payment rates are sufficient.
Similarly, we would also not require
States compare their rates to rates from
Federal or State employee dental plans
because this information might not be
generally available to State Medicaid
agencies.
At this time and for the purposes of
the comparative payment rate analysis,
we are not advocating or requiring
States source payment rate information
from any particular data source other
than the State’s own Medicaid agency
(who is responsible for setting and
paying the payment rates required in the
analysis and, therefore has direct access
to base Medicaid FFS fee schedule
payment rates required in the analysis)
and publicly available Medicare fee
schedule rates (which we have
previously described as an available and
reliable comparison point for States to
use in the comparative payment rate
analysis). Therefore, we are not
requiring States compare their rates to
FAIR Health data because this data
source is outside of the State agency and
Medicare’s publicly available fee
schedule rates. We would also not
require States compare their rates to
Medicare Advantage for dental, vision,
and hearing services because these are
not categories of services subject to the
comparative payment rate analysis. As
previously stated, only codes listed on
the CMS-published list of E/M CPT/
HCPCS codes are subject to the
comparative payment rate analysis. The
list does not include dental,
anesthesiology, physical therapy, vision,
and hearing services and these services,
among others not on the CMS-published
list of E/M CPT/HCPCS codes, are not
subject to the comparative payment rate
analysis requirement. Given that our
work to better ensure access in the
Medicaid program is ongoing, we intend
to gain implementation experience with
this final rule, and we will consider the
recommendations provided on the
proposed rule to help inform any future
rulemaking in this area, as appropriate.
For the previously stated reasons, we
believe the Medicare payment rates for
the categories of services subject to the
comparative payment rate analysis are
likely to serve as a reliable benchmark
for a level of payment sufficient to enlist
providers to furnish the relevant
services to an individual. Therefore, we
are finalizing this rule with the
requirement that States use the
Medicare non-facility payment rates as
established in the annual Medicare PFS
final rule for a calendar year as the
comparison point for States to compare
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
their Medicaid payment rates to in the
comparative payment rate analysis.
We would also like to clarify that the
provisions in this final rule do not
require States to change their payment
rates, including requiring States to align
their Medicaid payment rates with
Medicare rates for psychiatrist services.
Although we intend for States to
consider the information produced for
the payment rate transparency
publication, comparative payment rate
analysis, and payment rate disclosure in
an ongoing process of evaluating the
State’s payment rate sufficiency and
when considering changing payment
rates or methodologies (and we intend
to make similar use of the information
in performing our oversight activities
and in making payment SPA approval
decisions, for example), we did not
propose and are not finalizing that any
payment rate changes necessarily would
be triggered by the proposed
requirements.
Comment: Some commenters were
concerned about how States would be
expected to conduct the comparative
payment rate analysis for services that
Medicaid pays for, but Medicare does
not. A few commenters suggested CMS
develop a methodology for calculating a
proxy rate for Medicaid services with no
equivalent Medicare rate or Medicaid
services that are provided very
infrequently in Medicare, so Medicare
rates are not a reliable comparison. Two
commenters suggested working with
MedPAC or MACPAC to set appropriate
comparison points for services that are
not covered by Medicare, for example
contraceptive and pregnancy-related
services.
Response: To clarify, only codes listed
on the CMS-published list of E/M CPT/
HCPCS codes are subject to the
comparative payment rate analysis. All
codes on this list have an existing
Medicare payment rate, therefore, the
development of a proxy rate is
unnecessary. Codes outside of this list,
including services that Medicaid pays
for, but Medicare does not, are not
subject to the comparative payment rate
analysis requirement. Given that our
work to better ensure access in the
Medicaid program is ongoing, we intend
to gain implementation experience with
this final rule, and we will consider the
recommendations provided on the
proposed rule to help inform any future
rulemaking in this area, as appropriate.
We disagree with the commenter that
Medicare rates are not a reliable
comparison when services are provided
infrequently to Medicare beneficiaries.
As previously described, Medicare PFS
payment rates are computed using a
resource-based formula made up of
PO 00000
Frm 00197
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40737
three components of a procedure’s RVU:
physician work, practice expense, and
malpractice as well as geographical
differences in each locality area of the
country.317 The Medicare PFS is revised
annually by CMS to ensure that our
payment systems are updated to reflect
changes in medical practice and the
relative value of services, as well as
changes in the statute.318 Despite a
service being covered and paid for
infrequently by Medicare, the payment
rates on the Medicare PFS are
consistently updated with relevant data
on a frequent, annual basis.
Comment: A few commenters
suggested alternative update frequencies
for the comparative payment rate
analysis. Commenter suggestions
included updates annually, every 3
years, and every 4 years. Commenters’
justification ranged from more frequent
than 2 years due to the need for timely
publication of Medicaid data to less
frequent to align with the State’s
existing rate study schedule or because
they did not believe rates would change
significantly during a 2-year period.
Additionally, one commenter suggested
CMS require States to document when
rates have not changed between
comparative payment rate analysis
biennial publications.
Response: We are finalizing the
payment rate transparency
requirements, including the
comparative payment rate analysis, with
an applicability date of July 1, 2026;
however, we are not changing the
proposed timeframe of 2 years for States
to update their publications. We believe
requiring updates to the comparative
payment rate analysis every 2 years
balances State burden with maintaining
up-to-date information. Given that our
work to better ensure access in the
Medicaid program is ongoing, we intend
to gain implementation experience with
this final rule, and we will consider the
recommendations provided on the
proposed rule to help inform any future
rulemaking in this area, as appropriate.
Comment: One commenter expressed
concerns about cross walking a State’s
geographical areas to Medicare in the
comparative payment rate analysis. The
commenter stated that States may define
a geographical region differently than
Medicare and result in a complex and
confusing analysis that would be
contrary to CMS’ transparency goals.
Response: As discussed in the
proposed rule, we recognize that States
317 88
FR 27960 at 28012.
318 https://www.federalregister.gov/documents/
2023/11/16/2023-24184/medicare-and-medicaidprograms-cy-2024-payment-policies-under-thephysician-fee-schedule-and-other.
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
40738
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
that make Medicaid payment based on
geographical location may not use the
same locality areas as Medicare.319 We
expect the State to determine an
appropriate method to accomplish the
comparative payment rate analysis that
aligns the geographic area covered by
each payer’s rate as closely as
reasonably feasible. For example, if the
State identifies two geographic areas for
Medicaid payment purposes that are
contained almost entirely within one
Medicare geographic area, then the State
reasonably could determine to use the
same Medicare non-facility payment
rate as established in the annual
Medicare PFS final rule in a calendar
year in the comparative payment rate
analysis for each Medicaid geographic
area. As another example, if the State
defined a single geographic area for
Medicaid payment purposes that
contained two Medicare geographic
areas, then the State might determine a
reasonable method to weight the two
Medicare payment rates applicable
within the Medicaid geographic area,
and then compare the Medicaid
payment rate for the Medicaid-defined
geographic area to this weighted average
of Medicare payment rates. States could
also calculate the unweighted arithmetic
mean of the two Medicare payment rates
applicable within the Medicaid-defined
geographic area. While States have
flexibility in mapping their geographical
areas to Medicare’s for the comparative
payment rate analysis, we invite States
to reach out to CMS for technical
assistance.
Comment: A few commenters stated
that other factors besides rates impact
access to care. Commenters suggested
CMS consider regional cost differences,
provider shortages (including number of
providers and their location), and the
unique needs of specific populations
(such as dually eligible beneficiaries, or
beneficiaries in rural areas of a State) as
factors that impact access to care.
Response: We agree with commenters
that other factors besides rates impact
access to care.320 After considering
feedback received from States and other
interested parties about the previous
AMRP process issued through the 2015
final rule with comment period, as well
as our obligation to ensure continued
compliance with section 1902(a)(30)(A)
of the Act, we are finalizing a
streamlined and standardized process to
assess access to care that focuses on
payment rate transparency. Given that
our work to better ensure access in the
Medicaid program is ongoing, we intend
to gain implementation experience with
319 88
320 88
FR 27960 at 28013
FR 27960 at 28016–28017.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
this final rule, and we will consider the
recommendations provided on the
proposed rule to help inform any future
rulemaking in this area, as appropriate.
Comment: A couple of commenters
expressed concerns regarding the
privacy of beneficiary information when
it comes to the requirement that the
comparative payment rate analysis and
payment rate disclosure must specify
the number of Medicaid-paid claims
and the number of Medicaid enrolled
beneficiaries who received a service.
Commenters suggested CMS provide an
exception when the volume of claims or
beneficiaries is small.
Response: We take privacy and our
obligations to protect beneficiary
information very seriously. We remind
States of their obligations to comply
with applicable Federal and State
privacy laws with respect to such
information, such as the HIPAA Privacy
Rule and Federal Medicaid
requirements in section 1902(a)(7) of the
Social Security Act and 42 CFR part
431, subpart F. We are not requiring
States to publish any beneficiaryidentifiable information in the
comparative payment rate analysis or
payment rate disclosure. We expect
States will ensure that any claims and
Medicaid beneficiary data made
publicly available under these
requirements have been de-identified in
accordance with the HIPAA Privacy
Rule at 45 CFR 164.514(b).
We strongly encourage States to have
policies to ensure that all information,
particularly claims and beneficiary data,
published in their comparative payment
rate analysis and payment rate
disclosure is de-identified prior to
publishing on July 1, 2026. Such
policies should address circumstances
in which the number of Medicaid-paid
claims and/or Medicaid enrolled
beneficiaries is small. For example,
States may consider implementing a
small cell size suppression policy for
publishing data on the State’s website,
similar to CMS’ cell size suppression
policy that no cell (for example,
admissions, discharges, patients,
services, etc.) containing a value of 1 to
10 can be reported directly.321 We invite
States to reach out to CMS regarding any
data privacy concerns that may impact
a States’ compliance with the
comparative payment rate analysis or
payment rate disclosure requirements.
Additionally, to address privacy
concerns at the individual level, we
would like to share the following
resources for filing civil rights and
321 https://resdac.org/articles/cms-cell-sizesuppression-policy.
Jkt 262001
PO 00000
Frm 00198
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
HIPAA complaints with the Office for
Civil Rights:
• Filing a civil rights complaint; 322
and
• Filing a health information privacy
or security complaint.323
Comment: A commenter raised
concerns that the comparative payment
rate analysis would incentivize States to
raise payment rates for the categories of
services subject to the analysis, but
might also lead or contribute to rate cuts
for other services, since the proposed
rule would not provide that States may
not cut some rates to make funds
available to raise other rates.
Response: We understand the
commenter’s concerns about the effects
of the comparative payment rate
analysis in practice. We emphasize that
the comparative payment rate analysis
will afford more transparency to CMS
and the public about rates for primary
care, obstetrical and gynecological, and
outpatient mental health and substance
use disorder services, and will also
provide States with an opportunity to
identify where existing rates could
create an access issue for the services
subject to the comparative payment rate
analysis requirement. If a State chooses
to raise payment rates for the categories
of services subject to the analysis, and
in order to do so seeks to reduce rates
for other services, then the State would
be required to follow the State Analysis
Procedures for Rate Reduction or
Restructuring in § 447.203(c) to ensure
the proposed rate reductions do not
reduce access to care to the services for
which payment rates would be reduced
below the statutory standard. A public
input process to raise access concerns
with States is described in
§ 447.203(c)(4) of this final rule. We are
confident our policies finalized in this
rule will work in conjunction with each
other to ensure ongoing and improved
access to care.
Comment: A couple of commenters
requested clarification regarding the
circumstance whereby a comparative
payment rate analysis reveals that a
State’s Medicaid payment rates are
significantly below Medicare rates. One
commenter suggested requiring States to
submit a corrective action plan in those
instances.
Response: Transparency, particularly
the requirement that States must
publicly publish their payment rates
and compare their payment rates to
Medicare, helps to ensure that
interested parties have basic
322 https://www.hhs.gov/civil-rights/filing-acomplaint/.
323 https://www.hhs.gov/hipaa/filing-acomplaint/complaint-process/.
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
information available to them to
understand Medicaid payment levels
and the associated effects of payment
rates on access to care so that they may
raise concerns to State Medicaid
agencies via the various forms of public
process available to interested parties.
We intend to utilize the information
published by States in their payment
rate transparency publication and
comparative payment rate analysis
whenever the provisions of § 447.203(c)
are invoked, when a State submits a
SPA that proposes to reduce provider
payment rates or restructure provider
payments in circumstances when the
changes could result in diminished
access. We did not propose and are not
requiring States to submit a corrective
action plan when Medicaid payment
rates included in the comparative
payment rate analysis are lower than
Medicare payment rates. While the
results of a comparative payment rate
analysis would not themselves require a
corrective action plan, § 447.203(c)(5)
does require a State to submit a
corrective action plan to remedy an
access deficiency within 90 days from
when it is identified to the State.
Comment: One commenter requested
that CMS make UPL demonstration data
and methodologies publicly available
for purposes of data analysis,
particularly for inpatient behavioral
health services as CMS did not propose
to include these services in the
comparative payment rate analysis.
Response: While the comparative
payment rate analysis is limited in
scope to base Medicaid FFS fee
schedule payment rates, the payment
rate transparency publication does
include PPS rates that are considered
fee schedules payment rates within the
meaning of this final rule, including for
inpatient hospital, outpatient hospital,
and nursing facility services. The PPS
rates, which are generally the base
payment for these services, and reported
through UPLs, will be publicly available
through the payment rate transparency
publication. We acknowledge that
supplemental payments as well as UPL
data and methodologies typically are
not publicly available currently.
Nevertheless, UPL demonstrations
provide us with an opportunity for
payment oversight and we consider UPL
demonstrations in assessing State
compliance with the access requirement
in section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act.324
As previously discussed in an earlier
response to comments, we stated that
UPL demonstrations provide CMS with
important information for assessing if
payment rates comply with economy
324 88
FR 27960 at 28006.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
and efficiency provisions at section
1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act, specifically
how total Medicaid payments compare
to what Medicare would have paid for
similar services where Medicare acts as
a payment limit, or ceiling, for
economic and efficient. Requiring
supplemental payments as well as UPL
data and methodologies be publicly
available would contribute to our
transparency efforts; however, the
current reporting format of UPL data
would not align with § 447.203(b)(1)(iii)
which requires Medicaid FFS fee
schedule payment rates be published
and organized in such a way that a
member of the public can readily
determine the amount that Medicaid
would pay for a given service.
Therefore, we would need to develop a
different methodology, policies, and
oversight than what is being finalized in
this rule to ensure UPL data is
transparent. With this final rule, our
focus is on improving our oversight of
Medicaid payment rates to identify
where rates may be negatively
impacting access to care while
minimizing burden imposed on States,
which requires us to prioritize areas of
focus. We want our initial focus to be
on establishing the new payment rate
transparency, comparative payment rate
analysis, and payment rate disclosure
requirements, providing States with
support during the compliance period,
and ensuring the data required under
this final rule are available to
beneficiaries, providers, CMS, and other
interested parties for the purpose of
assessing access to care issues.
Payment Rate Disclosure Comments and
Responses
Comment: We received general
support for our proposal to require
States to develop and publish a payment
rate disclosure for certain HCBS.
Commenters specifically expressed
support for the proposed categories of
services and calculation of the average
hourly payment rate.
However, a couple of comments
expressed opposition of the payment
rate disclosure provision. Commenters
in opposition stated the proposed
payment rate disclosure requirements
would be administratively burdensome
for States and that it was unclear how
calculating an average hourly payment
rate along with publishing data about
claims and beneficiaries would be
valuable and informative for payment
policy purposes.
Response: We appreciate the
commenters’ support of the payment
rate disclosure provision at
§ 447.203(b)(3)(ii). We are finalizing the
payment rate disclosure provisions with
PO 00000
Frm 00199
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40739
an additional category of service,
habilitation, a few minor revisions for
clarification purposes and consistent
terminology usage within § 447.203(b),
and an update to the compliance
timeframe, the latter of which was
discussed earlier in this section. The
addition of habilitation services to the
payment rate disclosure is further
discussed in a later response to
comments in this section. In this final
rule, we are revising the regulatory
language to clarify which services and
payment rates are subject to this
requirement. We proposed in
§ 447.203(b)(3)(ii) that the State would
be required to publish the ‘‘average
hourly payment rate, separately
identified for payments made to
individual providers and to providers
employed by an agency, if the rates
vary’’ for each category of service
specified in paragraph (b)(2)(iv). We are
finalizing in § 447.203(b)(3)(ii) that
States are required to publish the
‘‘average hourly Medicaid fee-forservice fee schedule payment rates,
separately identified for payments made
to individual providers and provider
agencies, if the rates vary.’’ (new
language identified in bold). We
proposed in § 447.203(b)(3)(ii)(B) that
the State would be required to ‘‘identify
the average hourly payment rates by
applicable category of service,
including, if the rates vary, separate
identification of the average hourly
payment rates for payments made to
individual providers and to providers
employed by an agency, by population
(pediatric and adult), provider type, and
geographical location, as applicable.’’
We are finalizing in
§ 447.203(b)(3)(ii)(B) that the States are
required to ‘‘identify the average hourly
Medicaid fee-for-service fee schedule
payment rates by applicable category of
service, including, if the rates vary,
separate identification of the average
hourly Medicaid fee-for-service fee
schedule payment rates for payments
made to individual providers and
provider agencies, by population
(pediatric and adult), provider type,
geographical location, and whether the
payment rate includes facility-related
costs, as applicable.’’ (new language
identified in bold). For clarification and
consistent terminology usage of
‘‘Medicaid fee-for-service fee schedule
payment rates,’’ similar revisions were
made in § 447.203(b)(2)(iv) and
(b)(3)(ii)(B) and (C) and described in
detail at the end of responses to
comments in this section. We utilized
the term ‘‘average hourly Medicaid feefor-service fee schedule payment rates’’
in the payment rate disclosure for
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
40740
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
consistency throughout § 447.203(b)
where the term Medicaid FFS fee
schedule payment rates is used to
describe what payment rates are subject
to the payment rate transparency
publication in § 447.203(b)(1)(i).
Additionally, we are incorporating the
term ‘‘provider agencies’’ for
clarification purposes to more
accurately reflect what payment rate we
are requiring be published. Lastly, we
added the requirement that payments
that include facility-related costs must
be separately identified to ensure
transparency of payment rates that may
differ due to the inclusion of facilityrelated costs. Additional information
about these regulatory language changes
is discussed in later responses to
comments in this section.
We disagree with the commenters
regarding administrative burden of the
payment rate disclosure. As
documented in section III. of this final
rule, the FFS provisions, including the
payment rate transparency, comparative
payment rate analysis, and payment rate
disclosure requirements (§ 447.203(b)(1)
through (5)), interested parties’ advisory
group requirements (§ 447.203(b)(6)),
and State analysis procedures for
payment rate reductions or payment
restructuring (§ 447.203(c)), are
expected to result in a net burden
reduction on States compared to the
previous AMRP requirements.
Additionally, as addressed in another
comment response generally discussing
commenters’ concerns about State
burden, we have described numerous
flexibilities States will have for
compliance with this final rule.
Specifically for the payment rate
disclosure, and as discussed in a later
response to comments, States have
flexibility to (1) utilize contractors or
other third party websites to publish the
payment rate disclosure on (however,
we remind States that they are still
requiring to publish the hyperlink to the
website where the publication is located
on the State Medicaid agency’s website
as required in § 447.203(b)(1)(ii) of this
final rule), (2) format and organize the
payment rate disclosure how they chose
(that is, we are not requiring certain
codes be included as required in the
comparative payment rate analysis)
(however, we remind States that the
disclosure is still subject to the
publication requirements described in
proposed paragraphs (b)(1) and (b)(1)(ii)
for payment rate transparency data), and
(3) calculate the average hourly
Medicaid FFS fee schedule payment
rate as a simple average or arithmetic
mean where all payment rates would be
adjusted to an hourly figure, summed,
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
then divided by the number of all
hourly payment rates, rather than a
weighted average which would impose
more burden on States to calculate.
Additionally, we are providing an
illustrative example of a compliant
payment rate disclosure (including to
meet accessibility standards) through
subregulatory guidance that we will
issue prior to the effective date of this
final rule.
We are not identifying codes for the
categories of services subject to the
payment rate disclosure. We are
providing States with flexibility in
determining which codes to include in
the calculated average hourly Medicaid
FFS fee schedule payment rate for the
payment rate disclosure because States
may use a wide variety of codes to bill
and pay for personal care, home health
aide, homemaker, and habilitation
services, such as HCPCS codes T1019–
T1022 and/or CPT codes 99500- 99602.
For example, HCPCS codes T1019–
T1022 for home health services includes
T1019 (personal care services that are
part of the individualized plan of
treatment, per 15 minutes), T1020
(personal care services that are part of
the individualized plan of treatment,
per diem), T1021 (home health aide or
certified nurse assistant, per visit), and
T1022 (contracted home health agency
services, all services provided under
contract, per day). One State may use
T1019 or T1020 depending on the unit
(daily or per diem), a second State may
only use T1021, and a third State may
use none of these codes. We expect
States to review their Medicaid FFS fee
schedule payment rates for the payment
rate and unit the State uses to pay for
each of category of service and calculate
the Medicaid average hourly Medicaid
FFS fee schedule payment rate for
personal care, home health aide,
homemaker, and habilitation services,
separately by service and provider
employment structure as well as for
payments that include facility-related
costs, as provided in this final rule and
discussed in later responses to
comments in this section.
Additionally, the list of possible
codes States may pay for personal care,
home health aide, homemaker, and
habilitation services is already limited
by the available CPT/HCPCS codes, so
we did not see a need to narrow the
codes with a CMS-published list of E/
M CPT/HCPCS like the comparative
payment rate analysis. As previously
discussed, we recognize that States may
amend existing CPT/HCPCS codes with
additional numbers or letters for
processing in their own claims system.
If a State does not use CPT or HCPCS
codes as published by AMA and CMS,
PO 00000
Frm 00200
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
then we expect the State to review the
published lists of CPT or HCPCS codes
and identify which of their codes are
most comparable for purposes of the
payment rate disclosure. We anticipate
States may need to review code
descriptions of CPT and HCPCS codes
for personal care, home health aide,
homemaker, and habilitation services as
part of the process of identifying which
CPT and HCPCS codes are comparable
to the codes that States utilizes. We
want to ensure the full scope of personal
care, home health aide, homemaker, and
habilitation services, and providers of
these services, are included in the
payment rate disclosure for
transparency purposes, rather than
narrowing the scope to certain codes
and/or provider types, which would
result in a limited disclosure of provider
payment rates.
Regarding commenters that were
unclear how calculating an average
hourly payment rate along with
publishing data about claims and
beneficiaries would be valuable and
informative for payment policy
purposes, we are requiring States to
separately identify the average hourly
Medicaid FFS fee schedule payment
rates for personal care, home health
aide, homemaker, and habilitation
services by population (pediatric and
adult), provider type, geographical
location, and whether the payment rate
includes facility-related costs, as
applicable, and by provider
employment structures (individual
providers and provider agencies).
Calculating an average hourly Medicaid
FFS fee schedule payment rate for
categories of services subject to the
payment rate disclosure will ensure a
standardized unit and permit States,
CMS, and other interested parties to
compare payment rates among State
Medicaid programs. As discussed in the
proposed rule, HCBS and direct care
workers that deliver these services are
unique to Medicaid and often not
covered by other payers, which is why
we are proposing a different disclosure
of payment rates for providers of these
services that does not involve a
comparison to Medicare. Additionally,
private payer data and self-pay data are
often considered proprietary and not
available to States, thereby eliminating
private payers as feasible point of
comparison. Because HCBS coverage is
unique to Medicaid, Medicaid
beneficiaries are generally the only
individuals in a given geographic area
with access to HCBS that is covered by
a third-party payer.325
325 88
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
FR 27960 at 28019
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
Comment: Some commenters
requested CMS clarify and add to the
proposed categories of services included
in the payment rate disclosure
requirements. A few commenters
requested clarification regarding
whether services covered under waiver
authority or State plan authority are
subject to the disclosure requirements.
A couple of commenters suggested
adding regulatory language to explicitly
include services provided through State
plan and waiver authority in the
payment rate disclosure. Another
couple of commenters requested
clarification specifically about selfdirected services when an individual
has budget authority and residential
services. A few commenters encouraged
CMS to require States to report payment
rate variations by populations served
(that is, populations receiving services
under a waiver versus State plan
authority) due to States varying rates for
the same service furnished to different
targeted populations under different
coverage authorities.
A few commenters recommended
additional categories of services to the
proposed categories of services subject
to the payment rate disclosure. While
some commenters recommended
expanding the categories of services
generally, a number of commenters
specifically recommended expanding
the categories of service to include
habilitation services (including
residential habilitation services, day
habilitation services, and home-based
habilitation services).
Response: Personal care, home health
aide, homemaker, and habilitation
services provided under FFS State plan
authority, including sections 1915(i),
1915(j), 1915(k) State plan services;
section 1915(c) waiver authority; and
under section 1115 demonstration
authority are subject to the payment rate
disclosure described in
§ 447.203(b)(3)(ii). We are clarifying
that, consistent with the applicability of
other HCBS regulatory requirements to
such demonstration projects, the
requirements for section 1915(c) waiver
programs and section 1915(i), (j), and (k)
State plan services included in this final
rule, apply to such services included in
approved section 1115 demonstration
projects, unless we explicitly waive or
identify as not applicable one or more
of the requirements as part of the
approval of the demonstration project.
Please see section II.B for additional
information on the inclusion of section
1115 demonstrations under the
provisions of this final rule. While we
appreciate the commenters’ suggestion
to add regulatory language to explicitly
include services provided through State
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
plan and waiver authority in the
payment rate disclosure, we are not
incorporating this suggestion as we
previously provided clarification on
which authorities are subject to the
disclosure.
As previously discussed, self-directed
services delivery models under which
an individual beneficiary has budget
authority do not constitute a fee
schedule payment methodology for
purposes of the payment rate
transparency publication requirement,
as well as the payment rate disclosure.
Generally, under such self-directed
services delivery models, the individual
beneficiary determines a reasonable
payment rate for the service in the Stateauthorized budget for that beneficiary.
As such, these types of payment rates
are excluded from the disclosure
requirement. Regarding commenters’
request for clarification about
residential services being subject to the
disclosure, as discussed in a later
response to comments, personal care,
home health aide, homemaker, and
habilitation services, are inherently
delivered in a home or community
setting, outside of an institutional or
residential facility. However, we
acknowledge that the addition of
habilitation services to the disclosure
would now include residential
habilitation services and we further
address this in the later portion of this
comment response.
We appreciate commenters’
suggestion to require States report
payment rate variations by populations
served (that is, populations receiving
services under a waiver versus State
plan authority). However, that level of
detailed reporting is beyond the scope
of what we are seeking to implement in
this current rulemaking, and would
represent additional burden to States.
We are requiring States to separately
identify the average hourly Medicaid
FFS fee schedule payment rates for
personal care, home health aide,
homemaker, and habilitation services by
various factors that we believe will
provide beneficial insights into these
rates.
As stated in the proposed rule, we
intend to standardize data and
monitoring across service delivery
systems with the goal of improving
access to care, to the extent possible,
and particularly for the payment rate
disclosure requirements in
§ 447.203(b)(2)(iv) and (3)(ii), we intend
to remain consistent with the HCBS
provisions we are finalizing at
§ 441.311(d)(2) and (e).326 Given the
addition of habilitation services to these
326 88
PO 00000
FR 27960 at 28005.
Frm 00201
Fmt 4701
HCBS provisions in this final rule as
well as the Managed Care final rule (as
published elsewhere in this Federal
Register) provisions at
§ 438.207(b)(3)(ii) and after
consideration of comments, we are
adding habilitation services, including
residential habilitation, day habilitation,
and home-based habilitation services, to
the payment rate disclosure
requirements in § 447.203(b)(2)(iv) and
(3)(ii). Specifically, the regulatory
language finalized in this rule at
§ 447.203(b)(2)(iv) requires States to
publish the average hourly Medicaid
FFS payment rate for personal care,
home health aide, homemaker, and
habilitation services, as specified in
§ 440.180(b)(2) through (4) and (6) in the
payment rate disclosure. We note that
§ 447.203(b)(2)(iv) refers to
‘‘habilitation’’ services, without
distinguishing between residential
habilitation services, day habilitation
services, and home-based habilitation
services. As previously discussed in
section II.B., these categories will be
further described in subregulatory
guidance. As discussed in a later
response to comments in this section,
we also adding a requirement in the
payment rate disclosure that States must
separately identify the Medicaid FFS fee
schedule payment rates for services that
include facility-related costs. We believe
this distinction will generally only arise
for habilitation service rates, but we are
applying it across all four service
categories to remain consistent with the
amended provisions at § 441.311(e)(2),
and for consistency in reporting across
all four services within the payment rate
disclosure.
As discussed in the proposed rule, we
initially proposed to include in the
payment rate disclosure requirement
only personal care, home health aide,
and homemaker services because they
are most commonly conducted in
beneficiaries’ homes and general
community settings and, therefore,
constituted the majority of FFS
payments for direct care workers
delivering services under FFS.327
However, and as previously stated, we
agree with commenters’
recommendation that the payment rate
disclosure should include payment rates
for habilitation services. As such, and to
remain consistent with the HCBS
provisions at § 441.311(d)(2) and (e)
finalized in this rule, we are adding
habilitation services as a category of
service subject to the payment rate
disclosure.
We acknowledge that habilitation
services are also generally high-volume,
327 88
Sfmt 4700
40741
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
FR 27960 at 28005.
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
40742
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
high-cost services particularly in States
where individuals with intellectual or
developmental disabilities receive
personal care services through
habilitation. In other words, we
acknowledge that some States design
the delivery of and payment rates for
habilitation services to include personal
care services in these instances. If we
were to exclude habilitation services
from the payment rate disclosure
provisions, then we would effectively
exclude an important component of
personal care services provided to
individuals with intellectual or
developmental disabilities from the
payment rate disclosure, which would
not align with our intent to ensure
transparency of payment rates of
personal care services within this
provision. In instances where States
combine the delivery and payment of
habilitation services with personal care
services, requiring reporting on both
services supports our goal of enhancing
the transparency of payment rates that
support the delivery of personal care
services while accommodating the
potential variation in classification a
State utilizes. We want to note a State
has the option to indicate when a
habilitation service rate includes
personal care services or otherwise
provide further data nuances while
meeting the requirements of this final
rule. In addition, this change provides
clarity to States that might have
reported on habilitation services under
the personal care category of services in
the payment rate disclosure were it not
for this revision to the disclosure. Given
the variation in how States deliver and
pay for habilitation services, separately
identifying habilitation as a category of
service supports our payment rate
transparency goals to ensure that
interested parties have basic
information available to them to
understand Medicaid payment levels
and the associated effects of payment
rates on access to care so that they may
raise concerns to State Medicaid
agencies via the various forms of public
process available to interested parties.
As previously discussed in detail in
an earlier response to comments in
section II. of this final rule, including
habilitation services in HCBS reporting
requirements at § 441.311(d)(2) and (e),
as well as the payment rate disclosure
at § 447.203(b)(2) and (3)(ii), will ensure
that services of particular importance to
certain beneficiary populations, namely
individuals with intellectual or
developmental disabilities, are not
excluded from our efforts to promote
payment rate transparency in the
interest of ensuring adequate access to
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
care. As previously stated, in
accordance with commenters’
recommendation, and to remain
consistent with the proposed HCBS
provisions at § 441.311(d)(2) and (e) as
stated in the proposed rule,328 we are
adding habilitation services to the
payment rate disclosure to ensure
transparency of rates that
disproportionately affect access to
services required by a unique
population, individuals with
intellectual or developmental
disabilities.
Comment: A few commenters
expressed concern over certain terms
used in the proposed rule. Two
commenters noted the terms ‘‘rates,’’
‘‘payments,’’ ‘‘wage,’’ and
‘‘compensation’’ were used throughout
the rule and were concerned about
potential confusion about complying
with the payment rate disclosure with
the terms not clearly defined. One
commenter was concerned the payment
rate disclosure required States to request
detailed financial records and
information from provider
organizations/agencies, which are often
private businesses. Another couple of
commenters requested a Federal-level
definition or description of ‘‘provider
type’’ and ‘‘geographical location’’ in
the context of the payment rate
disclosure.
Response: The payment rate
disclosure requires States to separately
identify the average hourly Medicaid
FFS fee schedule payment rates for
personal care, home health aide,
homemaker, and habilitation services by
population (pediatric and adult),
provider type, geographical location,
and whether the payment rate includes
facility-related costs, as applicable, and
by provider employment structures
(individual providers and provider
agencies). We are not requiring in the
payment rate disclosure provisions at
§ 447.203(b)(3)(ii) that States collect
wage, compensation (including
benefits), or financial records and
information from provider agencies or to
publish information about the
compensation the provider agency pays
to its employee, where applicable. In
section II.C. of this final rule, wage is
only mentioned while summarizing
comments received on the February
2022 RFI.329 Likewise, compensation is
only mentioned in section II.C. of this
final rule while describing the
328 88
FR 27960 at 28005.
of Public Comments in response to
the CMS 2022 Request for Information: Access to
Coverage and Care in Medicaid & CHIP. December
2022. For the report, see https://www.medicaid.gov/
medicaid/access-care/downloads/access-rfi-2022report.pdf.
329 Summary
PO 00000
Frm 00202
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
difference between individual providers
and provider agencies and when
requesting public comments on whether
we should have proposed a provision
similar to the HCBS provisions we
proposed at § 441.302(k)(3)(i) (where we
proposed to require at least 80 percent
of all Medicaid FFS payments for
certain services be spent on
compensation for direct care workers).
Therefore, we are not requiring that
States collect wage or compensation
(including benefits) information from
provider agencies to publish
information about the compensation
that the provider agency pays to its
employee in the payment rate disclosure
provisions at § 447.203(b)(3)(ii). We
consistently used average hourly
payment rate to refer to the payment
rate that States are required to publish
in the payment rate disclosure. As
finalized in this rule, we are replacing
the term ‘‘average hourly payment rate’’
with ‘‘average hourly Medicaid FFS fee
schedule payment rate’’ for clarity and
consistency throughout § 447.203(b).
We are not specifying a Federal
definition for provider type because of
the variety of provider types a State
could license and pay for delivering
Medicaid services. States are
responsible for licensing providers in
their State and have the flexibility to
license a wide variety of provider types
for personal care, home health aide,
homemaker, and habilitation services,
including, but not limited to, personal
care attendants, home health aides,
certified nursing assistants, or registered
nurses. We would like to ensure the full
scope of providers of personal care,
home health aide, homemaker, and
habilitation services across States are
included in the payment rate disclosure
for transparency purposes.
Finally, we also are not providing a
Federal definition of geographical
location. Because the payment rate
disclosure does not involve a
comparison to Medicare (or other
payer), the data need only reflect the
State’s specific circumstances. Different
States have different methods of
assigning payment rates to particular
regions and are therefore best situated to
determine how rates must reflect their
State-determined geographical
designations.
Comment: A few commenters
requested clarification regarding what
CMS meant by ‘‘individual providers’’
and ‘‘providers employed by an agency’’
in the payment rate disclosure.
Commenters were generally unsure if
States are required to publish the
average hourly payment rate paid to the
agency or the compensation the agency
pays to its employee. One commenter
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
requested clarification on what CMS
considers ‘‘payments made to
individual providers’’ and ‘‘payments
made. . .to providers employed by an
agency.’’ Another commenter noted an
example where agencies have multiple
direct care workers as employees and
was unsure from the language in the
proposed rule (‘‘providers employed by
agency’’) what CMS considered to be the
payment rate, either total compensation
(including benefits) divided by total
hours, or the hourly base wage of the
direct care workers. One commenter
specifically noted the use of the terms
‘‘direct care worker’’ and ‘‘provider’’ are
both used in 42 CFR 447.203(b)(3)(ii)
and stated these terms are often
misaligned. The commenter explains
that ‘‘direct care worker’’ or ‘‘home care
worker’’ refers to personal care aides
and home health aides, who provide
hands-on services to those in need
while ‘‘providers’’ are the agencies that
employ direct care workers, train and
screen them (health status and
background checks), supervise them,
schedule their services, reimburse their
travel expenses, and support their
professional development as well as
liaise with service recipients and their
families, handle all service billing,
prepare for and respond to emergencies,
and ensure day-to-day compliance with
State and Federal standards.
Response: We appreciate the
commenters’ examples to illustrate the
requested areas of clarification in the
rule. As previously stated, in this final
rule, we are revising the language ‘‘to
providers employed by an agency’’ in
§ 447.203(b)(2)(iv), (b)(3)(ii), and
(b)(3)(ii)(B) and finalizing the language
as ‘‘provider agencies’’ for clarification
purposes to more accurately reflect what
payment rate we are requiring be
published which is discussed shortly in
this response to comments. To clarify,
in the payment rate disclosure, we are
requiring States to calculate and publish
the average hourly Medicaid FFS fee
schedule payment rate that States pay to
individual providers and provider
agencies, if the rates vary, and for
payments that include facility-related
costs. As described in the proposed rule
and this final rule, individual providers
in the context of the payment rate
disclosure at § 447.203(b)(3)(ii) refers to
individuals that are direct care workers
and often self-employed or contract
directly with the State to deliver
services as a Medicaid provide;
additionally, the individual provider
bills the States directly and is paid
directly by the State for services
provided. To clarify, individual
providers does not refer to providers
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
delivering services through self-directed
models with service budget authorized
under 42 CFR 441.545, as these are not
considered Medicaid FFS fee schedule
payment rates for the purposes of the
payment rate transparency publication,
as well as the payment rate disclosure
at § 447.203(b)(3)(ii), which was
discussed in an earlier response to
commenters.
Provider agency in the context of the
payment rate disclosure at
§ 447.203(b)(3)(ii) refers to the agency
contracted or enrolled with the State to
deliver Medicaid services and the
agency in turn employs or contracts
with direct care workers as employees
of the agency that works directly with
the Medicaid agency to provide
Medicaid services; additionally, the
agency bills the State directly and is
paid directly by the State for services
their employees or contractors provide.
Also, as previously stated, to the extent
a State pays a provider agency a
Medicaid FFS fee schedule payment
rate (as discussed in detail in an earlier
response to comments in this section),
then those payment rates are subject to
the payment rate disclosure
requirements at § 447.203(b)(3)(ii).
As previously discussed in an earlier
response to comments in this section,
we are not requiring in the payment rate
disclosure provisions at
§ 447.203(b)(3)(ii) that States collect
wage or compensation (including
benefits) information from provider
agencies to publish information about
the compensation the provider agency
pays to its employee. While the
comment focuses on the daily work of
a ‘‘direct care worker’’ and the functions
of a ‘‘provider’’ to distinguish these
terms, for the purposes of this rule, we
focused on the type of employment
structure (that is, individual provider or
provider agency) to best account for
variations in types and levels of
payment that may occur for different
provider types. We clarify that the
codified regulation text for
§ 447.203(b)(3)(ii) does not include the
phrase ‘‘direct care worker.’’
Comment: Many commenters raised
concerns and requested clarification
regarding CMS requiring the payment
rate being an hourly unit in the payment
rate disclosure. A few commenters
requested CMS clearly define what to
include in the average hourly payment
rate (for example, wages or benefits) to
ensure the average hourly payment rates
are comparable across States. A couple
of commenters requested clarification
on how States should convert half day,
per diem, or per visit payment rates into
an average hourly payment rate while
one commenter requested CMS permit
PO 00000
Frm 00203
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40743
States to publish an average payment
rate in the unit the State pays to ease
burden on States. Lastly, one
commenter stated that services, such as
adult day habilitation or assisted living
waiver, that cannot be calculated as an
hourly rate should be reported as daily
rates.
Response: For personal care, home
health aide, homemaker, or habilitation
services under FFS State plan authority,
including sections 1915(i), 1915(j),
1915(k) State plan services; section
1915(c) waiver authority; and under
section 1115 demonstration authority,
this final rule requires States to publish
a payment rate disclosure that expresses
the State’s payment rates as the average
hourly Medicaid FFS fee schedule
payment rates, separately identified for
payments made to individual providers
and provider agencies, if the rates vary,
and for payments that include facilityrelated costs, as applicable. States have
flexibility in operating their Medicaid
programs to set payment rates and
payment policies for services that cover
a particular unit of time for delivering
the service and, therefore, States
currently pay for these services in a
wide range of units, from minutes to
hourly to daily to monthly units. As
described in the proposed rule, because
of Medicaid’s status as the most
important payer for HCBS and lack of
other points of comparison (that is,
Medicare, private payers, self-pay),
transparency and comparability among
States is most important for assessing
compliance with section 1902(a)(30)(A)
of the Act. To ensure the payment rate
disclosure supports our transparency
efforts to help ensure that interested
parties have basic information available
to them to understand Medicaid
payment levels and the associated
effects of payment rates on access to
care so that they may raise concerns to
State Medicaid agencies via the various
forms of public processes available to
interested parties, we are requiring
States publish their payment rates in a
uniform and comparable format, that is,
an average hourly Medicaid FFS fee
schedule payment rate. As previously
discussed in an earlier response to
comments in this section, we are not
requiring in the payment rate disclosure
provisions at § 447.203(b)(3)(ii) that
States to collect wage, compensation
(including benefits), or financial records
and information from provider agencies
or to publish information about the
compensation the provider agency pays
to its employee, where applicable.
Regarding commenters requesting
clarification on how States should
convert half day, per diem, or per visit
payment rates into an average hourly
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
40744
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
payment rate, we would like to clarify
that States that pay for the categories of
services specified in paragraph (b)(2)(iv)
in a unit other than an hourly payment
rate are expected to calculate an hourly
payment rate using the unit of the rate
the State pays for the service and the
number of hours covered by that unit.
For example, if a State provides home
health aide services as a half day or on
a per diem (daily) or per visit basis, then
the State would be expected to divide
their payment rate for a half day, day,
or visit by the number of hours covered
by the rate, such as 8 hours for a full
day, to calculate an average hourly
Medicaid FFS fee schedule payment
rate for the payment rate disclosure.
States have flexibility in operating their
Medicaid programs to set payment rates
and payment policies for services that
cover a particular unit of time for
delivering the service. We expect States
have a maximum number of hours
factored into their payment rate for
services set on a per diem or per visit
basis and States should use that
maximum number in calculating the
average hourly Medicaid FFS fee
schedule payment rate, which is a
simple average (arithmetic mean) where
all payment rates are summed, then
divided by the number of all hourly
payment rates. Regarding commenters
who stated that services, such as adult
day habilitation or assisted living
waiver, that cannot be calculated as an
hourly rate should be reported as daily
rates, we are not incorporating this
suggestion into the final rule as we
would expect States to use the
previously described process to
calculate an hourly payment rate from a
per diem (daily) rate.
As previously mentioned in an earlier
response to comments, this final rule
adds habilitation services to the
categories of services subject to the
payment rate disclosure. This final rule
is also adding a requirement that States
must separately identify whether the
average hourly Medicaid FFS fee
schedule payment rate for services
includes facility-related costs in
§ 447.203(b)(2) and (3)(ii)(B) to remain
consistent with HCBS provisions
finalized in this rule at § 441.311(e)(2).
We recognize that habilitation services
can mean residential habilitation, day
habilitation, or home-based habilitation
services; as such, payment rates for
habilitation services generally may
include facility-related costs, as in the
case of residential or day habilitation
services delivered in a residential group
home or day center, whereas homebased habilitation would not include
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
facility-related costs.330 We remind
States that we proposed an ‘‘as
applicable’’ clause in
§ 447.203(b)(3)(ii)(B) that applies to the
ways payment rates can vary (that is, by
employment structure, population
(pediatric and adult), provider type,
geographical location). The requirement
to identify whether a payment rate
includes facility-related costs would
also be covered by the ‘‘as applicable’’
clause. As such, we would not expect
States to identify facility-related costs
for personal care, home health aide,
homemaker, and habilitation service
payment rates when they are delivered
in a home-based setting. While
§ 447.203(b)(2) and (3)(ii)(B) requires
that States must separately identify
whether the average hourly Medicaid
FFS fee schedule payment rate includes
facility-related costs may not apply to
all services and delivery sites (that is, in
home or community settings), we
believe this provision will help to
ensure transparency of payment rates
that may differ due to the inclusion of
facility-related costs.
Comment: One commenter requested
clarification regarding individually
negotiated rates and bundled rates being
included in the average hourly payment
rate calculation in the payment rate
disclosure.
Response: As previously described in
detail in an earlier response to
comments in this section, we interpret
the commenter’s reference to
‘‘negotiated rates’’ to mean a provider
payment rate where the individual
provider’s final payment rate is agreed
upon through negotiation with the State
Medicaid agency. For consistency with
the payment rate transparency
publication requirement, negotiated
rates are not subject to the payment rate
disclosure provision because these
payment rates are not subject to the
payment rate transparency publication
as negotiated rates are not Medicaid FFS
fee schedule payment rates that are
known in advance of a provider
delivering a service to a beneficiary.
Also, as previously discussed in detail
in an earlier response to comments in
this section, for purposes of the
payment rate transparency provision in
§ 447.203(b)(1), Medicaid FFS fee
schedule payment rates are FFS
payment amounts made to a provider,
330 We remind States that room and board is
generally only coverable and payable to an
individual who has been admitted to a medical
institution as an ‘‘inpatient’’ as defined in 42 CFR
440.2 and 435.1010. Therefore, room and board in
a facility setting that provides residential or day
habilitation service must be excluded from the
average hourly Medicaid FFS fee schedule payment
rate for habilitation services.
PO 00000
Frm 00204
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
and known in advance of a provider
delivering a service to a beneficiary by
reference to a fee schedule. For
consistency, we are using the same
description of Medicaid FFS fee
schedule payment rates to describe the
payment rates that need to be included
in the payment rate disclosure in
paragraph (b)(3)(ii)(B) of this section
which would also consider bundled
payment rates to be Medicaid FFS fee
schedule payment rates for the purposes
of the payment rate disclosure.
We also clarify that while PPS rates
for services provided in inpatient
hospitals, outpatient hospitals, inpatient
psychiatric facilities, inpatient
rehabilitation facilities, long-term care
hospitals, and nursing facilities are
subject to the payment rate transparency
publication, these PPS rates are
effectively excluded from the payment
rate disclosure because the categories of
services specified in § 447.203(b)(2)(iv),
personal care, home health aide,
homemaker, and habilitation services,
inherently delivered in a home or
community setting, outside of an
institutional facility.
Comment: Many commenters
suggested additional data elements and
levels of analysis for the payment rate
disclosure. A couple of commenters
suggested additional breakdowns of the
average hourly payment rates, including
when a State pays different rates for
higher level of need or complexity (such
as paying tiered rates for a single service
when provided on nights, weekends, or
in a particular geographical area),
demographic information (such as
gender and race of the direct care
worker), and type of service provided.
Another commenter suggested CMS
require States to identify the average
portion of the average payment rate that
is used for compensation to pay the
direct care worker in the payment rate
disclosure to enable easier comparison
of compensation between individual
providers and to providers employed by
an agency. One commenter suggested
requiring States to publish the rates that
provider agencies pay their employees
to ensure payment rates are fully
disclosed at the State and provider
levels. One commenter suggested
additional data elements be reported by
States in the payment rate disclosure:
Medicaid-authorized payment rates;
minimum base wages that would be
paid to direct care workers if the
proposed 80 percent requirement is met;
average Medicaid payment rates and
average direct care worker wages; the
minimum, maximum, and median rates
of wages; and number of direct care
workers employed by the agency.
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
Response: We appreciate commenters’
suggestions for the payment rate
disclosure. As previously discussed in
an earlier response to commenters, in
this final rule, we are revising the
proposed language ‘‘to providers
employed by an agency’’ in in
§ 447.203(b)(2)(iv), (b)(3)(ii), and
(b)(3)(ii)(B) and finalizing it as
‘‘provider agencies’’ for clarification
purposes to more accurately reflect what
payment rate we are requiring be
published, that is, the payment rate the
State pays a provider agency for services
its employees have delivered. While the
commenters did not provide additional
explanation or examples of what they
meant by requiring an additional break
down of the average hourly payment
rate by ‘‘type of service provided,’’ we
clarify that the payment rate disclosure
requires States to publish the average
hourly Medicaid FFS fee schedule
payment rate for personal care, home
health aide, homemaker, and
habilitation services, which are types of
services, separately. Additionally, while
we are not explicitly requiring States
break down their payment rates by
higher level of need or complexity, we
did propose and are finalizing the
requirement to break down the average
hourly Medicaid FFS fee schedule
payment rate by geographical location,
which was one of the examples of
additional criteria the commenter
provided for suggested further
breakdown.
However, we are not incorporating the
other suggestions to require the other,
additional breakdowns of the average
hourly payments rates as suggested by
commenters or to require additional
data elements be reported by States in
the payment rate disclosure, to remain
consistent across provisions of this final
rule. If we were to include these
suggestions only for the payment rate
disclosure, then the payment rate
breakdowns would be inconsistent with
the payment rate transparency
publication and comparative payment
rate analysis in terms of requiring, for
example, demographic information
about the direct care worker. During the
initial compliance period of this final
rule and in consideration of the
numerous, concurrent regulatory
changes States are facing, we believe
consistency, where possible, across
provisions will contribute to our goal to
standardize data and monitoring across
service delivery systems with the goal of
improving access to care.
Likewise, we are not incorporating the
suggestion to identify the average
portion of the average payment rate that
is used for compensation to pay the
direct care worker in the payment rate
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
disclosure. While the suggestion aligns
with the intent of HCBS provisions we
are finalizing in this rule at § 441.302(k)
as discussed in section II.B.5 of this
rule, we did not propose to require 80
percent of all payments with respect to
services at § 440.180(b)(2) through (4)
must be spent on compensation for
direct care workers within the payment
rate disclosure, as discussed in a later
response to comments in this section.
As we remain focused on consistency,
because we are not requiring a certain
percentage of all payments be spent on
compensation for direct care workers,
we are also not requiring at
§ 447.203(b)(3)(ii) that States to identify
the average portion of the average
payment rate that is used for
compensation to pay the direct care
worker.
We are also not incorporating the
suggestion to require States publish the
rates that provider agencies pay their
employees because, similar to private
payer data as a point of rate comparison,
rates that provider agencies pay their
employees is generally considered
proprietary and this information may
not be available to States. As previously
discussed in an earlier response to
comments in this section, we are not
requiring in the payment rate disclosure
provisions at § 447.203(b)(3)(ii) that
States to collect wage, compensation
(including benefits), or financial records
and information from provider agencies
or to publish information about the
compensation the provider agency pays
to its employee, where applicable.
We want our initial focus to be on
establishing the new payment rate
transparency, comparative payment rate
analysis, and payment rate disclosure
requirements, providing States with
support during the compliance period,
and ensuring these data are available to
beneficiaries, providers, CMS, and other
interested parties for the purposes of
assessing access to care issues. While
we are not adopting these suggestions,
we note that States have the flexibility
to add the elements described to their
payment rate disclosure publication if
they so choose. We will also review how
our finalized policies work in
conjunction with other policies
finalized in this rule to identify any
potential areas for future enhancements
suggested by the commenters.
Comment: One commenter suggested
CMS could ease burden on States by
collecting State payment rates from Dual
Special Needs Plans (D–SNPs) through
Medicare Advantage, rather than
requiring States to calculate and publish
their average hourly payment rate for
the payment rate disclosure.
PO 00000
Frm 00205
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40745
Response: We appreciate the
commenters’ suggestion; however, D–
SNPs do not provide us with the
specific data elements (that is, State
Medicaid payment rates, number of
Medicaid-paid claims, and number of
Medicaid enrolled beneficiaries) we are
requiring in this rule. Some D–SNPs
only cover Medicare services and do not
directly pay for Medicaid services.
Other D–SNPs do cover Medicaid
services (either directly or through an
affiliated Medicaid managed care plan),
but this rule only applies to Medicaid
FFS payment rates. Therefore, as D–
SNPs do not collect or provide us with
Medicaid payment rate information that
is relevant to this rule, we will not be
incorporating this suggestion.
Additionally, we believe that the States,
as stewards of Medicaid payment rates
in the Medicaid program, would be the
party best situated to publish and
analyze their own payment rate
information for the payment rate
transparency requirements finalized in
this rule, including the payment rate
disclosure. States’ ownership of
payment rate information will ensure
accurate payment rate transparency
publications, comparative payment rate
analyses, and payment rate disclosures.
Comment: A few commenters
suggested alternative timelines for
States updating their payment rate
disclosures. One commenter suggested
extending the requirement for updates
to the payment rate disclosure to every
3 years, instead of the proposed 2 years,
to align with the State’s existing data
publication cycle. However, another
commenter suggested the update
frequency of the payment rate
disclosure be every year.
Response: We are finalizing the
payment rate transparency
requirements, including the payment
rate disclosure, with an applicability
date of July 1, 2026; however, we are not
changing the proposed timeframe of 2
years for States to update their payment
rate disclosure. We believe requiring
updates to the payment rate disclosure
every 2 years appropriately balances
State burden and maintaining up-to-date
information in the payment rate
disclosure.
Comment: Most commenters were
supportive in response to our request for
public comment on whether we should
propose a provision to what we
proposed at § 441.302(k) (where we
proposed to require that at least 80
percent of all Medicaid FFS payments
with respect to personal care, home
health aide, and homemaker services
provided by individual providers and
providers employed by an agency must
be spent on compensation for direct care
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
40746
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
workers) in § 447.203(b) on the basis
that this provision would help address
the direct care workforce crisis and
access issues. One commenter suggested
that if such a provision were proposed
and implemented, then CMS should
implement an accountability
requirement where States would be
required to validate that direct care
workers are receiving 80 percent of all
Medicaid FFS payments.
Some commenters opposed this
consideration and suggested that, if this
provision is finalized, the requirement
would negatively affect access to care.
These commenters aligned with those in
opposition to the proposed HCBS
provisions at § 441.302(k), as discussed
in section II.B.5 of this rule. These
commenters opposed this because the
policy does not consider that given low
levels of payment for relevant services,
the remaining 20 percent of the payment
rate would be insufficient for the
administrative costs (that is, staff,
technology, training, travel, oversight) of
running a business, provider agencies
are already challenged by worker
shortages, providers would withdraw
from the Medicaid program or stop
serving Medicaid beneficiaries, and the
requirement would be ineffective
without supportive policies in place to
implement standards for determining
sufficient Medicaid payment rates that
provide competitive wages, promote
quality services, and ensure compliance
with all State and Federal regulations.
Commenters in opposition
recommended alternatives including: a
lower percentage than 80 percent of all
Medicaid FFS payments going to
compensation for direct care workers,
establishing quality outcome metrics,
and focusing on wage review and
transparency.
Response: We thank commenters for
their input and suggestions. We also
understand the commenters’ concerns.
Given that our work to better ensure
access in the Medicaid program is
ongoing, we intend to gain
implementation experience with this
final rule, particularly from the HCBS
provisions finalized in this rule at
§ 441.302(k) as discussed in section
II.B.5, and we will consider the
recommendations provided on the
proposed rule to help inform any future
rulemaking in this area, as appropriate.
Comment: Many commenters
expressed concerns about requiring
States to publish the average hourly
payment rate that States pay for
personal care, home health aide, and
homemaker services. These commenters
were generally concerned that requiring
States to publish this information could
result in unintended consequences or be
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
ineffective for assessing and improving
access to care. The unintended
consequences commenters were
primarily concerned about included
contributing to providers leaving areas
where there are low Medicaid payment
rates which could create or exacerbate
access to care issues in that area and
misunderstandings of the required
average hourly payment rate without
additional context about employee
benefits (for example, paid time off,
health insurance, pension, employee
assistance program) that are not easily
disaggregated from an hourly Medicaid
service payment rate. Regarding
commenter concerns that publishing the
average hourly rate would be
ineffective, one commenter stated that
their State already publishes provider
rates, and it has not resolved issues with
low and unequal payment rates among
providers employed by agencies.
Response: We understand
commenters’ concerns about the effects
of the payment rate disclosure in
practice. Regarding commenters’
concerns that providers could leave an
area where there are low Medicaid
payment rates, we would like to
emphasize that the payment rate
disclosure requirements will afford
more transparency to CMS and the
public about rates for HCBS, but they
will also provide States with an
opportunity to identify where existing
rates could create an access issue. If the
difference in rates between two areas
enlists more providers to one area over
another, States may need to consider
revisions to their payment rates to
comply with section 1902(a)(30)(A) of
the Act to ‘‘assure that payments . . .
are sufficient to enlist enough providers
so that care and services are available
under the plan at least to the extent that
such care and services are available to
the general population in the geographic
area.’’ Therefore, if the transparency
created by the payment rate disclosure
requirements induces providers to
switch locations, affecting access to
care, we would expect States to address
the rate disparities that the commenter
has correctly identified are negatively
impacting access.
Regarding commenters’ concerns that
there could be misunderstandings of the
published average hourly payment rate
without additional context about
employee benefits, the payment rate
disclosure provisions at
§ 447.203(b)(3)(ii) requires States to
separately identify the average hourly
Medicaid FFS fee schedule payment
rates for personal care, home health
aide, homemaker, and habilitation
services by population (pediatric and
adult), provider type, geographical
PO 00000
Frm 00206
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
location, and whether the payment rate
includes facility-related costs, as
applicable, and by provider
employment structures (individual
providers and provider agencies). As
previously discussed in an earlier
response to comments in this section,
we are not requiring in the payment rate
disclosure provisions at
§ 447.203(b)(3)(ii) that States to collect
wage, compensation (including
benefits), or financial records and
information from provider agencies or to
publish information about the
compensation the provider agency pays
to its employee, where applicable. In
other words, we are focused on payment
rate transparency for personal care,
home health aide, homemaker, and
habilitation services rather than what
the providers of these services does with
their payment rate (that is, pay for
employee benefits). Given that our work
to better ensure access in the Medicaid
program is ongoing, we intend to gain
implementation experience with this
final rule, and we will consider the
recommendations provided on the
proposed rule to help inform any future
rulemaking in this area, as appropriate.
We disagree with the commenters that
publishing the average hourly Medicaid
FFS fee schedule payment rate of
personal care, home health aide,
homemaker, and habilitation providers
through the payment rate disclosure
requirement will be ineffective,
including because one commenter’s
State already publishes this information,
and the commenter has not seen
improvement in low and unequal
payment rates among providers
employed by agencies. We believe a
broad requirement for all States that
provide personal care, home health
aide, homemaker, and habilitation
services through the FFS delivery
system will help ensure consistency
across delivery systems in monitoring
and ensuring access to care, particularly
with the HCBS provisions at
§ 441.311(d)(2) and (e), which require
annual State reporting on access and
payment adequacy metrics for the same
set of services as the payment rate
disclosure as well as with the Managed
Care final rule (as published elsewhere
in this Federal Register) provisions at
§ 438.207(b)(3)(ii) for Medicaid to
require a payment analysis of the total
amount paid for homemaker services,
home health aide services, and personal
care services and the percentage that
results from dividing the total amount
paid by the amount the State’s Medicaid
FFS program would have paid for the
same claims. While the commenter did
not provide additional details about
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
their State’s publication of payment
rates, we believe that with a broad rate
transparency requirement across
delivery systems, we can reasonably
expect that States, CMS, and interested
parties will have transparent payment
rate information available to them
across delivery systems. Transparency
would continually help States and CMS
to ensure that their Medicaid payment
rates are set at a level that is likely
sufficient to meet the statutory access
standard under section 1902(a)(30)(A) of
the Act that payments be sufficient to
enlist enough providers so that care and
services are available under the plan at
least to the extent that such care and
services are available to the general
population in the geographic area.
Transparency also helps to ensure that
interested parties have basic
information available to them to
understand Medicaid payment levels
and the associated effects of payment
rates on access to care so that they may
raise concerns to State Medicaid
agencies via the various forms of public
process available to interested parties.
Comment: Several commenters
expressed concern over low payment
rates in Medicaid, particularly for
HCBS, dental services, and behavioral
health care, and the negative impact on
access to care. Many commenters
suggested that the primary causes of
these low payment rates in Medicaid are
stagnant and insufficient payment rates
left unadjusted for rising costs, inflation,
new regulatory requirements, and
increased service expectations over
time, particularly for the HCBS direct
care workforce.
A few of these commenters suggested
CMS could address these issues directly
by requiring States conduct regular rate
reviews (for example, annual, biennial,
triennial, or when a programmatic
change occurs), publish the results, and
update their payment rates, when
necessary, based on criteria that CMS
sets. One commenter suggested this
could be achieved thorough regular SPA
and waiver reviews where CMS could
prevent stagnant and insufficient rates
from being maintained. Particularly for
HCBS, one commenter recommended
setting a national standard base pay rate
for direct care workers as determined by
the States’ cost of living index or
requiring States have parity for all State
payment rates, regardless of geographic
location, but allow differences in
payment rates for services provided to
pediatric and adult populations.
Response: We appreciate the
commenters’ suggestions. However, we
are limited in our authority to directly
address the commenters’ concerns
regarding stagnant and insufficient
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
payment rates. With limited statutory
exceptions (such as for hospice services
under section 1902(a)(13)(B) of the Act
and FQHC/RHC services under section
1902(bb) of the Act, which each
establish a floor for provider payment
rates which prohibits States from
implementing rate reductions below the
amount calculated through the
methodology provided in the statute),
we do not have the authority to require
States update their payment rates to a
particular level. Section 1902(a)(30)(A)
of the Act requires that State plans
assure that payments are consistent with
efficiency, economy, and quality of care
and are sufficient to enlist enough
providers so that care and services are
available under the plan at least to the
extent that such care and services are
available to the general population in
the geographic area. Under the statutory
authority at section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the
Act and through this final rule, we are
requiring States to develop and publish
a payment rate transparency
publication, comparative payment rate
analysis of certain services, and
payment rate disclosure for certain
HCBS, which are directed at helping the
States and CMS ensure that State
payment rates are consistent with the
payment standards under section
1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act.
While we are not explicitly requiring
that States update their payment rates to
a particular level or regularly submit
SPAs and/or waivers (except where
desired by the State to implement a
programmatic change, consistent with
existing requirements) waivers in this
rulemaking, we believe there are three
requirements within our statutory
authority and finalized by this rule that
effectively address the concerns raised
by commenters. First, this final rule
requires States to review their payment
rates during the development and
publication of their payment rate
transparency publications, comparative
payment rate analyses, and payment
rate disclosures. Specifically, the
payment rate transparency publication
requires States to regularly review their
rates in the course of publishing them
and maintaining the current accuracy of
the publication, including publishing
the date the payment rate publication
website was last updated, which will
reveal any rates that may be stagnant
and potentially insufficient. States must
also ensure the data in the publication
is kept current (that is, updates must be
made within 1 month of a rate change).
With this final rule, we focused on
transparency to help ensure that
interested parties have basic
information available to them to
PO 00000
Frm 00207
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40747
understand Medicaid payment levels
and the associated effects of payment
rates on access to care so that they may
raise concerns to State Medicaid
agencies via the various forms of public
process available to interested parties.
We acknowledge the provisions
finalized in this rule do not specifically
require rate reviews to ensure payment
rates are adjusted for rising costs,
inflation, new regulatory requirements,
and increased service expectations that
commenters suggested are factors
contributing to a crisis in the HCBS
direct care workforce. However, this
provision creates a process to help
validate that payment rates are
compliant with section 1902(a)(30)(A) of
the Act.
Second, this final rule requires States
to establish an advisory group for
interested parties to advise and consult
on certain current and proposed
Medicaid provider payment rates to
ensure the relevant Medicaid payment
rates are sufficient to ensure access to
homemaker services, home health aide
services, and personal care services for
Medicaid beneficiaries at least as great
as available to the general population in
the geographic area. We strongly
encourage States to use this group as
part of a process to conduct rate reviews
and encourage eligible participants
(including direct care workers,
beneficiaries, beneficiaries’ authorized
representatives, and other interested
parties impacted by the services rates in
question, as determined by the State) to
join their State’s interested parties
advisory group once established to bring
their concerns directly to States that are
setting the payment rates for HCBS.
Third, this final rule establishes a
two-tiered approach for determining the
level of access analysis States would be
required to conduct when proposing
provider payment rate reductions or
payment restructurings. The first tier of
this approach, § 447.203(c)(1), sets out
three criteria for States to meet when
proposing payment rate reductions or
payment restructurings in
circumstances when the changes could
result in diminished access that, if met,
would not require a more detailed
analysis to establish that the proposal
meets the access requirement in section
1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act. However,
meeting the three criteria described in
the first tier does not guarantee that the
SPA would be approved, if other
applicable Federal requirements are not
met. The second tier of this approach,
§ 447.203(c)(2) requires the State to
conduct a more extensive access
analysis in addition to providing the
results of the analysis in the first tier.
We believe this two-tiered approach, in
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
40748
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
combination with updated public
process requirements in § 447.203(c)(4)
(which this final rule relocates from
§ 447.203(b)(7)) will help us ensure that
a State’s proposed Medicaid payment
rates and/or payment structure are
consistent with the access requirement
in section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act at
the time the State proposes a payment
rate reduction or payment restructuring
in circumstances when the changes
could result in diminished access.
After consideration of public
comments, we are finalizing all
provisions under § 447.203(b)(2) to (4)
as proposed, apart from the following
changes.
• Deleted the word ‘‘following’’ in
two places in the following sentence in
§ 447.203(b)(2) ‘‘The State agency is
required to develop and publish a
comparative payment rate analysis of
Medicaid payment rates for each of the
following categories of services in
paragraphs (b)(2)(i) through (iii) of this
section and a payment rate disclosure of
Medicaid payment rates for each of the
following categories of services in
paragraph (b)(2)(iv) of this section, as
specified in paragraph (b)(3) of this
section.’’ The finalized language now
states ‘‘The State agency is required to
develop and publish a comparative
payment rate analysis of Medicaid
payment rates for each of the categories
of services in paragraphs (b)(2)(i)
through (iii) of this section and a
payment rate disclosure of Medicaid
payment rates for each of the categories
of services in paragraph (b)(2)(iv) of this
section, as specified in paragraph (b)(3)
of this section.’’ (bold added to
emphasize the deleted word).
• Replaced ‘‘Medicaid payment rates’’
with ‘‘Medicaid fee-for-service fee
schedule payment rates’’ in
§ 447.203(b)(2) with regard to the
comparative payment rate analysis. The
finalized language now states ‘‘. . .
publish a comparative payment rate
analysis of Medicaid fee-for-service fee
schedule payment rates. . .’’ for
clarification and consistent terminology
usage within § 447.203(b).
• Replaced ‘‘Medicaid payment rates’’
with ‘‘average hourly Medicaid fee-forservice fee schedule payment rates’’ in
§ 447.203(b)(2) with regard to the
payment rate disclosure. The finalized
language now states ‘‘. . . [publish] . . .
payment rate disclosure of the average
hourly Medicaid fee-for-service fee
schedule payment rates’’ for
clarification and consistent terminology
usage within § 447.203(b).
• Revised sentence structure
organization and added clarifying
language to the proposed language
stating how the Medicaid FFS payment
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
rates published in the comparative
payment rate analysis and the payment
rate disclosure need to be listed, if the
rates vary. The proposed language in
§ 447.203(b)(2) stated ‘‘The State agency
is required to develop and publish a
comparative payment rate analysis of
Medicaid payment rates for each of the
following categories of services in
paragraphs (b)(2)(i) through (iii) of this
section and a payment rate disclosure of
Medicaid payment rates for each of the
following categories of services in
paragraph (b)(2)(iv) of this section, as
specified in paragraph (b)(3) of this
section. If the rates vary, the State must
separately identify the payment rates by
population (pediatric and adult),
provider type, and geographical
location, as applicable.’’
++ Added the following sentence to
address payment rate variation for the
comparative payment rate analysis: ‘‘If
the rates vary, the State must separately
identify the payment rates by
population (pediatric and adult),
provider type, and geographical
location, as applicable.’’ in
§ 447.203(b)(2).
++ Revised the following sentence to
add payment rate variation related to
facility-related costs for the payment
rate disclosure: ‘‘If the rates vary, the
State must separately identify the
payment rates by population (pediatric
and adult), provider type, geographical
location, and whether the payment rate
includes facility-related costs, as
applicable.’’ (new language identified in
bold).
The language is finalized as ‘‘The
State agency is required to develop and
publish a comparative payment rate
analysis of Medicaid fee-for-service fee
schedule payment rates for each of the
categories of services in paragraphs
(b)(2)(i) through (iii) of this section. If
the rates vary, the State must separately
identify the payment rates by
population (pediatric and adult),
provider type, and geographical
location, as applicable. The State
agency is further required to develop
and publish a payment rate disclosure
of the average hourly Medicaid fee-forservice fee schedule payment rates for
each of the categories of services in
paragraph (b)(2)(iv) of this section, as
specified in paragraph (b)(3) of this
section. If the rates vary, the State must
separately identify the payment rates by
population (pediatric and adult),
provider type, geographical location,
and whether the payment rate includes
facility-related costs, as applicable.’’ in
paragraph (b)(2). (new language
identified in bold).
• Updated ‘‘Outpatient behavioral
health services’’ as a category of service
PO 00000
Frm 00208
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
in § 447.203(b)(2)(iii) to ‘‘Outpatient
mental health and substance use
disorder services.’’
• Added ‘‘habilitation’’ as a category
of service in the payment rate disclosure
described in § 447.203(b)(2)(iv) and
added a reference to § 440.180(b)(6). The
finalized language now states ‘‘Personal
care, home health aide, homemaker, and
habilitation services, as specified in
§ 440.180(b)(2) through (4) and (6),
provided by individual providers and
provider agencies (new language
identified in bold).
• Clarified which publication
requirements apply to the comparative
payment rate analysis and payment rate
disclosure in § 447.203(b)(3) and (b)(4)
to align with a previously described
update to the organizational structure of
paragraph (b)(1) to add romanettes to
specify the ‘‘publication requirements
described in paragraph (b)(1) through
(b)(1)(ii) of this section.’’ (new language
identified in bold).
• Replaced ‘‘Medicaid base payment
rates’’ with ‘‘base Medicaid fee-forservice fee schedule payment rates’’ in
§ 447.203(b)(3)(i)(B) through (E) for
clarification and consistent terminology
usage within § 447.203(b).
• Replaced ‘‘Medicare non-facility
payment rate’’ with ‘‘Medicare nonfacility payment rate as established in
the annual Medicare Physician Fee
Schedule final rule’’ in
§ 447.203(b)(3)(i)(C) and (D) for
clarification.
• Added ‘‘and whether the payment
rate includes facility-related costs’’ in
§ 447.203(b)(3)(ii)(B) to account for
facility-related costs in habilitation
settings, particularly residential
habilitation or day habilitation. The
finalized language now states, ‘‘[t]he
disclosure must identify the average
hourly Medicaid fee-for-service fee
schedule payment rates by applicable
category of service, including, if the
rates vary, separate identification of the
average hourly Medicaid fee-for-service
fee schedule payment rates for
payments made to individual providers
and provider agencies, by population
(pediatric and adult), provider type,
geographical location, and whether the
payment rate includes facility-related
costs, as applicable in
§ 447.203(b)(3)(ii)(B) (new language
identified in bold).
• Replaced ‘‘average hourly payment
rate’’ with ‘‘average hourly Medicaid
fee-for-service fee schedule payment
rates’’ in § 447.203(b)(3)(ii) and (ii)(B)
and (C) for clarification and consistent
terminology usage within § 447.203(b).
• Replaced ‘‘to providers employed
by an agency’’ with ‘‘provider agencies’’
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
in § 447.203(b)(2)(iv), (b)(3)(ii), and
(b)(3)(ii)(B) for clarification.
• Replaced ‘‘Medicaid payment rates’’
with ‘‘Medicaid fee-for-service fee
schedule payment rates’’ in
§ 447.203(b)(4) for clarification and
consistent terminology usage within
§ 447.203(b).
• Updated the applicability date in
§ 447.203(b)(4) from January 1, 2026 and
effective date of the Medicaid payment
rates subject to the comparative
payment rate analysis and payment rate
disclosure from January 1, 2025 to read:
‘‘The State agency must publish the
initial comparative payment rate
analysis and payment rate disclosure of
its Medicaid fee-for-service fee schedule
payment rates in effect as of July 1,
2025, as required under paragraphs
(b)(2) and (b)(3) of this section, by no
later than July 1, 2026. Thereafter, the
State agency must update the
comparative payment rate analysis and
payment rate disclosure no less than
every 2 years, by no later than July 1 of
the second year following the most
recent update.’’
c. Interested Parties Advisory Group
§ 447.203(b)(6)
In the proposed rule, we noted that a
fundamental element of ensuring access
to covered services is the sufficiency of
a provider network.331 As discussed
elsewhere in this rule, the HCBS direct
care workforce is currently experiencing
notable worker shortages.332 A robust
workforce providing HCBS allows more
beneficiaries to obtain necessary
services in home and community-based
settings. We proposed to use data-driven
benchmarks in requiring comparative
payment rate analyses relative to
Medicare non-facility payment rates as
established in the annual Medicare PFS
final rule for a calendar year for the
categories of service specified in
proposed § 447.203(b)(2)(i) through (iii),
but Medicare non-facility payment rates
are generally not relevant in the context
of HCBS, as discussed earlier in this
section. Furthermore, data alone cannot
replace the lived experience of direct
care workers and recipients of the
services they provide.
Understanding how Medicaid
payment rates compare in different
geographic areas of a State and across
State programs is also an important
access to care data point for covered
benefits where Medicaid is a
predominant payer of services, as in the
case of HCBS. In the absence of HCBS
coverage and a lack of available
331 88
FR 27960 at 28023.
332 https://www.macpac.gov/wp-content/uploads/
2022/03/MACPAC-brief-on-HCBS-workforce.pdf.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
payment rate and claims utilization data
from other health payers, such as
Medicare or private insurers, and with
the significant burden and potential
infeasibility associated with gathering
payment data for individuals who pay
out of pocket (that is, self-pay), we
noted our belief that it would be a
reasonable standard for States to
compare their rates to geographically
similar State Medicaid program
payment rates as a basis for
understanding compliance with section
1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act for those
services. In addition, even for services
where other payers establish payment
rates, comparisons to rates paid by other
geographically similar States could be
important to understanding compliance
with section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act
since Medicaid beneficiaries may have
unique health care needs that are not
typical of the general population in
particular geographic areas.
Section 2402(a) of the Affordable Care
Act directs the Secretary to issue
regulations ensuring that all States
develop service systems that, among
other things, improve coordination and
regulation of providers of HCBS to
oversee and monitor functions,
including a complaint system, and
ensure that there are an adequate
number of qualified direct care workers
to provide self-directed services. This
statutory mandate, coupled with the
workforce shortages exacerbated by the
COVID–19 pandemic, necessitates
action specific to direct care workers. As
such, we proposed to require States to
establish an interested parties advisory
group to advise and consult on FFS
rates paid to direct care workers
providing self-directed and agencydirected HCBS, at a minimum for
personal care, home health aide, and
homemaker services as described in
§ 440.180(b)(2) through (4), and States
may choose to include other HCBS.
We proposed the definition of direct
care workers under § 441.302(k)(1)(ii),
which is being finalized under
§ 441.311(e)(1)(ii) in this final rule. We
proposed to use that definition to
consider a direct care worker a
registered nurse, licensed practical
nurse, nurse practitioner, or clinical
nurse specialist who provides nursing
services to Medicaid-eligible
individuals receiving HCBS; a licensed
nursing assistant who provides such
services under the supervision of a
registered nurse, licensed practical
nurse, nurse practitioner, or clinical
nurse specialist; a direct support
professional; a personal care attendant;
a home health aide; or other individuals
who are paid to provide services to
address activities of daily living or
PO 00000
Frm 00209
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40749
instrumental activities of daily living
directly to Medicaid-eligible individuals
receiving HCBS available under part
441, subpart G. A direct care worker
may be employed by a Medicaid
provider, State agency, or third party;
contracted with a Medicaid provider,
State agency, or third party; or
delivering services under a self-directed
service model.
We proposed that the group would
consult on rates for service categories
under the Medicaid State plan, section
1915(c) waiver and demonstration
programs, as applicable, where
payments are made to individual
providers or providers employed by an
agency for, at a minimum, the
previously described types of services,
including for personal care, home health
aide, and homemaker services provided
under sections 1905(a), 1915(i), 1915(j),
and 1915(k) State plan authorities, and
section 1915(c) waivers. These proposed
requirements also would extend to rates
for HCBS provided under section 1115
demonstrations, as is typical for rules
pertaining to HCBS authorized using
demonstration authority. We proposed
that the interested parties advisory
group may consult on other HCBS, at
the State’s discretion.
In this final rule, we are adding an
additional service to the group’s
purview, habilitation services as found
under § 440.180(b)(6). In the proposed
rule, we proposed an alignment of
services subject to the requirements
between the HCBS payment adequacy
and access to care metrics requirements,
and the payment rate disclosure and
interested parties advisory group
provisions. Within the payment
adequacy and access to care metrics
provisions of the proposed rule, we
requested comment on whether to
expand services subject to those
requirements to include habilitation
services from the proposed personal
care, home health aide, and homemaker
services. In this final rule, we are adding
habilitation services to the reporting
requirements for direct care worker
compensation data under § 441.311(e)
and access to care metrics under
§ 441.311(d)(2), and therefore are adding
habilitation services to the interested
parties’ advisory group’s purview (and,
as previously discussed, to the payment
rate disclosure requirements). This
addition will create consistency
between HCBS-related provisions of this
final rule. It will also simplify the
process for States to provide the
relevant materials to members of the
interested parties advisory group, and
avoid any confusion on the scope of
review. We also want to note the point
made in earlier provisions of this final
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
40750
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
rule, that habilitation services can mean
residential habilitation, day habilitation,
or home-based habilitation services. All
three types are included within the
‘‘habilitation services’’ we are adding to
this provision.
In § 447.203(b)(6), we proposed that
the State agency would be required to
establish an advisory group for
interested parties to advise and consult
on provider rates with respect to service
categories under the Medicaid State
plan, section 1915(c) waiver and
demonstration programs, as applicable,
where payments are made to the direct
care workers specified in
§ 441.311(e)(1)(ii) for the self-directed or
agency-directed services found at
§ 440.180(b)(2) through (4). In this final
rule, as noted, we are adding
habilitation services as found at
§ 440.180(b)(6). The interested parties
advisory group would be required to
include, at a minimum, direct care
workers, beneficiaries and their
authorized representatives, and other
interested parties. We explained that
‘‘authorized representatives’’ refers to
individuals authorized to act on the
behalf of the beneficiary, and other
interested parties may include
beneficiary family members and
advocacy organizations. To the extent a
State’s MAC established under proposed
§ 431.12, if finalized, meets these
requirements of this regulation, we
proposed that the State could use that
committee for this purpose. However,
we noted the roles of the MAC under
proposed § 431.12 and the interested
parties advisory group under proposed
§ 447.203(b)(6) would be distinct, and
the existence or absence of one
committee or group (for example, if one
of these proposals is not finalized)
would not affect the requirements with
respect to the other as established in a
final rule.
We further proposed in
§ 447.203(b)(6)(iii) that the interested
parties advisory group would advise
and consult with the Medicaid agency
on current and proposed payment rates,
HCBS payment adequacy data as
required at § 441.311(e), and access to
care metrics described in
§ 441.311(d)(2), associated with services
found at § 440.180(b)(2) through (4), to
ensure the relevant Medicaid payment
rates are sufficient to ensure access to
homemaker services, home health aide
services, and personal care services for
Medicaid beneficiaries at least as great
as available to the general population in
the geographic area and to ensure an
adequate number of qualified direct care
workers to provide self-directed
personal assistance services. We want to
clarify that the group would not be
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
required to advise and consult on the
HCBS payment adequacy data as
required under § 441.311(e), and access
to care metrics under § 441.311(d)(2),
until such a time as those data are
available under the newly established
requirements. We also want to note
again here that we are expanding the
service categories to include habilitation
services as found at § 440.180(b)(6).
In § 447.203(b)(6)(iv), we proposed
that the interested parties’ advisory
group would meet at least every 2 years
and make recommendations to the
Medicaid agency on the sufficiency of
State plan, 1915(c) waiver, and
demonstration direct care worker
payment rates, as applicable. The State
agency would be required to ensure the
group has access to current and
proposed payment rates, HCBS provider
payment adequacy minimum
performance and reporting standards as
described in § 441.311(e), and
applicable access to care metrics for
HCBS as described in § 441.311(d)(2) to
produce these recommendations. These
materials would be required to be made
be available with sufficient time for the
advisory group to consider them,
formulate recommendations, and
transmit those recommendations to the
State. If the State has asked the group to
consider a proposed rate change, the
State would need to provide the group
with sufficient time to review and
produce a recommendation within the
State’s intended rate adjustment
schedule. We noted that this would be
necessary because the group’s
recommendation would be considered
part of the interested parties input
described in proposed §§ 447.203(c)(4)
and 447.204(b)(3), which States would
be required to consider and analyze.
The interested parties advisory group
would make recommendations to the
Medicaid agency on the sufficiency of
the established and proposed State plan,
section 1915(c) waiver and
demonstration payment rates, as
applicable. In other words, the group
would provide information to the State
regarding whether, based on the group’s
knowledge and experience, current
payment rates are sufficient to enlist a
sufficiently large work force to ensure
beneficiary access to services, and
whether a proposed rate change would
be consistent with a sufficiently large
work force or would disincentivize
participation in the work force in a
manner that might compromise
beneficiary access. We clarify here, as
well that the State would not be
required to make available the HCBS
provider payment adequacy minimum
performance and reporting standards
PO 00000
Frm 00210
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
under § 441.311(e), and applicable
access to care metrics for HCBS under
§ 441.311(d)(2), until such a time as
those data are available per the
applicable applicability dates of those
respective provisions in this final rule.
We proposed to require States to
convene this interested parties’ advisory
group every 2 years, at a minimum, to
advise and consult on current and
suggested payment rates and the
sufficiency of these rates to ensure
access to HCBS for beneficiaries
consistent with section 1902(a)(30)(A) of
the Act. This timing aligns with the
comparative payment rate analysis and
payment rate disclosure publication
requirements proposed in
§ 447.203(b)(4), although we noted that
this would be a minimum requirement
and a State may find that more frequent
meetings would be necessary or helpful
for the advisory group to provide
meaningful and actionable feedback. We
further proposed that the process by
which the State selects its advisory
group members and convenes meetings
would be required to be made publicly
available, but other matters, such as the
tenure of members, would be left to the
State’s discretion. We want to note that
the 2-year cadence could require the
group to convene its first meeting and
produce a recommendation before the
HCBS payment adequacy data as
required under § 441.311(e), and access
to care metrics under § 441.311(d)(2),
will be available. We do not expect the
State to furnish information to the group
that is not yet available or for the group
to comment on those topics for which
the State has not yet provided data. We
nevertheless are maintaining the 2-year
cadence that would require a
recommendation 2 years from the
effective date of this final rule, as we
believe the benefits to the State and
group in convening that initial time,
even with a limited availability of data
for the first meeting, will be beneficial
for getting the group to be operational.
States have the flexibility to convene the
group within a shorter timeframe to
adjust the future cadence to align with
other publication schedules, if desired.
Finally, in § 447.203(b)(6)(v), we
proposed that the Medicaid agency
would be required to publish the
recommendations of the interested
parties’ advisory group consistent with
the publication requirements described
in paragraph (b)(1) of this section for
payment rate transparency data, within
1 month of when the group provides the
recommendation to the agency. We
intend that States would consider, but
not be required to adopt, the
recommendations of the advisory group.
Under this proposal, the work of the
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
advisory group would be regarded as an
element of the State’s overall rate-setting
process. Additionally, the feedback of
this advisory group would not be
required for rate changes. That is to say,
should a State need or want to adjust
rates and it is not feasible to obtain a
recommendation from the advisory
group in a particular instance, the State
would still be permitted to submit its
rate change SPA to CMS. However, to
the extent the group comments on
proposed rate changes, its feedback
would be considered part of the
interested parties input described in
proposed §§ 447.203(c)(4) and
447.204(b)(3), which States would be
required to consider and analyze, and
submit such analysis to us, in
connection with any SPA submission
that proposes to reduce or restructure
Medicaid service payment rates. In
addition, by way of clarification, we
noted our intent that the advisory group
would be permitted to suggest alternate
rates besides those proposed by the
State for consideration.
We solicited comments on the
proposed interested parties’ advisory
group and about whether other
categories of services should be
included in the requirement for States to
consult with the interested parties
advisory group. We received public
comments on these proposals. The
following is a summary of the comments
we received and our responses.
Comment: We received many
comments expressing general support
for the establishment of the interested
parties advisory group. Commenters
agreed that individuals with lived
experience would provide invaluable
insight into appropriate rates for direct
care services, including both
beneficiaries and direct care workers,
which the proposed group would
include. Commenters also pointed to a
number of anticipated benefits, such as
helping to increase pay for these
valuable workers, giving beneficiaries a
voice on decisions that impact them,
providing additional insights into a
unique area of the healthcare market,
identifying what can attract workers,
and addressing an area of critical
concern for staffing, which is necessary
for the stability of access to HCBS.
Multiple commenters stated it was
important to have payment rate
decisions focus on community needs
rather than be determined solely by a
State’s budget, and thus better meeting
the needs of beneficiaries. One
commenter stated this group would be
valuable for staying abreast of the dayto-day provision of services as it relates
to current pay rates, while another
noted how it is important to focus on
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
rates in a service area for which there is
no Medicare comparison. Another
stated this proposal should be used as
the template for group feedback and
reporting for all provider payment
systems in a State.
Some commenters also chose to
specifically highlight aspects of the
proposals for this group they agreed
with. These include having a group to
advise on wages, the cadence of group
meetings, the publication requirements,
the composition of the group members,
and allowing States to set the tenure for
members. One commenter also pointed
out how this group will complement
payment adequacy requirements by
identifying rates that may meet a set
threshold for direct compensation but
remains low generally.
Response: We thank commenters for
taking the time to express support for
the provision and for highlighting many
of the areas where we expect this group
will add value. We are finalizing the
provisions related to the interested
parties’ advisory group as proposed,
with the addition of habilitation
services. The shortage of direct care
workers demands special attention, and
we hope that finalizing these
requirements will be one of several
steps contained in this final rule toward
addressing those concerns.
Comment: A very large proportion of
commenters on these provisions had
recommendations for changes or
enhancements to the interested parties
advisory group. A number of those
comments related to the composition of
the group, with commenters requesting
certain proportions for types of
members, or specific member positions
be added generally or defined as an
interested party. Specifically, various
commenters recommended a required
composition of 25 percent beneficiary
representation, 25 percent direct care
workers, and 25 percent provider
employers, such as representatives from
an agency providing HCBS and
employing direct care workers. Some
commenters expressed similar
sentiments without precise numbers,
instead recommending representation
by various individuals: agency-based
model providers; consumer-directed
model providers; union representatives;
patient advocates; program
administrators; politicians; or members
of the general public. Some commenters
recommended that a majority of
members be beneficiaries, unpaid
beneficiary caregivers, and advocacy
organizations. These commenters had
concerns about the possibility that
certain key voices could be silenced if
not sufficiently represented within the
overall composition of the group.
PO 00000
Frm 00211
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40751
A number of commenters stated that
the regulations should require other
specific member types without defining
in what proportion. There were multiple
requests to require members from
unions, worker advocacy organizations,
consumer advocates, and
representatives from provider agencies
and provider State associations. These
commenters wanted to ensure certain
technical expertise would be available
amongst the group members. For
example, a qualified consumer advocate
may have knowledge of technical
program aspects that other members
may not.
One commenter requested nurses be
included in the group, and another
requested physician anesthesiologists,
noting that they are subject to a
uniquely structured payment system.
Several commenters stated the group
should bar employees of the State
agency to ensure independence in
developing the recommendations.
Finally, a few commenters requested
members who were already among those
included in the proposed regulation.
Specifically, one commenter stated the
group should include paid direct service
workers, while another stated HCBS
providers should be included.
Response: As stated, we are finalizing
the interested party advisory group
requirement as proposed apart from the
addition of habilitation services, and
that includes the provisions defining the
membership of the group without
specifying particular proportions of
required membership. We agree
generally that additional types of
members such as those suggested by
commenters could bring unique
perspectives or expertise to the group.
Nevertheless, we are finalizing as
proposed the membership requirements,
because we intentionally proposed a
great deal of flexibility for States in
recognition of the unique circumstances
of State Medicaid programs. We also
want to ensure States can meaningfully
implement the requirements for this
group, and every additional member or
type of member presents additional
considerations for recruitment needed
to set up the group, as well as logistical
considerations for coordinating
meetings. We believe a limited but
inclusive list, with considerable State
flexibility in determining the
composition of the group, will ensure
that interested parties’ voices are heard
and not silenced, but as with any new
policy, we will monitor implementation
to identify if adjustments may be
needed through future rulemaking.
As the proposed rule contained many
changes to existing requirements and
processes, we were mindful at every
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
40752
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
step of the burden this would place on
States, and balanced potential State
burden against the proposal’s potential
to help ensure and improve access.
After careful consideration, we
determined it was more important to
implement a basic framework for the
interested party advisory group and
leave many details of its precise
composition and operation to the States.
Our access work is ongoing, and we will
consider the recommendations provided
on the proposed rule for any additional
changes we may propose through future
rulemaking.
We would encourage States, when
recruiting members, to consider the
composition of members that would
best satisfy the goals of this group and
identify where there is a need for
technical expertise, sufficient
representation, etc., and work to
establish the group in a manner that
promotes its efficient functioning and
meaningful contribution to Medicaid
policies in the State. The inclusion of
‘‘other interested parties’’ affords States
the flexibility to do so. We believe the
lived experiences of the members of this
group when coupled with the
requirements for States to provide
relevant documents and reports for the
group’s consideration, will be adequate
to provide the type of perspective on
rates we are seeking through this group.
Finally, we want to clarify which
members States are required to include
as part of the interested parties advisory
group. States are required to include
direct care workers, beneficiaries,
beneficiaries’ authorized
representatives, and other interested
parties impacted by the rates in
question, as determined by the State,
which may include beneficiary family
members (other than those who may be
authorized representatives for
beneficiaries) and advocacy
organizations. Representation from each
type of individual specified on this list
is required. As such, the group could
not be solely beneficiaries, or solely
direct care workers, or solely other
individuals meeting neither of those
criteria but whom a State would deem
an interested party.
Comment: Another area where many
commenters made suggestions was with
respect to the scope of the group’s work
and the requirements related to
consideration of the group’s
recommendations. Many commenters
recommended that CMS require States
to consult with the group for any rate or
payment methodology changes,
highlighting the value of the group’s
input, and to require a written, public
response to the recommendation of the
group, with evidence and rationale,
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
where the final rates differ from what
the group recommended. One
commenter also requested a public
comment process for the group’s
recommendations. Some emphasized
the importance of transparency of this
process, and one suggested
recommendations and responses be
made public for a minimum of 30 days
prior to the effective date of a new rate.
Several commenters, noting the
proposal made the group advisory in
nature, recommended that States be
required to justify when they choose to
go against the recommendation of the
group, with some of those commenters
offering that at a minimum the State
must engage again with the group when
intending to finalize rates that differ
from the group’s recommendation,
including meaningful negotiations with
the providers represented on the group,
perhaps with steps defined by CMS to
reach consensus. One commenter
wanted the public process regulations at
§ 447.204(a)(2) updated to explicitly
include obtaining and considering the
interested parties advisory group’s
input. The importance of the group’s
recommendation came up in multiple
comments, with one stating it is not
enough merely to require the State to
receive, and provide a written response
to, the advisory groups’ input, but that
we should ensure the group has
authority to shape policy.
Some commenters had detailed
recommendations for additional
requirements related to the group’s
output. One suggested a structured and
routine process for regular review and
approval of new rates or changes, with
meaningful input from beneficiaries.
The commenter requested the structured
process to be coupled with a
requirement for States to explain the
roles and responsibilities of a rate
review advisory body. Another wanted
CMS to require States to clearly
delineate how a proposed rate change
has factored in inflation and any
unfunded mandates on providers. One
commenter stated that the group’s
recommendations should go to the State
Medicaid director, as well as to the
governor, the State legislature, and HHS.
Like other commenters, this commenter
wanted the State to communicate
acceptance or denial of
recommendations to the group, with
explanations of the State’s decisions in
writing, but also stressed that CMS must
monitor the State advisory committees
as part of accountability and
transparency and provide feedback to
the State.
Some comments also contained other,
related recommendations for the group’s
purview. Two commenters
PO 00000
Frm 00212
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
recommended the group be allowed to
advise and comment on a broad range
of HCBS provider rates, with one
suggesting CMS consider leveraging the
group for feedback on HCBS access
issues more broadly. That commenter
stressed the importance to the Medicaid
program to evaluate rates and access for
HCBS, especially considering the
unique market power of Medicaid for
HCBS infrastructure. A commenter
requested the group’s rate review
consider the experience of individuals
dually eligible for Medicare and
Medicaid and factors related to
Medicare coverage. One commenter
stated the group should advocate for
creating a sustainable wage program to
attract and retain staff to benefit both
recipients and providers of the specified
services. Another commenter
recommended that the group should
review and comment on provider
payment rates in managed care delivery
systems. One commenter, in response
for our request for comment on the
services under review, stated the group
should focus on direct care work across
all waiver categories. Finally, a couple
commenters sought clarity on how
States must acknowledge or respond to
the group’s recommendations.
Response: We are finalizing as
proposed the advisory nature of the
interested parties advisory group. We
agree that the group’s input will be
valuable in setting rates, assessing
payment adequacy and applicable
access to care metrics, and may provide
a perspective on rates and access that
could be lacking in existing processes.
As one commenter noted, Medicaid has
an important and large role in the
market for HCBS. However, we believe
the policies as we are finalizing them
strike the right balance of accountability
and flexibility for a wholly new rate
advisory group process. The State will
be required to publish the
recommendations of the interested
parties advisory group for transparency,
under § 447.203(b)(6)(v). In addition,
when the group has a recommendation
on a proposed rate change, the State will
be required to consider and respond to
that recommendation as it would be
deemed part of the input of interested
parties described in §§ 447.203(c)(4) and
447.204(b)(3). In light of the public
notice and public input requirements
already in place when a State proposes
a rate change, and treatment of the
recommendation as public input to
which a State is required to consider
and address under these requirements,
we are not establishing any specific,
new public notice or comment process
requirements for the recommendations
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
of the interested parties advisory group.
The group could recommend a
sustainable wage program, but we are
not adding a requirement to develop
one. We intend for the group to have
broad discretion, within their remit, to
make recommendations to the State,
which could thereby result in such
recommendations. We encourage the
group to provide feedback to assist the
State in implementing a sustainable
HCBS program.
By keeping the group’s
recommendations recommendation
advisory only (that is, non-binding on
the State), we intend for the State to give
serious consideration to the group’s
recommendations while avoiding the
imposition of policy strictures on the
State that could require sudden shifts in
budget priorities or create conflicts, for
example, with the State legislature.
Fundamentally, the single State
Medicaid agency must maintain
ultimate responsibility to operate the
State’s Medicaid program. Also, because
the group is advisory only, we are not
including requirements for the State to
negotiate with providers or the group on
rate changes, or justify when a rate
change is made that is not consistent
with the recommendation of the group.
However, we remind States that the
group’s recommendation, to the extent it
has commented on rates included in a
SPA, would be considered part of the
public feedback to which the State must
respond, under §§ 447.203(c)(4) and
447.204.
As part of the requirement to establish
the interested parties’ advisory group in
this final rule, States will be responsible
for giving appropriate guidance to the
group so that it understands its role and
responsibilities in producing
recommendations. We defer to States on
how to best communicate this
information to the group. We also want
to emphasize for States that the
information they provide the group can
be expected to shape the nature of the
group’s recommendations. As such,
although we are not requiring the State
to explain if and how inflation has
factored in to a proposed rate, for
example, or provide information to the
group on costs imposed on providers
beyond what is required under the
payment adequacy metrics required
under 441.311(e), it would benefit a
State to provide as much context as
possible to the group so that it can
produce the strongest, best-informed,
most useful recommendations. Because
the group’s recommendations must be
published publicly, interested parties
such as State legislators and HHS will
be able to see and review any
recommendations.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
In addition, with the meeting cadence
we are finalizing (at least every 2 years),
and with recent examples of when a rate
change may be needed to be enacted
quickly (for example, to address urgent
programmatic needs in connection with
the COVID–19 pandemic and public
health emergency), it is not feasible to
require consultation with the group for
every possible rate change. We also note
that the mandate of the group and the
minimum required meeting cadence
should not be viewed as limitations, and
States have flexibility to rely on this
group in ways that will best help to
enhance HCBS or Medicaid more
broadly. States may have the group
review broader HCBS issues or rates if
it so chooses; we merely focused the
required scope on the most frequently
used HCBS. They can also have the
group advise on provider payment rates
in managed care delivery systems even
though that was not our prioritized
focus in this new requirement, under
the flexibility States have to direct the
work of the group. We also note that
although we are not requiring dually
eligible beneficiaries specifically in the
group to maximize the available pool for
recruiting beneficiary members of the
group, the majority of HCBS recipients
are dually eligible. Finally, we
appreciate the many recommendations
and suggestions that we will consider if
and when we examine the regulations
for this group for potential changes
through future rulemaking as part of our
ongoing access work.
Comment: Several commenters had
recommendations for the nature of
materials, data, explanations, and
information the group should have
access to, to ensure the group’s input
could be fully informed by data, both
public and internal to the agency, as to
how any rates were calculated. These
comments included advice on what
materials the group should have access
to or suggestions of sources the group
should be required to review and
consider. Specifically, a couple of
commenters wanted the group to be
required to consult any analyses
performed pursuant to the requirements
we are finalizing in § 447.203(c), since
those analyses would include valuable
data on the number of home care claims,
the number of enrollees receiving home
care services, and the number of
providers furnishing such services.
Another commenter recommended the
group to be required to consult wage
data, such as data from the Bureau of
Labor Statistics or from unions, to use
as a basis of rate recommendations.
Another commenter encouraged CMS to
partner with the Department of Labor to
PO 00000
Frm 00213
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40753
provide States with data on competitive
wages for other occupations with
similar low entry level requirements, to
avoid putting burden on States while
providing the advisory group with Statelevel economic data to assess the
competitiveness of direct care worker
wages.
One commenter provided a detailed
recommendation for data to provide the
group, including explanations and
supporting information on how any
proposed rates were calculated, in
addition to the metrics required under
the payment adequacy and reporting
requirements provisions of this final
rule. Specifically, the commenter stated
this information should include clear,
consistent definitions of the cost
elements that are considered in
establishing a rate, noting that if the
definitions of cost components such as
employee travel or training are not clear
and the bases for these calculations are
not shared with sufficient granularity,
then the advisory group will not be able
to meaningfully comment. Similarly, a
commenter urged CMS to ensure that
the interested parties advisory group
have access to both public-facing reports
that States are required to produce and
publish described in payment
transparency provisions of this rule, and
to the underlying data that States use to
prepare these reports, which may allow
the interested parties advisory group to
identify trends or access issues that are
not readily apparent in the public
reports. One commenter recommended
that States be required, through a phasein, to both collect and provide to the
group data on turnover and vacancy
rates for direct care workers. The
commenter explained that tools
currently used by States, such as the
National Core Indicators-Intellectual
and Developmental Disabilities Staff
Stability Survey, or the National Core
Indicators-Aging and Physical
Disabilities tool currently being piloted,
only provide data for agency-directed
workers, and as such, more information
was needed about independent
providers in self-directed programs. The
commenter noted these are important
data elements to assess the adequacy of
wages and compensation.
Finally, a few commenters stated that
States should make compensation,
including information on median wages
and historic trends in compensation,
available to all members of the public,
for transparency and to assist current or
future members of the group itself.
Response: We are finalizing as
proposed, apart from the addition of
habilitation services, the regulation
requiring that the group will advise and
consult on current and proposed
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
40754
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
payment rates, HCBS provider payment
adequacy reporting information under
§ 441.311(e),), and applicable access to
care metrics under § 441.311(d)(2),
associated with services found at
§ 440.180(b)(2) through (4) and (6). The
responsibility for the group to advise
and consult on these matters necessarily
implies that the State must ensure that
the group is provided access to current
and proposed rate information, HCBS
provider payment adequacy data, and
applicable access to care metrics. We
believe that these requirements, coupled
with requirements we are finalizing for
payment rate disclosures for HCBS at
§ 447.203(b)(2) through (3), will provide
the group with sufficient data to
develop and support their
recommendations, and we also believe
those additional finalized provisions
will provide reassurance to commenters
interested in more publicly available
data. We further note that certain data,
such as certain BLS wage data, are
already publicly available and can be
used by the group. We remind States
that they are not limited to the
requirements we are finalizing and are
free to consider and provide as much
data that the State considers relevant
and reasonably available to support the
group in its work.
We did not propose and are not
finalizing any data collection
requirements specifically with respect
to the interested parties’ advisory group
to inform their consideration of
Medicaid payment rates for certain
HCBS, although we understand that
currently available tools and data may
have some gaps. In view of the
otherwise existing information sources
just discussed, we do not believe the
value of requiring States to identify or
develop and make available additional
data sources, such as reporting on
independent providers in self-directed
programs, would outweigh the added
burden of a new data collection. We are
similarly not taking on any additional
data collection to support these efforts,
again noting that we think the policies
in this final rule will be sufficient, but
as with any new or existing policy we
will work with our State partners to
assist them in establishing these groups
and identifying where we can support
State efforts that may extend beyond the
requirements in this final rule.
Comment: We received a number of
comments around various
administrative aspects of
§ 447.203(b)(6), from member
recruitment to the meeting cadence.
Several commenters stated that the State
should publicly recruit members and
requested States to publicly disclose the
process of how those members are
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
recruited and the process to convene
meetings. A few commenters
recommended the members have termlimits, coupled with the protection to
only be removed for cause during a
term, in order to protect the individuals
and the group from reprisal or
disbandment.
Comments about the meeting cadence
varied. A few recommended the group
should meet for every rate change
proposed by the State, one agreed with
a biannual cadence, while another
suggested to increase the cadence to
annually in addition to meeting for
every rate change. Another commenter
supported annual meetings and noted
that issues impacting the lives of
beneficiaries and workers that should be
addressed by rates can happen at a more
frequent rate than biannual State budget
cycles. One commenter stated the
meeting cadence should be every 6
months.
A few commenters suggested a
number of additional recommendations
such as the regulation should include a
requirement of recordkeeping, and the
regulation should focus on the
distinction between independent and
agency-employed workers. Finally, one
commenter suggested a name change for
the group, ‘‘direct care workforce
payment advisory committee,’’ to clarify
the role and importance of the group.
Response: We appreciate the feedback
about the specifics of the administration
of the interested parties advisory group.
We are finalizing these aspects as
proposed. The meeting cadence, as
noted by the commenter, is intended to
align with usual State budgetary cycles.
While other factors may impact the
needs of beneficiaries, providers and
direct care workers, the State budget
creates the framework in which
decisions and recommendations can be
made, and we believe aligning with that
cycle appropriately balances the value
gained from the interested parties
advisory group’s recommendations with
burden on States. Similarly, we are
finalizing the ability of States to
determine the tenure of members, as
States are best situated to assess their
beneficiaries’ and workers’ ability to
participate in an advisory group and for
what length of time. Term limits and
removal for cause will be at the State’s
discretion to ensure the effective
operation of the group. We note that the
regulation does specify that the process
by which the State selects interested
parties advisory group members and
convenes its meetings must be made
publicly available, which aligns with
recommendations from some
commenters.
PO 00000
Frm 00214
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
States have requirements to maintain
records of public input under
§ 447.203(c)(4)(iii), and as stated we
would regard the recommendation of
the group a form of public input to the
extent the group comments on proposed
rates.
With respect to individual and
agency-employed providers, the
payment rate disclosure requirements
under § 447.203(b)(3)(ii2)(iv) require
States to publish average hourly
Medicaid FFS fee schedule payment
rates for individual providers and
provider agencies separately to the
extent they differ, creating a new
method through which the State, CMS,
and the public can scrutinize any rate
difference between individual providers
and provider agencies. We are not
adding additional requirements for the
group to examine further distinctions
between individual and provider
agencies, but as the group will be
reviewing current and proposed rates,
they will have the opportunity to see
where such rates differ and make
recommendations accordingly.
Finally, we appreciate the suggestion
to change the name of the group, but we
want to remind that the purview of this
group is not solely payments for HCBS,
although that is the primary focus. The
work includes access metrics,
specifically HCBS payment adequacy
data as required at § 441.311(e), and
access to care metrics under
§ 441.311(d)(2). We understand the
name is rather generic, and we will
make every effort to ensure any
materials or communications are clear
about when an ‘‘interested parties
advisory group’’ is in reference to
§ 447.203(b)(6).
Comment: We received some
comments in opposition to an interested
parties advisory group. A primary,
recurring element of these comments
was related to the burden of establishing
this group relative to the value the
commenters thought the group would
add. One commenter stated this group
would be duplicative of other State
efforts, without adding value. Another
was concerned that the group would
establish a pattern for more, similar
groups to be created, resulting in
significant State burden. Another stated
the group would create undue
interference in a State’s ability to
manage its Medicaid program. One
commenter stated that limiting the
group’s purview to three services would
create disjointedness in discussions
about HCBS or broader rates in general.
One commenter stated that their
MCAC (or, following the effective date
of this final rule, their MAC), already
performs the same functions as the
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
proposed interested parties advisory
group. Another requested an exception
to the requirement for States that
already have a group established for
similar topics. Two commenters in
opposition to the requirement had
recommendations for adjustments. One
commenter stated that the group should
not include members who have a
conflict of interest because they stand to
receive a financial benefit from the
decisions of the group, or that the scope
of the group’s recommendations should
exclude payment rates if group members
have financial conflicts of interest.
Another commenter, who thought the
group was unworkable and likely would
not be productive, indicated it would be
more productive to require States to
establish a separate advisory group for
each rate setting activity they undertake
and to include both industry and
consumer (beneficiary) representatives.
Response: We understand that there
will be costs and work for States to set
up a new advisory group. We do not
take lightly the decision to finalize this
policy. However, the circumstance of
HCBS and the direct care workforce
shortage described earlier in this section
demand immediate action. We kept the
required scope of the group’s remit
narrow to allow States that need to
minimize the work of the group the
ability to focus most acutely on certain
services and certain topics around rates,
access, and payment adequacy.
However, we also wrote into these
regulations a great deal of flexibility for
States. We understand the burden our
requirements put on States, which is
why we take steps to create and
highlight flexibility for States to
minimize the burden of new
requirements and help ensure that
States are able to comply with new
requirements in a manner likely to
result in the greatest benefit given the
particular circumstances of the State
and its provider and beneficiary
communities. We make these
assessments with every rulemaking
proposal. The creation of this group
does not mean that we necessarily will
propose to require the formation of
additional similar, discrete groups in
the future; we are mindful that any such
proposal would be likely to involve
additional burden on States, and
analysis of that burden would inform
any future proposal.
If a State believes the group, in the
form which we are finalizing in this
final rule, will not add value, there is
room to expand and enhance the group
to a point where that State realizes value
to its program. The group’s purview
includes the requirement to examine
rates for three services, but States can
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
always have the group advise on more.
In addition, the group will not be in a
position to unduly influence the State’s
Medicaid program, as its role is only
advisory in nature and the single State
agency will maintain full responsibility
to administer the State’s Medicaid
program. We also want to remind States
what we included in the proposed rule,
that to the extent a State’s MAC
established under § 431.12 meets the
requirements of this regulation, the
State could utilize that committee for
this purpose, thereby eliminating
duplication between these entities.
Furthermore, while we are unaware of
specific examples, if a State has another,
extant group that meets the
requirements of § 447.203(b)(6), then we
expect the State could use that group for
this purpose as well, similar to what we
indicated for MACs. Finally, we do not
agree that having members in the group
with a financial interest, such as the
direct care workers whose wages may be
impacted, and advising on rates creates
a problematic conflict of interest.
Rather, in the case of direct care
workers, we believe their lived
experience will supply a valuable
perspective, and their input on rates
specifically could be useful to the State
agency that (although operating under a
fiduciary obligation to administer the
Medicaid program in the best interest of
beneficiaries under section 1902(a)(19)
of the Act) also has a fiscal interest in
a proposed rate change. This final rule
leaves States free to establish conflict of
interest policies applicable to the
members of the interested parties’
advisory group, which we expect States
will do in a manner that protects the
integrity of the group while not unduly
restricting input from individuals with
perspectives the final rule is intended to
ensure are heard.
Comment: Several commenters
responded to language included in the
proposed rule that, to the extent a
State’s MAC established under proposed
§ 431.12 also meets the requirements of
this advisory group regulation, the State
could utilize that committee for this
purpose. The majority of those
comments recommended keeping the
MAC separate. These commenters
explained that the work involved merits
two groups and any overlap of
membership between the groups would
be acceptable and potentially beneficial.
One of those commenters stated that the
work of the interested parties’ advisory
group was much more specialized than
that of the MAC. One suggested the
interested parties’ advisory group be a
subgroup of the MAC, similar to the
BAG. Finally, one commenter suggested
PO 00000
Frm 00215
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40755
that the MAC and interested parties’
advisory group meetings be kept
separate, or the MAC could have a
dedicated subgroup responsible for
HCBS, to ensure adequate attention to
the topic. There were a few commenters
who appreciated the flexibility to allow
for the MAC to serve this dual purpose
of meeting both the MAC requirements
and the interested parties’ advisory
group requirements, and one expected
some States may pursue this flexibility.
Response: When we were developing
the proposed rule, which included
proposals under § 431.12 to reconfigure
the MCAC as the MAC and BAG (now
BAC), we noted that the membership
and scope of the MAC could potentially
align with what we were proposing for
the interested parties’ advisory group.
While we agree that the work of each is
distinct and important, deserving of
dedicated time and focus, we also seek
to avoid duplication where possible. If
a MAC has membership that includes
direct care workers, beneficiaries,
beneficiaries’ authorized
representatives, and other interested
parties impacted by the services and
rates of focus in the interested parties’
advisory group, then we believe it
would be unnecessarily duplicative to
require a separate group and deny the
State the ability to include the remit of
the interested parties’ advisory group in
the work of the MAC under the
flexibility given to States and their
MACs under § 431.12(g)(8), which we
are finalizing to include in the MAC’s
scope ‘‘[o]ther issues that impact the
provision or outcomes of health and
medical care services in the Medicaid
program as determined by the MAC,
BAC, or State.’’ States potentially also
could establish the interested parties’
advisory group as a subgroup of the
MAC, similar to the BAC, consistent
with the requirements of this final rule.
States will have the discretion to
determine if the groups and/or their
meetings need to be kept distinct in
order best to fulfil the obligations of
each.
However, we caution States that this
flexibility is not creating any type of
exception. The cadence of required
meetings, focus, and work products of
the interested parties advisory group are
distinct, and States wishing to utilize
their MAC will need to take adequate
steps to ensure the MAC is meeting the
regulatory requirements for both
entities. Some States may find keeping
the interested parties group distinct will
allow for easier recruitment, retention,
and focus on the relevant subject matter.
We also want to highlight the concerns
expressed by commenters requesting the
groups be kept distinct and emphasizing
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
40756
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
the specialized work of this interested
parties advisory group. Although we did
not elect to add requirements to keep
the groups or meetings distinct, States
should do so if combining the groups or
their meetings would hinder the work of
either the MAC or interested parties
advisory group.
Comment: A few commenters
requested additional clarity about what
support would be available for States to
establish the advisory group. A couple
of commenters requested CMS confirm
that States can claim FFP for activities
related to establishing and running this
group, similar to the confirmation
provided in the MAC/BAG provisions
explicitly saying FFP would be
available.333 Others requested CMS
make States aware of any available
funding streams or opportunities for
enhanced match.
Response: In the proposed rule, we
specified that ‘‘FFP would be available
for expenditures that might be necessary
to implement the activities States would
need to undertake to comply with the
provisions of the proposed rule, if
finalized.’’ 334 As we are finalizing the
requirements related to this advisory
group, FFP will be available for States
claiming qualifying expenditures for
related activities. We note that
generally, the applicable matching rate
will be the general 50 percent
administrative matching rate, but to the
extent a State incurs expenditures it
believes qualify for a higher match rate,
higher statutory matching rates
potentially could be available to the
extent the expenditures meet applicable
Federal requirements. There is not a
separate, unique funding source for this
provision of the final rule.
After consideration of public
comments, we are finalizing all
provisions under § 447.203(b)(6) with
the following changes:
• Added a regulatory reference for
habilitation services as a category of
service in § 447.203(b)(6)(i). The
finalized language now states ‘‘. . . for
the self-directed or agency-directed
services found at § 440.180(b)(2)
through (4) and (6).’’ (new language
identified in bold).
• Added a regulatory reference for
habilitation services and ‘‘habilitation’’
as a category of service in
§ 447.203(b)(6)(iii). The finalized
language now states ‘‘. . . associated
with services found at § 440.180(b)(2)
through (4) and (6), to ensure the
relevant Medicaid payment rates are
sufficient to ensure access to personal
care, home health aide, homemaker, and
333 88
FR 27960 at 27967.
334 88 FR 27960 at 27962.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
habilitation services’’ (new language
identified in bold).
• Added language to clarify the ‘‘. . .
publication requirements described in
paragraph (b)(1) through (b)(1)(ii) of this
section . . .’’ (new language identified
in bold).
• Minor technical changes to
wording.
3. State Analysis Procedures for Rate
Reduction or Restructuring
(§ 447.203(c))
As stated previously, the Supreme
Court’s Armstrong decision underscored
the importance of CMS’ administrative
review of Medicaid payment rates to
ensure compliance with section
1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act. CMS’
oversight role is particularly important
when States propose to reduce provider
payment rates or restructure provider
payments, since provider payment rates
can affect provider participation in
Medicaid, and therefore, beneficiary
access to care. In § 447.203(c), we
proposed a process for State access
analyses that would be required
whenever a State submits a SPA
proposing to reduce provider payment
rates or restructure provider payments.
As noted previously, the 2015 final
rule with comment period required that,
for any SPA proposing to reduce
provider payment rates or restructure
provider payments in circumstances
when the changes could result in
diminished access, States must submit a
detailed analysis of access to care under
previous §§ 447.203(b)(1) and (b)(6) and
447.204(b)(1). This analysis includes,
under previous § 447.203(b)(1), the
extent to which beneficiary needs are
fully met; the availability of care
through enrolled providers to
beneficiaries in each geographic area, by
provider type and site of service;
changes in beneficiary utilization of
covered services in each geographic
area; the characteristics of the
beneficiary population (including
considerations for care, service and
payment variations for pediatric and
adult populations and for individuals
with disabilities); and actual or
estimated levels of provider payment
available from other payers, including
other public and private payers, by
provider type and site of service.
Previously, this information was
required for any SPA that proposes to
reduce provider payment rates or
restructure provider payments in
circumstances when the changes could
result in diminished access, regardless
of the provider payment rates or levels
of access to care before the proposed
reduction or restructuring.
PO 00000
Frm 00216
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
Following the implementation of the
2015 final rule with comment period, as
we worked with States to implement the
previous AMRP requirements, many
States expressed concerns that the
requirements that accompany proposed
rate reductions or restructurings are
overly burdensome. Specifically, States
pointed to instances where proposed
reductions or restructurings are
nominal, or where rate changes are
made via the application of a previously
approved rate methodology, such as
when the State’s approved rate
methodology ties Medicaid payment
rates to a Medicare fee schedule and the
Medicare payment rate is reduced. We
acknowledged these concerns through
previous proposed rulemaking. In the
2018 proposed rule, we agreed that our
experience implementing the previous
AMRP process from the 2015 final rule
with comment period raised questions
about the benefit of the access analysis
when proposed rate changes include
nominal rate reductions or
restructurings that are unlikely to result
in diminished access to care.335
We did not finalize the 2018 proposed
rule; instead, in response to feedback,
we proposed a rescission of the previous
AMRP process in the 2019 proposed
rule.336 In that proposed rule, we
indicated that future guidance would be
forthcoming to provide information on
the required data and analysis that
States might submit with rate reduction
or restructuring SPAs in place of the
previous AMRP process to support
compliance with section 1902(a)(30)(A)
of the Act.337 We did not finalize the
rescission proposed in the 2019
proposed rule. Although we were
concerned that the previous AMRP
process was overly burdensome for
States and CMS in relation to the benefit
obtained in helping ensure compliance
with the access requirement in section
1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act, our 2018 and
2019 proposed rules did not adequately
consider our need for information and
analysis from States seeking to reduce
provider payment rates or restructure
provider payments to enable us to
determine that the statutory access
requirement is met when making SPA
approval decisions.
To improve the efficiency of our
administrative procedures and better
inform our SPA approval decisions, we
proposed to establish standard
information that States would be
required to submit with any proposed
rate reductions or proposed payment
restructurings in circumstances when
335 83
FR 12696 at 12697.
FR 3372.2.
337 Id at 33723.
336 84
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
the changes could result in diminished
access, including a streamlined set of
data when the reductions or
restructurings are nominal, the State
rates are above a certain percentage of
Medicare payment rates, and there are
no evident access concerns raised
through public processes; and an
additional set of data elements that
would be required when States propose
FFS provider payment rate reductions
or restructurings in circumstances when
the changes could result in diminished
access and these criteria are not met. For
both sets of required or potentially
required elements, we proposed to
standardize the data and information
States would be required to submit with
rate reduction or restructuring SPAs.
Although the previous AMRP process
has helped to improve our
administrative reviews and helped us
make informed SPA approval
determinations, we explained that the
proposed procedures would provide us
with similar information in a manner
that reduces State burden. Additionally,
the proposed procedures would provide
States increased flexibility to make
program changes with submission of
streamlined supporting data to us when
current Medicaid rates and proposed
changes fall within specified criteria
that create a reasonable presumption
that proposed reductions or
restructuring would not reduce
beneficiary access to care in a manner
inconsistent with section 1902(a)(30)(A)
of the Act.
This final rule seeks to achieve a more
appropriate balance between reducing
unnecessary burden for States and CMS
and ensuring that we have the
information necessary to make
appropriate determinations for whether
a rate reduction or restructuring SPA
might result in beneficiary access to
covered services failing to meet the
standard in section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the
Act. In § 447.203(c), we proposed to
establish analyses that States would be
required to perform, document, and
submit concurrently with the
submission of rate reduction and rate
restructuring SPAs, with additional
analyses required in certain
circumstances due to potentially
increased access to care concerns.
We proposed a two-tiered approach
for determining the level of access
analysis States would be required to
conduct when proposing provider
payment rate reductions or payment
restructurings. The first tier of this
approach, proposed at § 447.203(c)(1),
sets out three criteria for States to meet
when proposing payment rate
reductions or payment restructurings in
circumstances when the changes could
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
result in diminished access that, if met,
would not require a more detailed
analysis to establish that the proposal
meets the access requirement in section
1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act. The State
agency would be required to provide
written assurance and relevant
supporting documentation that the three
criteria specified in those paragraphs are
met, as well as a description of the
State’s procedures for monitoring
continued compliance with section
1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act. As explained
in more detail later in this section, these
criteria proposed in § 447.203(c)(1)
represent thresholds we believe would
be strong indicators that Medicaid
payment rates would continue to be
sufficient following the change to enlist
enough providers so that care and
services are available under the plan at
least to the extent that such care and
services are available to the general
population in the geographic area.
We noted that, in the course of our
review of a payment SPA that meets
these criteria, as with any SPA review,
we may need to request additional
information to ensure that all Federal
SPA requirements are met. We also note
that meeting the three criteria described
in proposed § 447.203(c)(1) does not
guarantee that the SPA would be
approved, if other applicable Federal
requirements are not met. Furthermore,
if any criterion in the first tier is not
met, we proposed a second tier in
§ 447.203(c)(2), which would require the
State to conduct a more extensive access
analysis in addition to providing the
results of the analysis in the first tier. A
detailed discussion of the second tier
follows the details of the first tier in this
section.
Under proposed § 447.203(c)(1)(i), the
State would be required to provide a
supported assurance that Medicaid
payment rates in the aggregate
(including base and supplemental
payments) following the proposed
reduction or restructuring for each
benefit category affected by the
proposed reduction or restructuring
would be at or above 80 percent of the
most recently published Medicare
payment rates for the same or a
comparable set of Medicare-covered
services. While we acknowledge that 80
percent of Medicare rates may not
provide absolute assurance that
providers will participate in the
Medicaid program, we proposed to use
80 percent as a threshold to help
determine the level of analysis and
information a State must provide to
CMS to support consistency with
section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act.
Establishing this threshold will allow
CMS to focus its resources on reviewing
PO 00000
Frm 00217
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40757
payment proposals that are at highest
risk for access to care concerns. Notably,
there are other provisions of the
proposal that would provide
opportunities for the public to raise
access to care concerns to State agencies
and to CMS should the 80 percent prove
insufficient to provide for adequate
access to care for certain care and
services.
In proposed § 447.203(c)(1)(i), we
explained that we mean for ‘‘benefit
category’’ to refer to all individual
services under a category of services
described in section 1905(a) of the Act
for which the State is proposing a
payment rate reduction or restructuring.
Comparing the payment rates in the
aggregate would involve first performing
a comparison of the Medicaid to the
Medicare payment rate on a code-bycode basis, meaning CPT, CDT, or
HCPCS as applicable, to derive a ratio
for individual constituent services, and
then the ratios for all codes within the
benefit category would be averaged by
summing the individual ratios then
dividing the sum by the number of
ratios. For example, if the State is
seeking to reduce payment rates for a
subset of physician services, the State
would review all current payment rates
for all physician services and determine
if the proposed reduction to the relevant
subset of codes would result in an
average Medicaid payment rate for all
physician services that is at or above 80
percent of the average corresponding
Medicare payment rates. For
supplemental payments, we are relying
upon the definition of supplemental
payments in section 1903(bb)(2) of the
Act, which defines supplemental
payments as ‘‘a payment to a provider
that is in addition to any base payment
made to the provider under the State
plan under this title or under
demonstration authority . . . [b]ut such
term does not include a
disproportionate share hospital payment
made under section 1923 [of the Act].’’
With the inclusion of supplemental
payments, States would need to
aggregate the supplemental payments
paid to qualifying providers during the
State fiscal year and divide by all
providers’ total service volume
(including service volume of providers
that do not qualify for the supplemental
payment) to establish an aggregate, perservice supplemental payment amount,
then add that amount to the State’s fee
schedule rate to compare the aggregate
Medicaid payment rate to the
corresponding Medicare payment rate.
As this supported assurance in
proposed § 447.203I(1)(i) is expected to
be provided with an accompanying
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
40758
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
SPA, we noted that CMS may ask the
State to explain how the analysis was
conducted if additional information is
needed as part of the analysis of the
SPA. We solicited comments on the
proposed § 447.203I(1)(i) supported
assurance that Medicaid payment rates
in the aggregate (including base and
supplemental payments) following the
proposed reduction or restructuring for
each benefit category affected by the
proposed reduction or restructuring
would be at or above 80 percent of the
most recently published Medicare
payment rates for the same or a
comparable set of Medicare-covered
services should include a weighted
average of the payment rate analysis by
service volume, number of beneficiaries
receiving the service, and total amount
paid by Medicaid for the code in a year
using State’s Medicaid utilization data
from the MMIS claims system rather
than using a straight code-by-code
analysis.
We explained that we understand this
approach may have a smoothing effect
on the demonstrated overall levels of
Medicaid payment within a benefit
category under the State plan. In many
circumstances, only a subset of
providers are recipients of Medicaid
supplemental payments with the rest of
the providers within the benefit
category simply receiving the State plan
fee schedule amount. This could result
in a demonstration showing the
Medicaid payments being high relative
to Medicare, but the actual payments to
a large portion of the providers would
be less than the overall demonstration
would suggest. As an alternative, we
considered whether to adopt separate
comparisons for providers who do and
who do not receive supplemental
payments, where a State makes
supplemental payments for a service to
some but not all providers of that
service. We solicited comments on the
proposed approach and this alternative.
We selected FFS Medicare, as
opposed to Medicare Advantage, as the
proposed payer for comparison for a
number of reasons. A threshold issue is
payment rate data availability: private
payer data may be proprietary or
otherwise limited in its availability for
use by States. In addition, Medicare sets
its prices rather than negotiating them
through contracts with providers, and is
held to many similar statutory standards
as Medicaid with respect to those
prices, such as efficiency, access, and
quality.338 For example, section
1848(g)(7) of the Act directs the
338 https://www.healthcarevaluehub.org/
advocate-resources/publications/medicare-ratesbenchmark-too-much-too-little-or-just-right.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
Secretary of HHS to monitor utilization
and access for Medicare beneficiaries
provided through the Medicare fee
schedule rates, and directs that the
Medicare Payment Advisory
Commission (MedPAC) shall comment
on the Secretary’s recommendations. In
developing its comments, MedPAC
convenes and consults a panel of
physician experts to evaluate the
implications of medical utilization
patterns for the quality of and access to
patient care. In a March 2001 report,
MedPAC summarized its evaluation of
Medicare rates, stating ‘‘Medicare buys
health care products and services from
providers who compete for resources in
private markets. To ensure beneficiaries’
access to high-quality care, Medicare’s
payment systems therefore must set
payment rates for health care products
and services that are: high enough to
stimulate adequate numbers of
providers to offer services to
beneficiaries, sufficient to enable
efficient providers to supply highquality services, given the trade-offs
between cost and quality that exist with
current technology and local supply
conditions for labor and capital, and
low enough to avoid imposing
unnecessary burdens on taxpayers and
beneficiaries through the taxes and
premiums they pay to finance program
spending.’’ 339 Medicare’s programmatic
focus on beneficiary access aligns with
the requirements of section
1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act.
In addition, Medicare PFS fee
schedule rates are stratified by
geographic areas within the States,
which we seek to consider as well to
ensure that payment rates are consistent
with section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act.
The fee schedule amounts are
established for each service, generally
described by a particular procedure
code (including HCPCS, CPT, and
CDT),) using resource-based inputs to
establish relative value units (RVUs) in
three components of a procedure: work,
practice expense, and malpractice. The
three component RVUs for each service
are adjusted using CMS-calculated
geographic practice cost indexes (GPCIs)
that reflect geographic cost differences
in each fee schedule area as compared
to the national average. The current
Medicare PFS locality structure was
implemented in 2017 in accordance
with the Protecting Access to Medicare
Act of 2014 (PAMA 2014). Under the
339 MedPAC. Report to the Congress: Medicare
Payment Policy, March 2001. https://
www.medpac.gov/wp-content/uploads/import_
data/scrape_files/docs/default-source/reports/
Mar01Ch1.pdf. Accessed December 20, 2022.
PO 00000
Frm 00218
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
current locality structure, there are 112
total PFS localities.340
When considering geography in their
rate analyses, we noted that we expect
States to conduct a code-by-code
analysis of the ratios of Medicaid-toMedicare provider payment rates for all
applicable codes within the benefit
category, either for each of the GPCIs
within the State, or by calculating an
average Medicare rate across the GPCIs
within the State (such as in cases where
a State does not vary its rates by region).
In cases where a State does vary its
Medicaid rates based on geography, but
that variation does not align with the
Medicare GPCI, we explained that the
State should utilize the Medicare
payment rates as published by Medicare
for the same geographical location as the
base Medicaid FFS fee schedule
payment rate to achieve an equivalent
comparison and align the Medicare
GPCI to the locality of the Medicaid
payment rates, using the county and
locality information provided by
Medicare for the GPCIs, for purposes of
creating a reasonable comparison of the
payment rates.341 To conduct such an
analysis that meets the requirements of
proposed § 447.203(c)(1)(i), States may
compare the Medicaid payment rates
applicable to the same Medicare GPCI to
each Medicare rate by GPCI
individually, and then aggregate that
comparison into an average rate
comparison for the benefit category. To
the extent that Medicaid payment rates
do not vary by geographic locality
within the State, the State may also
calculate a Statewide average Medicare
rate based upon all of the rates
applicable to the GPCIs within that State
and compare that average Medicare rate
340 Section 220(b) of PAMA 204 added section
1848(e)(6) of the Act, which requires that, for
services furnished on or after January 1, 2017, the
locality definitions for California, which has the
most unique locality structure, be based on the
Metropolitan Statistical Area (MSA) delineations as
defined by the Office of Management and Budget
(OMB). The resulting modifications to California’s
locality structure increased its number of localities
from 9 under the previous structure to 27 under the
MSA-based locality structure (operational note: for
the purposes of payment the actual number of
localities under the MSA-based locality structure is
32). Of the 112 total PFS localities, 34 localities are
Statewide areas (that is, only one locality for the
entire State). There are 75 localities in the other 16
States, with 10 States having 2 localities, 2 States
having 3 localities, 1 State having 4 localities, and
3 States having 5 or more localities. The District of
Columbia, Maryland, and Virginia suburbs, Puerto
Rico, and the Virgin Islands are additional localities
that make up the remainder of the total of 112
localities. Medicare PFS Locality Configuration.
https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-forService-Payment/PhysicianFeeSched/Locality.
Accessed December 21, 2022.
341 https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Feefor-Service-Payment/PhysicianFeeSched/Locality.
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
to the average Medicaid rate for the
benefit category.
Once we decided to propose using
Medicare payment rates as a point of
comparison, we needed to decide what
threshold ratio of proposed Medicaid to
Medicare payment rates should trigger
additional consideration and review for
potential access issues. First, we
considered how current levels of
Medicaid payment compares to the
Medicare payment for the same services.
In a 2021 Health Affairs article,
Zuckerman, et al, found that ‘‘Medicaid
physician fees were 72 percent of
Medicare physician fees for twentyseven common procedures in 2019.’’ 342
This ratio varied by service type. For
example, ‘‘the 2019 Medicaid-toMedicare fee index was lower for
primary care (0.67) than for obstetric
care (0.80) or for other services (0.78).’’
The authors also found that ‘‘between
2008 and 2019 Medicare and Medicaid
fees both increased (23.6 percent for
Medicare fees and 19.9 percent for
Medicaid fees), leaving the fee ratios
similar.’’ 343
Next, considering that Medicaid rates
are generally lower than Medicare, we
wanted to examine the relationship
between these rates and a beneficiary’s
ability to access covered services. This
led us to first look into a comparison of
physician new patient acceptance rates
based on a prospective new patient’s
payer. In a June 2021 fact sheet,
MACPAC found ‘‘in 2017 (the most
recent year available), physicians were
significantly less likely to accept new
patients insured by Medicaid (74.3
percent) than those with Medicare (87.8
percent) or private insurance (96.1
percent).’’ 344 MACPAC found this to be
true ‘‘regardless of physician
demographic characteristics (age, sex,
region of the country); and type and size
of practice.’’ 345
We then wanted to confirm whether
this was related to the rates themselves.
In a 2019 Health Affairs article, the
authors found that, ‘‘higher payment
continues to be associated with higher
rates of accepting new Medicaid
342 Zuckerman, S. et al. ‘‘Medicaid Physician Fees
Remained Substantially Below Fees Paid By
Medicare in 2019,’’ Health Affairs, Volume 40,
Number 2, February 2021. Available at https://
doi.org/10.1377/hlthaff.2020.00611 (accessed
December 23, 2022).
343 Id.
344 MACPAC. ‘‘Physician Acceptance of New
Medicaid Patients: Finding from the National
Electronic Health Records Survey.’’ June. 2021.
Available at https://www.macpac.gov/wp-content/
uploads/2021/06/Physician-Acceptance-of-NewMedicaid-Patients-Findings-from-the-NationalElectronic-Health-Records-Survey.pdf (accessed
December 23, 2023).
345 Id.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
patients. . .physicians most commonly
point to low payment as the main
reason they choose not to accept
patients insured by Medicaid.’’ 346 The
study found that physicians in States
that pay above the median Medicaid-toMedicare fee ratio accepted new
Medicaid patients at higher rates than
those in States that pay below the
median, with acceptance rates
increasing by nearly 1 percentage point
(0.78) for every percentage point
increase in the fee ratio.347
Similarly, in a 2020 study published
by the National Bureau of Economic
Research, researchers found that there
was a positive association between
increasing Medicaid physician fees and
increased likelihood of having a usual
source of care, improved access to
specialty doctor care, and large
improvements in caregivers’ satisfaction
with the adequacy of health coverage,
among children with special health care
needs with a public source of health
coverage.348 Further, Berman, et al,
focused on pediatricians and looked at
Medicaid-Medicare fee ratio quartiles,
finding that the percent of pediatricians
accepting all Medicaid patients and
relative pediatrician participation in
Medicaid increased at each quartile, but
improvement was most significant up to
the third quartile.349 According to the
Kaiser Family Foundation, in 2016,
following the expiration of section 1202
of the Affordable Care Act (Pub. L. 111–
148), which amended section
1902(a)(13) of the Act to implement a
temporary payment floor for certain
Medicaid primary care physician
services, the third quartile of States had
Medicaid-Medicare fee ratios of between
79 and 86 percent for all services
provided under all State Medicaid FFS
programs.350 Importantly, considering
the proposed requirements at paragraph
(c) would pertain to proposed payment
rate reductions or payment
restructurings in circumstances when
the changes could result in diminished
access, multiple recent studies have also
346 Holgash,
K. and Martha Heberlein, ‘‘Physician
Acceptance Of New Medicaid Patients: What
Matters And What Doesn’t.’’ Health Affairs, April
10, 2019. Available at https://www.healthaffairs.
org/do/10.1377/forefront.20190401.678690/full/
(accessed February 22, 2023).
347 Id.
348 Chatterji, P. et al. ‘‘Medicaid Physician Fees
and Access to Care Among Children with Special
Health Care Needs’’ National Bureau of Economic
Research, Working Paper 26769, February 2020, p.
2–54. Medicaid Physician Fees and Access to Care
among Children with Special Health Care Needs |
NBER. Accessed June 16, 2022.
349 Berman, S., et al. ‘‘Factors that Influence the
Willingness of Private Primary Care Pediatricians to
Accept More Medicaid Patients’’ Pediatrics.
350 https://www.kff.org/medicaid/state-indicator/
medicaid-to-medicare-fee-index.
PO 00000
Frm 00219
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40759
shown that the association between
Medicaid physician fees and measures
of beneficiary access are consistent
whether physician payments are
increased or decreased to reach a
particular level at which access is
assessed.351
The Kaiser Family Foundation found
that 23 States have Medicaid-toMedicare fee ratios of at least 80 percent
for all services, 17 States have fee ratios
of 80 percent for primary care services,
32 States have fee ratios of 80 percent
for obstetric care, and 27 States have fee
ratios of 80 percent for other services.352
Additional studies support the Holgash
and Heberlein findings that physicians
most commonly point to low payment
as the main reason they choose not to
accept patients insured by Medicaid,
showing that States with a Medicaid to
Medicare fee ratio at or above 80 percent
show improved access for children to a
regular source of care,353 and decreased
use of hospital-based facilities, versus
States with a lower Medicaid to
Medicare fee ratio.
We noted our concern that higher
rates of acceptance by some providers of
new patients with payers other than
Medicaid (specifically, Medicare and
private coverage), and indications by
some providers that low Medicaid
payments are a primary reason for not
accepting new Medicaid patients, may
suggest that some beneficiaries could
have a more difficult time accessing
covered services than other individuals
in the same geographic area. We are
encouraged by findings that suggest that
some increases in Medicaid payment
rates may drive increases in provider
acceptance of new Medicaid patients,
with one study finding that new
Medicaid patient acceptance rates
increased by 0.78 percent for every
percentage point increase in the
Medicaid-to-Medicare fee ratio, for
certain providers for certain States
above the median Medicaid-to-Medicare
fee ratio.354 355 In line with the Berman
351 Candon, M., et al. ‘‘Declining Medicaid Fees
and Primary Care Appointment Availability for
New Medicaid Patients’’ JAMA Internal Medicine,
Volume 178, Number 1, January 2018, p. 145–146.
Available at https://jamanetwork.com/journals/
jamainternalmedicine/fullarticle/2663253.
Accessed June 16, 2022.
352 https://www.kff.org/medicaid/state-indicator/
medicaid-to-medicare-fee-index.
353 Chatterji, P. et al. ‘‘Medicaid Physician Fees
and Access to Care Among Children with Special
Health Care Needs’’ National Bureau of Economic
Research, Working Paper 26769, February 2020, p.
2–54. Available at https://www.nber.org/papers/
w26769. Accessed August 16, 2022.
354 MACPAC. ‘‘Physician Acceptance of New
Medicaid Patients: Finding from the National
Electronic Health Records Survey.’’ June. 2021.
Available at https://www.macpac.gov/wp-content/
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
Continued
10MYR2
40760
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
study, which found that increases in the
percentage of pediatricians participating
in Medicaid and of pediatricians
accepting new Medicaid patients
occurred with Medicaid payment rate
increases at each quartile of the
Medicaid-to-Medicare fee ratio but were
most significant up to the third quartile,
we believe that beneficiaries in States
that provide this level of Medicaid
payment generally may be less likely to
encounter access to care issues at rates
higher than the general population.356
In line with the Kaiser Family
Foundation reporting of the Medicaidto-Medicare fee ratio third quartile as
ranging from 79 to 86 percent in 2016,
depending on the service, we stated our
belief that a minimum 80 percent
Medicaid-to-Medicare fee ratio is a
reasonable threshold to propose in
§ 447.203(c)(1)(i) as one of three criteria
State proposals to reduce or restructure
provider payments would be required to
meet to qualify for the proposed
streamlined documentation process.357
As documented by the Kaiser Family
Foundation, many States currently
satisfy this ratio for many Medicaidcovered services, and according to
findings by Zuckerman, et al. in Health
Affairs, in 2019, the average nationwide
fee ratio for obstetric care met this
proposed threshold.358 359 We proposed
that this percentage would hold across
benefit categories, because we did not
find any indication that a lower
threshold would be adequate, or that a
higher threshold would be strictly
necessary, to support a level of access to
covered services for Medicaid
beneficiaries at least as great as for the
general population in the geographic
area. We noted that the disparities in
provider participation for some provider
types may be larger than this overview
suggests, as such we proposed a uniform
standard in the interest of
administrative simplicity but cautioned
uploads/2021/06/Physician-Acceptance-of-NewMedicaid-Patients-Findings-from-the-NationalElectronic-Health-Records-Survey.pdf (accessed
December 23, 2023).
355 Holgash, K. and Martha Heberlein, ‘‘Physician
Acceptance Of New Medicaid Patients: What
Matters And What Doesn’t.’’ Health Affairs, April
10, 2019. Available at https://
www.healthaffairs.org/do/10.1377/
forefront.20190401.678690/full/ (accessed February
22, 2023).
356 Berman, S., et al. ‘‘Factors that Influence the
Willingness of Private Primary Care Pediatricians to
Accept More Medicaid Patients’’ Pediatrics.
357 https://www.kff.org/medicaid/state-indicator/
medicaid-to-medicare-fee-index.
358 Id.
359 Zuckerman, S. et al. ‘‘Medicaid Physician Fees
Remained Substantially Below Fees Paid By
Medicare in 2019,’’ Health Affairs, Volume 40,
Number 2, February 2021. Available at https://
doi.org/10.1377/hlthaff.2020.00611 (accessed
December 23, 2022).
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
that States must meet all three of the
criteria in proposed paragraph (c)(1) to
qualify for the streamlined analysis
process; otherwise, the additional
analysis specified in proposed
paragraph (c)(2) would be required.
Given the results of this literature
review, and by proposing this provision
as only one part of a three-part
assessment of the likely effect of a
proposed payment rate reduction or
payment restructuring on access to care,
as further discussed in this section, we
proposed 80 percent of the most
recently published Medicare payment
rates, as identified on the applicable
Medicare fee schedule for the same or
a comparable set of Medicare-covered
services, as a benchmark for the level of
Medicaid payment for benefit categories
that are subject to proposed provider
payment reductions or restructurings
that is likely to enlist enough providers
so that care and services are available to
Medicaid beneficiaries at least to the
extent as to the general population in
the geographic area, where the
additional tests in proposed
§ 447.203(c)(1) also are met. While we
acknowledge that 80 percent of
Medicare rates may not provide absolute
assurance that providers will participate
in the Medicaid program, we proposed
to use 80 percent as a threshold to help
determine the level of analysis and
information a State must provide to
CMS to support consistency with
section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act.
Establishing this threshold will allow
CMS to focus its resources on reviewing
payment proposals that are at highest
risk for access to care concerns. Notably,
there are other provisions of the
proposal that would provide
opportunities for the public to raise
access to care concerns to State agencies
and to CMS should the 80 percent prove
insufficient to provide for adequate
access to care for certain care and
services.
We explained that the published
Medicare payment rates means the
amount per applicable procedure code
identified on the Medicare fee schedule.
The established Medicare fee schedule
rate includes the amount that Medicare
pays for the claim and any applicable
co-insurance and deductible amounts
owed by the patient. Medicaid feeschedule rates should be representative
of the total computable payment amount
a provider would expect to receive as
payment-in-full for the provision of
Medicaid services to individual
beneficiaries. Section 447.15 defines
payment-in-full as ‘‘the amounts paid by
the agency plus any deductible,
coinsurance or copayment required by
the plan to be paid by the individual.’’
PO 00000
Frm 00220
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
Therefore, State fee schedules should be
inclusive of total base payments from
the Medicaid agency plus any
applicable coinsurance and deductibles
to the extent that a beneficiary is
expected to be liable for those
payments. If a State Medicaid fee
schedule does not include these
additional beneficiary cost-sharing
payment amounts, then the Medicaid
fee schedule amounts would need to be
modified to include expected
beneficiary cost sharing to align with
Medicare’s fee schedule.
We noted that Medicaid benefits that
do not have a reasonably comparable
Medicare-covered analogue, and for
which a State proposes a payment rate
reduction or payment restructuring in
circumstances when the changes could
result in diminished access, would be
subject to the expanded review criteria
proposed in § 447.203(c)(2), because the
State would be unable to demonstrate
its Medicaid payment rates are at or
above 80 percent of Medicare payment
rates for the same or a comparable set
of Medicare-covered services after the
payment rate reduction or payment
restructuring. For identifying a
comparable set of Medicare-covered
services, we stated that we would
expect to see services that bear a
reasonable relationship to each other.
For example, the clinic benefit in
Medicaid does not have a directly
analogous clinic benefit in Medicare. In
Medicaid, clinic services generally are
defined in § 440.90, as ‘‘preventive,
diagnostic, therapeutic, rehabilitative, or
palliative services that are furnished by
a facility that is not part of a hospital
but is organized and operated to provide
medical care to outpatients.’’ This can
include a number of primary care
services otherwise available through
physician practices and other primary
care providers, such as nurse
practitioners. Therefore, in seeking to
construct a comparable set of Medicarecovered services to which the State
could compare its proposed Medicaid
payment rates, the State reasonably
could include Medicare payment rates
for practitioner services, such as
physician and nurse practitioner
services, or payments for facility-based
services that bear a reasonable similarity
to clinic services, potentially including
those provided in Ambulatory Surgical
Centers. We would expect the State to
develop a reasonably comparable set of
Medicare-covered services to which its
proposed Medicaid payment rates could
be compared and to include with its
submission an explanation of its
reasoning and methodology for
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
constructing the Medicare rate to
compare to Medicaid payment rates.
In § 447.203(c)(1)(ii), we proposed
that the State would be required to
provide a supported assurance that the
proposed reduction or restructuring,
including the cumulative effect of all
reductions or restructurings taken
throughout the State fiscal year, would
result in no more than a 4 percent
reduction in aggregate FFS Medicaid
expenditures for each benefit category
affected by proposed reduction or
restructuring within a single State fiscal
year. We explained that the
documentation will need to show the
change stated as a percentage reduction
in aggregate FFS Medicaid expenditures
for each affected benefit category. We
recognized that the effects of payment
rate reductions and payment
restructurings on beneficiary access
generally cannot be determined through
any single measure, and applying a 4
percent threshold without sufficient
additional safeguards would not be
prudent. Therefore, we proposed to
limit the 4 percent threshold as the
cumulative percentage of rate
reductions or restructurings applied to
the overall FFS Medicaid expenditures
for a particular benefit category affected
by the proposed reduction(s) or
restructuring(s) within each State fiscal
year. We proposed the cumulative
application of the threshold to State
plan actions taken within a State fiscal
year as opposed to a SPA-specific
application to avoid circumstances
where a State may propose rate
reductions or restructurings that
cumulatively exceed the 4 percent
threshold across multiple SPAs without
providing additional analysis.
For example, if a State proposed to
reduce payment rates for a broad set of
obstetric services by 3 percent in State
fiscal year 2023 and had not proposed
any other payment changes affecting the
benefit category of obstetric care during
the same State fiscal year, that payment
change would meet the criterion
proposed in § 447.203(c)(1)(ii) because it
would be expected to result in no more
than a 3 percent reduction in aggregate
Medicaid expenditures for obstetric care
within a State fiscal year. However, if
the State had received approval earlier
in the State fiscal year to revise its
obstetric care payment methodology to
include value-based arrangements
expected to reduce overall Medicaid
expenditures for obstetric care by 2
percent per State fiscal year, then it is
likely that the cumulative effect of the
proposal to reduce payment rates for a
broad set of obstetric services by 3
percent and the Medicaid obstetric care
expenditure reductions under the
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
earlier-approved payment restructuring
would result in an aggregate reduction
to FFS Medicaid expenditures for
obstetric services of more than 4 percent
in a State fiscal year. If so, the State’s
proposal would not meet the criterion
proposed in § 447.203(c)(1)(ii), and the
proposal would be subject to the
additional review criteria proposed in
§ 447.203(c)(2). The State would need to
document for our review whether the
three percent payment rate reduction
proposal for the particular subset of
obstetric services would be likely to
result in a greater than 2 percent further
reduction in aggregate FFS Medicaid
expenditures for obstetric care as
compared to the expected expenditures
for such services for the State fiscal year
before any payment rate reduction or
payment restructuring; if this expected
aggregate reduction is demonstrated to
be 2 percent or less, then the proposal
still could meet the criterion proposed
in § 447.203(c)(1)(ii).
We proposed to codify a 4 percent
reduction threshold for aggregate FFS
Medicaid expenditures in each benefit
category affected by a proposed
payment rate reduction or payment
restructuring within a State fiscal year.
This threshold is consistent with one we
proposed in the 2018 proposed rule,
which proposed to require the States to
submit an AMRP with any SPA that
proposed to reduce provider payments
by greater than 4 percent in overall
service category spending in a State
fiscal year or greater than 6 percent
across 2 consecutive State fiscal years,
or restructure provider payments in
circumstances when the changes could
result in diminished access.360 The
proposed rule received positive
feedback from States regarding its
potential for mitigating administrative
burden, and providing States with
flexibility to administer their programs
and make provider payment rate
changes. Some States and national
organizations requested that we increase
the rate reduction threshold to 5 percent
and increase the consecutive year
threshold to 8 percent.361 362 Non-State
commenters cautioned CMS against
providing too much administrative
flexibility and to not abandon the
Medicaid access analysis the previous
AMRP regulations required.
Commenters also raised that 4 and 6
360 83
FR 12696 at 12698.
Department of Social Services.
Comment Letter on 2018 Proposed Rule (May 21,
2018), https://downloads.regulations.gov/CMS2018-0031-0021/attachment_1.pdf.
362 National Association of Medicaid Directors.
Comment Letter on 2018 Proposed rule (June 1,
2018), https://downloads.regulations.gov/CMS2018-0031-0115/attachment_1.pdf.
361 Connecticut
PO 00000
Frm 00221
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40761
percent may seem nominal for larger
medical practices and health care
settings, but for certain physician
practices or direct care workers a 6
percent reduction in payment could be
considerable.363 This feedback has been
essential in considering how we
proceed with this rulemaking, in which
we emphasize that the size of the rate
reduction threshold proposed in
§ 447.203(c)(1)(ii) would operate in
conjunction with the two other
proposed elements in § 447.203(c)(1)(i)
and (iii) to qualify the State for a
streamlined analysis process and would
not exempt the proposal from scrutiny
for compliance with section
1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act.
We proposed a 4 percent threshold on
cumulative provider payment rate
reductions throughout a single State
fiscal year as one of the criteria of the
streamlined process in proposed
paragraph (c)(1), and therefore,
emphasizing that while we believe this
payment threshold to be nominal and
unlikely to diminish access to care, we
proposed to include paragraph (c)(1)(i)
to require States to review current levels
of provider payment in relation to
Medicare and proposed to include
paragraph (c)(1)(iii) to require that
States rely on the public process to
inform the determination on the
sufficiency of the proposed payment
rates after reduction or restructuring,
with consideration for providers and
practice types that may be
disproportionately impacted by the
State’s proposed rate reductions or
restructurings.
As previously noted, we would not
consider any payment rate reduction or
payment rate restructuring proposal to
qualify for the streamlined analysis
process in the proposed paragraph (c)(1)
unless all three of the proposed
paragraph (c)(1) criteria are met. Using
information from the Kaiser Family
Foundation’s Medicaid-to-Medicare fee
index 364 as an example, only 15 States
could have reduced primary care service
provider payment rates by up to 4
percent in 2019 and continued to meet
the 80 percent of Medicare threshold in
proposed paragraph (c)(1). Even those
15 States with rates above the 80
percent of Medicare threshold would be
subject to proposed paragraph (c)(2)
requirements if the State received
significant public feedback that the
proposed payment reduction or
restructuring would result in an access
363 American Academy of Family Physicians,
Comment Letter on 2018 Proposed Rule (May 21,
2018), https://downloads.regulations.gov/CMS2018-0031-0017/attachment_1.pdf.
364 https://www.kff.org/medicaid/state-indicator/
medicaid-to-medicare-fee-index/.
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
40762
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
to care concern, if the State were unable
to reasonably respond to or mitigate
such concerns. All States with primary
care service payment rates below the 80
percent of Medicare threshold, no
matter the size of the payment rate
reduction or restructuring and no matter
whether interested parties expressed
access concerns through available
public processes, would have to
conduct an additional access analysis
required under proposed paragraph
(c)(2).
We issued SMDL #17–004 to provide
States with guidance on complying with
regulatory requirements to help States
avoid unnecessary burden when seeking
approval of and implementing payment
changes, because States often seek to
make payment rate and/or payment
structure changes for a variety of
programmatic and budgetary reasons
with limited or potentially no effect on
beneficiary access to care, and we
recognized that State legislatures
needed some flexibility to manage State
budgets accordingly. We discussed a 4
percent spending reduction threshold
with respect to a particular service
category in SMDL #17–004 as an
example of a targeted reduction where
the overall change in net payments
within the service category would be
nominal and any effect on access
difficult to determine (although we
reminded States that they should
document that the State followed the
public process under § 447.204, which
could identify access concerns even
with a seemingly nominal payment rate
reduction). To our knowledge, since the
release of SMDL #17–004, the 4 percent
threshold for regarding a payment rate
reduction as nominal has not resulted in
access to care concerns in State
Medicaid programs, and it received
significant State support for this reason
in comments submitted in response to
the 2018 proposed rule.365
In instances where States submitted
payment rate reduction SPAs after the
publication of SMDL #17–004, we
routinely have asked the State for an
explanation of the purpose of the
proposed change, whether the FFS
Medicaid expenditure impact for the
365 See, for example: Indiana Family and Social
Services Administration. Comment Letter on 2018
Proposed Rule (May 24, 2018), https://
downloads.regulations.gov/CMS-2018-0031-0055/
attachment_1.pdf; Colorado Department of Health
Care Policy and Financing. Comment Letter on 2018
Proposed Rule (May 24, 2018), https://
downloads.regulations.gov/CMS-2018-0031-0087/
attachment_1.pdf; The Commonwealth of
Massachusetts Executive Office of Health and
Human Services Office of Medicaid. Comment
Letter on 2018 Proposed Rule (May 21, 2018),
https://downloads.regulations.gov/CMS-2018-00310020/attachment_1.pdf.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
service category would be within a 4
percent reduction threshold, and for an
analysis of public comments received
on the proposed change, and approved
those SPAs to the extent that the State
was able to resolve any potential access
to care issues and determined that
access would remain consistent for the
Medicaid population. For example, in
the proposed rule, we stated that, of the
849 SPAs approved in 2019, there were
557 State payment rate changes. Of
those, 39 were classified as payment
rate reductions or methodology changes
that resulted in a reduction in overall
provider payment. Within those 39,
there were 18 SPAs that sought to
reduce payments by less than 4 percent
of overall spending within the benefit
category, most of which were decreases
related to changes in Medicare payment
formulas. Sixteen of the remaining 21
SPAs fell into an area discussed in
SMDL #17–004 as being unlikely to
result in diminished access to covered
services, where with the State’s
analytical support, we were able to
determine that the payment rates would
continue to comply with section
1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act without the
State submitting an AMRP with the
SPA. Six of these SPAs represented rate
freezes meant to continue forward a
prior year’s rates or eliminate an
inflation adjustment. Six SPAs reduced
a payment rate to comply with Federal
requirements, such as the Medicaid
UPLs in §§ 447.272 and 447.321, the
Medicaid DME FFP limit in section
1903(i)(27) of the Act, or the Medicaid
hospice rate, per section 1902(a)(13)(B)
of the Act. Four SPAs contained
reductions that resulted from
programmatic changes such as the
elimination of a Medicaid benefit or
shifting the delivery system for a benefit
to coverage by a pre-paid ambulatory
health plan. Finally, we identified five
SPAs for which States were required to
submit AMRPs. In each instance, the
SPAs were approved by CMS, with
three of the SPAs being submitted to us
in 2017 and updated for 2019 with the
appropriate AMRP data submission
required by the 2015 final rule with
comment period. Overall, our review of
SPAs revealed that smaller reductions
may often be a result of elements or
other requirements that may be outside
of the State’s control, such as Federal
payment limits or changes in the
Medicare payment rate that might be
included in a State’s proposed payment
methodology (such as where some
Medicare payment rates for certain
services increased and others decreased
as a result of the Medicare payment
formulas, which may disproportionately
PO 00000
Frm 00222
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
impact one benefit category), or coding
changes that might affect the amount of
payment related to the unit of service.
We determined, using this information,
that it is necessary to provide States
with some degree of flexibility in
making changes, even if that change is
a reduction in provider payment. For
example, if a State submits a SPA to
reduce or restructure inpatient hospital
base or supplemental payments, where
inaction on the State’s part would result
in the State exceeding the applicable
UPL, the State will need to reduce
inpatient hospital payments or risk a
compliance action against the State for
violating Medicaid UPL requirements
authorized under section 1902(a)(30)(A)
of the Act and implementing regulations
in 42 CFR 447 subparts C and F. We
recognized that this flexibility does not
eliminate the need to monitor or
consider access to care when making
payment rate decisions, but also
recognized the need to provide some
relief in circumstances where the State
must take a rate action to address an
issue of compliance with another
statutory or regulatory requirement.
Accordingly, we proposed that, where
a State has provided the information
required under proposed paragraphs
(c)(1)(i) through (iii), we would consider
that the proposed reduction would
result in a nominal payment adjustment
unlikely to diminish access below the
level consistent with section
1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act and would
approve the SPA, provided all other
criteria for approval also are met,
without requiring the additional
analysis that otherwise would be
required under proposed
§ 447.203(c)(2).
Finally, in § 447.203(c)(1)(iii), we
proposed that the State would be
required to provide a supported
assurance that the public processes
described in § 447.203(c)(4) yielded no
significant access to care concerns or
yielded concerns that the State can
reasonably respond to or mitigate, as
appropriate, as documented in the
analysis provided by the State under
§ 447.204(b)(3). The State’s response to
any access concern identified through
the public processes, and any mitigation
approach, as appropriate, would be
expected to be fully described in the
State’s submission to us.
We noted that the proposed
requirement in § 447.203(c)(4) would
not duplicate the requirements in
previous § 447.204(a)(2), as the previous
§ 447.204(a)(2) required States to
consider provider and beneficiary input
as part of the information that States are
required to consider prior to the
submission of any SPA that proposes to
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
reduce or restructure Medicaid service
payment rates. The proposed
§ 447.203(c)(4) describes material that
States would be required to include
with any SPA submission that proposes
to reduce or restructure provider
payment rates. As discussed in the
CMCS informational bulletin dated June
24, 2016,366 before submitting SPAs to
us, States were required under previous
§ 447.204(a)(2) to make information
available so that beneficiaries,
providers, and other interested parties
may provide input on beneficiary access
to the affected services and the impact
that the proposed payment change
would have, if any, on continued
service access. We explained that States
are expected to obtain input from
beneficiaries, providers, and other
interested parties, and analyze the input
to identify and address access to care
concerns. States must obtain this
information prior to submitting a SPA to
us and maintain a record of the public
input and how the agency responded to
the input. When a State submits the
SPA to us, § 447.204(b)(3) requires the
State to also submit a specific analysis
of the information and concerns
expressed in input from affected
interested parties. We would rely on
this and other documentation submitted
by the State, including under proposed
§ 447.203(c)(1)(iii), (c)(2)(vi), and (c)(4),
to inform our SPA approval decisions.
In addition, we noted that States are
required to use the applicable public
process required under section
1902(a)(13) of the Act, as applicable,
and follow the public notice
requirement in § 447.205, as well as any
other public processes required by State
law (for example, State-specified
budgetary process requirements), in
setting payment rates and
methodologies in view of potential
access to care concerns. States have an
important role in identifying access to
care concerns, including through
ongoing and collaborative efforts with
beneficiaries, providers, and other
interested parties. We acknowledged
that not every concern would be easily
resolvable, but we anticipate that States
would be meaningfully engaged with
their beneficiary, provider, and other
interested party communities to identify
and mitigate issues as they arise. We
explained that we would consider
information about access concerns
raised by beneficiaries, providers, and
other interested parties when States
366 CMCS Informational Bulletin, ‘‘Federal public
notice and public process requirements for changes
to Medicaid payment rates.’’ Published June 24,
2016. https://www.medicaid.gov/federal-policyguidance/downloads/cib062416.pdf. Accessed
November 3, 2022.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
propose SPAs to reduce Medicaid
payment rates or restructure Medicaid
payments and would not approve
proposals that do not comport with all
applicable requirements, including the
access standard in section
1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act.
In feedback received regarding
implementation of the previous AMRP
requirements in the 2015 final rule with
comment period, States expressed
concern about burdensome
requirements to draft, solicit public
input on, and update their AMRPs after
receiving beneficiary or provider
complaints that were later resolved by
the State’s engagement with
beneficiaries and the provider
community. we explained that our
proposal to require access review
procedures specific to State proposals to
reduce payment rates or restructure
payments would provide an opportunity
for the State meaningfully to address
and respond to interested parties’ input,
and seeks to balance State burden
concerns with the clear need to
understand the perspectives of the
interested parties most likely to be
affected by a Medicaid payment rate
reduction or payment restructuring.
Previously, § 447.203(b)(7) requires
States to have ongoing mechanisms for
beneficiary and provider input on
access to care through various
mechanisms, and to maintain a record
of data on public input and how the
State responded to such input, which
must be made available to us upon
request. We proposed to retain this
important mechanism and to relocate it
to § 447.203(c)(4). Through the cross
reference to proposed § 447.203(c)(4) in
proposed § 447.203(c)(1)(iii), we would
require States to use the ongoing
beneficiary and provider feedback
mechanisms to aid in identifying and
assessing any access to care issues in
cooperation with their interested
parties’ communities, as a component of
the streamlined access analysis criteria
in proposed § 447.203(c)(1).
Together, we stated our belief that the
proposed criteria of § 447.203(c)(1)(i)
through (iii), where all are met, would
establish that a State’s proposed
Medicaid payment rates and/or payment
structure are consistent with the access
requirement in section 1902(a)(30)(A) of
the Act at the time the State proposes a
payment rate reduction or payment
restructuring in circumstances when the
changes could result in diminished
access. Importantly, as noted above,
proposed § 447.203(c)(4) (proposed to be
relocated from previous § 447.203(b)(7))
would ensure that States have ongoing
procedures for compliance monitoring
PO 00000
Frm 00223
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40763
independent of any approved Medicaid
payment changes.
We previously outlined in SMDL
#17–004 several circumstances where
Medicaid payment rate reductions
generally would not be expected to
diminish access: reductions necessary to
implement CMS Federal Medicaid
payment requirements; reductions that
will be implemented as a decrease to all
codes within a service category or
targeted to certain codes, but for
services where the payment rates
continue to be at or above Medicare
and/or average commercial rates; and
reductions that result from changes
implemented through the Medicare
program, where a State’s service
payment methodology adheres to the
Medicare methodology. We did not
propose to codify this list of policies
that may produce payment rate
reductions unlikely to diminish access
to Medicaid-covered services. However,
as a possible addition to the proposed
streamlined access analysis criteria in
proposed § 447.203(c)(1), we solicited
comments on whether this list of
circumstances discussed in SMDL #17–
004 should be included in a new
paragraph under proposed
§ 447.203(c)(1) and, if one or more of
these circumstances were applicable,
the State’s proposal would be
considered to qualify for the
streamlined analysis process under
proposed § 447.203(c)(1)
notwithstanding the other criteria in
proposed paragraph(c)(1).
In proposed paragraph (c)(1), we
specified the full set of written
assurances and relevant supporting
documentation that States would be
required to submit with a proposed
payment rate reduction or payment
restructuring SPA in circumstances
when the changes could result in
diminished access, where the
requirements in proposed paragraphs
(c)(1)(i) through (c)(1)(iii) are met. The
inclusion of documentation that
confirms all criteria proposed in
paragraph (c)(1) are met would exempt
the State from the requirements in
proposed § 447.203(c)(2), discussed later
in this section; however, it would not
guarantee SPA approval. Proposed
payment rate reduction SPAs and
payment rate restructuring SPAs
meeting the requirements in proposed
§ 447.203(c)(1) would still be subject to
CMS’ standard review requirements for
all proposed SPAs to ensure compliance
with section 1902(a) of the Act,
including implementing regulations in
part 430. Specifically, and without
limitation, we noted that this includes
compliance with section 1902(a)(2) of
the Act, requiring financial participation
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
40764
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
by the State in payments authorized
under section 1903 of the Act. We
review SPAs involving payments to
ensure that the State has identified an
adequate source of non-Federal share
financing for payments under the SPA
so that section 1902(a)(2) of the Act is
satisfied; in particular, section 1903(w)
of the Act and its implementing
regulations establish requirements for
certain non-Federal share financing
sources that CMS must ensure are met.
We further noted that a proposed SPA’s
failure to meet the criteria in proposed
paragraph (c)(1) would not result in
automatic SPA disapproval; rather, such
proposals would be subject to additional
documentation and review
requirements, as specified in proposed
§ 447.203(c)(2).
In paragraph (c)(2), we proposed the
additional, more rigorous State access
analysis that States would be required to
submit where the State proposes to
reduce provider payment rates or
restructure provider payments in
circumstances when the changes could
result in diminished access where the
requirements in paragraphs (c)(1)(i)
through (iii) are not met. We explained
our belief that this more rigorous access
analysis should be required where the
State is unable to demonstrate that the
proposed paragraph (c)(1) criteria are
met, because more scrutiny then is
needed to ensure that the proposed
payment rates and structure would be
sufficient to enlist enough providers so
that covered services would be available
to beneficiaries at least to the same
extent as to the general population in
the geographic area. Accordingly, we
proposed in § 447.203(c)(2) to have
States document current and recent
historical levels of access to care,
including a demonstration of counts and
trends of actively participating
providers, counts and trends of FFS
Medicaid beneficiaries who receive the
services subject to the proposed
payment rate reduction or payment
restructuring; and service utilization
trends, all for the 3-year period
immediately preceding the submission
date of the proposed rate reduction or
payment restructuring SPA, as a
condition for approval. As with the
previous AMRP process, the
information provided by the State
would serve as a baseline of
understanding current access to care
within the State’s program, from which
the State’s payment rate reduction or
payment restructuring proposal would
be scrutinized.
The 2015 final rule with comment
period included requirements that the
previous AMRP process include data on
the following topics, in previous
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
§ 447.203(b)(1)(i) through (v): the extent
to which beneficiary needs are fully
met; the availability of care through
enrolled providers to beneficiaries in
each geographic area, by provider type
and site of service; changes in
beneficiary utilization of covered
services in each geographic area; the
characteristics of the beneficiary
population (including considerations for
care, service and payment variations for
pediatric and adult populations and for
individuals with disabilities); and actual
or estimated levels of provider payment
available from other payers, including
other public and private payers, by
provider type and site of service. The
usefulness of the previous ongoing
AMRP data was directly related to the
quality of particular data measures that
States selected to use in their AMRPs,
and one of the biggest concerns we
heard about the process was that States
were not always certain that they were
providing us with the relevant data that
we needed to make informed decisions
about Medicaid access to care because
the 2015 final rule provided States with
a considerable amount of flexibility in
determining the type of data that may be
provided in support of the State’s access
analysis included in their AMRP. In
addition, States were required to consult
with the State’s medical advisory
committees and publish the draft AMRP
for no less than 30 days for public
review and comment, per § 447.203(b).
Therefore, the final AMRP, so long as
the base data elements were met and
supported the State’s conclusion that
access to care in the Medicaid program
met the requirements of section
1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act, then the
AMRP was accepted by us. As a result,
the previous AMRPs were often very
long and complex documents that
sometimes included data that was not
necessarily useful for understanding the
extent of beneficiary access to services
in the State or for making administrative
decisions about SPAs. In an effort to
promote standardization of data
measures and limit State submissions to
materials likely to assist in ensuring
consistency of payment rates with the
requirements of section 1902(a)(30)(A)
of the Act, we proposed to maintain a
number of the previously required data
elements from the previous AMRP
process but to be more precise about the
type of information that would be
required.
In § 447.203(c)(2), we proposed that,
for any SPA that proposes to reduce
provider payment rates or restructure
provider payments in circumstances
when the changes could result in
diminished access, where the
PO 00000
Frm 00224
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
requirements in paragraphs (c)(1)(i)
through (iii) are not met, the State
would be required to also provide
specified information to us as part of the
SPA submission as a condition of
approval, in addition to the information
required under paragraph (c)(1), in a
format prescribed by us. Specifically, in
§ 447.203(c)(2)(i), we proposed to
require States to provide a summary of
the proposed payment change,
including the State’s reason for the
proposal and a description of any policy
purpose for the proposed change,
including the cumulative effect of all
reductions or restructurings taken
throughout the current State fiscal year
in aggregate FFS Medicaid expenditures
for each benefit category affected by
proposed reduction or restructuring
within a State fiscal year. We proposed
to collect this information for SPAs that
require a § 447.203(c)(2) analysis, but for
those that meet the criteria proposed
under § 447.203(c)(1), we did not
proposed to require a summary of the
proposed payment change, including
the State’s reason for the proposal and
a description of any policy purpose for
the proposed change beyond that which
is already provided as part of a normal
State plan submission or as may be
requested by CMS through the normal
State plan review process; we solicited
comments whether these elements
should apply to both proposed
§ 447.203(c)(1) and (c)(2) equally.
In § 447.203(c)(2)(ii), we proposed to
require the State to provide Medicaid
payment rates in the aggregate
(including base and supplemental
payments) before and after the proposed
reduction or restructuring for each
benefit category affected by proposed
reduction or restructuring, and a
comparison of each (aggregate Medicaid
payment before and after the reduction
or restructuring) to the most recently
published Medicare payment rates for
the same or a comparable set of
Medicare-covered services and, as
reasonably feasible, to the most recently
available payment rates of other health
care payers in the State or the
geographic area for the same or a
comparable set of covered services. We
noted that this proposed element is
similar to the previous § 447.203(b)(1)(v)
rate comparison requirement, which
required the previous AMRPs to include
‘‘[a]ctual or estimated levels of provider
payment available from other payers,
including other public and private
payers, by provider type and site of
service.’’ However, the proposed
analysis specifically would require an
aggregate comparison including
Medicaid base and supplemental
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
payments, as applicable, before and
after the proposed reduction or
restructuring are implemented,
compared to the most recently
published Medicare payment rates for
the same or comparable set of Medicarecovered services and, as reasonably
feasible, to the most recently available
payment rates of other health care
payers in the State or the geographic
area for the same or a comparable set of
covered services. We found that, first,
States struggled with obtaining and
providing private payer data as
contemplated by the 2015 final rule
with comment period, and second,
States were confused about how to
compare Medicaid rates to Medicare
rates where there were no comparable
services between Medicare and
Medicaid. We wanted to acknowledge
the feedback we received from States
during the previous AMRP process and
modify the requirements in the final
rule by focusing on the more readily
available Medicare payment data as the
most relevant payment comparison for
Medicaid, as discussed in detail above.
We explained that the E/M CPT/HCPCS
code comparison methodology included
in the proposed § 447.203(b)(3)(i) and
the payment rate disclosure in proposed
§ 447.203(b)(3)(ii) could serve, at a
minimum, as frameworks for States that
struggled to compare Medicaid rates to
Medicare where there may be no other
comparable services between the two
programs. Otherwise, where comparable
services exist, States would be required
to compare all applicable Medicaid
payment rates within the benefit
category to the Medicare rates for the
same or comparable services under
proposed § 447.203(c)(2)(ii). For reasons
mentioned previously in this section,
Medicare through MedPAC engages in
substantial analysis of access to care as
it reviews payment rates for services, so
we noted our belief that this is a
sufficient benchmark for the Medicaid
payment rate analysis.
In § 447.203(c)(2)(iii), we proposed to
require States to provide information
about the number of actively
participating providers of services in
each benefit category affected by the
proposed reduction or restructuring. For
this purpose, we stated that an actively
participating provider is a provider that
is participating in the Medicaid program
and actively seeing and providing
services to Medicaid beneficiaries or
accepting Medicaid beneficiaries as new
patients. The State would be required to
provide the number of actively
participating providers of services in
each affected benefit category for each of
the 3 years immediately preceding the
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
SPA submission date, by State-specified
geographic area (for example, by county
or parish), provider type, and site of
service. The State would be required to
document observed trends in the
number of actively participating
providers in each geographic area over
this period. The State could provide
estimates of the anticipated effect on the
number of actively participating
providers of services in each benefit
category affected by the proposed
reduction or restructuring, by
geographic area. This data element is
similar to previous § 447.203(b)(1)(ii),
under which States must analyze the
availability of care through enrolled
providers to beneficiaries in each
geographic area, by provider type and
site of service, in the previous AMRP
process; however, the proposal would
require specific quantitative information
describing the number of providers, by
geographic area, provider type, and site
of service available to furnish services to
Medicaid beneficiaries and would leave
less discretion to the States on specific
data measures. With all of the data
elements included in proposed
paragraph (c)(2), we proposed that the
data come from the 3 years immediately
preceding the State plan amendment
submission date, as this would provide
us with the most recent data and would
allow for considerations for data
anomalies that might otherwise distort a
demonstration of access to care if only
1 year of data was used.
In § 447.203(c)(2)(iv), we proposed to
require States to provide information
about the number of Medicaid
beneficiaries receiving services through
the FFS delivery system in each benefit
category affected by the proposed
reduction or restructuring. The State
would be required to provide the
number of beneficiaries receiving
services in each affected benefit
category for each of the 3 years
immediately preceding the SPA
submission date, by State-specified
geographic area (for example, by county
or parish). The State would be required
to document observed trends in the
number of Medicaid beneficiaries
receiving services in each affected
benefit category in each geographic area
over this period. The State would be
required to provide quantitative and
qualitative information about the
beneficiary populations receiving
services in the affected benefit
categories over this period, including
the number and proportion of
beneficiaries who are adults and
children and who are living with
disabilities, and a description of the
State’s consideration of the how the
PO 00000
Frm 00225
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40765
proposed payment changes may affect
access to care and service delivery for
beneficiaries in various populations.
The State would be required to provide
estimates of the anticipated effect on the
number of Medicaid beneficiaries
receiving services through the FFS
delivery system in each benefit category
affected by the proposed reduction or
restructuring, by geographic area. We
explained that this proposed provision
is a combination of previous
§ 447.203(b)(1)(i) and (iv), which require
States to provide an analysis of the
extent to which beneficiary needs are
met, and the characteristics of the
beneficiary population (including
considerations for care, service, and
payment variations for pediatric and
adult populations and for individuals
with disabilities). Even though we did
not propose to require this analysis to be
updated broadly with respect to many
benefit categories on an ongoing basis,
we proposed to require current
information on the number of
beneficiaries currently receiving
services through the FFS delivery
system in each benefit category affected
by the proposed reduction or
restructuring to inform our SPA review
process to ensure that the statutory
access standard is met. The inclusion of
this beneficiary data is relevant because
it provides information about the
recipients of Medicaid services and
where, geographically, these
populations reside to ensure that the
statutory access standard is met.
In § 447.203(c)(2)(v), we proposed to
require information about the number of
Medicaid services furnished through the
FFS delivery system in each benefit
category affected by the proposed
reduction or restructuring. The State
would be required to provide the
number of Medicaid services furnished
in each affected benefit category for
each of the 3 years immediately
preceding the SPA submission date, by
State-specified geographic area (for
example, by county or parish), provider
type, and site of service. The State
would be required to document
observed trends in the number of
Medicaid services furnished in each
affected benefit category in each
geographic area over this period. The
State would be required to provide
quantitative and qualitative information
about the Medicaid services furnished
in the affected benefit categories over
this period, including the number and
proportion of Medicaid services
furnished to adults and children and
who are living with disabilities, and a
description of the State’s consideration
of the how the proposed payment
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
40766
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
changes may affect access to care and
service delivery. The State would be
required to provide estimates of the
anticipated effect on the number of
Medicaid services furnished through the
FFS delivery system in each benefit
category affected by the proposed
reduction or restructuring, by
geographic area. We noted that this
proposed data element was similar to
that previously required in
§ 447.203(b)(1)(iii), which required an
analysis of changes in beneficiary
utilization of covered services in each
geographic area. However, as stated
earlier, the difference here is that this
proposed analysis would be limited to
the beneficiary populations impacted by
the rate reduction or restructuring, for a
narrower set of data points, rather than
requiring the State to conduct a full
review of the Medicaid beneficiary
population every 3 years on an ongoing
basis. Even though we did not propose
to require this analysis to be updated
broadly with respect to many benefit
categories on an ongoing basis, we
proposed to require current information
on the number and types of Medicaid
services being delivered to Medicaid
beneficiaries through the FFS delivery
system in each benefit category affected
by the proposed reduction or
restructuring to inform our SPA review
process to ensure that the statutory
access standard is met. The inclusion of
this data is relevant because it provides
information about the actual
distribution of care received by
Medicaid beneficiaries and where,
geographically, these services are
provided to ensure that the statutory
access standard is met.
Finally, in § 447.203(c)(2)(vi), we
proposed to require a summary of, and
the State’s response to, any access to
care concerns or complaints received
from beneficiaries, providers, and other
interested parties regarding the
service(s) for which the payment rate
reduction or restructuring is proposed
as required under § 447.204(a)(2). We
noted that this proposed requirement
mirrors the requirement in
§ 447.204(b)(3), which requires that for
any SPA submission that proposes to
reduce or restructure Medicaid service
payment rates, a specific analysis of the
information and concerns expressed in
input from affected interested parties
must be provided at the time of the SPA
submission. The new proposed
§ 447.203(c)(2)(vi) would require the
same analysis while providing more
detail as to what we expect the State to
provide. Proposed § 447.203(c)(2)(vi)
would require information about
concerns and complaints from
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
beneficiaries and providers specifically,
as well as from other interested parties,
and would underscore that the required
analysis would be required to include
the State’s responses.
Where any of the previously
discussed proposed data elements
requires an analysis of data over a 3-year
period, we proposed this time span to
smooth statistical anomalies, and so that
data variations can be understood. For
example, any 3-year period look-back
that includes portions of time during a
public health emergency, such as that
for the COVID–19 pandemic, might
include much more variation in the
access to care measures than periods
before or after the public health
emergency. By using a 3-year period, it
is more likely that the State, CMS, and
other interested parties would be able to
identify and appropriately account for
short term disruptions in access-related
measures, for example, when the
number of services performed dropped
precipitously in 2020 as elective visits
and procedures were postponed or
canceled due to the public health
emergency.367 If the proposed rule only
included a 12-month period, for
example, it might not be clear that the
data represent an accurate reflection of
access to care at the time of the
proposed reduction or restructuring. For
example, a State may see variation in
service utilization if there have been
programmatic changes that are
introduced over time, such as a move to
increase care provided through a
managed care delivery system in the
State through which the FFS utilization
declines steadily until managed care
enrollment targets are achieved, but a
one-time review of that FFS utilization
capturing just a 12-month period might
not capture data most reflective of the
current FFS utilization demonstrating
access to care consistent with section
1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act. We solicited
comments on the proposed use of a 3year period where the proposed rule
would require data about trends over
time in the data elements proposed to be
required under § 447.203(c)(2). We also
solicited comments on the data
elements required in § 447.203(c)(2) as
additional State rate analysis.
Proposed paragraph (c)(2) would
require that States conduct and provide
to us a rigorous analysis of a proposed
payment rate reduction’s or payment
restructuring’s potential to affect
beneficiary access to care. However, by
367 Stuart, B. ‘‘How The COVID–19 Pandemic Has
Affected Provision Of Elective Services: The
Challenges Ahead.’’ Health Affairs, October 8, 2020.
Available at https://www.healthaffairs.org/do/
10.1377/forefront.20201006.263687 (accessed
February 27, 2023).
PO 00000
Frm 00226
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
limiting these analyses to only those
proposed payment rate reductions and
payment restructurings in
circumstances when the changes could
result in diminished access that do not
meet the criteria in proposed paragraph
(c)(1), we believe that the requirements
proposed in paragraph (c)(2) would help
to enable us to determine whether the
proposed State Medicaid payment rates
and payment methodologies are
consistent with section 1902(a)(30)(A) of
the Act while minimizing State and
Federal administrative burden, to the
extent possible. We would use this
State-provided information and analysis
to help us understand the current levels
of access to care in the State’s program,
and determine, considering the
provider, beneficiary, and other
interested party input collected through
proposed § 447.203(c)(4), whether the
proposed payment rate reduction or
payment restructuring likely would
maintain access to care for the particular
service(s) consistent with the statutory
standard in section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the
Act. If we approve the State’s proposal,
the data provided would serve as a
baseline for prospective monitoring of
access to care within the State.
We explained that the proposed
analysis and documentation
requirements in paragraph (c)(2) draw,
in part, from the requirements of the
previous AMRP process in the previous
§ 447.203(b)(1) and reflect the diverse
methods and measures that are and can
be used to monitor access to care. We
also drew on some of the comments
received on the 2011 proposed rule, as
discussed in the 2015 final rule with
comment period, where several
commenters recommended that CMS
consider identifying a set of uniform
measures that States must collect data
on or that CMS weighs more heavily in
its analysis.368 We proposed to provide
more specificity on the types of uniform
data elements in § 447.203(c) than is
provided under previous
§ 447.203(b)(1). States have shown that
they have access to the data listed in the
proposed § 447.203(c)(2) when we have
requested it during SPA reviews and
through the previous AMRP process,
and through this proposed rule, we
proposed to specify the type of data that
we would expect States to provide with
rate reduction or restructuring SPAs that
do not meet the proposed criteria for
streamlined analysis under
§ 447.203(c)(1). As noted elsewhere in
the preamble, the ongoing AMRP
requirements previously presented an
administratively burdensome process
for States to follow every 3 years,
368 80
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
FR 67576 at 67590.
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
particularly where we did not provide
States with the specific direction on the
types of data elements we preferred for
States to include. However, the data
elements involved in the previous
AMRP process in § 447.203(b)(1) can
provide useful information about
beneficiary access to care in previous
§ 447.203(b)(1)(i), (iii), and (iv);
Medicaid provider availability in
previous § 447.203(b)(1)(ii); and about
payment rates available from other
payers, which may affect Medicaid
beneficiaries’ relative ability to access
care, in previous § 447.203(b)(1)(v). We
found that the previous AMRPs were
most relevant when updated to
accompany a submission of rate
reduction or restructuring SPAs as
specified in the previous
§ 447.203(b)(6); accordingly, to better
balance ongoing State and Federal
administrative burden with our need to
obtain access-related information to
inform our approval decisions for
payment rate reduction or restructuring
SPAs, we proposed to end the ongoing
AMRP requirement but maintain a
requirement that States include similar
data elements when submitting such
SPAs to us that do not qualify for the
proposed streamlined analysis process
under § 447.203(c)(1).
We explained that the proposed
analyses in paragraph (c)(2) would
enable us to focus our review of
Medicaid access to care on proposals
that are at highest risk to result in
diminished access to care, enabling us
to more substantively review a proposed
rate reduction’s or restructuring’s
potential impact on access (for example,
counts of participating providers),
realized access (for example, service
utilization trends), and the beneficiary
experience of care (for example,
characteristics of the beneficiary
population, beneficiary utilization data,
and information related to feedback
from beneficiaries and other interested
parties collected during the public
process and through ongoing beneficiary
feedback mechanisms, along with the
State’s responses to that feedback),
while also being able to more quickly
work through a review of nominal rate
reduction SPAs for which States have
demonstrated certain levels of payment
and for which the public process did
not generate access to care concerns. By
including information on provider type
and site of service, we believe States
would be able to demonstrate access to
the services provided under a specific
benefit category within a number of
different settings across the Medicaid
program, such as the availability of
physician services delivered in a
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
physician practice, clinic setting, FQHC
or RHC, or even in a hospital-based
office setting. We noted our belief that
defining specific data elements that
must be provided to support a payment
rate reduction SPA would create a more
predictable process for States and for
CMS in conducting the SPA review than
under the previous AMRP process in
§ 447.203(b)(6).
Furthermore, data elements proposed
to be required under proposed
§ 447.203(c)(2) would be based on Statespecified geographic stratifications, to
help ensure we can perform access
review consistent with the requirements
of section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act. We
expect that States would have readily
available access to geographically
differential beneficiary and provider
data. We observed that some of this
information is available through CMSmaintained resources, such as the
Transformed Medicaid Statistical
Information System (T–MSIS), and other
data is available through the National
Plan and Provider Enumeration System
(NPPES), but States should have their
own data systems that would allow
them to generate the most up-to-date
beneficiary utilization and provider
enrollment data, stratified by geographic
areas within the State. States should use
the most recent complete data available
for each of the proposed data elements,
and each would be required to be
demonstrated to CMS by State-specified
geographic area. We noted our belief
that the geographic stratification would
enable CMS to establish a baseline for
Medicaid access to care within the
geographic areas so that we can
determine if current levels of access to
care are consistent with section
1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act and can make
future determinations if access is
diminished subsequently within the
geographic area. For all of the data
elements in proposed § 447.203(c)(2),
we stated that the more geographic
differentiation that can be provided
(that is, the smaller and more numerous
the distinct geographic areas of the State
that are selected for separate analysis),
the more we believe that the State can
meaningfully demonstrate that the
proposed rate changes are consistent
with the access standard in section
1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act, which
requires that States assure that
payments are sufficient to enlist enough
providers so that care and services are
available under the plan at least to the
extent that such care and services are
available to the general population in
the geographic area.
If finalized, we stated that we would
anticipate releasing subregulatory
guidance, including a template to
PO 00000
Frm 00227
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40767
support completion of the analysis that
would be required under paragraph
(c)(2), prior to the beginning date of the
Comparative Payment Rate Analysis
Timeframe proposed in § 447.203(b)(4).
In the intervening period, we would
anticipate working directly with States
through the SPA review process to
ensure compliance with section
1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act.
In § 447.203(c)(3), we proposed
mechanisms for ensuring compliance
with requirements for State analysis for
rate reduction or restructuring, as
specified in proposed paragraphs (c)(1)
and (c)(2), as applicable. We proposed
that a State that submits a SPA that
proposes to reduce provider payments
or restructure provider payments that
fails to provide the required information
and analysis to support approval as
specified in proposed paragraphs (c)(1)
and (2), as applicable, may be subject to
SPA disapproval under § 430.15(c).
Additionally, States that submit relevant
information, but where there are
unresolved access to care concerns
related to the proposed SPA, including
any raised by CMS in our review of the
proposal and any raised through the
public process as specified in proposed
paragraph (c)(4) of this section, or under
§ 447.204(a)(2), may be subject to SPA
disapproval under § 430.15(c).
Disapproving a SPA means that the
State would not have authority to
implement the proposed rate reduction
or restructuring and would be required
to continue to pay providers according
to the rate methodology described in the
approved State plan. Proposed
paragraph (c)(3) would further provide
that if, after approval of a proposed rate
reduction or restructuring, State
monitoring of beneficiary access shows
a decrease in Medicaid access to care,
such as a decrease in the provider-tobeneficiary ratio for any affected service,
or the State or CMS experiences an
increase in the number of beneficiary or
provider complaints or concerns about
access to care that suggests possible
noncompliance with the access
requirements in section 1902(a)(30)(A)
of the Act, we may take a compliance
action. As described in § 447.204(d),
compliance actions would be carried
out using the procedures described in
§ 430.35.
As discussed in the prior section, we
proposed to move previous
§ 447.203(b)(7) to § 447.203(c)(4) as
finalized in this rule. We did not
propose any changes to the public
process described in paragraph (b)(7).
We proposed that if the other provisions
of the proposed rule are finalized, we
would redesignate paragraph (b)(7) as
paragraph (c)(4). The ability for
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
40768
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
providers and beneficiaries to provide
ongoing feedback to the State regarding
access to care and a beneficiary’s ability
to access Medicaid services is essential
to the Medicaid program in that it
provides the primary interested parties
the opportunity to communicate with
the State and for the State to track and
take account of those interactions in a
meaningful way. We stated that the
ongoing mechanisms for provider and
beneficiary feedback must be retained,
as this process serves an important role
in determining whether or not the
public has raised concerns regarding
access to Medicaid-covered services,
which would inform the State’s
approach to ongoing Medicaid provider
payment rates and methodologies, and
whether related proposals would be
approvable.
We proposed to move previous
§ 447.203(b)(8) to § 447.203(c)(5), as
finalized in this rule, to better organize
§ 447.203 to reflect the policies in the
proposed rule. We did not propose any
changes to the methods for addressing
access questions and remediation of
inadequate access to care, as described
in paragraph (b)(8). We proposed that if
the other provisions of the proposed
rule are finalized, we would redesignate
paragraph (b)(8) as paragraph (c)(5). We
stated that it is important to retain this
provision because we acknowledge that
there may be access issues that come
about apart from a specific State
payment rate action, and there must be
mechanisms through which those issues
can be identified, and corrective action
taken.
Finally, we proposed to move
previous § 447.204(d) to proposed
§ 447.203(c)(6). We noted our belief that
the subject matter, of compliance
actions for an access deficiency, is better
aligned to the proposed changes in
§ 447.203. We did not propose any
changes to the remedy for the
identification of an unresolved access
deficiency, as described in § 447.204(d).
We proposed that if the other provisions
of this proposed rule are finalized, we
would redesignate § 447.204(d) as
paragraph (c)(6).
We solicited public comment on our
proposed procedures and requirements
for State analysis when submitting
payment rate reduction or payment
restructuring SPAs. We received public
comments on these proposals. The
following is a summary of the comments
we received and our responses,
organized by regulatory section.
a. General Comments
Comment: Many commenters
supported the approaches to reviewing
rate changes. Specifically, a number of
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
commenters noted support for the twotiered process to provide specific levels
of information and data with a request
to reduce or restructure payment rates
in circumstances where such changes
could result in diminished access to
care, with some commenters specifically
supporting the inclusion of concerns
raised during the public comment
process. Other commenters noted
general support for requiring State
justification for rate reductions and
restructurings as it would provide
greater transparency and accountability
into State justifications for potentially
harmful rate reductions. A couple
commenters noted support for CMS’
administrative review of rate changes to
ensure continued access. One
commenter was encouraged that CMS
proposed to include protections to
mitigate the risk that payment
reductions will translate into reduced
access. Another commenter agreed with
CMS that additional scrutiny is
warranted when a rate reduction is more
than nominal, and when public
concerns are raised regarding the rate.
Finally, one commenter expressed
appreciation for CMS’ detailed review
and summary of the literature on the
impact of payment rates for providers
on access to care for beneficiaries.
Response: We appreciate the support
of the commenters on both our overall
approach and for certain specific
aspects of our proposed policies, which
we are finalizing as proposed. We agree
that the public process is an important
component of Medicaid program
changes.
Comment: One commenter supported
requiring States to demonstrate that a
reduction in payment rates will not
adversely impact access to care. The
commenter stated that the effort
required for States to make such a
showing will guard against rate
reductions that would be detrimental to
Medicaid recipients’ ability to access
care.
Response: We appreciate the support
of the commenter. We believe there will
be States, in certain circumstances, that
will be able to meet the requirements of
the streamlined access process under
§ 447.203(c)(1). The intention of the
§ 447.203(c) provisions is to balance the
requirement that State’s ensure
compliance with section 1902(a)(30)(A)
of the Act with reducing unnecessary
burden in the State’s administration of
their Medicaid programs. We believe
that the streamlined process under
§ 447.203(c)(1) is itself consistent with
the statutory access standard, because
the policies in this final rule ensure that
only rate reductions or restructurings
that are likely to be consistent with that
PO 00000
Frm 00228
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
standard will be approvable under this
streamlined process.
Comment: One commenter stated that
in some States, there is high potential
for interruption in access due to delays
created by the SPA process. The
commenter was concerned that long
delays caused by the SPA process can
interrupt access to the latest standard of
care. They stated that clarification on
CMS regulations for SPAs for changes
that increase access to the standard of
care could reduce the risk of care
interruptions.
Similarly, another commenter
recommended that CMS give States the
flexibility to increase rates to 100
percent of the equivalent Medicare rate
without a SPA, and to make midyear
adjustments to rates without a SPA. The
commenter also indicated SPAs should
only be required beyond specified
thresholds.
Response: We appreciate the concern
of the commenter related to any delays
in the approval of SPAs. We are
interested in approving approvable
SPAs as expeditiously as possible,
which is one of the reasons for issuing
this final rule with an included
template. SPAs generally may be
effective no earlier than the first day of
the quarter in which they are submitted
per 42 CFR 430.20. The policies in this
final rule and the template process
provide States with clear documentation
requirements for SPAs proposing to
reduce or restructure provider payment
rates. Without exception, our policy, as
set forth in § 447.201(b), is that States
must receive approval through the SPA
process to modify Medicaid payment
methodologies. CMS approval ensures
that the changes in service payment
methodologies comply with all
applicable regulatory and statutory
requirements and that resulting State
expenditures are eligible for FFP.
Changes to these requirements are
beyond the scope of this rulemaking. In
addition, regardless of this final rule, all
SPAs are reviewed using the criteria and
timeframes outlined in 42 CFR part 430
subpart B.
Comment: One commenter requested
that CMS clarify how the § 447.203(c)
provisions would apply to performancebased incentives, withholds, and
alternative payment models, indicating
that States should not be penalized for
moving away from a FFS model that is
not tied to performance.
Response: Performance-based
incentives, innovative care models, and
alternative payment models are often
designed to improve quality of care,
promote better patient outcomes, and
reward providers for improvements to
quality of care and patient outcomes,
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
while lowering the cost of care. In the
2015 final rule with comment period,
we signaled our interest in working with
States in promoting innovative patient
care models and delivery system
changes that seek to reward the
provision of quality patient care that
also lowered cost to the Medicaid
program.369
The provisions of the final rule in
§ 447.203(c) provide processes for rate
reductions or restructurings, with the
goal of determining when those changes
could result in diminished access. In
most instances, a performance-based
incentive, innovative care models, or
alternative payment models that
restructure provider payments do so in
a manner that would not result in
diminished access and that we would
not regard as a restructuring subject to
§ 447.203(c). For example, a State may
propose an episode of care arrangement
that bundles all of the care related to a
defined medical event, including the
care for the event itself, any precursors
to the event and follow-up care. As a
component of this methodology, the
State would make one payment for the
whole episode that is meant to
encompass the medical event including
the precursors and follow-up care, with
up-side and down-side incentives paid
or collected based on the providers’
performance against the mean.
Providers must volunteer to enroll in
this program, and any other provider
would continue to be paid as they
normally would under the State plan.
Such a restructuring proposal does not
diminish access because the providers
are electing to participate and
understand the risk, but since care must
be provided for the performance
incentives to be determined and nonparticipating providers would not
experience a change in payment,
Medicaid beneficiaries will not
experience diminished access to
services. We also note that other simple
add-on payments for achievement of
specified quality targets where there is
no possibility of a reduction to any
provider’s payment would not be
considered a restructuring subject to the
requirements of § 447.203(c).
However, to the extent that a State
implements a performance-based
incentive, withhold, or alternative
payment model would reduce payment
rates, such as models that involve
down-side risk arrangements where
provider payments could decrease from
current levels in certain circumstances,
these changes likely would have the
potential to result in diminished access
to care and therefore would be a
369 80
FR 67578 and 67579.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
restructuring that would fall under the
requirements of § 447.203(c). For
example, if a State proposed to
implement a quality improvement
payment arrangement involving
downside risk, meaning that providers
could their payment rates reduced the
State’s quality improvement proposal,
for which providers were required to
participate then CMS could view this
arrangement as being a payment
reduction or restructuring that could
affect access to care. The State in this
instance would be expected to conduct
the appropriate level(s) of analysis
required under § 447.203(c).
We want to note that the requirement
to perform an initial or initial and
additional analysis under § 447.203(c)
does not mean the State will be unable
to enact the proposed payment
arrangement; it simply means CMS
wants to verify that access will not be
negatively impacted with additional
documentation to demonstrate this fact.
As such, this final rule does not limit a
State’s ability to reduce or restructure
rates based on information that the rates
are not economic and efficient; rather, it
ensures that States take appropriate
measures to document access to care
consistent with section 1902(a)(30)(A) of
the Act. We do not view this as a
penalty, as the commenter suggested,
but rather a documentation of
consistency with the statute. Under the
Act, rates must be both economic and
efficient, and they also must ensure that
individuals have sufficient access to
covered services. We interpret section
1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act as requiring a
balanced approach to Medicaid ratesetting and we encourage States to use
appropriate information and program
experience to develop rates to meet all
of its requirements. Further, we expect
States to document that Medicaid rates
are economic and efficient when the
State submits changes to payment
methodologies through a SPA. If a State
is unsure whether its proposed
performance-based incentive,
innovative care model, or alternative
payment models contains a
restructuring subject to § 447.203(c),
they can engage with CMS prior to
submission of a SPA. CMS can and may
request § 447.203(c) analyses upon
receipt of a proposal as well.
Comment: A few commenters
expressed concern that the provisions of
§ 447.203(c) appear to be operating
under the assumption that current
payment rates are adequate, with some
commenters focusing on HCBS service
payment, and concern that there is no
express requirement to regularly review
the payment methodology to account for
inflationary updates. For example, one
PO 00000
Frm 00229
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40769
commenter indicated that there would
be no analysis required by a State that
today pays less than the cost of
delivering care and does not increase
rates for the next 5 years, but also does
not propose any rate reductions.
Another indicated that the new rate
review process requires no
accountability from a State that may
currently have rates below the cost of
care or where rates remain static for
several years. These commenters
strongly encouraged CMS to include
provisions that would require States to
review current payment rates for
adequacy and update payment rates
immediately and on an ongoing basis
either annually or up to every 2 years
to account for inflation, new regulatory
requirements that impose costs on
providers, and other changes that may
impact the cost of doing business.
Response: We agree with the
commenter on the importance of States
having adequate rates, even when they
are not proposing to reduce or
restructure those provider payment
rates. We direct the commenter to the
other provisions of this final rule,
including the payment rate transparency
publication in § 447.203(b)(1),
comparative rate analysis in
§ 447.203(b)(2), and payment rate
disclosure in § 447.203(b)(3), which are
intended to make available readily
accessible information relevant to
whether the rates States currently are
paying (beginning with the initial
publications on or before July 1, 2026)
are adequate. We also note that
beneficiaries and providers have
opportunities to raise access to care
concerns to the State through the State’s
mechanisms for ongoing beneficiary and
provider input described in
§ 447.203(c)(4). This final rule addresses
how States can demonstrate sufficient
access to care as required by section
1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act when
submitting SPAs that propose to reduce
or restructure provider payment rates.
Neither provider cost nor inflation is a
required review element in meeting the
requirements of the final rule. States
may certainly consider these elements
when engaging in rate setting or
conducting rate reviews, but it is not a
required component of this final rule.
Comment: Two commenters
supported the proposal to revamp
previous requirements in effect for SPAs
that propose to reduce rate or
restructure payments and strongly urged
CMS to consider changes to the final
rule to ensure the new proposed
structure does not permit States to alter
rates in ways that negatively impact
beneficiary access.
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
40770
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
Response: We appreciate the
commenters’ support. We are finalizing
the provisions as proposed. The final
rule provides CMS with an
administrative process through which
States can demonstrate that they have
considered access to care and responded
to public concerns in the
implementation of payment rate
reduction or restructuring SPAs. We are
confident these steps will ensure rate
changes do not impact access in a
manner inconsistent with section
1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act.
Comment: Some commenters
supported efforts to bring more
transparency to the rate-setting process
but did not support CMS’ proposed
change to replace the current rate
reduction review process for one that
examines proposed rate reductions on a
State fiscal year basis. One commenter
expressed concern that the proposal to
establish an across-the-board threshold
for provider payment rate reductions
subject to the access review process fails
to recognize the need for variable rate
assumptions consistent with the
characteristics of different Medicaid
eligibility groups. The commenters
expressed concern that it is not always
appropriate to use the same
assumptions for all populations or
providers serving these eligibility
groups, especially for complex
populations, and noted that this
proposal fails to recognize the impact
individual provider rate reductions may
have on a class of providers, noting that
it is not appropriate to aggregate the
impact of provider rate reductions,
particularly for services provided to
complex populations served under the
Temporary Aid for Needy Families;
Aged, Blind, and Disabled; and LTSS
eligibility groups.
Response: We understand the
commenters’ concerns. States, under the
finalized § 447.203(c)(1) and (2), as
applicable, will be required to analyze
the impact on provider payments based
on the affected benefit category, but we
acknowledge that particular services
within a benefit category may be
provided across different provider
classes or settings. For example,
physicians may provide services in an
office setting, a hospital setting, or a
clinic setting. The provider may receive
a different payment rate for physician
services depending upon the setting
where services are performed as a result
of differences between facility and nonfacility payment rate types, which
account for the difference in provider
overhead cost assumptions based on the
setting where the services occur.
We also note, as the commenter
specifically raised concerns regarding
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
complex populations and eligibility
groups, that CMS policy has long
established policy, consistent with
statutory requirements for comparability
in amount, duration, or scope of
medical assistance, that States may not
establish differential rates based upon
an individual’s eligibility category.
States are able to set rates based on a
patient’s acuity, service complexity, or
other service-related consideration, but
to set different rates for different
eligibility categories could promote
inequity across the Medicaid program if
providers were offered greater financial
incentives to furnish services to
beneficiaries in some eligibility groups
than others. Such differentiation of
payment rates would also not be
considered economic and efficient in a
manner consistent with section
1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act because some
payment rates would be higher than
necessary considering relevant servicerelated factors, for example, if rates were
higher for certain eligibility groups than
others in relation to the Federal
matching rate available for expenditures
for the respective groups.
Comment: One commenter
recommended CMS clarify that FQHC
services are included in protections for
payment rate reductions in § 477.203(c).
Response: The requirements in
§ 447.203(c) are applicable to all
Medicaid FFS services under the
Medicaid State plan, including services
furnished by FQHCs.
Comment: One of the commenters
recommended that CMS consider
proposals to address stagnant and
insufficient Medicaid payment rates that
are not high enough to support paying
competitive wages. One commenter
recommended that CMS require States
to perform a one-time rate review
analysis (requiring States to submit the
data described in paragraph (c)(1) and,
if not all three of the requirements are
met, (c)(2)) upon implementation of this
rule to ensure payment adequacy
necessary to support access to quality
care.
Response: We understand the
commenters’ concerns regarding
stagnant provider payment rates and
rates that may not support competitive
wages. We encourage providers to
engage with their State Medicaid
programs through forums available to
them, such as the interested parties
advisory group and the mechanisms for
ongoing beneficiary and provider input,
described in § 447.203(c)(4). In addition,
we direct the commenter to the other
provisions of this final rule, including
the payment rate transparency
publication in § 447.203(b)(1),
comparative rate analysis in
PO 00000
Frm 00230
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
§ 447.203(b)(2), and payment rate
disclosure in § 447.203(b)(3), which are
intended to make available readily
accessible information relevant to
whether the rates States currently are
paying (beginning with the initial
publications on or before 7/1/26) are
adequate.
We explained in the proposed rule
that our primary objective was to
replace the previous AMRP process
with something that could better assess
access while decreasing burden on
States. Requiring the analysis described
by the commenters would represent an
enormous one-time burden on States.
We note that we are finalizing the rate
transparency and analysis requirements
proposed under § 447.203(b), which we
expect will provide greater insight into
rates relative to access issues, while
maintaining a scope that seeks to
minimize unnecessary burden on States.
Comment: A few commenters noted
how CMS indicated in the preamble of
the proposed rule that the term ‘‘benefit
category’’ under § 447.203(c) would
refer to services under a category of
services as described in section 1905(a)
of the Act. One commenter stated that
CMS has declined to define ‘‘benefit
category’’ in a meaningful way and
requested clarification. The commenter
was concerned that extremely large
swaths of services can be grouped
together for the purposes of conducting
the analysis, which could circumvent
the analysis of real-world impact of
payment cuts on specific provider types.
Another commenter requested that CMS
clarify that the required analyses apply
to both home care services (that is,
personal care and home health services)
provided under section 1905(a) of the
Act and to services provided under 1915
authorities. However, rather than
treating (for example) personal care
services as a single benefit category
across all authorities for the purpose of
the required analysis, the commenter
suggested that CMS view 1905(a) PCS as
one benefit and treat the set of HCBS
coverable under 1915 and other
authorities as a separate single benefit.
Response: Reiterating the definition in
the preamble, we mean for ‘‘benefit
category’’ to refer to all individual
services under a category of services
described in the Medicaid State plan for
which the State is proposing a payment
rate reduction or restructuring. Just as
with our review of Medicaid payment
rates, we do not review the inclusion of
individual services within a benefit
category unless the intention of a SPA
is to specifically add or remove coverage
for a particular service from the State
plan. Further, we have concerns about
the usefulness of information that
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
would inform our SPA review as the
relevant unit of analysis becomes
smaller (from benefit category to
individual service level). For example, it
is unclear that a reduction in the
number of group occupational therapy
services furnished by therapy providers
during a given time frame would
indicate that there is an issue with
provider payment rates being
insufficient to support adequate
beneficiary access, or if the reduction
merely represented a data anomaly that
is unrelated to the rate of payment. We
believe that the higher level of review of
payment rate sufficiency at the benefit
category level is consistent with the
requirement in section 1902(a)(30)(A) of
the Act that rates be sufficient to ensure
that ‘‘care and services are available
under the plan at least to the extent that
such care and services are available to
the general population in the geographic
area.’’
That being said, if a State proposes to
group together services together that are
not reasonably considered to be within
the same benefit category (including
where the grouping is not consistent
with how the State covers and/or pays
for the services under the State plan) to
attempt to meet the paragraph (c)(1)
thresholds and avoid the need to submit
additional analysis under paragraph
(c)(2), we will request additional
information from the State including
demonstrations that the paragraph (c)(1)
criteria are met using a reasonable
benefit category definition, or the
additional analysis required under
paragraph (c)(2), to support SPA
approval.
Finally, in response to the commenter
that requested that CMS clarify that the
required analyses apply to home care
services (including personal care and
home health services) under section
1905(a) of the Act and to those covered
under section 1915 authorities, we
affirm that the analyses apply to both
types of home care services under State
plan, section 1915(c) waiver and
demonstration payment rates, as
applicable. To the extent that it is
applicable, the 1905(a) PCS is one
benefit category and the set of HCBS
coverable PCS under 1915 and other
authorities are considered as individual
benefits as the payment methodologies
for these services of often distinct
methodologies across the different State
plan or waiver authorities.
Comment: One commenter suggested
CMS provide a template for the code-bycode analysis level to support the State
analysis procedures for rate reductions
or restructurings.
Response: We produced and are
finalizing a template for States to ease
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
the administration of the requirements
of this final rule, including a code-bycode analysis to the support the
payment analysis. The template will
assist the States with meeting the
§ 447.203(c)(1)(i) and (c)(2)(ii)
requirements for an aggregate analysis of
Medicaid base and supplemental
payments relative to Medicare, but it is
important for us to clarify that these
provisions do not necessarily require
submission to CMS of a code-by-code
analysis as suggested by the commenter.
Section 447.203(c)(1)(i) requires States
to provide written assurance and
relevant supporting documentation that
Medicaid payment rates in the aggregate
(including base and supplemental
payments) following the proposed
reduction or restructuring for each
benefit category affected by the
proposed reduction or restructuring
would be at or above 80 percent of the
most recently published Medicare
payment rates for the same or a
comparable set of Medicare-covered
services. Section 447.203(c)(2)(ii)
requires States to provide Medicaid
payment rates in the aggregate
(including base and supplemental
payments) before and after the proposed
reduction or restructuring for each
benefit category affected by proposed
reduction or restructuring, and a
comparison of each (aggregate Medicaid
payment before and after the reduction
or restructuring) to the most recently
published Medicare payment rates for
the same or a comparable set of
Medicare-covered services and, as
reasonably feasible, to the most recently
available payment rates of other health
care payers in the State or the
geographic area for the same or a
comparable set of covered services. In
each case, the analysis performed would
be an aggregate comparison of the
State’s proposed Medicaid rates to
Medicare; however, CMS may request
that the State provide supporting
documentation, for example, where
CMS has concerns with the accuracy of
the analysis performed.
Comment: One commenter stated that,
while imperfect as a point of
comparison, Medicare is at least a
reliable source of data that utilizes cost
studies and other factors in its own rate
setting processes. The commenter stated
that if Medicare is retained as the
benchmark, they would endorse use of
an aggregate, as opposed to code-bycode, comparison with Medicaid rates.
They explained that a code-by-code
analysis would be extremely difficult, as
CMS would need to define a
methodology to determine if there is a
one-to-one match between service
PO 00000
Frm 00231
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40771
descriptions and procedural codes in
Medicare and Medicaid; Medicaid
agencies report significant variation in
codes and service descriptions.
Response: We agree with the
commenter and note that the final rule
in § 447.203(c)(1)(i), and the similar
provision in § 447.203(c)(2)(ii), require
that Medicaid payment rates in the
aggregate (including base and
supplemental payments) following the
proposed reduction or restructuring for
each benefit category affected by the
proposed reduction or restructuring be
compared to the most recently
published Medicare payment rates for
the same or a comparable set of
Medicare-covered services. For this
purpose, the Medicare services selected
for comparison should align reasonably
with the Medicaid services covered by
the State within the affected Medicaid
benefit category. We would expect the
State to develop a reasonably
comparable set of Medicare-covered
services to which its proposed Medicaid
payment rates could be compared and to
include with its submission an
explanation of its reasoning and
methodology for constructing the
comparison of Medicaid to Medicare
payment rates.
Comment: A few commenters
opposed the two-tiered approach,
believing that this approach is
insufficient to ensure access. Those
commenters urged CMS to only use the
tier two (§ 447.203(c)(2)) analysis on any
SPA that proposes to reduce or
restructure provider payment rates. One
of the commenters opposed the twotiered system on the basis that it would
result in States implementing significant
cuts to Medicaid rates without scrutiny
for prolonged periods of time as long as
they are exempt from second-tier
analysis.
Response: We appreciate the
commenters’ viewpoints, but we are
finalizing the two-tiered analysis as
proposed. We do not agree that the twotiered system would result in States
implementing significant cuts to
Medicaid without scrutiny for
prolonged periods of time. We are
finalizing § 447.203(c)(1) to require that
all three provisions of § 447.203(c)(1)
must be met in order for the SPA to
qualify for the streamlined analysis
provision of the final rule. In our view,
the streamlined review for qualifying
SPAs under § 447.203(c)(1) is sufficient
because the State’s payment rates would
remain at or above 80 percent of the
Medicare rate; the proposed reduction
or restructuring would be likely to result
in no more than a 4 percent reduction
in aggregate FFS Medicaid expenditures
for each benefit category affected by
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
40772
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
proposed reduction or restructuring
within a State fiscal year; and the public
process yielded no significant access to
care concerns from beneficiaries,
providers, or other interested parties
regarding the service(s) for which the
payment rate reduction or payment
restructuring is proposed, or if such
processes did yield concerns, the State
can reasonably respond to or mitigate
the concerns, as appropriate. Taken
together, the streamlined State analysis
provides safeguards to mitigate the
impact of State rate reductions while
also providing protection for
compounding reductions that could
occur over a prolonged period of time.
We anticipate that compounding rate
reductions or restructurings would
lower the possibility that a State’s
payment rates remain at or above 80
percent of Medicare and the public
input process would generate significant
provider and beneficiary feedback in the
event that such reductions are taken at
4 percent per State fiscal year which
would disqualify a State Plan rate
reduction or restructuring proposal from
meeting the requirements for the
streamlined § 447.203(c)(1) process. We
included this aspect of the analysis, in
part, to protect against a large reduction
spread over time through smaller
reductions that pass initial scrutiny
having an unacceptable negative impact
on beneficiary access. As noted above,
we anticipate that any State that is
making significant cuts to provider
payment rates over time will have a
significant challenge in meeting the
requirements for the initial State
analysis in § 447.203(c)(1).
Comment: One commenter noted that
the proposed rule would require States
to provide additional information to
justify their requests for reduced or
restructured payment rates in SPAs, but
the commenter noted that CMS does not
commit to denying the requests where
the State proposes payment rates below
80 percent of Medicare and did not
agree with CMS’s lack of commitment to
disapprove such requested rate actions.
The commenter did not believe this
would sufficiently dissuade rate
reductions, and that the language
indicating CMS might not approve such
proposed payment rate reduction or
restructuring SPAs would just generate
confusion, as well as attempts by States
to ‘‘game the system’’ to try to figure out
what language they should submit to
win approval of their applications.
Response: Much like the previous
AMRP process from the 2015 final rule
with comment period, the access
provisions contained in § 447.203(c) are
intended to create a baseline
measurement from which the State rate
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
reduction or restructuring proposals
may be evaluated. CMS has not taken
the position that State payment rate
proposals that set provider payment
rates below 80 percent of Medicare are
to be automatically disapproved, but
instead we are committing States to a
process by which they demonstrate that
access is sufficient in their State so the
agency can properly evaluate these State
proposals under the section
1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act requirements.
SPAs that fail to include the information
required under the applicable
provisions of § 447.203(c) will be
disapproved by CMS. For proposals that
do not meet the streamlined State
analysis requirements under
§ 447.203(c)(1), States are required to
provide the following with all payment
rate reduction or restructuring SPAs: a
summary of the proposed change,
including the State’s reason for the
proposal and a description of any policy
purpose for the proposed change,
including the cumulative effect of all
reductions or restructurings taken
throughout the current State fiscal year
in aggregate FFS Medicaid expenditures
for each benefit category affected by
proposed reduction or restructuring
within a State fiscal year; Medicaid
payment rates in the aggregate
(including base and supplemental
payments) before and after the proposed
reduction or restructuring for each
benefit category affected by proposed
reduction or restructuring, and a
comparison of each (aggregate Medicaid
payment before and after the reduction
or restructuring) to the most recently
published Medicare payment rates for
the same or a comparable set of
Medicare-covered services and, as
reasonably feasible, to the most recently
available payment rates of other health
care payers in the State or the
geographic area for the same or a
comparable set of covered services;
information about the number of
actively participating providers of
services in each benefit category
affected by the proposed reduction or
restructuring; information about the
number of Medicaid beneficiaries
receiving services through the FFS
delivery system in each benefit category
affected by the proposed reduction or
restructuring; information about the
number of Medicaid services furnished
through the FFS delivery system in each
benefit category affected by the
proposed reduction or restructuring;
and a summary of, and the State’s
response to, any access to care concerns
or complaints received from
beneficiaries, providers, and other
interested parties regarding the
PO 00000
Frm 00232
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
service(s) for which the payment rate
reduction or restructuring is proposed,
as required under § 447.204(a)(2). In
addition to being used to establish a
baseline, as mentioned above, CMS will
use the information in determining
whether access is sufficient based on the
State’s submission of the required data
and analysis, including of Medicaid
provider enrollment, service utilization,
and number of beneficiaries receiving
affected services (including observed
trends). We expect State proposals to be
accompanied by documentation of
meaningful engagement with providers,
beneficiaries, and potentially other
interested parties, to ensure that the
proposed payment rate reductions or
restructurings will not reduce access to
care for Medicaid beneficiaries below
the standard set in section
1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act. However, we
acknowledge that the individual
circumstances of the SPA proposal will
inform the precise information required
to be submitted under this final rule. We
are confident that the provisions of the
final rule are clear and outline a process
which States will be required to follow
when reducing or restructuring provider
payment rates which CMS will review
on a case-by-case basis, but we are
confident that the documentation
requirements will not allow States to
game the system, as the commenter
contends.
Comment: One commenter urged
CMS to take an approach that is more
straightforward than the two-tiered
proposal to better monitor provider
payment adequacy. For example, the
commenter stated that payment
reductions in excess of 5 percent for any
given service or CPT code should be
reviewed by CMS to determine if
beneficiary access is at risk. Another
commenter was concerned that CMS’
proposed ‘‘aggregate’’ standard,
reviewing rates across a benefit category
rather than at the service-specific level,
could mean that some Medicaid services
may be paid well below the percentage
threshold even if the overall benefit
category achieves the threshold. They
recommended setting the threshold on a
disaggregated basis to protect access to
key services and avoid permitting States
to obscure low payment rates.
Response: We approve States’ rate
methodologies for compliance with
regulation and statute, but may not
approve individual service rates unless
a State presents a final rate, or a fee
schedule, as the output of a rate
methodology. This final rule does not
change that policy or imply that CMS
will review individual rates for
sufficiency in all cases. Reviewing
individual rates within a fee schedule
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
would not necessarily provide a better
determination of whether the rates are
adequate to enlist sufficient providers
into the Medicaid program or not,
provided that the State is using a
consistent payment rate methodology
for the entirety of the fee schedule, since
we do not believe that providers
generally make decisions about whether
to participate with a payer (and accept
the payer’s rates) based on the rate for
a single service. However, we will
review individual payment rate codes to
the extent that the rate changes fall
outside of the typical methodology used
by the State in their payment rate setting
methodology under the State plan. For
example, if the State uses the Medicare
fee schedule for items of DME under the
Medicaid State plan but decides to alter
the payment rate for the oxygen codes
(E0441, for example) to set Medicaidspecific rates, we will review those
individual payment rate changes as they
fall outside of the State’s payment rate
setting methodology under the State
plan. Further, the payment rate
transparency publication in
§ 447.203(b)(1) will require States to
publish their fee schedule rates for
services specified in that section of the
final rule, which will include individual
fee schedule payment rates for services
for CMS and public review.
b. Initial State Analysis for Rate
Reduction or Restructuring
(§ 447.203(c)(1))
Comment: One commenter stated
their general support for the streamlined
initial review process, noting it provides
States with clear safe harbor guidelines.
Response: We appreciate the support
of the commenter. However, we note
that section 447.203(c)(1) does not
necessarily provide a ‘‘safe harbor’’
guaranteeing approval of a SPA. All
applicable Federal requirements must
be met for SPA approval. And even
where paragraph (c)(1)(i) and (ii) are met
because the aggregate Medicaid
payment rates for the benefit category
after reduction or restructuring would
be at or above 80 percent of the most
recently published Medicare rates for
the same or a comparable set of
Medicare-covered services, and the
cumulative effect of all reductions or
restructurings throughout the current
State fiscal year would be likely to
result in no more than a 4 percent
reduction in aggregate FFS Medicaid
expenditures for the benefit category,
paragraph (c)(1)(iii) still must be met.
That is to say, even when the
quantitative standards of the first two
prongs of the (c)(1) test are satisfied, we
will carefully review the information
the State provides to us under section
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
447.204(b)(3) specifically analyzing any
information and concerns expressed in
input from affected interested parties in
connection with the proposed SPA. As
specified in section 447.203(c)(1)(iii),
there must be no significant access to
care concerns from beneficiaries,
providers, or other interested parties
regarding the service(s) for which the
payment rate reduction or payment
restructuring is proposed, or if public
processes did yield such concerns, the
State must be able to reasonably
respond to or mitigate them, as
appropriate.
Comment: One commenter noted their
support of CMS’ first-tier proposal for
handling rate reductions. However, they
recommended that CMS establish a
process for granting States flexibility
from the requirements under unique
circumstances. For example, a reduction
may occur as the result of a decrease in
CMS’ RVUs or Medicare payment
schedules. Some State fee schedules are
indirectly tied to CMS RVUs or other
Medicare payment schedules, and
decreases occurring there are likely to
also occur on the State’s fee schedule.
The commenter stated that an
exemption from rate reduction
requirements would be justified in this
circumstance.
Response: For States that have set
their approved State plan payment
methodology at the current Medicare
RVU prices, CMS would interpret such
a methodology as accounting for
changes that Medicare makes to
components of their RVU-based
methodology without the need for
additional SPA action on the State’s
part. This would only include scenarios
where the State has specifically
indicated that the payment rates for
Medicaid services are set at the current
Medicare price for the State plan
services and would not apply to
circumstances where the State creates a
static fee schedule that simply relies on
a particular snapshot of Medicare prices
to inform a State fee schedule, or for
methodologies that rely upon a prior
iteration of the Medicare prices for the
current Medicaid payment rates.
Comment: One commenter suggested
that provider associations and
participant representatives be part of
reviewing and analyzing the impacts on
rate reductions and access that would be
required under § 447.203(c)(1) and (2).
Response: Section 447.203(c)(4) as
finalized in this final rule provides that
States must have ongoing mechanisms
for beneficiary and provider input
(through hotlines, surveys, ombudsman,
review of grievance and appeals data, or
another equivalent mechanism), through
which interested parties can raise
PO 00000
Frm 00233
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40773
concerns about access, including
payment sufficiency. Provider
associations and participant
representatives, which we understand to
be representatives of beneficiaries that
may be under the age of 21, are able to
participate in public engagement
through these mechanisms, related to
State actions that could result in a
reduction or restructuring of State plan
payment rates. To be clear, the public
process in § 447.203(c)(4) serves as a
means for the State to receive feedback
on real-time access to care issues that
may be addressed on an ad hoc basis;
interested parties do not need to wait for
the State to develop a payment SPA to
raise access to care issues through
mechanisms under § 447.203(c)(4). This
input, as well as input collected through
the public input process under
§ 447.204, will be considered under
§ 447.203(c)(1)(iii) and used to
determine whether or not the proposed
reduction or restructuring SPA is
consistent with section 1902(a)(30)(A) of
the Act.
Comment: A few commenters
suggested CMS use its authority to
encourage States toward a national floor
for rates, with some stating the
Medicaid-to-Medicare fee ratio
threshold proposed in § 447.203(c)(1)(i)
should become a Federal floor for all
SPA and waiver approvals. For
example, they recommended that CMS
could phase-in an explicit regulatory
floor or implement standards tying
improvements in Medicaid rates to
approvals of related Medicaid
flexibilities, such as section 1115
approvals, SDPs, etc. One commenter
pointed out that some States have rates
well below Medicare levels and change
rates infrequently. This means that,
assuming a State does nothing, currently
inadequate rates could simply persist
for decades more under CMS’ approach,
and in fact regress relative to inflation.
Another commenter specifically
recommended that CMS require both an
initial in-depth analysis of access
metrics as well as an analysis over time
for any State that implements payment
rates lower than Medicare.
Response: Unless explicitly
authorized by statute, CMS does not
have the authority to establish a
national floor for Medicaid payment
rates. Refusing to approve any payment
rate reductions or restructurings that do
not specifically meet the thresholds in
§ 447.203(c)(1)(i) could be construed as
setting a national floor for rates. We
understand that some States may
infrequently update their payment rates,
but section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act
provides States with flexibility to
establish payment rates in a manner that
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
40774
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
balances consideration of State
budgetary needs and restrictions with
the obligation to provide medical
assistance under the State plan in
accordance with Federal requirements.
With the policies finalized throughout
this final rule, we hope that both States
and the public will more closely
examine existing rates. Our policies
around rate transparency and adequacy
will enhance opportunities to determine
where an existing rate may negatively
impact access to care and identify for
States where a need should be
addressed by providing beneficiaries,
providers, other and interested parties
with easier access to State plan payment
rates through payment rate transparency
publications, comparative payment rate
analyses, and payment rate disclosures.
Our policies around the mechanisms for
ongoing beneficiary and provider input
in § 447.203(c)(4) and addressing access
questions and remediation of
inadequate access to care in
§ 447.203(c)(5) will further provide
beneficiaries and providers
opportunities to engage with States
where existing payment rates may have
an impact on beneficiaries’ access to
care.
The purpose of this final rule is to
create a process that is less
administratively burdensome than the
previous, ongoing AMRP process under
the 2015 final rule with comment
period, while also maintaining a data
submission process for payment rate
reduction and restructuring SPAs that
do not meet the thresholds set out in
§ 447.203(c)(1), and note that the FFS
provisions, including the payment rate
transparency, comparative payment rate
analysis, and payment rate disclosure
requirements (§ 447.203(b)(1) through
(5)), interested parties’ advisory group
requirements (§ 447.203(b)(6)), and State
analysis procedures for payment rate
reductions or payment restructuring
(§ 447.203(c)), finalized in this rule are
expected to result in a net burden
reduction on States compared to the
previous AMRP requirements, as
discussed in the proposed rule and in
section III. of this final rule. This final
rule provides CMS and States with an
administrative process through which
rate reductions or restructurings can be
reviewed and approved, so long as the
proposed SPA satisfactorily includes the
information required under this final
rule and meets all applicable Federal
requirements.
We note that the policies finalized in
§ 447.203(c)(2) do include an analysis of
data that looks back at a 3-year period
of time to help ascertain whether access
to care for the relevant services is
consistent with the statutory access
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
standard. Further, the rule includes a
requirement for ongoing access
monitoring to the extent that access
issues are identified that require State
intervention, as provided in
§ 447.203(c)(5), which requires the State
to take corrective action resulting in
measurable and sustainable access
improvements.
Comment: One commenter
recommended that CMS amend
§ 447.203(c)(1) and (2) to require States
to demonstrate compliance with the
Mental Health Parity and Addiction
Equity Act of 2008 (MHPAEA), as
applicable, for any proposed rate
reduction or restructuring and provide
technical assistance to States on
compliance with this provision that
would include guidance on the required
comparative analysis both for the
standard as written and in operation.
Response: CMS works closely with
State Medicaid agencies to ensure
compliance with MHPAEA in Medicaid
managed care arrangements, Medicaid
alternative benefit plans (managed care
and FFS), and CHIP benefits (managed
care and FFS) whenever changes to
coverage of mental health or SUD
benefits are proposed by States. We did
not specifically require that States
demonstrate compliance with the
MHPAEA as part of this final rule, as
the final rule focuses on payment rates
established by the State Medicaid
agencies to pay for allowable Medicaid
services under the Medicaid State plan
through FFS. Congress has not extended
MHPAEA requirements to Medicaid
benefits provided solely through FFS
delivery systems. Nonetheless, we
encourage our State Medicaid and CHIP
agency partners to ensure their FFS
benefits comply with MHPAEA.
Moreover, CMS reviews State proposals
regarding rate reductions or
restructuring to ensure compliance with
the requirements of section
1902(a)(30)(A) of the Social Security Act
‘‘to assure that payments are consistent
with efficiency, economy, and quality of
care and are sufficient to enlist enough
providers so that care and services are
available under the plan, at least to the
extent that such care and services are
available to the general population in
the geographic area.’’ This review thus
includes the fundamental objective of
MHPAEA—to ensure access to mental
health and substance use disorder
treatment.
Comment: One commenter requested
further information on what
circumstances CMS would expect to
result in diminished access for a SPA
that would restructure, but not reduce,
rates.
PO 00000
Frm 00234
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
Response: We acknowledge that there
may be any number of payment
methodology changes that could harm
access to care even when there is a
restructuring but not reduction in rates,
and unfortunately, we are unable to
identify all such circumstances in
advance. However, as discussed
previously, one common type of
restructuring is a change in the targeting
of supplemental payments. States may
alter payments, including in ways that
are budget neutral for a benefit category
as a whole (that is, they do not decrease
overall Medicaid spending for the
benefit category), but the changes would
reduce payments for some providers,
potentially harming beneficiary access.
Comment: One commenter requested
that CMS clarify what is meant by
‘‘restructure’’ and confirm that this
would not include any type of rate
increase.
Response: A rate restructuring is a
payment action where a State amends
its methodology for an interrelated set of
rates whereby individual rates may
increase, decrease, or remain the same,
which the State typically undertakes to
achieve some programmatic purpose,
such as achieving more efficient
payment for services that frequently are
furnished together. While a rate
restructuring potentially could include
rate increases, if increasing rates is the
only effect of the rate restructuring, then
we generally would not expect these to
be circumstances when the changes
could result in diminished access, and
the requirements of § 447.203(c)(1)
through (3) would not have to be met.
Although we cannot set forth an
exhaustive list of rate restructurings,
one common type of restructuring is a
change in the targeting of supplemental
payments, under which the set of
providers qualifying for a supplemental
payment might change and/or the
amounts received by each provider
might increase or decrease. States may
use a methodology to identify amounts
that a provider would receive, which
would not require a SPA to initiate a
change in the amounts providers
receive. For example, a State sets up
supplemental payment pools of $10
million for trauma care centers in the
State and that payment pool is
distributed based upon a provider’s pro
rata share of Medicaid services. The
amounts paid to providers eligible for
that pool may vary from year to year
based upon each providers’ relative
Medicaid utilization within the State,
but the total amount of available funds
remains the same. If that State submits
a SPA to change the distribution
methodology or to add more qualifying
providers to the payment methodology,
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
but not change the $10 million pool,
then this change would be considered a
payment restructuring. If the State were
to reduce the total pool from $10
million to $8 million, then that would
be considered a reduction. A change in
supplemental payments that reduces the
total amounts that providers receive or
shifts funds from one provider to
another could result in access to care
issues and is one example of a potential
payment restructuring that could
negatively impact access to care. Where
there is uncertainty, we will work with
States to help identify situations where
a rate restructuring could diminish
access to care such that the processes
under § 447.203(c)(1) through (3) will
apply.
Comment: One commenter suggested
streamlined approval should apply to
any rate reduction that meets any one of
the three criteria listed in the proposed
rule. The commenter specifically
recommended providing streamlined
approval for rate reductions that result
in the rates being 100 percent or higher
of the comparable Medicare rate
regardless of the reduction in overall
expenditures for the benefit category
(otherwise stated, without the
application of § 447.203(c)(1)(ii)).).
Another commenter recommended that
CMS’ primary goal should be to
encourage increasing rates to Medicare
levels and generating feedback through
processes with interested parties.
Response: To the extent a State
proposes a payment rate reduction or
restructuring which results in payment
rates at or above 100 percent of
Medicare, it would certainly meet one of
the three criteria in § 447.203(c)(1) for
the initial State analysis for rate
reduction or restructuring, but would
still require that the other two criteria in
§ 447.203(c)(1) be met. We are requiring
all three criteria in § 447.203(c)(1) be
satisfied for the State to qualify for the
streamlined process, to protect access
across varied circumstances. For
example, a proposed rate may be 100
percent of Medicare, but if the currently
approved Medicaid payment rate is
higher such that the change represents
a payment reduction, then the proposed
rate reduction still could harm
beneficiary access to the relevant
services and potentially reduce access to
below the statutory standard.
Although we generally believe that
setting rate thresholds at a level
recommended by the commenter (100
percent of the corresponding Medicare
rate, or higher) could help support
adequate access to care for Medicaid
beneficiaries, we believe there are
circumstances where balancing State
budgetary considerations, and the
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
willingness of providers to accept a
given level of payment for services
provided to the Medicaid population,
will suggest a Medicaid payment rate
that diverges from a corresponding
Medicare rate but is still consistent with
the access requirement under section
1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act.
Comment: One commenter requested
that CMS provide additional guidance
about how to conduct the Medicaid to
Medicare comparison required under
§ 447.203(c)(1) and (2).
Response: As part of the proposed
rule PRA process, we proposed a
template for States to use to complete
the analyses under § 447.203(c). The
template includes detailed instructions
for how States should complete each
tier and component of the analysis, as
applicable. We are finalizing that
template as proposed.
Comment: Several commenters
inquired about whether the guidance
provided in SMDL #17–004 370 would
remain applicable under the new
proposals, wherein CMS determined
that there were circumstances unlikely
to diminish access, and as such, would
not invoke the requirements of
§ 447.203(b)(6) of the 2015 final rule
with comment period: reductions
necessary to implement CMS Federal
Medicaid payment requirements (for
example, Federal upper payment limits
and financial participation limits), but
only in circumstances under which the
State is not exercising discretion as to
how the requirement is implemented in
rates; reductions that will be
implemented as a decrease to all codes
within a service category or targeted to
certain codes, but for services where the
payment rates continue to be at or above
Medicare and/or average commercial
rates; and reductions that result from
changes implemented through the
Medicare program, where a State’s
service payment methodology adheres
to the Medicare methodology (For
example, modifications to diagnostic
related groups and the resource based
relative value scale, adoption of new
Medicare payment systems, consistency
with value-based purchasing initiatives,
etc.). One commenter specifically
inquired about circumstances where
payment rates would be below the
threshold of 100 percent of the most
recently published Medicare rates for
the same or comparable services in the
impacted benefit area before and after
the proposed restructuring. A few other
commenters encouraged CMS to allow a
tier 1 review for rate reductions in
370 SMDL #17–004. November 16, 2017. https://
www.medicaid.gov/sites/default/files/federalpolicy-guidance/downloads/smd17004.pdf.
PO 00000
Frm 00235
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40775
circumstances where rate reductions: (1)
are necessary to implement CMS
Medicaid payment requirements (for
example, UPL); (2) result in payment
rates that remain at or above Medicare
or average commercial rate amounts; or
(3) are prompted by a change in
Medicare payment rates when the
State’s rate methodology adheres to
Medicare methodology. One commenter
specifically recommended that the
exemptions provided under SMDL #17–
004 be included in the exemptions
under § 447.203(c)(1), specifically citing
circumstances in the SMDL where
Medicaid payment rate reductions
generally would not be expected to
diminish access, such as: reductions
necessary to implement CMS Federal
Medicaid payment requirements;
reductions that will be implemented as
a decrease to all codes within a service
category or targeted to certain codes, but
for services where the payment rates
continue to be at or above Medicare
and/or average commercial rates; and
reductions that result from changes
implemented through the Medicare
program, where a State’s service
payment methodology adheres to the
Medicare methodology.
Response: We did specifically request
comment on whether and how the
policies discussed in SMDL #17–004
should be included in the final rule, and
we thank the commenters for their
helpful suggestions. As stated, we are
finalizing § 447.203(c)(1) as proposed,
and we are not finalizing any exceptions
to the tier 1 (or tier 2) analysis. We
believe the analysis is warranted under
any rate reduction or restructuring. The
three circumstances described by
commenters from SMDL #17–004 are
either inapplicable to this final rule or
already accounted for. Specifically, in
the first circumstance, where Federal
Medicaid payment requirements are
otherwise established in statute or
regulation, we recognize that States
often have multiple ways of complying
with multiple Federal requirements that
may bear upon payment rates, and the
review required in this final rule in
§ 447.203(c) is necessary to ensure that
the State’s programmatic decisions are
consistent with all applicable Federal
requirements including that they ensure
sufficient beneficiary access to care. In
the third circumstance, reductions that
result from changes implemented
through the Medicare program, where
such a change does not require a SPA
to implement would also fall outside of
§ 447.203(c)(1) through (3), which are
only applicable when a State must
submit a SPA. The final rule provisions
only apply to the extent that a SPA is
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
40776
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
needed to implement the proposed
reduction or restructuring.
The second circumstance is the only
one subject to the provisions of this
final rule, for reductions that will be
implemented as a decrease to all codes
within a service category or targeted to
certain codes, but for services where the
payment rates continue to be at or above
Medicare and/or average commercial
rates. These reductions or restructurings
would need to meet all of the
requirements of § 447.203(c)(1) in order
to be eligible for the streamlined access
review criteria. We decided not to
include this criterion from SMDL #17–
004 in this final rule because we
received a number of comments on this
final rule that suggested that providers
and beneficiaries should have input
where non-nominal rate reductions or
restructurings may occur, regardless of
the current or proposed payment level.
Including this particular provision
could provide a State with a means to
significantly reduce provider payment
rates without needing to engage with the
provider and beneficiary community on
the impact such a reduction might have
on access to care.
Comment: One commenter expressed
concern that CMS’ proposals would
slow or in some cases prevent altogether
the adoption of VBP arrangements or
other alternative payment models.
Under these models, the commenter
stated that it is common for some
providers to experience increases in
payment reflective of outcomes
attributable to those providers, and it is
also common for some providers to
experience decreases in payment,
including when aggregate levels of
payment are increasing for a relevant
service or services. Given that any SPA
proposing to implement or substantially
modify a VBP payment arrangement
could reasonably be considered a
proposal to ‘‘restructure’’ payments, the
commenter was concerned that the
proposed rule essentially would treat all
VBP payment arrangements as
inherently suspect and as requiring
additional scrutiny and administrative
burden. The commenter encouraged
CMS to continue to identify ways to
support and encourage the adoption of
VBP models in Medicaid, noting that
CMS should not adopt rules that create
additional obstacles for States seeking to
implement VBP models. A few other
commenters suggested that streamlined
review should be available in situations
where rate reductions are used to
implement VBPs through a withhold
payment rate restructuring that does not
reduce the total payments within the
overall service category, because the
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
withheld amounts subsequently are
paid out based on performance.
Response: We agree with the
commenter that VBP arrangements can
be useful tools to promote high-quality
services for Medicaid beneficiaries
while promoting efficient and economic
care delivery, fully consistent with
beneficiary access to covered services
that meets the statutory standard.
Although a proposed SPA seeking to
implement or significantly modify a
VBP arrangement likely may be
considered a payment rate restructuring,
nothing in the final rule would prohibit
or is intended to discourage States from
adopting such structures. Performancebased incentives, innovative care
models, and alternative payment models
are often designed to improve quality of
care, promote better patient outcomes,
and reward providers for improvements
to quality of care and patient outcomes,
while lowering the cost of care. In the
2015 final rule with comment period,
we signaled our interest in working with
States in promoting innovative patient
care models and delivery system
changes that seek to reward the
provision of quality patient care that
also lowered cost to the Medicaid
program.371
The provisions of the final rule in
§ 447.203(c) provide processes for rate
reductions or restructurings, with the
goal of determining when those changes
could result in diminished access. In
most instances, a performance-based
incentive, innovative care models, or
alternative payment models that
restructure provider payments do so in
a manner that would not result in
diminished access and that we would
not regard as a restructuring subject to
§ 447.203(c). For example, a State may
propose an episode of care arrangement
that bundles all of the care related to a
defined medical event, including the
care for the event itself, any precursors
to the event and follow-up care. As a
component of this methodology, the
State would make one payment for the
whole episode that is meant to
encompass the medical event including
the precursors and follow-up care, with
up-side and down-side incentives paid
or collected based on the providers’
performance against the mean.
Providers must volunteer to enroll in
this program, and any other provider
would continue to be paid as they
normally would under the State plan.
Such a restructuring proposal does not
diminish access because the providers
are electing to participate and
understand the risk, but since care must
be provided for the performance
371 80
PO 00000
FR 67578–67579.
Frm 00236
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
incentives to be determined and nonparticipating providers would not
experience a change in payment,
Medicaid beneficiaries will not
experience diminished access to
services. We also note that other simple
add-on payments for achievement of
specified quality targets where there is
no possibility of a reduction to any
provider’s payment would not be
considered a restructuring subject to the
requirements of § 447.203(c).
However, to the extent that a State
implements a performance-based
incentive, withhold, or alternative
payment model would reduce payment
rates, such as models that involve
down-side risk arrangements where
provider payments could decrease from
current levels in certain circumstances,
these changes likely would have the
potential to result in diminished access
to care and therefore would be a
restructuring that would fall under the
requirements of § 447.203(c). For
example, if a State proposed to
implement a quality improvement
payment arrangement involving
downside risk, meaning that providers
could their payment rates reduced the
State’s quality improvement proposal,
for which providers were required to
participate then CMS could view this
arrangement as being a payment
reduction or restructuring that could
affect access to care. The State in this
instance would be expected to conduct
the appropriate level(s) of analysis
required under § 447.203(c).
We want to note that the requirement
to perform an initial or initial and
additional analysis under § 447.203(c)
does not mean the State will be unable
to enact the proposed payment
arrangement; it simply means CMS
wants to verify that access will not be
negatively impacted with additional
documentation to demonstrate this fact.
As such, this final rule does not limit a
State’s ability to reduce or restructure
rates based on information that the rates
are not economic and efficient; rather, it
ensures that States take appropriate
measures to document access to care
consistent with section 1902(a)(30)(A) of
the Act. We do not view this as a
penalty, as the commenter suggested,
but rather a documentation of
consistency with the statute. Under the
Act, rates must be both economic and
efficient, and they also must ensure that
individuals have sufficient access to
covered services. We interpret section
1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act as requiring a
balanced approach to Medicaid ratesetting and we encourage States to use
appropriate information and program
experience to develop rates to meet all
of its requirements. Further, we expect
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
States to document that Medicaid rates
are economic and efficient when the
State submits changes to payment
methodologies through a SPA. If a State
is unsure whether its proposed
performance-based incentive,
innovative care model, or alternative
payment models contains a
restructuring subject to § 447.203(c),
they can engage with CMS prior to
submission of a SPA. CMS can and may
request § 447.203(c) analyses upon
receipt of a proposal as well.
Comment: One commenter strongly
suggested that the State rate analysis be
required on an annual basis, not only
upon rate reductions or restructuring,
and further suggested that any rate
examinations by CMS should also
include rates paid in managed care,
noting the volume of HCBS provided
under managed care, and as such,
focusing only on FFS rates is a
disservice to much of the industry.
Response: We intend for the payment
rate transparency provisions in
§ 447.203(b) to provide interested
parties with insight into State plan
payment rates relative to the Medicare
payment rates for the same services.
While these payment analyses will be
updated every other year, as opposed to
annually as mentioned by the
commenter, the § 447.203(b) analysis
will be available for CMS and for
interested parties to review, while the
§ 447.203(c) analysis will apply only to
SPA submissions that propose to reduce
or restructure provider payment rates.
The § 447.203(c) provisions of this final
rule concern SPAs proposing to reduce
or restructure payment rates in
Medicaid FFS. Other components of this
final rule address payment rate
adequacy and transparency for HCBS
specifically, and access to care in
managed care is being addressed
through the Managed Care final rule (as
published elsewhere in this Federal
Register).
Comment: One commenter stated that
SPAs that would result in Medicaid
payments that are at or above 80 percent
of Medicare rates for the same or
comparable services should be
approvable without resorting to the
larger access analysis described in
proposed § 447.203(c)(2). The
commenter noted that it is common for
Medicaid to pay a percentage of
Medicare rates (for example, 85 percent
of Medicare) and stated that a proposed
payment methodology should not have
to result in Medicaid payments that are
exactly the same as Medicare rates to
avoid access concerns.
Response: This final rule does not
require that the proposed payment
methodology result in payments that are
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
exactly the same as Medicare rates, or
any specific percentage of the Medicare
rates for the same or a comparable set
of services. States that have rates at or
above 80 percent of Medicare in the
aggregate, including base and
supplemental payments, can qualify for
the streamlined initial State analysis for
rate reduction or restructuring in
§ 447.203(c)(1) of the final rule,
provided that the other criteria of
§ 447.203(c)(1) are met. As discussed in
an earlier response to comment in this
final rule; however, we do not agree that
State payment proposals that meet the
80 percent of Medicare threshold should
be exempt from the other qualification
criteria specified in § 447.203(c)(1)(ii)
and (iii), nor the additional analysis
elements in § 447.203(c)(2) if all the
criteria for the streamlined process are
not met.
Comment: One commenter
commended CMS for moving towards
more clear and transparent processes for
rate analyses associated with Stateproposed payment changes. However,
the commenter indicated that the first
tier’s streamlined requirements are
unlikely to ever be met, as the
commenter noted that there are rarely
any changes in rates that are proposed
that do not elicit complaints and/or
concerns about impacts to access from
the public and/or interested parties,
even in such circumstances as rate
increases. The commenter suggested
that CMS reconsider the tier guidelines
to make it more feasible for a State to
meet the requirements of the initial,
streamlined tier.
Response: We disagree that the
streamlined requirements are unlikely
to ever be met. We discussed a State’s
ability to meet the streamlined criteria
in the preamble, and direct the
commenter to sections II.C.3 and
III.C.11.d.i. of the final rule, which
discusses the overall impact of this
policy on State proposals to reduce or
restructure provider payment rates.
Similar to our experience after the
issuance of SMDL #17–004, as
discussed in the above referenced
sections of the final rule, we anticipate
that there will be States that propose
rate reductions or restructurings that
will be able to demonstrate compliance
with § 447.203(c)(1). The final rule
provides that significant access
concerns can be raised, and the proposal
can still meet the (c)(1) threshold,
provided that the State can reasonably
respond to or mitigate the concerns, as
appropriate. States should be working
with their provider and beneficiary
communities and engaging with
constructive criticism and complaints,
and provide justification to those
PO 00000
Frm 00237
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40777
interested parties as to why the
reductions are necessary, and discuss
alternatives considered. An important
purpose of § 447.203(c)(1)(iii) is to
encourage meaningful engagement
between States and s interested parties.
Comment: Multiple commenters
recommended that CMS increase the
proposed threshold to qualify for the
streamlined payment SPA analysis
proposed at § 447.203(c)(1)(i) from 80
percent of Medicare, with some
commenters suggesting that the
threshold be changed to 100 percent of
Medicare to make the streamlined
process more meaningful. These
commenters noted that, although
Medicare FFS pays physicians
considerably more, on average, than
Medicaid, it is not competitive in
markets with a large percent of
commercial payers and Medicare
Advantage plans, which typically pay
more than traditional Medicare.
Therefore, these commenters stated that
setting a benchmark at 80 percent of a
rate that is not competitive in many
parts of the country would undermine
efforts to ensure Medicaid payments
comply with section 1902(a)(30)(A) of
the Act. Another commenter stated that
many people cannot access Medicaid
acute-care services of the types that
Medicare pays for because States do not
pay providers adequate rates to induce
them to accept Medicaid as payment,
and the commenter noted that this
problem has existed for a very long
time, and it is not related to whether a
State wants to reduce or restructure
rates from their current levels. One
commenter noted that many providers
are already paid at 80 percent of
Medicare and thus recommended that it
seems appropriate to select a higher
standard by which to assess whether a
reduction would diminish access.
Further, a couple of commenters
suggested that if access problems persist
after a State has achieved the 80 percent
threshold for a suitable period of time,
and those problems can be traced to
inadequate rates, then the State should
be required to raise those rates to 85
percent, then 90 percent and so on until
the rates reach 100 percent of the
Medicare rate. One commenter
suggested that such a graduated
approach to the § 447.203(c)(1)(i)
threshold should be included regardless
of whether there are persistent
documented access to care issues. Some
commenters had similar
recommendations to increase the
threshold without recommending a
specific number, noting that Medicare
payments are often low relative to
provider costs, and one of these
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
40778
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
commenters also recommended a phasein approach.
Some commenters suggested that
CMS take a different approach for
different services where the commenters
suggested that Medicare may
undervalue a service, such as mental
health, or where certain service
providers do not take insurance, which
leads to higher charges in the private
market. One specifically suggested a 100
percent threshold for behavioral health,
for these reasons.
Response: We appreciate the
viewpoints and suggestions of the
commenters. First, where the
commenters suggested raising the 80
percent threshold to a higher level, such
as a 100 percent threshold, to make the
streamlined process more protective of
beneficiary access, we believe the 80
percent threshold continues to present a
meaningful threshold, particularly as it
is coupled with the other standards in
§ 447.203(c)(1). As we discussed in the
preamble, after careful review of the
literature, we determined that 80
percent of Medicare would be a
reasonable payment rate threshold to
aid States’ and our assessment of
compliance with section 1902(a)(30)(A)
of the Act. Based on a review of
evidence discuss elsewhere in the
proposed rule and preamble of this final
rule, we do not currently have evidence
that a ratio higher than 80 percent is
necessary to ensure compliance with the
statutory access standard.372 However,
we are committed to monitoring
implementation and would consider
proposing a sliding percentage
threshold for the Streamlined analysis
required under § 447.203(c)(1) through
future rulemaking, if it is determined
that such a change would be
appropriate. The threshold is not a level
set for approval (or disapproval) of a
SPA, but merely to inform the level of
analysis would be required.
Additionally, the other commenter’s
assertion that many providers are
already paid at 80 percent of Medicare
does not, in our view, indicate a need
for stricter thresholds, but rather
provides that some States may simply
be able to meet the § 447.203(c)(1)(i)
threshold. If these providers, the
beneficiaries they serve, and/or other
interested parties have access-related
concerns about current or proposed
payment rates in their State, they may
raise those concerns to the State through
the various available forms of public
process, which the State would need to
address consistent with
§ 447.203(c)(1)(iii) to qualify for the
streamlined analysis process in the
372 88
FR 28027 through 28029.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
event of a payment SPA that would
reduce or restructure rates in
circumstances that could result in
diminished access. We note that, in
general, there is no requirement that
payment rates for Medicaid services
include explicit consideration of a
provider’s cost of care. The level of
payment rates in relation to provider
costs is not necessarily the only or the
decisive factor in ensuring access to care
consistent with the statutory standard,
and we do not require that States
establish that rates are sufficient to
ensure access by reviewing the
relationship of payment rates to
provider costs.
Second, we agree that Medicare
payment rates are typically higher than
Medicaid, but do not agree the fact that
some private payer rates and Medicare
Advantage rates are higher than
Medicare FFS rates requires that we
select a threshold rate of higher than 80
percent of the Medicare FFS rate to
achieve a meaningful comparison that
helps ensure that Medicaid rates are
adequate to meet the statutory access
standard. In addition, regarding the
comment that certain providers that do
not take insurance, which leads to
higher charges, we do not consider a
charged amount to be comparable to a
payment rate unless the provider
actually receives the charged amount as
payment amount from a payer
(including self-pay individuals). Some
providers bill patients on a sliding fee
scale, dependent on factors like the
individual’s income level, even if the
provider does not take insurance. This
does not mean that using a provider’s
customary charge is a reasonable proxy
for an economic and efficient payment
rate or for a payment level that is
necessary to support adequate access to
care, because not all providers receive
payment at their charge rate, even if
they bill the patient directly.
We are finalizing the § 447.203(c)(1)(i)
threshold at 80 percent of Medicare FFS
because we wanted to balance an
achievable threshold for States while
also establishing a threshold that we
believe would be strongly indicative
that Medicaid payment rates would be
likely to comply with section
1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act. While we
acknowledge that 80 percent of
Medicare rates may not provide absolute
assurance that a given provider, or a
sufficient number of providers, will
participate in the Medicaid program, we
are using 80 percent as a threshold to
determine the level of analysis and
information a State must provide to
CMS to support consistency of payment
rates with section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the
Act. Notably, there are other provisions
PO 00000
Frm 00238
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
of the final rule that provide
opportunities for the public to raise
access to care concerns to State agencies
and to CMS should Medicaid payment
rates be insufficient to ensure adequate
provider participation so that the
statutory access standard is met, as
provided in §§ 447.203(c)(4) and
447.204.
Finally, we acknowledge the
commenter that suggested that 80
percent of Medicare does not take into
account circumstances in which
Medicare may undervalue a service,
such as mental health. In the 2024
Medicare PFS final rule, Medicare did
finalize an adjustment to the payment
for certain timed behavioral health
services paid under the PFS.373 In the
same rule, we acknowledged the
systemic valuation problem and
finalized an adjustment to help mitigate
the impact which is scheduled to be
phased-in over 4 years. While there are
certainly going to be issues within any
selected rate comparison approach, do
not believe that Medicare payment rates
for certain services or in general are
insufficient in a manner that would
suggest a need to use a threshold higher
than 80 percent of the Medicare PFS
rate. We acknowledge that the
reluctance of some provider types to
accept payment from various payers,
including public and private payers, is
concerning, as this can have a negative
effect on access to needed care for
Medicaid and Medicare beneficiaries, as
well as the public at large, including
those who are privately insured.
However, to the extent the broader
public has difficulty accessing a
particular service due to high levels of
refusal among providers of that service
to accept payment offered by public and
private payers, then it is possible that
the access standard under section
1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act could be met
even if Medicaid beneficiaries are
experiencing significant difficultly
obtaining services from these providers.
Although CMS would encourage States
in such circumstances to explore all
available options to encourage greater
provider participation in Medicaid, we
have not seen evidence that leads us to
believe this circumstance warrants a
different approach to evaluating the
sufficiency of payment rates for
behavioral health services that is
different than the approach for physical
health services.
Comment: One commenter
recommended that CMS establish a
minimum payment threshold that States
must adhere to if there are significant,
demonstrated access problems, noting
373 88
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
FR 79006.
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
that States where the 80 percent
threshold has been met or exceeded
have significantly fewer problems with
access to Medicaid services than States
where that has not happened. Therefore,
the commenter recommended that CMS
require States to set all rates under the
Medicaid State plan to at least 80
percent of the comparable Medicare
rate, unless the State can demonstrate
that it does not have a significant access
problem with the services for which
Medicaid payment rates are below that
threshold.
Response: We appreciate the
recommendations of the commenters,
but the statute does not provide CMS
with the authority to establish a floor for
Medicaid payment rates as
recommended by the commenter, with
limited statutory exceptions (such as for
hospice services under section
1902(a)(13)(B) of the Act and FQHC/
RHC services under section 1902(bb) of
the Act, which each establish a floor for
provider payment rates which prohibits
States from implementing rate
reductions below the amount calculated
through the methodology provided in
the statute). We are finalizing the
§ 447.203(c)(1) and (2) provisions as
proposed. Payment rates are not the sole
indicators of access to care, and States
should pursue any means to improve
access to care to the extent that they are
able. To the extent that there are
significant access issues where the
provider payment rates are at least 80
percent of Medicare, the other
components of § 447.203(c)(1) would
also be reviewed to determine if the
payment rate reductions or
restructurings meet the § 447.203(c)(1)
thresholds. If there are access to care
issues, then in following the process
described in this final rule, we
anticipate that the public processes in
paragraph (c)(4) and § 447.204 may
yield significant access to care concerns
from beneficiaries, providers, or other
interested parties regarding the
service(s) for which the payment rate
reduction or payment restructuring is
proposed. We would only consider
approving a payment SPA in such
circumstances under the streamlined
process under § 447.203(c)(1) if the State
were able to reasonably respond to or
mitigate the concerns, as appropriate, as
documented in the analysis provided by
the State pursuant to § 447.204(b)(3).
Comment: One commenter
encouraged CMS to conduct enhanced
reviews, consistent with § 447.203(c)(2),
of payment rates for States that are
already below the 80 percent threshold,
even if the State has not submitted a
triggering rate reduction SPA.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
Response: We appreciate the
suggestion of the commenter. The
payment rate transparency publication,
comparative payment rate analysis, and
payment rate disclosure requirements
we are finalizing in § 447.203(b) will
allow States, CMS, and the public a
better insight into rates regardless of
whether a SPA is submitted. However,
we are not requesting a § 447.203(c)(2)
analysis where the State has not
submitted a SPA because we are moving
away from the previous AMRP process
from the 2015 final rule with comment
period and replacing that process with
the new § 447.203 provisions of this
final rule. We will continue in our
oversight role of the Medicaid program
and note that we can initiate a State
plan compliance action if we have
evidence that the State’s Medicaid
payment rates do not meet the access
standards in section 1902(a)(30)(A) of
the Act, regardless of whether the State
is seeking to change them with a SPA.
Comment: For the 80 percent of
Medicare analysis, two commenters
recommended weighting codes in the
analysis by service volume to reflect
payment levels more meaningfully
across the benefit category. These
commenters were concerned that CMS’
proposed ‘‘aggregate’’ standard,
reviewing rates across a benefit category
rather than at the service-specific level,
will mean that some Medicaid services
are paid below 80 percent (including
frequently provided services) even if the
overall benefit category (including
equally weighted but infrequently
provided services) achieves the 80
percent threshold. They recommended
that CMS set the threshold on a
disaggregated basis to avoid permitting
States to obscure low payment rates for
key services.
Response: We approve States’ rate
methodologies for compliance with
regulation and statute, but may not
approve individual service rates unless
a State presents a final rate, or a fee
schedule, as the output of a rate
methodology. This final rule does not
change that policy or imply that CMS
will review individual rates for
sufficiency in all cases. Reviewing
individual rates within a fee schedule
would not necessarily provide a better
determination of whether the rates are
adequate to enlist sufficient providers
into the Medicaid program or not, since
we do not believe that providers
generally make decisions about whether
to participate with a payer (and accept
the payer’s rates) based on the rate for
a single service. However, we will
review individual payment rate codes to
the extent that the rate changes fall
outside of the typical methodology used
PO 00000
Frm 00239
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40779
by the State in their payment rate setting
methodology under the State plan, or to
the extent that we have reason to believe
that common billing codes most
frequently used by providers within the
State are disproportionately impacted,
as determined by the State’s public
input process, by the payment rate
reduction or restructuring proposal.
Further, the payment rate transparency
publication in § 447.203(b)(1) will
require States to publish their fee
schedule rates for services specified in
that section of the final rule, which will
include individual fee schedule
payment rates for services for CMS and
public review.
Comment: One commenter
recommended that, for services for
which the State does not use a costbased payment methodology, CMS
should require States to transition to a
cost-based methodology. Alternatively,
they recommended that CMS require
Medicaid rates be no less than 80
percent of Medicare, private insurance,
private payment (which we interpret to
mean self-pay), or rates for Statefurnished or paid services or other
comparable service rates.
Response: We appreciate the
recommendations of the commenter, but
with limited statutory exceptions (such
as for hospice services under section
1902(a)(13)(B) of the Act and FQHC/
RHC services under section 1902(bb) of
the Act, which each establish a floor for
provider payment rates which prohibits
States from implementing rate
reductions below the amount calculated
through the methodology provided in
the statute), the statute does not provide
CMS with the authority to establish a
floor or a particular payment
methodology for Medicaid payment
rates as recommended by the
commenter. There is also no statutory
requirement to pay providers at the cost
of providing services or rates that are
equivalent to cost. Prior to 1997, the
Omnibus Reconciliation Act of 1980
included the ‘‘Boren Amendment’’
which required under then section
1902(a)(13) of the Act that some
institutional providers, in particular
nursing facilities and intermediate care
facilities, receive payments were
reasonable and adequate to meet the
costs which much be incurred by
efficiently and economically operated
facilities in order to provide care and
services in conformity with applicable
State and Federal laws, regulations, and
quality and safety standards. In 1997,
through the Balance Budget Act of 1997,
the Boren Amendment was repealed
and replaced with the current section
1902(a)(13) of Act to instead require
States to use a public process to set
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
40780
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
institutional provider payment rates.
Since these statutory changes have
occurred, States are not required to
consider the cost of care in the
development of provider payment rates,
but instead rely on input from those
providers in their rate setting, which
input also is important under the
requirements set forth in this final rule.
We are finalizing the § 447.203(c)(1) and
(2) provisions as proposed.
Comment: A couple of commenters
questioned the use of Medicare rates as
the basis for comparison in § 447.203(c),
as it is not a significant payor of certain
Medicaid-covered services and serves a
significantly different population. These
commenters suggested that services
such as substance-use disorder services,
facility-based treatment, dental services,
and certain LTSS lack a comparable set
of Medicare-covered services that would
‘‘bear a reasonable similarity’’ to the
Medicaid-covered services. One
commenter expressed concern about
whether States may compare against
Medicare rates that are perhaps similar
in concept but not in practice.
Specifically, the commenter noted that
Medicare Home Health Aides and
Medicare in-home skilled nursing
services seem like they might be
comparable to certain Medicaid HCBS
and LTSS, but in practice serve different
populations in vastly different volumes
and as such are not appropriate
comparisons. Commenters urged CMS
to issue guidance to States on service
categories that would require the
submission of additional data under this
circumstance. One commenter
acknowledged that the aggregate
comparison, rather than a rate-by-rate
comparison, alleviated some of the
challenges of finding a Medicare
equivalent for certain services.
Further, one commenter suggested a
more nuanced approach to examining
payment rates as they relate to access,
such as benchmarking against rates for
a subset of the highest performing States
in terms of access to care for these
service categories. That commenter
cited recent research from the American
Dental Association’s Health Policy
Institute, which does not suggest a
strong relationship between the ratio of
Medicaid-to-private payer rates and
dental provider participation in
Medicaid, meaning that a comparison to
private payer rates is not necessarily
instructive for all services in the
absence of Medicare comparator rates.
Response: We are finalizing
§ 447.203(c)(1) and (2) as proposed. The
regulations account for circumstances
where Medicare does not cover
comparable services, by requiring States
to compare, ‘‘as reasonably feasible, to
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
the most recently available payment
rates of other health care payers in the
State or the geographic area for the same
or a comparable set of covered services,
‘‘which comparison is required even if
it is impossible to compare’’ to the most
recently published Medicare payment
rates for the same or a comparable set
of Medicare-covered services because no
such set of Medicare-covered services
exists. We also agree with the
commenter who pointed out that the
aggregate comparison at the level of the
benefit category makes it more feasible
to find a reasonable Medicare
comparison. While the regulations allow
States some flexibility in determining
how to perform the required comparison
in developing and submitting their SPA
analysis, all State-submitted information
will be reviewed by CMS through the
SPA process, and we reserve the right to
request any additional information
necessary to further understand the SPA
or the accompanying analysis, which
may include a request for additional rate
comparison information.
Although we appreciate the concern
of the commenter about circumstances
where neither Medicare nor private
payer rates provide a reasonable analog
to assess access to care, we have to
balance our requirements against the
feasibility of obtaining data for
comparison. Although the rate
transparency requirements we are
finalizing in this rule will increase the
availability of State rate data,
determining the highest performing
States for use as the commenter
suggested would require additional
burden on both States and the Federal
Government to determine which States
would be benchmark States for which
services. In addition, it is not
necessarily clear that this approach
would be appropriate to ensure
compliance with the statutory access
standard, which looks to whether
beneficiaries have access to covered
services at least as great as that enjoyed
by the general population in the same
geographic area. We believe the policies
we are finalizing strike an appropriate
balance that reasonably considers
availability of data and State burden, as
well as the need to ensure sufficient
beneficiary access.
We acknowledge the commenters’
concern that services such as substanceuse disorder services, facility-based
treatment, dental services, and certain
LTSS lack a comparable set of Medicarecovered services that would ‘‘bear a
reasonable similarity’’ to the Medicaidcovered services, and the concern about
whether States may compare against
Medicare rates that are perhaps similar
in concept but not in practice.
PO 00000
Frm 00240
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
Particularly for facility-based services,
we recognize that Medicare and
Medicaid provider types may not be
identical in certain cases. However,
often, facility-based services furnished
by a provider type enrolled in one
program are covered when furnished in
a different setting or by a provider with
a different enrollment type in the other
program. In such cases, States should
look to the nature of the service rather
than, for example, the enrollment type
of the provider, to identify a reasonably
similar set of Medicare-covered services
for comparison. We acknowledge that
Medicare also establishes payment rates
for certain services for which Medicare
seldom pays; however, States still
should consider these rates when
constructing their comparisons to
Medicare in accordance with the
provisions of this final rule.
Comment: Some commenters
requested that CMS remove the 4
percent threshold under 447.203(c)(1),
noting that a 4 percent, or even lower,
standard would in most cases be
reducing a rate which is already far
below Medicare levels. One commenter
suggested that if a 1 or 2 percent
threshold is not feasible for every State,
then CMS should use this standard (that
is, 1 or 2 percent, instead of 4 percent)
for States whose aggregate Medicaid
FFS payments average less than the
national average of 72 percent for the
most common E/M services.
One of these commenters supported
CMS’ proposal to assess such rate
reductions on a cumulative basis over
the course of a State fiscal year. Another
commenter urged CMS to consider
designing a limit to ensure that States
could not implement a large cut (for
example, 20 percent) to payments for a
particular service, which the commenter
perceived as a risk due to our proposal
to analyze changes at the benefit
category level, where we proposed to
examine whether aggregate payment
rate changes for the benefit category as
a whole would exceed the 4 percent
threshold. The commenter also
suggested that CMS could also consider
disaggregating service analysis in future
rulemaking.
Response: We are finalizing
§ 447.203(c)(1) and (2) as proposed. As
discussed previously, the 4 percent
threshold is one of three criteria
identified in § 447.203(c)(1), which, if
not met, will require the State to submit
additional information required under
§ 447.203(c)(2). Where a State’s payment
rates are already below 80 percent of the
Medicare FFS payment rate for the same
or a comparable set of services, then any
rate reductions from that State would be
subject to the requirements of
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
§ 447.203(c)(2). This feature will ensure
States with rates already below 80
percent of comparable Medicare FFS
rate levels will have to take additional
steps to establish that the rate change
will not result in access below the level
required under section 1902(a)(30)(A) of
the Act. We declined to include a lower
threshold because we believe that the 4
percent is sufficient based upon our
experience with State proposals
received after the publication of SMDL
#17–004. State proposals that included
a reduction less than or equal to 4
percent of the aggregate FFS Medicaid
expenditures for each benefit category
impacted by the reduction or
restructuring generally did not result in
access to care issues for affected
services.
Comment: Multiple commenters were
concerned that the 4 percent reduction
criterion is not nominal, as CMS had
described it. These commenters urged
CMS to re-assess the appropriateness of
the 4 percent threshold.
Response: As discussed in the
proposed rule, States often seek to make
payment rate and/or payment structure
changes for a variety of programmatic
and budgetary reasons with limited or
potentially no effect on beneficiary
access to care, and we recognized that
State legislatures needed some
flexibility to manage State budgets
accordingly.374 We discussed a 4
percent spending reduction threshold
with respect to a particular service
category in SMDL #17–004 as an
example of a targeted reduction where
the overall change in net payments
within the service category would be
nominal and any effect on access
difficult to determine (although we
reminded States that they should
document that the State followed the
public process under § 447.204, which
could identify access concerns even
with a seemingly nominal payment rate
reduction). To our knowledge, since the
release of SMDL #17–004 six years ago,
the 4 percent threshold for regarding a
payment rate reduction as nominal has
not resulted in access to care concerns
in State Medicaid programs, and it
received significant State support for
this reason in comments submitted in
response to the 2018 proposed rule, as
well as in response to the proposed rule
in this rulemaking. The provisions of
the final rule in § 447.203(c)(1) are not
intended to be individually applicable,
as they were under the SMDL #17–004,
and are instead intended for each
element of § 447.203(c)(1) to be met in
order for the rate reduction or
restructuring SPA to be considered
374 88
FR 28030.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
consistent with section 1902(a)(30)(A) of
the Act under the streamlined analysis
process. In each instance, the State’s
proposal would need to demonstrate
that Medicaid payment rates in the
aggregate (including base and
supplemental payments) following the
proposed reduction or restructuring for
each benefit category affected by the
proposed reduction or restructuring
would be at or above 80 percent of the
most recently published Medicare
payment rates for the same or a
comparable set of Medicare-covered
services; the proposed reduction or
restructuring, including the cumulative
effect of all reductions or restructurings
taken throughout the current State fiscal
year, would be likely to result in no
more than a 4 percent reduction in
aggregate FFS Medicaid expenditures
for each benefit category affected by
proposed reduction or restructuring
within a State fiscal year; and the public
processes described in paragraph (c)(4)
and § 447.204 yielded no significant
access to care concerns from
beneficiaries, providers, or other
interested parties regarding the
service(s) for which the payment rate
reduction or payment restructuring is
proposed, or if such processes did yield
concerns, the State can reasonably
respond to or mitigate the concerns, as
appropriate, as documented in the
analysis provided by the State pursuant
to § 447.204(b)(3).
Comment: One commenter noted that
the 4 percent reduction threshold is
consistent with the 2018 proposed rule,
but suggested that CMS assess any rate
reduction compared to broader trends in
the economy, particularly when
considering rising medical cost and
adjusting for inflation, a 4 percent
payment cut should not be considered
nominal, especially in States where
Medicaid payments are already low.
Furthermore, the accumulating effect of
yearly cuts to provider payments, which
could still meet the thresholds of the
rule, would be extremely detrimental to
access for beneficiaries in the Medicaid
program. For example, the Medicare
Economic Index (MEI) measures the
impact of inflation faced by physicians
with respect to practice costs and
general wage levels, and as such show
the year-over-year change in cost of
providing the same basket of services.
The commenter stated that rate
reductions should be compared against
this type of measure rather than against
an arbitrary percentage. The commenter
also noted that the 4 percent rate
reduction threshold would operate in
conjunction with the other criteria in
§ 447.203(c)(1), and therefore not
PO 00000
Frm 00241
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40781
exempt a State proposal from
compliance with the broader access
framework in the rule, but expressed
concern about the disproportionate
impact a 4 percent reduction can have
on certain practice types, such as
pediatric.
Response: We appreciate the
suggestion of the commenter. We are
finalizing § 447.203(c)(1)(ii) as
proposed. We did not want to rely upon
the MEI to supply an inflation factor
that must be considered in examining
the approvability of payment rate
changes or restructurings because we
wanted to provide flexibility for States
within their budgetary constraints. We
also note that the comparison of State
payment rates to Medicare would
accomplish a similar goal to that stated
by the commenter. By requiring State
rate actions be compared to the most
recently published Medicare rate, which
are trended forward annually, the
(c)(1)(i) threshold does take into account
inflation that may occur in the health
care industry.
We reiterate the statement of the
commenter that the provisions of the
final rule in § 447.203(c)(1) are not
intended to be individually applicable,
as they were under the SMDL #17–004,
and are instead intended for each
element of § 447.203(c)(1) to be met in
order for the rate reduction or
restructuring SPA to be considered
consistent with section 1902(a)(30)(A) of
the Act under the streamlined analysis
process. In each instance, the State’s
proposal would need to demonstrate
that Medicaid payment rates in the
aggregate (including base and
supplemental payments) following the
proposed reduction or restructuring for
each benefit category affected by the
proposed reduction or restructuring
would be at or above 80 percent of the
most recently published Medicare
payment rates for the same or a
comparable set of Medicare-covered
services; the proposed reduction or
restructuring, including the cumulative
effect of all reductions or restructurings
taken throughout the current State fiscal
year, would be likely to result in no
more than a 4 percent reduction in
aggregate FFS Medicaid expenditures
for each benefit category affected by
proposed reduction or restructuring
within a State fiscal year; and the public
processes described in paragraph (c)(4)
and § 447.204 yielded no significant
access to care concerns from
beneficiaries, providers, or other
interested parties regarding the
service(s) for which the payment rate
reduction or payment restructuring is
proposed, or if such processes did yield
concerns, the State can reasonably
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
40782
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
respond to or mitigate the concerns, as
appropriate, as documented in the
analysis provided by the State pursuant
to § 447.204(b)(3).
We disagree that 4 percent is an
arbitrary threshold. As noted in a prior
response, States often seek to make
payment rate and/or payment structure
changes for a variety of programmatic
and budgetary reasons with limited or
potentially no effect on beneficiary
access to care, and we recognized that
State legislatures needed some
flexibility to manage State budgets
accordingly. We discussed a 4 percent
spending reduction threshold with
respect to a particular service category
in SMDL #17–004 as an example of a
targeted reduction where the overall
change in net payments within the
service category would be nominal and
any effect on access difficult to
determine (although we reminded States
that they should document that the
State followed the public process under
§ 447.204, which could identify access
concerns even with a seemingly
nominal payment rate reduction). To
our knowledge, since the release of
SMDL #17–004, the 4 percent threshold
for regarding a payment rate reduction
as nominal has not resulted in access to
care concerns in State Medicaid
programs, and it received significant
State support for this reason in
comments submitted in response to the
2018 proposed rule and the proposed
rule in this rulemaking. In addition, we
did not receive comments indicating
that specific State rate reductions that
were less than 4 percent had an impact
on beneficiary access to care in their
State Medicaid programs. In addition,
the 4 percent threshold is then a
measure to ensure that payment rates
are not reduced by too significant of an
amount over a single State fiscal year.
The two quantitative thresholds in
paragraphs (c)(1)(i) and (ii), taken
together with the public input
requirements in paragraph (c)(1)(iii),
work in conjunction to ensure that State
payment rates are consistent with
section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act.
Comment: One commenter suggested
where States make changes to a costrelated payment methodology that may
result in diminished access (for
example, by placing a new cap on
administrative costs, requiring a
‘‘rebase,’’ or otherwise altering costreporting procedures), it may be
challenging to determine whether the
change would result in a 4 percent or
more decrease in payment.
Response: We understand the
commenter’s concern and note that the
4 percent threshold is a cumulative
percentage of rate reductions or
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
restructurings applied to the overall FFS
Medicaid expenditures for a particular
benefit category affected by the
proposed reduction(s) or restructuring(s)
within each State fiscal year. During the
SPA process, States are required to
estimate the amount of the financial
impact on their CMS form 179 and in
their public notice as required by
§ 447.205(c)(2), which states that the
public notice must ‘‘give an estimate of
any expected increase or decrease in
annual aggregate expenditures.’’ Where
States are unsure how they should
demonstrate whether the proposed
change meets the 4 percent threshold in
§ 447.203(c)(1)(ii), they should look to
existing criteria and methodologies used
to estimate financial impacts for the
CMS form 179 and public notice under
§ 447.205.
Comment: One commenter noted that
§ 447.203(c)(1)(iii) requires an
assessment of ‘‘significant concerns’’
from providers and others, and
requested additional detail regarding the
definition of ‘‘significant concern,’’ and
what the State’s response to significant
concerns must entail. A couple of
commenters stated that requiring States
to demonstrate that no concerns were
raised or to ‘‘address’’ concerns raised
in public comment would be a difficult
requirement to meet, noting that any
proposed rate reduction is likely to
result in significant public comment.
One of these commenters stated it is
unclear what level of concern or
complaint would shift a State from one
tier (that is, the streamlined process
under § 447.203(c)(1)) to the next (that
is, to requiring the additional analysis
under § 447.203(c)(2)). The other of
these commenters added that, as CMS
does not define the term ‘‘address’’ in
the rule, it is concerning that a State
must meet all of the criteria in
§ 447.203(c)(1) to qualify for the
streamlined analysis.
Response: The term ‘‘significant’’ can
be dependent upon the circumstances,
but we generally consider ‘‘significant
concerns’’ to mean those that are not
easily resolvable through engagement
with beneficiaries, providers, and other
interested parties. We also note that the
regulation does not actually use the
word ‘‘address’’ but rather requires that,
to the extent that States received public
input on their proposed SPA to reduce
or restructure payment rates that
‘‘yielded . . . significant access to care
concerns from beneficiaries, providers,
or other interested parties,’’ the State
must demonstrate that it is able to
‘‘respond to or mitigate the concerns, as
appropriate.’’ For example, a State may
receive a large number of public
comments on a proposed rate change,
PO 00000
Frm 00242
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
but if all the comments merely seek to
clarify an aspect of the change, this
situation, despite the high volume of
comments, would not be a significant
concern, because no concern has been
raised other than a request for
clarification of the proposal As an
alternative example, where providers
are raising concerns about the level of
payment they would receive under a
State’s new payment rate proposal, the
State could discuss with interested
parties other legislative initiatives
underway or programmatic goals that
might be considered as offsetting any
decrease in provider payments that
might be expected from the proposed
rate action. This is common with valuebased purchasing initiatives in States.
Section 447.203(c)(4), where we are
recodifying § 447.203(b)(7) as finalized
in the 2015 final rule with comment
period, continues to require that ‘‘States
have ongoing mechanisms for
beneficiary and provider input on
access to care (through hotlines,
surveys, ombudsman, review of
grievance and appeals data, or another
equivalent mechanism), consistent with
the access requirements and public
process described in § 447.204.’’
Furthermore, § 447.203(c)(4)(ii) provides
that ‘‘States should promptly respond to
public input through these mechanisms
. . . with an appropriate investigation,
analysis, and response,’’ and ‘‘States
must maintain a record of data on
public input and how the State
responded to this input,’’ which record
the State must make available to us
upon request. If the State is not able to
demonstrate that its proposal will not
decrease access below the statutory
standard, including by credibly refuting
any reasonable, supported concern
raised in public comments that it will
harm access excessively, then the
proposed rate reduction or restructuring
will not meet the requirements for the
streamlined (c)(1) process and will be
subject to the tier 2 process in paragraph
(c)(2), where additional data and
analysis will be required to be
submitted. In all cases, we will review
to ensure that statutory access standard
and all other applicable Federal
requirements are met.
Comment: A few commenters
commended CMS for including the
third criterion, which centers the
importance of public concerns about
rate reductions or restructuring, but
these commenters opposed CMS
implementing any threshold for rate
reduction or restructuring SPAs under
§ 447.203(c)(1).
Response: We appreciate the support
of the commenters. With respect to the
inclusion of this criterion as one of three
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
requirements needed to qualify for a
streamlined access analysis and in
response to the commenters’ opposition
to implementing any threshold for rate
reductions or restructuring SPAs under
§ 447.203(c)(1), we note that the
intention of this final rule is to balance
the administrative burden on the States
associated with rate reduction or
restructuring SPAs with the need to
have sufficient information to make an
administrative decision on State
payment rate proposals, and whether
they satisfy the access standard in
section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act, while
also providing providers, beneficiaries,
and interested parties to raise concerns
directly to the State through the
mechanisms for ongoing beneficiary and
provider feedback in § 447.203(c)(4) of
the final rule.
Comment: A few commenters strongly
supported the public input process
provision in § 447.203(c), particularly in
§ 447.203(c)(1)(iii), since developing
robust mechanisms for States to hear
feedback from providers and interested
parties about access concerns will be
critical to assuring that access analysis
in connection with payment SPAs has
its intended effect. One commenter
suggested that CMS should further
consider formalizing a specific role for
the MAC/BAG in this process.
Response: We appreciate the support
of the commenters and note that the
public input processes defined in
§ 447.203(c)(4), where we are
recodifying requirements previously
located in § 447.203(b)(7), requires that
States have ongoing mechanisms for
beneficiary and provider input on
access to care (through hotlines,
surveys, ombudsman, review of
grievance and appeals data, or another
equivalent mechanism), consistent with
the access requirements and public
process described in § 447.204. We did
not specifically provide a defined role
for the MAC or BAC in the regulatory
rate reduction or restructuring process,
but States are not prohibited from
including such entities in their public
input process to the extent that they
believe it would be valuable. However,
if the MAC/BAC under § 431.12 of this
final rule, or the interested parties’
advisory group under § 447.203(b)(6)
produces a comment on a State proposal
to reduce or restructure payment rates,
then the State would be required to
consider and respond to it as public
input under § 447.204.
Comment: A few commenters stated
that providers that receive Medicaid
payments always raise concerns about
any proposed rate reduction or
restructuring. These concerns are
typically framed as concerns about
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
access. While one commenter reiterated
the value of the input of providers and
other interested parties in the ratesetting process, a requirement to
conduct an access analysis any time a
provider voices concerns during the
public input process is a de facto
requirement to conduct an access
analysis for all SPAs. The commenter
stated that this will increase the
administrative burden for States and
CMS and undermine the two-tiered
level of analysis envisioned by CMS.
Response: We understand the
viewpoint of the commenter and can
affirm that the mere existence of one or
more comments is not in and of itself a
measure of whether the comments have
raised a significant access to care
concern or whether the State is able to
respond to and mitigate any significant
concern, as appropriate. If comments
received do not raise any significant
access to care concern, or if they do but
the State documents a reasonable
response to all significant concerns that
demonstrates that the proposal will not
reduce access below the statutory
standard notwithstanding the concerns,
or that mitigations identified by the
State will prevent such a degradation of
access, then the proposed reduction or
restructuring will qualify for the
streamlined initial State analysis under
§ 447.203(c)(1). We also point out that
the requirement that States provide
adequate notice and consider public
comment for payment rate changes is a
long-standing requirement of the
Medicaid program in 42 CFR part 447,
subpart B.
Comment: One commenter expressed
concern that § 447.203(c)(1)(iii), which
states as a criterion that ‘‘public
feedback yielded no significant access to
care concerns or yielded concerns that
the State can reasonably respond to or
mitigate, as appropriate,’’ presents a
dangerous loophole through which
States can drastically cut payment for
services, including, for example,
specialist office visits, without
triggering additional regulatory scrutiny.
The commenter expressed doubt that
the subjective inquiry on whether State
efforts might be reasonable coupled
with the non-specific activity the State
would undertake (‘‘respond’’ or
‘‘mitigate’’) would provide an actual
hurdle to payment cuts, including cuts
that could constrict access for
beneficiaries with rare and ultra-rare
conditions.
Response: We disagree that this
provision provides States with a
loophole enact drastic cuts for services.
First and foremost, the provision in
question is just one of three criteria a
State must meet in order to perform
PO 00000
Frm 00243
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40783
only a streamlined access analysis
under § 447.203(c)(1). Second,
qualification for the streamlined
analysis does not result in automatic
approval of the SPA. We will still
review both the SPA itself and the
streamlined analysis as submitted by the
State to determine accuracy and
whether the State has met all applicable
Federal requirements. We fully expect
that some States may submit
documentation for the streamlined
analysis, and CMS will determine that
a more extensive analysis under
§ 447.203(c)(2) is necessary. For
example, if we disagreed that a State’s
streamlined access analysis submission
adequately documented that the State
had reasonably responded to or
mitigated all significant access concerns
raised through public processes in
connection with a SPA to reduce or
restructure payment rates, we would
require the State to submit the
additional access analysis provided for
in this final rule to enable us to verify
that the SPA satisfies the access
standard in section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the
Act.
To be clear, the State’s response to
any significant access concern identified
through the public processes, and any
mitigation approach, as appropriate,
would be expected to be fully described
in the State’s submission to us. In
addition, § 447.203(c)(4), where we are
recodifying § 447.203(b)(7), continues to
require that ‘‘States have ongoing
mechanisms for beneficiary and
provider input on access to care
(through hotlines, surveys, ombudsman,
review of grievance and appeals data, or
another equivalent mechanism),
consistent with the access requirements
and public process described in
§ 447.204.’’ Furthermore,
§ 447.203(c)(4)(ii) provides that ‘‘States
should promptly respond to public
input through these mechanisms . . .
with an appropriate investigation,
analysis, and response,’’ and ‘‘States
must maintain a record of data on
public input and how the State
responded to this input,’’ which record
the State must make available to us
upon request. A major benefit and intent
of this repeated emphasis on public
process is to protect against the
situation the commenter describes. Our
regulations ensure other parties besides
the State have visibility into a proposed
rate reduction or restructuring, and are
able to voice related concerns, so we do
not need to rely solely on a State’s
assertion that there are no access-related
concerns or that all such concerns have
been addressed.
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
40784
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
c. Additional State Rate Analysis
(§ 447.203(c)(2))
Comment: One commenter expressed
support for the proposed changes to
strengthen and clarify requirements for
the analysis required for reductions in
rates or restructuring of provider
payments under § 447.203(c)(2);
however, the commenter raised
concerns about comparing Medicaid
rates solely to Medicare rates, as
Medicare does not have comparable
services for every benefit category in
Medicaid. As such, the commenter
suggested using private pay where no
Medicare payment rates are available.
Response: We appreciate the support
of the commenter and point out that a
comparison to Medicare payment rates
is not the sole means of assessing access
to care in this final rule. This final rule
requires that, for States submitting a
proposed rate reduction or
restructuring, the proposed reduction or
restructuring must meet all three criteria
set out in § 447.203(c)(1), which include
the 80 percent of Medicare comparison,
or else the additional analysis under
§ 447.203(c)(2) would be required. We
also finalized in in § 447.203(c)(2)(ii) to
require a comparison of Medicaid
payment rates to Medicare ‘‘and, as
reasonably feasible, to the most recently
available payment rates of other health
care payers in the State or the
geographic area for the same or a
comparable set of covered services’’ but
note that the availability of private
payer rate information that has proven
difficult for States to obtain due to its
often proprietary nature. Similarly,
under § 447.203(c)(2), a comparison to
Medicare rates is just one part of the
full, required analysis for States that
must complete the tier 2 analysis. The
full tier 2 analysis, which we are
finalizing as proposed, requires the
following in addition to the full tier 1
analysis: a summary of the proposed
payment change including the
cumulative effect of all reductions or
restructurings taken throughout the
current State fiscal year in aggregate FFS
Medicaid expenditures for each benefit
category affected by proposed reduction
or restructuring; an analysis of the
Medicaid payment rates in the aggregate
(including base and supplemental
payments) before and after the proposed
reduction or restructuring for each
benefit category affected by the
proposed reduction or restructuring and
a comparison of each to the most
recently published Medicare payment
rates for the same or a comparable set
of Medicare-covered services and, as
reasonably feasible, to the most recently
available payment rates of other health
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
care payers in the State or geographic
area; information about the number of
actively participating providers of
services in each benefit category
affected by the proposed reduction or
restructuring for each of the
immediately preceding 3 years
including trend information;
information about the number of
Medicaid beneficiaries receiving
services through the FFS delivery
system in each benefit category affected
by the proposed reduction or
restructuring for each of the
immediately preceding 3 years
including trend and beneficiary
population information and anticipated
effects; information about the number of
Medicaid services furnished through the
FFS delivery system in each benefit
category affected by the proposed
reduction or restructuring for each of
the immediately preceding 3 years
including trend and service-recipient
beneficiary population information and
anticipated effects; and a summary of,
and the State’s response to, any access
to care concerns or complaints received
from beneficiaries, providers, and other
interested parties regarding the
service(s) for which the payment rate
reduction or restructuring is proposed
as required under § 447.204(a)(2). For
services for which a Medicare
comparator is not available, the
§ 447.203(c)(2) analysis is required to be
submitted by the State along with the
SPA proposing to reduce or restructure
provider payment rates as the State is
unable to demonstrate compliance with
§ 447.203(c)(1). The regulations being
finalized in § 447.203(c)(2)(ii) account
for circumstances where Medicare does
not cover comparable services, by
requiring States to compare, ‘‘as
reasonably feasible, to the most recently
available payment rates of other health
care payers in the State or the
geographic area for the same or a
comparable set of covered services to
the most recently published Medicare
payment rates for the same or a
comparable set of Medicare-covered
services because no such set of
Medicare-covered services exists.
Comment: One commenter expressed
concern that, while CMS
understandably seeks to clarify which
SPAs are subject to heightened scrutiny
under the tier 2 analysis requirements in
§ 447.203(c)(2), the criteria are skewed
toward services that are paid for off a fee
schedule, and which correspond to
Medicare-covered services.
Response: We acknowledge that there
is an administrative ease associated
with meeting the requirements of
§ 447.203(c) where States pay according
to a fee schedule. However, it is also
PO 00000
Frm 00244
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
possible to compare payment amounts
where no such fee schedule exists. State
UPL demonstrations are a valuable
resource in determining level of
payment of both base and supplemental
payments compared to a reasonable
estimate of the amount that Medicare
would pay for the same services, and
our experience has shown that States
are able to make these comparisons on
both a provider-specific level and in the
aggregate. The methodology States use
for required UPL demonstrations would
support the analysis required under
§ 447.203(c) of this final rule, even
where the payment methodology is not
based on a fee schedule.
Comment: One commenter noted that
the proposed first-tier analysis requires
States to compare proposed Medicaid
rates to Medicare rates, but as CMS
acknowledges in the preamble, the
absence of a comparable Medicare
service for some services would mean
the State would need to perform the full
two-step access analysis, since they
would not be able to meet all three
criteria in § 447.203(c)(1). The
commenter stated that this expectation
is not clearly reflected in proposed
§ 447.203(c) and suggested that CMS
add language clarifying that when there
is no comparable set of Medicare
services, the State must perform the
second tier of analysis under
§ 447.203(c)(2). Another commenter
expressed support for CMS’s preamble
provision that, for services in which a
reasonably comparable Medicarecovered analogue is not available, the
State would be obligated to support its
rate reduction or restructuring proposal
through the submission of additional
information under § 447.203(c)(2).
Response: We reiterate that we are
finalizing § 447.203(c)(1) and (2) as
proposed. In addition, we are finalizing
our statement in preamble that for any
service for which the State has proposed
to reduce or restructure the Medicaid
payments in circumstances when the
changes could result in diminished
access, for which there are no
comparable Medicare services that
would enable the State to make the
showing required under
§ 447.203(c)(1)(i), the State is required to
conduct the secondary analysis required
under § 447.203(c)(2). For example,
where Medicare does not cover routine
dental care, payment rate reductions or
restructurings of such services would be
subject to § 447.203(c)(2) since
comparable Medicare payment
information required under
§ 447.203(c)(1)(i) of the final rule would
be unavailable.
Comment: One commenter stated that
the information States are required to
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
collect and examine, especially the
number of providers, beneficiaries, and
services, will be particularly valuable in
assessing the impact of rate changes on
access to home care services. One
commenter specifically expressed
support for the § 447.203(c)(2)(iii)
proposal to require States to provide the
number of actively participating
providers of services in each affected
benefit category for each of the 3 years
immediately preceding the SPA
submission date, by State-specified
geographic area, provider type, and site
of service. That commenter
acknowledged that this would be
valuable information to be made
publicly available. Another agreed,
saying CMS should require States to
publicly post the enhanced analysis,
including data submissions, to ensure
full transparency.
Response: We appreciate the support
of the commenters. At this time, there
is no plan for CMS to make the
information States provide in these
analyses publicly available. Approved
SPAs are public facing documents and
are posted on Medicaid.gov after they
are approved by CMS. Payment rates
used to provide the § 447.203(b) and (c)
of the final rule should come from these
approved SPAs, and these SPAs should
help to clarify questions about the
State’s particular rate model. We further
note that the requirements we are
finalizing at §§ 447.203(c)(1)(iii), (c)(4),
and 447.204 regarding public process
and mechanisms for ongoing beneficiary
and provider input should provide
interested parties opportunity for
meaningful input on State rate actions.
Otherwise, information may be available
upon request from either States or CMS,
and we note that some of this
information may be subject to Freedom
of Information Act (FOIA) disclosure
requirements.
Comment: Several commenters
expressed that States should be required
to provide detailed information
described in § 447.203(c)(2)(i) through
(vi) about proposed rate reductions or
restructuring any time it proposes to
reduce rates or restructure rates in a way
that could result in diminished access,
and not only when the proposed rate
fails to meet certain criteria such as
those specified in § 447.203(c)(1). These
commenters stated concern that the
proposed two-tier structure would still
permit States to alter rates in ways that
harm beneficiary access.
Response: The purpose of this final
rule is to create a process that is less
administratively burdensome than the
previous, ongoing AMRP process
outlined in the 2015 final rule with
comment period, while also maintaining
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
a data submission process for payment
rate reduction and restructuring SPAs
that do not meet the thresholds set out
in § 447.203(c)(1). The commenters’
recommendation seems to suggest
something closer to a continuation of
the previous AMRP process, whereas we
believe this final rule strikes a more
appropriate balance of easing State
burden where SPAs meet the
§ 447.203(c)(1) criteria (making them
unlikely to result in reducing
beneficiary access to care to a level
inconsistent with section 1902(a)(30)(A)
of the Act), and requiring more rigorous
data and analysis requirements for SPAs
that do not meet the § 447.203(c)(1)
criteria and may present more cause for
concern related to beneficiary access to
care.
Comment: A commenter
recommended that, in addition to
requiring States to provide summary
information about proposed changes,
and information about the rates in
aggregate in § 447.203(c), CMS should
require States to provide the specific
range of rates, including any variation in
rates (for example, regional differences,
or differences based on provider
specialty).
Response: We approve States’ rate
methodologies for compliance with
regulation and statute, but may not
approve individual service rates unless
a State presents a final rate, or a fee
schedule, as the output of a rate
methodology. This final rule does not
change that policy or imply that CMS
will review individual rates for
sufficiency in all cases. Reviewing
individual rates within a fee schedule
would not necessarily provide a better
determination of whether the rates are
adequate to enlist sufficient providers
into the Medicaid program or not,
provided that the State is using a
consistent payment rate methodology
for the entirety of the fee schedule, since
we do not believe that providers
generally make decisions about whether
to participate with a payer (and accept
the payer’s rates) based on the rate for
a single service. However, we will
review individual payment rate codes to
the extent that the rate changes fall
outside of the typical methodology used
by the State in their payment rate setting
methodology under the State plan, or to
the extent that we have reason to believe
that common billing codes most
frequently used by providers within the
State are disproportionately impacted
by the payment rate reduction or
restructuring proposal. Further, the
payment rate transparency publication
in § 447.203(b) will require States to
publish their fee schedule rates for
services specified in that section of the
PO 00000
Frm 00245
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40785
final rule, which will include individual
fee schedule payment rates for services
for CMS and public review.
Comment: Several commenters noted
appreciation that the additional
information that would be required from
States that seek to reduce payment rates
or restructure payments in a manner
that could result in decreased access
noting their belief that the
§ 447.203(c)(2) provision will create
important safeguards to prevent
decisions that are solely based on State
budgetary concerns rather than an
actual analysis of the cost of providing
services in the Medicaid program. A few
commenters noted that they were glad
to see that, because of the nature of
HCBS, the majority of rate reductions
for home care services and supports
would always be subject to the
provisions mandating greater scrutiny
under § 447.203(c)(2), because Medicare
rates for the same or a reasonably
similar set of services generally will not
be available to make such SPAs eligible
for the streamlined access review
process under § 447.203(c)(1).
Response: We appreciate the support
of the commenters, but note for clarity,
as discussed earlier in this preamble,
there is no requirement in the Medicaid
program that payment rates be based on
provider cost.
Comment: A few commenters
recommended that, at a minimum, CMS
should require all States to complete the
more extensive access analysis under
§ 447.203(c)(2) shortly after publication
of the final rule to establish a baseline
assessment of access to care for
Medicaid beneficiaries. Such analysis
should include FFS as well as managed
care, enabling comparison of payment
and access within and across delivery
systems. These commenters urged that
this baseline analysis should serve as a
comparison point for future access
monitoring. Other commenters
suggested that the requirement for the
analysis in § 447.203(c) should be
decoupled from a State’s intention to
reduce or restructure rates, suggesting
instead that all States should be
required to conduct this analysis
annually, every 2 years, or at least every
3 years across all rates for all Medicaid
FFS and managed care programs for
which a Medicare comparison is
possible.
Response: We appreciate the
suggestion of the commenters. The
purpose of this final rule is to create a
process that is less administratively
burdensome than the previous, ongoing
AMRP process outlined in the 2015
final rule with comment period, while
also maintaining a data submission
process for payment rate reduction and
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
40786
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
restructuring SPAs that do not meet the
thresholds set out in § 447.203(c)(1), and
note that the FFS provisions, including
the payment rate transparency,
comparative payment rate analysis, and
payment rate disclosure requirements
(§ 447.203(b)(1) through (5)), interested
parties’ advisory group requirements
(§ 447.203(b)(6)), and State analysis
procedures for payment rate reductions
or payment restructuring (§ 447.203(c)),
finalized in this rule are expected to
result in a net burden reduction on
States compared to the previous AMRP
requirements, as discussed in the
proposed rule and in section III. of this
final rule. This final rule provides CMS
and States with an administrative
process through which rate reductions
or restructurings can be reviewed and
approved, so long as the proposed SPA
satisfactorily includes the information
required under this final rule and meets
all applicable Federal requirements.
CMS is discontinuing the previous
AMRP process in this final rule, and did
not propose and is not finalizing a
substantially similar process, as we
believe doing so would impose a great
deal of burden on States and CMS
without commensurate programmatic
value, as discussed in the proposed rule
and in this final rule (88 FR 27965). We
note that the § 447.203(c)(4)
mechanisms for ongoing beneficiary and
provider input provide impacted parties
opportunities to raise access concerns or
issues to the State at any point through
State-provided input processes.
Comment: One commenter requested
that CMS clarify the criteria in both tiers
which CMS will use to determine the
appropriate level of access on which to
provide analyses and documentation of
adequate access, claiming there are no
details available on the criteria. The
commenter requested that CMS define a
measurable methodology with which to
determine and demonstrate adequacy of
access to care in relation to the criteria
of the analysis required in the
applicable provisions of § 447.203(c).
Response: We are finalizing
§ 447.203(c)(1) and (2) as proposed, and
are providing a template which will
assist States with the data
demonstrations which will be used to
comply with the provisions of the final
rule. We produced a template that was
submitted to OMB for public review
under control number 0938–1134
(CMS–10391) and will be submitted for
approval with this final rule and a final
template will be available shortly
thereafter. Between the regulation text,
the preamble of this final rule, and the
components of the analysis template, we
believe that the criteria we will use to
evaluate SPA proposals are clear. We
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
are electing not to otherwise define
adequate levels of access to care under
§ 447.203(c) because section
1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act establishes
that a measure for access is that
payment rates are ‘‘sufficient to enlist
enough providers so that care and
services are available under the plan at
least to the extent that such care and
services are available to the general
population in the geographic area,’’
which level of access (based on
whatever metric might be selected) will
vary based on geographic area and the
level of access available to the general
population for a given service. Although
CMS reserves the right to request
additional information, we have
developed the template to ensure that a
State has a mechanism through which
all of the data elements in § 447.203(c)
can be gathered and presented in a
straightforward format. Completing the
applicable fields of the template will
ensure that the State provides all
required data elements of under
§ 447.203(c), and we will review the
materials provided by the State to
determine that the State has
demonstrated current and anticipated
levels of access under the SPA in a
manner demonstrates compliance with
section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act. CMS
will review each proposal and the Stateprovided supporting information to
ensure compliance with section
1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act and all other
applicable Federal requirements before
approving any SPA.
Comment: One commenter urged
CMS to require States to identify the
unique number of Medicaid-paid claims
for beneficiaries (in addition to the full
number of services required in the
regulations as proposed) and the unique
number of beneficiaries who received
services. The commenter also stated that
measuring providers’ capacity to
provide Medicaid services, by including
an estimated number of beneficiaries
who could have received the respective
services, would allow States to fully
assess the gaps in service and number
of providers required to meet the need,
noting that this assessment would be
needed to assess proposed rate
reductions or restructuring under
proposed § 447.203(c).
Response: We are finalizing
§ 447.203(c)(2)(v) as proposed. The
measures mentioned by the commenter
are often associated with health care
system capacity by looking at enrolled
providers with open panels, which is
very useful in addressing individual
beneficiary requests for services, or
finding care for individuals within a
geographic area, which are the type of
request we would expect to be made
PO 00000
Frm 00246
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
through the § 447.203(c)(4) mechanisms
for ongoing beneficiary and provider
input, and States should be using any
information they can to address
beneficiary needs in this way. We
encourage any interested parties to
engage with their State partners to
ensure that real-time access to care
concerns are able to be addressed by the
State as applicable. Further, the
provisions of § 447.203(c)(2) are
designed to present an overall picture of
access to care for each affected benefit
category in the State’s program. States
are welcome to use any additional
measures the State believes would be
helpful to assess access to care within
each affected benefit category, above
and beyond the requirements of this
final rule.
Comment: One commenter, citing the
3-year period where the proposed rule
would require data about trends over
time in the data elements proposed to be
required under § 447.203(c)(2),
supported the use of statistical methods
that provide an accurate picture of
utilization trends, but recommended
that CMS use its discretion in analyzing
the information States provide to meet
the required data elements. The
commenter stated use of a 3-year
analysis as a blanket approach may not
be required in periods of stable
utilization.
Response: The requirements in
§ 447.203(c)(2)(iii), (iv), and (v) to use 3year periods are being finalized as
proposed. The purpose of the 3-year
analysis is to help identify and
appropriately account for statistical
anomalies that might appear in the data
demonstration. Further, we wanted to
provide a clear expectation for what
States would be required to provide and
thereby remove ambiguity, which we
believe existed in the previous AMRP
process from the 2015 final rule with
comment period. In the 2015 final rule
with comment period, the previous
AMRP data elements were limited to
those specified in § 447.203(b)(1)(i)
through 447.203(b)(1)(v), which stated
that the AMRP and monitoring analysis
will consider: the extent to which
beneficiary needs are fully met; the
availability of care through enrolled
providers to beneficiaries in each
geographic area, by provider type and
site of service; changes in beneficiary
utilization of covered services in each
geographic area; the characteristics of
the beneficiary population (including
considerations for care, service and
payment variations for pediatric and
adult populations and for individuals
with disabilities); and actual or
estimated levels of provider payment
available from other payers, including
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
other public and private payers, by
provider type and site of service. Within
the final rule with comment period,
there was discussion regarding the types
of data States might use to provide the
required information, but much of the
final rule with comment period left the
specifics of the particular data elements
up to the States. In this rulemaking, we
proposed and are finalizing
considerably more detail in
§ 447.203(c)(2) than was present in the
previous AMRP requirements in the
former 447.203(b)(1).
We are also finalizing the 3-year time
frame for data analysis in this final rule
in § 447.203(c)(2) because we
determined that a 3-year look back on
provider enrollment, beneficiary
enrollment, and beneficiary utilization
provides sufficient data to show trends
in the data while also helping to
identify data anomalies. Where the
commenter stated that the use of a 3year analysis as a blanket approach may
not be required in periods of stable
utilization, we disagree. The
commenter’s statement implies that a
determination would still need to be
made that utilization was stable,
therefore by requiring 3 years’ worth of
data, CMS and the State will be able to
document that utilization was stable
during the prior 3 years.
Comment: One commenter opposed
the requirement to provide an
additional summary of the proposed
payment change, as described in
§ 447.203(c)(2)(i), to both § 447.203(c)(1)
and (2) equally. The commenter was
concerned about the administrative
burden these requirements place on
States, which could delay SPA
submission and in turn affect access to
services. The commenter also
specifically pointed out that SPAs for
services without comparable Medicare
rates would, by default, need to
complete the additional analysis under
§ 447.203(c)(2), adding administrative
burden. The commenter further
recommended CMS implement a form
similar to the Standard Funding
Questions submitted for Medicaid
payment SPAs, in which the State
would be able to answer a specific set
of questions that would capture the
analysis that is being sought. Another
commenter noted that the
§ 447.203(c)(2) data submission
requirements may impact significant
portions of Medicaid services, such as
LTSS, and creates administrative
burdens, disincentivizing States from
modernizing rate methodologies for
these services. This commenter
recommended that for services without
comparable Medicare rates, the initial
analysis be sufficient if all other criteria
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
of the initial review (that is,
§ 447.203(c)(1)(ii) and (iii)) are satisfied.
Response: States are responsible to
ensure that their proposed reduction or
restructuring SPA submission includes
all of the information required under
§ 447.203(c)(1) prior to submission. If
the proposed reduction or restructuring
SPA does not meet all of the paragraph
(c)(1) requirements, then the State
would need to provide the additional
analysis required under § 447.203(c)(2).
We understand that there is burden
associated with these new requirements.
However, as discussed in the proposed
rule in section III.C.11.d, this new
process will be less burdensome on
States than the previous AMRP process.
We also do not believe a State could
adequately demonstrate access by
answering a standard set of questions as
suggested by the commenter, as we
would be concerned that static
questions may not be well suited to
solicit the full scope of data elements
that could be necessary to evaluate a
particular proposal and therefore prefer
to keep data submission requirements
open-ended so that States are able to
provide the most complete and
appropriate information possible to
stablish that their proposal satisfies
section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act as
implemented in this final rule. We
anticipate providing a considerable
amount of technical assistance and
templates to assist States with the
preparation and submission of data and
analysis required under § 447.203(c)(1)
and (2).
The rule does not limit a State’s
ability to reduce or restructure rates
where the State believes it appropriate
to do so, for example, based on
information that the rates are not
economic and efficient; rather, it
ensures that States take appropriate
measures to document access to care
consistent with section 1902(a)(30)(A) of
the Act. This includes efforts to
modernize rates, as noted by the
commenter, including by implementing
or adjusting. VBP arrangements. While
we appreciate that the analysis creates
a burden for States, we note that we are
replacing a process that was more
burdensome. For services for which a
Medicare comparator is not available,
the § 447.203(c)(2) analysis is required
to be submitted by the State along with
the SPA proposing to reduce or
restructure provider payment rates. As
the § 447.203(c)(2) elements are based
upon and similar to the elements
included in the former § 447.203(b)(1) of
the 2015 final rule with comment
period, we do not believe the new
requirements are more burdensome than
the 2015 final rule with comment period
PO 00000
Frm 00247
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40787
which created the previous AMRP
process. Therefore, we do not believe
this final rule disincentivizes States
from modernizing payment rates or
methodologies as compared to the
previous requirements under the 2015
final rule with comment period. For
some services, particularly for those for
which the State can demonstrate that
the § 447.203(c)(1) requirements are
met, the final rule considerably reduces
burden on States.
Comment: A few commenters urged
caution not to impose overly rigid
restrictions on States’ and CMS’ ability
to adjust provider payment rates, noting
that State Medicaid programs are
constrained by the same factors that
constrain all State spending, including
general economic conditions, State
balanced budget requirements, and State
general fund revenue. One commenter
noted that requiring a significant
analysis for proposed reductions in
Medicaid FFS payment rates will create
administrative burden for States that
have been mandated by their
legislatures to reduce certain rates or
Medicaid spending in general. The
commenter noted that in such
circumstances, States have a limited
number of ‘‘levers’’ at their disposal—
(1) they can reduce the number of
individuals enrolled in Medicaid, (2)
they can impose reductions on the
covered services that Medicaid
beneficiaries receive, or (3) they can
adjust provider payment rates. If CMS
makes it impossible (or inordinately
difficult) to restructure provider
payment rates, then States may be
forced to make other undesirable
reductions to coverage and/or eligibility
in order to cope with difficult economic
conditions.
Response: We understand the
concerns of the commenters. States are
required to operate their Medicaid
programs within their budgetary
constraints, and we agree with the
commenter that, of the options available
for States facing budgetary issues, none
of the available approaches typically is
ideal. However, we also note that States
are also obligated to comply with
section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act, which
requires States to ‘‘assure that payments
are consistent with efficiency, economy,
and quality of care and are sufficient to
enlist enough providers so that care and
services are available under the plan at
least to the extent that such care and
services are available to the general
population in the geographic area.’’ The
requirement specifically references
payment rates for ‘‘care and services
available under the plan’’ such that the
services that are covered under the State
plan as both mandatory and optional
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
40788
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
benefits, must be supported by adequate
payment rates for those services. We
anticipate providing a considerable
amount of technical assistance to ease
the administrative burden on States that
both need to reduce rates and need to
satisfy the requirements of § 447.203(c)
to ensure that the statutory access
standard is met. We are also finalizing
the template we proposed to accompany
these requirements and assist States
with supplying the necessary data to
fulfil these requirements.
Comment: One commenter
recommended that CMS build into the
review and approval of all SPAs, waiver
amendments, and waiver renewals a
process for the review of payment rates.
The commenter further suggested that
CMS require adequate payment rates
prior to approving these amendments
and renewals. The commenter indicated
that this would allow CMS to review
rates more often and prevent years or
decades passing without rates being
reviewed or adjusted.
Response: CMS reviews all SPAs
affecting Medicaid payment for
compliance with section 1902(a)(30)(A)
of the Act. Outside of the SPA process,
the corrective action plan process under
§ 447.203(c)(5) (which we are
recodifying from § 447.203(b)(8)) is
available to address access issues that
may arise even when the State has not
submitted a payment SPA. Further, to
the extent that a State submits a SPA
that updates coverage of a Medicaid
service but does not amend Medicaid
payment rates or the rate methodology
in the Attachment 4.19A (for Medicaid
inpatient services such as inpatient
hospital services), 4.19B (for Medicaid
non-institutional services such as
physician services), or 4.19D (for
Medicaid nursing facility services) State
plan pages, CMS will not necessarily
disapprove that SPA on the basis of
insufficient Medicaid payment rates as
the payment rates were not submitted
along with the corresponding coverage
and benefit changes for our
consideration. States certainly can
submit payment rate information to
CMS of the State’s own volition or upon
request during review of a coverage
SPA; however, CMS provides States in
this situation (where the SPA would
amend State plan coverage, but not
payment, pages) with an option to
instead defer review of the payment rate
compliance issue through a mechanism
called a ‘‘companion letter,’’ as noted in
the 2010 SMDL #10–0020.375 As noted
375 SMDL #10–020, ‘‘Revised State Plan
Amendment Review Process.’’ Published October 1,
2010. https://www.medicaid.gov/sites/default/files/
Federal-Policy-Guidance/downloads/
SMD10020.pdf.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
above, even in the absence of a SPA, the
corrective action plan process under
§ 447.203(c)(5) (which we are
recodifying from § 447.203(b)(8)) is
available to for CMS to take compliance
action where it is aware of an access
problem due to insufficient rates.
With the policies finalized throughout
this final rule, we hope and anticipate
that both States and the public will
more closely examine existing rates. Our
policies around payment rate
transparency publications, comparative
payment rate analyses, and payment
rate disclosures will enhance
opportunities to determine where an
existing rate may not be supporting
adequate access to care and identify for
States where a need for increased
payments and/or updated payment
methodologies should be addressed.
Our policies around the mechanisms for
ongoing beneficiary and provider input
in § 447.203(c)(4) and addressing access
questions and remediation of
inadequate access to care in
§ 447.203(c)(5) will further provide
beneficiaries, providers, and other
interested parties opportunities to
engage with States on existing payment
rates and their impact on beneficiaries’
access to care.
d. Compliance With Requirements for
State Analysis for Rate Reduction or
Restructuring (§ 447.203(c)(3))
Comment: A few commenters
applauded CMS for including a clear
enforcement mechanism for these
provisions at § 447.203(c)(3). One of the
commenters specifically offered that
this provision helpfully codifies CMS’s
longstanding authority to enforce access
standards under section 1902(a)(30)(A)
of the Act by denying SPAs or taking
compliance action to protect access for
Medicaid enrollees.
Response: We appreciate the support
of the commenters.
Comment: One commenter opposed
the provision at § 447.203(c)(3) that
SPAs may be subject to disapproval.
The commenter did not believe that
approval of a SPA should be contingent
on the submission of a satisfactory
access analysis required under
paragraphs (c)(1) and (c)(2) of this
section of the final rule.
Response: The final rule requires
States to submit information with their
payment rate reduction or restructuring
SPAs in circumstances where those
types of rate changes may result in
diminished access to care. We are
requiring this information in order to
determine compliance with section
1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act, which
requires that a State plan for medical
assistance ‘‘assure that payments are
PO 00000
Frm 00248
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
consistent with efficiency, economy,
and quality of care and are sufficient to
enlist enough providers so that care and
services are available under the plan at
least to the extent that such care and
services are available to the general
population in the geographic area.’’ In
the event that a State does not provide
the information required under this
final rule, we would be unable to
determine that the State’s proposal is
consistent with the statute, and
therefore, we would be unable to
approve the SPA.
e. Public Input Process (§ 447.203(c)(4))
Comment: Several commenters
supported the proposal at
§ 447.203(c)(4) regarding ongoing
mechanisms for beneficiary and
provider input on access. One
commenter specifically appreciated
CMS’ recognition of the importance of
ongoing feedback from providers and
beneficiaries to the State regarding
access to care and for the State to track
and take account of those interactions in
a meaningful way. Another commenter
supported this requirement, noting that
HCBS recipients enrolled in managed
care are currently provided with a
grievance system and indicating that
FFS recipients must be afforded this
same right.
Response: We appreciate the support
of the commenters. We believe that the
provision in § 447.203(c)(4) of this final
rule provides beneficiaries with
opportunities to raise their concerns
through hotlines, surveys, ombudsman,
grievance, and appeals processes that
the State makes available, or other
equivalent mechanisms offered by the
State.
Comment: One commenter
recommended that CMS update the
public notice requirements in § 447.205
to require notice 30 days before the
effective date in order to increase the
transparency of the proposed SPA
process and ensure that States provide
interested parties with meaningful
notice and opportunity to provide
feedback.
Response: Changes to the public
notice requirements in § 447.205 are
outside the scope of this rulemaking.
Comment: One commenter
recommended that CMS change
‘‘should’’ to ‘‘must’’ at
§ 447.203(c)(4)(ii). They pointed out that
§ 447.203(c)(4)(i) and (iii) under
‘‘Mechanisms for ongoing beneficiary
and provider input,’’ both use ‘‘must,’’
while item (ii) notes States ‘‘should
promptly respond to public input
through these mechanisms citing
specific access problems, with an
appropriate investigation, analysis, and
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
response.’’ The commenter stated this
provision is important and that if it is
not mandated on States, some States
may ignore it.
Response: This provision is being
finalized as proposed because this
section is carried over from prior
regulatory language at § 447.203(b)(7)
and was proposed to be recodified
without change. We acknowledge that
responses to public input can take time
and resources to manage, and point out
that this final rule provision is carrying
forward the same regulatory language
from the 2015 final rule with comment
period. In our experience, States do
respond timely and appropriately, and
therefore did not think it necessary to
propose a change to this provision. We
note that § 447.203(c)(4)(iii) requires
States to maintain a record of data on
public input and how the State
responded to this input, and the record
of input and responses ‘‘will be made
available to CMS upon request.’’
Comment: One commenter supported
requiring States to maintain a record of
data on public input and how the State
responded to this input, which will be
made available to CMS upon request.
Response: We thank the commenter
for their support and are finalizing the
recodification of § 447.203(b)(7) at
§ 447.203(c)(4) as proposed.
Comment: One commenter stated that
States should establish mechanisms for
ongoing monitoring, evaluation, and
feedback from beneficiaries, direct care
workers, and underserved communities,
and that States should create
opportunities for meaningful
engagement through advisory boards,
focus groups, public comment periods,
and partnerships with advocacy
organizations. The commenter suggested
that such an approach ensures that the
perspectives and needs of these
interested parties are considered in
policy development and
implementation.
Response: We are finalizing the
provisions of § 447.203(c)(4) as
proposed, as we believe that the
mechanisms for ongoing beneficiary and
provider input in paragraph (c)(4)
provide opportunities for meaningful
engagement by requiring States to
develop some of the mechanisms
suggested by the commenter. However,
in addition to the mechanisms required
under § 447.203(c)(4) for ongoing
beneficiary and provider input, States
are welcome to develop additional
processes to facilitate beneficiary and
provider feedback, as well as feedback
from other interested parties.
Comment: One commenter stated that
the mechanisms for ongoing beneficiary
and provider input provision in
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
§ 447.203(c)(4) lack enforcement to get
States to respond in a meaningful way
to concerns about access, noting that the
question of whether there is a
‘‘deficiency’’ will be left to the States
themselves to determine. The
commenter suggested that there needs to
be some way for interested parties to
elevate concerns to CMS in a formal
fashion when this process does not
work at the State level.
Response: The steps States must take
to respond to concerns about access
raised through input pursuant to
§ 447.203(c)(4) are detailed in
§ 447.203(c)(5), which we are finalizing
as proposed as a recodification from
§ 447.203(b)(8). Section 447.203(c)(5)
requires States to develop and submit a
corrective action plan to CMS within 90
days of discovery of an access
deficiency. The submitted action plan
must aim to remediate the access
deficiency within 12 months. This
requirement ensures that the access
deficiency is addressed in a timely
manner while allowing the State time to
address underlying causes of the access
issue, be it payment rates, provider
participation, etc. These remediation
efforts can include but are not limited
to: increasing payment rates; improving
outreach to providers; reducing barriers
to provider enrollment; providing
additional transportation to services; or
improving care coordination.
Because each State designs and
administers its own Medicaid program
within the Federal framework, we
believe it is most appropriate for
beneficiaries and interested parties to
raise access concerns with the State
directly, rather than to CMS. To the
extent that a beneficiary or interested
parties’ access concerns are not
addressed by the State adequately, we
continue to urge interested parties to
elevate concerns to the State through the
§ 447.203(c)(4) mechanisms for ongoing
beneficiary and provider feedback. We
further note that we are finalizing as
proposed compliance actions for access
deficiencies that have not been
remedied under § 447.203(c)(6), as
recodified from § 447.204(d).
Comment: One commenter noted that
some of the proposed policies, such as
strengthening the role of Medicaid
beneficiaries in the policymaking
process, have been pioneered at the
State level.
Response: We appreciate the
perspective of the commenter and agree
that many of these activities have been
pioneered at the State level. We often
look to actions undertaken by our State
partners to identify areas of policy that
may be appropriate to enact at the
Federal level.
PO 00000
Frm 00249
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40789
f. Addressing Access Questions and
Remediation of Inadequate Access to
Care (§ 447.203(c)(5))
Comment: A couple commenters
strongly supported the retention of
§ 447.203(b)(8) language concerning a
State’s response to problems with access
to Medicaid services, which now
appears in § 447.203(c)(5). However, one
commenter also expressed concerns
about whether that requirement has
historically served to require States to
make meaningful efforts to correct
access issues, considering that the
commenter stated there are serious
problems with access to Medicaid
services in many States today, which
the commenter asserted CMS has also
acknowledged. The commenter
suggested this may be a problem of the
resources that CMS devotes to
enforcement and insisted that CMS
needs to commit to stricter and more
effective enforcement of this language.
Response: We appreciate the support
of the commenters and the sentiment
expressed in the comment. CMS is
committed to an agency-wide strategy
for oversight and enforcement of Federal
requirements concerning access to care.
Although the language pointed out by
the commenter is unchanged from how
it previously appeared in
§ 447.203(b)(8), we are confident the
changes to § 447.203(c)(1)(iii),
§ 447.203(c)(2)(vi), and § 447.203(c)(4)
in this final rule will enhance oversight
of access and work to enhance the
importance of input from beneficiaries,
providers, and other interested parties.
Comment: One commenter noted that
concerns around timely access may be
identified by enrollees, patient advocacy
organizations, or providers long before
they become apparent to Medicaid
managed care plans or State officials,
particularly if those access challenges
are specific to a disease group such as
complex and rare cancers. The
commenter urged CMS to clarify that, if
such groups present plausible access
concerns to State officials, that can be
sufficient to make the State aware of the
access issue, such that the State must
submit a proposed remedy plan to CMS
within 90 days of receiving a report of
such concern.
Response: We encourage
beneficiaries, patient advocacy
organizations, and providers to work
closely with States in order to raise
issues such as inability to connect
patients to care, or inability to find an
appointment within the patient’s
geographic area, through the
mechanisms for ongoing beneficiary and
provider input the State established
under § 447.203(c)(4). Section
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
40790
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
4. Medicaid Provider Participation and
Public Process To Inform Access to Care
(§ 447.204)
In § 447.204, we proposed conforming
changes to reflect proposed changes in
§ 447.203, if finalized. These
conforming edits are limited to
§ 447.204(a)(1) and (b) and are necessary
for consistency with the newly
proposed changes in § 447.203(b). The
remaining paragraphs of § 447.204
would be unchanged.
Specifically, we proposed to update
the language of § 447.204(a)(1), which
previously referenced § 447.203, to
reference § 447.203(c). Because we
proposed wholesale revisions to
§ 447.203(b) and the addition of
§ 447.203(c), the proposed data and
analysis referenced in the previous
citation to § 447.203 would be located
more precisely in § 447.203(c). Previous
§ 447.204(b)(1) referred to the State’s
most recent AMRP performed under
previous § 447.203(b)(6) for the services
at issue in the State’s payment rate
reduction or payment restructuring
SPA; we proposed to remove this
requirement to align with our proposal
to rescind the previous AMRP
requirements in § 447.203(b). Previous
§ 447.204(b)(2) and (3) required the
State to submit with such a payment
States and the Private Sector: To
derive average costs, we used data from
the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics’
(BLS’) May 2022 376 National
Occupational Employment and Wage
Estimates for all salary estimates (https://
www.bls.gov/oes/2022/may/oes_
nat.htm). In this regard, Table 2 presents
BLS’ mean hourly wage, our estimated
cost of fringe benefits and other indirect
costs 377 (calculated at 100 percent of
salary), and our adjusted hourly wage.
376 In this final rule, we used the most recently
available data, May 2022, from the BLS. This is an
update from the proposed rule, (88 FR 27960),
which used data from the BLS’ May 2021 National
Occupational Employment and Wage Estimates for
salary estimates.
377 https://aspe.hhs.gov/reports/valuing-time-usdepartment-health-human-services-regulatoryimpact-analyses-conceptual-framework.
g. Compliance Actions for Access
Deficiencies (§ 447.203(c)(6))
Comment: One commenter supported
the proposal to clarify that CMS may
use the procedures set forth in § 430.35
when necessary to ensure compliance
with access requirements.
Response: We appreciate the support
of the commenter. We are finalizing as
proposed to recodify § 447.204(d) at
§ 447.203(c)(6).
After consideration of public
comments, we are finalizing the
provisions of § 447.203(c) as proposed
aside from minor typographical
corrections.
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
provide interested parties opportunity
for meaningful input on State rate
actions.
After consideration of public
comments, we are finalizing the
provisions of § 447.204 as proposed.
SPA an analysis of the effect of the
change in the payment rates on access
and a specific analysis of the
information and concerns expressed in
input from affected interested parties;
we noted our belief that the previous
requirements are addressed in proposed
§ 447.203(c)(1) and (2), as applicable.
We explained our belief that the
continued inclusion of these paragraphs
(b)(2) and (3) would be unnecessary or
redundant in light of the proposals in
§ 447.203(c)(1) and (2), if finalized. The
objective processes proposed under
§ 447.203(c)(1) and (2), which would
require States to submit quantitative and
qualitative information with a proposed
payment rate reduction or payment
restructuring SPA, would be sufficient
for us to obtain the information
necessary to assess the State’s proposal
with the same or similar information as
previously required under
§ 447.204(b)(2) and (3).
With the removal of § 447.204(b)(1)
through (b)(3), we proposed to revise
§ 447.204(b) to read, ‘‘[t]he State must
submit to us with any such proposed
State plan amendment affecting
payment rates documentation of the
information and analysis required under
§ 447.203(c) of this chapter.’’
Finally, as noted in the previous
section, we proposed to remove and
relocate § 447.204(d), as we believed the
nature of that provision is better suited
to codification in § 447.203(c)(6).
We solicited comments on the
proposed amendments to § 447.204. We
received public comments on these
proposals. The following is a summary
of the comments we received and our
responses.
Comment: One commenter supported
the conforming edits to § 447.204.
Another commenter specifically
supported the proposal to make
technical changes to § 447.204(a) to
cross-reference the analysis that CMS
proposes to require under § 447.203(c).
Response: We appreciate the support
of the commenters.
Comment: One commenter
recommended that CMS amend
§ 447.204(a)(2) to specifically include
reference to the interested parties
advisory group described in
§ 447.203(b)(6).
Response: We appreciate the
recommendation of the commenter. We
are confident that the mechanisms for
ongoing beneficiary and provider input
in § 447.203(c)(4) of the final rule will
447.203(c)(5), which was formerly
§ 447.203(b)(8), then requires States to
submit a corrective action plan to
remedy the access deficiency within 90
days from when it is identified to the
State. We agree with the commenters
that beneficiaries, patient advocacy
organizations, and providers raising
plausible access concerns to State
officials would be considered as
identifying an access deficiency when
raised to the State through appropriate
State channels.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
PO 00000
Frm 00250
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
III. Collection of Information
Requirements
Under the Paperwork Reduction Act
of 1995 (PRA) (44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.),
we are required to provide 60-day notice
in the Federal Register and solicit
public comment before a ‘‘collection of
information’’ requirement is submitted
to the Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) for review and approval. For the
purpose of the PRA and this section of
the rule, collection of information is
defined under 5 CFR 1320.3(c) of the
PRA’s implementing regulations.
To fairly evaluate whether an
information collection should be
approved by OMB, section 3506(c)(2)(A)
of the PRA requires that we solicit
comment on the following issues:
• The need for the information
collection and its usefulness in carrying
out the proper functions of our agency.
• The accuracy of our estimate of the
information collection burden.
• The quality, utility, and clarity of
the information to be collected.
• Recommendations to minimize the
information collection burden on the
affected public, including automated
collection techniques.
In the proposed rule (88 FR 28037
through 28066) we solicited public
comment on each of these issues for the
following sections of the proposed rule
(CMS–2442–P, RIN 0938–AU68) that
contained collection of information
requirements. Comments were received
with respect to ICR #4 (Incident
Management System). A summary of the
comment and our response is set out
below.
A. Wage Estimates
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
40791
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
TABLE 2: National Occupational Employment and Wage Estimates
13-1000
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
rs
Gener
rations Mana er
Human Resources Mana er
Mana ement Anal st
Social and Community Service
Mana ers
Social Science Research Assistants
Statistician
For States and the private sector, the
employee hourly wage estimates have
been adjusted by a factor of 100 percent.
This is necessarily a rough adjustment,
both because fringe benefits and other
indirect costs vary significantly across
employers, and because methods of
estimating these costs vary widely
across studies. Nonetheless, we believe
that doubling the hourly wage to
estimate total cost is a reasonably
accurate estimation method.
Beneficiaries: We believe that the
costs for beneficiaries undertaking
administrative and other tasks on their
own time is a post-tax hourly wage rate
of $20.71/hr.
We adopt an hourly value of time
based on after-tax wages to quantify the
opportunity cost of changes in time use
for unpaid activities. This approach
matches the default assumptions for
valuing changes in time use for
individuals undertaking administrative
and other tasks on their own time,
which are outlined in an ASPE report
on ‘‘Valuing Time in U.S. Department of
Health and Human Services Regulatory
Impact Analyses: Conceptual
Framework and Best Practices.’’ [*] We
start with a measurement of the usual
weekly earnings of wage and salary
workers of $998. [**] We divide this
weekly rate by 40 hours to calculate an
hourly pre-tax wage rate of $24.95. We
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
80.08
13-1199
39.75
39.75
79.50
11-1011
13-1141
118.48
36.50
118.48
36.50
236.96
73.00
15-1210
15-1251
43-9021
11-1021
11-3121
13-1111
11-9151
53.15
49.42
18.26
59.07
70.07
50.32
38.13
53.15
49.42
18.26
59.07
70.07
50.32
38.13
106.30
98.84
36.52
118.14
140.14
100.64
76.26
19-4061
15-2041
19-3022
13-1151
27.77
50.73
31.94
33.59
27.77
50.73
31.94
33.59
55.54
101.46
63.88
67.18
adjust this hourly rate downwards by an
estimate of the effective tax rate for
median income households of about 17
percent, resulting in a post-tax hourly
wage rate of $20.71. We adopt this as
our estimate of the hourly value of time
for changes in time use for unpaid
activities.378 379 Unlike our State and
private sector wage adjustments, we are
not adjusting beneficiary wages for
fringe benefits and other indirect costs
since the individuals’ activities, if any,
would occur outside the scope of their
employment.
B. Adjustment to State Cost Estimates
To estimate the financial burden on
States, it was important to consider the
Federal government’s contribution to
the cost of administering the Medicaid
program. For medical assistance
378 Department of Health and Human Services,
Office of the Assistant Secretary for Planning and
Evaluation. 2017. ‘‘Valuing Time in U.S.
Department of Health and Human Services
Regulatory Impact Analyses: Conceptual
Framework and Best Practices.’’ https://
aspe.hhs.gov/reports/valuing-time-us-departmenthealth-human-services-regulatory-impact-analysesconceptual-framework.
379 U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. Employed full
time: Median usual weekly nominal earnings
(second quartile): Wage and salary workers: 16
years and over [LEU0252881500A], retrieved from
FRED, Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis; https://
fred.stlouisfed.org/series/LEU0252881500A. Annual
Estimate, 2021.
PO 00000
Frm 00251
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
services, the Federal government
provides funding based on an FMAP
that is established for each State, based
on the per capita income in the State as
compared to the national average.
FMAPs range from a minimum of 50
percent in States with higher per capita
incomes to a maximum of 83 percent in
States with lower per capital incomes.
For Medicaid, all States receive a 50
percent Federal matching rate for most
administration expenditures. States also
receive higher Federal matching rates
for certain systems improvements,
redesign, or operations. As such, and
taking into account the Federal
contribution to the costs of
administering the Medicaid programs
for purposes of estimate State burden
with respect to collection of
information, we elected to use the
higher end estimate that the States
would contribute 50 percent of the
costs, even though the burden would
likely be smaller.
C. Information Collection Requirements
(ICRs)
1. ICRs Regarding Medicaid Advisory
Committee and Beneficiary Advisory
Council (§ 431.12)
The following changes will be
submitted to OMB for approval under
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
ER10MY24.024
Business O erations S ecialist
Business Operations Specialist, All
Other
Chief Executive
Compensation, Benefits, and Job
Anal st
40792
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
control number 0938–TBD (CMS–
10845).
Currently, most States have an
established Medical Care Advisory
Committee (MCAC), which we are
renaming the Medicaid Advisory
Committee (MAC), whereby each State
has the discretion on how to operate its
MCAC. A small number of States also
use consumer advisory subcommittees
as part of their current MCACs, similar
to the Beneficiary Advisory Council
(BAC) in § 431.12. We reviewed data
from 10 States to determine the current
status of MCACs and to determine the
burden needed to comply with the
§ 431.12 requirements across 50 States
and the District of Columbia.
Under the provision, States will be
required to:
• Select members to the MAC and
BAC on a rotating and continuous basis.
• Develop and publish a process for
MAC and BAC member recruitment and
selection of MAC and BAC leadership.
• Develop and publish:
++ Bylaws for governance of the
MAC.
++ A current list of MAC and BAC
membership.380
++ Past meeting minutes, including a
summary from the most recent BAC
Meeting.
• Develop, publish, and implement a
regular meeting schedule for the MAC
and BAC.
Additionally, the State must provide
and post to its website an annual report
written by the MAC to the State
describing its activities, topics
discussed, recommendations. The report
must also include actions taken by the
State based on the MAC
recommendations.
The requirements will require varying
levels of effort by States. For example,
a handful of States already have a BAC.
However, we believe that most States
will be required to create new structures
and processes. The majority of States
reviewed are already meeting some of
the new requirements for MACs, such as
publication of meeting schedules,
publication of membership lists, and
publication of bylaws. However, all
MAC bylaws will need to be updated to
meet the new requirements. Our review
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
380 BAC members may choose to not have their
names listed on the publicly posted membership
list.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
showed that most States are not
currently publishing their recruitment
and appointment processes for MAC
members, and those that did will need
to update these processes to meet the
new requirements. About half of the
States reviewed published meeting
minutes with responses and State
actions, as required under the new
requirements. However, only one State
reviewed published an annual report, so
this will likely be a new requirement for
almost all State MACs. States will not
need to modify or build reporting
systems to create and post these annual
reports. Due to the wide range in the use
and maturity of current MCACs across
the States, we are providing a range of
estimates to address these variations.
We recognize that some States, which
do not currently operate a MCAC, will
have a higher burden to implement the
requirements of § 431.12 to shift to the
MAC and BAC structure. However, our
research showed that the majority of
States do have processes and procedures
for their current MCACs, which will
require updating, but at a much lower
burden. Therefore, we believe it is
appropriate to offer average low and
high burden estimates.
For a low estimate, we estimate it will
take a team of business operations
specialists 120 hours at $79.50/hr to
develop and publish the processes and
report. In aggregate, we estimate an
annual burden of 6,120 hours (120 hr/
response × 51 responses) at a cost of
$486,540 (6,120 hr × $79.50/hr). Taking
into account the Federal administrative
match of 50 percent, the requirement
will cost States $243,270 ($486,540 ×
0.50). We also estimate that it will take
40 hours at $140.14/hr for a human
resources manager to review and
approve bylaws and help with
recruitment and appointment and
selection of MAC and BAC leadership
which will occur every 2 years. In
aggregate, we estimate a biennial burden
of 2,040 hours (40 hr/response × 51
responses) at a cost of $285,885 (2,040
hr × $140.14/hr). Taking into account
the Federal administrative match of 50
percent, the requirement will cost States
$142,942 ($285,885 × 0.50).
Additionally, we estimate it will take 10
hours at $118.14/hr for an operations
manager to review the updates and
prepare the required reports for annual
PO 00000
Frm 00252
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
publication. In aggregate, we estimate an
annual burden of 510 hours (10 hr/
response × 51 responses) at a cost of
$60,251 (510 hr × $118.14/hr). Taking
into account the Federal administrative
match of 50 percent, the requirement
will cost States $30,125 ($60,251 ×
0.50).
We derived the high estimate by
doubling the hours from the low
estimate. We used this approach
because all States already have a MCAC
requirement which means the type of
work being discussed is already
underway in most States and that there
is reference point for the type of work
described. For example, we estimate it
will take a team of business operations
specialists 240 hours at $79.50/hr to
develop and publish the processes and
annual report. In aggregate, we estimate
an annual burden of 12,240 hours (240
hr/response × 51 responses) at a cost of
$973,080 (12,240 hr × $79.50/hr).
Taking into account the Federal
administrative match of 50 percent, the
requirement will cost States $486,540
($973,080 × 0.50). We also estimate that
it will take 80 hours at $140.14/hr for
a human resources manager to review
and approve bylaws and help with
recruitment and appointment and
selection of MAC and BAC leadership
which will occur every 2 years. In
aggregate, we estimate a biennial burden
of 4,080 hours (80 hr/response × 51
responses) at a cost of $571,771 (4,080
hr × $140.14). Taking into account the
Federal administrative match of 50
percent, the requirement will cost States
$285,885 ($571,771 × 0.50).
Additionally, we estimate it will take 20
hours at $118.14/hr for an operations
manager to review the updates and
prepare the required annual report for
publication. In aggregate, we estimate an
annual burden of 1,020 hours (20 hr/
response × 51 responses) at a cost of
$120,503 (1,020 hr × $118.14/hr).
Taking into account the Federal
administrative match of 50 percent, the
requirement will cost States $60,251
($120,503 × 0.50).
We have summarized the total burden
in Table 3. To be conservative and not
underestimate our burden analysis, we
are using the high end of our estimates
to score the PRA-related impact of the
finalized requirements.
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
40793
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
Requirement
§ 431.12
(develop/
publish report)
§ 431.12
(review/approve
bylaws)
§ 431.12
(review
updates/prepare
reports)
Total
No.
Respondents
Total
Responses
Frequency
Time per
Response
(hr)
Total
Time
(hr)
Wage
($/hr)
Total
Cost($)
State
Share
($)
51
51
Annual
240
12,240
79.50
973,080
486,540
51
51
Biennial
80
4,080
140.14
571,771
285,885
51
51
Annual
20
1,020
118.14
120,503
60,251
51
153
vanes
Varies
17,340
vanes
1,665,354
832,676
While a few commenters made
general or high-level comments
regarding concerns about burden (which
are addressed in section II.A of this final
rule) we did not receive specific
comments on this ICR. The general
comments we received were about the
overall burden related to the MAC and
BAC provisions and not about the
burden estimated in the ICR Table 3 nor
the information outlined in this section.
In this rule we are finalizing the MAC
and BAC reporting requirements and
burden estimates as proposed.
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
2. ICRs Regarding Person-Centered
Service Plans (§ 441.301(c)(3); Applied
to Other HCBS Authorities at
§§ 441.450(c), 441.540(c), and
441.725(c), and 438.72(b) and to
Managed Care at § 438.72(b))
The following changes will be
submitted to OMB for approval after this
final rule is finalized and our survey
instrument has been developed. The
survey instrument and burden will be
made available to the public for their
review under the standard non-rule PRA
process which includes the publication
of 60- and 30-day Federal Register
notices. In the meantime, we are setting
out our burden figures (see below) as a
means of scoring the impact of this
rule’s changes. The availability of the
survey instrument and more definitive
burden estimates will be announced in
both Federal Register notices. The CMS
ID number for that collection of
information request is CMS–10854
(OMB control number 0938–TBD). Since
this will be a new collection of
information request, the OMB control
number has yet to be determined (TBD)
but will be issued by OMB upon their
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
approval of the new collection of
information request.
Section 1915(c)(1) of the Act requires
that services provided through section
1915(c) waiver programs be provided
under a written plan of care (hereinafter
referred to as ‘‘person-centered service
plans’’ or ‘‘service plans’’). Existing
Federal regulations at § 441.301(c)(1)
through (3) address the person-centered
planning process and include a
requirement at § 441.301(c)(3) that the
person-centered service plan be
reviewed and revised upon
reassessment of functional need, at least
every 12 months, when the individual’s
circumstances or needs change
significantly or at the request of the
individual.
In 2014, we released guidance for
section 1915(c) waiver programs 381
(hereinafter the ‘‘2014 guidance’’) that
included expectations for State
reporting of State-developed
performance measures to demonstrate
compliance with section 1915(c) of the
Act and the implementing regulations in
part 441, subpart G through six
assurances, including assurances related
to person-centered service plans. The
2014 guidance also indicated that States
should conduct systemic remediation
and implement a Quality Improvement
Project when they score below an 86
percent threshold on any of their
performance measures.
In this rule, we are finalizing a new
requirement at § 441.301(c)(3)(i) to
specify that States demonstrate that the
381 Modifications to Quality Measures and
Reporting in § 1915(c) Home and Community-Based
Waivers. March 2014. Accessed at https://
www.hhs.gov/guidance/sites/default/files/hhsguidance-documents/3-cmcs-quality-memonarrative_0_2.pdf.
PO 00000
Frm 00253
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
person-centered service plan for every
individual is reviewed, and revised, as
appropriate, based upon the
reassessment of functional need as
required by § 441.365(e), at least every
12 months, when the individual’s
circumstances or needs change
significantly, or at the request of the
individual. At § 441.301(c)(3)(ii)(A) we
are finalizing a requirement that States
demonstrate that a reassessment of
functional need was conducted at least
annually for at least 90 percent of
individuals continuously enrolled in the
waiver for at least 365 days. We are also
finalizing, at new § 441.301(c)(3)(ii)(B),
that States demonstrate that they
reviewed for every individual the
person-centered service plan and
revised the plan as appropriate based on
the results of the required reassessment
of functional need at least every 12
months for at least 90 percent of
individuals continuously enrolled in the
waiver for at least 365 days.
We are finalizing the application of
these requirements to services delivered
under FFS or managed care delivery
systems. Further, we are finalizing the
application of the finalized
requirements sections 1915(j), (k), and
(i) State plan services by crossreferencing at §§ 441.450(c), 441.540(c),
and 441.725(c), respectively.
In addition, we also proposed (and are
finalizing) several changes to current
regulations for person-centered
planning at § 441.301(c)(1) to reposition,
clarify, and remove extraneous language
from § 441.301(c)(1).
We are finalizing the person-centered
planning requirements at § 441.301(c)(1)
and (3) without substantive changes.
Below are our burden estimates for
these requirements.
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
ER10MY24.025
TABLE 3: Summary of High Burden Estimates for Medical Care Advisory Committee Requirements
40794
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
a. One Time Person-Centered Service
Plan Requirements: State
(§ 441.301(c)(3))
As discussed above, at new
§ 441.301(c)(3)(ii)(A), we are finalizing a
requirement that States demonstrate that
a reassessment of functional need was
conducted at least annually for at least
90 percent of individuals continuously
enrolled in the waiver for at least 365
days. We are also finalizing, at
§ 441.301(c)(3)(ii)(B), a requirement that
States demonstrate for every individual
that they reviewed the person-centered
service plan and revised the plan as
appropriate based on the results of the
required reassessment of functional
need at least every 12 months for at least
90 percent of individuals continuously
enrolled in the waiver for at least 365
days. The burden associated with the
person-centered service plan reporting
requirements at § 441.301(c)(3)(ii)(A)
and (B) affects the 48 States (including
the District of Columbia) that deliver
HCBS under sections 1915(c), (i), (j), or
(k) authorities.382 We anticipate that
States will need to update State policy,
as well as oversight and monitoring
processes related to the codification of
the new 90 percent minimum
performance level associated with these
requirements.
However, because we are codifying a
minimum performance level associated
with existing regulations but not
otherwise changing the regulatory
requirements under
§ 441.301(c)(3)(ii)(A) and (B), we do not
estimate any additional burden related
to those requirements. We also hold that
there is no additional burden associated
with repositioning, clarifying, and
removing extraneous language from the
regulatory text at § 441.301(c)(1). In this
regard we are only estimating burden for
updating State policy and oversight and
monitoring processes related to the
codification of the finalized 90 percent
minimum performance level
requirement.
We estimate it will take 8 hours at
$111.18/hr for an administrative
services manager to update State policy
and oversight and monitoring processes,
2 hours at $118.14/hr for a general and
operations manager to review and
approve the updates to State policy and
oversight and monitoring processes, and
1 hour at $236.96/hr for a chief
executive to review and approve the
updates to State policy and oversight
and monitoring processes. In aggregate,
we estimate a one-time burden of 528
hours (48 States × [8 hr + 2 hr + 1 hr])
at a cost of $65,409 (48 States × [(8 hr
× $111.18/hr) + (2 hr × $118.14/hr) + (1
hr × $236.96/hr)]). Taking into account
the Federal contribution to Medicaid
administration, the estimated State
share of this cost is $32,704 ($65,409 ×
0.50).
TABLE 4: Summary of One-Time Burden Estimates for States for the Person-Centered Service Plan
Requirements at§ 441.301(c)(3)
Update State policy
and oversight and
monitoring
processes
Review and
approval of State
policy update at the
management level
Review and
approval of State
policy update at the
chief executive level
Total
No.
Respondents
Total
Responses
Frequency
Time per
Response
(hr)
Total
Time
(hr)
Wage
($/hr)
Total Cost
($)
State
Share
($)
48
48
Once
8
384
111.18
42,693
21,347
48
48
Once
2
96
118.14
11,341
5,671
48
48
Once
1
48
236.96
11,374
5,687
48
48
Once
Varies
528
Varies
65,409
32,704
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
b. One Time Person-Centered Service
Plan Requirements: Managed Care Plans
(§ 441.301(c)(3))
As discussed above, we are requiring
managed care delivery systems to also
comply with the requirements finalized
at § 441.301(c)(3) to demonstrate that a
reassessment of functional need was
conducted at least annually for at least
90 percent of individuals continuously
enrolled in the waiver for at least 365
days and to demonstrate that they
reviewed the person centered service
plan and revised the plan as appropriate
based on the results of the required
reassessment of functional need at least
every 12 months for at least 90 percent
of individuals continuously enrolled in
the waiver for at least 365 days. As with
the burden estimate for States, we do
not estimate an ongoing burden related
to the codification of a minimum
performance level associated with the
requirements at § 441.301(c)(3).
For managed care plans, we estimate
it would take 5 hours at $111.18/hr for
an administrative services manager to
update organizational policy and
oversight and monitoring processes
related to the codification of a new
minimum performance level and 1 hour
at $236.96/hr for a chief executive to
review and approve the updates to
organizational policy and oversight and
monitoring processes. In aggregate, we
estimate a one-time burden of 966 hours
(161 managed care plans × [5 hr + 1 hr])
at a cost of $127,650 (161 managed care
plans × [(5 hr × $111.18/hr) + (1 hr ×
$236.96/hr)]).
382 Arizona, Rhode Island, and Vermont do not
have HCBS programs under any of these authorities.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
PO 00000
Frm 00254
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
ER10MY24.026
Requirement
40795
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
TABLE 5: Summary of One-Time Burden Estimates for Managed Care Plans for the
Person-Centered Service Plan Requirements at§ 441.301(c)(3)
Update organizational
policy and oversight
and monitoring
processes
Review and approval
of policy and oversight
and monitoring
processes
Total
Total
Responses
Frequency
Time per
Response
(hr)
Total
Time
(hr)
161
161
Once
5
805
111.18
89,500
n/a
161
161
Once
1
161
236.96
38,151
n/a
161
161
Once
Varies
966
Varies
127,650
n/a
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
3. ICRs Regarding Grievance System
(§ 441.301(c)(7); Applied to Other HCBS
Authorities at §§ 441.464(d)(2)(v),
441.555(b)(2)(iv), and 441.745(a)(1)(iii))
The following changes will be
submitted to OMB for approval after this
final rule is finalized and when our
reporting tools and survey instrument
has been developed. The survey
instrument and burden will be made
available to the public for their review
under the standard non-rule PRA
process which includes the publication
of 60- and 30-day Federal Register
notices. In the meantime, we are setting
out our burden figures (see below) as a
means of scoring the impact of this
rule’s changes. The availability of the
survey instrument and more definitive
burden estimates will be announced in
both Federal Register notices. The CMS
ID number for that collection of
information request is CMS–10854
(OMB control number 0938–TBD). Since
this will be a new collection of
information request, the OMB control
number has yet to be determined (TBD)
but will be issued by OMB upon their
approval of the new collection of
information request.
At § 441.301(c)(7), we are finalizing
requirements that States establish
grievance procedures for Medicaid
beneficiaries receiving section 1915(c)
waiver program services through a FFS
delivery system to file a complaint or
expression or dissatisfaction related to
the State’s or a provider’s compliance
with the person-centered planning and
service plan requirements at
§ 441.301(c)(1) through (3) and the
HCBS settings requirements at
§ 441.301(c)(4) through (6).
We are finalizing at
§ 441.301(c)(7)(vii) a list of
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
State
Share
($)
No.
Respondents
Jkt 262001
recordkeeping requirements related to
grievances. Specifically, at
§ 441.301(c)(7)(vii)(A), we are finalizing
that States maintain records of
grievances and review the information
as part of their ongoing monitoring
procedures. At § 441.301(c)(7)(vii)(B)(1)
through (7), we are finalizing that the
record of each grievance must contain
the following information at a
minimum: a general description of the
reason for the grievance, the date
received, the date of each review or
review meeting (if applicable),
resolution and date of the resolution of
the grievance (if applicable), and the
name of the beneficiary for whom the
grievance was filed. Further, at
§ 441.301(c)(7)(vii)(C), we are finalizing
that grievance records be accurately
maintained and in a manner that would
be available upon our request.
We are finalizing the application of
these requirements in § 441.301(c)(7) to
sections 1915(j), (k), and (i) State plan
services by cross-referencing at
§§ 441.464(d)(2)(v), 441.555(b)(2)(iv),
and 441.745(a)(1)(iii), respectively.
However, to avoid duplication with the
grievance requirements for managed
care plans at part 438, subpart F, we did
not propose to apply these requirements
to managed care delivery systems.
We are finalizing the grievance
process requirements we proposed at
§ 441.301(c)(7) with one substantive
change. As discussed in section II.B.2.
of this final rule, we are not finalizing
the requirements we proposed at
§ 441.301(c)(7)(iv)(B) that States must
have a 14-day expedited resolution
process in addition to a standard 90-day
resolution process for grievances. We do
not anticipate that this change affects
the burden estimates, as it does not
change the recordkeeping requirements
PO 00000
Frm 00255
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
Wage
($/hr)
Total
Cost($)
finalized at § 441.301(c)(7)(vii). In
general, even with this change, the
States will still have to perform all
activities described below in order to
establish and maintain the standard
grievance process outlined in
§ 441.301(c)(7). Additionally, as we
encourage States to develop their own
expedited grievance process, we are
calculating the burden estimate with the
assumption that all States will choose to
create their own version of an expedited
resolution process within the grievance
process required at § 441.301(c)(7).
We are finalizing the other grievance
process proposals without substantive
changes. Burden estimates for our
finalized grievance process
requirements are below.
a. States
The burden associated with the
grievance system requirements finalized
at § 441.301(c)(7) affect the 48 States
(including the District of Columbia) that
deliver at least some HCBS under
sections 1915(c), (i), (j), or (k) authorities
through FFS delivery systems.383 384
383 Arizona, Rhode Island, and Vermont do not
have HCBS programs under any of these authorities.
384 While some States deliver the vast majority of
HCBS through managed care delivery systems,
States would be subject to these requirements if
they deliver any HCBS under section 1915(c), (i),
(j), or (k) authorities through a fee-for service
delivery system. Based on data showing that the
percent of LTSS expenditures delivered through
managed LTSS delivery systems varied between 3
percent and 93 percent in 2019 across all States
with managed LTSS, we assume that all States
deliver at least some HCBS through fee-for-service
delivery systems (https://www.medicaid.gov/
medicaid/long-term-services-supports/downloads/
ltssexpenditures2019.pdf). We anticipate that the
burden associated with implementing these
requirements will be lower for States that deliver
the vast majority of HCBS through managed care
delivery systems.
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
ER10MY24.027
Requirement
40796
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
While some States may have existing
grievance systems in place for their FFS
delivery systems, we were unable to
determine the number of States with
existing grievance systems or whether
those grievance systems would meet the
finalized requirements at
§ 441.301(c)(7). As a result, we do not
take this information into account in our
burden estimate calculated below. We
estimate a one-time and ongoing burden
to implement these requirements at the
State level.
Specifically, States will have to: (1)
develop and implement policies and
procedures; (2) establish processes and
data collection tools for accepting,
tracking, and resolving, within required
timeframes, beneficiary grievances,
including processes and tools for:
providing beneficiaries with reasonable
assistance with filing a grievance, for
accepting grievances orally and in
writing, for reviewing grievance
resolutions with which beneficiaries are
dissatisfied, and for providing
beneficiaries with a reasonable
opportunity to present evidence and
testimony and make legal and factual
arguments related to their grievance; (3)
inform beneficiaries, providers, and
subcontractors about the grievance
system; and (4) develop beneficiary
notices; and (5) collect and maintain
information on each grievance,
including the reason for the grievance,
the date received, the date of each
review or review meeting (if applicable),
resolution and date of the resolution of
the grievance (if applicable), and the
name of the beneficiary for whom the
grievance was filed.
i. One-Time Grievance System
Requirements: States (§ 441.301(c)(7))
With regard to the one-time
requirements, we estimate it will take:
240 hours at $111.18/hr for an
administrative services manager to draft
policy and procedure content, prepare
notices and informational materials,
draft rules for publication, and conduct
public hearings; 100 hours at $98.84/hr
for a computer programmer to build,
design, and operationalize internal
systems for data collection and tracking;
120 hours at $67.18/hr for a training and
development specialist to develop and
conduct training for staff; 40 hours at
$118.14/hr for a general and operations
manager to review and approve policies,
procedures, rules for publication,
notices, and training materials; and 20
hours at $236.96/hr for a chief executive
to review and approve all operations
associated with this collection of
information requirement. In aggregate,
we estimate a one-time burden of 24,960
hours (520 hr × 48 States) at a cost of
$2,596,493 (48 States × [(240 hr ×
$111.18/hr) + (100 hr × $98.84/hr) +
(120 hr × $67.18/hr) + (40 hr × $118.14/
hr) + (20 hr × $236.96/hr)]). Taking into
account the Federal contribution to
Medicaid administration, the estimated
State share of this cost would be
$1,298,246 ($2,596,493 × 0.50).
TABLE 6: Summary of One-Time Burden Estimates for States for the Grievance System Requirements
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Requirement
Draft policy and
procedures, rules for
publication; prepare
beneficiary notices,
informational
materials; conduct
public hearings
Build, design,
operationalize internal
systems for data
collection and tracking
Develop and conduct
training for staff
Review and approve
policies, procedures,
rules for publication,
notices, and training
materials at the
management level
Review and approve
all operations in
collection of
information
requirement at the
chief executive level
TOTAL
VerDate Sep<11>2014
No.
Respondents
Total
Responses
Frequency
Time per
Response
(hr)
Total
Time
(hr)
Wage
($/hr)
Total Cost
($)
State
Share($)
48
48
Once
240
11,520
111.18
1,280,794
640,397
48
48
Once
100
4,800
98.84
474,432
237,216
48
48
Once
120
5,760
67.18
386,957
193,478
48
48
Once
40
1,920
118.14
226,829
113,415
48
48
Once
20
960
236.96
227,482
113,741
48
48
Once
Varies
24,960
Varies
2,596,493
1,298,246
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
PO 00000
Frm 00256
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
ER10MY24.028
at § 441.301(c)(7)
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
ii. Ongoing Grievance System
Requirements: States (§ 441.301(c)(7))
With regard to the on-going
requirements, we estimate that
approximately 2 percent of 1,460,363
Medicaid beneficiaries who receive
HCBS under section 1915(c), (i), (j), or
(k) authorities through FFS delivery
systems annually 385 will file a
grievance or appeal (29,207 grievances =
1,460,363 × 0.02).386 We estimate it will
take: 0.333 hours or 20 minutes at
$79.50/hr for a business operations
specialist to collect the required
information for each grievance from the
beneficiary (29,207 total grievances),
0.166 hours or 10 minutes at $36.52/hr
for a data entry worker to record the
required information on each grievance
(29,207 total grievances), 20 hours at
$98.84/hr for a computer programmer to
maintain the system for storing
information on grievances (48 States),
12 hours at $118.14/hr for a general and
operations manager to monitor and
oversee the collection and maintenance
of the required information (48 States),
and 2 hours at $236.96/hr for a chief
executive to review and approve all
40797
operations associated with this
collection of information requirement
(48 States). In aggregate, we estimate an
on-going burden of 16,206 hours at a
cost of $1,135,949 ([(29,207 grievances ×
0.333 hr × $79.50/hr) + (29,207
grievances × 0.166 hr × $36.52/hr) + (48
States × 20 hr × $98.84/hr) + (48 States
× 12 hr × $118.14/hr) + (48 States × 2
hr × $236.96/hr)]). Taking into account
the Federal contribution to Medicaid
administration, the estimated State
share of this cost is $567,975
($1,135,949 × 0.50) per year.
TABLE 7: Summary of Ongoing Burden for States for the Grievance System Requirements at§
441.301(c)(7)
Collect required
grievance data and
information
Enter required
grievance data and
information into data
collection and
tracking svstem
Perform maintenance
on system for storing
data and information
on grievances
Monitor and oversee
the collection and
maintenance of the
required information
at the management
level
Review and approve
all operations
associated with
collection of
information
requirement at the
executive level
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
TOTAL
No.
Respondents
Total
Responses
Frequency
Time per
Response
(hr)
48
29,207
On
occas10n
0.333
9,726
79.50
773,217
386,609
48
29,207
On
occas10n
0.166
4,848
36.52
177,049
88,525
48
48
Annually
20
960
98.84
94,886
47,443
48
48
Annually
12
576
118.14
68,049
34,025
48
48
Annually
2
96
236.96
22,748
11,374
48
29,255
(29,207 +
48)
Varies
Varies
16,206
Varies
1,135,949
567,975
385 https://www.medicaid.gov/medicaid/longterm-services-supports/downloads/ltss-user-brief2019.pdf.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
Total
Time
(hr)
386 We based this percent on an estimate of the
percent of Medicaid beneficiaries that file appeals
and grievances in Medicaid managed care in
Supporting Statement A for the information
PO 00000
Frm 00257
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
Wage
($/hr)
Total Cost
($)
State
Share($)
collection requirements for the Medicaid Managed
Care file rule (CMS–2408–F, RIN 0938–AT40). See
https://omb.report/icr/202205-0938-015/doc/
121334100 for more information.
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
ER10MY24.029
Requirement
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
40798
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
4. ICRs Regarding Incident Management
System (§ 441.302(a)(6); Applied to
Other HCBS Authorities at
§§ 441.464(e), 441.570(e),
441.745(a)(1)(v), and to Managed Care at
§ 438.72(b))
The following changes will be
submitted to OMB for approval after this
final rule is finalized and our survey
instrument has been developed. The
survey instrument and burden will be
made available to the public for their
review under the standard non-rule PRA
process which includes the publication
of 60- and 30-day Federal Register
notices. In the meantime, we are setting
out our burden figures (see below) as a
means of scoring the impact of this
rule’s changes. The availability of the
survey instrument and more definitive
burden estimates will be announced in
both Federal Register notices. The CMS
ID number for that collection of
information request is CMS–10854
(OMB control number 0938–TBD). Since
this would be a new collection of
information request, the OMB control
number has yet to be determined (TBD)
but will be issued by OMB upon their
approval of the new collection of
information request.
At § 441.302(a)(6), we are finalizing a
requirement that States provide an
assurance that they operate and
maintain an incident management
system that identifies, reports, triages,
investigates, resolves, tracks, and trends
critical incidents. At
§ 441.302(a)(6)(i)(A), we are finalizing
that States must establish a minimum
standard definition of a critical incident.
At § 441.302(a)(6)(i)(B) we are finalizing
a requirement that States must have
electronic incident management systems
that, at a minimum, enable electronic
collection, tracking (including tracking
of the status and resolution of
investigations), and trending of data on
critical incidents.
We are finalizing the requirements we
proposed at § 441.302(a)(6)(i) without
substantive changes, but we are
finalizing a change to the applicability
date for the electronic management
system requirement. We had proposed
that States would need to comply with
the requirements at § 441.302(a)(6) in 3
years. We are finalizing the 3-year
applicability date for the requirements
at § 441.302(a)(6) with the exception of
the electronic incident management
system finalized at § 441.302(a)(6)(i)(B),
which has a finalized applicability date
of 5 years. We do not anticipate that this
change will affect the activities
described in these burden estimates; the
primary effect of this change is to grant
States two additional years in which to
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
develop electronic incident
management systems, for which they
will perform the same activities.
At § 441.302(a)(6)(i)(C), we finalized
that States require providers to report to
States any critical incidents that occur
during the delivery of section 1915(c)
waiver program services as specified in
a waiver participant’s person-centered
service plan or are a result of the failure
to deliver authorized services. At
§ 441.302(a)(6)(i)(D), we finalized that
States must use claims data, Medicaid
Fraud Control Unit data, and data from
other State agencies such as Adult
Protective Services or Child Protective
Services to the extent permissible under
applicable State law to identify critical
incidents that are unreported by
providers and occur during the delivery
of section 1915(c) waiver program
services, or as a result of the failure to
deliver authorized services. At
§ 441.302(a)(6)(i)(E) we finalized a new
requirement that the State must ensure
medical records being used as part of
the incident management system are
handled in compliance with 45 CFR
164.510(b) to ensure that records with
protected health information used
during critical incident review are
obtained and used with beneficiaries’
consent. We are finalizing at
§ 441.302(a)(6)(i)(F) a requirement that
States share information on the status
and resolution of investigations if the
State refers critical incidents to other
entities for investigation. We are
finalizing at § 441.302(a)(6)(i)(G) a
requirement that States separately
investigate critical incidents if the
investigative agency fails to report the
resolution of an investigation within
State-specified timeframes. We are
finalizing at § 441.302(a)(6)(i)(H) a
requirement that States meet the
reporting requirements at
§ 441.311(b)(1) related to the
performance of their incident
management systems.
At § 441.302(a)(6)(iii), we are the
application of these requirements to
services delivered under FFS or
managed care delivery systems. We also
finalized the application of the
requirements finalized at § 441.302(a)(6)
to sections 1915(j), (k), and (i) State plan
services by cross-referencing at
§§ 441.570(e), 441.464(e), and
441.745(a)(1)(v), respectively.
With the exception of the change to
the effective date for electronic incident
management systems noted above, we
are finalizing the requirements
described herein without substantive
modification. Burden estimates for these
requirements are discussed below.
We received one comment on the
proposed burden estimate for the
PO 00000
Frm 00258
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
incident management provision. This
comment, and our response, is
summarized below.
Comment: One commenter noted that
when their State investigated
developing a single electronic incident
management system in 2014, the State
estimated the cost of consolidating
multiple State systems into a single
system would be $100 million and
believed that it would be even more
expensive to create such a system now.
Response: We thank the commenter
for their feedback. Without more
detailed information, provided, we
decline to update our burden estimate
for the incident management ICR based
on this comment. We believe most
States that require upgrades to their
system could do so within the costs that
we estimated; we will provide technical
assistance on an as-need basis for States
to identify efficient ways to upgrade
their systems.
We also note that according to the
finalized requirements in
§ 441.302(a)(6), States must have
electronic critical incident systems that,
at a minimum, enable electronic
collection, tracking (including of the
status and resolution of investigations),
and trending of data on critical
incidents. We are recommending, but
not requiring, that States develop a
single electronic critical incident system
for all of their HCBS programs under
sections 1915(c), (i), (j), and (k)
authorities, as we believe that a single
system will best enable States to prevent
the occurrence of critical incidents and
protect the health and safety of
beneficiaries across their lifespan. We
recognize that States may have to make
certain decisions about the development
of their electronic incident management
system according to current system
constraints.
a. States
The burden associated with the
incident management system
requirements proposed at
§ 441.302(a)(6) will affect the 48 States
(including Washington DC) that deliver
HCBS under section 1915(c), (i), (j), or
(k) authorities.387 We estimate a onetime and on-going burden to implement
these requirements at the State level.
The burden for the reporting
requirements at § 441.311(b)(1) is
included in the ICR #8, which is the
ICRs Regarding Compliance Reporting
(§ 441.311(b)).
All of the States impacted by
§ 441.302(a)(6)(i)(B), requiring that
States use an information system, as
387 Arizona, Rhode Island, and Vermont do not
have HCBS programs under any of these authorities.
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
defined in 45 CFR 164.304 and
compliant with 45 CFR part 164, have
existing incident management systems
in place. However, we assume that all
States will need to make at least some
changes to their existing systems to fully
comply with the proposed
requirements. Specifically, States will
have to update State policies and
procedures; implement new or update
existing electronic incident management
systems; publish revised provider
requirements through State notice and
publication processes; update provider
manuals and other policy guidance;
amend managed care contracts; collect
required information from providers;
use other required data sources to
identify unreported incidents; and share
information with other entities in the
State responsible for investigating
critical incidents.
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
i. One Time Incident Management
System Requirements: States
(§ 441.302(a)(6))
With regard to the one-time
requirements related to § 441.302(a)(6),
we estimate it will take: 120 hours at
$111.18/hr for an administrative
services manager to draft policy content,
prepare notices and draft rules for
publication, conduct public hearings,
and draft contract modifications for
managed care plans; 20 hours at
$100.64/hr for a management analyst to
update provider manuals; 80 hours at
$67.18/hr for a training and
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
development specialist to develop and
conduct training for providers; 80 hours
at $79.50/hr for a business operations
specialist to establish processes for
information sharing with other entities;
80 hours at $106.30/hr for a computer
and information analyst to build,
design, and implement reports for using
claims and other data to identify
unreported incidents; 24 hours at
$118.14/hr for a general and operations
manager to review and approve
managed care contract modifications,
policy and rules for publication, and
training materials; and 10 hours at
$236.96/hr for a chief executive to
review and approve all operations
associated with this requirement.
In aggregate, we estimate a one-time
burden of 19,872 hours (414 hr × 48
States) at a cost of $1,958,292 (48 States
× [(120 hr × $111.18/hr) + (20 hr ×
$100.64/hr) + (80 hr × $67.18/hr) + (80
hr × $79.50/hr) + (80 hr × $106.30/hr)
+ (24 hr × $118.14/hr) + (10 hr ×
$236.96/hr)]). Taking into account the
Federal contribution to Medicaid
administration, the estimated State
share of this cost would be $979,146
($1,958,292 × 0.50).
In addition, we estimate that States,
based on the results of the incident
management system assessment
discussed earlier in section II.B.3. of this
preamble, that 82 percent of States, or
39 States (48 States × 0.82), will need to
update existing electronic incident
management systems, while the
PO 00000
Frm 00259
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40799
remaining 9 States would need to
implement new electronic incident
management systems, to meet the
proposed requirement at
§ 441.302(a)(6)(i)(B). We estimate based
on information reported by some States
in spending plans for section 9817 of
the American Rescue Plan Act of 2021
that the cost per State to update existing
electronic systems is $2 million while
the cost per State to implement new
electronic systems is $5 million.388 In
aggregate, we estimate a one-time
technology burden of $123,000,000
[($2,000,000 × 39 States) + ($5,000,000
× 9 States)]. Taking into account the
Federal contribution to Medicaid
administration, the estimated State
share of this cost would be $61,500,000
($123,000,000 × 0.50).
BILLING CODE 4120–01–P
388 Enhanced Federal Financial Participation
(FFP) is available at a 90 percent Federal Medical
Assistance Percentage (FMAP) rate for the design,
development, or installation of improvements of
mechanized claims processing and information
retrieval systems, in accordance with applicable
Federal requirements. Enhanced FFP at a 75 percent
FMAP rate is also available for operations of such
systems, in accordance with applicable Federal
requirements. However, the receipt of these
enhanced funds is conditioned upon States meeting
a series of standards and conditions to ensure
investments are efficient and effective. As a result,
we do not assume for the purpose of this burden
estimate that States will qualify for the enhanced
Federal match. This estimate overestimates State
burden to the extent that States qualify for the
enhanced Federal match.
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
40800
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
TABLE 8: Summary of One-Time Burden for States for the Incident Management System
Requirements(§ 441.302(a)(6))
No.
Respondents
Total
Responses
Frequency
Time per
Response
(hr)
Total
Time
(hr)
Wage ($/hr)
Total Cost ($)
State Share
($)
48
48
Once
120
5,760
111.18
640,397
320,198
48
48
Once
20
960
100.64
96,614
48,307
48
48
Once
80
3,840
67.18
257,971
128,986
48
48
Once
80
3,840
79.50
305,280
152,640
48
48
Once
80
3,840
106.30
408,192
204,096
48
48
Once
24
1,152
118.14
136,097
68,049
48
48
Once
10
480
236.96
113,741
56,871
48
48
Once
Varies
19,872
Varies
1,958,292
979,146
48
39
Once
n/a
n/a
78,000,000
39,000,000
Implement new
electronic systems
48
9
Once
n/a
n/a
45,000,000
22,500,000
Subtotal Non-Labor
Burden
48
48
Once
nla
nla
Varies
123,000,000
61,500,000
TOTAL
48
96
Once
varies
19,872
Varies
124,958,292
62,479,146
Requirement
Draft policy content,
prepare notices and
draft rules for
publication, conduct
public hearings, and
draft contract
modifications for
managed care plans
Update provider
manuals
Develop and conduct
training for providers
Establish processes for
information sharing
with other entities
Build, design, and
implement reports for
using claims and other
data to identify
unreported incidents
Review and approve
managed care contract
modifications, policy
and rules for
publication, and
training materials at the
management level
Review and approve all
operations associated
with this requirement at
the executive level
Subtotal Labor-Related
Burden
Update existing
electronic incident
management systems
$2,000,000/
system
(contractor)
$5,000,000/
system
(contractor)
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
PO 00000
Frm 00260
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
ER10MY24.030
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
BILLING CODE 4120–01–C
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
ii. Ongoing Incident Management
System Requirements: States
(§ 441.302(a)(6))
With regard to the ongoing
requirements § 441.302(a)(6), we
estimate that there are 0.5 critical
incidents annually 389 for each of the
1,889,640 Medicaid beneficiaries who
receive HCBS under sections 1915(c),
(i), (j), or (k) authorities annually, or
944,820 (1,889,640 × 0.5) critical
incidents annually.390 We further
estimate that, based on data on
unreported incidents, these
requirements will result in the
identification of 30 percent more critical
incidents annually, or 283,446 (944,820
× 0.3) critical incidents; 391 that 76
percent, or 215,419 (283,446 × 0.76) will
be reported for individuals enrolled in
FFS delivery systems; 392 and that 10
percent of those for individuals enrolled
in FFS delivery systems (21,542 =
215,419 × 0.1) will be made through
provider reports and 90 percent
(193,877 = 215,419 × 0.9) through
claims identification and other
sources.393 We estimate 0.166 hr or 10
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
389 Data on the number of critical incidents is
limited. We base our estimate on available public
information, such as https://oig.hhs.gov/oas/
reports/region7/71806081.pdf and https://
dhs.sd.gov/servicetotheblind/docs/
2015%20CIR%20Annual%20Trend%20Analysis.
pdf.
390 https://www.medicaid.gov/medicaid/longterm-services-supports/downloads/ltss-user-brief2019.pdf.
391 Data on the number of unreported critical
incidents is limited. We base our estimate on
available public information, such as https://
pennlive.com/news/2020/01/possible-abuse-ofgroup-home-residents-wasnt-adequately-tracked-inpa-federal-audit.html and https://www.kare11.com/
article/news/local/federal-audit-finds-maine-dhhsfailed-to-investigate-multiple-deaths-criticalincidents/97-463258015.
392 https://www.medicaid.gov/medicaid/longterm-services-supports/downloads/ltss-user-brief2019.pdf.
393 Data is limited on the identification of critical
incidents through various data sources. We
conservatively assume that 25 percent of more
critical incidents identified as a result of these
requirements will be reported by providers even
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
minutes at $36.52/hr for a data entry
worker to record the information on
each reported critical incident reported
by providers for individuals enrolled in
FFS delivery systems. In aggregate, we
estimate an ongoing burden each year of
3,576 hours (21,542 incidents × 0.166
hr) at a cost of $130,594 (3,576 hr ×
$36.52/hr) to record the information on
each reported critical incident reported
by providers for individuals enrolled in
FFS delivery systems. While States can
establish different processes for the
reporting of critical incidents for
individuals enrolled in managed care,
we assume for the purpose of this
analysis that the States would delegate
provider reporting critical incidents and
identification of critical incidents
through claims and other data sources to
managed care plans and that the
managed care plans would be
responsible for reporting the identified
critical incidents to the State.394 We
further assume that the information
reported by managed care plans to the
State and identified by the State through
claims and other data sources would be
in an electronic form. For the 68,027
more critical incidents for individuals
enrolled in managed care (283,446 more
critical incidents identified × 24 percent
for individuals enrolled in managed
care), and the 193,877 more critical
incidents identified through claims and
other data sources for individuals
enrolled in FFS (283,446 more critical
incidents identified × 76 percent for
individuals enrolled in FFS × 90 percent
identified through claims and other
sources), we estimate 2 minutes (0.0333
hr) at $36.52/hr for a data entry worker
to record the information on each of
these 261,904 critical incidents (68,027
though claims data will likely identify a
substantially higher of percentage of claims than
will be reported by providers.
394 Addressing Critical Incidents in the MLTSS
Environment: Research Brief, ASPE, https://
aspe.hhs.gov/reports/addressing-critical-incidentsmltss-environment-research-brief-0.
PO 00000
Frm 00261
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40801
+ 193,877). In aggregate, for
§ 441.302(a)(6), we estimate an ongoing
annual burden of 8,721 hours (261,904
incidents × 0.0333 hr) at a cost of
$318,491 (8,721 hr × $36.52/hr) on these
critical incidents.
In total, for § 441.302(a)(6), we
estimate an ongoing burden each year of
12,297 hours (3,576 hr + 8,721 hr) at a
cost of $449,085 ($130,594 + $318,491)
to record the information on all critical
further estimate it would take 12 hours
at $79.50/hr for a business operations
specialist to maintain processes for
information sharing with other entities;
20 hours at $106.30/hr for a computer
and information analyst to update and
maintain reports for using claims and
other data to identify unreported
incidents; 24 hours at $118.14/hr for a
general and operations manager to
monitor the operations associated with
this requirement; and 4 hours at
$236.96/hr for a chief executive to
review and approve all operations
associated with this collection of
information requirement in each State.
In aggregate, we estimate an ongoing
burden of 15,177 hours ([60 hr × 48
States] + 12,297 hr) at a cost of $778,520
($449,085 + [48 States × ((12 hr ×
$79.50/hr) + (20 hr × $106.30/hr) + (24
hr × $118.14/hr) + 4 hr × $236.96/hr)]).
In addition, we estimate an on-going
annual technology-related cost of
$500,000 per State for States to maintain
their electronic incident management
systems. In aggregate, we estimate an
ongoing burden of $24,000,000
($500,000 × 48 States) for States to
maintain their electronic incident
management systems. In total, we
estimate an ongoing annual burden of
15,177 hours at a cost $24,778,520
($778,520 + $24,000,000). Taking into
account the Federal contribution to
Medicaid administration, the estimated
State share of this cost would be
$12,389,260 ($24,778,520 × 0.50).
BILLING CODE 4120–01–P
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
40802
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
TABLE 9: Summary of Ongoing Burden for States for the Incident Management System Requirements
at§ 441.302(a)(6)
Requirement
Total
Responses
Frequency
Time per
Response
(hr)
48
21,542
Annually
0.166
48
261,904
Annually
48
48
48
Total
Time
(hr)
State Share
($)
Wage ($/hr)
Total Cost ($)
3,576
36.52
130,596
65,298
0.033
8,721
36.52
318,491
159,245
Annually
12
576
79.50
45,792
22,896
48
Annually
20
960
106.30
102,048
51,024
48
48
Annually
24
1,152
118.14
136,097
68,048
48
48
Annually
4
192
236.96
45,496
22,748
Subtotal: Labor
Related Burden
48
283,494
(21,542 +
261,904 +
48)
Annually
Varies
15,177
Varies
778,520
389,260
Maintain electronic
incident
management
systems
(specifically, §
44 l.302(a)(6)(i)(B))
48
48
Annually
n/a
n/a
500,000/
system
( contractor)
24,000,000
12,000,000
Total Technology
Cost
48
48
Annually
n/a
n/a
500,000
system
(contractor)
24,000,000
12,000,000
TOTAL
48
283,542
(283,494
+48)
Annually
Varies
15,177
Varies
24,778,520
12,389,260
Record the
information on each
reported critical
incident reported by
providers for
individuals enrolled
in FFS delivery
systems
Record the
information on
critical incidents for
individuals enrolled
in managed care and
critical incidents
identified through
claims and other
data sources for
individuals enrolled
inFFS
Maintain processes
for information
sharing with other
entities
Update and maintain
reports for using
claims and other
data to identify
unreported incidents
Monitor operations
associated with this
requirement at the
management level
Review and approve
all operations
associated with this
collection of
information
requirement at the
executive level
BILLING CODE 4120–01–C
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
PO 00000
Frm 00262
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
ER10MY24.031
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
No.
Respondents
40803
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
b. Service Providers and Managed Care
Plans
The burden associated with this final
rule will affect service providers that
provide HCBS under sections 1915(c),
(i), (j), and (k) authorities, as well as
managed care plans that States contract
with to provide managed long-term
services and supports.
The following discussion estimates an
ongoing burden for service providers to
implement these requirements and both
a one-time and ongoing burden for
managed care plans.
i. On-Going Incident Management
System Requirements: Service Provider
To estimate the number of service
providers that will be impacted by this
final rule, we used unpublished data
from the Provider Relief Fund to
estimate that there are 19,677 providers
nationally across all payers delivering
the types of HCBS that are delivered
the high end of our estimates to score
under sections 1915(c), (i), (j), and (k)
authorities. We then prorate the number the PRA-related impact of the changes.
to estimate the number of providers in
As discussed earlier, we estimate that
the 48 States that are subject to this
providers will report 10 percent, or
requirement (19,677 providers
28,345, of the more critical incidents
nationally × 48 States subject to the
(283,446 more critical incidents × 0.10)
proposed requirement/51 States =
identified annually as a result of these
18,520 providers). We used data from
requirements. Based on these figures,
the Centers for Disease Control and
395
Prevention
to estimate the percentage we estimate that, on average, each
of these HCBS providers that participate provider will report 1.8 (28,345
incidents/15,742 providers) more
in Medicaid and, due to uncertainty in
critical incidents annually. We further
the data and differences in provider
estimate that, on average, it would take
definitions, estimate both a lower and
a provider 1 hour at $118.14/hr for a
upper range of providers affected. At a
general and operations manager to
low end of 78 percent Medicaid
participation, we estimate that there are collect the required information and
report the information to the State or to
14,446 providers impacted (18,520
providers × 0.78), while at a high end of the managed care plan as appropriate
for each incident.396 In aggregate, for
85 percent participation, we estimate
that there are 15,742 providers impacted § 441.302(a)(6), we estimate an ongoing
burden of 28,345 hours (28,345
(18,520 providers × 0.85). To be
conservative and not underestimate our incidents × 1 hr) at a cost of $3,348,678
projected burden analysis, we are using
(28,345 hr × $118.14/hr).
TABLE 10: Summary of Ongoing Burden for Service Providers for the Incident Management
System Requirements
Frequency
Time
per
Respon
se (hr)
Total
Time
{hr)
Wage
($/hr)
Total
Cost
($)
State
Share
($)
Collect the
required
information and
report the
information to
the State or to
the managed
care plan(§
441.302(a)(6)(i)
(C))
15,742
providers
28,345
incidents
Annually
1
28,34
5
118.1
4
3,348,6
78
n/a
Total
15,742
providers
28,345
incidents
Annually
1
28,34
5
118.1
4
3,348,6
78
n/a
ii. One Time Incident Management
System Requirements: Managed Care
Plans (§ 441.302(a)(6))
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Total
Responses
As required under § 441.302(a)(6),
while States can establish different
processes for the reporting of critical
incidents for individuals enrolled in
managed care, we assume for the
purpose of this analysis that the States
395 https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/data/series/sr_03/
sr03_43-508.pdf.
396 The actual amount of time for each incident
will vary depending on the nature of the critical
incident and the specific reporting requirements of
each State and managed care plan. This estimate
assumes that some critical incidents will take
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
will delegate provider reporting of
critical incidents and identification of
critical incidents through claims and
other data sources to managed care
plans and that the plans will be
responsible for reporting the identified
critical incidents to the State.397 We
further assume that the information
reported by managed care plans to the
State would be in an electronic form.
We estimated that there are 161
managed long-term services and
supports plans providing services across
25 States.398 With regard to the one-time
requirements at § 441.302(a)(6), we
estimate it would take: 20 hours at
$111.18/hr for an administrative
substantially less time to report, while others could
take substantially less time.
397 Addressing Critical Incidents in the MLTSS
Environment: Research Brief, available at https://
aspe.hhs.gov/reports/addressing-critical-incidentsmltss-environment-research-brief-0.
398 ‘‘A View from the States: Key Medicaid Policy
Changes: Results from a 50-State Medicaid Budget
Survey for State Fiscal Years 2019 and 2020,’’
https://www.kff.org/report-section/a-view-from-thestates-key-medicaid-policy-changes-long-termservices-and-supports/.
PO 00000
Frm 00263
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
ER10MY24.032
Requirement
No.
Respondents
40804
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
services manager to draft policy for
contracted providers; 20 hours at
$100.64/hr for a management analyst to
update provider manuals; 40 hours at
$67.18/hr for a training and
development specialist to develop and
conduct training for providers; 80 hours
requirement. In aggregate, we estimate a
one-time burden of 26,726 hours (161
managed care plans × 166 hr) at a cost
of $2,712,747 (161 managed care plans
× [(20 hr × $111.18/hr) + (20 hr ×
$100.64/hr) + (40 hr × $67.18/hr) + (80
hr × $106.30/hr) + (6 hr × $236.96/hr)]).
at $106.30/hr for a computer and
information analyst to build, design,
and implement reports for using claims
and other data to identify unreported
incidents; and 6 hours at $236.96/hr for
a chief executive to review and approve
all operations associated with this
TABLE 11: Summary of One-Time Burden for Managed Care Plans for the Incident
Management System Requirements at § 441.302(a)(6)
Draft policy for
contracted providers
Update provider
manuals
Develop and conduct
training for providers
Build, design, and
implement reports for
using claims and
other data to identify
unreported incidents
Review and approve
all operations
associated with this
requirement
Total
No.
Respondent
s
Total
Response
s
Time per
Response
Total
Time
Wage
($/hr)
Total
Cost($)
State
Shar
e ($)
(hr)
(hr)
161
161
Once
20
3,220
111.18
358,000
n/a
161
161
Once
20
3,220
100.64
324,061
n/a
161
161
Once
40
6,440
67.18
432,639
n/a
161
161
Once
80
12,880
106.30
1,369,144
n/a
161
161
Once
6
966
236.96
228,903
n/a
161
161
Once
Varies
26,726
Varies
2,712,747
n/a
iii. Ongoing Incident Management
System Requirements: Managed Care
Plans (§ 441.302(a)(6))
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
The ongoing burden to managed care
plans consists of the collection and
maintenance of information on critical
incidents. As noted earlier, we estimate
that these requirements will result in
the identification of 283,446 more
critical incidents annually than are
currently identified by States. We
further estimate that 24 percent, or
68,027 (283,446 × 0.24), will be reported
for individuals enrolled in managed
care delivery systems 399 and that 10
percent, or 6,803 (68,027 × 0.10), will be
made through provider reports and 90
399 https://www.medicaid.gov/medicaid/longterm-services-supports/downloads/ltss-user-brief2019.pdf.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
Frequenc
y
percent, or 61,224 (68,027 × 0.90),
through claims identification and other
sources.400 We estimate that it will take
0.166 hr at $36.52/hr for a data entry
worker to record the information on
each reported critical incident reported
by providers (§ 441.302(a)(6)(i)(B)(2)). In
aggregate, we estimate an ongoing
burden of 1,129 hours (6,803 critical
incidents made through provider reports
× 0.166 hr) at a cost of $41,231 (1,129
hr × $36.52/hr). We also estimate that it
will take: 20 hours at $106.30/hr for a
computer and information analyst to
update and maintain reports for using
claims and other data to identify
unreported incidents
(§ 441.302(a)(6)(i)(B)(3)); 6 hours at
400 Data is limited on the identification of critical
incidents through various data sources. We
conservatively assume that 25 percent of additional
critical incidents identified as a result of these
PO 00000
Frm 00264
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
$118.14/hr for a general and operations
manager to monitor the operations
associated with this requirement and
report the information to the State
(§ 441.302(a)(6)(i)(E)); and 1 hour at
$236.96/hr for a chief executive to
review and approve all operations
associated with this collection of
information requirement
(§ 441.302(a)(6)(i)(G)). In aggregate, we
estimate an ongoing burden of 5,476
hours (1,129 hr + [161 managed care
plans × 27 hr]) at a cost of $535,791
($41,231 + (161 managed care plans ×
[(20 hr × $106.30/hr) + (6 hr × $118.14/
hr) + (1 hr × $236.96/hr)]).
BILLING CODE 4120–01–P
requirements will be reported by providers even
though claims data will likely identify a
substantially higher of percentage of claims than
will be reported by providers.
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
ER10MY24.033
Requirement
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
40805
TABLE 12: Summary of Ongoing Burden for Managed Care Plans for the Incident Management System
Requirements
Requirement
Record the
information on each
reported critical
incident reported by
providers
( §441.3 02(a)(6)(i)(B)
(2))
Update and maintain
reports for using
claims and other data
to identify unreported
incidents
( §441.3 02(a)(6)(i)(B)
(3))
Monitor the
operations associated
with this requirement
and report the
information to the
State
(§441.302(a)(6)(i)(E))
Review and approve
all operations
associated with this
requirement
(§441.302(a)(6)(i)(G)
Time per
Response
Total
Time
Wage
($/hr)
Total Cost
($)
State
Share
($)
(hr)
(hr)
Annually
0.166
1,129
36.52
41,231
n/a
161
Annually
20
3,220
106.30
342,286
n/a
161
161
Annually
6
966
118.14
114,123
n/a
161
161
Annually
1
161
236.96
38,151
n/a
161
6,964
(6,803 +
161)
Annually
Varies
5,476
Varies
535,791
n/a
No.
Respondents
Total
Responses
Frequency
161
6,803
161
Total
BILLING CODE 4120–01–C
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
5. ICRs Regarding Payment Adequacy
Reporting (§ 441.311(e); Applied to
Other HCBS Authorities at
§§ 441.474(c), 441.580(i), and
441.745(a)(1)(vii) and to Managed Care
at § 438.72(b))
The following changes will be
submitted to OMB for approval after this
final rule is finalized and when our
survey instrument has been developed.
The survey instrument will be made
available to the public for their review
under the standard non-rule PRA
process which includes the publication
of 60- and 30-day Federal Register
notices. In the meantime, we are setting
out our burden figures (see below) as a
means of scoring the impact of this
rule’s changes. The availability of the
survey instrument and more definitive
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
burden estimates will be announced in
both Federal Register notices. The CMS
ID number for that collection of
information request is CMS–10854
(OMB control number 0938–TBD). Since
this would be a new collection of
information request, the OMB control
number has yet to be determined (TBD)
but will be issued by OMB upon their
approval of the new collection of
information request.
We finalized at § 441.311(e)(2) a new
requirement that States report to us
annually on the percentage of total
payments (not including excluded costs)
for furnishing homemaker services,
home health aide services, personal
care, and habilitation services, as set
forth in § 440.180(b)(2) through (4) and
(6), that are spent on compensation for
direct care workers.
PO 00000
Frm 00265
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
Section 441.311(e)(1)(i), as finalized,
defines compensation to include salary,
wages, and other remuneration as
defined by the Fair Labor Standards Act
and implementing regulations (29
U.S.C. 201 et seq., 29 CFR parts 531 and
778); benefits (such as health and dental
benefits, paid leave, and tuition
reimbursement); and the employer share
of payroll taxes for direct care workers
delivering services authorized under
section 1915(c) of the Act. Section
441.311(e)(1)(ii), as finalized, defines
direct care workers to include workers
who provide nursing services, assist
with activities of daily living (such as
mobility, personal hygiene, eating), or
provide support with instrumental
activities of daily living (such as
cooking, grocery shopping, managing
finances). Specifically, direct care
workers include nurses (registered
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
ER10MY24.034
)
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
40806
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
nurses, licensed practical nurses, nurse
practitioners, or clinical nurse
specialists) who provide nursing
services to Medicaid-eligible
individuals receiving HCBS, licensed or
certified nursing assistants, direct
support professionals, personal care
attendants, home health aides, and other
individuals who are paid to directly
provide services to Medicaid
beneficiaries receiving HCBS to address
activities of daily living or instrumental
activities of daily living. Direct care
workers include individuals employed
by a Medicaid provider, State agency, or
third party; contracted with a Medicaid
provider, State agency, or third party; or
delivering services under a self-directed
service model. (Refer to section II.B.5. of
this final rule for complete discussion of
these definitions.)
We are also finalizing § 441.311(e) to
include a definition of excluded costs at
§ 441.311ek)(1)(iii). Excluded costs are
costs that are not included in the
calculation of the percentage of
Medicaid payments to providers that is
spent on compensation for direct care
workers. Such costs are limited to: costs
of required trainings for direct care
workers (such as costs for qualified
trainers and training materials); travel
reimbursements (such as mileage
reimbursement or public transportation
subsidies) provided to direct care
workers; and personal protective
equipment for direct care workers. This
policy was not included in the NPRM
calculations. While we do not believe
the policy of allowing providers to
deduct excluded costs will affect the
activities described in this cost estimate,
we acknowledge that they may require
additional time for some of the activities
(such as drafting policy manuals or
training providers on the policy.) These
costs have been added to the revised
burden estimate.
As discussed in section II.B.7. of this
rule, we had initially proposed at
§ 441.311(e) that States would be
required to report on the percent of
Medicaid compensation spent on
compensation for direct care workers
providing homemaker, home health
aide, and personal care services as
defined at § 440.180(b)(2) through (4),
and that the State must report this data
for each service, with self-directed
services reported separately. We are
finalizing this requirement to include
reporting on an additional service
(habilitation services, as defined at
§ 440.180(b)(6)). We are also finalizing a
new requirement that in addition to
reporting by service, with separate
reporting for self-directed services,
States must also report facility-based
services separately. Below, we include
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
in our revised calculations the increased
anticipated burden associated with the
addition of reporting on habilitation
services and separate reporting for
facility-based services in § 441.311(e).
We anticipate an increased burden on
States and managed care plans to
address data collection on the
additional services. While we are
increasing our estimate of the number of
impacted providers, we do not believe
this will change providers’ activities
associated with this requirement.
To ensure that States are prepared to
comply with the reporting requirement
at § 441.311(e)(2), we are finalizing a
requirement at § 441.311(e)(3) to require
that one year prior to the first payment
adequacy report, States must provide a
status update on their readiness to
report the data required in
§ 441.311(e)(2). This will allow us to
identify States in need of additional
support to come into compliance with
§ 441.311(e)(2) and provide targeted
technical assistance to States as needed.
Our burden estimate below has been
revised to include the activities
associated with the State’s one-time
submission of this report. We do not
anticipate an additional burden on
managed care plans or providers
associated with this requirement.
We also finalized at § 441.311(e)(4) an
exemption for the Indian Health Service
and Tribal health programs subject to 25
U.S.C. 1641, which exempts these
providers from the requirements in
§ 441.311(e). Based on internal figures,
we believe that about 100 HCBS provide
As discussed in section II.B.7. of this
final rule, we are applying the finalized
requirements at § 441.311(e) to services
delivered in both FFS and managed care
delivery systems. We are applying the
requirements to services that are
delivered in 1915(c), (i) and (k)
programs. We note also that the
reporting requirement will go into effect
4 years after this rule is finalized.
We are finalizing the requirements at
§§ 441.311(e) with the substantive
modifications as described above.
Burden estimates for the finalized
requirements are below. We note an
additional change to the burden
estimates. As presented in the proposed
rule at 88 FR 28047, we had presented
the burden estimate of both the payment
adequacy reporting requirement at
§ 441.311(e) and the HCBS payment
adequacy minimum performance
requirements at § 441.302(k) in a single
ICR. Since the publication of the NPRM,
upon further consideration we have
determined that as §§ 441.302(k) and
441.311(e) represent distinct sets of
requirements, it is more appropriate to
present the costs associated with
PO 00000
Frm 00266
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
§ 441.302(k) under a separate ICR (ICR
11) in this section IV. of the final rule.
However, while § 441.311(e)
represents a distinct set of requirements
from those in § 441.302(k), we also
expect that States will employ certain
efficiencies in complying with both
§§ 441.302(k) and 441.311(e). In
particular, we expect that States will
build a single IT infrastructure and use
the same processes both for collecting
data for the reporting requirement at
§ 441.311(e) and for determining
providers’ compliance with HCBS
payment adequacy performance
requirements at § 441.302(k). The
burden associated with States’
development of infrastructure and
processes to determine what percentage
of HCBS providers’ Medicaid payments
for certain HCBS is spent on direct care
worker compensation, as well as
providers’ reporting of this information
to the State, is included in this ICR for
§ 441.311(e). We believe representing
these costs under only one ICR avoids
duplicative or inflated burden estimates.
Burden estimates associated specifically
with the minimum performance
requirements in § 441.302(k) are
presented in ICR 11 of this Collection of
Information (section IV. of this final
rule.)
a. State Burden
The burden associated with the
requirements at § 441.311(e) will affect
the 48 States (including Washington DC)
that deliver HCBS under sections
1915(c), (i), (j), or (k) authorities.401 402
We estimate both a one-time and
ongoing burden to implement these
requirements at the State level.
Under § 441.311(e), we expect that
States will have to: (1) draft new policy
(one-time); (2) update provider manuals
and other policy guidance to include
reporting requirements (including
information regarding excluded costs)
for each of the services subject to the
requirement (one-time); (3) inform
providers of services through State
notification processes, both initially and
annually of reporting requirements (onetime and ongoing); (4) assess State
systems and submit a one-time report to
us on the State’s readiness to comply
with the ongoing reporting requirement
at 441.311(e)(2) (one-time); (5) collect
the information from providers for each
service required (ongoing); (6) aggregate
the data broken down by each service,
as well as self-directed services
401 Arizona, Rhode Island, and Vermont do not
have HCBS programs under any of these authorities.
402 For purposes of this burden analysis, we are
not taking into consideration temporary wage
increases or bonus payments that have been or are
being made.
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
(ongoing); (7) derive an overall
percentage for each service including
self-directed services (ongoing); and (8)
report to us on an annual basis
(ongoing).
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
i. One Time Payment Adequacy
Reporting Requirements (§ 441.311(e)):
State Burden
With regard to the one-time
requirements, we estimate it will take:
40 hours at $111.18/hr for an
administrative services manager to: draft
policy content, and draft provider
agreements and contract modifications
for managed care plans; 20 hours at
$100.64/hr for a management analyst to
update provider manuals for each of the
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
affected services; 32 hours at $98.84/hr
for a computer programmer to build,
design, and operationalize internal
systems for collection, aggregation,
stratification by service, reporting, and
creating remittance advice; 50 hours at
$67.18/hr for a training and
development specialist to develop and
conduct training for providers on the
reporting elements and reporting
process; 20 hours at $118.14/hr for a
general and operations manager to:
review, approve managed care contract
modifications, policy and rules for
publication, and training materials, and
to complete the annual reporting and
complete the reporting readiness report
PO 00000
Frm 00267
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40807
(required at § 441.311(e)(3)) for
submission to CMS; and 10 hours at
$236.96/hr for a chief executive to
review and approve all operations
associated with these requirements.
In aggregate, we estimate a one-time
burden of 7,776 hours (172 hr × 48
States) at a cost of $850,285 (48 States
× [(40 hr × $111.18/hr) + (20 hr ×
$100.64/hr) + (32 hr × $98.84/hr) + (50
hr × $67.18/hr) + (20 hr × $118.14/hr)
+ (10 hr × $236.96/hr)]). Taking into
account the Federal contribution to
Medicaid administration, the estimated
State share of this cost would be
$425,143 ($850,285 × 0.50).
BILLING CODE 4120–01–P
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
40808
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
TABLE 13: Summary of One-Time Burden for States for the Payment Adequacy Reporting
Requirements at§ 441.311(e)
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Draft policy content,
and draft provider
agreements and
contract
modifications for
managed care plans
Update provider
manuals for each of
the affected service
Build, design, and
operationalize
internal systems for
collection,
aggregation,
stratification by
service, reporting,
and creating
remittance advice
Develop and
conduct training for
providers on the
reporting elements
and reporting
process
Review, approve
managed care
contract
modifications,
policy and rules for
publication, and
training materials,
and to complete the
annual reporting and
complete the
reporting readiness
report (required at §
441.31 l(e)(3)) for
submission to CMS
Review and approve
all operations
associated with this
requirement
Total
Wage
($/hr)
40
1,920
111.18
213,466
106,733
Once
20
960
100.64
96,614
48,307
48
Once
32
1,536
98.84
151,818
75,909
48
48
Once
50
2,400
67.18
161,232
80,616
48
48
Once
20
960
118.14
113,414
56,707
48
48
Once
10
480
236.96
113,74
56,780
48
48
Once
Varies
7,776
vanes
850,285
425,173
Total
Responses
Frequency
48
48
Once
48
48
48
ii. Ongoing Payment Adequacy
Reporting Requirements (§ 441.311(e)):
State Burden
With regard to the ongoing
requirements, we estimate it will take 8
hours at $98.84/hr for a computer
programmer to: (1) collect the
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
Time per
Response
(hr)
information from all providers for each
service required; (2) aggregate and
stratify by each service as well as selfdirected services; (3) derive an overall
percentage for each service including
self-directed and facility-based services;
and (4) develop the reports for CMS on
PO 00000
Frm 00268
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
Total
Cost($)
State
Share($)
an annual basis. We also estimate it will
take: 10 hours at $67.18 for a training
and development specialist to develop
and conduct training for providers on
the reporting elements and reporting
process; 5 hours at $118.14/hr by a
general and operations manager to
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
ER10MY24.035
Requirement
Total
Time
(hr)
No.
Respondents
40809
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
review, verify, and approve reporting
required at § 441.311(e)(2) to CMS; and
2 hours at $236.96/hr for a chief
executive to review and approve all
operations associated with these
requirements.
In aggregate, we estimate an ongoing
burden of 1,200 hours (25 hr × 48 States)
at a cost of $121,302 (48 States × [(8 hr
× $98.84/hr) + (10 hr × $67.18) + (5 hr
× $118.14/hr) + (2 hr × $236.96/hr)]).
Taking into account the Federal
contribution to Medicaid
administration, the estimated State
share of this cost would be $60,651
($121,302 × 0.50) per year.
TABLE 14: Summary of Ongoing Burden for States for Payment Reporting Requirements at§
441.311(e)
Collect information
from providers;
aggregate and stratify
data as required;
derive an overall
percentage for each
service; identify
percentages for
providers subject to
flexibilities; and
develop report
annually
Develop and conduct
annual training for
providers on the
reporting elements and
reporting process
Review, verify and
approve reporting as
required in §
441.302(k) and§
441.3ll(e)-to CMS
Review and approve
all operations
associated with
reporting requirements
at§ 441.302(k) and§
441.3ll(e)
Total
No.
Respondents
Total
Responses
Frequency
Time per
Response
(hr)
Total
Time
(hr)
48
48
Annually
8
384
98.84
37,954
18,977
48
48
Annually
10
480
67.18
32,246
16,123
48
48
Annually
5
240
118.14
28,354
14,177
48
48
Annually
2
96
236.96
22,748
11,374
Varies
48
Annually
Varies
1,200
Varies
121,302
60,651
BILLING CODE 4120–01–C
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
b. Service Providers and Managed Care
Plans
The burden associated with this final
rule will affect both service providers
that provide the services listed at
§ 440.180(b)(2) through (4) and (6)
across HCBS programs as well as
managed care plans that contract with
the States to provide managed long-term
services and supports. We estimate both
a one-time and ongoing burden to
implement the reporting requirements
§ 441.311(e) for both service providers
and managed care plans.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
As noted in the proposed rule at 88
FR 28049, we had estimated an impact
on 11,155 HCBS providers that provided
homemaker, home health aide, or
personal care services. We are adjusting
this burden estimate to account for the
inclusion of providers that also provide
habilitation services in the finalized
requirements in § 441.311(e). To
estimate the number of service
providers that will be impacted by this
final rule, we used unpublished data
from the Provider Relief Fund to
estimate that there are 19,677 providers
nationally across all payers delivering
the types of HCBS that are delivered
PO 00000
Frm 00269
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
Wage
($/hr)
Total
Cost($)
State
Share
($)
under sections 1915(c), (i) and (k)
authorities. We then prorate the number
to estimate the number of providers in
the 48 States that are subject to this
requirement (19,677 providers
nationally × 48 States subject to the
requirement/51 States = 18,520
providers). We used data from the
Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention403 to estimate the percentage
of these HCBS providers that participate
in Medicaid and, due to uncertainty in
the data and differences in provider
403 https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/data/series/sr_03/
sr03_43-508.pdf.
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
ER10MY24.036
Requirement
40810
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
definitions, estimate both a lower and
upper range of providers affected. At a
low end of 78 percent Medicaid
participation, we estimate that there are
14,446 providers impacted (18,520
providers × 0.78), while at a high end of
85 percent participation, we estimate
that there are 15,742 providers impacted
(18,520 providers × 0.85). To be
conservative and not underestimate our
projected burden analysis, we are using
the high end of our estimates to score
the PRA-related impact of the changes.
We also note that it is possible that
some of the providers included in this
count do not provide the services
impacted by § 441.311(e) (homemaker,
home health aide, personal care, or
habilitation services.) However, as we
believe a significant number of the
providers included in this count do
provide at least one of these services.
We note that from this number (15,742)
we are subtracting 100 providers to
represent the providers we believe will
be eligible for the exemption at
§ 441.311(e)(4) for HIS and Tribal
providers subject to 25 U.S.C. 1641.
This brings the estimated number of
providers impacted by the reporting
requirement at § 441.311(e) to 15,642.
i. One Time HCBS Payment Adequacy
Requirements: Service Providers
(§ 441.311(e))
With regard to the one-time
requirements, we estimate it would take:
35 hours at $73.00/hr for a
compensation, benefits and job analysis
specialist to calculate compensation, as
defined by § 441.(311)(e)(1)(i) for each
direct care worker defined at
§ 441.311(e)(1)(ii); 40 hours at $98.84/hr
for a computer programmer to build,
design and operationalize an internal
system to calculate each direct care
worker’s compensation as a percentage
of total revenues received, aggregate the
sum of direct care worker compensation
as an overall percentage, and separate
self-directed services to report to the
State; and 8 hours at $118.14/hr for a
general and operations manager to
review and approve reporting to the
State.
In aggregate, we estimate a one-time
burden of 1,298,286 hours (15,642
providers × 83 hr) at a cost of
$116,591,088 (15,642 providers × [(35 hr
× $73.00/hr) + (40 hr × $98.84/hr) + (8
hr × $118.14/hr)]).
TABLE 15: Summary of One-Time Burden for Service Providers for the Payment Adequacy Reporting
Requirements at§ 441.311(e)
Total
Total
Response
s
Frequenc
y
Time per
Response
(hr)
Total
Time
(hr)
Wage
($/hr)
Total
Cost($)
State
Shar
e ($)
15,642
15,642
Once
35
547,470
73.00
39,965,310
n/a
15,642
15,642
Once
40
625,680
98.84
61,842,211
n/a
15,642
15,642
Once
8
125,136
118.14
14,783,567
n/a
15,642
15,642
Once
Varies
1,298,2
86
varies
116,591,088
n/a
ii. Ongoing Payment Adequacy
Reporting Requirements (§ 441.311(e)):
Service Providers
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
With regard to the on-going
requirements, we estimate it will take 8
hours at $73.00/hr for a compensation,
benefits, and job analysis specialist to
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
account for new hires and/or contracted
employees; 8 hours at $98.84/hr for a
computer programmer to calculate
compensation, aggregate data, and
report to the State as required; and 5
hours at $118.14/hr for a general and
operations manager to review and
PO 00000
Frm 00270
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
approve reporting to the State. In
aggregate, we estimate an on-going
burden of 328,482 hours (15,742
providers × 21 hr) at a cost of
$30,743,100 (15,642 providers × [(8 hr ×
$73.00/hr) + (8 hr × $98.84/hr) + (5 hr
× $118.14/hr)]).
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
ER10MY24.037
Requirement
Calculate
compensation for
each direct care
worker
Build, design and
operationalize an
internal system
for reporting to
the State
Review and
approve reporting
to the State
No.
Respondent
s
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
40811
TABLE 16: Summary of Ongoing Burden for Service Providers for the HCBS Payment Adequacy
Requirements at§ 441.311(e)
15,642
15,642
Once
8
125,136
73.00
9,134,928
n/a
15,642
15,642
Once
8
125,136
98.84
12,368,442
n/a
15,642
15,642
Once
5
78,210
118.14
9,239,729
n/a
15,642
15,642
Once
Varies
328,482
vanes
30,743,100
n/a
As noted earlier, the burden
associated with this final rule will affect
managed care plans that contract with
the States to provide managed long-term
services and supports. We estimate that
there are 161 managed long-term
services and supports plans providing
services across 25 States.404 We estimate
both a one-time and ongoing burden for
managed care plans to implement these
requirements. Specifically, managed
care plans would have to: (1) draft new
policy (one-time); (2) update provider
manuals for each of the services subject
to the requirement (one-time); (3) inform
providers of requirements (one-time and
ongoing); (4) collect the information
from providers for each service required
(ongoing); (5) aggregate the data as
required by the States (ongoing); and (6)
report to the State on an annual basis
(ongoing).
With regard to the one-time
requirements, we estimate it would take
50 hours at $111.18/hr for an
administrative services manager to draft
policy for contracted providers; 32
hours at $98.84/hr for a computer
404 https://www.kff.org/report-section/a-viewfrom-the-states-key-medicaid-policy-changes-long-
term-services-and-supports/; Profiles & Program
Features | Medicaid.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
PO 00000
Frm 00271
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
Wage
($/hr)
Total Cost
($)
State
Share
($)
Frequency
iii. On-Time Payment Adequacy
Reporting Requirements (§ 441.311(e)):
Managed Care Plans
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Total
Time
(hr)
Total
Responses
programmer to build, design, and
operationalize internal systems for data
collection, aggregation, stratification by
service, and reporting; 40 hours at
$67.18/hr for a training and
development specialist to develop and
conduct training for providers; and 4
hours at $236.96/hr for a chief executive
to review and approve reporting to the
State. In aggregate, we estimate a onetime burden of 20,286 hours (161 MCPs
× 126 hr) at a cost of $1,989,464 (161
MCPs × [(50 hr × $111.18/hr) + (32 hr
× $98.84/hr) + (40 hr × $67.18/hr) + (4
hr × $236.96/hr)]).
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
ER10MY24.038
Requirement
Account for new
hires and/or
contracted
employees
Calculate
compensation,
aggregate data,
and report to the
State
Review and
approve reporting
to the State
Total
Time per
Response
(hr)
No.
Respondents
40812
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
TABLE 17: Summary of One-time Burden for Managed Care Plans for the Payment Adequacy
Reporting Requirements at§ 441.311(e)
Requirement
Draft policy for
contracted providers
Build, design, and
operationalize internal
systems for data
collection, aggregation,
stratification by service,
and reporting
Develop and conduct
training for providers
Review and approve
reporting to the State
Total
No.
Respondent
s
Total
Response
s
Frequenc
V
Time per
Response
(hr)
Total
Time
(hr)
Wage
($/hr)
Total
Cost($)
State
Shar
e ($)
161
161
Once
50
8,050
lll.18
894,999
n/a
161
161
Once
32
5.152
98.84
509,224
n/a
161
161
Once
40
6,440
67.18
432,639
n/a
161
161
Once
4
644
236.96
152,602
n/a
161
161
Once
Varies
20,286
vanes
1,989,464
n/a
iv. Ongoing Payment Adequacy
Reporting Requirements (§ 441.311(e)):
Managed Care Plans
With regard to the ongoing
requirements, we estimate it will take: 8
hours at $98.84/hr for a computer
programmer to: (1) collect the
information from all providers for each
service required, (2) aggregate and
stratify data as required, and (3) develop
report to the State on an annual basis;
and 2 hours at $236.96/hr for a chief
executive to review and approve the
reporting to the State. In aggregate, we
estimate an ongoing burden of 1,610
hours (161 MCPs × 10 hr) at a cost of
$203,607 (161 MCPs × [(8 hr × $98.84/
hr) + (2 hr × $236.96/hr)]).
TABLE 18: Summary of Ongoing Burden for Managed Care Plans for the Payment Adequacy Reporting
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Collect information
from providers;
aggregate and stratify
data as required; and
develop report
annually
Review and approve
the report
Total
No.
Respondent
s
Total
Response
s
Frequenc
y
Time
per
Respons
e (hr)
Total
Time
(hr)
Wage
($/hr)
Total
Cost($)
State
Share
($)
161
161
Annually
8
1,288
98.84
127,306
n/a
161
161
Annually
2
322
236.96
76,301
n/a
161
161
Annually
Varies
1,610
varies
203,607
n/a
6. ICRs Regarding Supporting
Documentation for HCBS Access
(§§ 441.303(f)(6) and 441.311(d)(1);
Applied to Managed Care at
§ 438.72(b)))
The following changes will be
submitted to OMB for approval after this
final rule is finalized and when our
survey instrument has been developed.
The survey instrument and burden will
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
be made available to the public for their
review under the standard non-rule PRA
process which includes the publication
of 60- and 30-day Federal Register
notices. In the meantime, we are setting
out our burden figures (see below) as a
means of scoring the impact of this
rule’s changes. The availability of the
survey instrument and more definitive
burden estimates will be announced in
both Federal Register notices. The CMS
PO 00000
Frm 00272
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
ID number for that collection of
information request is CMS–10854
(OMB control number 0938–TBD). Since
this will be a new collection of
information request, the OMB control
number has yet to be determined (TBD)
but will be issued by OMB upon their
approval of the new collection of
information request.
Section 1915(c) of the Act authorizes
States to set enrollment limits or caps
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
ER10MY24.039
Requirement
ER10MY24.040
Requirements at§ 441.311(e)
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
on the number of individuals served in
a waiver, and many States maintain
waiting lists of individuals interested in
receiving waiver services once a spot
becomes available. States vary in the
way they maintain waiting lists for
section 1915(c) waivers, and if a waiting
list is maintained, how individuals may
join the waiting list. Some States permit
individuals to join a waiting list as an
expression of interest in receiving
waiver services, while other States
require individuals to first be
determined eligible for waiver services
to join the waiting list. States have not
been required to submit any information
on the existence or composition of
waiting lists, which has led to gaps in
information on the accessibility of
HCBS within and across States. Further,
feedback obtained during various
interested parties’ engagement activities
conducted with States and other
interested parties over the past several
years about reporting requirements for
HCBS, as well as feedback received
through the RFI 405 discussed earlier,
indicate that there is a need to improve
public transparency and processes
related to States’ HCBS waiting lists.
In this final rule, we are finalizing an
amendment to § 441.303(f)(6) by adding
language to the end of the regulatory
text to specify that if the State has a
limit on the size of the waiver program
and maintains a list of individuals who
are waiting to enroll in the waiver
program, the State must meet the
reporting requirements at
§ 441.311(d)(1). Per the finalized
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
405 CMS Request for Information: Access to
Coverage and Care in Medicaid & CHIP. February
2022. For a full list of question from the RFI, see
https://www.medicaid.gov/medicaid/access-care/
downloads/access-rfi-2022-questions.pdf.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
requirements at § 441.311(d)(1), for
States that limit or cap enrollment in a
section 1915(c) waiver and maintain a
waiting list, States will be required to
provide a description annually on how
they maintain the list of individuals
who are waiting to enroll in a section
1915(c) waiver program. The
description must include, but not be
limited to, information on whether the
State screens individuals on the waiting
list for eligibility for the waiver
program, whether the State periodically
rescreens individuals on the waiver list
for eligibility, and the frequency of
rescreening, if applicable. In addition,
States will be required to report on the
number of people on the waiting list if
applicable, as well as the average
amount of time that individuals newly
enrolled in the waiver program in the
past 12 months were on the waiting list,
if applicable.
We are finalizing these proposals
without substantive modifications.
Burden estimates for this requirement
are presented below.
a. One Time Waiting List Reporting
Requirements: States (§ 441.311(d)(1))
The one-time State burden associated
with the waiting list reporting
requirements in § 441.311(d)(1) will
affect the 39 State Medicaid programs
with waiting lists for section 1915(c)
waivers.406 We estimate both a one-time
and ongoing burden to implement these
requirements at the State level.
Specifically, States will have to query
their databases or instruct their
contractors to do so to collect
406 https://www.kff.org/report-section/statepolicy-choices-about-medicaid-home-andcommunity-based-services-amid-the-pandemicissue-brief/.
PO 00000
Frm 00273
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40813
information on the number of people on
existing waiting lists and how long they
wait; and write or update their existing
waiting list policies and the information
collected. In some States, HCBS waivers
are administered by more than one
operating agency, in these cases each
will have to report this data up to the
Medicaid agency for submission to us.
With regard to the one-time
requirements, we estimate it will take:
16 hours at $111.18/hr for an
administrative services manager to write
or update State policy, direct
information collection, compile
information, and produce a report; 20
hours at $98.84/hr for a computer
programmer or contractor to query
internal systems for reporting
requirements; 3 hours at $118.14/hr for
a general and operations manager to
review and approve report; and 2 hours
at $236.96/hr for a chief executive to
review and approve all reports
associated with this requirement. In
aggregate, we estimate a burden of 1,599
hours (39 States × 41 hr) at a cost of
$178,777 (39 States × [(16 hr × $111.18/
hr) + (20 hr × $98.84/hr) + (3 hr ×
$118.14/hr) + (2 hr × $236.96/hr)]).
Taking into account the Federal
contribution to Medicaid
administration, the estimated State
share of this cost would be $89,388
($178,777 × 0.50).
Assuming no changes to the State
waiting list policies, each year States
will only need to update the report to
reflect the number of people on the list
of individuals who are waiting to enroll
in the waiver program and average
amount of time that individuals newly
enrolled in the waiver program in the
past 12 months were on the list.
BILLING CODE 4120–01–P
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
40814
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
TABLE 19: Summary of One-Time Burden for States for the Waiting List Reporting Requirements at§
441.311(d)(l)
Write or
update State
policy, direct
information
collection,
compile
information,
and produce a
report
Query internal
systems for
reporting
requirements
Review and
approve report
at management
level
Review and
approve all
reports
associated
with this
requirement at
the executive
level
Total
Total
Response
s
Frequenc
y
Time
per
Respons
e (hr)
39
39
Once
16
39
39
Once
39
39
39
39
b. Ongoing Waiting List Reporting
Requirements: States (§ 441.311(d)(1))
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
With regard to the on-going burden
for the section 1915(c) waiver waiting
list reporting requirements at
§ 441.311(d)(1), we estimate it will take:
4 hours at $111.18/hr for an
administrative services managers across
relevant operating agencies to direct
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
Total
Time
Wage
($/hr)
Total
Cost($)
State
Share
($)
624
111.18
69,376
34,688
20
780
98.84
77,095
38,548
Once
3
117
118.14
13,822
6,911
39
Once
2
78
236.96
18,483
9,242
39
Once
Varies
1,599
Varies
178,777
89,388
(hr)
information collection, compile
information, and produce a report; 6
hours at $98.84/hr for a computer
programmer or contractor to query
internal systems for reporting
requirements; 3 hours at $118.14/hr for
a general and operations manager to
review and approve report; and 2 hours
at $236.96/hr for a chief executive to
review and approve all reports
PO 00000
Frm 00274
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
associated with this requirement. In
aggregate, we estimate a burden of 585
hours (39 States × 15 hr) at a cost of
$72,778 (39 States × [(4 hr × $111.18/hr)
+ (6 hr × $98.84/hr) + (3 hr × $118.14/
hr) + (2 hr × $236.96/hr)]. Taking into
account the Federal contribution to
Medicaid administration, the estimated
State share of this cost will be $36,389
($72,778 × 0.50) per year.
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
ER10MY24.041
Requirement
No.
Respondent
s
40815
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
TABLE 20: Summary of Ongoing Burden for States for the Waiting List Reporting Requirements at§
441.311(d)(l)
Direct
information
collection,
compile
information,
and produce a
report
Query internal
systems for
reporting
requirements
Review and
approve report
at the
management
level
Review and
approve all
reports
associated
with this
requirement at
the executive
level
Total
Total
Response
s
Frequenc
y
Time
per
Respons
e (hr)
Total
Time
(hr)
Wage
($/hr)
Total
Cost($)
State
Share
($)
39
39
Annually
4
156
111.18
17,344
8,672
39
39
Annually
6
234
98.84
23,129
11,564
39
39
Annually
3
117
118.14
13,822
6,911
39
39
Annually
2
78
236.96
18,483
9,241
39
39
Annually
Varies
585
Varies
72,778
36,389
BILLING CODE 4120–01–C
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
7. ICRs Regarding Additional HCBS
Access Reporting (§ 441.311(d)(2)(i);
Applied to Other HCBS Authorities at
§§ 441.474(c), 441.580(i), and
441.745(a)(1)(vii) and to Managed Care
at § 438.72(b))
The following changes will be
submitted to OMB for approval after this
final rule is finalized and when our
survey instrument has been developed.
The survey instrument and burden will
be made available to the public for their
review under the standard non-rule PRA
process which includes the publication
of 60- and 30-day Federal Register
notices. In the meantime, we are setting
out our burden figures (see below) as a
means of scoring the impact of this
rule’s changes. The availability of the
survey instrument and more definitive
burden estimates will be announced in
both Federal Register notices. The CMS
ID number for that collection of
information request is CMS–10854
(OMB control number 0938–TBD). Since
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
this will be a new collection of
information request, the OMB control
number has yet to be determined (TBD)
but will be issued by OMB upon their
approval of the new collection of
information request.
We proposed additional HCBS access
reporting at § 441.311(d)(2)(i). We
proposed at § 441.311(d)(2)(i) to require
States to report annually on the average
amount of time from when homemaker
services, home health aide services, or
personal care services, listed in
§ 440.180(b)(2) through (4), are initially
approved to when services began for
individuals newly approved to begin
receiving services within the past 12
months. We also proposed at
§ 441.311(d)(2)(ii) to require States to
report annually on the percent of
authorized hours for homemaker
services, home health aide services, or
personal care, as listed in
§ 440.180(b)(2) through (4), that are
provided within the past 12 months.
States are allowed to report on a
statistically valid random sample of
PO 00000
Frm 00275
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
individuals newly approved to begin
receiving these services within the past
12 months.
We are finalizing the requirements at
§ 441.311(d)(2) with a modification to
add reporting on habilitation services as
defined at § 440.180(b)(6), in addition to
the other services. We have adjusted our
burden estimates below to reflect
additional reporting on habilitation
services.
The burden associated with the
additional HCBS access reporting
requirements at § 441.311(d)(2) will
affect the 48 States (including
Washington DC) that deliver HCBS
under sections 1915I, (i), (j), or (k)
authorities.407 Specifically, States will
have to query their databases or instruct
their contractors to do so to collect
information on the average amount of
time from which homemaker services,
home health aide services, personal
care, and habilitation services, as listed
407 Arizona, Rhode Island, and Vermont do not
have HCBS programs under any of these authorities.
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
ER10MY24.042
Requirement
No.
Respondent
s
40816
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
in § 440.180(b)(2) through (4) and (6),
are initially approved to when services
began, for individuals newly approved
to begin receiving services within the
past 12 months, and the percent of
authorized hours for these services that
are provided within the past 12 months.
We expect many States will need to
analyze report this metric for a
statistically valid random sample of
beneficiaries. They will then need to
produce a report for us within such
information. For States with managed
long-term services and supports, they
will need to direct managed care plans
to report this information up to them.
We estimate one-time and ongoing
burden to implement the requirements
at § 441.311(d)(2) at the State level.
One-Time HCBS Access Reporting
Requirements: States (§ 441.311(d)(2))
With regard to the one-time burden
related to the HCBS access reporting
requirements, we estimate it will take:
30 hours at $111.18/hr for an
administrative services manager across
relevant operating agencies to direct
information collection, compile
information, and produce a report; 80
hours at $98.84/hr for a computer
programmer or contractor to analyze
service authorization and claims data;
50 hours at $101.46/hr for a statistician
to conduct data sampling; 4 hours at
$118.14/hr for a general and operations
manager to review and approve report;
and 3 hours at $236.96/hr for a chief
executive to review and approve all
reports associated with this
requirement. In aggregate, we estimate a
one-time burden of 8,016 hours (48
States × 167 hr) at a cost of $839,954 (48
States × [(20 hr × $111.18/hr) + (60 hr
× $98.84/hr) + (40 hr × $101.46/hr) + (3
hr × $118.14/hr) + (2 hr × $236.96/hr)]).
Taking into account the Federal
contribution to Medicaid
administration, the estimated State
share of this cost will be $419,977
($839,954 × 0.50) per year.
BILLING CODE 4120–01–P
TABLE 21: Summary of One-Time Burden for States for the HCBS Access Reporting Requirements at§
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Requirement
Direct
information
collection,
compile
information,
and produce a
report
Analyze
service
authorization
and claims
data
Conduct data
sampling
Review and
approve
report at the
management
level
Review and
approve all
reports
associated
with this
requirement
at the
executive
level
Total
VerDate Sep<11>2014
Time
per
Respons
e (hr)
Total
Time
(hr)
Wage
($/hr)
Total
Cost($)
State
Share
($)
Once
30
1,440
111.18
160,099
80,050
48
Once
80
3,840
98.84
379,546
189,773
48
48
Once
50
2,400
101.46
243,504
121,752
48
48
Once
4
192
118.14
22,683
11,341
48
48
Once
3
144
236.96
34,122
17,061
48
48
Once
Varies
8,016
Varies
839,954
419,977
No.
Respondent
s
Total
Response
s
48
48
48
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
PO 00000
Frequenc
y
Frm 00276
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
ER10MY24.043
441.311(d)(2)
40817
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
b. Ongoing HCBS Access Reporting
Requirements: States (§ 441.311(d)(2))
hours at $98.84/hr for a computer
programmer or contractor to analyze
service authorization and claims data;
15 hours at $101.46/hr for a statistician
to conduct data sampling; 4 hours at
$118.14/hr for a general and operations
manager to review and approve report;
and 2 hours at $236.96/hr for a chief
executive to review and approve all
reports associated with this
With regard to the on-going burden
related to the HCBS access reporting
requirements for States, we estimate it
will take: 15 hours at $111.18/hr for an
administrative services manager to
direct information collection, compile
information, and produce a report; 30
requirement. In aggregate, we estimate a
burden of 3,168 hours (48 States × 67 hr)
at a cost of $340,861 (48 States × [(15 hr
× $111.18/hr) + (30 hr × $98.84/hr) + (15
hr × $101.46/hr) + (4 hr × $118.14/hr)
+ (2 hr × $236.96/hr)]). Taking into
account the Federal contribution to
Medicaid administration, the estimated
State share of this cost will be $170,431
($340,861 × 0.50) per year.
TABLE 22: Summary of Ongoing Burden for States for the HCBS Access Reporting Requirements at§
441.311(d)(2)
Direct
information
collection,
compile
information,
and produce a
report
Analyze
service
authorization
and claims
data
Conduct data
sampling
Review and
approve report
at the
management
level
Review and
approve all
reports
associated
with this
requirement at
the executive
level
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Total
Total
Response
s
Frequenc
y
Time
per
Respons
e (hr)
Total
Time
(hr)
Wage
($/hr)
Total
Cost($)
State
Share
($)
48
48
Annually
15
720
111.18
80,050
40,025
48
48
Annually
30
1,440
98.84
142,330
71,165
48
48
Annually
15
720
101.46
73,051
36,526
48
48
Annually
4
192
118.14
22,683
11,341
48
48
Annually
2
96
236.96
22,748
11,374
48
48
Annual
Varies
3,168
Varies
340,861
170,431
c. One-Time HCBS Access Reporting
Requirements: Managed Care Plans
(§ 441.311(d)(2))
With regard to the one-time HCBS
access reporting requirements at
§ 441.311(d)(2) for managed care plans,
we estimate it will take: 15 hours at
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
$111.18/hr for an administrative
services manager to direct information
collection, compile information, and
produce a report to the State; 45 hours
at $98.84/hr for a computer programmer
to analyze service authorization and
claims data; 15 hours at $101.46/hr for
a statistician to conduct data sampling;
PO 00000
Frm 00277
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
and 2 hours at $236.96/hr for a chief
executive review and approval. In
aggregate, we estimate a one-time
burden of 12,397 hours (161 MCPs × 77
hr) at a cost of $1,305,923 (161 MCPs ×
[(15 hr × $111.18/hr) + (45 hr × $98.84/
hr) + (15 hr × $101.46/hr) + (2 hr ×
$236.96/hr)]).
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
ER10MY24.044
Requirement
No.
Respondent
s
40818
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
TABLE 23: Summary of One-Time Burden for Managed Care Plans for the HCBS Access Reporting
Requirements at§ 441.311(d)(2)
Direct
information
collection,
compile
information,
and produce a
report to the
State
Analyze
service
authorization
and claims
data
Conduct data
sampling
Review and
annrove report
Total
Total
Response
s
Frequenc
y
Time
per
Respons
e (hr)
161
161
Once
15
161
161
Once
161
161
161
161
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
d. Ongoing HCBS Access Reporting
Requirements: Managed Care Plans
(§ 441.311(d)(2))
With regard to the ongoing
requirements associated with the annual
collection, aggregation, and reporting of
the HCBS access measures at
§ 441.311(d)(2), we estimate it will
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
Total
Time
Wage
($/hr)
Total
Cost($)
State
Share
($)
1,610
111.18
179,000
n/a
45
5,635
98.84
556,963
n/a
Once
15
1,610
101.46
163,351
n/a
161
Once
2
322
236.96
76,301
n/a
161
Once
Varies
12,39
7
Varies
1,305,923
n/a
(hr)
require: 5 hours at $111.18/hr for an
administrative services manager to
direct information collection, compile
information, and produce a report to the
State; 25 hours at $98.84/hr for a
computer programmer to analyze
service authorization and claims data;
10 hours at $101.46/hr for a statistician
PO 00000
Frm 00278
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
to conduct data sampling; and 2 hours
at $236.96/hr for a chief executive to
review and approve. In aggregate, we
estimate a burden of 6,762 hours (161
MCPs × 42 hr) at a cost of $726,983 (161
MCPs × [(5 hr × $111.18/hr) + (25 hr ×
$98.84/hr) + (10 hr × $101.46/hr) + (2 hr
× $236.96/hr)]).
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
ER10MY24.045
Requirement
No.
Respondent
s
40819
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
TABLE 24: Summary of Ongoing Burden for Managed Care Plans for Additional HCBS Access Reporting
Requirement
Direct
information
collection,
compile
information,
and produce a
report to the
State
Analyze
service
authorization
and claims
data
Conduct data
sampling
Review and
approve report
Total
No.
Respondent
s
Total
Response
s
Frequenc
y
Time
per
Respons
e (hr)
161
161
Annually
5
161
161
Annually
161
161
161
161
BILLING CODE 4120–01–C
8. ICRs Regarding Compliance Reporting
(§ 441.311(b); Applied to Other HCBS
Authorities at §§ 441.474(c), 441.580(i),
and 441.745(a)(1)(vii) and to Managed
Care at § 438.72(b))
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
a. Ongoing Incident Management
System Assessment Requirements:
States (§ 441.311(b)(1)
The following changes will be
submitted to OMB for approval after this
final rule is finalized and when our
survey instrument has been developed.
The survey instrument and burden will
be made available to the public for their
review under the standard non-rule PRA
process which includes the publication
of 60- and 30-day Federal Register
notices. In the meantime, we are setting
out our burden figures (see below) as a
means of scoring the impact of this
rule’s changes. The availability of the
survey instrument and more definitive
burden estimates will be announced in
both Federal Register notices. The CMS
ID number for that collection of
information request is CMS–10692
(OMB control number 0938–1362).
As discussed in II.B.3 of this final
rule, we are finalizing at § 441.302(a)(6),
a requirement that States provide an
assurance that they operate and
maintain an incident management
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
Total
Time
Wage
($/hr)
Total
Cost($)
State
Share
($)
805
111.18
89,500
n/a
25
4,025
98.84
397,831
n/a
Annually
10
1,610
101.46
163,351
n/a
161
Annually
2
322
236.96
76,301
n/a
161
Annually
Varies
6,762
Varies
726,983
n/a
(hr)
system that identifies, reports, triages,
investigates, resolves, tracks, and trends
critical incidents. We are finalizing at
§ 441.311(b)(1)(i) a requirement that
States must report, every 24 months, on
the results of an incident management
system assessment to demonstrate that
they meet the requirements in
§ 441.302(a)(6). We are also finalizing at
§ 441.311(b)(1)(ii) a flexibility in which
we may reduce the frequency of
reporting to up to once every 60 months
for States with incident management
systems that are determined by CMS to
meet the requirements in
§ 441.302(a)(6).
The reporting requirements finalized
at § 411.311(b)(1) are intended to
standardize our expectations and States’
reporting requirements to ensure that
States operate and maintain an incident
management system that identifies,
reports, triages, investigates, resolves,
tracks, and trends critical incidents. The
requirements were informed by the
responses to the HCBS Incident
Management Survey (CMS–10692; OMB
0938–1362) recently released to States.
We estimate that the reporting
requirement at § 441.311(b)(1) would
apply to the 48 States (including
Washington DC) that deliver HCBS
under sections 1915(c), (i), (j), or (k)
authorities. Some States employ the
PO 00000
Frm 00279
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
same incident management system
across their waivers, while others
employ an incident management system
specific to each waiver and will require
multiple assessments to meet the
requirements at § 441.311(b)(1). Based
on the responses to the previously
referenced survey, we estimate that on
average States will conduct assessments
on two incident management systems,
totaling approximately 96 unique
required assessments (48 State Medicaid
programs × 2 incident management
system assessments per State). Because
the requirements under § 441.311(b)(1)
are required every 24 months, we
estimate 48 assessments on an annual
basis (96 unique assessments every 2
years). With regard to the ongoing
requirements, we estimate that it will
take 1.5 hours at $76.26/hr for a social/
community service manager to gather
information and complete the required
assessment; and 0.5 hours at $118.14/hr
for a general and operations manager to
review and approve the assessment. In
aggregate, we estimate an ongoing
annual burden of 96 hours (48 States ×
2 hr) at a cost of $8,326 (48 States × [(1.5
hr × $76.26/hr) + (0.5 hr × $118.14/hr)]).
Taking into account the Federal
contribution to Medicaid
administration, the estimated State
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
ER10MY24.046
Requirements at§ 441.311(d)(2)
40820
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
share of this cost would be $4,163
($8,326 × 0.50) per year.
TABLE 25: Summary of the Ongoing Burden for States for the Incident Management System
Assessment Requirements at§ 441.311(b)(l)
Gather
information
and complete
the required
assessment
Review and
approve the
assessment
Total
Total
Response
s
Frequenc
y
Time
per
Respons
e (hr)
48
48
Annually
1.5
48
48
Annually
48
48
Annually
b. Reporting on Critical Incidents
(§ 441.311(b)(2)), Person-Centered
Planning (§ 441.311(b)(3)), and Type,
Amount, and Cost of Services
(§ 441.311(b)(4))
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
The following changes will be
submitted to OMB for approval after our
survey instrument has been developed.
The survey instrument and burden will
be made available to the public for their
review under the standard non-rule PRA
process which includes the publication
of 60- and 30-day Federal Register
notices. In the meantime, we are setting
out our burden figures (see below) as a
means of scoring the impact of this
rule’s changes. The availability of the
survey instrument and more definitive
burden estimates will be announced in
Total
Time
Wage
($/hr)
Total
Cost($)
State
Share
($)
72
76.26
5,491
2,745
0.5
24
118.14
2,835
1,418
Varies
96
varies
8,326
4,163
(hr)
both Federal Register notices. The CMS
ID number for that collection of
information request is CMS 0938–0272
(CMS–372(S)).
This final rule codifies existing
compliance reporting requirements on
critical incidents, person-centered
planning, and type, amount, and cost of
services. At § 441.311(b)(2), we are
finalizing a reporting requirement
which requires States to report annually
on the minimum performance standards
for critical incidents that are finalized at
§ 441.302(a)(6). At § 441.311(b)(3), we
are finalizing a reporting requirement to
require States to report annually on the
minimum performance standards for
person-centered planning that are
finalized at § 441.301(c)(3). Similar
reporting requirements were previously
described in 2014 guidance.408 We are
also finalizing a redesignation of the
existing requirement at § 441.302(h)(1)
to report on type, amount, and cost of
services as § 441.311(b)(4), to make the
requirement part of the new
consolidated compliance reporting
section finalized at § 441.311.
This final rule removes our currently
approved burden and replaces it with
the burden associated with the
amendments to § 441.311(b)(2) through
(4). In aggregate, the change will remove
11,132 hours (253 waivers × 44 hr) and
$891,451 (11,132 hr × $80.08/hr for a
business operations specialist). Taking
into account the Federal contribution to
Medicaid administration, the estimated
State share of this cost reduction would
be minus $445,725 (¥$891,451 × 0.50).
408 https://www.hhs.gov/guidance/sites/default/
files/hhs-guidance-documents/3-cmcs-qualitymemo-narrative_0_71.pdf.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
PO 00000
Frm 00280
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
ER10MY24.047
Requirement
No.
Respondent
s
40821
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
TABLE 26: Summary of the Removal of Approved Ongoing Burden for Form 372(5) as a Result of the
Requirements at§ 441.311(b)(2) through (b)(4)
No.
Respondents
Total
Responses
Remove
currently
approved
burden under
control
number
0938-0272
(CMS372(S))
48
(253)
Total
48
(253)
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
We expect, as a result of the changes
discussed in this section, to revise the
Form CMS–372(S) and the form’s
instructions based on the reporting
requirements. The consolidated
reporting requirements at
§ 441.311(b)(2) through (4) also assume
that 48 States (including Washington
DC) are required to submit the Form
CMS–372(S) Report on an annual basis.
However, a separate form will no longer
be required for each of the 253 approved
waivers currently in operation. We
estimate a burden of 50 hours at $80.08/
hr for a business operations specialist to
draft each Form CMS–372(S) Report
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
Frequency
Annually
Annually
Time per
Response
(hr)
Total
Time
(hr)
Frm 00281
Fmt 4701
Total Cost
($)
(44)
(11,1
32)
80.08
(891,451)
(44)
(11,1
32)
80.08
(891,451)
submission. The per response increase
reflects the increase to the minimum
State quality performance level for
person-centered planning (finalized at
§ 441.301(c)(3)(ii)) and critical incident
reporting (finalized at § 441.302(a)(6)(ii))
from the 86 percent threshold
established by the 2014 guidance to 90
percent in this final rule. This slight
increase to the minimum performance
level will help ensure that States are
sufficiently meeting all section 1915(c)
waiver requirements but may also
increase the evidence that some States
may need to submit to document that
appropriate remediation is being
PO 00000
Wage
($/hr)
Sfmt 4700
State Share
($)
(445,725)
(445,725)
undertaken to resolve any compliance
deficiencies. As a result, we estimate a
total of 50 hours for each Form CMS–
372(S) Report submission, comprised of
30 hours of recordkeeping, collection
and maintenance of data, and 20 hours
of record assembly, programming, and
completing the Form CMS–372(S)
Report in the required format. We also
estimate 3 hours at $118.14/hr for a
general and operations manager to
review and approve the report to CMS;
and 2 hours at $236.96/hr for a chief
executive to review and approve all
reports associated with this
requirement.
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
ER10MY24.048
Requirement
40822
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
TABLE 27: Summary of the New Burden for Form 372(5) Annual Report on HCBS Waivers, Inclusive of
Updates to § 441.311(b)(2) through (4)
t
Draft Form
CMS 372(S)
Report
submission
Review and
approve the
report at the
management
level
Review and
approve all
reports
associated
with this
requirement
at the
executive
level
Total
No.
Respondent
s
Total
Response
s
Frequenc
Time per
Response
Total
Time
y
(hr)
48
48
Annually
48
48
48
48
(hr)
Total
Cost($)
50
2,400
80.08
192,192
96,096
Annually
3
144
118.14
17,012
8,506
48
Annually
2
96
236.96
22,748
11,374
48
Annuallv
Varies
2,640
varies
231,952
115,976
The net change resulting from
reporting requirements on critical
incidents, person-centered service
planning, and type, amount, and cost of
services, finalized in § 441.311(b)(2)
through (4) is a burden decrease of 8,492
hours (2,640 hr—11,132 hr) and
$329,749 (State share) ($115,976—
$445,725).
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
9. ICRs Regarding Reporting on the
Home and Community-Based Services
(HCBS) Quality Measure Set
(§ 441.311(c); Applied to Other HCBS
Authorities at §§ 441.474(c), 441.580(i),
and 441.745(a)(1)(vii) and to Managed
Care at § 438.72(b)))
The following changes will be
submitted to OMB for approval after this
final rule is finalized and when our
survey instrument has been developed.
The survey instrument and burden will
be made available to the public for their
review under the standard non-rule PRA
process which includes the publication
of 60- and 30-day Federal Register
notices. In the meantime, we are setting
out our burden figures (see below) as a
means of scoring the impact of this
rule’s changes. The availability of the
survey instrument and more definitive
burden estimates will be announced in
both Federal Register notices. The CMS
ID number for that collection of
information request is CMS–10854
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
State
Share
Wage
($/hr)
(OMB control number 0938–TBD). Since
this would be a new collection of
information request, the OMB control
number has yet to be determined (TBD)
but will be issued by OMB upon their
approval of the new collection of
information request.
a. States
At § 441.311(c), we finalized a
requirement that States report every
other year on the HCBS Quality Measure
Set, which is described in section II.B.8.
of this final rule. The reporting
requirement will affect the 48 States
(including Washington DC) that deliver
HCBS under section 1915(c), 1915(i),
1915(j), and 1915(k) authorities. We
estimate both a one-time and ongoing
burden to implement these
requirements at the State level. Unlike
other reporting requirements finalized at
§ 441.311, the effective date of
§ 441.311(c) will be 4 years, rather than
3 years, after the effective date of the
final rule.
As finalized at § 441.311(c), the data
collection includes reporting every
other year on all measures in the HCBS
Quality Measure Set that are identified
by the Secretary.409 For certain
measures which are based on data
already collected by us, the State can
409 Available at https://www.medicaid.gov/
federal-policy-guidance/downloads/smd22003.pdf.
PO 00000
Frm 00282
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
($)
elect to have the Secretary report on
their behalf.
As finalized at§ 441.312(c)(1)(iii),
States are required to establish
performance targets, subject to our
review and approval, for each of the
measures in the HCBS Quality Measure
Set that are identified as mandatory for
States to report or are identified as
measures for which we will report on
behalf of States, as well as to describe
the quality improvement strategies that
they will pursue to achieve the
performance targets for those measures.
We are finalizing the requirements at
§ 441.312 without substantive
modification. Our burden estimates are
described below.
i. One Time HCBS Quality Measure Set
Requirements: States (§ 441.311(c))
This one-time burden analysis
assumes that States must newly adopt
one of the ‘‘experience of care’’ surveys
cited in the HCBS Quality Measure Set:
The Consumer Assessment of
Healthcare Providers and Systems Home
and Community-Based (HCBS CAHPS®)
Survey, National Core Indicators®Intellectual and Developmental
Disabilities (NCI®-IDD), National Core
Indicators-Aging and Disability (NCI–
AD)TM, or Personal Outcome Measures
(POM)® to fully meet the HCBS Quality
Measures Set mandatory requirements.
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
ER10MY24.049
Requiremen
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Currently most States use at least one of
these surveys; however, States may need
to use multiple ‘‘experience of care’’
surveys, depending on the populations
served by the States’ HCBS program and
the particular survey instruments that
States select to use, to ensure that all
major population groups are assessed
using the measures in the HCBS Quality
Measure Set.
The estimate of one-time burden
related to the effort associated with the
requirements is for the first year of
reporting. It assumes that the Secretary
will initially require 25 of the 97
measures currently included in the
HCBS Quality Measure Set. The
estimate disregards costs associated
with the voluntary reporting of
measures in the HCBS Quality Measure
Set that are not yet mandatory, and
voluntary stratification of measures
ahead of the phase-in schedule,
discussed later in this section.
Additionally, we are finalizing a
requirement at § 441.312(f) that the
Secretary will require stratification by
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
demographic characteristics of 25
percent of the measures in the HCBS
Quality Measure Set for which the
Secretary has specified that reporting
should be stratified 4 years after the
effective date of these regulations, 50
percent of such measures by 6 years
after the effective date of these
regulations, and 100 percent of
measures by 8 years after the effective
date of these regulations. The burden
associated with stratifying data is
considered in the ongoing cost estimate
only. We anticipate that certain costs
will decline after the first year of
reporting, but that some of the reduction
will be supplanted with costs associated
with stratifying data.
With regard to the one-time
requirements at § 441.311(c) for
reporting on the initial mandatory
elements of the HCBS Quality Measure
Set, we estimate that will take: 540
hours at $111.18/hr for administrative
services managers to conduct project
planning, administer and oversee survey
administration, compile measures,
PO 00000
Frm 00283
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40823
establish and describe performance
targets, describe quality improvement
strategies, and produce a report; 40
hours at $101.46/hr for a statistician to
determine survey sampling
methodology; 500 hours at $63.88/hr for
survey researcher(s) to be trained in
survey administration and to administer
an in-person survey; 200 hours at
$36.52/hr for a data entry worker to
input the data; 60 hours at $98.84/hr for
a computer programmer to synthesize
the data; and 5 hours at $236.96/hr for
a chief executive to verify, certify, and
approve the report. In aggregate, we
estimate a one-time burden of 64,560
hours (48 States × 1,345 hr) at a cost of
$5,301,830 (48 States × [(540 hr ×
$111.18/hr) + (40 hr × $101.46/hr) +
(500 hr × $63.88/hr) + (200 hr × $36.52/
hr) + (60 hr × $98.84/hr) + (5 hr ×
$236.96/hr)]) Taking into account the
Federal contribution to Medicaid
administration, the estimated State
share of this cost will be $2,650,915
($5,301,830 × 0.50).
BILLING CODE 4120–01–P
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
40824
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
TABLE 28: Summary of the One-Time Burden for States for the HCBS Quality Measure Set
Requirements at§ 441.311(c)
Conduct project
planning, administer
and oversee survey
administration,
compile measures,
establish and
describe
performance targets,
describe quality
improvement
strategies, and
produce a report
Determine survey
sampling
methodology
Receive training in
survey
administration and
administer an inperson survey
Input data
Synthesize data
Verify, certify, and
annrove the report
Total
No.
Respondents
Total
Responses
Frequency
Time per
Response
(hr)
Total
Time
(hr)
Wage
($/hr)
48
48
Once
540
25,920
111.18
2,881,786
1,440,893
48
48
Once
40
1,920
101.46
194,803
97,402
48
48
Once
500
24,000
63.88
1,533,120
766,560
48
48
48
48
Once
Once
200
60
9,600
2,880
36.52
98.84
350,592
284,659
175,296
142,330
48
48
Once
5
240
236.96
56,870
28,435
48
48
Once
Varies
64,560
varies
5,301,830
2,650,915
ii. Ongoing HCBS Quality Measure Set
Requirements: States (§ 441.311(c))
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
With regard to the ongoing burden of
fulfilling requirements at § 441.311(c),
every other year, for reporting on
mandatory elements of the HCBS
Quality Measure Set, including data
stratification by demographic
characteristics, we estimate it will take:
520 hours at $111.18/hr for
administrative services managers to
conduct project planning, administer
and oversee survey administration,
compile measures, update performance
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
targets and quality improvement
strategy description, and produce a
report; 80 hours at $101.46/hr for a
statistician to determine survey
sampling methodology; 1,250 hours at
$63.88/hr for survey researcher(s) to be
trained in survey administration and to
administer an in-person survey; 500
hours at $36.52/hr for a data entry
worker to input the data; 100 hours at
$98.84/hr for a computer programmer to
synthesize the data; and 5 hours at
$236.96/hr for a chief executive to
verify, certify, and approve a State data
submission to us. In aggregate, we
PO 00000
Frm 00284
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
Total Cost
($)
State Share
($)
estimate an ongoing burden of 117,840
hours (48 States × 2,455 hr) at a cost of
$8,405,242 (48 States × [(520 hr ×
$111.18/hr) + (80 hr × $101.46/hr) +
(1,250 hr × $63.88/hr) + (500 hr ×
$36.52/hr) + (100 hr × $98.84/hr) + (5 hr
× $236.96/hr)]). Given that reporting is
every other year, the annual burden will
be 58,920 hours (117,840 hr/2 years)
and $4,202,621 ($8,405,242/2 years).
Taking into account the Federal
contribution to Medicaid
administration, the estimated State
share of this cost would be $2,101,310
($4,202,621 × 0.50).
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
ER10MY24.050
Requirement
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
40825
TABLE 29: Summary of the Ongoing Burden for States for the HCBS Quality Measure Set
Requirements at§ 441.311(c)
Requirement
No.
Respondents
Conduct project
planning, administer
and oversee survey
administration,
compile measures,
update performance
targets and quality
improvement strategy
description, and
produce a report
Determine survey
sampling
methodology
Receive training in
survey administration
and administer an inperson survey
Input data
Total
Responses
*
12 per
year) (24
biennially
)
48
12 per
year) (24
biennially
48
Frequency
Time per
Response
(hr)
Total
Time
(hr)*
Wage
($/hr)
Total Cost
($)*
State Share
($)*
Biennial
520
12,480
111.18
1,387,526
1,387,526
Biennial
80
1,920
101.46
194,803
194,803
Biennial
1,250
30,000
63.88
1,916,400
958,200
Biennial
500
12,000
36.52
438,240
219,120
Biennial
100
2,400
98.84
237,216
118,608
Biennial
5
120
236.96
28,435
14,218
Biennial
Varies
58,920
Varies
4,202,620
2,101,310
)
12 per
year) (24
biennially
48
)
12 per
year) (24
biennially
48
)
Synthesize data
12 per
year) (24
biennially
48
)
Verify, certify, and
approve the report
48
Total
48
12 per
year) (24
biennially
)
12 per
year) (24
biennially
)
*Annualized over 2 years.
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
b. HCBS Quality Measure Set
Requirements: Beneficiary Experience
Survey (§ 441.311(c))
State adoption of existing beneficiary
experience surveys, contained in the
HCBS Quality Measure Set, to fulfill the
mandatory reporting requirements
includes a burden on beneficiaries. As
finalized in § 441.312, a State must
newly adopt one of the ‘‘experience of
care’’ surveys cited in the HCBS Quality
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
Measure Set: The Consumer Assessment
of Healthcare Providers and Systems
Home and Community Based (HCBS
CAHPS®) Survey, National Core
Indicators® Intellectual and
Developmental Disabilities (NCI® IDD),
National Core Indicators Aging and
Disability (NCI AD)TM, or Personal
Outcome Measures (POM)®.
With regard to beneficiary burden, we
estimate it will take 45 minutes (0.75 hr)
at $20.71/hr for a Medicaid beneficiary
to complete a survey every other year
PO 00000
Frm 00285
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
that will be used to derive one or more
of the measures in the HCBS Quality
Measure Set. At 1,000 beneficiaries/
State and 48 States, we estimate an
aggregate burden of 36,000 hours (1,000
beneficiary responses/State × 48 States ×
0.75 hr/survey) at a cost of $745,560
(36,000 hr × $20.71/hr). Given that
survey is every other year, the annual
burden will be 18,000 hours (36,000 hr/
2 years) and $372,780 ($745,560/2
years).
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
ER10MY24.051
BILLING CODE 4120–01–C
40826
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
TABLE 30: Summary of Ongoing Beneficiary Experience Survey Burden for the HCBS Quality Measure
Set Requirements at§ 441.311(c)
Total
Responses
*
No.
Respondents
Complete
beneficiary
48,000
24,000
experience
survey
Total
48,000
24,000
*Annualized over 2 years.
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
10. ICRs Regarding Website
Transparency (§ 441.313; Applied to
Other HCBS Authorities at §§ 441.486,
441.595, and 441.750, and to Managed
Care at § 438.72(b))
The following changes will be
submitted to OMB for approval after our
survey instrument has been developed.
The survey instrument and burden will
be made available to the public for their
review under the standard non-rule PRA
process which includes the publication
of 60- and 30-day Federal Register
notices. In the meantime, we are setting
out our burden figures (see below) as a
means of scoring the impact of this
rule’s changes. The availability of the
survey instrument and more definitive
burden estimates will be announced in
both Federal Register notices. The CMS
ID number for that collection of
information request is CMS–10854
(OMB control number 0938–TBD). Since
this would be a new collection of
information request, the OMB control
number has yet to be determined (TBD)
but will be issued by OMB upon their
approval of the new collection of
information request.
We are finalizing a new section, at
§ 441.313, titled, ‘‘website
Transparency, to promote public
transparency related to the
administration of Medicaid-covered
HCBS under section 1915(c) of the Act.’’
Specifically, at § 441.313(a), we
proposed to require States to operate a
website that meets the availability and
accessibility requirements at
§ 435.905(b) and that provides the data
and information that States are required
to report under the newly finalized
reporting section at § 441.311. At
§ 441.313(a)(1), we proposed to require
that the data and information that States
are required to report under § 441.311
be provided on one website, either
directly or by linking to the web pages
of the managed care organization,
prepaid ambulatory health plan, prepaid
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
Frequency
Time per
Response
(hr)
Total
Time
(hr)*
Biennial
0.75
18,000
20.71
372,780
n/a
Biennial
0.75
18,000
20.71
372,780
n/a
inpatient health plan, or primary care
case management entity that is
authorized to provide services. At
§ 441.313(a)(2), we proposed to require
that the web page include clear and easy
to understand labels on documents and
links.
At § 441.313(a)(3), we proposed to
require that States verify the accurate
function of the website and the
timeliness of the information and links
at least quarterly. At § 441.313(c), we
proposed to apply these requirements to
services delivered under FFS or
managed care delivery systems. At
§ 441.313(a)(4), we proposed to require
that States explain that assistance in
accessing the required information on
the website is available at no cost and
include information on the availability
of oral interpretation in all languages
and written translation available in each
prevalent non-English language, how to
request auxiliary aids and services, and
a toll-free and TTY/TDY telephone
number. Further, we proposed to apply
the proposed requirements at § 441.313
to sections 1915(j), (k), and (i) State plan
services by finalizing §§ 441.486,
441.595, and 441.750, respectively.
We are finalizing the requirements
without substantive changes. Our
burden estimates are described below.
The burden associated with the website
transparency requirements at § 441.313
will affect the 48 States (including
Washington, DC) that deliver HCBS
under sections 1915(c), (i), (j), or (k)
authorities. We are requiring at
§ 441.313(c) to apply the website
transparency requirements to services
delivered under FFS or managed care
delivery systems, and we are providing
States with the option to meet the
requirements at § 441.313 by linking to
the web pages of the managed care
organization, prepaid ambulatory health
plan, prepaid inpatient health plan, or
primary care case management entity
that are authorized to provide services.
However, we are not requiring managed
PO 00000
Frm 00286
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
Wage
($/hr)
Total Cost
($)*
State
Share
($)
care plans to report the data and
information required under § 441.311 on
their website. As such, we estimate that
there is no additional burden for
managed care plans associated with the
requirements to link to the web pages of
the managed care organization, prepaid
ambulatory health plan, prepaid
inpatient health plan, or primary care
case management entity that are
authorized to provide services for
§ 441.313. Further, the burden
associated with the requirements for
managed care plans to report the data
and information required under
§ 441.311 is estimated in the ICRs
Regarding Compliance Reporting
(§ 441.311(b)).
If a State opts to comply with the
requirements at § 441.313 by linking to
the web pages of the managed care
organization, prepaid ambulatory health
plan, prepaid inpatient health plan, or
primary care case management entity
that are authorized to provide services,
the State will incur a burden. However,
such burden will be less than the
burden associated with posting the
information required under § 441.311 on
their own website. We are unable to
estimate the number of States that may
opt to comply with the requirements at
§ 441.313 by linking to the web pages of
the managed care organization, prepaid
ambulatory health plan, prepaid
inpatient health plan, or primary care
case management entity that are
authorized to provide services. As a
result, we do not take into account the
option in our burden estimate and
conservatively assume that all States
subject to the requirements at § 441.313
by posting the information required
under § 441.311 on their own website.
We estimate both a one-time and
ongoing burden to implement these
requirements at the State level.
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
ER10MY24.052
Requirement
40827
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
a. One Time Website Transparency
Requirements: States (§ 441.313)
The burden associated with the
website transparency requirements at
§ 441.313 will affect the 48 States
(including Washington DC) that deliver
HCBS under sections 1915(c), (i), (j), or
(k) authorities. We estimate both a onetime and ongoing burden to implement
these requirements at the State level. In
developing our burden estimate, we
assumed that States will provide the
data and information that States are
required to report under newly
proposed § 441.311 through an existing
website, rather than develop a new
website to meet this requirement.
With regard to the one-time burden,
based on the website transparency
requirements, we estimate it will take:
24 hours at $111.18/hr for an
administrative services manager to
determine the content of the website; 80
hours at $98.84/hr for a computer
programmer or contractor to develop the
website; 3 hours at $118.14/hr for a
general and operations manager to
review and approve the website; and 2
hours at $236.96/hr for a chief executive
to review and approve the website. In
aggregate, we estimate a one-time
burden of 5,232 hours (48 States × 109
hr) at a cost of $547,385 (48 States × [(24
hr × $111.18/hr) + (80 hr × $98.84/hr)
+ (3 hr × $118.14/hr) + (2 hr × $236.96/
hr)]). Taking into account the Federal
contribution to Medicaid
administration, the estimated State
share of this cost will be $273,693
($547,385 × 0.50) per year.
TABLE 31: Summary of the One-Time Burden for States for the Website Transparency Requirements
at§ 441.313
Determine content
of website
Develop website
Review and
approve the
website at the
management level
Review and
approve the
website at the
executive level
Total
No.
Respondents
Total
Responses
Frequency
Time per
Response
(hr)
Total
Time
(hr)
Wage
($/hr)
Total Cost
($)
State
Share
($)/vear
48
48
Once
24
1,152
111.18
128,080
64,040
48
48
Once
80
3,840
98.84
379,546
189,773
48
48
Once
3
144
118.14
17,012
8,506
48
48
Once
2
96
236.96
22,748
11,374
48
48
Once
Varies
5,232
Varies
547,385
273,693
b. Ongoing Website Transparency
Requirements: States (§ 441.313)
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
With regard to the State on-going
burden related to the website
transparency requirement, per quarter
we estimate it will take: 8 hours at
$111.18/hr for an administrative
services manager to provide updated
data and information for posting and to
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
verify the accuracy of the website; 20
hours at $98.84/hr for a computer
programmer or contractor to update the
website; 3 hours at $118.14/hr for a
general and operations manager to
review and approve the website; and 2
hours at $236.96/hr for a chief executive
to review and approve the website. In
aggregate, we estimate an ongoing
annual burden of 6,336 hours (33 hr ×
PO 00000
Frm 00287
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
48 States × 4 quarters) at a cost of
$709,359 (48 States × 4 quarters × [(8 hr
× $111.18/hr) + (20 hr × $98.84/hr) + (3
hr × $118.14/hr) + (2 hr × $236.96/hr)]).
Taking into account the Federal
contribution to Medicaid
administration, the estimated State
share of this cost would be $354,680
($709,359 × 0.50) per year.
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
ER10MY24.053
Requirement
40828
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
Requirement
Provide
updated data
and
information
for posting
and verify the
accuracy of
the website
Update
website
Review and
approve
website at the
management
level
Review and
approve
website at the
executive
level
Total
No.
Respondents
Total
Responses
Frequency
Time per
Response
(hr)
Total
Time
(hr)
Wage
($/hr)
Total
Cost($)
State
Share
($)
48
192
Quarterly
8
1,536
111.18
170,772
85,386
48
192
Quarterly
20
3,840
98.84
379,546
189,773
48
192
Quarterly
3
576
118.14
68,049
34,024
48
192
Quarterly
2
384
236.96
90,993
45,496
48
192
Quarterly
Varies
6,336
Varies
709,359
354,680
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
11. ICRs Regarding HCBS Payment
Adequacy (§ 441.302(k); Applied to
Other HCBS Authorities at §§ 441.464(f),
441.570(f), 441.745(a)(1)(vi), and to
Managed Care at § 438.72(b))
The following changes will be
submitted to OMB for approval after this
final rule is finalized and when our
survey instrument has been developed.
The survey instrument will be made
available to the public for their review
under the standard non-rule PRA
process which includes the publication
of 60- and 30-day Federal Register
notices. In the meantime, we are setting
out our burden figures (see below) as a
means of scoring the impact of this
rule’s changes. The availability of the
survey instrument and more definitive
burden estimates will be announced in
both Federal Register notices. The CMS
ID number for that collection of
information request is CMS–10854
(OMB control number 0938–TBD). Since
this would be a new collection of
information request, the OMB control
number has yet to be determined (TBD)
but will be issued by OMB upon their
approval of the new collection of
information request.
We proposed, and are finalizing, a
new policy at § 441.302(k)(3)(i), which
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
requires that 80 percent of Medicaid
payments for the following services for
homemaker services, home health aide
services, and personal care services (as
set forth in § 440.180(b)(2) through (4))
be spent on compensation for direct care
workers. We proposed, and are
finalizing, definitions for compensation
and direct care workers at
§§ 441.302(k)(1) and (2), respectively,
which are discussed in greater detail in
section II.B.5. of this final rule. As
finalized, States must comply with the
requirements in § 441.302(k) 6 years
after this rule is finalized.
As discussed in greater detail in
section II.B.5. of this final rule, we are
finalizing this policy with additional
modifications which have an impact on
our burden estimates. We are finalizing
a policy at § 441.302(k)(3)(ii) that allows
States to apply a different minimum
performance threshold for small
providers. We are finalizing a
requirement at § 441.302(k)(4)(i) that
allows States to develop reasonable,
objective criteria through a transparent
process (which includes public notice
and opportunities for comment from
interested parties) to identify small
providers that the State would require to
meet this alternative minimum
performance requirement. We are
PO 00000
Frm 00288
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
finalizing a requirement at
§ 441.302(k)(4)(ii) that the State must set
the percentage for a small provider to
meet the minimum performance level
based on reasonable, objective criteria
that it develops through a transparent
process that includes public notice and
opportunities for comment from
interested parties. The costs associated
with establishing the small provider
threshold (including activities related to
public notice and opportunities for
comment) have been added to this
burden estimate for States. We do not
estimate an impact on managed care
plans associated with the small provider
threshold. We estimate a small impact
on providers associated with this
requirement; while we believe
providers’ activities would remain the
same whether they were complying
with the 80 percent threshold or a Stateset small provider threshold, we also
assume an additional activity associated
with demonstrating eligibility for the
State-set small provider threshold. We
note that while we have not specified a
process by which a State would have
providers determine eligibility for a
small provider threshold, we are
calculating a burden based on the
assumption that States would have such
a process.
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
ER10MY24.054
TABLE 32: Summary of the Ongoing Burden for States for the Website Transparency Requirements at
§ 441.313
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
We are also finalizing at
§ 441.302(k)(5) a flexibility to allow
States to offer certain providers
temporary hardship exemptions. As
finalized, this requirement would allow
States to develop reasonable, objective
criteria through a transparent process
(which includes public notice and
opportunities for comment from
interested parties) to exempt from the
minimum performance requirement at
paragraphs (k)(3) of this section a
reasonable number of providers
determined by the State to be facing
extraordinary circumstances that
prevent their compliance with either the
80 percent threshold requirement or the
State’s small provider threshold. The
costs associated with establishing the
hardship exemption (including
activities related to public notice and
opportunities for comment) have been
added to this burden estimate for States.
We do not anticipate a specific impact
on managed care plans as a result of this
requirement. We do not estimate an
impact on managed care plans
associated with the hardship exemption.
We estimate a small impact on
providers associated with this
requirement, as we assume an
additional activity associated with
demonstrating eligibility for the Stateset hardship exemption. We note that
while we have not specified a process
by which a State would have providers
determine eligibility for a hardship
exemption, we are calculating a burden
based on the assumption that States
would have such a process.
We are finalizing at § 441.302(k)(6)
reporting requirements for small
provider minimum performance levels
and hardship exemptions. Under this
requirement, States that establish a
small provider minimum performance
level must report to CMS annually the
following information, in the form and
manner, and at a time, specified by
CMS: the State’s small provider criteria
developed in accordance with
paragraph (k)(4)(i) of this section; the
State’s small provider minimum
performance level; the percentage of
providers of services set forth at
§ 440.180(b)(2) through (4) that qualify
for the small provider minimum
performance level; and a plan, subject to
CMS review and approval, for small
providers to meet the minimum
performance requirement at paragraph
(k)(3)(i) of this section within a
reasonable period of time. States that
provide a hardship exemption must
report to CMS annually the following
information, in the form and manner,
and at a time, specified by CMS: the
State’s hardship criteria; the percentage
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
of providers of services set forth at
§ 440.180(b)(2) through (4) that qualify
for a hardship exemption; and a plan,
subject to CMS review and approval, for
reducing the number of providers that
qualify for a hardship exemption within
a reasonable period of time. We also
finalized a flexibility at
§ 441.302(k)(6)(iii) that CMS may waive
the reporting requirements if the State
demonstrates it has applied the small
provider minimum performance level or
the hardship exemption to less than 10
percent of the State’s providers.
We have added the burden associated
with the reporting requirement finalized
at § 441.302(k)(6) to the burden
estimate. We do not expect that all
States will need to submit such a report
(because some States will expect most,
if not all, of their providers to comply
with the minimum performance
threshold); we also expect that over
time, fewer States will need to submit
such a report (again, as more States
begin to require that more than 90
percent of their providers comply with
the minimum performance threshold.)
However, to avoid underestimating
burden, we have calculated the burden
of this requirement based on the
assumption that all 48 States will
submit such a report annually. We do
not anticipate an impact on managed
care plans or providers associated with
this additional requirement.
We also finalized at § 441.302(k)(7) an
exemption for the Indian Health Service
and Tribal health programs subject to 25
U.S.C. 1641, which exempts these
providers from the requirements in
§ 441.302(k). Based on internal data, we
believe that about 100 providers would
be eligible for this exclusion as
§ 441.302(k)(7) requires no additional
action on the part of the State or
providers impacted by this exemption)
we did not calculate a change in the
burden activities as a result of this
exemption.
We are finalizing the application of
these requirements to services delivered
under FFS or managed care delivery
systems. Further, we are finalizing the
application of the finalized
requirements sections 1915(j), (k), and
(i) State plan services by crossreferencing at §§ 441.450(c), 441.540(c),
and 441.725(c), respectively.
We are finalizing the requirements at
§§ 441.302(k) with the substantive
modifications as described above.
Burden estimates for the finalized
requirements are below. We note an
additional change to the burden
estimates. As presented in the proposed
rule at 88 FR 28047, we had presented
the burden estimate of both the HCBS
payment adequacy provision at
PO 00000
Frm 00289
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40829
§ 441.302(k) and the payment adequacy
reporting requirement at § 441.311(e) in
a single ICR. Since the publication of
the NPRM, upon further consideration
we have determined that as
§§ 441.302(k) and 441.311(e) represent
distinct sets of requirements, it is more
appropriate to present the costs
associated with § 441.311(e) under a
separate ICR in this section IV. of the
final rule.
However, while § 441.311(e)
represents a distinct set of requirements
from those in § 441.302(k), we also
expect that States will employ certain
efficiencies in complying with both
§§ 441.302(k) and 441.311(e). In
particular, we expect that States will
build a single IT infrastructure and use
the same processes both for collecting
data for the reporting requirement at
§ 441.311(e) and for determining
providers’ compliance with the 80
percent threshold at § 441.302(k)(3)(i) or
the small provider threshold at
§ 441.302(k)(3)(ii). The burden
associated with States’ development of
infrastructure and processes to
determine what percentage of HCBS
providers’ Medicaid payments for
homemaker, home health aide, or
personal care services is spent on direct
care worker compensation, as well as
providers’ reporting of this information
to the State, is included in the ICR for
§ 441.311(e) (ICR 5 of this section IV. of
the final rule). We believe representing
these costs under only one ICR avoids
duplicative or inflated burden estimates.
The burden estimates below include
costs associated specifically with
§ 441.302(k), namely: development and
application of the small provider
threshold under § 441.302(k)(3)(ii) and
(4), development and application of the
hardship exemption under
§ 441.302(k)(5), and the reporting on the
small provider threshold and hardship
exemption under § 441.302(k)(6).
a. States
The burden associated with the
requirements at § 441.302(k) will affect
the 48 States (including Washington DC)
that deliver HCBS under sections
1915(c), (i), (j), or (k) authorities.410 411
We estimate both a one-time and
ongoing burden to implement these
requirements at the State level.
Specifically, under §§ 441.302(k) States
will have to: (1) draft new policy
regarding the application of the 80
percent minimum performance level at
410 Arizona, Rhode Island, and Vermont do not
have HCBS programs under any of these authorities.
411 For purposes of this burden analysis, we are
not taking into consideration temporary wage
increases or bonus payments that have been or are
being made.
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
40830
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
§ 441.302(k)(3), the small provider
performance level and criteria described
in § 441.302(k)(4), and the hardship
exemptions described in § 441.302(k)(5)
(one-time); (2) publish the proposed
requirements for the small provider
performance level described in
§ 441.302(k)(4) and threshold and the
hardship exemption described in
§ 441.302(k)(5) through State notice and
publication processes (one-time); (3)
update provider manuals and other
policy guidance regarding the
performance levels described in
§ 441.302(k)(3) and (4) and the hardship
exemption described in § 441.302(k)(5)
for each of the services subject to the
requirement (one-time); (4) inform
providers of the process for
demonstrating eligibility for the small
provider performance level described at
§ 441.302(k)(4) or the hardship
exemption described at § 441.302(k)(5)
through State notification processes,
both initially and annually (one-time
and ongoing); (5) review providers’
eligibility for the small provider
performance level described at
§ 441.302(k)(4) or hardship exemption
described in § 441.302(k)(5) (ongoing);
and (6) provide the report on the small
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
provider performance level and the
hardship exemption required at
§ 441.302(k)(6) to us on an annual basis
(ongoing).
i. One Time HCBS Payment Adequacy
Requirements (§ 441.302(k)): State
Burden
With regard to the one-time
requirements, we estimate it will take
100 hours at $111.18/hr for an
administrative services manager to: draft
policy content; prepare notices and draft
rules for publication, conduct public
hearings on the small provider
performance level and hardship
exemptions in accordance with
§ 441.302(k)(4) and (5), respectively. We
estimate it will take 50 hours at
$100.64/hr for a management analyst to:
update provider manuals for each of the
affected services (explaining the policies
for § 441.302(k) generally, and the
policies and criteria related to the small
provider performance level and
hardship exemption described at
§ 441.302(k)(4) and (5), respectively; and
draft provider agreement and managed
care contract amendments regarding the
requirements at § 441.302(k)(3), (4) and
(5). We estimate it will take 8 hours at
$98.84/hr for a computer programmer to
PO 00000
Frm 00290
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
build, design, and operationalize
internal systems for identifying
providers falling under § 441.302(k)(4)
or (5). We estimate it will take 40 hours
at $67.18/hr for a training and
development specialist to: develop and
conduct training for providers specific
to the requirements associated with
§ 441.302(k)(3), (4), and (5). We estimate
it will take 20 hours at $118.14/hr for
a general and operations manager to:
review and approve provider agreement
amendment sand managed care contract
modifications; and to review and
approve policy guidance for
publication. We estimate it will take 10
hours at $236.96/hr for a chief executive
to review and approve all operations
associated with these requirements.
In aggregate, we estimate a one-time
burden of 10,944 hours (228 hr × 48
States) at a cost of $1,169,295 (48 States
× [(100 hr × $111.18/hr) + (50 hr ×
$100.64/hr) + (8 hr × $98.84/hr) + (40 hr
× $67.18/hr) + (20 hr × $118.14/hr) + (10
hr × $236.96/hr)]). Taking into account
the Federal contribution to Medicaid
administration, the estimated State
share of this cost would be $584,648
($1,169,295 × 0.50).
BILLING CODE 4120–01–P
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
40831
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
TABLE 33: Summary of One-Time Burden for States for the HCBS Payment Adequacy Requirements
at § 441.302(k)
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Draft policy content;
prepare notices and
draft rules for
publication, conduct
public hearings for §
441.302(k)(4) and
(5)
Update provider
manuals for each of
the affected services
(explaining the
policies related to §
441.302(k) (4) and
(5); and draft
provider agreement
and managed care
contract
amendments
Build, design, and
operationalize
internal systems for
marking providers
identified as under §
441.302(k)(4) or (5)
Develop and
conduct training for
providers for the
requirements
associated with §
441.302(k)
Review, approve
managed care
contract
modifications,
provider agreement
updates, policy and
rules for publication,
and training
materials
Review and approve
all operations
associated with this
requirement
Total
Freauencv
48
48
Once
100
4,800
111.18
533,664
266,832
48
48
Once
50
2,400
100.64
241,536
120,768
48
48
Once
8
384
98.84
37,955
18,977
48
48
Once
40
1,920
67.18
128,986
64,493
48
48
Once
20
960
118.14
113,414
56,707
48
48
Once
10
480
236.96
113,740
56,780
48
48
Once
Varies
10,944
vanes
1,169,295
584,648
ii. Ongoing HCBS Payment Adequacy
Requirements (§ 441.302(k)): State
Burden
We also expect that States will have
to review, on an ongoing basis,
providers’ requests to be considered
VerDate Sep<11>2014
Total
Time
(hr)
Total
Responses
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
under the small provider performance
level at § 441.302(k)(4) or the hardship
exemption at § 441.302(k)(5). As noted
in the Collection of Information in the
proposed rule at 88 FR 28049, we
estimate that 11,555 HCBS providers
PO 00000
Frm 00291
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
Wage
($/hr)
Total Cost
($)
State
Share($)
provide homemaker, home health aide,
or personal care services and thus are
subject to the requirements at
§ 441.302(k). We estimate that around
15 percent of these providers will
request consideration under either the
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
ER10MY24.055
Reauirement
Time per
Response
(hr)
No.
Respondents
40832
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
small provider performance level or
hardship exemption; 10 percent is
selected as we expect States will set
criteria to apply to 10 percent or less of
providers. Thus, we expect that States
(collectively) will need to review 1,155
requests for flexibilities under
§ 441.302(k)(4) or (5) on an ongoing,
annual basis; we expect that it will take
0.5 hours at $100.64/hr for a
management analyst to review each
request.
With regard to additional ongoing
requirements, we estimate it will take 2
hours at $98.84/hr for a computer
programmer to update providers’ status
in any system that tracks providers
subject to the small provider
performance level and hardship
exemptions under § 441.302(k)(4) or (5),
respectively, and calculate the percent
of providers subject to 441.302(k)(4) or
(5). We also estimate it will take 2 hours
at $118.14/hr by a general and
operations manager to generate the
report required at § 441.302(k)(6) for
submission to CMS. We estimate it will
take 2 hours at $236.96/hr for a chief
executive to review and approve all
operations associated with these
requirements.
In aggregate, we estimate an ongoing
burden of 866 hours [(0.5 hr × 1,155
providers) + (6 hr × 48 States)] at a cost
of $101,698 [1,155 providers × (0.5 hr ×
$100.65) + (48 States × [(2 hr × $98.84/
hr) + (2 hr × $118.14/hr) + (2 hr ×
$236.96/hr)]). Taking into account the
Federal contribution to Medicaid
administration, the estimated State
share of this cost would be $50,849
($101,698 × 0.50) per year.
TABLE 34: Summary of Ongoing Burden for States for the HCBS Payment Adequacy Requirements at
§§ 441.302(k)
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Review providers'
requests for
classification under §
441.302(k)(4) or (5)
Collect information
from providers;
aggregate and stratify
data as required;
derive an overall
percentage for each
service; identify
percentages for
providers subject to
flexibilities; and
develop report
annually
Review, verify and
approve reporting as
required in §
441.302(k) and§
441.311(e)-to CMS
Review and approve
all operations
associated with
reporting requirements
at§ 441.302(k) and§
441.311(e)
Total
No.
Respondents
Total
Responses
Frequency
Time per
Response
(hr)
Total
Time
(hr)
1,155
1,155
Annually
0.5
576
100.64
58,120
29,060
48
48
Annually
2
96
98.84
9,489
4,744
48
48
Annually
2
96
118.14
11,341
5,671
48
48
Annually
2
96
236.96
22,748
11,374
Varies
1,203
(1,155 +
48)
Annually
Varies
866
Varies
101,698
50,849
BILLING CODE 4120–01–C
b. Service Providers
The burden associated with
§ 441.302(k) being finalized in this final
rule will affect service providers that
provide the services listed at
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
§ 440.180(b)(2) through (4) and (6). We
estimate an ongoing burden on
providers to request, on an ongoing
basis, either qualification as a small
provider under the small provider
criteria (in accordance with
§ 441.302(k)(4)) or eligibility for the
PO 00000
Frm 00292
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
Wage
($/hr)
Total
Cost($)
State
Share
($)
hardship exemption (in accordance with
§ 441.302(k)(5)). (We do also expect
there to be a burden on providers to
implement the separate payment
adequacy reporting requirement at
§ 441.311(e); these costs are addressed
in a separate ICR.)
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
ER10MY24.056
Requirement
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
As noted above, we expect that
annually, we estimate that 1,155
providers will request consideration for
eligibility for the small provider
performance level or the hardship
exemption under § 441.302(k)(4) or (5),
respectively.
With regard to the ongoing
requirement, we estimate it would take:
1 hour at $118.14/hr for a general and
40833
operations manager to file the request
for the State. In aggregate, we estimate
an ongoing burden of 1,155 hours (1,155
providers × 1 hr) at a cost of $136,452
(1,155 providers × (1 hr × $118.14/hr).
Requirement
Request
qualification
under§
441.302(k)(4) or
(5)
Total
No.
Respondent
s
Total
Response
s
Frequenc
Total
Time
(hr)
Wage
($/hr)
Total Cost
y
Time per
Response
(hr)
($)
State
Shar
e ($)
1,155
1,155
Once
1
1,155
118.14
136,452
n/a
1,155
1,155
Once
1
1.155
118.14
136,452
n/a
12. ICRs Regarding Payment Rate
Transparency (§ 447.203)
The following changes will be
submitted to OMB for approval under
control number 0938–1134 (CMS–
10391).
This final rule will update
documentation requirements in
§ 447.203. To develop the burden
estimates associated with these changes,
we account for the removal of existing
information collection requirements in
current § 447.203(b), and the
introduction of new requirements at
447.203(b) and (c). As described later in
this section, we estimate the impact of
the revisions to § 447.203 will result in
a net burden reduction. We do not
anticipate any additional information
collection burden from the conforming
edits finalized in § 447.204, as the
conforming edits merely alter the items
submitted as part of an existing
submission requirement, and the burden
of producing those items is reflected in
the estimates related to § 447.203,
including instances where we move
language from § 447.204 to § 447.203.
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
a. Removal of Access Monitoring
Review Plan: States (§ 447.203(b)(1)
Through (8))
The burden reduction associated with
the removal of § 447.203(b)(1) through
(8) consists of the removal of time and
effort necessary to develop and publish
AMRPs, perform ongoing monitoring,
and corrective action plans.
Former § 447.203(b)(1) and (2)
described the minimum factors that
States must consider when developing
an AMRP. Specifically, the AMRP must
include: input from both Medicaid
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
beneficiaries and Medicaid providers,
an analysis of Medicaid payment data,
and a description of the specific
measures the State will use to analyze
access to care. Section 447.203(b)(3)
required that States include aggregate
percentage comparisons of Medicaid
payment rates to other public
(including, as practical, provider
payments rates in Medicaid managed
care or Medicare rates) and private
health coverage rates within geographic
areas of the State. Section 447.203(b)(4)
described the minimum content that
must be included in the monitoring
plan. States were required to describe:
measures the State uses to analyze
access to care issues, how the measures
relate to the overarching framework,
access issues that are discovered as a
result of the review, and the State
Medicaid agency’s recommendations on
the sufficiency of access to care based
on the review. Section 447.203(b)(5)
described the timeframe for States to
develop the AMRP and complete the
data review for the following categories
of services: primary care, physician
specialist services, behavioral health,
pre- and post-natal obstetric services
including labor and delivery, home
health, any services for which the State
has submitted a SPA to reduce or
restructure provider payments which
changes could result in diminished
access, and additional services as
determined necessary by the State or
CMS based on complaints or as selected
by the State. While the initial AMRPs
have been completed, the plan had to be
updated at least every 3 years, but no
later than October 1 of the update year.
Section 447.203(b)(6)(i) required that
PO 00000
Frm 00293
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
any time a State submits a SPA to
reduce provider payment rates or
restructure provider payments in a way
that could diminish access, the State
must submit an AMRP associated with
the services affected by the payment rate
reduction or payment restructuring that
has been completed within the prior 12
months.
Former § 447.203(b)(6)(ii) required
that States have procedures within the
AMRP to monitor continued access after
implementation of a SPA that reduces or
restructures payment rates. The
monitoring procedures were required to
be in place for a period of at least 3
years following the effective date of the
SPA. However, States were already
required to submit information on
compliance with section 1902(a)(30)(A)
of the Act prior to the 2015 final rule
with comment period. Therefore,
removal of § 447.203(b)(6)(ii) results in
a burden reduction.
Finally, we note that this section
references the rescission of the AMRP
process contained in § 447.203(b)(1)
through (b)(8). However, the
requirements of former paragraph (b)(7)
are reflected in new paragraph (b)(4),
and the requirements of former
paragraph (b)(8) are reflected in new
paragraph (c)(5). As such, there is not a
change in impact related to the
rescission of these specific aspects of
the AMRP process and are not reflected
in this section.
In our currently approved information
collection request, we estimated that the
requirements to develop and make the
AMRPs publicly available for the
specific categories of Medicaid services
will affect each of the 50 State Medicaid
programs and the District of Columbia
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
ER10MY24.057
TABLE 35: Summary of Ongoing Burden for Service Providers for the HCBS Payment Adequacy
Requirements at § 442.302(k)
40834
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
(51 total respondents). We will use that
estimate here as well, although we note
that the requirements may not be
limited to solely those States, as some
territories may not be exempt under
waivers; however, because these figures
fluctuate, we are maintaining the
estimate for consistency. As such, for
consistency, we will maintain the
estimate of 51 respondents subject to
this final rule. We further note that the
one-time cost estimates have already
been met for AMRPs, and the ongoing
monitoring requirements are every 3
years. As such, the estimates in this
section for burden reduction are for 17
respondents, which is one-third of the
51 affected respondents, to provide an
annual estimate of the reduced burden.
We estimated that every 3 years, it
would take: 80 hours at $55.54/hr for a
social science research analyst to gather
data, 80 hours at $106.30/hr for a
computer and information analyst to
analyze the data, 100 hours at $100.64/
hr for a management analyst to develop
the content of the AMRP, 40 hours at
$80.08/hr for a business operations
specialist to publish the AMRP, and 10
hours at $118.14/hr for a general and
operations manager to review and
approve the AMRP. In aggregate, and as
shown in Table 36, we estimate the
reduced annual burden of the rescission
of the ongoing AMRP requirements
would be minus 5,270 hours (17 States
× 310 hr) and minus $465,729 (17 States
× [(80 hr × $55.54/hr) + (80 hr ×
$106.30/hr) + (100 hr × $100.64/hr) +
(40 hr × $80.08/hr) + (10 hr × $118.14/
hr)]). Taking into account the 50 percent
Federal contribution for administrative
expenditures, the rescission represents a
saving to States of minus $232,865
($465,729 × 0.50).
The currently approved ongoing
burden associated with the
requirements under § 447.203(b)(6)(ii) is
the time and effort it takes each of the
State Medicaid programs to monitor
continued access following the
implementation of a SPA that reduces or
restructures payment rates. In our
currently approved information
collection request, we estimated that in
each SPA submission cycle, 22 States
will submit SPAs to implement rate
changes or restructure provider
payments based on the number of
submissions received in FY 2010. Using
our currently approved burden
estimates we estimate a reduction of: 40
hours at $100.64/hr for a management
analyst to develop the monitoring
procedures, 24 hours at $100.64/hr for
a management analyst to periodically
review the monitoring results, and 3
hours at $118.14/hr for a general and
operations manager to review and
approve the monitoring procedures. In
aggregate, we estimate burden reduction
of minus 1,474 hours (22 responses × 67
hr) and minus $149,498 (22 States × [(40
hr × $100.64/hr) + (24 hr × $100.64/hr)
+ (3 hr × $118.14/hr)]). Accounting for
the 50 percent Federal administrative
match, the total State cost reduction is
adjusted to minus $74,749 ($149,498 ×
0.50).
TABLE 36: Summary of Annual Burden Reduction Associated with Removal of Access Monitoring
Review Plan Requirements(§ 447.203(b)(l) through (8))
Requirement
No.
Respondents
Rescission of
§447.203(b)(l)
through (b )(6)(i)
Total
Responses
17
17
Frequency
Triennial
(figures
are
annualized
Time per
Response
(hr)
Total
Time
(hr)
Wage
($/hr)
Total Cost
($)
State
Share($)
(310)
(5,270)
Varies
(465,729)
(232,865)
(67)
(1,474)
Varies
(149,498)
(74,749)
Varies
(6,744)
Varies
(615,227)
(307,614)
)
Rescission of
§ 447.203(b )(6)(i
i)
22
22
TOTAL
39
39
Varies
(figures
are
annualized
b. Payment Rate Transparency
(§ 447.203(b)(1) Through (5))
We proposed to replace the AMRP
requirements with new payment rate
transparency and analysis requirements
at § 447.203(b)(1) through (5), which we
are finalizing as proposed apart from
minor technical adjustments. The
burden associated with these
requirements consists of the time and
effort to develop and publish a
Medicaid FFS provider payment rate
information and analysis.
Section 447.203(b)(1) specifies that all
FFS Medicaid payments must be
published on a publicly accessible
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
website that is maintained by the State.
Section 447.203(b)(2) specifies the
service types that are subject to the
proposed payment analysis, which
include: primary care services;
obstetrical and gynecological services;
outpatient mental health and substance
use disorder services; and certain HCBS.
Section 447.203(b)(3) describes the
required components of the payment
analysis to include, for services in
§ 447.203(b)(2)(i) through (iii), a
percentage comparison of Medicaid
payment rates to the most recently
published Medicare payment rates
effective for the time period for each of
PO 00000
Frm 00294
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
the service categories specified in
paragraph (b)(2). We also specify that
the payment analysis must include
percentage comparisons made on the
basis of Medicaid base payments. For
HCBS described in § 447.203(b)(2)(iv),
we require a State-based comparison of
average hourly payment rates. Section
447.203(b)(4) details the payment
analysis timeframe, with the first
payment analysis required to be
published by the State agency by July 1,
2026, which is a change from our
proposed date of January 1, 2026, and
updated every 2 years by July 1. Section
447.203(b)(5) describes our mechanism
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
ER10MY24.058
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
)
Varies
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
for ensuring compliance and that we
may take compliance action against a
State that fails to meet the requirements
of the payment rate transparency,
comparative payment rate analysis, and
payment rate disclosure provisions in
preceding paragraphs in § 447.203(b),
including a deferral or disallowance of
certain of the State’s administrative
expenditures following the procedures
described at part 430, subpart C.
We estimate that the requirements to
complete and make publicly available
all FFS Medicaid payments and the
comparative payment rate analysis and
payment rate disclosures under
§ 447.203(b)(1) through (5) for the
specific categories of Medicaid services
will affect 51 total respondents, based
on the estimate in the prior section
regarding the variation in States and
territories subject to these requirements.
We require applicable States and
territories to publish all FFS Medicaid
payments initially by July 1, 2026, while
future updates to the payment rate
transparency information would depend
on when a State submits a SPA updating
provider payments and we have
approved that SPA. As such, we assume
51 one-time respondents for the initial
rates publication. Because the
comparative payment rate analysis and
payment rate disclosure requirement is
biennial, we assume 26 annual
respondents in any given year, and we
will assume this figure would account
for the updates made following a rate
reduction SPA or rate restructuring SPA
approval. The comparative payment rate
analysis will be similar to the prior
requirement at § 447.203(b)(3) that
required AMRPs to include a
comparative payment rate analysis
against public or private payers. The
inclusion of levels of provider payment
available from other payers is also one
of five required components of the
AMRP as specified by current
§ 447.203(b)(1). To estimate the burden
associated with our comparative
payment rate analysis and payment rate
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
disclosure provisions, we assume this
work will require approximately 25
percent of the ongoing labor hour
burden that we previously estimated to
be required by the entire AMRP, to
account for the service categories
subject to the comparative payment rate
analysis and payment rate disclosure in
§ 447.203(b)(2) as decreased from the
full body of AMRP service
requirements. We invited comment on
these estimated proportions. We are
finalizing this requirement to include
reporting on an additional service
(habilitation services, as defined at
§ 440.180(b)(6)) in the payment rate
disclosure. Below, we include in our
burden calculations the minimal
increased anticipated burden associated
with the addition of reporting on
habilitation services.
With regard to the developing and
publishing the payment rate
transparency data under § 447.203(b)(1),
we estimate a low one-time and ongoing
burden due to the data being available,
and the main work required to meet the
proposed requirement would be
formatting and web publication. As
such, we estimate it will initially take:
5 hours at $55.54/hr for a research
assistant to gather the data, 5 hours at
$80.08/hr for a business operations
specialist to publish, and 1 hour at
$118.14/hr for a general and operations
manager to review and approve the rate
transparency data. In aggregate, we
estimate a one-time burden of 561 hours
(51 responses × 11 hr) at a cost of
$40,608 (51 responses × [(5 hr × $55.54/
hr) + (5 hr × $80.08/hr) + (1 hr ×
$118.14/hr)]). Taking into account the
Federal administrative match of 50
percent, the requirement will cost States
$20,304 ($40,608 × 0.50).
For the ongoing cost to update
assumed to take place every 2 years
(although we proposed that updates
would only be required as necessary to
keep the data current, with any update
made no later than 1 month following
the date of CMS approval of the SPA or
PO 00000
Frm 00295
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40835
similar amendment providing for the
change), we estimate an annualized
impact on 26 respondents (51
respondents every 2 years) of: 2 hours
at $55.54/hr for a research assistant to
update the data, 1 hour at $80.08/hr for
a business operations specialist to
publish the updates, and 1 hour at
$118.14/hr for a general and operations
manager to review and approve the rate
transparency update. In aggregate, we
estimate an annualized burden of 104
hours (26 responses × 4 hr) at a cost of
$8,042 (26 responses × [(2 hr × $55.54/
hr) + (1 hr × $80.08/hr) + (1 hr ×
$118.14/hr)]). Taking into account the
Federal administrative match of 50
percent, the requirement will cost States
$4,021 ($8,042 × 0.50).
With regard to developing and
publishing the comparative payment
rate analysis and payment rate
disclosure at § 447.203(b)(2), we
estimate it will take: 22 hours at $55.54/
hr for a research assistant to gather the
data, 22 hours at $106.30/hr for an
information analyst to analyze the data,
25 hours at $100.64/hr for a
management analyst to design the
comparative payment rate analysis, 11
hours at $80.08/hr for a business
operations specialist to publish the
comparative payment rate analysis and
payment rate disclosure, and 3 hours at
$118.14/hr for a general and operations
manager to review and approve the
comparative payment rate analysis and
payment rate disclosure. In aggregate,
we estimate an annualized burden,
based on 51 respondents every 2 years,
of 2,054 (26 responses × 79 hr) at a cost
of $190,107 (26 States × [(22 hr ×
$55.54/hr) + (22 hr × $106.30/hr) + (25
hr × $100.64/hr) + (11 hr × $80.08/hr)
+ (3 hr × $118.14/hr)]). We then adjust
the total cost to $95,053 ($190,107 ×
0.50) to account for the 50 percent
Federal administrative match. We have
summarized the total burdens in Table
37.
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
40836
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
TABLE 37: Summary of Burden Associated with Payment Rate Transparency Requirements
(§ 447.203(b)(l) through (S))
Requirement
No.
Respondents
Total
Responses
§ 447.203(b)(l)
Rate Transparency
51
51
§ 447.203(b)(l)
Rate Transparency
26
26
26
26
51
103
§ 447.203(b)(2)
and (3) Rate
Analysis
TOTAL
c. Medicaid Payment Rate Interested
Parties’ Advisory Group
(§ 447.203(b)(6))
The burden associated with the
recordkeeping requirements at
§ 447.203(b)(6), specifically the online
publication associated with the
reporting and recommendations of the
interested parties advisory group, will
consist of the time and effort for all 50
States and the District of Columbia to:
• Appoint members to the interested
parties’ advisory group.
• Provide the group members with
materials necessary to:
++ Review current and proposed
rates.
++ Hold meetings.
++ Provide a written
recommendation to the State.
• Publish the group’s
recommendations to a website
maintained by the single State agency.
Frequency
Total
Time
(hr)
Wage
($/hr)
Total
Cost($)
11
561
Varies
40,608
20,304
4
104
Varies
8,042
4,021
79
2,054
Varies
190,107
95,053
Varies
2,719
Varies
238,757
119,378
One-time
Biannual
(figures are
annualized)
Biannual
(figures are
annualized)
Varies
State
Time per
Response
(hr)
The requirements will require varying
levels of efforts for States depending on
the existence of groups that may fulfil
the requirements of this group.
However, because it is unknown how
many States will be able to leverage
existing practices, and to what extent,
this estimate does not account for those
differences. We are finalizing the
requirements at § 447.203(b)(6) with a
modification to add habilitation services
as defined at § 440.180(b)(6), in addition
to the previously identified services, to
the group’s purview. However, this
addition is not expected to create any
additional burden. We estimate that it
will take 40 hours at $140.14/hr for a
human resources manager to recruit
interested parties and provide the
necessary materials for the group to
meet. In aggregate, we estimate a onetime burden of 2,040 hours (51
responses × 40 hr) at a cost of $285,886
(2,040 hr × $140.14/hr). Taking into
Share
($)
account the 50 percent administrative
match, the total one-time State cost is
estimated to be $142,943 ($285,886 ×
0.50).
We believe the ongoing work to
maintain the needs of this group will
take a human resources manager 5 hours
at $140.14/hr annually. Additionally,
we estimate it will take 4 hours for the
biennial requirement, or 2 hours
annually at $118.14/hr for an operations
manager to review and prepare the
recommendation for publication. In
aggregate, we estimate an ongoing
annualized burden of 182 hours (26
responses × 7 hr) at a cost of $24,361 (26
Respondents × [(5 hr × $140.14/hr) + (2
hr × $118.14/hr)]). Accounting for the 50
percent Federal administrative match,
the total State cost is adjusted to
$12,181 ($24,361 × 0.50). We have
summarized the total burden in Table
38.
§ 447.203(b)(6)
(Establish
advisory group)
§ 447.203(b)(6)
(Support and
publish
recommendation
No.
Respondent
s
Total
Response
s
Frequency
Time per
Respons
e (hr)
Total
Time
51
51
51
One-time
40
2,040
26
Biennial
(figures are
annualized
)
7
51
77
Varies
Varies
)
TOTAL
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
PO 00000
Frm 00296
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
Total
Cost
State
Share
($)
($)
140.1
4
285,88
6
142,94
3
182
Varies
24,361
12,181
2,222
Varies
310,24
7
155,12
4
(hr)
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
Wage
($/hr)
10MYR2
ER10MY24.059
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Requirement
ER10MY24.060
TABLE 38: Summary of Burden for Medicaid Payment Rate Interested Parties' Advisory Group
40837
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
d. State Analysis Procedures for
Payment Rate Reductions or Payment
Restructuring (§ 447.203(c))
The State analysis procedures for
payment rate reductions and payment
restructurings at § 447.203(c)(1) through
(3) within this final rule effectively will
replace payment rate reduction or
payment restructuring procedures in
current § 447.203(b)(6). As noted, the
burden reduction associated with the
removal of § 447.203(b)(6)(i) has already
been accounted for in the recurring
burden reduction estimate shown in
Table 36 for the removal of the AMRP
requirements, and the burden reduction
associated with the removal of
monitoring requirements at current
§ 447.203(b)(6)(ii) has been accounted
for in Table 36 as well. Our replacement
procedures at § 447.203(c)(1) through (3)
will introduce new requirements as
follows.
i. Initial State Analysis for Rate
Reduction or Restructuring
(§ 447.203(c)(1))
Section 447.203(c)(1) will require that
for States proposing to reduce or
restructure provider payment rates, the
State must document that their program
and proposal meet all of the following
requirements: (1) Medicaid rates in the
aggregate for the service category
following the proposed reduction(s) or
restructurings are at or above 80 percent
of most recent Medicare prices or rates
for the same or a comparable set of
services; (2) Proposed reductions or
restructurings result in no more than a
4 percent reduction of overall spending
for each service category affected by a
proposed reduction or restructuring in a
single State fiscal year; and (3) Public
process yields no significant access
concerns or the State can reasonably
respond to concerns.
Section 447.203(c)(1) will apply to all
States that submit a SPA that proposes
to reduce or restructure provider
payment rates. We limited our estimates
for new information collection burden
to the requirements at § 447.203(c)(1)(i)
through (ii). Our estimates assume
States will build off the comparative
analysis required by § 447.203(b)(2)
through (4) to complete the
requirements by § 447.203(c)(1)(i),
which will limit the additional
information collection burden. We also
assume no additional information
collection burden posed by the public
review process required by
§ 447.203(c)(1)(iii), as this burden is
encapsulated by current public process
requirements at § 447.204.
The requirements of § 447.203(c)
apply to all 50 States and the District of
Columbia, as well as US territories. We
will again use the estimate of 51 utilized
in preceding sections, although we note
some territories may be subject to these
requirements if not exempt under
waivers, and these figures fluctuate. As
such, for consistency, we will maintain
the estimate of 51 respondents subject to
this rule. While we cannot predict how
many States will submit a rate reduction
SPA or rate restructuring SPA in a given
year, the figures from 2019 provide the
best recent estimate, as the years during
the COVID pandemic do not reflect
typical behavior. In 2019, we approved
rate reduction and rate restructuring
SPAs from 17 unique State respondents.
Therefore, to estimate the annualized
number of respondents subject to this
information collection burden, we will
utilize a count of 17 respondents.
With regard to the burden associated
with completing the required State
analysis for rate reductions or
restructurings at § 447.203(c)(1), we
estimate that it will take: 20 hours at
$100.64/hr for a management analyst to
structure the rate reduction or
restructuring analysis, 25 hours at
$106.30/hr for an information analyst to
complete the rate reduction or
restructuring analysis, and 3 hours at
$118.14/hr for a general and operations
manager to review and approve the rate
reduction or restructuring analysis. In
aggregate, we estimate a burden of 816
hours (17 States × 48 hr) at a cost of
$85,420 (17 States × [(20 hr × $100.64/
hr) + (25 hr × $106.30/hr) + (3 hr ×
$118.14/hr)]). Accounting for the 50
percent Federal administrative
reimbursement, this adjusts to a total
State cost of $42,710 ($85,420 × 0.50).
TABLE 39: Burden Associated with Tier 1 State Analysis Procedures for Rate Reductions or
Restructurings (§ 447.203(c)(l))
~
No.
Respondents
447.203(c)(l)
TOTAL
Total
Responses
17
17
17
17
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
We solicited public comment on these
estimates as well as relevant State data
to further refine the burden and time
estimates. We did not receive public
comments on this issue, and therefore,
we are finalizing as proposed.
ii. Additional State Rate Analysis
(§ 447.203(c)(2))
Section 447.203(c)(2) describes
requirements for payment proposals that
do not meet the requirements in
paragraph (c)(1), requiring the State to
provide the nature of the change and
policy purpose, the rates compared to
Medicare and/or other payers pre- and
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
Frequency
Time per
Response
(hr)
Total
Time
(hr)
48
48
816
816
Annual
Annual
post-reduction or restructuring, counts/
trends of actively participating
providers by geographic areas, counts of
FFS Medicaid beneficiaries residing in
geographic areas/characteristics of the
beneficiary population, service
utilization trends, access to care
complaints from beneficiaries,
providers, and other interested parties,
and the State’s response to access to
care complaints.
The information collection
requirements at § 447.203(c)(2) applies
to those States that submit rate
reduction or restructuring SPAs that do
not meet one or more of the criteria
PO 00000
Frm 00297
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
Wage
($/hr)
Varies
Varies
Total
Cost($)
85,420
85,420
State
Share
($)
42,710
42,710
proposed by § 447.203(c)(1). Using 2019
rate reduction and restructuring SPA
figures, we estimate that 17 States will
submit rate reduction or restructuring
SPAs per year. Then, a 2019 Urban
Institute analysis 412 indicates that 22
States (or 43 percent) have rates that
meet the 80 percent fee ratio threshold
proposed in § 447.203(c)(1)(i) across all
services. Although our proposal did not
412 Zuckerman, S. et al. ‘‘Medicaid Physician Fees
Remained Substantially Below Fees Paid By
Medicare in 2019.’’, Health Affairs, Volume 40,
Number 2, February 2021, p. 343–348, https://
www.healthaffairs.org/doi/10.1377/hlthaff.2020.
00611, accessed August 31, 2022.
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
ER10MY24.061
Requirement
40838
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
include all services, using this all
services amount is our best method to
estimate how many States may fall
below on any given service without
knowing which. Because we cannot
predict the amount a State may propose
to reduce, once or cumulatively for the
SFY, and because failure of any one
criterion in § 447.203(c)(1) will require
additional analysis under
§ 447.203(c)(2), we will use that
percentage to assess how many States
will need to perform additional
analysis. Using this percentage, we
estimate that 7 (43 percent × 17) of the
estimated 17 unique State respondents
may submit rate reduction or
restructuring SPAs meet the criteria for
the streamlined analysis process under
proposed § 447.203(c)(1). Therefore, we
assume that 10 out of 17 unique annual
State respondents who submit rate
reduction or restructuring SPAs will
also need to perform the additional
analysis § 447.203(c)(2).
The required components of the
review and analysis in § 447.203(c)(2)
are similar to the AMRP requirements
found at current § 447.203(b)(1).
However, due to the availability of a
template for States to facilitate
completion of the required analysis, as
well as the lack of a requirement to
publish the analysis, we anticipate a
moderately reduced burden associated
with § 447.203(c)(2) when compared to
the burden estimated for the AMRPs.
With regard to our requirements, we
estimate that it would take: 64 hours at
$55.54/hr for a social science research
assistant to gather data, 64 hours at
$106.30/hr for a computer and
information analyst to analyze data, 80
hours at $100.64/hr for a management
analyst to structure the analyses and
organize output, and 8 hours at $118.14/
hr for a general and operations manager
to review and approve the rate
reduction or restructuring analysis. In
aggregate, we estimate a burden of 2,160
hours (10 States × 216 hr) at a cost of
$193,541 (10 States × [(64 hr × $55.54/
hr) + (64 hr × $106.30/hr) + (80 hr ×
$100.64/hr) + (8 hr × $118.14/hr)]). The
total cost is adjusted down to $96,771
($193,541 × 0.50) for States after
accounting for the 50 percent Federal
administrative match. We solicited
public comment on these estimates as
well as relevant State data to further
refine the burden and time estimates.
We did not receive public comments on
this issue, and therefore, we are
finalizing as proposed.
We do not assume any additional
information collection imposed by the
compliance procedures at
§ 447.203(c)(3).
Table 40 shows our estimated
combined annualized burden for
§ 447.203(c), which includes 17 States
for § 447.203(c)(1) and 10 States for
§ 447.203(c)(2). In total, we estimate an
annualized burden of 2,976 (816 hours
+ 2,160 hours) hours at a cost of
$278,961 ($85,420 + $193,541). This
cost to States is then adjusted to
$139,481 after the 50 percent Federal
administrative reimbursement is
applied.
BILLING CODE 4120–01–P
TABLE 40: Summary of Burden Associated with State Analysis Procedures for Rate Reductions
or Restructurings (§ 447.203(c))
No.
Respondents
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
§ 447.203(c)(l)
(initial State
analysis)
§ 447.203(c)(2)
(additional
State analysis)
TOTAL
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Total
Responses
Frequency
Time per
Response
(hr)
Total
Time
(hr)
Wage
($/hr)
Total
Cost($)
State
Share
($)
17
17
Annual
48
816
Varies
85,420
42,710
10
10
Annual
216
2,160
Varies
193,541
96,771
17
27
Annual
264
2,976
Varies
278,961
139,481
Jkt 262001
PO 00000
Frm 00298
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
ER10MY24.062
Requirement
40839
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
D. Burden Summary
Regulation Section(s) in
Title 42 of the CFR
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
§431.12 (Table 3) (MACs &
BACs)
§441.301(c)(3)- One-time
burden to States (Table 4)
(Person-Centered Service
Plans)
§441.30l(c)(3)-One-time
burden to Managed Care Plans
(Table 5) (Person-Centered
Service Plans)
§441.301 (c)(7) - One-time
burden to States (Table 6)
(Grievance Systems)
§441.301 (c)(7) - Ongoing
burden to States (Table 7)
_{Grievance Systems}
§441.302(a)(6)- One-time
burden to States (Table 8)
(Incident Management
System)
§441.302(a)(6)- Ongoing
burden to States (Table 9)
(Incident Management
System)
§441.302(a)(6)- Ongoing
burden to Service Providers
(Table 10) (Incident
Management System)
§441.302(a)(6)- One-time
burden to Managed Care Plans
(Table 11) (Incident
Management System)
§441.302(a)(6)- Ongoing
burden to Managed Care Plans
(Table 12) (Incident
Management System)
§441.311 (b )(1) Ongoing
burden to States (Table 25)
(Incident Management System
Assessment)
§ 441.311(e) -One-time
burden to States (Table 13)
(Payment Adequacy
Reporting)
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
0MB
Control
Number
(CMS ID
Number)
0938-TBD
(CMS-10845)
0938-TBD
(CMS-10854)
0938-TBD
(CMS-10854)
0938-TBD
(CMS-10854)
0938-TBD
(CMS-10854)
0938-TBD
(CMS-10854)
0938-TBD
(CMS-10854)
0938-TBD
(CMS-10854)
0938-TBD
(CMS-10854)
0938-TBD
(CMS-10854)
0938-1362
(CMS-10692)
0938-TBD
(CMS-10854)
Jkt 262001
PO 00000
#of
Respon
dents
#of
Respon
ses
Time
per
Respo
nse
(hr}
Total
Time
(hr)
Total Labor
Cost($)
State
Share
($)
Total
Benef
iciary
Cost
_{$}
51
States
153
Varies
17,340
Varies
1,665,354
832,676
n/a
48
States
48
Varies
528
Varies
65,409
32,704
n/a
161
Manage
dCare
Plans
161
Varies
966
Varies
127,650
n/a
n/a
48
States
48
Varies
24,960
Varies
2,596,493
1,298,24
6
n/a
48
States
29,255
Varies
16,206
Varies
1,135,949
567,975
n/a
48
States
96
Varies
19,872
Varies
124,958,292
62,479,1
46
n/a
48
States
283,542
Varies
15,177
Varies
24,778,520
12,389,2
60
n/a
15,742
Provide
rs
28,345
1
28,345
118.14
3,348,678
n/a
n/a
161
Varies
26,726
Varies
2,712,747
n/a
n/a
6,964
Varies
5,476
Varies
535,791
n/a
n/a
48
States
48
Varies
96
Varies
8,326
4,163
n/a
48
States
48
Varies
7,776
Varies
850,285
425,173
n/a
161
Manage
dCare
Plans
161
Manage
dCare
Plans
Frm 00299
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
Hourly
Labor
Rate
($/hr)
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
ER10MY24.063
TABLE 41: Summary of Annual Burden Estimates
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
Regulation Section(s) in
Title 42 of the CFR
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
§ 441.31 l(e)-Ongoing
burden to States (Table 14)
(Payment Adequacy
Reporting)
§ 441.311 (e) - One-time
burden to service providers
(Table 15) (HCBS Payment
Adequacy)
§ 441.311(e) -Ongoing
burden to service providers
(Table 16) (Payment
Adequacy Reporting)
§ 441.31 l(e)- One-time
burden to managed care plans
(Table 17) (Payment
Adequacy Reporting)
§ 441.3 ll(e) - Ongoing
burden to managed care plans
(Table 18) (Payment
Adeauacv Reporting)
§ 441.302(k) One-time burden
to States (Table 33) (HCBS
Pavment Adequacy)
§ 441.302(k) Ongoing burden
to States (Table 34) (HCBS
Payment Adequacy)
§441.303(£)(6), §
441.31 l(d)(l)- One-Time
burden to States (Table 19)
(Supporting Documentation
for HCBS Access)
§441.303(£)(6), §
441.31 l(d)(l)- Ongoing
burden to States (Table 20)
(Supporting Documentation
for HCBS Access)
§441.311 (d)(2)(i) One-Time
burden to States (Table 21)
(Additional HCBS Access
Reporting)
§441.311(d)(2)(i) Ongoing
burden to States (Table 22)
(Additional HCBS Access
Reporting)
§441.311(d)(2)(i) One-Time
burden to managed care plans
(Table 23) (Additional HCBS
Access Reporting)
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
0MB
Control
Number
(CMS ID
Number)
0938-TBD
(CMS-10854)
0938-TBD
(CMS-10854)
0938-TBD
(CMS-10854)
0938-TBD
(CMS-10854)
0938-TBD
(CMS-10854)
0938-TBD
(CMS-10854)
0938-TBD
(CMS-10854)
0938-TBD
(CMS-I 0854)
0938-TBD
(CMS-10854)
0938-TBD
(CMS-10854)
0938-TBD
(CMS-10854)
0938-TBD
(CMS-10854)
Jkt 262001
PO 00000
#of
Respon
dents
#of
Respon
ses
Time
per
Respo
nse
(hr)
Total
Time
(hr)
Hourly
Labor
Rate
($/hr)
Total Labor
Cost($)
State
Share
($)
Total
Benef
iciary
Cost
($)
48
States
48
Varies
1,200
Varies
121,302
60,651
n/a
15,642
Provide
rs
15,642
Varies
1,298,
286
Varies
116,591,088
n/a
n/a
15,642
Provide
rs
15,642
Varies
328,48
2
Varies
30,743,100
n/a
n/a
161
Varies
Varies
1,989,464
n/a
n/a
161
Varies
1,610
Varies
203,607
n/a
n/a
48
States
48
Varies
10,944
Varies
1,169,295
584,648
n/a
Varies
1,203
Varies
866
Varies
101,698
50,849
n/a
39
States
39
Varies
1,599
Varies
178,777
89,388
n/a
39
States
39
Varies
585
Varies
72,778
36,389
n/a
48
States
48
Varies
8,016
Varies
839,954
419,977
n/a
48
States
48
Varies
3,168
Varies
340,861
170,431
n/a
161
Manage
dCare
Plans
161
Varies
12,397
Varies
1,305,923
n/a
n/a
161
Manage
dCare
Plans
161
Manage
dCare
Plans
Frm 00300
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
20,286
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
ER10MY24.064
40840
40841
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
§441.31 l(d)(2)(i) Ongoing
burden to managed care plans
(Table 24) (Additional HCBS
Access Reporting)
Removal of Current Form
372(S) Ongoing Reporting
Information Collection (Table
26)
Form 372(S) Reporting
Requirement to include
Proposed § 441.3 ll(b)(2)-(4)
(Table 27)
§441.31 l(c) One-time burden
to States (Table 28) (HCBS
Quality Measure Set)
§441.311 (c) Ongoing burden
to States (Table 29) (HCBS
Oualitv Measure Set)
§441.311 (c) Ongoing burden
to beneficiaries (Table 30)
(HCBS Qualitv Measure Set)
§441.313
One-time burden to States
(Table 31) (Website
Transparency)
§441.313 Ongoing burden to
States (Table 32) (Website
Transparency)
Removal of§ 447.203(b)(l)(6)(i)) (Table 36) (Removal of
AMRP)
Removal of§
447.203(b)(6)(ii) (Table 36)
(Removal of AMRP)
§ 447.203(b)(l) (Table 37)
(Rate transparency)
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
§ 447.203(b)(2) (Table 37)
(Rate analysis)
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
0938---0272
(CMS372(S))
0938-TBD
(CMS-10854)
0938-TBD
(CMS-10854)
0938-TBD
(CMS-10854)
0938-TBD
(CMS-10854)
0938-TBD
(CMS-10854)
0938-TBD
(CMS-10854)
0938-1134
(CMS10391)
0938-1134
(CMS10391)
0938-1134
(CMS10391)
0938-1134
(CMS10391)
Jkt 262001
PO 00000
#of
Respon
dents
#of
Respon
ses
Time
per
Respo
nse
(hr)
Total
Time
(hr)
Hourly
Labor
Rate
($/hr)
Total Labor
Cost($)
State
Share
($)
Total
Benef
iciary
Cost
($)
161
Manage
dCare
Plans
161
Varies
6,762
Varies
726,983
n/a
n/a
48
States
253
(44)
(11,13
2)
75.32
(891,451)
(445,725
)
n/a
48
States
48
Varies
2,640
Varies
231,952
115,976
n/a
48
States
48
Varies
64,560
Varies
5,301,830
2,650,91
5
n/a
24
States
24
Varies
58,920
Varies
4,202,621
2,101,31
0
n/a
48,000
Benefic
iaries
24,000
0.75
18,000
20.71
n/a
n/a
372,7
80
48
States
48
Varies
5,232
Varies
547,385
273,693
n/a
48
States
192
Varies
6,336
Varies
709,359
354,680
n/a
17
(310)
(5,270)
varies
(465,729)
(232,865
)
n/a
22
(67)
(1,474)
varies
(149,498)
(74,749)
n/a
26
4
104
varies
8,042
4,021
n/a
26
83
2,158
varies
190,107
95,053
n/a
51
States
and
Territor
ies
51
States
and
Territor
ies
51
States
and
Territor
ies
51
States
and
Territor
ies
Frm 00301
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
ER10MY24.065
Regulation Section(s) in
Title 42 of the CFR
0MB
Control
Number
(CMS ID
Number)
0938-TBD
(CMS-10854)
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
0MB
Control
Number
(CMS ID
Number)
0938-1134
(CMS10391)
Regulation Section(s) in
Title 42 of the CFR
§ 447.203(b)(6) (Table 38)
( advisory group)
#of
Respon
dents
51
States
and
Territor
ies
51
States
and
Territor
ies
51
States
and
Territor
ies
0938-1134
(CMS10391)
§ 447.203(c)(l) (Table 39)
(initial State analysis)
0938-1134
(CMS10391)
§ 447.203(c)(2) (Table 39)
(additional State analysis)
TOTAL
Varies
BILLING CODE 4120–01–C
IV. Regulatory Impact Analysis
A. Statement of Need
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
1. Medicaid Advisory Committee
The changes to § 431.12 are intended
to provide beneficiaries a greater voice
in State Medicaid programs. In making
policy and program decisions, it is vital
for States to include the perspective and
experience of those served by the
Medicaid program. States are currently
required to operate a MCAC, made up
of health professionals, consumers, and
State representatives to ‘‘advise the
Medicaid agency about health and
medical care services.’’ This rule
establishes new requirements for a MAC
in place of the MCAC, with additional
membership requirements to include a
broader group of interested parties, to
advise the State Medicaid agency on
matters related to the effective
administration of the Medicaid program.
We seek to expand the viewpoints
represented on the MAC, to provider
States with richer feedback on Medicaid
program and policy issues. States are
already required to set up and use
MCACs. The changes will result in the
State also setting up a smaller group, the
BAC, which will likely have a cost
implication. The additional cost will
depend on whether or not States already
have a beneficiary committee—we know
that many States already do. This
smaller group which feeds into the
larger MAC will benefit the Medicaid
program by creating a forum for
beneficiaries to weigh in on key topics
and share their unique views as
Medicaid program participants. The
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
#of
Respon
ses
Time
per
Respo
nse
(hr)
Total Labor
Cost($)
State
Share
($)
Total
Benef
iciary
Cost
($)
26
varies
24,361
12,181
n/a
816
varies
85,420
42,710
n/a
216
2,160
varies
193,541
96,771
n/a
Varies
2,200,
901
Varies
327,156,264
84,435,6
47
372,3
80
Total
Time
(hr)
Hourly
Labor
Rate
($/hr)
7
182
17
48
12
407,029
new provisions of § 431.12 also enhance
transparency and accountability through
public reporting requirements related to
the operation and activities of the MAC
and BAC, and guidelines for operation
of both bodies.
2. Home and Community-Based
Services (HCBS)
The proposed changes at part 441,
subpart G, seek to amend and add new
Federal requirements, which are
intended to improve access to care,
quality of care, and health outcomes,
and strengthen necessary safeguards
that are in place to ensure health and
welfare, and promote health equity for
people receiving Medicaid-covered
HCBS. The provisions in this final rule
are intended to achieve a more
consistent and coordinated approach to
the administration of policies and
procedures across Medicaid HCBS
programs in accordance with section
2402(a) of the Affordable Care Act, and
is made applicable to part 441, subparts
J, K, and M, as well as part 438 to
achieve these goals.
Specifically, the proposed rule seeks
to: strengthen person-centered services
planning and incident management
systems in HCBS; require minimum
percentages of Medicaid payments for
certain HCBS to be spent on
compensation for the direct care
workforce; require States to establish
grievance systems in FFS HCBS
programs; report on waiver waiting lists
in section 1915(c) waiver programs,
service delivery timeframes for certain
HCBS, and a standardized set of HCBS
quality measures; and promote public
transparency related to the
PO 00000
Frm 00302
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
administration of Medicaid-covered
HCBS through public reporting on
measures related to incident
management systems, critical incidents,
person-centered planning, quality,
access, and payment adequacy.
In 2014, we released guidance 413 for
section 1915(c) waiver programs, which
described a process in which States
were to report on State-developed
performance measures to demonstrate
that they meet the six assurances that
are required for section 1915(c) waiver
programs. Those six assurances include
the following:
1. Level of Care: The State
demonstrates that it implements the
processes and instrument(s) specified in
its approved waiver for evaluating/
reevaluating an applicant’s/waiver
participant’s level of care consistent
with care provided in a hospital,
nursing facility, or Intermediate Care
Facilities for Individuals with
Intellectual Disabilities.
2. Service Plan: The State
demonstrates it has designed and
implemented an effective system for
reviewing the adequacy of service plans
for waiver participants.
3. Qualified Providers: The State
demonstrates that it has designed and
implemented an adequate system for
assuring that all waiver services are
provided by qualified providers.
4. Health and Welfare: The State
demonstrates it has designed and
implemented an effective system for
assuring waiver participant health and
welfare.
413 https://www.hhs.gov/guidance/sites/default/
files/hhs-guidance-documents/3-cmcs-qualitymemo-narrative_0_71.pdf.
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
ER10MY24.066
40842
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
5. Financial Accountability: The State
demonstrates that it has designed and
implemented an adequate system for
insuring financial accountability of the
waiver program.
6. Administrative Authority: The
Medicaid Agency retains ultimate
administrative authority and
responsibility for the operation of the
waiver program by exercising oversight
of the performance of waiver functions
by other State and local/regional nonState agencies (if appropriate) and
contracted entities.
Despite these assurances, there is
evidence that State HCBS systems still
need to be strengthened and that there
are gaps in existing reporting
requirements. We believe that this final
rule is necessary to address these
concerns and strengthen HCBS systems.
The requirements in this final rule are
intended to supersede and fully replace
reporting and performance expectations
described in the 2014 guidance for
section 1915(c) waiver programs. They
are also intended to promote
consistency and alignment across HCBS
programs, as well as delivery systems,
by applying the requirements (where
applicable) to sections 1915(i), (j), and
(k) authorities State plan benefits and to
both FFS and managed care delivery
systems.
3. Fee-for-Service (FFS)
Provisions under § 447.203 from this
final rule will impact States’ required
documentation of compliance with
section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act to
‘‘assure that payments are . . .
sufficient to enlist enough providers so
that care and services are available
under the plan at least to the extent that
such care and services are available to
the general population in the geographic
area.’’ We have received comments from
State agencies that the existing AMRP
requirement first established by the
2015 final rule with comment period
imposes excessive administrative
burden for its corresponding value in
demonstrating compliance with section
1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act.
This final rule will replace the
existing AMRP requirement with a more
limited payment rate transparency
requirement under proposed
§ 447.203(b), while requiring a more
detailed access impact analysis (as
described at proposed § 447.203(c)(2))
when a State proposes provider rate
reductions or restructurings that exceed
certain thresholds for a streamlined
analysis process under proposed
§ 447.203(c)(1). By limiting the data
collection and publication requirements
imposed on all States, while targeting
certain provider rate reductions or
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
restructuring proposals for a more
detailed analysis, this final rule will
provide administrative burden relief to
States while maintaining a transparent
and data-driven process to assure State
compliance with section 1902(a)(30)(A)
of the Act.
B. Overall Impact
We have examined the impacts of this
rule as required by E.O. 12866 on
Regulatory Planning and Review
(September 30, 1993), E.O. 13563 on
Improving Regulation and Regulatory
Review (January 18, 2011), the
Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)
(September 19, 1980, Pub. L. 96–354),
section 1102(b) of the Act, section 202
of the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
of 1995 (March 22, 1995; Pub. L. 104–
4), E.O. 13132 on Federalism (August 4,
1999), and the Congressional Review
Act (5 U.S.C. 804(2)). Pursuant to
Subtitle E of the Small Business
Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act of
1996 (also known as the Congressional
Review Act, 5 U.S.C. 801 et seq.), OMB’s
Office of Information and Regulatory
Affairs has determined that this final
rule does meet the criteria set forth in
5 U.S.C. 804(2).
Executive Orders 12866 and 13563
direct agencies to assess all costs and
benefits of available regulatory
alternatives and, if regulation is
necessary, to select regulatory
approaches that maximize net benefits
(including potential economic,
environmental, public health and safety
effects, distributive impacts, and
equity). Section 3(f) of Executive Order
12866 as amended by Executive Order
14094 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 1 year, or adversely and
materially affecting a sector of the
economy, productivity, competition,
jobs, the environment, public health or
safety, or State, local or tribal
governments or communities; (2)
creating a serious inconsistency or
otherwise interfering with an action
taken or planned by another agency; (3)
materially altering the budgetary
impacts of entitlement grants, user fees,
or loan programs or the rights and
obligations of recipients thereof; or (4)
raising legal or policy issues for which
centralized review would meaningfully
further the President’s priorities, or the
principles set forth in the Executive
Order.
A regulatory impact analysis (RIA)
must be prepared for rules that meet
section 3(f)(1) of the Executive Order.
This final rule does meet that criterion
as the aggregate amount of benefits and
PO 00000
Frm 00303
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40843
costs may meet the $200 million
threshold in at least 1 year.
Based on our estimates using a ‘‘no
action’’ baseline in accordance with
OMB Circular A–4, (available at https://
www.whitehouse.gov/wpcontent/
uploads/legacy_drupal_files/omb/
circulars/A4/a-4.pdf), OMB’s Office of
Information and Regulatory Affairs has
determined that this rulemaking is
significant or otherwise meets section
3(f)(1). Therefore, OMB has reviewed
these proposed regulations, and the
Departments have provided the
following assessment of their impact.
C. Detailed Economic Analysis
As mentioned in the prior section,
and in accordance with OMB Circular
A–4, the following estimates were
determined using a ‘‘no action’’
baseline. That is, our analytical baseline
for impact is a direct comparison
between the provisions and not
proposing them at all.
1. Benefits
a. Medicaid Advisory Committees
(MAC)
We believe the changes to § 431.12
will benefit State Medicaid programs
and those they serve by ensuring that
beneficiaries have a significant role in
advising States on the experience of
receiving health care and services
through Medicaid. These benefits
cannot be quantified. However, the BAC
and a more diverse and transparent
MAC will provide opportunities for
richer interested parties feedback and
expertise to positively impact State
decision making on Medicaid program
and policy chances. For example,
beneficiary feedback on accessing health
care services and the quality of those
services can inform decisions on
provider networks and networks
adequacy requirements. Issues that
States need to address, like cultural
competency of providers, language
accessibility, health equity, and
disparities and biases in the Medicaid
program, can be revealed through
beneficiary experiences. The MAC falls
into the Public Administration 921
Executive, Legislative, and Other
General Government Support.
b. Person-Centered Service Plans,
Grievance Systems, Incident
Management Systems
The changes benefit Medicaid
beneficiaries and States by requiring
States to demonstrate through reporting
requirements that they provide
safeguards to assure eligibility for
Medicaid-covered care and services is
determined and provided in a manner
that is in the Medicaid beneficiaries’
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
40844
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
best interest, although these potential
benefits cannot be monetarily quantified
at this time. The changes will provide
further safeguards that ensure health
and welfare by strengthening the
person-centered service plan
requirements, establishing grievance
systems, amending requirements for
incident management systems, and
establishing new reporting requirements
for States, and contracted managed care
plans identified by the North American
Industry Classification System (NAICS)
industry code (Direct Health and
Medical Insurance Carriers (524114).
These changes will benefit
individuals on HCBS waiver wait lists,
and individuals who receive
homemaker, home health aide, personal
care, and habilitation services under the
finalized regulations found at
§§ 441.301(c), 441.302(a)(6), 441.302(h),
441.303(f), 441.311, 441.725, and
amended regulations in §§ 441.464,
441.474, 441.540, 441.555, 441.570,
441.580, and 441.745. These benefits
cannot be monetarily quantified at this
time.
c. Home and Community-Based Services
(HCBS) Payment Adequacy and
Payment Adequacy Reporting
This final rule adds a new reporting
requirement at § 441.311(e) (and amends
§§ 441.474(c), 441.580(i), and
441.745(a)(1)(vii)) to require States to
demonstrate through reporting what
percent of payments to providers of
certain HCBS (homemaker, home health
aide, personal care, and habilitation
services) are spent on compensation to
direct care workers. The goal of this
requirement is to promote transparency
and to assure that payments are
consistent with efficiency, economy,
and quality of care, in accordance with
section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act. This
final rule seeks to address access to care
that is being affected by direct care
workforce shortages. States will be
required to report annually and will be
required to separately report on
payments for services that are selfdirected and services that include
facility costs. benefit from reporting in
the aggregate for each service subject to
the requirement across HCBS programs
and delivery systems, which minimizes
administrative burden while providing
us better oversight of compensation of
the direct care workforce. These
potential benefits cannot be monetarily
quantified at this time due to the variety
of State data collection approaches.
Additionally, through this final rule,
we are finalizing § 441.302(k), which
establishes certain minimum thresholds
for the percent of Medicaid payments
for certain HCBS must be spent on
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
compensation for direct care workers.
We believe this requirement will help to
ensure that payments to workers are
sufficient to provide access to care that
is at least comparable to that of the
general population in the same
geographic location, in accordance with
section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act. We are
also finalizing a number of flexibilities
to allow States to address needs of
specific providers, such as providers
that are small or rural, or are
experiencing particular hardship that
would temporarily prevent the provider
for adhering to the minimum payment
level. Through this requirement, we can
better ensure payment adequacy to a
provider population experiencing
worker shortages that impact beneficiary
access. While we believe this
requirement will promote increases in
direct care worker compensation in
some regions, these potential benefits
cannot be monetarily quantified at this
time due to the variety of State data
collection approaches.
d. Home and Community-Based
Services (HCBS) Quality Measure Set
Reporting
As described in section II.B.8. of this
final rule, on July 21, 2022, we issued
State Medicaid Director Letter (SMDL)
#22–003 414 to release the first official
version of the HCBS Quality Measure
Set. This final rule provides definitions
and sets forth requirements at § 441.312
that expand on the HCBS Quality
Measure Set described in the SMDL. By
expanding and codifying aspects of the
SMDL, we can better drive improvement
in quality of care and health outcomes
for beneficiaries receiving HCBS. States
will also benefit from the clarity
afforded by this final rule, and from the
assurance that other States they may be
looking to for comparison are adhering
to the same requirements. The clarity
and assurance, at this time, cannot be
measured.
e. Fee-for-Service (FFS) Payment
Transparency
The changes to § 447.203 will update
requirements placed on States to
document access to care and service
payment rates. The updates create a
systematic framework through which
we can assess compliance with section
1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act, while
reducing existing burden on States and
maximizing the value of their efforts, as
described in section III.C.11.a. of this
rule.
The payment rate transparency
provisions at § 447.203(b) create a
414 https://www.medicaid.gov/federal-policyguidance/downloads/smd22003.pdf.
PO 00000
Frm 00304
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
process that will facilitate transparent
oversight by us and other interested
parties. By requiring States to calculate
Medicaid payment rates as a percent of
corresponding Medicare payment rates,
this provision offers a uniform
benchmark through which CMS and
interested parties can assess payment
rate sufficiency. When compared to the
existing AMRP requirement, the rate
analysis proposed by § 447.203(b)
should improve the utility of the
reporting, while reducing the associated
administrative burden, as reflected in
the Burden Estimate Summary Table 38.
Updates at § 447.203(c) specify required
documentation and analysis when
States propose to reduce or restructure
provider payment rates. By establishing
thresholds at § 447.203(c)(1), this final
rule will generally limit the more
extensive access review prescribed by
§ 447.203(c)(2) to those SPAs that we
believe more likely to cause access
concerns. In doing so, these proposed
updates reduce the State administrative
burden imposed by existing
documentation requirements for
proposed rate reductions or
restructurings, without impeding our
ability to ensure proposed rate
reduction and restructuring SPAs
comply with section 1902(a)(30)(A) of
the Act. These burden reductions are
reflected in the Collection of
Information section of this rule.
When considering the benefits of
these regulatory updates, we considered
the possibility that the improved
transparency required by § 447.203(b)
could create upward pressure on
provider payment rates, and that the
tiered nature of documentation
requirements set by § 447.203(c) could
create an incentive for States to
moderate proposed payment reductions
or restructurings that were near the
proposed thresholds that would trigger
additional analysis and documentation
requirements. If either of these rate
impacts were to occur, existing
literature implies there could be followon benefits to Medicaid beneficiaries,
including but not limited to increased
physician acceptance rates,415 increased
appointment availability,416 and even
improved self-reported health.417
However, nothing in this final rule will
require States to directly adjust payment
415 Holgash, K. and Martha Heberlein, Health
Affairs, April 10, 2019.
416 Candon, M., et al. JAMA Internal Medicine,
January 2018, p. 145–146.
417 Alexander, D., and Molly Schnell. ‘‘The
Impacts of Physician Payments on Patient Access,
Use, and Health’’, National Bureau of Economic
Research, Working Paper 26095, July 2019 (revised
August 2020), p. 1–74. https://www.nber.org/
papers/w26095. Accessed June 16, 2022.
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
rates, and we recognize that multiple
factors influence State rate-setting
proposals, including State budgetary
pressures, legislative priorities, and
other forces. These competing
influences create substantial uncertainty
about the specific impact of the
provisions at § 447.203 on provider
payment rate-setting and beneficiary
access. Rather, the specific intent and
anticipated outcome of these provisions
is the creation of a more uniform,
transparent, and less burdensome
process through which States can
conduct required payment rate and
access analyses and we can perform our
oversight role related to provider
payment rate sufficiency.
2. Costs
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
a. Medicaid Advisory Committee (MAC)
In addition to the costs reflected in
section III.C.1 of this final rule, States
will incur additional ongoing costs
(estimated below in Table 42) in
appointing and recruiting members to
the MAC and BAC and, also developing
and publishing bylaws, membership
lists, and meeting minutes for the MAC
and BAC. All of these costs can be
categorized under the NAICS Code 921
(Executive, Legislative, and Other
General Government Support) since
States are the only entity accounted for
in the MAC and BAC. How often these
costs occur will also vary in how often
the State chooses to make changes such
as add or replace members of the MAC
and BAC or change its bylaws.
Additionally, there will be new, ongoing
costs, estimated below, for States related
to meeting logistics and administration
for the BAC. All of these new costs can
also be categorized under the NAICS
Code 921 (Executive, Legislative, and
Other General Government Support). To
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
derive average costs, as in the previous
section of this final rule, we used data
from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics’
(BLS’) May 2022 National Occupational
Employment and Wage Estimates for all
salary estimates (https://www.bls.gov/
oes/2022/may/oes_nat.htm). Costs
include our estimated cost of fringe
benefits and other indirect costs,
calculated at 100 percent of salary, in
our adjusted hourly wage.
Since most States are already holding
MAC meetings under current regulatory
requirements, any new costs related to
MAC requirements would likely be
minimal. In terms of the MAC and BAC
meeting costs, we estimate a total cost
for 5 years of $3.414 million or $682,821
annually for States. We estimate it will
take a business operations specialist 10
hours to plan and execute each BAC
meeting, at a total cost of $162,180
($79.50/hour × 10 hours × 4 meetings/
year) × 51 States and the District of
Columbia). To satisfy the requirements
of § 431.12(h)(3)(i), a public relations
specialist will spend an estimated 80
hours/year supporting Medicaid
beneficiary MAC and BAC members at
a total cost of $308,122 ($75.50/hour ×
80 hours) × 51 States and the District of
Columbia). A chief executive in State
government, as required by
§ 431.12(h)(3)(iii) will spend a total of 8
hours a year attending BAC meetings,
which we estimate will be 2 hours in
duration, 4 times a year at a total cost
of $ 49,319 ($120.88/hour × 2 hours/
meeting × 4 meetings) × 51 States and
the District of Columbia). Each meeting
of the BAC will cost States an estimated
$200 in meeting costs and
telecommunication, at an annual total
cost of $40,800 ($200 × 4 meetings) × 51
States and the District of Columbia). The
meeting costs are estimated by adding
PO 00000
Frm 00305
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40845
the average cost for telecommunications
(approximately $130 418 per meeting) to
the average cost of meeting supplies
(approximately $70 per meeting for
photocopies, name tags, etc.). While we
cannot estimate precisely the costs for
meeting materials and additional items
to support meetings, we are including a
nominal estimate of $70 per meeting to
acknowledge these costs.
There will also be a per meeting cost
to States for financial support for
beneficiary members participating in
MAC and BAC meetings, as described in
§ 431.12(h)(3)(ii). We estimate a cost of
$75/beneficiary/meeting in the form of
transportation vouchers, childcare
reimbursement, meals, and/or other
financial compensation. Assuming 4
meetings per year (with BAC and MAC
meetings co-located and occurring on
the same day) and an average of 8
beneficiary members on the BAC and
MAC, the cost of financial support for
beneficiary members across States is
estimated to cost approximately
$122,400 annually (($75/beneficiary × 8
beneficiaries × 4 meetings/year) × 51
States and the District of Columbia).
This cost will vary depending on the
decisions States make around financial
support, the number of beneficiary
members of the BAC and MAC, and the
number of meetings per year. We
solicited comment on the costs
associated with planning, execution,
and participation in the MAC and BAC
meetings.
We did not receive public comments
specifically on these estimates, and
therefore, we are finalizing as proposed.
418 Sources: https://www.usnews.com/360reviews/business/best-conference-calling-services;
https://money.com/best-conference-callingservices/.
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
40846
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
TABLE 42: Projected Ten Year Costs for Proposed Updates
§ 431.12
MAC&
BAC
logistic and
admin
support
0.560
0.560
0.560
0.560
0.560
0.560
0.560
0.560
0.560
0.560
5.6
b. Home and Community-Based
Services (HCBS)
Costs displayed in Table 43 are
inclusive of both one-time and ongoing
costs. One-time costs are split evenly
over the years leading up to the
provision’s applicability date. For
example, if a finalized provision is
applicable 3 years after the final rule’s
publication, the one-time costs would
be split evenly across each of the years
leading to that applicability date. Please
note the following applicability dates
(beginning after the effective date of this
final rule): 2 years for the grievance
process requirements finalized at
§ 441.302(c)(7); 3 years for the personcentered planning, incident
management, changes to Form 372(S),
access reporting, and website
transparency requirements finalized at
§§ 441.301(c)(3), 441.302(a)(6),
441.311(b), 441.311(d) and 441.313,
respectively; 4 years for the reporting
requirements for the HCBS Quality
Measure Set and for payment adequacy
reporting finalized at § 441.311(c) and
(e), respectively; 5 years for the
electronic incident management system
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
requirement at § 441.302(a)(6); and 6
years for the HCBS payment adequacy
requirements finalized at § 441.302(k).
The estimates below do not account for
higher costs associated with medical
care, as the costs are related exclusively
to reporting costs. Costs to States, the
Federal government, and managed care
plans do not account for enrollment
fluctuations, as they assume a stable
number of States operating HCBS
programs and managed care plans
delivering services through these
programs. Similarly, costs to providers
and beneficiaries do not account for
enrollment fluctuations. In the COI
section, costs are based on a projected
range of HCBS providers and
beneficiaries. Given this uncertainty,
here, we based cost estimates on the
mid-point of the respective ranges and
kept those assumptions consistent over
the course of the 5-year projection. Per
OMB guidelines, the projected estimates
for future years do not include ordinary
inflation. (that is, they are reported in
constant-year dollars).
Table 44 summarizes the estimated
ongoing costs for States, managed care
PO 00000
Frm 00306
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
plans (Direct Health and Medical
Insurance Carriers (NAICS 524114)),
and providers (Services for the Elderly
and Persons with Disabilities (NAICS
624120) and Home Health Care Services
(NAICS 621610)) from the Collection of
Information section (section III. of this
final rule) of the HCBS provisions of the
final rule projected over 10 years. This
comprises the entirety of anticipated
quantifiable costs associated with
changes to part 441, subpart G. It is also
possible that increasing the threshold
from 86 percent to 90 percent for
compliance reporting at § 441.311(b)(2)
through (3) may lead to additional costs
to remediate issues pertaining to critical
incidents or person-centered planning.
However, the various avenues through
which States could address these
concerns creates substantial uncertainty
as to what those costs may be. While we
acknowledge the potential for increased
costs in a limited number of States that
may fall within the gap between the
existing and the compliance thresholds,
we do not quantify them here.
BILLING CODE 4120–01–P
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
ER10MY24.067
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
§ 431.12
Financial
support to
MAC/BAC
beneficiary
0.122
0.122
0.122
0.122
0.122
0.122
0.122
0.122
0.122
0.122
1.22
members
(cost will
range per
State
Total
0.682
0.682
0.682
0.682
0.682
0.682
0.682
0.682
0.682
0.682
6.82
Costs will vary depending by State, on how many in person meetings are held, and how many Medicaid beneficiaries are selected for the
MACandBAC
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
40847
Provision Costs (in
millions)
Year
1
Year
2
Year
3
Year
4
Year
5
Year
6
Year
7
Year
8
Year
9
Year
10
§ 441.30l(c)(3)
(Person-Centered
Service Plans)
§ 441.301( C)(7)
(Grievance Systems)
§ 441.302(a)(6)
(Incident
Management
System)
§ 441.302(a)(6)
(Incident
Management System
- Electronic Incident
Management
System)
§
441.311 (b )( 1)(Incide
nt Management
System Assessment)
§ 441.311(e)
(Payment Adequacy
Reporting)
§ 441.302(k) (HCBS
Payment Adequacy)
§441.303(f)(6), §
441.311(d)(l)
(Supporting
Documentation for
HCBS Access)
§441.3 ll(d)(2)(i)
(Additional HCBS
Access Reporting)
Removal of Current
Form 372(S)
Ongoing Reporting
Information
Collection
Form 372(S)
Reporting
Requirement to
include§
441.3 ll(b)(2)-(4)
§441.311(c) (HCBS
Quality Measure Set)
§441.313 (Website
Transparency)
Total*
0.06
0.06
0.06
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
Projecte
d 10year
total*
0.19
1.30
1.30
1.14
1.14
1.14
1.14
1.14
1.14
1.14
1.14
11.68
1.56
1.56
1.56
28.66
28.66
28.66
28.66
28.66
28.66
28.66
205.31
24.6
0
24.6
0
24.6
0
24.60
24.60
0
0
0
0
0
123.00
-
-
-
0.00
0.00
0.00
0.00
0.00
0.00
0.00
0.06
29.8
6
29.8
6
29.8
6
29.86
31.07
31.07
31.07
31.07
31.07
31.07
305.84
0.19
0.19
0.19
0.19
0.19
0.19
0.24
0.24
0.24
0.24
2.12
0.06
0.06
0.06
0.07
0.07
0.07
0.07
0.07
0.07
0.07
0.69
0.71
0.71
0.71
1.07
1.07
1.07
1.07
1.07
1.07
1.07
9.62
-
-
-
(0.89
)
(0.89
)
(0.89
)
(0.89
)
(0.89
)
(0.89
)
(0.89
)
(6.24)
-
-
-
0.23
0.23
0.23
0.23
0.23
0.23
0.23
1.62
1.33
1.33
1.33
1.33
4.58
4.58
4.58
4.58
4.58
4.58
32.75
0.18
0.18
0.18
0.71
0.71
0.71
0.71
0.71
0.71
0.71
5.51
59.8
59.8
5
5
* Totals were calculated based on
may appear slightly different than
The costs displayed in Table 44 are
inclusive of costs anticipated to be
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
59.6
87.00 91.44 66.84 66.88 66.88 66.88 66.88 692.17
9
actual figures, so the total row and projected 10-year total column
had they been calculated based on estimates to the nearest million.
incurred by State Medicaid agencies, the
Federal government, providers,
PO 00000
Frm 00307
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
managed care plans, and beneficiaries.
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
ER10MY24.068
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
TABLE 43: Projected 10-Year Costs for Updates to 441 Subparts G, J, K, and M
40848
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
Table 44 distributes those costs across
these respective entities.
TABLE 44: Projected Distribution of Costs for Updates to 42 CFR 441 Subpart G, J, K, and M
Costs (in millions)
Year
1
Year
2
14.41 14.41
State Costs
Federal
14.41 14.41
Government Costs
Managed Care Plan 1.88
1.88
Costs
HCBS Provider
29.15 29.15
Costs
Beneficiarv costs
0
0
Total*
59.86 59.86
* Totals were calculated based on
may appear slightly different than
c. Fee-for-Service (FFS) Payment Rate
Transparency
The costs associated with the
payment rate transparency proposals are
Year
3
Year
4
Year
5
Year
6
Year
7
Year
8
Year
9
Year
10
14.34
14.34
26.36
26.36
27.75
27.75
15.45
15.45
15.41
15.41
15.41
15.41
15.41
15.41
15.41
15.41
Projected
10-year
total*
175.35
175.35
1.88
1.76
1.47
1.47
1.47
1.47
1.47
1.47
16.20
29.15
32.50
34.09
34.09
34.23
34.23
34.23
34.23
325.03
2.24
0
0
0.37
0.37
0.37
0.37
0.37
0.37
59.70 91.44 66.84 66.88 66.88 66.88 66.88 66.88 692.17
actual figures, so the total row and projected 10-year total column
had they been calculated based on estimates to the nearest million.
wholly associated with information
collection requirements, and as such
those impacts are reflected in the COI
section of this rule. For ease of
reference, and for projection purposes,
we are including those costs here in
Table 45.
TABLE 45: Projected 5-Year State Costs for Updates to 42 CFR 447.203
Removal of current §
447.20
-0.615
-0.615
-0.615
-0.615
-0.615
-3.075
0.516
0.254
0.254
0.254
0.254
1.532
TABLE 46: NAICS Classification of Services and Their Distribution of Costs
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
PO 00000
Frm 00308
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
100 Percent
67 Percent
37 Percent
10MYR2
ER10MY24.070 ER10MY24.071
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Home and Community-Based
Services CBS
Home and Community-Based
Services (HCBS)
Direct Health and Medical
Insurance Carriers 524114
Elderly and Persons with
Disabilities 624120
Home Health Care Services
(621610)
ER10MY24.069
Managed Care Plans
40849
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
Regulatory
Review
§ 431.12
Medical Care
Advisory
Committee
Requirements
§ 441.301(c)(3)
(PersonCentered
Service Plans)
(One-time
Costs) (Tables
4, 5)
§ 441.30l(c)(7)
(Grievance
Systems) (Onetime Costs)
(Table 6)
§441.301(c)(7)
(Grievance
Systems)
(Ongoing
Costs) (Table 7)
§ 441.302(a)(6)
(Incident
Management
System) (Onetime Costs)
(Tables 8, 11)
§ 441.302(a)(6)
(Incident
Management
System)
(Ongoing
Costs) (Tables
9, 10, 12)
§ 441.311(b)(l)
(Incident
Management
System
Assessment)
(Ongoing
Costs) (Table
25)
§ 441.31 l(e)
(Payment
Adequacy
Reporting)
(One-time
Costs) (Tables
13, 15, 17)
§ 441.311(e)
(Payment
Adequacy
VerDate Sep<11>2014
Cost to
States($)
Cost to
Beneficiaries ($)
Cost to
Providers
($)
Cost to
Managed
Care
Plans($)
Costs to
Federal
Government
($)
One Time
Burden
Overall
Total($)
Annual
Burden
Overall
Total($)
19,587.06
39,174.12
-
61,833.66
-
120,594.84
0
790,795
-
-
790,795
-
1,581,590
32,704
-
-
127,650
32,704
193,059
-
1,298,246
-
-
-
l,298,246
2,596,493
-
567,975
-
-
-
567,975
-
1,135,949
62,479,146
-
-
2,712,747
62,479,146
127,671,039
-
12,389,260
-
3,348,678
535,791
12,389,260
-
28,662,989
4,163
-
-
-
4,163
-
425,173
-
116,591,088
l,989,464
425,173
119,430,837
-
60,651
-
30,743,100
203,607
60,652
-
31,068,009
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
PO 00000
Frm 00309
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
ER10MY24.072
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
TABLE 47: One Time and Annual Costs Detailed
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
Reporting)
(Ongoing)
(Tables 15, 16,
18)
§ 44 l.302(k)
(HCBS
Payment
Adequacy)
(One-time
Costs) (Table
33)
§ 44 l.302(k)
(HCBS
Payment
Adequacy)
(Ongoing
Costs) (Tables
34, 36)
§§
441.303(f)(6)
and
441.3ll(d)(l)
(Supporting
Documentation
forHCBS
Access) (Onetime Costs)
(Table 19)
§§
44 l .303(f)(6)
and
441.3ll(d)(l)
(Supporting
Documentation
forHCBS
Access)
(Ongoing
Costs) (Table
20)
§
441.3 l l(d)(2)(i)
(HCBS Access
Reporting)
(One-time
Costs) (Tables
21, 23)
§
441.31 l(d)(2)(i)
(HCBS Access
Reporting)
(Ongoing
Costs) (Tables
22, 24)
Removal of
Current Form
372(S) Ongoing
Reporting
Information
Collection
(Ongoing
Costs)
(Table 26)
VerDate Sep<11>2014
584,648
-
-
-
584,648
1,169,295
-
50,849
-
136,452
-
50,849
-
238,150
89,388
-
-
-
89,388
178,777
-
36,389
-
-
-
36,389
-
72,778
419,977
-
-
1,305,923
419,977
2,140,427
-
170,431
-
-
726,983
170,431
-
1,067,845
(445,725)
-
-
-
(445,725)
-
(891,450)
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
PO 00000
Frm 00310
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
ER10MY24.073
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
40850
40851
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
Form 372(8)
Reporting
Requirement to
include§
441.311(b)(2)
through (4)
(Ongoing
Costs)
(Table 27)
§ 441.311(c)
(HCBS Quality
Measure Set)
(One-time
Costs) (Table
28)
§ 441.31l(c)
(HCBS Quality
Measure Set)
(Ongoing
Costs) (Tables
29, 30)
§ 441.313
(Website
Transparency)
(One-time
Costs) (Table
31)
§ 441.313
(Website
Transparency)
(Ongoing
Costs) (Table
32)
Removal of§
447.203(b)(l)
through (6)
(Removal of
115,976
-
-
-
115,976
-
231,952
2,650,915
-
-
-
2,650,915
5,302,480
-
2,101,310
372,780
-
-
2,101,310
-
4,575,400
273,693
-
-
-
273,693
547,385
-
354,680
-
-
-
354,680
-
709,359
(307,614)
-
-
-
307,614)
(615,228)
-
23,453
-
-
-
23,453
39,195
7,712
87,103
-
-
-
87,103
-
174,206
145,386
-
-
-
145,386
267,934
22,837
40,678
-
-
-
40,678
-
81,356
92,716
-
-
-
92,716
-
185,432
AMRP)
§ 447.203(b)(l)
(Rate
transparency)
(Table 36)
§ 447.203(b)(2)
(Rate analysis)
(Table 37)
§ 447.203(b)(6)
(advisory
group) (Table
38)
§ 447.203(c)(l)
(initial State
analysis) (Table
40)
§ 447.203(c)(2)
(additional
State analysis)
(Table 40)
BILLING CODE 4120–01–C
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
PO 00000
Frm 00311
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
ER10MY24.074
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
(Table 36)
40852
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
3. Transfers
Transfers are payments between
persons or groups that do not directly
affect the total resources available to
society. They are a benefit to recipients
and a cost to payers, with zero net
effects. Because this rule proposes
changes to requirements to State
agencies without changes to payments
from Federal to State governments, the
transfer impact is null, and cost impacts
are reflected in the other sections of this
rule.
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
4. Regulatory Review Cost Estimation
If regulations impose administrative
costs on private entities, such as the
time needed to read and interpret this
proposed or final rule, we should
estimate the cost associated with
regulatory review. There is uncertainty
involved with accurately quantifying
the number of entities that will review
the rule. However, for the purposes of
this final rule we assume that on
average, each of the 51 affected State
Medicaid agencies will have one
contractor per State review this final
rule. This average assumes that some
State Medicaid agencies may use the
same contractor, others may use
multiple contractors to address the
various provisions within this final rule,
and some State Medicaid agencies may
perform the review in-house. We also
assume that each affected managed care
plan (estimated in the COI section to be
161 managed care plans) will review the
final rule. Lastly, we assume that an
average of two advocacy or interest
group representatives from each State
will review this final rule. In total, we
are estimating that 314 entities (51 State
Contractors + 161 Managed Care Plans
+ 102 Advocacy and Interest Groups)
will review this final rule. We
acknowledge that this assumption may
understate or overstate the costs of
reviewing this rule. We did not receive
public comment on this issue.
We also recognize that different types
of entities are in many cases affected by
mutually exclusive sections of this final
rule, and therefore for the purposes of
our estimate we assume that each
reviewer reads approximately 50
percent of the rule. We solicited
comments on this assumption.
We did not receive public comments
on this provision, and therefore, we are
finalizing as proposed.
Using the wage information from the
Bureau of Labor Statistics, https://
www.bls.gov/oes/current/oes_nat.htm,
we are considering medical and health
service managers (Code 11–9111), as
including the 51 State Contractors, 161
Managed Care Plans and 102 Advocacy
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
and Interest Groups identified in this
final rule, and we estimate that the cost
of reviewing this rule is $123.06 per
hour, including fringe benefits and other
indirect costs. Assuming an average
reading speed of 250 words per minute,
we estimate that it will take
approximately 6.67 hours for each
individual to review half of this final
rule ([200,000 words × 0.5]/250 words
per minute/60 minutes per hour). For
each entity that reviews the rule, the
estimated cost is $820.40 (6.67 hours ×
$123.06). Therefore, we estimate that
the total one-time cost of reviewing this
regulation is $257,605.60 ($820.40 per
individual review × 314 reviewers).
D. Alternatives Considered
1. Medicaid Advisory Committee (MAC)
In determining the best way to
promote beneficiary and interested
parties’ voices in State Medicaid
program decision making and
administration, we considered several
ways of revising the MCAC structure
and administration. We considered
setting minimum benchmarks for each
category of all types of MAC members,
but we viewed it as too restrictive. We
ultimately concluded that only setting
minimum benchmarks (at least 25
percent) for beneficiary representation
on the MAC and requiring
representation from the other MAC
categories would give States maximum
flexibility in determining the exact
composition of their MAC. However, we
understand that some States may want
us to set specific thresholds for each
MAC category rather than determine
those categories on their own.
We also considered having not having
a separate BAC, but we ultimately
determined that requiring States to
establish a separate BAC assures that
there is a dedicated forum for States to
receive beneficiary input outside of the
MAC. In the MAC setting, a beneficiary
might not feel as comfortable speaking
up among other Medicaid program
interested parties. The BAC also
provides an opportunity for
beneficiaries to focus on the issues that
are most important to them, and bring
those issues to the MAC.
Finally, we also considered setting
specific topics for the MAC to provide
feedback. However, due to the range of
issues specific to each State’s Medicaid
program, we determined it was most
conducive to allow States work with
their MAC to identify which topics and
priority issues would benefit from
interested parties’ input.
PO 00000
Frm 00312
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
2. Home and Community-Based
Services (HCBS)
a. Person-Centered Service Plans,
Grievance Systems, Incident
Management Systems
We considered whether to codify the
existing 86 percent performance level
that was outlined in the 2014 guidance
for both person-centered service plans
and incident management systems. We
did not choose this alternative due to
feedback from States and other
interested parties of the importance of
these requirements, as well as concerns
that an 86 percent performance level
may not be sufficient to demonstrate
that a State has met the requirements.
We considered whether to apply these
requirements to section 1905(a)
‘‘medical assistance’’ State Plan
personal care, home health, and case
management services. We decided
against this alternative based on State
feedback that they do not have the same
data collection and reporting
capabilities for these services as they do
for HCBS delivered under sections
1915(c), (i), (j), and (k) of the Act and
because of differences between the
requirements of those authorities and
section 1905(a) State Plan benefits.
Finally, we considered allowing a
good cause exception to the minimum
performance level reporting
requirements to both the personcentered service plan and the incident
management system. We decided
against this alternative because the 90
percent performance level is intended to
account for various scenarios that might
impact a State’s ability to achieve these
performance levels. Furthermore, there
are existing disaster authorities that
States could utilize to request a waiver
of these requirements in the event of a
public health emergency or a disaster.
b. HCBS Payment Adequacy and
Payment Adequacy Reporting
We considered several alternatives to
this final rule. We considered whether
the requirements at § 441.302(k) relating
to the percent of payments going to the
direct care workforce should apply to
other services, such as adult day health,
habilitation, day treatment or other
partial hospitalization services,
psychosocial rehabilitation services, and
clinic services for individuals with
mental illness. As discussed in section
II.B.5, we decided against these
alternatives because the services
(homemaker, home health aide, and
personal care) are those for which the
vast majority of payment should be
comprised of compensation for direct
care workers and for which there will be
low facility or other indirect costs. We
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
also did not include other services for
which the percentage might be variable
due to the diversity of services included
or for which worker compensation will
be reasonably expected to comprise only
a small percentage of the payment.
As an alternative to the payment
adequacy reporting requirement
finalized at § 441.311(e), we considered
whether other reporting requirements
such as a State assurance or attestation
or an alternative frequency of reporting
could be used to collect data from States
regarding the percent of Medicaid
payments is spent on compensation to
direct care workers. We determined,
upon reviewing public comment, that
collecting the data is necessary to
promote transparency and inform future
policymaking. We considered whether
to require reporting at the delivery
system, HCBS waiver program, or
population level but decided against
additional levels of reporting because it
will increase reporting burden for States
without providing additional
information necessary for demonstrating
that Medicaid payments are being
allocated efficiently in accordance with
section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act.
We considered whether to apply both
§ 441.302(k) and the reporting
requirements finalized at § 441.311 to
section 1905(a) ‘‘medical assistance’’
State Plan personal care and home
health services, but decided not to,
largely due to concerns that the
statutory and regulatory requirements
for section 1905(a) services are different
from the statutory and regulatory
requirements for section 1915 services;
these differences will require additional
consideration and rulemaking should
the requirements be applied to section
1905(a) services. States also provided
feedback that, for the purposes of
§ 441.311, they do not have the same
data collection and reporting
capabilities for these services as they do
for sections 1915(c), (i), (j), and (k)
HCBS.
c. Supporting Documentation
Requirements
No alternatives were considered.
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
d. HCBS Quality Measure Set Reporting
We considered giving States the
flexibility to choose which measures
they will stratify and by what factors but
decided against this alternative as
discussed in the Mandatory Medicaid
and CHIP Core Set Reporting proposed
rule (see 87 FR 51313). We believe that
consistent measurement of differences
in health outcomes between different
groups of beneficiaries is essential to
identifying areas for intervention and
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
evaluation of those interventions.419
Consistency could not be achieved if
each State made its own decisions about
which data, it would stratify and by
what factors.
3. Payment Rate Transparency
In developing this final rule, we
considered multiple alternatives. We
considered not proposing this rule and
maintaining the status quo under
current regulations at § 447.203 and 204.
However, as noted throughout the
Background and Provisions sections of
this rule, since the 2011 proposed rule,
we have received concerns from
interested parties, including State
agencies, about the administrative
burden of completing AMRPs and
questioning whether they are the most
efficient way to determine access to
care. These comments expressed
particular concern about the AMRPs’
value when they are required to
accompany a proposed nominal rate
reduction or restructuring, or where
proposed rate changes are made via
application of a previously approved
rate methodology. At the same time, and
as we have discussed, in Armstrong v.
Exceptional Child Care, Inc., 575 U.S.
320 (2015), the Supreme Court held that
Medicaid providers and beneficiaries do
not have private right of action against
States to challenge State-determined
Medicaid payment rates in Federal
courts. This decision made our
administrative review of SPAs
proposing to reduce or restructure
payment rates all the more important.
For both of these reasons, this rule
includes requirements that will create
an alternative process that both reduces
the administrative burden on States and
standardizes and strengthens our review
of payment rate reductions or payment
restructurings to ensure compliance
with section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act.
We considered, but did not propose,
adopting a complaint-driven process or
developing a Federal review process for
assessing access to care concerns.
Although such processes could further
our goals of ensuring compliance with
the access requirement in section
1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act, we concluded
similar effects can be achieved through
methods that did not require the
significant amount of Federal effort that
will be necessary to develop either or
both of these processes. Additionally, a
complaint-driven process will not
necessarily ensure a balanced review of
State-proposed payment rate or payment
419 Schlotthauer AE, Badler A, Cook SC, Perez DJ,
Chin MH. Evaluating Interventions to Reduce
Health Care Disparities: An RWJF Program. Health
Aff (Millwood). 2008;27(2):568–573.
PO 00000
Frm 00313
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40853
structure changes, and it is possible that
a large volume of complaints could be
submitted with the intended or
unintended effect of hampering State
Medicaid program operations.
Therefore, the impact of adopting a
complaint-driven process or developing
a Federal review process for assessing
access to care concerns may be
negligible given existing processes.
Instead, we believe that relying on
existing processes that States are already
engaged in, such as the ongoing
provider and beneficiary feedback
channels under paragraph (b)(7) in
§ 447.203 and the public process
requirement for States submitting a SPA
that are required to reduce or restructure
Medicaid service payments in § 447.204,
will be more effective than creating a
new process. While we are relying on
existing public feedback channels and
processes that States are already
engaged in, we solicited public
comment regarding our alternative
consideration to adopting a complaint
driven process or developing a Federal
review process for assessing access to
care concerns.
We also considered numerous
variations of the individual provisions
of the final rule. We considered, but did
not propose, maintaining the benefits
outlined in the current
§ 447.203(b)(5)(ii)(A) through (H) or
requiring all mandatory Medicaid
benefit categories be included in the
comparative payment rate analysis
proposed under § 447.203(b)(2). We also
considered, but did not propose,
including inpatient hospital behavioral
health services and covered outpatient
drugs including professional dispensing
fees as additional categories of services
subject to the comparative payment rate
analysis proposed under § 447.203(b)(2).
We considered, but did not propose,
requiring States whose Medicaid
payment rates vary by provider type,
calculate an average Medicaid payment
rate of all providers for each E/M CPT
code subject to the comparative
payment rate analysis. We also
considered, but did not propose,
different points of comparison other
than Medicare under the comparative
payment rate analysis proposed under
§ 447.203(b)(2) or using a peer payment
rate benchmarking approach for benefit
categories where Medicaid is the only or
primary payer, or there is no
comparable Medicare rate under the
comparative payment rate analysis
proposed under § 447.203(b)(2) and (3).
We considered, but did not propose,
varying timeframes for the comparative
payment rate analysis proposed under
§ 447.203(b)(2). We also considered not
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
40854
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
proposing the payment rate
transparency aspect of this rule
proposed under § 447.203(b)(1), leaving
the comparative payment rate analysis
to replace the AMRP process as
proposed under § 447.203(b)(2). With
regard to the proposal in § 447.203(c),
we considered, but did not propose,
establishing alternative circumstances
from those described in the 2017 SMDL
for identifying nominal payment rate
adjustments, establishing a minimum
set of required data for States above 80
percent of the most recent Medicare
payment rates after the proposed
reduction or restructuring, using
measures that are different from the
proposed measures that would be
reflected in the forthcoming template,
allowing States to use their own
unstructured data for States that fail to
meet all three criteria in § 447.203(c)(1),
and CMS producing and publishing the
comparative payment rate analysis
proposed in § 447.203(b).
We considered, but did not propose,
maintaining the benefits outlined in the
current § 447.203(b)(5)(ii)(A) through
(H) or requiring all mandatory Medicaid
benefit categories be included in the
comparative payment rate analysis
proposed under § 447.203(b)(2).
Maintaining the benefits in previous
§ 447.203(b)(5)(ii)(A) through (H) might
have simplified the transition from the
AMRP process to the payment rate
transparency and comparative payment
rate analysis requirements. However,
our experience implementing the 2015
final rule with comment period, as well
as interested parties’ and States’
feedback about the AMRP process,
encouraged us to review and reconsider
the current list of benefits subject to the
AMRP process under current
regulations § 447.203(b)(5)(ii)(A)
through (H) to determine where we
could decrease the level of effort
required from States while still allowing
ourselves an opportunity to review for
access concerns. During our review of
the current list of benefits under
§ 447.203(b)(5)(ii)(A) through (H), we
considered, but did not propose,
requiring all mandatory Medicaid
benefit categories be included in the
comparative payment rate analysis.
However, when considering the existing
burden of the AMRP process under
current § 447.203)(b), we believed that
expanding the list of benefits to include
under proposed § 447.203(b) and (c)
would not support our goal to develop
a new access strategy that aims to
balance Federal and State
administrative burden with our shared
obligation to ensure compliance with
section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act. As
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
previously noted in section II. of this
rule, we solicited public comment on
primary care services, obstetrical and
gynecological services, outpatient
behavioral health services, and personal
care, home health aide, and homemaker
services provided by individual
providers and providers employed by an
agency as the proposed categories of
services subject to the comparative
payment rate analysis requirements in
proposed § 447.203(b)(2)(i).
Additionally, we solicited public
comment regarding our alternative
consideration to propose maintaining
the benefits outlined in the current
§ 447.203(b)(5)(ii)(A) through (H) or
propose requiring all mandatory
Medicaid benefit categories.
We considered, but did not propose,
requiring States whose Medicaid
payment rates vary by provider type to
calculate an average Medicaid payment
rate of all provider types for each E/M
CPT code subject to the comparative
payment rate analysis. Rather than
proposing States distinguish their
Medicaid payment rates by each
provider type in the comparative
payment rate analysis, we considered
proposing States calculate an average
Medicaid payment rate of all providers
for each E/M CPT code. This
consideration would have simplified the
comparative payment rate analysis
because States would include a single,
average Medicaid payment rate amount
and only need to separately analyze
their Medicaid payment rates for
services delivered to pediatric and adult
populations, if they varied. However,
calculating an average for the Medicaid
payment rate has limitations, including
sensitivity to extreme values and
inconsistent characterizations of the
payment rate between Medicaid and
Medicare. In this rule, we propose to
characterize the Medicare payment rate
as the non-facility payment rate listed
on the Medicare PFS for the E/M CPT/
HCPCS codes subject to the comparative
payment rate analysis. If we were to
propose the Medicaid payment rate be
calculated as an average Medicaid
payment rate of all provider types for
the same E/M CPT/HCPCS code, then
States’ calculated average Medicaid
payment rate could include a wide
variety of provider types, from a single
payment rate for physicians to an
average of three payment rates for
physicians, physician assistants, and
nurse practitioners. This wide variation
in how the Medicaid payment rate is
calculated among States would provide
a less meaningful comparative payment
rate analysis to Medicare. The extremes
and outliers that would be diluted by
PO 00000
Frm 00314
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
using an average are not necessarily the
same for both Medicaid and Medicare,
so even if both sides of the comparison
used an average, we would not be able
to look more closely at specific large
differences between the respective rates.
As previously noted in section II. of this
final rule, we solicited public comment
on the proposed characterization of the
Medicaid payment rate, which accounts
for variation in payment rates for
pediatric and adult populations and
distinguishes payment rates by provider
type, in the comparative payment rate
analysis. Additionally, we solicited
public comment regarding our
alternative consideration to propose
requiring States whose Medicaid
payment rates vary by provider type to
calculate an average Medicaid payment
rate of all provider types for each E/M
CPT code subject to the comparative
payment rate analysis.
We considered, but did not propose,
requiring States to use a different point
of comparison, other than Medicare, for
certain services where Medicare is not
a consistent or primary payer, such as
pediatric dental services or HCBS. The
impact of requiring a different point of
comparison, other than Medicare,
would have carried forward the current
regulation requiring States to ‘‘include
an analysis of the percentage
comparison of Medicaid payment rates
to other public (including, as practical,
provider payment rates in Medicaid
managed care) and private health
insurer payment rates within geographic
areas of the State’’ in their AMRPs. As
previously discussed in this rule, FFS
States expressed concerns following the
2015 final rule with comment period
that private payer payment rates were
proprietary information and not
available to them, therefore, the
challenges to comply with current
regulations would be carried forward
into the proposed rule. Therefore, we
also considered, but did not propose,
using various payment rate
benchmarking approaches for benefit
categories where Medicaid is the only or
primary payer, or there is no
comparable Medicare rate. As
previously noted in section II. of this
final rule, we considered benchmarks
based on national Medicaid payment
averages for certain services included
within the LTSS benefit category,
benchmarks that use average daily rates
for certain HCBS that can be compared
to other State Medicaid programs, and
benchmarks that use payment data
specific to the State’s Medicaid program
for similarly situated services so that the
service payments may be benchmarked
to national average. Notwithstanding the
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
previously described limitations of the
alternative considered for situations
where differences between Medicaid
and Medicare coverage and payment
exists, we solicited public comment
regarding our alternative consideration
to propose States use a different point
of comparison, other than Medicare, for
certain services where Medicare is not
a consistent or primary payer or States
use a payment rate benchmarking
approach for benefit categories where
Medicaid is the only or primary payer,
or there is no comparable Medicare rate.
Specifically, we solicited public
comment on the feasibility and burden
on States to implement these
alternatives considered for the proposed
comparative payment rate analysis. For
any comparison to other State Medicaid
programs or to a national benchmark,
we also solicited public comment on the
appropriate role for such a comparison
in the context of the statutory
requirement to consider beneficiary
access relative to the general population
in the geographic area.
We considered, but did not propose,
various timeframes for the comparative
payment rate analysis, including annual
(every year), triennial (every 3 years), or
quinquennial (every 5 years) updates
after the initial effective date of January
1, 2026. As noted in section II. of this
final rule, we did not propose an annual
timeframe as we believed that an annual
update requirement was too frequent
due to many States’ biennial legislative
sessions that provide the Medicaid
agency with authority it make Medicaid
payment rate changes as well as create
more or maintain a similar level of
administrative burden of the AMRPs.
While some States do have annual
legislative sessions and may have
annual Medicaid payment rate changes,
we believed that proposing annual
updates solely for the purpose of
capturing payment rate changes in
States that with annual legislative
sessions would be overly burdensome
and duplicative for States with biennial
legislative sessions who do not have
new, updated Medicaid payment rates
to update in their comparative payment
rate analysis. Therefore, for numerous
States with biennial legislative sessions,
the resulting analysis would likely not
vary significantly from year to year.
Additionally, the comparative payment
rate analysis proposes to use the most
recently published Medicare payment
rates and we are cognizant that
Medicare payment rate updates often
occur on a quarterly basis. While
Medicare often increases rates by the
market basket inflation amount, as well
as through rulemaking, it does not
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
always result in payment increases for
providers.420 421 We also considered, but
did not propose, maintaining the
triennial (every 3 years) timeframe
currently in regulation, because we
thought it necessary to make significant
changes to the non-SPA-related reported
in § 447.203(b) that would represent a
significant departure from the initial
AMRP process in the 2015 final rule
with comment in the current
§ 447.203(b)(1) and this new proposed
approach did not lend itself to the
triennial timeframe of the current AMRP
process. Lastly, we considered, but did
not propose, the comparative payment
rate analysis be published on a
quinquennial basis (every 5 years),
because this timeframe was too
infrequent for the comparative payment
rate analysis to provide meaningful,
actionable information. As previously
noted in section II. of this rule, we are
solicited public comment on the
proposed timeframe for the initial
publication and biennial update
requirements of the comparative
payment rate analysis as proposed in
§ 447.203(b)(4). Additionally, we
solicited public comment regarding our
alternative consideration to propose an
annual, triennial, or quinquennial
timeframe for the updating the
comparative payment rate analysis after
the initial effective date.
We considered, but did not propose,
requiring the comparative payment rate
analysis be submitted directly to us, as
this would not achieve the public
transparency goal of the proposed rule.
As proposed in § 447.203(b)(3), we are
requiring States develop and publish
their Medicaid comparative payment
rate analysis on the State’s website in an
accessible and easily understandable
format. This proposal is
methodologically similar to the current
regulation, which requires AMRPs be
submitted to us and publicly published
by the State and CMS. We found this
420 Although ‘‘market basket’’ technically
describes the mix of goods and services used in
providing health care, this term is also commonly
used to denote the input price index (that is, cost
category weights and price proxies combined)
derived from that market basket. Accordingly, the
term ‘‘market basket’’ as used in this document
refers to the various CMS input price indexes. A
CMS market basket is described as a fixed-weight,
Laspeyres-type index because it measures the
change in price, over time, of the same mix of goods
and services purchased in the base period. FAQ—
Medicare Market Basket Definitions and General
Information, updated May 2022. https://
www.cms.gov/Research-Statistics-Data-andSystems/Statistics-Trends-and-Reports/
MedicareProgramRatesStats/Downloads/info.pdf
Accessed January 4, 2023.
421 Medicare Unit Cost Increases Reported as of
April 2022. https://www.cms.gov/files/document/
ffs-trends-2021-2023-april-2022.pdf. Accessed
January 4, 2023.
PO 00000
Frm 00315
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40855
aspect of the rule to be an effective
method of publicly sharing access to
care information, as well as ensuring
State compliance. As previously noted
in section II. of this rule, we solicited
public comment on the proposed
requirement for States to publish their
Medicaid FFS payment rates for all
services and comparative payment rate
analysis and payment rate disclosure
information on the State’s website under
the proposed § 447.203(b)(1) and (3),
respectively. Additionally, we solicited
public comment regarding our
alternative consideration to propose
requiring the comparative payment rate
analysis be submitted directly to us and
not publicly published.
We considered, but did not propose,
that we produce and publish the
comparative payment rate analysis
proposed in § 447.203(b)(2) through (3)
whereby we would develop reports for
all States demonstrating Medicaid
payment rates for all services or a subset
for Medicaid services as a percentage of
Medicare payment rates. Shifting
responsibility for this analysis would
remove some burden from States and
allow us to do a full cross-comparison
of State Medicaid payment rates to
Medicare payment rates, while ensuring
a consistent rate analysis across States.
However, this approach would rely on
T–MSIS data, which would increase the
lag in available data due to the need for
CMS to prepare it, and introduce
uncertainty into the results due to
ongoing variation in State T–MSIS data
quality and completeness. Although our
proposed approach still relies on Statesupplied data, they are able to perform
the comparisons on their own regardless
of the readiness and compliance of any
other State. Furthermore, we would
need to validate its results with States
and work through any discrepancies.
Ultimately, we determined the
increased lag time and uncertainty in
results would diminish the utility of the
rate analyses proposed in § 447.203(b),
if performed by us instead of the States,
to support our oversight of State
compliance with section 1902(a)(30)(A)
of the Act. As previously noted in
section II. of this rule, we solicited
public comment on our proposal to
require States to develop and publish a
comparative payment rate analysis and
payment rate disclosure as proposed in
§ 447.203(b)(2) and (3). Additionally, we
solicited public comment regarding our
alternative consideration to propose that
we produce and publish the
comparative payment rate analysis and
payment rate disclosure proposed in
§ 447.203(b)(2) and (3) for all States.
We considered, but did not propose,
establishing alternative circumstances
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
40856
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
from the 2017 SMDL for identifying
nominal payment rate adjustments
when States propose a rate reduction or
restructuring. We previously outlined in
SMDL #17–004 several circumstances
where Medicaid payment rate
reductions generally would not be
expected to diminish access: reductions
necessary to implement CMS Federal
Medicaid payment requirements;
reductions that will be implemented as
a decrease to all codes within a service
category or targeted to certain codes, but
for services where the payment rates
continue to be at or above Medicare
and/or average commercial rates; and
reductions that result from changes
implemented through the Medicare
program, where a State’s service
payment methodology adheres to the
Medicare methodology. This final rule
will not codify this list of policies that
may produce payment rate reductions
unlikely to diminish access to
Medicaid-covered services. We
considered, but did not propose, setting
a different percentage for the criteria
that State Medicaid rates for each
benefit category affected by the
reductions or restructurings must, in the
aggregate, be at or above 80 percent of
the most recent comparable Medicare
payment rates after the proposed
reduction or restructuring as a
threshold. We considered setting the
threshold at 100 percent of Medicare to
remain consistent with the 2017 SMDL.
However, after conducting a literature
review, we determined that 80 percent
of the most recently published Medicare
payment rates is currently the most
reliable benchmark of whether a rate
reduction or restructuring is likely to
diminish access to care. We also
considered, but did not propose, setting
a different percentage for the criteria
that proposed reductions or
restructurings result in no more than 4
percent reduction of overall FFS
Medicaid expenditures for a benefit
category. We considered a variety of
percentages, but determined that
codifying the 4 percent threshold from
the 2017 SMDL and proposed in the
2018 proposed rule 422 was the best
option based on our experience
implementing this established policy
after the publication of the 2017 SMDL.
Additionally, we received a significant
number of comments in the 2018
proposed rule from State Medicaid
agencies that signaled strong support for
this percentage threshold as a
meaningful threshold for future rate
changes.423 424 425 Lastly, we considered,
422 83
FR 12696 at 12705.
Department of Social Services,
Comment Letter on 2018 Proposed Rule (May 21,
423 Connecticut
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
but did not propose, defining what is
meant by ‘‘significant’’ access concerns
received through the public process
described in § 447.204 when a State
proposes a rate reduction or
restructuring. As proposed, we expect
State Medicaid agencies to make
reasonable determinations about which
access concerns are significant when
raised through the public process, and
as part of our SPA review, may request
additional information from the State to
better understand any access concerns
that have been raised through public
processes and whether they are
significant. Based on our experience
implementing the policies outlined in
the 2017 SMDL and a literature review
of relevant research about payment rate
sufficiency, we proposed criteria for
States proposing rate reductions or
restructurings that would reduce the
SPA submission requirements when
those criteria are met. Additionally,
each of these thresholds is one of a
three-part test where States must meet
all three, or else it will trigger a
requirement for additional State
analysis of the rate reduction or
restructuring. As previously noted in
section II. of this rule, we solicited
public comment on the streamlined
criteria proposed in § 447.203(c)(1).
Additionally, we solicited public
comment regarding our alternative
consideration to propose establishing
alternative circumstances from the 2017
SMDL for identifying nominal payment
rate adjustments when States propose a
rate reduction or restructuring.
We considered, but did not propose,
establishing a minimum set of required
data for States above 80 percent of the
most recent Medicare payment rates
after the proposed reduction or
restructuring regardless of the remaining
criteria. This requirement would
minimize administrative burden on
States by not requiring States submit all
items in § 447.203(c)(2) and establish a
baseline for comparison if future rate
reductions or restructurings are
proposed that may lower the State’s
payment rates below 80 percent of the
most recent Medicare payment rates.
However, we determined that, while we
believe 80 percent to be an effective
threshold point, we did not want that to
serve as the only trigger for additional
2018), https://downloads.regulations.gov/CMS2018-0031-0021/attachment_1.pdf.
424 California Department of Health Care Services,
Comment Letter on 2018 Proposed Rule (May 24,
2018), https://downloads.regulations.gov/CMS2018-0031-0090/attachment_1.pdf.
425 Florida Agency for Health Care
Administration, Comment Letter on 2018 Proposed
Rule (May 24, 2018), https://downloads.
regulations.gov/CMS-2018-0031-0083/attachment_
1.pdf.
PO 00000
Frm 00316
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
analysis. As proposed, only States that
do not meet all of the proposed
requirements in § 447.203(c)(1) will
have to submit the required data
outlined in § 447.203(c)(2). As
previously noted in section II. of this
rule, we solicited public comment on
our proposal to require all three criteria
described in § 447.203(c)(1)(i) through
(iii) for assessing the effect of a
proposed payment rate reduction or
payment restructuring on access to care.
Additionally, we solicited public
comment regarding our alternative
consideration to propose establishing
alternative circumstances from the 2017
SMDL for identifying nominal payment
rate adjustments when States propose a
rate reduction or restructuring.
We considered, but did not propose,
allowing States to use their own
unstructured data, similar to the AMRP
process, for States that fail to meet all
three criteria in § 447.203(c)(1), thereby
eliminating the need for us to develop
a template for States proposing rate
reductions or restructurings. While this
would reduce administrative burden on
us and provide States with flexibility in
determining relevant data for complying
with statutory and regulatory
requirements, we received feedback
after the 2015 final rule with comment
period that States found developing an
AMRP from scratch with minimal
Federal guidelines a challenging task
and other interested parties noted that
States had too much discretion in
documenting sufficient access to care.
Therefore, we proposed developing a
template to support State analyses of
rate reduction or restructuring SPAs that
fail to meet the criteria in
§ 447.203(c)(1). As noted elsewhere in
the preamble, we are releasing
subregulatory guidance, including a
template to support completion of the
analysis that would be required under
paragraph (c)(2), alongside this final
rule. We also anticipate working
directly with States through the SPA
review process to ensure compliance
with section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act.
Additionally, we solicited public
comment regarding our alternative
consideration to propose allowing States
to use their own unstructured data,
similar to the AMRP process, for States
that fail to meet all three criteria in
§ 447.203(c)(1).
After careful consideration, we
ultimately determined that the
requirements in proposed § 447.203(b)
and (c) would strike a more optimal
balance between alleviating State and
Federal administrative burden, while
ensuring a transparent, data-driven, and
consistent approach to States’
implementation and our oversight of
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
State compliance with the access
requirement in section 1902(a)(30)(A) of
the Act.
We considered finalizing the payment
rate transparency provisions under
447.203(b)(1) as proposed, but in
response to commenter concerns about
the requirement to breakdown bundled
payment rates into constituent services
and rates, we added regulatory language
to provide States with flexibility in
complying with the payment rate
transparency publication requirements
when individual rates for constituent
services within a State’s bundle
payment rate do not exist. Specifically,
we added the following language:
‘‘unless this information is not
reasonably available’’ to the requirement
that ‘‘in the case of a bundled or similar
payment methodology’’ States must
‘‘identify each constituent service
included within the rate and how much
of the bundled payment is allocated to
each constituent service under the
State’s methodology.’’ We also clarified
in this final rule through a previous
comment response that facility payment
rates (for example, provider-specific
rates and per diem rates) are not
considered to be bundled payment rates
and are not subject to the payment rate
transparency provisions. We believe this
additional regulatory language and
clarification will reduce administrative
burden on States by narrowing the
scope of bundled payment rates subject
to the payment rate transparency
requirements. While we still believe this
requirement is necessary to ensure
maximum transparency of payment
rates in the case of bundled fee schedule
payment rates, it is also necessary to
account for circumstances where a State
does not have information available to
comply with this regulatory
requirement.
We considered finalizing the payment
rate transparency provisions under
447.203(b)(1) as proposed, but in
response to commenter concerns about
requiring States with prospective
effective dates to publish rates that are
not yet in effect, we added regulatory
language to address this circumstance.
Specifically, the regulation now states
that the agency is required to include
the date the payment rates were last
updated on the State Medicaid agency’s
website and to ensure these data are
kept current, where any necessary
update must be made no later than
either 1 month following the date of
CMS approval of the State plan
amendment, section 1915(c) HCBS
waiver amendment, or similar
amendment revising the provider
payment rate or methodology, or 1
month following the effective date of the
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
approved amendment, whichever date
occurs latest. If we finalized the
regulatory language as proposed, then
States would be required to update their
payment rate transparency publications
with payment rates that are not yet in
effect, and this would not align with our
transparency efforts to ensure a States’
payment rate transparency publication
is as current as possible, and accurate
once published.
We considered finalizing the payment
rate transparency provisions under
§ 447.203(b)(1) with a requirement to
organize the payment rate transparency
publication by CPT/HCPCS code,
similar to the comparative payment rate
analysis, but in response to commenter
concerns about administrative burden
on States to comply with the provisions
as proposed, we did not require the
payment rate transparency publication
to be organized in this manner. While
we still require both the payment rate
transparency publication and
comparative payment rate analysis to be
organized in such a way that a member
of the public can readily determine the
amount that Medicaid would pay for the
service, requiring the publication to be
organized by CPT/HCPCS code would
create substantial burden for States that
do not current organize their payment
rates in this manner as all fee schedule
payment rates are subject to this
provision. By not requiring the payment
rate transparency publication to be
organized a particular way, we are
providing States with the flexibility to
use existing fee schedule publications
for compliance with the regulations
finalized in this rule.
We considered, but did not finalize,
an increase to the 80 percent of
Medicare threshold in § 447.203(c)(1)(i)
to 100 percent of Medicare as suggested
by some of the commenters. Taking
such an action would have increased
the threshold for States to qualify for the
streamlined review process and
increased administrative burden on the
States. We ultimately decided not to
pursue this alternative because this
threshold was not intended to provide
absolute assurance that a provider
would participate in the Medicaid
program. Instead, we are using 80
percent as a threshold to determine the
level of analysis and information a State
must provide to CMS to support
consistency with section 1902(a)(30)(A)
of the Act and allow CMS to focus its
review efforts on proposals at the
highest risk of access concerns. We also
note that the 80 percent threshold was
just one of three criteria that must be
met for a streamlined review. Our stated
intention in this rule was that we were
intending this to provide States with
PO 00000
Frm 00317
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40857
relief from the more burdensome AMRP
process defined in the 2015 final rule
with comment period, and establishing
a higher threshold would not fit within
that stated purpose.
We received public comments on
several of these alternatives, but many
of those comments blended with
discussion of the relevant provisions, so
in general our responses to those
comments are contained in section II.C.
However, we did receive some
comments on alternatives not already
addressed in this final rule.
Comment: One commenter responded
to our decision not to propose adopting
a complaint-driven process or
developing a Federal review process for
assessing access to care concerns. That
commenter stated that CMS’ reliance on
existing State processes, such as the
ongoing provider and beneficiary
feedback channels and the public
process requirement for States
submitting a SPA that proposed to
reduce or restructure Medicaid services
would be acceptable if the existing
processes are responsive and delivered
timely action when concerns are raised.
Response: We agree with the
commenter regarding existing processes
being responsive and timely. As
described in the proposed rule, these
processes must meet requirements
under newly finalized § 447.203(c)(4)
(which includes existing requirements
from the 2015 final rule with comment
period that was relocated from
§ 447.203(b)(7)), as well as § 447.204
(which includes existing requirements
from the 2015 final rule with comment
period with confirming changes to align
with this final rule). These existing
regulatory requirements require States
have ongoing mechanisms for
beneficiary and provider input on
access to care in which they promptly
respond to public input and maintain a
record the public input, as well as how
the State responded. While this is a
general requirement for ensuring States
have a method for collecting access to
care issues from the public, these
requirements also specifically apply to
States proposing a rate reduction or
restructuring.
Comment: One commenter agreed
with CMS’ decision to exclude
outpatient drugs from the proposed
comparative payment rate analysis
under § 447.203(b)(2) noting that, in
addition to the reasons CMS outlined in
the proposed rule, the cost of outpatient
drugs can change weekly and there are
anticipated cost differences compared to
other payers, such as Medicare or States.
The commenter recommended that, if
CMS decides to subject outpatient drugs
to the comparative payment rate
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
40858
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
analysis, then CMS should develop a
unique methodology for States to follow
in making the comparison to another
payer.
Response: We appreciate the
commenter’s support for our decision,
as well as their recommendation for
how we could subject outpatient drugs
to the comparative payment rate
analysis if we did end up deciding to
include them. We are not changing the
services subject to the analysis in this
final rule, although we note we have
updated ‘‘outpatient behavioral health
services’’ to ‘‘outpatient mental health
and substance use disorder services.’’
E. Accounting Statement and Table
As required by OMB Circular A–4
(available at https://
www.whitehouse.gov/wp-content/
uploads/legacy_drupal_files/omb/
circulars/A4/a-4.pdf), we have prepared
an accounting statement in Table 48
showing the classification of the impact
associated with the provisions of this
final rule. Note, Table 47 shown
previously in this final rule provides a
summary of the one-time and annual
costs estimates.
TABLE 48: Accounting Table
F. Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)
The RFA requires agencies to analyze
options for regulatory relief of small
entities, if a rule has a significant impact
on a substantial number of small
entities. For purposes of the RFA, we
estimate that almost all of Home Health
Care Services, Services for the Elderly
and Persons with Disabilities, and
Direct Health and Medical Insurance
Carriers are small entities as that term
is used in the RFA (include small
businesses, nonprofit organizations, and
small governmental jurisdictions). The
great majority of hospitals and most
other health care providers and
suppliers are small entities, either by
being nonprofit organizations or by
meeting the SBA definition of a small
business (having revenues of less than
$9.0 million to $47 million in any 1
year).
For purposes of the RFA,
approximately 95 percent of the health
care industries impacted are considered
small businesses according to the Small
Business Administration’s size
standards with total revenues of $47
million or less in any 1 year.
According to the SBA’s website at
https://www.sba.gov/content/smallbusiness-size-standards HCBS Provider
Costs and Managed care Plan fall in the
North American Industrial
Classification System 621610 Home
Health Care Services, 624120 Services
for the Elderly and Persons with
Disabilities, and 524114 Direct Health
and Medical Insurance Carriers.
BILLING CODE 4120–01–P
624120
524114
Home Health Care Services
Services for the Elderly and Persons
with Disabilities
Direct Health and Medical Insurance
Carriers
$19 Million
22,840
$15 Million
26,051
$47 Million
455
Source: 2017 Statistics of U.S. Businesses
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
PO 00000
Frm 00318
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
ER10MY24.076
621610
ER10MY24.075
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
TABLE 49: HCBS Providers Costs and Managed Care Plan Size Standards
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
40859
TABLE 50: NAICS 62160 Home Health Care Servies ($19 Million Size Standard)
Firm Size (by Receipts)
SMALL FIRMS
<$100K
$1 00K -$499K
$500 - $999K
$IM- $2.49M
$2.5M - $4.9M
$5M-$7.5M
$7.6M - $9.9M
$10M - $14.9M
$15M - $19.9M
LARGE FIRMS
Receipts > $20M
Firm Count
22,840
5,861
5,687
3,342
4,434
1,951
672
356
346
191
% of Small Firms
100%
26%
25%
15%
19%
9%
3%
2%
2%
1%
NIA
961
Avg. Revenue
$
5,320,704.31
$
35,948.98
$
256,725.47
$
414,742.71
$
1,201,189.90
$
1,135,879.03
$
667,476.88
$
496,663.20
$
642,844.22
$
469,233.92
$
6,451,412.39
(for firms> $100M
Source: 2017 Statistics of U.S. Businesses
TABLE 51: NAICS 624120 Services for the Elderly and Persons with Disabilities ($15 Million Size
Standard)
% of Small Firms
Firm Size b Recei ts
SMALL FIRMS
<$100K
$100K-$499K
$500 - $999K
$IM- $2.49M
$2.5M - $4.9M
$5M-$7.5M
$7.6M - $9.9M
$10M - $14.9M
LARGE FIRMS
Receipts > $15M
100%
32%
26%
13%
16%
7%
3%
2%
2%
NIA
1,211
ER10MY24.078
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
PO 00000
Frm 00319
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
ER10MY24.077
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Source: 2017 Statistics of U.S. Businesses
40860
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
TABLE F52: NAICS 524114 Direct Health and Medical Insurance Carriers ($47 Million Size Standard)
% of Small Firms
100%
17%
37%
9%
11%
7%
3%
2%
3%
3%
1%
1%
2%
1%
3%
SMALL FIRMS
<$100K
$1 00K -$499K
$500 - $999K
$IM- $2.49M
$2.5M - $4.9M
$5M-$7.5M
$7.6M- $9.9M
$10M - $14.9M
$15M - $19.9M
$20M-$24.9M
$25M- $29.9M
$30M - $34.9M
$35M- $39.9M
$40M- $49.9M
LARGE FIRMS
Receipts > 50M
NIA
290
Tables 50, 51, and 52 aid in showing the distribution of firms and revenues at their 6 digits NAICS code
level. These tables aim to provide an understanding of the disproportionate impacts among firms,
between small and large firms.
Individuals and States are not
included in the definition of a small
entity. This rule will not have a
significant impact measured change in
revenue of 3 to 5 percent on a
substantial number of small businesses
or other small entities. All the industries
combined, according to the 2017
Economic Census, earned
approximately $46,771,961,000.00.
Hence, all the costs combined, amounts
to about 1 percent.
Direct Health and
Medical Insurance
Carriers 524114
Elderly and Persons
with Disabilities
624120
Home Health Care
Services (621610)
100 Percent
$370,989,000
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Home and
67 Percent
$248,562,630.00
Community-Based
Services HCBS
Home and
37 Percent
$137,265,930.00
Community-Based
Services HCBS
*Annualized Cost per Industry was determined from the Accounting Table 7.
BILLING CODE 4120–01–C
Therefore, as its measure of
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities,
HHS uses a change in revenue of more
than 3 to 5 percent.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
According to Table 12, for Direct
Health and Medical Insurance Carriers
(524114) and Elderly and Persons with
Disabilities (624120), we do not believe
that the 3 to 5 percent threshold will be
reached by the requirements in this final
PO 00000
Frm 00320
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
$5,320,704.31
1.4%
$3,117,267.70
1.3%
$25,087,240.51
18%
rule. However, Home Health Care
Services (621610) has a substantial
effect on its small businesses.
Therefore, the Secretary has certified
that this final rule will not have a
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities in
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
ER10MY24.079
Managed Care Plans
ER10MY24.080
TABLE 53: NAICS Classification of Services, the Distribution of Costs, Annualized Cost per Industry,
Average Annual Revenue for Small Firms, and Revenue Test
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
the Direct Health and Medical Insurance
Carriers (524114) and Elderly and
Persons with Disabilities (624120)
industries. However, the Secretary
cannot certify that this final rule will
not have a significant economic impact
on the Home Health Care Services
(621610) industry.
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 604 of the Act.
For purposes of section 1102(b) of the
Act, we define a small rural hospital as
a hospital that is located outside of a
metropolitan statistical area and has
fewer than 100 beds. This final rule will
not have a significant impact on the
operations of small rural hospitals since
small hospitals are not affected by the
proposed rule. Therefore, the Secretary
has certified that this final rule will not
have a significant impact on the
operations of a substantial number of
small rural hospitals.
G. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
(UMRA)
Section 202 of the Unfunded
Mandates Reform Act of 1995 (UMRA)
also requires that agencies assess
anticipated costs and benefits before
issuing any rule whose mandates
require spending in any 1 year of $100
million in 1995 dollars, updated
annually for inflation. In 2023, that
threshold is approximately $177
million. This final rule will impose a
mandate that will result in the
expenditure by the private sector, of
more than $177 million in at least 1
year.
Several of the provisions in this final
rule address gaps in existing
regulations. In these cases, the costs for
States to implement the changes to
existing processes will likely be
minimal. For the remaining areas of the
rule, we have sought to minimize
burden whenever possible, while still
achieving the goals of this rulemaking,
as reflected in the burden analyses and
estimates described in sections III. and
IV. of this final rule. We further note
that, as reflected in those sections,
States would be able to claim
administrative match for the work
required to implement the proposals.
We have described the projected
paperwork costs to providers, as well as
to States, the Federal Government, and
managed care plans (as applicable) in
the Collection of Information section
(section III. of this final rule.) We note
that the requirements finalized at
§ 441.302(k) regarding the HCBS
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
40861
payment adequacy requirements
represent the biggest impact on small
entities. We have not calculated an
additional financial impact on providers
beyond what is reflected in the
Collection of Information (in section III.)
and the Regulatory Impact Analysis
(section (this section, section IV. of the
final rule.) The requirements finalized at
§ 441.302(k) may require that a number
of HCBS providers ensure that they
allocate more of their Medicaid
payments to direct care workers than
they had prior to the implementation of
§ 441.302(k); this does not reflect a
change in the Medicaid payments. The
underlying assumption of this
requirement is that providers are
capable of allocating 80 percent their
Medicaid payments to direct care
workers by ensuring that payments are
allocated efficiently and that overhead
is kept to a minimum. Additionally, as
discussed in II.B.5. of this final rule, we
have provided States with several
flexibilities for certain providers that
would be unable to operate successfully
under this requirement. While we
received anecdotal data from public
commenters regarding current Medicaid
rates, workforce shortages, and survey
responses from providers regarding their
reaction to the proposal in the proposed
rule, we did not receive data (nor do we
have other sources of data) on which to
estimate additional costs associated
with § 441.302(k) aside from what is
presented in the Collection of
Information and Regulatory Impact
Analysis sections above.
The analysis in section IV. of this
final rule, together with the rest of this
preamble, provides a regulatory impact
analysis. In accordance with the
provisions of E.O. 12866, this final rule
was reviewed by the Office of
Management and Budget.
Chiquita Brooks-LaSure,
Administrator of the Centers for
Medicare & Medicaid Services,
approved this document on April 11,
2024.
H. Federalism
E.O. 13132 establishes certain
requirements that an agency must meet
when it issues a proposed rule that
imposes substantial direct requirement
costs on State and local governments,
preempts State law, or otherwise has
Federalism implications. This rule does
not impose substantial direct costs on
State or local governments, preempt
State law, or otherwise have Federalism
implications. As mentioned in the
previous section of this rule, the costs
to States by our estimate do not rise to
the level of specified thresholds for
significant burden to States. In addition,
many proposals amend existing
requirements or further requirements
that already exist in statute, and as such
would not create any new conflict with
State law.
Accounting, Administrative practice
and procedure, Drugs, Grant programs—
health, Health facilities, Health
professions, Medicaid, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements, and Rural
areas.
For the reasons set forth in the
preamble, the Centers for Medicare &
Medicaid Services amends 42 CFR
Chapter IV as set forth below:
I. Conclusion
The policies in this final rule, will
enable us to implement enhanced access
to health care services for Medicaid
beneficiaries across FFS, managed care,
and HCBS delivery systems.
PO 00000
Frm 00321
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
List of Subjects
42 CFR Part 431
Administrative practice and
procedure, Consumer protection, Grant
programs—health, Medicaid,
Organization and functions
(Government agencies), Public
assistance programs, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirement.
42 CFR Part 438
Administrative practice and
procedure, Grant programs—health,
Health professions, Medicaid, Older
adults, People with Disabilities,
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.
42 CFR Part 441
Administrative practice and
procedure, Consumer protection, Grant
programs—health, Health professions,
Medicaid, Older adults, People with
Disabilities, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
42 CFR Part 447
PART 431—STATE ORGANIZATION
AND GENERAL ADMINISTRATION
1. The authority citation for part 431
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 1302.
2. Section 431.12 is revised to read as
follows:
■
§ 431.12 Medicaid Advisory Committee
and Beneficiary Advisory Council.
(a) Basis and purpose. This section,
based on section 1902(a)(4) of the Act,
prescribes State Plan requirements for
establishment and ongoing operation of
a public Medicaid Advisory Committee
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
40862
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
(MAC) with a dedicated Beneficiary
Advisory Council (BAC) comprised of
current and former Medicaid
beneficiaries, their family members, and
caregivers, to advise the State Medicaid
agency on matters of concern related to
policy development, and matters related
to the effective administration of the
Medicaid program.
(b) State plan requirement. The State
plan must provide for a MAC and a BAC
that will advise the director of the single
State Agency for the Medicaid program
on matters of concern related to policy
development and matters related to the
effective administration of the Medicaid
program.
(c) Selection of members. The Director
of the single State Agency for the
Medicaid program must select members
for the MAC and BAC for a term of
length determined by the State, which
may not be followed immediately by a
consecutive term for the same member,
on a rotating and continuous basis. The
State must create a process for
recruitment and selection of members
and publish this information on the
State’s website as specified in paragraph
(f).
(d) MAC membership and
composition. The membership of the
MAC must be composed of the
following percentage and representative
categories of interested parties in the
State:
(1) For the period from July 9, 2024
through July 9, 2025, 10 percent of the
MAC members must come from the
BAC; for the period from July 10, 2025
through July 9, 2026, 20 percent of MAC
members must come from the BAC; and
thereafter, 25 percent of MAC members
must come from the BAC.
(2) The remaining committee
members must include representation of
at least one from each of the following
categories:
(A) State or local consumer advocacy
groups or other community-based
organizations that represent the interests
of, or provide direct service, to
Medicaid beneficiaries.
(B) Clinical providers or
administrators who are familiar with the
health and social needs of Medicaid
beneficiaries and with the resources
available and required for their care.
This includes providers or
administrators of primary care, specialty
care, and long-term care.
(C) As applicable, participating
Medicaid MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs, PCCM
entities or PCCMs as defined in § 438.2,
or a health plan association representing
more than one such plans; and
(D) Other State agencies that serve
Medicaid beneficiaries (for example,
foster care agency, mental health
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
agency, health department, State
agencies delegated to conduct eligibility
determinations for Medicaid, State Unit
on Aging), as ex-officio, non-voting
members.
(e) Beneficiary Advisory Council. The
State must form and support a BAC,
which can be an existing beneficiary
group, that is comprised of: individuals
who are currently or have been
Medicaid beneficiaries and individuals
with direct experience supporting
Medicaid beneficiaries (family members
and paid or unpaid caregivers of those
enrolled in Medicaid), to advise the
State regarding their experience with
the Medicaid program, on matters of
concern related to policy development
and matters related to the effective
administration of the Medicaid program.
(1) The MAC members described in
paragraph (d)(1) of this section must
also be members of the BAC.
(2) The BAC must meet separately
from the MAC, on a regular basis, and
in advance of each MAC meeting to
ensure BAC member preparation for
each MAC meeting.
(f) MAC and BAC administration. The
State agency must create standardized
processes and practices for the
administration of the MAC and the BAC
that are available for public review on
the State website. The State agency
must—
(1) Develop and publish, by posting
publicly on its website, bylaws for
governance of the MAC and BAC along
with a current list of members. States
will also post publicly the past meeting
minutes of the MAC and BAC meetings,
including a list of meeting attendees.
States will give BAC members the
option to include their names in the
membership list and meeting minutes
that will be posted publicly.
(2) Develop and publish by posting
publicly on its website a process for
MAC and BAC member recruitment and
selection along with a process for
selection of MAC and BAC leadership;
(3) Develop, publish by posting
publicly on its website, and implement
a regular meeting schedule for the MAC
and BAC; the MAC and BAC must each
meet at least once per quarter and hold
off-cycle meetings as needed. Each MAC
and BAC meeting agenda must include
a time for members and the public (if
applicable) to disclose conflicts of
interest.
(4) Make at least two MAC meetings
per year open to the public and those
meetings must include a dedicated time
during the meeting for the public to
make comments. BAC meetings are not
required to be open to the public, unless
the State’s BAC members decide
otherwise. The public must be
PO 00000
Frm 00322
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
adequately notified of the date, location,
and time of each public MAC meeting
and any public BAC meeting at least 30
calendar days in advance of the date of
the meeting.
(5) Offer a rotating, variety of meeting
attendance options. These meeting
options are: all in-person attendance, all
virtual attendance, and hybrid (in
person and virtual) attendance options.
Regardless of which attendance type of
meeting it is, States are required to
always have, at a minimum, telephone
dial-in option at the MAC and BAC
meetings for its members. If the MAC or
BAC meeting is deemed open to the
public, the State must offer at a
minimum a telephone dial-in option for
members of the public;
(6) Ensure that the meeting times and
locations for MAC and BAC meetings
are selected to maximize member
attendance and may vary by meeting;
and
(7) Facilitate participation of
beneficiaries by ensuring that that
meetings are accessible to people with
disabilities, that reasonable
modifications are provided when
necessary to ensure access and enable
meaningful participation, and
communications with individuals with
disabilities are as effective as with
others, that reasonable steps are taken to
provide meaningful access to
individuals with Limited English
Proficiency, and that meetings comply
with the requirements at § 435.905(b) of
this chapter and applicable regulations
implementing the ADA, Title VI of the
Civil Rights Act of 1964, section 504 of
the Rehabilitation Act, and section 1557
of the Affordable Care Act at 28 CFR
part 35 and 45 CFR parts 80, 84 and 92,
respectively.
(g) MAC and BAC participation and
scope. The MAC and BAC participants
must have the opportunity to advise the
director of the single State Agency for
the Medicaid program on matters
related to policy development and
matters related to the effective
administration of the Medicaid program.
At a minimum, the MAC and BAC must
determine, in collaboration with the
State, which topics to provide advice on
related to—
(1) Additions and changes to services;
(2) Coordination of care;
(3) Quality of services;
(4) Eligibility, enrollment, and
renewal processes;
(5) Beneficiary and provider
communications by State Medicaid
agency and Medicaid MCOs, PIHPs,
PAHPs, PCCM entities or PCCMs as
defined in § 438.2;
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
(6) Cultural competency, language
access, health equity, and disparities
and biases in the Medicaid program;
(7) Access to services; and
(8) Other issues that impact the
provision or outcomes of health and
medical care services in the Medicaid
program as determined by the MAC,
BAC, or State.
(h) State agency staff assistance,
participation, and financial help. The
single State Agency for the Medicaid
program must provide staff to support
planning and execution of the MAC and
the BAC to include—
(1) Recruitment of MAC and BAC
members;
(2) Planning and execution of all MAC
and BAC meetings and the production
of meeting minutes that include actions
taken or anticipated actions by the State
in response to interested parties’
feedback provided during the meeting.
The minutes are to be posted on the
State’s website within 30 calendar days
following each meeting. Additionally,
the State must produce and post on its
website an annual report as specified in
paragraph (i) of this section; and
(3) The provision of appropriate
support and preparation (providing
research or other information needed) to
the MAC and BAC members who are
Medicaid beneficiaries to ensure
meaningful participation. These tasks
include—
(i) Providing staff whose
responsibilities are to facilitate MAC
and BAC member engagement;
(ii) Providing financial support, if
necessary, to facilitate Medicaid
beneficiary engagement in the MAC and
the BAC; and
(iii) Attendance by at least one staff
member from the single State Agency
for the Medicaid program’s executive
staff at all MAC and BAC meetings.
(i) Annual report. The MAC, with
support from the State, must submit an
annual report describing its activities,
topics discussed, and recommendations.
The State must review the report and
include responses to the recommended
actions. The State agency must then—
(1) Provide MAC members with final
review of the report;
(2) Ensure that the annual report of
the MAC includes a section describing
the activities, topics discussed, and
recommendations of the BAC, as well as
the State’s responses to the
recommendations; and
(3) Post the report to the State’s
website. States have 2 years from July 9,
2024 to finalize the first annual MAC
report. After the report has been
finalized, States will have 30 days to
post the annual report.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
21:29 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
(j) Federal financial participation.
FFP is available at 50 percent of
expenditures for the MAC and BAC
activities.
(k) Applicability dates. Except as
noted in paragraphs (d)(1) and (i)(3) of
this section, the requirements in
paragraphs (a) through (j) of this section
are applicable July 9, 2025.
■ 3. Section 431.408 is amended by
revising paragraph (a)(3)(i) to read as
follows:
§ 431.408
State public notice process.
(a) * * *
(3) * * *
(i) The Medicaid Advisory Committee
and Beneficiary Advisory Council that
operate in accordance with § 431.12 of
this subpart; or
*
*
*
*
*
PART 438—MANAGED CARE
4. The authority citation for part 438
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 1302.
5. Section 438.72 is added to subpart
B to read as follows:
■
§ 438.72 Additional requirements for longterm services and supports.
(a) [Reserved]
(b) Services authorized under section
1915(c) waivers and section 1915(i), (j),
and (k) State plan authorities. The State
must comply with the requirements at
§§ 441.301(c)(1) through (3),
441.302(a)(6), 441.302(k), 441.311, and
441.313 for services authorized under
section 1915(c) waivers and section
1915(i), (j), and (k) State plan
authorities.
PART 441—SERVICES:
REQUIREMENTS AND LIMITS
APPLICABLE TO SPECIFIC SERVICES
6. The authority citation for part 441
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 1302.
7. Section 441.301 is amended by
revising paragraphs (c)(1) introductory
text and (c)(3), and adding paragraph
(c)(7) to read as follows:
■
§ 441.301
Contents of request for a waiver.
*
*
*
*
*
(c) * * *
(1) Person-centered planning process.
The individual, or if applicable, the
individual and the individual’s
authorized representative, will lead the
person-centered planning process.
When the term ‘‘individual’’ is used
throughout § 441.301(c)(1) through (3),
it includes the individual’s authorized
PO 00000
Frm 00323
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40863
representative if applicable. In addition,
the person-centered planning process:
*
*
*
*
*
(3) Review of the person-centered
service plan—(i) Requirement. The State
must ensure that the person-centered
service plan for every individual is
reviewed, and revised as appropriate,
based upon the reassessment of
functional need at least every 12
months, when the individual’s
circumstances or needs change
significantly, or at the request of the
individual.
(ii) Minimum performance at the
State level. The State must demonstrate,
through the reporting requirements at
§ 441.311(b)(3), that it ensures the
following minimum performance levels
are met:
(A) Complete a reassessment of
functional need at least every 12 months
for no less than 90 percent of the
individuals continuously enrolled in the
waiver for at least 365 days; and
(B) Review, and revise as appropriate,
the person-centered service plan, based
upon the reassessment of functional
need, at least every 12 months, for no
less than 90 percent of the individuals
continuously enrolled in the waiver for
at least 365 days.
(iii) Applicability date. States must
comply with the performance levels
described in paragraph (c)(3)(ii) of this
section beginning 3 years after July 9,
2024; and in the case of the State that
implements a managed care delivery
system under the authority of sections
1915(a), 1915(b), 1932(a), or 1115(a) of
the Act and includes HCBS in the
MCO’s, PIHP’s, or PAHP’s contract, the
first rating period for contracts with the
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP beginning on or
after the date that is 3 years after July
9, 2024.
*
*
*
*
*
(7) Grievance system—(i) Purpose.
The State must establish a procedure
under which a beneficiary may file a
grievance related to the State’s or a
provider’s performance of the activities
described in paragraphs (c)(1) through
(6) of this section. This requirement
does not apply to a managed care
delivery system under the authority of
sections 1915(a), 1915(b), 1932(a), or
1115(a) of the Act. The State may have
activities described in paragraph (c)(7)
of this section performed by contractors
or other government entities, provided,
however, that the State retains
responsibility for ensuring performance
of and compliance with these
provisions.
(ii) Definitions. As used in this
section:
Grievance means an expression of
dissatisfaction or complaint related to
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
40864
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
the State’s or a provider’s performance
of the activities described in paragraphs
(c)(1) through (6) of this section,
regardless of whether remedial action is
requested.
Grievance system means the processes
the State implements to handle
grievances, as well as the processes to
collect and track information about
them.
(iii) General requirements. (A) The
beneficiary or a beneficiary’s authorized
representative, if applicable, may file a
grievance. All references to beneficiary
include the role of the beneficiary’s
representative, if applicable.
(1) Another individual or entity may
file a grievance on behalf of the
beneficiary, or provide the beneficiary
with assistance or representation
throughout the grievance process, with
the written consent of the beneficiary or
authorized representative.
(2) A provider cannot file a grievance
that would violate the State’s conflict of
interest guidelines, as required in
§ 441.540(a)(5).
(B) The State must:
(1) Base its grievance processes on
written policies and procedures that, at
a minimum, meet the conditions set
forth in this paragraph (c)(7);
(2) Provide beneficiaries reasonable
assistance in ensuring grievances are
appropriately filed with the grievance
system, completing forms and taking
other procedural steps related to a
grievance. This includes, but is not
limited to, ensuring the grievance
system is accessible to individuals with
disabilities and providing meaningful
access to individuals with Limited
English Proficiency, consistent with
§ 435.905(b) of this chapter, and
includes auxiliary aids and services
where necessary to ensure effective
communication, such as providing
interpreter services and toll-free
numbers that have adequate TTY/TTD
and interpreter capability;
(3) Ensure that punitive or retaliatory
action is neither threatened nor taken
against an individual filing a grievance
or who has had a grievance filed on
their behalf;
(4) Accept grievances and requests for
extension of timeframes from the
beneficiary;
(5) Provide to the beneficiary the
notices and information required under
this subsection, including information
on their rights under the grievance
system and on how to file grievances,
and ensure that such information is
accessible for individuals with
disabilities and individuals with
Limited English Proficiency in
accordance with § 435.905(b);
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
(6) Review any grievance resolution
with which the beneficiary is
dissatisfied; and
(7) Provide information about the
grievance system to all providers and
subcontractors approved to deliver
services.
(C) The process for handling
grievances must:
(1) Allow the beneficiary to file a
grievance with the State either orally or
in writing;
(2) Acknowledge receipt of each
grievance;
(3) Ensure that the individuals who
make decisions on grievances are
individuals:
(i) Who were neither involved in any
previous level of review or decisionmaking related to the grievance nor a
subordinate of any such individual;
(ii) Who are individuals who have the
appropriate clinical and non-clinical
expertise, as determined by the State;
and
(iii) Who consider all comments,
documents, records, and other
information submitted by the
beneficiary without regard to whether
such information was submitted to or
considered previously by the State;
(4) Provide the beneficiary a
reasonable opportunity, face-to-face
(including through the use of audio or
video technology) and in writing, to
present evidence and testimony and
make legal and factual arguments
related to their grievance. The State
must inform the beneficiary of the
limited time available for this
sufficiently in advance of the resolution
timeframe for grievances as specified in
paragraph (c)(7)(v) of this section;
(5) Provide the beneficiary their case
file, including medical records in
compliance with the HIPAA Privacy
Rule (45 CFR part 160 and part 164
subparts A and E), other documents and
records, and any new or additional
evidence considered, relied upon, or
generated by the State related to the
grievance. This information must be
provided free of charge and sufficiently
in advance of the resolution timeframe
for grievances as specified in paragraph
(c)(7)(v) of this section; and
(6) Provide beneficiaries, free of
charge, with language services,
including written translation and
interpreter services in accordance with
§ 435.905(b), to support their
participation in grievance processes and
their use of the grievance system.
(iv) Filing timeframes. A beneficiary
may file a grievance at any time.
(v) Resolution and notification—(A)
Basic rule. The State must resolve each
grievance, and provide notice, as
expeditiously as the beneficiary’s health
PO 00000
Frm 00324
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
condition requires, within Stateestablished timeframes that may not
exceed the timeframes specified in this
section.
(B) Resolution timeframes. For
resolution of a grievance and notice to
the affected parties, the timeframe may
not exceed 90 calendar days from the
day the State receives the grievance.
This timeframe may be extended under
paragraph (c)(7)(v)(C) of this section.
(C) Extension of timeframes. The
States may extend the timeframe from
that in paragraph (c)(7)(v)(B) of this
section by up to 14 calendar days if –
(1) The beneficiary requests the
extension; or
(2) The State documents that there is
need for additional information and
how the delay is in the beneficiary’s
interest.
(D) Requirements following extension.
If the State extends the timeframe not at
the request of the beneficiary, it must
complete all of the following:
(1) Make reasonable efforts to give the
beneficiary prompt oral notice of the
delay;
(2) Within 2 calendar days of
determining a need for a delay, but no
later than the timeframes in paragraph
(c)(7)(v)(B) of this section, give the
beneficiary written notice of the reason
for the decision to extend the timeframe;
and
(3) Resolve the grievance as
expeditiously as the beneficiary’s health
condition requires and no later than the
date the extension expires.
(vi) Format of notice. The State must
establish a method to notify a
beneficiary of the resolution of a
grievance and ensure that such methods
meet, at a minimum, the standards
described at § 435.905(b) of this chapter.
(vii) Recordkeeping. (A) The State
must maintain records of grievances and
must review the information as part of
its ongoing monitoring procedures.
(B) The record of each grievance must
contain, at a minimum, all of the
following information:
(1) A general description of the reason
for the grievance;
(2) The date received;
(3) The date of each review or, if
applicable, review meeting;
(4) Resolution of the grievance, as
applicable;
(5) Date of resolution, if applicable;
and
(6) Name of the beneficiary for whom
the grievance was filed.
(C) The record must be accurately
maintained in a manner available upon
request to CMS.
(viii) Applicability date. States must
comply with the requirement at
paragraph (c)(7) of this section
beginning 2 years after July 9, 2024.
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
8. Section 441.302 is amended by—
a. Adding paragraph (a)(6);
b. Revising paragraph (h); and
c. Adding paragraph (k).
The additions and revision read as
follows:
■
■
■
■
§ 441.302
State assurances.
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
*
*
*
*
*
(a) * * *
(6) Assurance that the State operates
and maintains an incident management
system that identifies, reports, triages,
investigates, resolves, tracks, and trends
critical incidents.
(i) Requirements. The State must:
(A) Define critical incident to include,
at a minimum—
(1) Verbal, physical, sexual,
psychological, or emotional abuse;
(2) Neglect;
(3) Exploitation including financial
exploitation;
(4) Misuse or unauthorized use of
restrictive interventions or seclusion;
(5) A medication error resulting in a
telephone call to, or a consultation with,
a poison control center, an emergency
department visit, an urgent care visit, a
hospitalization, or death; or
(6) An unexplained or unanticipated
death, including but not limited to a
death caused by abuse or neglect;
(B) Use an information system, as
defined in 45 CFR 164.304 and
compliant with 45 CFR part 164, that, at
a minimum, enables—
(1) Electronic critical incident data
collection;
(2) Tracking (including of the status
and resolution of investigations); and
(3) Trending;
(C) Require providers to report to the
State, within State-established
timeframes and procedures, any critical
incident that occurs during the delivery
of services authorized under section
1915(c) of the Act and as specified in
the beneficiary’s person-centered
service plan, or occurs as a result of the
failure to deliver services authorized
under section 1915(c) of the Act and as
specified in the beneficiary’s personcentered service plan;
(D) Use claims data, Medicaid fraud
control unit data, and data from other
State agencies, such as Adult Protective
Services or Child Protective Services, to
the extent permissible under applicable
State law to identify critical incidents
that are unreported by providers and
occur during the delivery of services
authorized under section 1915(c) of the
Act and as specified in the beneficiary’s
person-centered service plan, or occur
as a result of the failure to deliver
services authorized under section
1915(c) of the Act and as specified in
the beneficiary’s person-centered
service plan;
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
(E) Ensure that there is information
sharing on the status and resolution of
investigations, such as through the use
of information sharing agreements,
between the State and the entity or
entities responsible in the State for
investigating critical incidents as
defined in paragraph (a)(6)(i)(A) of this
section if the State refers critical
incidents to other entities for
investigation;
(F) Separately investigate critical
incidents if the investigative agency
fails to report the resolution of an
investigation within State-specified
timeframes; and
(G) Demonstrate that it meets the
requirements in paragraph (a)(6) of this
section through the reporting
requirement at § 441.311(b)(1).
(ii) Minimum performance at the
State level. The State must demonstrate,
through the reporting requirements at
§ 441.311(b)(2), that it meets the
following minimum performance levels:
(A) Initiate an investigation, within
State-specified timeframes, for no less
than 90 percent of critical incidents;
(B) Complete an investigation and
determine the resolution of the
investigation, within State-specified
timeframes, for no less than 90 percent
of critical incidents; and
(C) Ensure that corrective action has
been completed within State-specified
timeframes, for no less than 90 percent
of critical incidents that require
corrective action.
(iii) Applicability date. States must
comply with the requirements in
paragraph (a)(6) of this section
beginning 3 years after July 9, 2024;
except for the requirement at paragraph
(a)(6)(i)(B) of this section, with which
the State must comply beginning 5 years
after July 9, 2024; and in the case of the
State that implements a managed care
delivery system under the authority of
sections 1915(a), 1915(b), 1932(a), or
1115(a) of the Act and includes HCBS
in the MCO’s, PIHP’s, or PAHP’s
contract, the first rating period for
contracts with the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP
beginning on or after 3 years after July
9, 2024, except for the requirement at
paragraph (a)(6)(i)(B) of this section,
with which the first rating period for
contracts with the MCO, PIHP or PAHP
beginning on or after 5 years after July
9, 2024.
*
*
*
*
*
(h) Reporting. Assurance that the
agency will provide CMS with
information on the waiver’s impact,
including the data and information as
required in § 441.311.
*
*
*
*
*
(k) HCBS payment adequacy.
Assurance that payment rates are
PO 00000
Frm 00325
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40865
adequate to ensure a sufficient direct
care workforce to meet the needs of
beneficiaries and provide access to
services in the amount, duration, and
scope specified in beneficiaries’ personcentered service plans.
(1) Definitions. As used in this
paragraph—
(i) Compensation means:
(A) Salary, wages, and other
remuneration as defined by the Fair
Labor Standards Act and implementing
regulations (29 U.S.C. 201 et seq., 29
CFR parts 531 and 778);
(B) Benefits (such as health and dental
benefits, life and disability insurance,
paid leave, retirement, and tuition
reimbursement); and
(C) The employer share of payroll
taxes for direct care workers delivering
services authorized under section
1915(c) of the Act.
(ii) Direct care worker means any of
the following individuals who may be
employed by a Medicaid provider, State
agency, or third party; contracted with
a Medicaid provider, State agency, or
third party; or delivering services under
a self-directed services delivery model:
(A) A registered nurse, licensed
practical nurse, nurse practitioner, or
clinical nurse specialist who provides
nursing services to Medicaid
beneficiaries receiving home and
community-based services available
under this subpart;
(B) A licensed or certified nursing
assistant who provides such services
under the supervision of a registered
nurse, licensed practical nurse, nurse
practitioner, or clinical nurse specialist;
(C) A direct support professional;
(D) A personal care attendant;
(E) A home health aide; or
(F) Other individuals who are paid to
provide services to address activities of
daily living or instrumental activities of
daily living, behavioral supports,
employment supports, or other services
to promote community integration
directly to Medicaid beneficiaries
receiving home and community-based
services available under this subpart,
including nurses and other staff
providing clinical supervision.
(iii) Excluded costs means costs that
are not included in the calculation of
the percentage of Medicaid payments to
providers that is spent on compensation
for direct care workers. Such costs are
limited to:
(A) Costs of required trainings for
direct care workers (such as costs for
qualified trainers and training
materials);
(B) Travel costs for direct care
workers (such as mileage
reimbursement or public transportation
subsidies); and
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
40866
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
(C) Costs of personal protective
equipment for direct care workers.
(2) Requirement. (i) Except as
provided in paragraph (k)(2)(ii) of this
section, the State must demonstrate
annually, through the reporting
requirements at paragraph (k)(6) of this
section and § 441.311(e), that it meets
the minimum performance levels in
paragraph (k)(3) of this section for
furnishing homemaker, home health
aide, or personal care services, as set
forth at § 440.180(b)(2) through (4), that
are delivered by direct care workers and
authorized under section 1915(c) of the
Act.
(ii) Treatment of certain payment data
under self-directed services delivery
models. If the State provides that
homemaker, home health aide, or
personal care services, as set forth at
§ 440.180(b)(2) through (4), may be
furnished under a self-directed services
delivery model in which the beneficiary
directing the services sets the direct care
worker’s payment rate, then the State
does not include such payment data in
its calculation of the State’s compliance
with the minimum performance levels
at paragraph (k)(3) of this section.
(3) Minimum performance at the
provider level. Except as provided in
paragraphs (k)(5) and (7) of this section,
the State must meet the following
minimum performance level as
applicable, calculated as the percentage
of total payment (not including
excluded costs) to a provider for
furnishing homemaker, home health
aide, or personal care services, as set
forth at § 440.180(b)(2) through (4),
represented by the provider’s total
compensation to direct care workers:
(i) Except as provided in paragraph
(k)(3)(ii) of this section, the State must
ensure that each provider spends 80
percent of total payments the provider
receives for services it furnishes as
described in paragraph (k)(3) of this
section on total compensation for direct
care workers who furnish those services.
(ii) At the State’s option, for providers
determined by the State to meet its
State-defined small provider criteria in
paragraph (k)(4)(i) of this section, the
State must ensure that each provider
spends the percentage set by the State
in accordance with paragraph (k)(4)(ii)
of this section of total payments the
provider receives for services it
furnishes as described in paragraph
(k)(3) of this section on total
compensation for direct care workers
who furnish those services.
(4) Small provider minimum
performance level—(i) Small provider
criteria. The State may develop
reasonable, objective criteria through a
transparent process to identify small
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
providers that the State would require to
meet the minimum performance
requirement at paragraph (k)(3)(ii) of
this section. The transparent process for
developing criteria to identify providers
that qualify for the minimum
performance requirement in paragraph
(k)(3)(ii) of this section must include
public notice and opportunities for
comment from interested parties.
(ii) Small provider minimum
performance level. The State must set
the percentage for a small provider to
meet the minimum performance level at
paragraph (k)(3)(ii) of this section based
on reasonable, objective criteria it
develops through a transparent process
that includes public notice and
opportunities for comment from
interested parties.
(5) Hardship exemption. The State
may develop reasonable, objective
criteria through a transparent process to
exempt from the minimum performance
requirement at paragraph (k)(3) of this
section a reasonable number of
providers determined by the State to be
facing extraordinary circumstances that
prevent their compliance with
paragraph (k)(3) of this section. The
State must develop these criteria
through a transparent process that
includes public notice and
opportunities for comment from
interested parties. If a provider meets
the State’s hardship exemption criteria,
then the State does not include that
provider in its calculation of the State’s
compliance with the minimum
performance level at paragraph (k)(3) of
this section.
(6) Reporting on small provider
minimum performance level and
hardship exemption.
(i) States that establish a small
provider minimum performance level
under paragraph (k)(4) of this section
must report to CMS annually the
following information, in the form and
manner, and at a time, specified by
CMS:
(A) The State’s small provider criteria
developed in accordance with
paragraph (k)(4)(i) of this section;
(B) The State’s small provider
minimum performance level developed
in accordance with paragraph (k)(4)(ii)
of this section;
(C) The percentage of providers of
services set forth at § 440.180(b)(2)
through (4) that qualify for the small
provider minimum performance level at
paragraph (k)(4) of this section; and
(D) A plan, subject to CMS review and
approval, for small providers to meet
the minimum performance requirement
at paragraph (k)(3)(i) of this section
within a reasonable period of time.
PO 00000
Frm 00326
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
(ii) States that provide a hardship
exemption in accordance with
paragraph (k)(5) of this section must
report to CMS annually the following
information, in the form and manner,
and at a time, specified by CMS:
(A) The State’s hardship criteria
developed in accordance with
paragraph (k)(5) of this section;
(B) The percentage of providers of
services set forth at § 440.180(b)(2)
through (4) that qualify for a hardship
exemption as provided in paragraph
(k)(5) of this section; and
(C) A plan, subject to CMS review and
approval, for reducing the number of
providers that qualify for a hardship
exemption within a reasonable period of
time.
(iii) CMS may waive the reporting
requirements in paragraphs (k)(6)(i)(D)
or (k)(6)(ii)(C) of this section, as
applicable, if the State demonstrates it
has applied the small provider
minimum performance level at
paragraph (k)(4)(ii) of this section or the
hardship exemption at paragraph (k)(5)
of this section to less than 10 percent of
the State’s providers.
(7) Exemption for the Indian Health
Service and Tribal health programs
subject to 25 U.S.C. 1641. The Indian
Health Service and Tribal health
programs subject to the requirements at
25 U.S.C. 1641 are exempt from the
requirements at paragraph (k) of this
section.
(8) Applicability date. States must
comply with the requirements set forth
in paragraph (k) of this section
beginning 6 years after July 9, 2024; and
in the case of the State that implements
a managed care delivery system under
the authority of section 1915(a), 1915(b),
1932(a), or 1115(a) of the Act and
includes homemaker, home health aide,
or personal care services, as set forth at
§ 440.180(b)(2) through (4) in the
MCO’s, PIHP’s, or PAHP’s contract, the
first rating period for contracts with the
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP beginning on or
after the date that is 6 years after July
9, 2024.
■ 9. Section 441.303 is amended by
revising paragraph (f)(6) to read as
follows:
§ 441.303
required.
Supporting documentation
*
*
*
*
*
(f) * * *
(6) The State must indicate the
number of unduplicated beneficiaries to
which it intends to provide waiver
services in each year of its program.
This number will constitute a limit on
the size of the waiver program unless
the State requests and the Secretary
approves a greater number of waiver
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
participants in a waiver amendment. If
the State has a limit on the size of the
waiver program and maintains a list of
individuals who are waiting to enroll in
the waiver program, the State must meet
the reporting requirements at
§ 441.311(d)(1).
*
*
*
*
*
■ 10. Section 441.311 is added to
subpart G to read as follows:
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
§ 441.311
Reporting requirements.
(a) Basis and scope. Section 1902(a)(6)
of the Act requires State Medicaid
agencies to make such reports, in such
form and containing such information,
as the Secretary may from time to time
require, and to comply with such
provisions as the Secretary may from
time to time find necessary to assure the
correctness and verification of such
reports. Section 1902(a)(19) of the Act
requires States to provide safeguards to
assure that eligibility for Medicaidcovered care and services will be
determined and provided in a manner
that is consistent with simplicity of
administration and the best interests of
Medicaid beneficiaries. This section
describes the reporting requirements for
States for section 1915(c) waiver
programs, under the authority at section
1902(a)(6) and (a)(19) of the Act.
(b) Compliance reporting—(1)
Incident management system. As
described in § 441.302(a)(6)—
(i) The State must report, every 24
months, in the form and manner, and at
a time, specified by CMS, on the results
of an incident management system
assessment to demonstrate that it meets
the requirements in § 441.302(a)(6).
(ii) CMS may reduce the frequency of
reporting to up to once every 60 months
for States with incident management
systems that are determined by CMS to
meet the requirements in
§ 441.302(a)(6).
(2) Critical incidents. The State must
report to CMS annually on the following
information regarding critical incidents
as defined in § 441.302(a)(6)(i)(A), in the
form and manner, and at a time,
specified by CMS:
(i) Number and percent of critical
incidents for which an investigation was
initiated within State-specified
timeframes;
(ii) Number and percent of critical
incidents that are investigated and for
which the State determines the
resolution within State-specified
timeframes;
(iii) Number and percent of critical
incidents requiring corrective action, as
determined by the State, for which the
required corrective action has been
completed within State-specified
timeframes.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
(3) Person-centered planning. To
demonstrate that the State meets the
requirements at § 441.301(c)(3)(ii)
regarding person-centered planning (as
described in § 441.301(c)(1) through (3)),
the State must report to CMS annually
on the following, in the form and
manner, and at a time, specified by
CMS—
(i) Percent of beneficiaries
continuously enrolled for at least 365
days for whom a reassessment of
functional need was completed within
the past 12 months. The State may
report this metric using statistically
valid random sampling of beneficiaries.
(ii) Percent of beneficiaries
continuously enrolled for at least 365
days who had a service plan updated as
a result of a re-assessment of functional
need within the past 12 months. The
State may report this metric using
statistically valid random sampling of
beneficiaries.
(4) Annually, the State will provide
CMS with information on the waiver’s
impact on the type, amount, and cost of
services provided under the State plan,
in the form and manner, and at a time,
specified by CMS.
(c) Reporting on the Home and
Community-Based Services Quality
Measure Set, as described in § 441.312.
(1) General rules. The State—
(i) Must report every other year,
according to the format and schedule
prescribed by the Secretary through the
process for developing and updating the
measure set described in § 441.312(d),
on all measures in the Home and
Community-Based Services Quality
Measure Set that are identified by the
Secretary pursuant to § 441.312(d)(1)(ii)
of this subpart.
(ii) May report on all other measures
in the Home and Community-Based
Services Quality Measure Set that are
not described in § 441.312(d)(1)(ii) and
(iii) of this subpart.
(iii) Must establish, subject to CMS
review and approval, State performance
targets for each of the measures in the
Home and Community-Based Services
Quality Measure Set that are identified
by the Secretary pursuant to
§ 441.312(d)(1)(ii) and (iii) of this
subpart and describe the quality
improvement strategies that the State
will pursue to achieve the performance
targets.
(iv) May establish State performance
targets for each of the measures in the
Home and Community-Based Services
Quality Measure Set that are not
identified by the Secretary pursuant to
§ 441.312(d)(1)(ii) and (iii) of this
subpart and describe the quality
improvement strategies that the State
PO 00000
Frm 00327
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40867
will pursue to achieve the performance
targets.
(2) Measures identified per
§ 441.312(d)(1)(iii) of this subpart will
be reported by the Secretary on behalf
of the State.
(3) In reporting on Home and
Community-Based Services Quality
Measure Set measures, the State may,
but is not required to:
(i) Report on the measures identified
by the Secretary pursuant to
§ 441.312(c) of this subpart for which
reporting will be, but is not yet required
(that is, reporting has not yet been
phased-in).
(ii) Report on the populations
identified by the Secretary pursuant to
§ 441.312(c) of this subpart for whom
reporting will be, but is not yet required.
(d) Access reporting. The State must
report to CMS annually on the
following, in the form and manner, and
at a time, specified by CMS:
(1) Waiver waiting lists. (i) A
description of how the State maintains
the list of individuals who are waiting
to enroll in the waiver program, if the
State has a limit on the size of the
waiver program, as described in
§ 441.303(f)(6), and maintains a list of
individuals who are waiting to enroll in
the waiver program. This description
must include, but is not limited to:
(A) Information on whether the State
screens individuals on the list for
eligibility for the waiver program;
(B) Whether the State periodically rescreens individuals on the list for
eligibility; and
(C) The frequency of re-screening, if
applicable.
(ii) Number of people on the list of
individuals who are waiting to enroll in
the waiver program, if applicable.
(iii) Average amount of time that
individuals newly enrolled in the
waiver program in the past 12 months
were on the list of individuals waiting
to enroll in the waiver program, if
applicable.
(2) Access to homemaker, home
health aide, personal care, and
habilitation services. (i) Average amount
of time from when homemaker services,
home health aide services, personal care
services, and habilitation services, as set
forth in § 440.180(b)(2) through (4) and
(6), are initially approved to when
services began, for individuals newly
receiving services within the past 12
months. The State may report this
metric using statistically valid random
sampling of beneficiaries.
(ii) Percent of authorized hours for
homemaker services, home health aide
services, personal care services, and
habilitation services, as set forth in
§ 440.180(b)(2) through (4) and (6), that
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
40868
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
are provided within the past 12 months.
The State may report this metric using
statistically valid random sampling of
beneficiaries.
(e) Payment adequacy—(1)
Definitions. As used in this paragraph
(e)(i) Compensation means:
(A) Salary, wages, and other
remuneration as defined by the Fair
Labor Standards Act and implementing
regulations (29 U.S.C. 201 et seq., 29
CFR parts 531 and 778);
(B) Benefits (such as health and dental
benefits, life and disability insurance,
paid leave, retirement, and tuition
reimbursement); and
(C) The employer share of payroll
taxes for direct care workers delivering
services authorized under section
1915(c) of the Act.
(ii) Direct care worker means any of
the following individuals who may be
employed by a Medicaid provider, State
agency, or third party; contracted with
a Medicaid provider, State agency, or
third party; or delivering services under
a self-directed services delivery model:
(A) A registered nurse, licensed
practical nurse, nurse practitioner, or
clinical nurse specialist who provides
nursing services to Medicaid
beneficiaries receiving home and
community-based services available
under this subpart;
(B) A licensed or certified nursing
assistant who provides such services
under the supervision of a registered
nurse, licensed practical nurse, nurse
practitioner, or clinical nurse specialist;
(C) A direct support professional;
(D) A personal care attendant;
(E) A home health aide; or
(F) Other individuals who are paid to
provide services to address activities of
daily living or instrumental activities of
daily living, behavioral supports,
employment supports, or other services
to promote community integration
directly to Medicaid beneficiaries
receiving home and community-based
services available under this subpart,
including nurses and other staff
providing clinical supervision.
(iii) Excluded costs means costs that
are not included in the calculation of
the percentage of Medicaid payments to
providers that are spent on
compensation for direct care workers.
Such costs are limited to:
(A) Costs of required trainings for
direct care workers (such as costs for
qualified trainers and training
materials);
(B) Travel costs for direct care
workers (such as mileage
reimbursement or public transportation
subsidies); and
(C) Cost of personal protective
equipment for direct care workers.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
(2) Payment adequacy reporting. (i)
Except as provided in paragraphs
(e)(2)(ii) and (e)(4) of this section, the
State must report to CMS annually on
the percentage of total payments (not
including excluded costs) for furnishing
homemaker services, home health aide
services, personal care, and habilitation
services, as set forth in § 440.180(b)(2)
through (4) and (6), that is spent on
compensation for direct care workers, at
the time and in the form and manner
specified by CMS. The State must report
separately for each service and, within
each service, must separately report
services that are self-directed and
services delivered in a provideroperated physical location for which
facility-related costs are included in the
payment rate.
(ii) If the State provides that
homemaker, home health aide, personal
care services, or habilitation services, as
set forth at § 440.180(b)(2) through (4)
and (6), may be furnished under a selfdirected services delivery model in
which the beneficiary directing the
services sets the direct care worker’s
payment rate, then the State must
exclude such payment data from the
reporting required in paragraph (e) of
this section.
(3) Payment adequacy reporting
readiness. One year prior to the
applicability date for paragraph (e)(2)(i)
of this section, the State must report on
its readiness to comply with the
reporting requirement in (e)(2)(i) of this
section.
(4) Exclusion of data from the Indian
Health Service and Tribal health
programs that are subject to 25 U.S.C.
1641. States must exclude the Indian
Health Service and Tribal health
programs subject to the requirements at
25 U.S.C. 1641 from the reporting
required in paragraph (e) of this section,
and not require submission of data by,
or include any data from, the Indian
Health Service or Tribal health
programs subject to the requirements at
25 U.S.C. 1641 for the State’s reporting
required under paragraph (e)(2) of this
section.
(f) Applicability dates. (1) The State
must comply with the reporting
requirements at paragraphs (b) and (d)
of this section beginning 3 years after
July 9, 2024; and in the case of a State
that implements a managed care
delivery system under the authority of
sections 1915(a), 1915(b), 1932(a), or
1115(a) of the Act and includes HCBS
in the MCO’s, PIHP’s, or PAHP’s
contract, the first rating period for
contracts with the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP
beginning on or after the date that is 3
years after July 9, 2024.
PO 00000
Frm 00328
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
(2) The State must comply with the
reporting requirements at paragraphs (c)
and (e) of this section beginning 4 years
after July 9, 2024; and in the case of a
State that implements a managed care
delivery system under the authority of
sections 1915(a), 1915(b), 1932(a), or
1115(a) of the Act and includes HCBS
in the MCO’s, PIHP’s, or PAHP’s
contract, the first rating period for
contracts with the MCO, PIHP or PAHP
beginning on or after the date that is 4
years after July 9, 2024.
■ 11. Section 441.312 is added to
subpart G to read as follows:
§ 441.312 Home and community-based
services quality measure set.
(a) Basis and scope. Section 1102(a) of
the Act provides the Secretary of HHS
with authority to make and publish
rules and regulations that are necessary
for the efficient administration of the
Medicaid program. Section 1902(a)(6) of
the Act requires State Medicaid agencies
to make such reports, in such form and
containing such information, as the
Secretary may from time to time require,
and to comply with such provisions as
the Secretary may from time to time find
necessary to assure the correctness and
verification of such reports. This section
describes the Home and CommunityBased Services Quality Measure Set,
which States are required to use in
section 1915(c) waiver programs to
promote public transparency related to
the administration of Medicaid-covered
HCBS, under the authority at sections
1102(a) and 1902(a)(6) of the Act.
(b) Definitions. As used in this
subpart—
(1) Attribution rules means the
process States use to assign beneficiaries
to a specific health care program or
delivery system for the purpose of
calculating the measures on the Home
and Community-Based Services Quality
Measure Set.
(2) Home and Community-Based
Services Quality Measure Set means the
Home and Community-Based Services
Quality Measures for Medicaid
established and updated by the
Secretary through a process that allows
for public input and comment,
including through the Federal Register,
as described in paragraph (d) of this
section.
(c) Responsibilities of the Secretary.
The Secretary shall—
(1) Identify, and update no more
frequently than every other year,
beginning no later than December 31,
2026, the quality measures to be
included in the Home and CommunityBased Services Quality Measure Set as
defined in paragraph (b) of this section.
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
(2) Make technical updates and
corrections to the Home and
Community-Based Services Quality
Measure Set annually as appropriate.
(3) Consult at least every other year
with States and other interested parties
identified in paragraph (g) of this
section to—
(i) Establish priorities for the
development and advancement of the
Home and Community-Based Services
Quality Measure Set;
(ii) Identify newly developed or other
measures which should be added
including to address any gaps in the
measures included in the Home and
Community-Based Services Quality
Measure Set;
(iii) Identify measures which should
be removed as they no longer strengthen
the Home and Community-Based
Services Quality Measure Set; and
(iv) Ensure that all measures included
in the Home and Community-Based
Quality Measure Set reflect an
evidenced-based process including
testing, validation, and consensus
among interested parties; are
meaningful for States; and are feasible
for State-level, program-level, or
provider-level reporting as appropriate.
(4) In consultation with States,
develop and update, no more frequently
than every other year, the Home and
Community-Based Services Quality
Measure Set Quality Measure Set using
a process that allows for public input
and comment as described in paragraph
(d) of this section.
(d) Process for developing and
updating the HCBS Quality Measure
Set. The process for developing and
updating the Home and CommunityBased Services Quality Measure Set
Quality Measure Set will address all of
the following:
(1) Identification of all measures in
the Home and Community-Based
Services Quality Measure Set,
including:
(i) Measures newly added and
measures removed from the prior
version of the Home and CommunityBased Services Quality Measure Set;
(ii) The specific measures for which
reporting is mandatory;
(iii) The measures for which the
Secretary will complete reporting on
behalf of States and the measures for
which States may elect to have the
Secretary report on their behalf; and
(iv) The measures, if any, for which
the Secretary will provide States with
additional time to report, as well as how
much additional time the Secretary will
provide, in accordance with paragraph
(c) of this section.
(2) Technical information to States on
how to collect and calculate the data on
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
the Home and Community-Based
Services Quality Measure Set.
(3) Standardized format and reporting
schedule for reporting measure data
required under this section.
(4) Procedures that State agencies
must follow in reporting measure data
required under this section.
(5) Identification of the populations
for which States must report the
measures identified by the Secretary
under paragraph (e) of this section,
which may include, but is not limited
to beneficiaries—
(i) Receiving services through
specified delivery systems, such as
those enrolled in a MCO, PIHP, or PAHP
as defined in § 438.2 or receiving
services on a fee-for-service basis;
(ii) Who are dually eligible for
Medicare and Medicaid, including
beneficiaries whose medical assistance
is limited to payment of Medicare
premiums or cost sharing;
(iii) Who are older adults;
(iv) Who have physical disabilities;
(v) Who have intellectual and
development disabilities;
(vi) Who have serious mental illness;
and
(vii) Who have other health
conditions.
(6) Technical information on
attribution rules for determining how
States must report on measures for
beneficiaries who are included in more
than one population, as described in
paragraph (d)(5) of this section, during
the reporting period.
(7) The subset of measures among the
measures in the Home and CommunityBased Services Quality Measure Set that
must be stratified by race, ethnicity, sex,
age, rural/urban status, disability,
language, or such other factors as may
be specified by the Secretary and
informed by consultation every other
year with States and interested parties
in accordance with paragraphs (b)(2)
and (g) of this section.
(8) Describe how to establish State
performance targets for each of the
measures in the Home and CommunityBased Services Quality Measure Set.
(e) Phasing in of certain reporting. As
part of the process that allows for
developing and updating the Home and
Community-Based Services Quality
Measure Set described in paragraph (d)
of this section, the Secretary may
provide that mandatory State reporting
for certain measures and reporting for
certain populations of beneficiaries will
be phased in over a specified period of
time, taking into account the level of
complexity required for such State
reporting.
(f) Selection of measures for
stratification. In specifying which
PO 00000
Frm 00329
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40869
measures, and by which factors, States
must report stratified measures
consistent with paragraph (d)(7) of this
section, the Secretary will take into
account whether stratification can be
accomplished based on valid statistical
methods and without risking a violation
of beneficiary privacy and, for measures
obtained from surveys, whether the
original survey instrument collects the
variables necessary to stratify the
measures, and such other factors as the
Secretary determines appropriate; the
Secretary will require stratification of 25
percent of the measures in the Home
and Community-Based Services Quality
Measure Set for which the Secretary has
specified that reporting should be
stratified by 4 years after July 9, 2024,
50 percent of such measures by 6 years
after July 9, 2024, and 100 percent of
measures by 8 years after July 9, 2024.
(g) Consultation with interested
parties. For purposes of paragraph (c)(2)
of this section, the Secretary must
consult with interested parties as
described in this paragraph to include
the following:
(1) State Medicaid Agencies and
agencies that administer Medicaidcovered home and community-based
services.
(2) Health care and home and
community-based services
professionals, including members of the
allied health professions who specialize
in the care and treatment of older
adults, children and adults with
disabilities, and individuals with
complex medical needs.
(3) Health care and home and
community-based services professionals
(including members of the allied health
professions), providers, and direct care
workers who provide services to older
adults, children and adults with
disabilities, and individuals with
complex medical and behavioral health
care needs who live in urban and rural
medically underserved communities or
who are members of distinct population
sub-groups at heightened risk for poor
outcomes.
(4) Providers of home and
community-based services.
(5) Direct care workers and national
organizations representing direct care
workers.
(6) Consumers and national
organizations representing older adults,
children and adults with disabilities,
and individuals with complex medical
needs.
(7) National organizations and
individuals with expertise in home and
community-based services quality
measurement.
(8) Voluntary consensus standards
setting organizations and other
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
40870
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
organizations involved in the
advancement of evidence-based
measures of health care.
(9) Measure development experts.
(10) Such other interested parties as
the Secretary may determine
appropriate.
■ 12. Section 441.313 is added to
subpart G to read as follows:
§ 441.313
Website transparency.
(a) The State must operate a website
consistent with § 435.905(b) of this
chapter that provides the results of the
reporting requirements specified at
§§ 441.302(k)(6) and 441.311. The State
must:
(1) Include all content on one website,
either directly or by linking to websites
of individual MCO’s, PIHP’s, or PAHP’s,
as defined in § 438.2 of this chapter;
(2) Include clear and easy to
understand labels on documents and
links;
(3) Verify no less than quarterly, the
accurate function of the website and the
timeliness of the information and links;
and
(4) Include prominent language on the
website explaining that assistance in
accessing the required information on
the website is available at no cost and
include information on the availability
of oral interpretation in all languages
and written translation available in each
non-English language, how to request
auxiliary aids and services, and a tollfree and TTY/TDY telephone number.
(b) CMS must report on its website the
results of the reporting requirements
specified at §§ 441.302(k)(6) and
441.311 that the State reports to CMS.
(c) The State must comply with these
requirements beginning 3 years after
July 9, 2024; and in the case of the State
that implements a managed care
delivery system under the authority of
sections 1915(a), 1915(b), 1932(a), and
1115(a) of the Act and includes HCBS
in the MCO’s, PIHP’s, or PAHP’s
contract, the first rating period for
contracts with the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP
beginning on or after the date that is 3
years after July 9, 2024.
■ 13. Section 441.450 is amended in
paragraph (c) by revising the definition
of ‘‘Service plan’’ to read as follows:
§ 441.450
Basis, scope, and definitions.
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
*
*
*
*
*
(c) * * *
Service plan means the written
document that specifies the services and
supports (regardless of funding source)
that are to be furnished to meet the
needs of a participant in the selfdirected PAS option and to assist the
participant to direct the PAS and to live
in the community. The service plan is
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
developed based on the assessment of
need using a person-centered and
directed process. The service plan
supports the participant’s engagement
in community life and respects the
participant’s preferences, choices, and
abilities. The participant’s
representative, if any, families, friends,
and professionals, as desired or required
by the participant, will be involved in
the service-planning process. Service
plans must meet the requirements of
§ 441.301(c)(3), except that the
references to section 1915(c) of the Act
are instead references to section 1915(j)
of the Act.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 14. Section 441.464 is amended by—
■ a. Adding paragraph (d)(5);
■ b. Redesignating paragraphs (e) and (f)
as paragraphs (g) and (h); and
■ c. Adding new paragraphs (e) and (f).
The revisions and additions read as
follows:
§ 441.464
State assurances.
*
*
*
*
*
(d) * * *
(5) Implement and maintain a
grievance process in accordance with
§ 441.301(c)(7), except that the
references to section 1915(c) of the Act
are instead references to section 1915(j)
of the Act.
(e) Incident management system. The
State operates and maintains an
incident management system that
identifies, reports, triages, investigates,
resolves, tracks, and trends critical
incidents and adheres to requirements
of § 441.302(a)(6), except that the
references to section 1915(c) of the Act
are instead references to section 1915(j)
of the Act.
(f) Payment rates. Payment rates are
adequate to ensure a sufficient direct
care workforce to meet the needs of
beneficiaries and provide access to
services in the amount, duration, and
scope specified in beneficiaries’ personcentered service plans, in accordance
with § 441.302(k), except that the
references to section 1915(c) of the Act
are instead references to section 1915(j)
of the Act.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 15. Section 441.474 is amended by
adding paragraph (c) to read as follows:
§ 441.474 Quality assurance and
improvement plan.
*
*
*
*
*
(c) The quality assurance and
improvement plan must comply with all
components of §§ 441.302(k)(6), 441.311
and 441.312 and related reporting
requirements relevant to the State’s selfdirected PAS program, except that the
PO 00000
Frm 00330
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
references to section 1915(c) of the Act
are instead references to section 1915(j)
of the Act.
■ 16. Section 441.486 is added to
subpart J to read as follows:
§ 441.486
Website transparency.
For States subject to the requirements
of subpart J, the State must operate a
website consistent with § 441.313,
except that the references to section
1915(c) of the Act are instead references
to section 1915(j) of the Act.
■ 17. Section 441.540 is amended by
revising paragraph (c) to read as follows:
§ 441.540
Person-centered service plan.
*
*
*
*
*
(c) Reviewing the person-centered
service plan. The State must ensure that
the person-centered service plan for
every individual is reviewed, and
revised as appropriate, based upon the
reassessment of functional need at least
every 12 months, when the individual’s
circumstances or needs change
significantly, and at the request of the
individual. States must adhere to the
requirements of § 441.301(c)(3), except
that the references to section 1915(c) of
the Act are instead references to section
1915(k) of the Act.
■ 18. Section 441.555 is amended by
adding paragraph (e) to read as follows:
§ 441.555
Support system.
*
*
*
*
*
(e) Implement and maintain a
grievance process, in accordance with
§ 441.301(c)(7), except that the
references to section 1915(c) of the Act
are instead references to section 1915(k)
of the Act.
■ 19. Section 441.570 is amended by
adding paragraphs (e) and (f) to read as
follows:
§ 441.570
State assurances.
*
*
*
*
*
(e) An incident management system
in accordance with § 441.302(a)(6) is
implemented, except that the references
to section 1915(c) of the Act are instead
references to section 1915(k) of the Act.
(f) Payment rates are adequate to
ensure a sufficient direct care workforce
to meet the needs of beneficiaries and
provide access to services in the
amount, duration, and scope specified
in beneficiaries’ person-centered service
plans, in accordance with § 441.302(k),
except that the references to section
1915(c) of the Act are instead references
to section 1915(k) of the Act.
■ 20. Section 441.580 is amended by
redesignating paragraph (i) as (j), and
adding a new paragraph (i) to read as
follows:
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
§ 441.580
Data collection.
*
*
*
*
*
(i) Data and information as required in
§§ 441.302(k)(6) and 441.311, except
that the references to section 1915(c) of
the Act are instead references to section
1915(k) of the Act.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 21. Section 441.585 is amended by
adding paragraph (d) to read as follows:
§ 441.585
Quality assurance system.
*
*
*
*
*
(d) The State must implement the
Home and Community-Based Services
Quality Measure Set in accordance with
§ 441.312, except that the references to
section 1915(c) of the Act are instead
references to section 1915(k) of the Act.
■ 22. Section 441.595 is added to
subpart K to read as follows§ 441.595
Website transparency.
For States subject to the requirements
of subpart K, the State must operate a
website consistent with § 441.313,
except that the references to section
1915(c) of the Act are instead references
to section 1915(k) of the Act.
■ 23. Section 441.725 is amended by
revising paragraph (c) to read as follows:
§ 441.725
Person-centered service plan.
*
*
*
*
*
(c) Reviewing the person-centered
service plan. The State must ensure that
the person-centered service plan for
every individual is reviewed, and
revised as appropriate, based upon the
reassessment of functional need as
required in § 441.720, at least every 12
months, when the individual’s
circumstances or needs change
significantly, and at the request of the
individual. States must adhere to the
requirements of § 441.301(c)(3), except
that the references to section 1915(c) of
the Act are instead references to section
1915(i) of the Act.
■ 24. Section 441.745 is amended by–
■ a. Revising paragraph (a)(1)(iii) and
adding (a)(1)(iv) through (vii);
■ b. Revising paragraph (b)(1)(i); and
■ c. Adding paragraph (b)(1)(v).
The revision and additions read as
follows:
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
§ 441.745 State plan HCBS administration:
State responsibilities and quality
improvement.
*
*
*
*
*
(a) * * *
(1) * * *
(iii) Grievances. A State must
implement and maintain a grievance
process in accordance with
§ 441.301(c)(7), except that the
references to section 1915(c) of the Act
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
are instead references to section 1915(i)
of the Act.
(iv) Appeals. A State must provide
individuals with advance notice of and
the right to appeal terminations,
suspensions, or reductions of Medicaid
eligibility or covered services as
described in part 431, subpart E, of this
chapter.
(v) A State must implement an
incident management system in
accordance with § 441.302(a)(6), except
that the references to section 1915(c) of
the Act are instead references to section
1915(i) of the Act.
(vi) A State must assure payment rates
are adequate to ensure a sufficient direct
care workforce to meet the needs of
beneficiaries and provide access to
services in the amount, duration, and
scope specified in beneficiaries’ personcentered service plans, in accordance
with § 441.302(k), except that the
references to section 1915(c) of the Act
are instead references to section 1915(i)
of the Act.
(vii) A State must assure the
submission of data and information as
required in § 441.302(k)(6) and
§ 441.311, except that the references to
section 1915(c) of the Act are instead
references to section 1915(i) of the Act.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) * * *
(1) * * *
(i) Incorporate a continuous quality
improvement process that includes
monitoring, remediation, and quality
improvement, including recognizing
and reporting critical incidents, as
defined in § 441.302(a)(6)(i)(A), except
that the references to section 1915(c) of
the Act are instead references to section
1915(i) of the Act.
*
*
*
*
*
(v) Implementation of the Home and
Community-Based Services Quality
Measure Set in accordance with
§ 441.312, except that the references to
section 1915(c) of the Act are instead
references to section 1915(i) of the Act.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 25. Section 441.750 is added to
subpart M to read as follows—
§ 441.750
Website transparency.
For States subject to the requirements
of subpart M, the State must operate a
website consistent with § 441.313,
except that the references to section
1915(c) of the Act are instead references
to section 1915(i) of the Act.
PART 447—PAYMENT FOR SERVICES
26. The authority citation for part 447
is revised to read as follows:
■
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 1302, and 1396r–8,
and Pub. L. 111–148.
PO 00000
Frm 00331
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40871
27. Section 447.203 is amended by
revising paragraph (b) and adding
paragraph (c) to read as follows:
■
§ 447.203 Documentation of access to care
and service payment rates.
*
*
*
*
*
(b)(1) Payment rate transparency. The
State agency is required to publish all
Medicaid fee-for-service fee schedule
payment rates on a website that is
accessible to the general public.
(i) For purposes of this paragraph
(b)(1), the payment rates that the State
agency is required to publish are
Medicaid fee-for-service fee schedule
payment rates made to providers
delivering Medicaid services to
Medicaid beneficiaries through a fee-forservice delivery system.
(ii) The website where the State
agency publishes its Medicaid fee-forservice payment rates must be easily
reached from a hyperlink on the State
Medicaid agency’s website.
(iii) Medicaid fee-for-service payment
rates must be organized in such a way
that a member of the public can readily
determine the amount that Medicaid
would pay for a given service.
(iv) In the case of a bundled payment
methodology, the State must publish the
Medicaid fee-for-service bundled
payment rate and, where the bundled
payment rate is based on fee schedule
payment rates for each constituent
service, must identify each constituent
service included within the rate and
how much of the bundled payment is
allocated to each constituent service
under the State’s methodology.
(v) If the rates vary, the State must
separately identify the Medicaid fee-forservice payment rates by population
(pediatric and adult), provider type, and
geographical location, as applicable.
(vi) The initial publication of the
Medicaid fee-for-service payment rates
shall occur no later than July 1, 2026
and include approved Medicaid fee-forservice payment rates in effect as of July
1, 2026. The agency is required to
include the date the payment rates were
last updated on the State Medicaid
agency’s website and to ensure these
data are kept current where any
necessary update must be made no later
than 1 month following the latter of the
date of CMS approval of the State plan
amendment, section 1915(c) HCBS
waiver amendment, or similar
amendment revising the provider
payment rate or methodology, or the
effective date of the approved
amendment. In the event of a payment
rate change that occurs in accordance
with a previously approved rate
methodology, the State will ensure that
its payment rate transparency
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
40872
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
publication is updated no later than 1
month after the effective date of the
most recent update to the payment rate.
(2) Comparative payment rate
analysis and payment rate disclosure.
The State agency is required to develop
and publish a comparative payment rate
analysis of Medicaid fee-for-service fee
schedule payment rates for each of the
categories of services in paragraphs
(b)(2)(i) through (iii) of this section. If
the rates vary, the State must separately
identify the payment rates by
population (pediatric and adult),
provider type, and geographical
location, as applicable. The State agency
is further required to develop and
publish a payment rate disclosure of the
average hourly Medicaid fee-for-service
fee schedule payment rates for each of
the categories of services in paragraph
(b)(2)(iv) of this section, as specified in
paragraph (b)(3) of this section. If the
rates vary, the State must separately
identify the payment rates by
population (pediatric and adult),
provider type, geographical location,
and whether the payment rate includes
facility-related costs, as applicable.
(i) Primary care services.
(ii) Obstetrical and gynecological
services.
(iii) Outpatient mental health and
substance use disorder services.
(iv) Personal care, home health aide,
homemaker, and habilitation services,
as specified in § 440.180(b)(2) through
(4) and (6), provided by individual
providers and provider agencies.
(3) Comparative payment rate
analysis and payment rate disclosure
requirements. The State agency must
develop and publish, consistent with
the publication requirements described
in paragraphs (b)(1) through (b)(1)(ii) of
this section, a comparative payment rate
analysis and a payment rate disclosure.
(i) For the categories of services
described in paragraph (b)(2)(i) through
(iii) of this section, the comparative
payment rate analysis must compare the
State agency’s Medicaid fee-for-service
fee schedule payment rates to the most
recently published Medicare payment
rates effective for the same time period
for the evaluation and management (E/
M) codes applicable to the category of
service. The State must conduct the
comparative payment rate analysis at
the Current Procedural Terminology
(CPT) or Healthcare Common Procedure
Coding System (HCPCS) code level, as
applicable, using the most current set of
codes published by CMS, and the
analysis must meet the following
requirements:
(A) The State must organize the
analysis by category of service as
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
described in paragraphs (b)(2)(i) through
(iii) of this section.
(B) The analysis must clearly identify
the base Medicaid fee-for-service fee
schedule payment rates for each E/M
CPT/HCPCS code identified by CMS
under the applicable category of service,
including, if the rates vary, separate
identification of the payment rates by
population (pediatric and adult),
provider type, and geographical
location, as applicable.
(C) The analysis must clearly identify
the Medicare non-facility payment rates
as established in the annual Medicare
Physician Fee Schedule final rule
effective for the same time period for the
same set of E/M CPT/HCPCS codes, and
for the same geographical location as the
base Medicaid fee-for-service fee
schedule payment rates, that correspond
to the base Medicaid fee-for-service fee
schedule payment rates identified under
paragraph (b)(3)(i)(B) of this section,
including separate identification of the
payment rates by provider type.
(D) The analysis must specify the base
Medicaid fee-for-service fee schedule
payment rate identified under paragraph
(b)(3)(i)(B) of this section as a
percentage of the Medicare non-facility
payment rate as established in the
annual Medicare Physician Fee
Schedule final rule identified under
paragraph (b)(3)(i)(C) of this section for
each of the services for which the base
Medicaid fee-for-service fee schedule
payment rate is published pursuant to
paragraph (b)(3)(i)(B) of this section.
(E) The analysis must specify the
number of Medicaid-paid claims and
the number of Medicaid enrolled
beneficiaries who received a service
within a calendar year for each of the
services for which the base Medicaid
fee-for-service fee schedule payment
rate is published pursuant to paragraph
(b)(3)(i)(B) of this section.
(ii) For each category of services
specified in paragraph (b)(2)(iv) of this
section, the State agency is required to
publish a payment rate disclosure that
expresses the State’s payment rates as
the average hourly Medicaid fee-forservice fee schedule payment rates,
separately identified for payments made
to individual providers and provider
agencies, if the rates vary. The payment
rate disclosure must meet the following
requirements:
(A) The State must organize the
payment rate disclosure by category of
service as specified in paragraph
(b)(2)(iv) of this section.
(B) The disclosure must identify the
average hourly Medicaid fee-for-service
fee schedule payment rates by
applicable category of service,
including, if the rates vary, separate
PO 00000
Frm 00332
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
identification of the average hourly
Medicaid fee-for-service fee schedule
payment rates for payments made to
individual providers and provider
agencies, by population (pediatric and
adult), provider type, geographical
location, and whether the payment rate
includes facility-related costs, as
applicable.
(C) The disclosure must identify the
number of Medicaid-paid claims and
the number of Medicaid enrolled
beneficiaries who received a service
within a calendar year for each of the
services for which the average hourly
Medicaid fee-for-service fee schedule
payment rates are published pursuant to
paragraph (b)(3)(ii)(B) of this section.
(4) Comparative payment rate
analysis and payment rate disclosure
timeframe. The State agency must
publish the initial comparative payment
rate analysis and payment rate
disclosure of its Medicaid fee-for-service
fee schedule payment rates in effect as
of July 1, 2025 as required under
paragraphs (b)(2) and (b)(3) of this
section, by no later than July 1, 2026.
Thereafter, the State agency must
update the comparative payment rate
analysis and payment rate disclosure no
less than every 2 years, by no later than
July 1 of the second year following the
most recent update. The comparative
payment rate analysis and payment rate
disclosure must be published consistent
with the publication requirements
described in paragraphs
(b)(1)introductory text, (b)(1)(i) and
(b)(1)(ii) of this section.
(5) Compliance with payment rate
transparency, comparative payment rate
analysis, and payment rate disclosure
requirements. If a State fails to comply
with the payment rate transparency,
comparative payment rate analysis, and
payment rate disclosure requirements in
paragraphs (b)(1) through (b)(4) of this
section, including requirements for the
time and manner of publication, future
grant awards may be reduced under the
procedures set forth at 42 CFR part 430,
subparts C and D by the amount of FFP
CMS estimates is attributable to the
State’s administrative expenditures
relative to the total expenditures for the
categories of services specified in
paragraph (b)(2) of this section for
which the State has failed to comply
with applicable requirements, until
such time as the State complies with the
requirements. Unless otherwise
prohibited by law, deferred FFP for
those expenditures will be released after
the State has fully complied with all
applicable requirements.
(6) Interested parties advisory group
for rates paid for certain services. (i) The
State agency must establish an advisory
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
group for interested parties to advise
and consult on provider rates with
respect to service categories under the
Medicaid State plan, 1915(c) waiver,
and demonstration programs, as
applicable, where payments are made to
the direct care workers specified in
§ 441.311(e)(1)(ii) for the self-directed or
agency-directed services found at
§ 440.180(b)(2) through (4), and (6).
(ii) The interested parties advisory
group must include, at a minimum,
direct care workers, beneficiaries,
beneficiaries’ authorized
representatives, and other interested
parties impacted by the services rates in
question, as determined by the State.
(iii) The interested parties advisory
group will advise and consult with the
Medicaid agency on current and
proposed payment rates, HCBS payment
adequacy data as required at
§ 441.311(e), and access to care metrics
described in § 441.311(d)(2), associated
with services found at § 440.180(b)(2)
through (4) and (6), to ensure the
relevant Medicaid payment rates are
sufficient to ensure access to personal
care, home health aide, homemaker, and
habilitation services for Medicaid
beneficiaries at least as great as available
to the general population in the
geographic area and to ensure an
adequate number of qualified direct care
workers to provide self-directed
personal assistance services.
(iv) The interested parties advisory
group shall meet at least every 2 years
and make recommendations to the
Medicaid agency on the sufficiency of
State plan, 1915(c) waiver, and
demonstration direct care worker
payment rates, as applicable. The State
agency will ensure the group has access
to current and proposed payment rates,
HCBS provider payment adequacy
reporting information as described in
§ 441.311(e), and applicable access to
care metrics as described in
§ 441.311(d)(2) for HCBS in order to
produce these recommendations. The
process by which the State selects
interested party advisory group
members and convenes its meetings
must be made publicly available.
(v) The Medicaid agency must publish
the recommendations produced under
paragraph (b)(6)(iv) of the interested
parties advisory group consistent with
the publication requirements described
in paragraph (b)(1) through (b)(1)(ii) of
this section, within 1 month of when
the group provides the recommendation
to the agency.
(c)(1) Initial State analysis for rate
reduction or restructuring. For any State
plan amendment that proposes to
reduce provider payment rates or
restructure provider payments in
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
circumstances when the changes could
result in diminished access where the
criteria in paragraphs (c)(1)(i) through
(iii) of this section are met, the State
agency must provide written assurance
and relevant supporting documentation
that the following conditions are met as
well as a description of the State’s
procedures for monitoring continued
compliance with section 1902(a)(30)(A)
of the Act, as part of the State plan
amendment submission in a format
prescribed by CMS as a condition of
approval:
(i) Medicaid payment rates in the
aggregate (including base and
supplemental payments) following the
proposed reduction or restructuring for
each benefit category affected by the
proposed reduction or restructuring
would be at or above 80 percent of the
most recently published Medicare
payment rates for the same or a
comparable set of Medicare-covered
services.
(ii) The proposed reduction or
restructuring, including the cumulative
effect of all reductions or restructurings
taken throughout the current State fiscal
year, would be likely to result in no
more than a 4 percent reduction in
aggregate fee-for-service Medicaid
expenditures for each benefit category
affected by proposed reduction or
restructuring within a State fiscal year.
(iii) The public processes described in
paragraph (c)(4) of this section and
§ 447.204 yielded no significant access
to care concerns from beneficiaries,
providers, or other interested parties
regarding the service(s) for which the
payment rate reduction or payment
restructuring is proposed, or if such
processes did yield concerns, the State
can reasonably respond to or mitigate
the concerns, as appropriate, as
documented in the analysis provided by
the State pursuant to § 447.204(b)(3).
(2) Additional State rate analysis. For
any State plan amendment that
proposes to reduce provider payment
rates or restructure provider payments
in circumstances when the changes
could result in diminished access where
the requirements in paragraphs (c)(1)(i)
through (iii) of this section are not met,
the State must also provide the
following to CMS as part of the State
plan amendment submission as a
condition of approval, in addition to the
information required under paragraph
(c)(1) of this section, in a format
prescribed by CMS:
(i) A summary of the proposed
payment change, including the State’s
reason for the proposal and a
description of any policy purpose for
the proposed change, including the
cumulative effect of all reductions or
PO 00000
Frm 00333
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
40873
restructurings taken throughout the
current State fiscal year in aggregate feefor-service Medicaid expenditures for
each benefit category affected by
proposed reduction or restructuring
within a State fiscal year.
(ii) Medicaid payment rates in the
aggregate (including base and
supplemental payments) before and
after the proposed reduction or
restructuring for each benefit category
affected by proposed reduction or
restructuring, and a comparison of each
(aggregate Medicaid payment before and
after the reduction or restructuring) to
the most recently published Medicare
payment rates for the same or a
comparable set of Medicare-covered
services and, as reasonably feasible, to
the most recently available payment
rates of other health care payers in the
State or the geographic area for the same
or a comparable set of covered services.
(iii) Information about the number of
actively participating providers of
services in each benefit category
affected by the proposed reduction or
restructuring. For this purpose, an
actively participating provider is a
provider that is participating in the
Medicaid program and actively seeing
and providing services to Medicaid
beneficiaries or accepting Medicaid
beneficiaries as new patients. The State
must provide the number of actively
participating providers of services in
each affected benefit category for each of
the 3 years immediately preceding the
State plan amendment submission date,
by State-specified geographic area (for
example, by county or parish), provider
type, and site of service. The State must
document observed trends in the
number of actively participating
providers in each geographic area over
this period. The State may provide
estimates of the anticipated effect on the
number of actively participating
providers of services in each benefit
category affected by the proposed
reduction or restructuring, by
geographic area.
(iv) Information about the number of
Medicaid beneficiaries receiving
services through the FFS delivery
system in each benefit category affected
by the proposed reduction or
restructuring. The State must provide
the number of beneficiaries receiving
services in each affected benefit
category for each of the 3 years
immediately preceding the State plan
amendment submission date, by Statespecified geographic area (for example,
by county or parish). The State must
document observed trends in the
number of Medicaid beneficiaries
receiving services in each affected
benefit category in each geographic area
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
40874
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
over this period. The State must provide
quantitative and qualitative information
about the beneficiary populations
receiving services in the affected benefit
categories over this period, including
the number and proportion of
beneficiaries who are adults and
children and who are living with
disabilities, and a description of the
State’s consideration of the how the
proposed payment changes may affect
access to care and service delivery for
beneficiaries in various populations.
The State must provide estimates of the
anticipated effect on the number of
Medicaid beneficiaries receiving
services through the FFS delivery
system in each benefit category affected
by the proposed reduction or
restructuring, by geographic area.
(v) Information about the number of
Medicaid services furnished through the
FFS delivery system in each benefit
category affected by the proposed
reduction or restructuring. The State
must provide the number of Medicaid
services furnished in each affected
benefit category for each of the 3 years
immediately preceding the State plan
amendment submission date, by Statespecified geographic area (for example,
by county or parish), provider type, and
site of service. The State must document
observed trends in the number of
Medicaid services furnished in each
affected benefit category in each
geographic area over this period. The
State must provide quantitative and
qualitative information about the
Medicaid services furnished in the
affected benefit categories over this
period, including the number and
proportion of Medicaid services
furnished to adults and children and
who are living with disabilities, and a
description of the State’s consideration
of the how the proposed payment
changes may affect access to care and
service delivery. The State must provide
estimates of the anticipated effect on the
number of Medicaid services furnished
through the FFS delivery system in each
benefit category affected by the
proposed reduction or restructuring, by
geographic area.
(vi) A summary of, and the State’s
response to, any access to care concerns
or complaints received from
beneficiaries, providers, and other
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:28 May 09, 2024
Jkt 262001
interested parties regarding the
service(s) for which the payment rate
reduction or restructuring is proposed
as required under § 447.204(a)(2).
(3) Compliance with requirements for
State analysis for rate reduction or
restructuring. A State that submits a
State plan amendment that proposes to
reduce provider payment rates or
restructure provider payments in
circumstances when the changes could
result in diminished access that fails to
provide the information and analysis to
support approval as specified in
paragraphs (c)(1) and (2) of this section,
as applicable, may be subject to State
plan amendment disapproval under
§ 430.15(c) of this chapter. Additionally,
States that submit relevant information,
but where there are unresolved access to
care concerns related to the proposed
State plan amendment, including any
raised by CMS in its review of the
proposal and any raised through the
public process as specified in paragraph
(c)(4) of this section or under
§ 447.204(a)(2), may be subject to State
plan amendment disapproval. If State
monitoring of beneficiary access after
the payment rate reduction or
restructuring takes effect shows a
decrease in Medicaid access to care,
such as a decrease in the provider-tobeneficiary ratio for any affected service,
or the State or CMS experiences an
increase in beneficiary or provider
complaints or concerns about access to
care that suggests possible
noncompliance with the access
requirements in section 1902(a)(30)(A)
of the Act, CMS may take a compliance
action using the procedures described in
§ 430.35 of this chapter.
(4) Mechanisms for ongoing
beneficiary and provider input. (i) States
must have ongoing mechanisms for
beneficiary and provider input on
access to care (through hotlines,
surveys, ombudsman, review of
grievance and appeals data, or another
equivalent mechanism), consistent with
the access requirements and public
process described in § 447.204.
(ii) States should promptly respond to
public input through these mechanisms
citing specific access problems, with an
appropriate investigation, analysis, and
response.
(iii) States must maintain a record of
data on public input and how the State
PO 00000
Frm 00334
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 9990
responded to this input. This record
will be made available to CMS upon
request.
(5) Addressing access questions and
remediation of inadequate access to
care. When access deficiencies are
identified, the State must, within 90
days after discovery, submit a corrective
action plan with specific steps and
timelines to address those issues. While
the corrective action plan may include
longer-term objectives, remediation of
the access deficiency should take place
within 12 months.
(i) The State’s corrective actions may
address the access deficiencies through
a variety of approaches, including, but
not limited to: Increasing payment rates,
improving outreach to providers,
reducing barriers to provider
enrollment, providing additional
transportation to services, providing for
telemedicine delivery and telehealth, or
improving care coordination.
(ii) The resulting improvements in
access must be measured and
sustainable.
(6) Compliance actions for access
deficiencies. To remedy an access
deficiency, CMS may take a compliance
action using the procedures described at
§ 430.35 of this chapter.
■ 28. Section 447.204 is amended by—
■ a. Revising paragraphs (a)(1) and (b);
and
■ b. Removing paragraph (d).
The revisions read as follows:
§ 447.204 Medicaid provider participation
and public process to inform access to
care.
(a) * * *
(1) The data collected, and the State
analysis performed, under § 447.203(c).
*
*
*
*
*
(b) The State must submit to CMS
with any such proposed State plan
amendment affecting payment rates
documentation of the information and
analysis required under § 447.203(c) of
this chapter.
*
*
*
*
*
Xavier Becerra,
Secretary, Department of Health and Human
Services.
[FR Doc. 2024–08363 Filed 4–22–24; 4:15 pm]
BILLING CODE 4120–01–P
E:\FR\FM\10MYR2.SGM
10MYR2
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 89, Number 92 (Friday, May 10, 2024)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 40542-40874]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2024-08363]
[[Page 40541]]
Vol. 89
Friday,
No. 92
May 10, 2024
Part II
Department of Health and Human Services
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
42 CFR Parts 431, 438, 441, et al.
Medicaid Program; Ensuring Access to Medicaid Services; Final Rule
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 92 / Friday, May 10, 2024 / Rules and
Regulations
[[Page 40542]]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services
42 CFR Parts 431, 438, 441, and 447
[CMS-2442-F]
RIN 0938-AU68
Medicaid Program; Ensuring Access to Medicaid Services
AGENCY: Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS), Department of
Health and Human Services (HHS).
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: This final rule takes a comprehensive approach to improving
access to care, quality and health outcomes, and better addressing
health equity issues in the Medicaid program across fee-for-service
(FFS), managed care delivery systems, and in home and community-based
services (HCBS) programs. These improvements increase transparency and
accountability, standardize data and monitoring, and create
opportunities for States to promote active beneficiary engagement in
their Medicaid programs, with the goal of improving access to care.
DATES: These regulations are effective on July 9, 2024.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Karen LLanos, (410) 786-9071, for Medicaid Advisory Committee.
Jennifer Bowdoin, (410) 786-8551, for Home and Community-Based
Services.
Jeremy Silanskis, (410) 786-1592, for Fee-for-Service Payment.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background
A. Overview
Title XIX of the Social Security Act (the Act) established the
Medicaid program as a joint Federal and State program to provide
medical assistance to eligible individuals, including many with low
incomes. Under the Medicaid program, each State that chooses to
participate in the program and receive Federal financial participation
(FFP) for program expenditures must establish eligibility standards,
benefits packages, and payment rates, and undertake program
administration in accordance with Federal statutory and regulatory
requirements. The provisions of each State's Medicaid program are
described in the Medicaid ``State plan'' and, as applicable, related
authorities, such as demonstration projects and waivers of State plan
requirements. Among other responsibilities, CMS approves State plans,
State plan amendments (SPAs), demonstration projects authorized under
section 1115 of the Act, and waivers authorized under section 1915 of
the Act; and reviews expenditures for compliance with Federal Medicaid
law, including the requirements of section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act
relating to efficiency, economy, quality of care, and access to ensure
that all applicable Federal requirements are met.
The Medicaid program provides essential health coverage to tens of
millions of people, covering a broad array of health benefits and
services critical to underserved populations,\1\ including low-income
adults, children, parents, pregnant individuals, older adults, and
people with disabilities. For example, Medicaid pays for approximately
41 percent of all births in the U.S.\2\ and is the largest payer of
long-term services and supports (LTSS),\3\ the largest, single payer of
services to treat substance use disorders,\4\ and services to prevent
and treat the Human Immunodeficiency Virus.\5\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Executive Order 13985: https://www.whitehouse.gov/briefing-room/presidential-actions/2021/01/20/executive-order-advancing-racial-equity-and-support-for-underserved-communities-through-the-federal-government/.
\2\ National Center for Health Statistics. Key Birth Statistics.
Accessed at https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/nvss/births.htm.
\3\ Colello, Kirsten J. Who Pays for Long-Term Services and
Supports? Congressional Research Service. Updated September 2023.
Accessed at https://crsreports.congress.gov/product/pdf/IF/IF10343.
\4\ Soni, Anita. Health Care Expenditures for Treatment of
Mental Disorders: Estimates for Adults Ages 18 and Older, U.S.
Civilian Noninstitutionalized Population, 2019. Statistical Brief
#539, pg 12. February 2022. Agency for Healthcare Research and
Quality, Rockville, MD. Accessed at https://meps.ahrq.gov/data_files/publications/st539/stat539.pdf.
\5\ Dawson, L. and Kates, J. Insurance Coverage and Viral
Suppression Among People with HIV, 2018. September 2020. Kaiser
Family Foundation. Accessed at https://www.kff.org/hivaids/issue-brief/insurance-coverage-and-viral-suppression-among-people-with-hiv-2018/.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
On January 28, 2021, the President signed Executive Order (E.O.)
14009,\6\ ``Strengthening Medicaid and the Affordable Care Act,'' which
established the policy objective to protect and strengthen Medicaid and
the Affordable Care Act and to make high-quality health care accessible
and affordable for every American. The E.O. also directed executive
departments and agencies to review existing regulations, orders,
guidance documents, and policies to determine whether such agency
actions are inconsistent with this policy. On April 5, 2022, E.O.
14070,\7\ ``Continuing To Strengthen Americans' Access to Affordable,
Quality Health Coverage,'' directed Federal agencies with
responsibilities related to Americans' access to health coverage to
review agency actions to identify ways to continue to expand the
availability of affordable health coverage, to improve the quality of
coverage, to strengthen benefits, and to help more Americans enroll in
quality health coverage. Consistent with CMS' authorities under the
Act, this final rule implements E.O.s 14009 and 14070 by helping States
to strengthen Medicaid and improve access to and quality of care
provided.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\6\ Executive Order 14009: https://www.federalregister.gov/documents/2021/02/02/2021-02252/strengthening-medicaid-and-the-affordable-care-act.
\7\ Executive Order 14070: https://www.federalregister.gov/documents/2022/04/08/2022-07716/continuing-to-strengthen-americans-access-to-affordable-quality-health-coverage.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Ensuring that beneficiaries can access covered services is
necessary to the basic operation of the Medicaid program. Depending on
the State and its Medicaid program structure, beneficiaries access
their health care services using a variety of care delivery systems
(for example, FFS, fully-capitated managed care, partially capitated
managed care, etc.), including through demonstrations and waiver
programs. The volume of Medicaid beneficiaries enrolled in a managed
care program in Medicaid has grown from 81 percent in 2016 to 85
percent in 2021, with 74.6 percent of Medicaid beneficiaries enrolled
in comprehensive managed care organizations.8 9 The
remaining individuals received all of their care or some services that
have been carved out of managed care through FFS.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\8\ Medicaid Managed Care Enrollment Report. https://www.medicaid.gov/medicaid/managed-care/enrollment-report/.
\9\ Throughout this document, the use of the term ``managed care
plan'' includes managed care organizations (MCOs), prepaid inpatient
health plans (PIHPs), and prepaid ambulatory health plans (PAHPs)
[as defined in 42 CFR 438.2] and is used only when the provision
under discussion applies to all three arrangements. An explicit
reference is used in the preamble if the provision applies to
primary care case managers (PCCMs) or primary care case management
entities (PCCM entities).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Current access regulations are neither comprehensive nor consistent
across delivery systems or coverage authority (for example, State plan
and demonstration authority). For example, regulations at 42 CFR
447.203 and 447.204 relating to access to care, service payment rates,
and Medicaid provider participation in rate setting apply only to
Medicaid FFS delivery systems and focus on ensuring that payment rates
are consistent with the statutory requirements in section
1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act. The regulations do not apply to services
[[Page 40543]]
delivered under managed care. These regulations are also largely
procedural in nature and rely heavily on States to form an analysis and
reach conclusions on the sufficiency of their own payment rates.
With a program as large and complex as Medicaid, access regulations
need to be multi-factorial to promote consistent access to health care
for all beneficiaries across all types of care delivery systems in
accordance with statutory requirements. Strategies to enhance access to
health care services should reflect how people move through and
interact with the health care system. We view the continuum of health
care access across three dimensions of a person-centered framework: (1)
enrollment in coverage; (2) maintenance of coverage; and (3) access to
services and supports. Within each of these dimensions, accompanying
regulatory, monitoring, and/or compliance actions may be needed to
ensure access to health care is achieved and maintained.
In the spring of 2022, we released a request for information (RFI)
\10\ to collect feedback on a broad range of questions that examined
topics such as: challenges with eligibility and enrollment; ways we can
use data available to measure, monitor, and support improvement efforts
related to access to services; strategies we can implement to support
equitable and timely access to providers and services; and
opportunities to use existing and new access standards to help ensure
that Medicaid and Children's Health Insurance Program (CHIP) payments
are sufficient to enlist enough providers.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\10\ CMS Request for Information: Access to Coverage and Care in
Medicaid & CHIP. February 2022. For a full list of question from the
RFI, see https://www.medicaid.gov/medicaid/access-care/downloads/access-rfi-2022-questions.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Some of the most common feedback we received through the RFI
related to ways that we can promote health equity through cultural
competency. Commenters shared the importance that cultural competency
plays in how beneficiaries access health care and in the quality of
health services received by beneficiaries. The RFI respondents shared
examples of actions that we could take, including collecting and
analyzing health outcomes data by sociodemographic categories;
establishing minimum standards for how States serve communities in ways
that address cultural competency and language preferences; and reducing
barriers to enrollment and retention for racial and ethnic minority
groups.
In addition to the topic of cultural competency, commenters also
commonly shared that they viewed reimbursement rates as a key driver of
provider participation in Medicaid and CHIP programs. Further,
commenters noted that aligning payment approaches and setting minimum
standards for payment regulations and compliance across Medicaid and
CHIP delivery systems, services, and benefits could help ensure that
beneficiaries' access to services is as similar as possible across
beneficiary groups, delivery systems, and programs.
As mentioned previously in this final rule, the first dimension of
access focuses on ensuring that eligible people are able to enroll in
the Medicaid program. Access to Medicaid enrollment requires that a
potential beneficiary know if they are or may be eligible for Medicaid,
be aware of Medicaid coverage options, and be able to easily apply for
and enroll in coverage. The second dimension of access in this
continuum relates to maintaining coverage once the beneficiary is
enrolled in the Medicaid program initially. Maintaining coverage
requires that eligible beneficiaries are able to stay enrolled in the
program without interruption, or that they know how to and can smoothly
transition to other health coverage, such as CHIP, Exchange coverage,
or Medicare, when they are no longer eligible for Medicaid coverage but
have become eligible for other health coverage programs. In September
2022, we published a proposed rule, Streamlining the Medicaid,
Children's Health Insurance Program, and Basic Health Program
Application, Eligibility, Determination, Enrollment, and Renewal
Processes to simplify the processes for eligible individuals to enroll
and retain eligibility in Medicaid, CHIP, and the Basic Health Program
(BHP) (87 FR 54760). This proposed rule was finalized in two parts, the
Streamlining Medicaid; Medicare Savings Program Eligibility
Determination and Enrollment Final Rule (88 FR 65230) and the
Streamlining Eligibility & Enrollment final rule (89 FR 22780).
The third dimension, which is the focus of this final rule, is
access to services and supports. This rule addresses additional
critical elements of access: (1) potential access, which refers to a
beneficiary's access to providers and services, whether or not the
providers or services are used; (2) beneficiary utilization, which
refers to beneficiaries' actual use of the providers and services
available to them; and (3) beneficiaries' perceptions and experiences
with the care they did or were not able to receive. These terms and
definitions build upon previous efforts to examine how best to monitor
access.\11\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\11\ Kenney, Genevieve M., Kathy Gifford, Jane Wishner, Vanessa
Forsberg, Amanda I. Napoles, and Danielle Pavliv. ``Proposed
Medicaid Access Measurement and Monitoring Plan.'' Washington, DC:
The Urban Institute. August 2016. Accessed at https://www.urban.org/sites/default/files/publication/88081/2001143-medicaid-access-measurement-and-monitoring-plan_0.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We completed an array of regulatory activities, including three
rules: the aforementioned Streamlining Eligibility & Enrollment final
rules and a final rule entitled Medicaid and Children's Health
Insurance Program (CHIP) Managed Care Access, Finance, and Quality (as
published elsewhere in this issue of the Federal Register, Managed Care
final rule), on managed care including matters of access, and this
final rule on access. Additionally, we are taking non-regulatory
actions to improve beneficiary access to care (for example, best
practices toolkits and technical assistance to States) to improve
access to health care services across Medicaid delivery systems.
As noted earlier, we issued the Streamlining Eligibility &
Enrollment final rules to address the first two dimensions of access to
health care: (1) enrollment in coverage and (2) maintenance of
coverage. Through those final rules, we streamline Medicaid, CHIP and
BHP eligibility and enrollment processes, reduce administrative burden
on States and applicants/enrollees toward a more seamless eligibility
and enrollment process, and increase the enrollment and retention of
eligible individuals.
The Managed Care final rule improves access to care and quality
outcomes for Medicaid and CHIP beneficiaries enrolled in managed care
by: creating standards for timely access to care and States' monitoring
and enforcement efforts; reducing burden for some State directed
payments and certain quality reporting requirements; adding new
standards that will apply when States use in lieu of services and
settings (ILOSs) to promote effective utilization, and specifying the
scope and nature of ILOS; specifying medical loss ratio (MLR)
requirements, and establishing a quality rating system for Medicaid and
CHIP managed care plans.
Through the Managed Care final rule and this final rule (Ensuring
Access to Medicaid Services), we finalize additional requirements to
address the third dimension of the health care access continuum: access
to services. The requirements outlined later in this section focus on
improving access to services in Medicaid by utilizing tools such as FFS
rate transparency,
[[Page 40544]]
standardized reporting for HCBS, and improving the process for
interested parties, especially Medicaid beneficiaries, to provide
feedback to State Medicaid agencies and for Medicaid agencies to
respond to the feedback (also known as a feedback loop).
Through a combination of these four final rules, we address a range
of access-related challenges that impact how beneficiaries are served
by Medicaid across all of its delivery systems. FFP will be available
for expenditures that are necessary to implement the activities States
will need to undertake to comply with the provisions of these final
rules.
Finally, we also believe it is important to acknowledge the role of
health equity within this final rule. Medicaid plays a
disproportionately large role in covering health care for people from
underserved communities in this country.\12\ Consistent with E.O. 13985
on ``Advancing Racial Equity and Support for Underserved Communities
Through the Federal Government (January 20, 2021),'' \13\ which calls
for advancing equity for underserved populations, we are working to
ensure our programs consistently provide high-quality care to all
beneficiaries, and thus advance health equity, consistent with the
goals and objectives we have outlined in the CMS Framework for Health
Equity 2022-2032 \14\ and the HHS Equity Action Plan.\15\ That effort
includes increasing our understanding of the needs of those we serve to
ensure that all individuals have access to equitable coverage and care.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\12\ Guth, M and Artiga, S. Medicaid and Racial Health Equity
March 2022. Accessed at https://www.kff.org/medicaid/issue-brief/medicaid-and-racial-health-equity/.
\13\ Executive Order 13985: https://www.whitehouse.gov/briefing-room/presidential-actions/2021/01/20/executive-order-advancing-racial-equity-and-support-for-underserved-communities-through-the-federal-government/.
\14\ CMS Framework for Health Equity 2022-2032: https://www.cms.gov/files/document/cms-framework-health-equity.pdf.
\15\ HHS Equity Action Plan. April 2022. Accessed at https://www.hhs.gov/sites/default/files/hhs-equity-action-plan.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We recognize that each State faces a unique set of challenges
related to the resumption of its normal program activities after the
end of the COVID-19 public health emergency (PHE). More specifically,
the expiration of the Medicaid continuous enrollment condition
authorized by the Families First Coronavirus Response Act (FFCRA)
presents the single largest health coverage transition event since the
first open enrollment period of the Affordable Care Act. As a condition
of receiving a temporary 6.2 percentage point Federal Medical
Assistance Percentage (FMAP) increase under the FFCRA, States were
required to maintain enrollment of nearly all Medicaid enrollees. This
continuous enrollment condition expired on March 31, 2023, after which
States began completing renewals for all individuals enrolled in
Medicaid, CHIP, and the BHP. Additionally, many other temporary
authorities adopted by States during the COVID-19 PHE expired at the
end of the PHE, and States are returning to regular operations across
their programs. The resumption of normal Medicaid operations is
generally referred to as ``unwinding'' and the period for States to
initiate all outstanding eligibility actions that were delayed because
of the FFCRA continuous enrollment condition is called the ``unwinding
period.'' We considered States' unwinding responsibilities when
finalizing the dates for States to begin complying with the
requirements being finalized in this rule, but, as noted in the
Ensuring Access to Medicaid Services proposed rule, we solicited State
feedback on whether our proposals struck the correct balance.
We considered adopting an effective date of 60 days following
publication of this final rule and separate compliance dates for
various provisions, which we note where relevant in our discussion of
specific proposals in this final rule. We solicited comment on whether
an effective date of 60 days following publication would be appropriate
when combined with later dates for compliance for some provisions.
We also solicited comment on the timeframe that would be most
achievable and appropriate for compliance with each proposed provision
and whether the compliance date should vary by provision.
B. Medical Care Advisory Committees (MCAC)
We obtained feedback during various public engagement activities
conducted with States and other interested parties, which supports
research findings that the beneficiary perspective and lived Medicaid
experience \16\ should be considered when making policy decisions
related to Medicaid programs.17 18 A 2022 report from the
HHS Assistant Secretary of Planning and Evaluation (ASPE) noted that
including people with lived experience in the policy-making process can
lead to a deeper understanding of the conditions affecting certain
populations, facilitate identification of possible solutions, and avoid
unintended consequences of potential policy or program changes that
could negatively impact the people the program aims to serve.\19\ We
have concluded that beneficiary perspectives need to be central to
operating a high-quality health coverage program that consistently
meets the needs of all its beneficiaries.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\16\ Lived experience refers to ``representation and
understanding of an individual's human experiences, choices, and
options and how those factors influence one's perception of
knowledge'' based on one's own life. In this context, we refer to
people who have been enrolled in Medicaid currently or in the past.
Accessed at https://aspe.hhs.gov/lived-
experience#:~:text=In%20the%20context%20of%20ASPE%E2%80%99s%20researc
h%2C%20people%20with,programs%20that%20aim%20to%20address%20the%20iss
ue%20%28s%29.
\17\ Zhu JM, Rowland R, Gunn R, Gollust S, Grande DT. Engaging
Consumers in Medicaid Program Design: Strategies from the States.
Milbank Q. 2021 Mar;99(1):99-125. doi: 10.1111/1468-0009.12492. Epub
2020 Dec 15. PMID: 33320389; PMCID: PMC7984666. Accessed at https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7984666/.
\18\ Key Findings from the Medicaid MCO Learning Hub Discussion
Group Series and Roundtable--Focus on Member Engagement and the
Consumer Voice. NORC at the University of Chicago. Jan 2021.
Accessed at https://www.norc.org/PDFs/Medicaid%20Managed%20Care%20Organization%20Learning%20Hub/MMCOLearningHub_MemberEngagement.pdf.
\19\ Syreeta Skelton-Wilson et al., ``Methods and Emerging
Strategies to Engage People with Lived Experience,'' Office of the
Assistant Secretary for Planning and Evaluation (ASPE), U.S.
Department of Health and Human Services, January 4, 2022, https://aspe.hhs.gov/reports/lived-experience-brief.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
However, effective community engagement is not as simple as
planning a meeting and requesting feedback. To create opportunities
that facilitate true engagement, it is important to understand and
honor strengths and assets that exist within communities; recognize and
solicit the inclusion of diverse voices; dedicate resources to ensuring
that engagement is done in culturally meaningful ways; ensure
timelines, planning processes, and resources that support equitable
participation; and follow up with communities to let them know how
their input was utilized. Ensuring optimal health outcomes for all
beneficiaries served by a program through the design, implementation,
and operationalization of policies and programs requires intentional
and continuous effort to engage people who have historically been
excluded from the process.
Section 1902(a)(4) of the Act is a longstanding statutory provision
that, as implemented in part in regulations currently codified at 42
CFR 431.12,\20\ requires States to have a Medical Care
[[Page 40545]]
Advisory Committee (MCAC) in place to advise the State Medicaid agency
about health and medical care services. Under section 1903(a)(7) of the
Act, expenditures made by the State agency to operate the MCAC are
eligible for Federal administrative match.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\20\ The regulatory provision was originally established in 36
FR 3793 at 3870.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The current MCAC regulations at Sec. 431.12 require States to
establish such a committee and describe high-level requirements related
to the composition of the committee, the scope of topics to be
discussed, and the support the Committee can receive from the State in
its administration. Due to the lack of specificity in the current
regulations, these regulations have not been consistently implemented
across States. For example, there is no mention of how States should
approach meeting periodicity or meeting structure in ways that are
conducive to including a variety of Medicaid interested parties. There
is also no mention in the regulations about how States can build
accountability through transparency with their interested parties by
publicly sharing meeting dates, membership lists, and the outcomes of
these meetings. The regulations also limit the required MCAC
discussions to topics about health and medical care services--which in
turn limits the benefits of using the MCAC as a vehicle that can
provide States with varied ideas, suggestions, and experiences on a
range of issues related to the effective administration of the Medicaid
program.
As such, we have determined the requirements governing MCACs need
to be more robust to ensure all States are using these committees
optimally to realize a more effective and efficient Medicaid program
that is informed by the experiences of beneficiaries, their caretakers,
and other interested parties. The current regulations have been in
place without change for over 40 years.\21\ Over the last four decades,
we have learned that the current MCAC requirements are insufficient in
ensuring that the beneficiary perspective is meaningfully represented
on the MCAC. Recent research regarding soliciting input from
individuals with lived experience, including our recent discussions
with States about their MCAC, provide a unique opportunity to re-
examine the purpose of this committee and update the policies to
reflect four decades of program experience.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\21\ 43 FR 45091 at 45189.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In 2022, we gathered feedback from various public engagement
activities conducted with States, other interested parties, and
directly from a subset of State Medicaid agencies that described a wide
variation in how States are operating MCACs today. The feedback
suggested that some MCACs operate simply to meet the broad Federal
requirements. As discussed previously in this section, we have
discovered that our current regulations do not further the statutory
goal of meaningfully engaging Medicaid beneficiaries and other low-
income people in matters related to the operation of the Medicaid
program. Meaningful engagement can help develop relationships and
establish trust between the communities served and the Medicaid agency
to ensure States receive important information concerning how to best
provide health coverage to their beneficiary populations. The current
MCAC regulations establish the importance of broad feedback from
interested parties, but they lack the specificity that can ensure
States use MCACs in ways that facilitate that feedback.
The current regulations require that MCACs must include Medicaid
beneficiaries as committee members. However, the regulations do not
mention or account for the reality that other interested parties can
stifle beneficiary contribution in a group setting. For example, when
there are a small number of beneficiary representatives in large
committees with providers, health plans, and professional advocates, it
can be uncomfortable and intimidating for beneficiaries to share their
perspective and experience. Based on these reasons, several States
already use beneficiary-only groups that feed into larger MCACs.
Improvements to the MCACs are critical to ensuring a robust and
accurate understanding of beneficiaries' challenges to health care
access. The current regulations value State Medicaid agencies having a
way to get feedback from interested parties on issues related to the
Medicaid program. However, the current regulations lack specificity
related to how MCACs can be used to benefit the Medicaid program more
expressly by more fully promoting the beneficiary voice. MCACs need to
provide a forum for beneficiaries and people with lived experience with
the Medicaid program to share their experiences and challenges with
accessing health care, and to assist States in understanding and better
addressing those challenges. These committees also represent unique
opportunities for States to include representation by members that
reflect the demographics of their Medicaid program to ensure that the
program is best serving the needs of all beneficiaries, but not all
States are utilizing that opportunity.
This final rule strikes a balance that reflects how States
currently use advisory committees (such as MCACs or standalone
beneficiary groups). We know that some States approach these committees
as a way to meet a Federal requirement while other States are using
them in much more innovative ways. As a middle ground, this final rule
seeks to: (1) address the gaps in the current regulations described
previously in this section; and (2) establish requirements to implement
more effective advisory committees. States will select members in a way
that reflects a wide range of Medicaid interested parties (covering a
diverse set of populations and interests relevant to the Medicaid
program), place a special emphasis on the inclusion of the beneficiary
perspective, and create a meeting environment where each voice is
empowered to participate equally.
The changes we are making in this rule are rooted in best practices
learned from States' experiences implementing the existing MCAC
provisions and from other State examples of community engagement that
support getting the type of feedback and experiences from
beneficiaries, their caretakers, providers, and other interested
parties that can then be used to positively impact care delivered
through the Medicaid program.
Accordingly, this final rule includes changes that will support the
implementation of the principles of bi-directional feedback,
transparency, and accountability. We are making changes to the features
of the new committee that can most effectively ensure member
engagement, including the staff and logistical support that is required
for beneficiaries and individuals representing beneficiaries to
meaningfully participate in these committees. We are also making
changes to expand the scope of topics to be addressed by the committee,
address committee membership composition, prescribe the features of
administration of the committee, establish requirements of an annual
report, and underscore the importance of beneficiary engagement through
the addition of a related beneficiary-only group.
C. Home and Community-Based Services (HCBS)
While Medicaid programs are required to provide medically necessary
nursing facility services for most eligible individuals age 21 or
older, coverage for
[[Page 40546]]
HCBS is a State option.\22\ As a result of this ``institutional bias''
in the statute, Medicaid reimbursement for LTSS was primarily spent on
institutional care, historically, with very little spending for
HCBS.\23\ However, over the past several decades, States have used
several Medicaid authorities,\24\ as well as CMS-funded grant
programs,\25\ to develop a broad range of HCBS to provide alternatives
to institutionalization for eligible Medicaid beneficiaries and to
advance person-centered care. Consistent with many beneficiaries'
preferences for where they would like to receive their care, HCBS have
become a critical component of the Medicaid program and are part of a
larger framework of progress toward community integration of older
adults and people with disabilities that spans efforts across the
Federal government. In fact, total Medicaid HCBS expenditures surpassed
the long-standing benchmark of 50 percent of LTSS expenditures in FY
2013 and has remained higher than 50 percent since then, reaching 55.4
percent in FY 2017 and 62.5 percent in FY 2020.\26\ A total of 35
States spent at least 50 percent of Medicaid LTSS expenditures on HCBS
in FY 2020.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\22\ Murray, Caitlin, Alena Tourtellotte, Debra Lipson, and
Andrea Wysocki. ``Medicaid Long Term Services and Supports Annual
Expenditures Report: Federal Fiscal Year 2019.'' Chicago, IL:
Mathematica, December 2021. Accessed at https://www.medicaid.gov/medicaid/long-term-services-supports/downloads/ltssexpenditures2019.pdf.
\23\ Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services. November 2020.
Long-Term Services and Supports Rebalancing Toolkit. Accessed at
https://www.medicaid.gov/medicaid/long-term-services-supports/downloads/ltss-rebalancing-toolkit.pdf.
\24\ These authorities include Medicaid State plan personal care
services and Social Security Act (the Act) section 1915(c) waivers,
section 1915(i) State plan HCBS, section 1915(j) self-directed
personal assistant services, and section 1915(k) Community First
Choice. See https://www.medicaid.gov/medicaid/home-community-based-services/home-community-based-services-authorities/ for
more information on these authorities. Some States also use
demonstration authority under section 1115(a) of the Act to cover
and test home and community-based service strategies. See https://www.medicaid.gov/medicaid/section-1115-demonstrations/ for
more information.
\25\ Federally funded grant programs include the Money Follows
the Person (MFP) demonstration program, which was initially
authorized by the Deficit Reduction Act of 2005 (Pub. L. 109-171).
The MFP program was recently extended under the Consolidated
Appropriations Act, 2021 (Pub. L. 116-260), which allowed new States
to join the demonstration and made statutory changes affecting MFP
participant eligibility criteria, allowing grantees to provide
community transition services under MFP earlier in an eligible
individual's inpatient stay.
\26\ Murray, Caitlin, Michelle Eckstein, Debra Lipson, and
Andrea Wysocki. ``Medicaid Long Term Services and Supports Annual
Expenditures Report: Federal Fiscal Year 2020.'' Chicago, IL:
Mathematica, December 9, 2021. Accessed at https://www.medicaid.gov/medicaid/long-term-services-supports/downloads/ltssexpenditures2020.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Furthermore, HCBS play an important role in States' efforts to
achieve compliance with Title II of the Americans with Disabilities Act
(ADA) of 1990, section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 (section
504),\27\ section 1557 of the Affordable Care Act, and the Supreme
Court's decision in Olmstead v. L.C.,\28\ in which the Court held that
unjustified segregation of persons with disabilities is a form of
unlawful discrimination under the ADA \29\ and States must ensure that
persons with disabilities are served in the most integrated setting
appropriate to their needs.\30\ Section 9817 of the American Rescue
Plan Act of 2021 (ARP) (Pub. L. 117-2) recently made a historic
investment in Medicaid HCBS by providing qualifying States with a
temporary 10 percentage point increase to the FMAP for certain Medicaid
expenditures for HCBS that States must use to implement or supplement
the implementation of one or more activities to enhance, expand, or
strengthen HCBS under the Medicaid program.\31\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\27\ HHS interprets section 504 and Title II of the ADA
similarly regarding the integration mandate and the Department of
Justice generally interprets the requirements under section 504
consistently with those under Title II of the ADA.
\28\ 527 U.S. 581 (1999).
\29\ Medicaid and the Olmstead Decision. Accessed at https://www.medicaid.gov/about-us/program-history/medicaid-50th-anniversary/entry/47688.
\30\ Medicaid and the Olmstead Decision. Accessed at https://www.medicaid.gov/about-us/program-history/medicaid-50th-anniversary/entry/47688.
\31\ Information on State activities to expand, enhance, or
strengthen HCBS under ARP section 9817 can be found on Medicaid.gov
at https://www.medicaid.gov/medicaid/home-community-based-services/guidance/strengthening-and-investing-home-and-community-based-services-for-medicaid-beneficiaries-american-rescue-plan-act-of-2021-section-9817/.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Medicaid coverage of HCBS varies by State and can include a
combination of medical and non-medical services, such as case
management, homemaker, personal care, adult day health, habilitation
(both day and residential), and respite care services. HCBS programs
serve a variety of targeted population groups, such as older adults,
and children and adults with intellectual or developmental
disabilities, physical disabilities, mental health/substance use
disorders, and complex medical needs. HCBS programs provide
opportunities for Medicaid beneficiaries to receive services in their
own homes and communities rather than in institutions.
CMS and States have worked for decades to support the increased
availability and provision of high-quality HCBS for Medicaid
beneficiaries. While there are quality and reporting requirements for
Medicaid HCBS, the requirements vary across authorities and are often
inadequate to provide the necessary information for ensuring that HCBS
are provided in a high-quality manner that best protects the health and
welfare of beneficiaries. Consequently, quality measurement and
reporting expectations are not consistent across and within services,
but instead vary depending on the authorities under which States are
delivering services. Additionally, States have flexibility to determine
the quality measures they use in their HCBS programs. While we support
State flexibility, a lack of standardization has resulted in thousands
of metrics and measures currently in use across States, with different
metrics and measures often used for different HCBS programs within the
same State. As a result, CMS and States are limited in the ability to
compare HCBS quality and outcomes within and across States or to
compare the performance of HCBS programs for different populations.
In addition, although there are differences in rates of disability
among demographic groups, there are very limited data currently
available to assess disparities in HCBS access, utilization, quality,
and outcomes. Few States have the data infrastructure to systematically
or routinely report data that can be used to assess whether disparities
exist in HCBS programs. This lack of available data also prevents CMS
and States from implementing interventions to make improvements in HCBS
programs designed to consistently meet the needs of all beneficiaries.
Compounding these concerns have been notable and high-profile instances
of abuse and neglect in recent years, which have been shown to result
from poor quality care and inadequate oversight of HCBS in Medicaid.
For example, a 2018 report, ``Ensuring Beneficiary Health and Safety in
Group Homes Through State Implementation of Comprehensive Compliance
Oversight,'' \32\ (``Joint Report''), which was jointly developed by
the U.S. Department of Health Human Services' Administration for
Community Living (ACL), Office for Civil Rights (OCR), and the Office
of
[[Page 40547]]
Inspector General (OIG), found systemic problems with health and safety
policies and procedures being followed in group homes and that failure
to comply with these policies and procedures left beneficiaries in
group homes at risk of serious harm. In addition, while existing
regulations provide safeguards for all Medicaid beneficiaries in the
event of a denial of Medicaid eligibility or an adverse benefit
determination by the State Medicaid agency and, where applicable, by
the beneficiary's managed care plan, there are no safeguards related to
other issues that HCBS beneficiaries may experience, such as the
failure of a provider to comply with the HCBS settings requirements or
difficulty accessing the services in the person-centered service plan
unless the individual is receiving those services through a Medicaid
managed care arrangement.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\32\ Ensuring Beneficiary Health and Safety in Group Homes
Through State Implementation of Comprehensive Compliance Oversight.
US Department of Health and Human Services, Office of the Inspector
General, Administration for Community Living, and Office for Civil
Rights. January 2018. Accessed at https://oig.hhs.gov/reports-and-publications/featured-topics/group-homes/group-homes-joint-report.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Finally, through our regular interactions with State Medicaid
agencies, provider groups, and beneficiary advocates, we observed that
all these interested parties routinely cite a shortage of direct care
workers and high rates of turnover in direct care workers among the
greatest challenges in ensuring access to high-quality, cost-effective
HCBS for people with disabilities and older adults. Some States have
also indicated that a lack of direct care workers is preventing them
from transitioning individuals from institutions to home and community-
based settings. While workforce shortages have existed for years, they
have been exacerbated by the COVID-19 pandemic, which has resulted in
higher rates of direct care worker turnover (for instance, due to
higher rates of worker-reported stress), an inability of some direct
care workers to return to their positions prior to the pandemic (for
instance, due to difficulty accessing child care or concerns about
contracting COVID-19 for people with higher risk of severe illness),
workforce shortages across the health care sector, and wage increases
in types of retail and other jobs that tend to draw from the same pool
of workers.33 34 35
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\33\ MACPAC Issue Brief. State Efforts to Address Medicaid Home-
and Community-Based Services Workforce Shortages. March 2022.
Accessed at https://www.macpac.gov/wp-content/uploads/2022/03/MACPAC-brief-on-HCBS-workforce.pdf.
\34\ Campbell, S., A. Del Rio Drake, R. Espinoza, K. Scales.
2021. Caring for the future: The power and potential of America's
direct care workforce. Bronx, NY: PHI https://phinational.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/01/Caring-for-the-Future-2021-PHI.pdf.
\35\ American Network of Community Options and Resources
(ANCOR). 2021. The state of America's direct support workforce 2021.
Alexandria, VA: ANCOR. Accessed at https://www.ancor.org/sites/default/files/the_state_of_americas_direct_support_workforce_crisis_2021.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
To address the list of challenges outlined in this section, we
proposed Federal requirements to improve access to care, quality of
care, and health and quality of life outcomes; promote health equity
for people receiving Medicaid-covered HCBS; and ensure that there are
safeguards in place for beneficiaries who receive HCBS through FFS
delivery systems. We solicited comment on other areas for rulemaking
consideration. The requirements we are finalizing in this rule are
intended, individually and as a whole, to promote public transparency
related to the administration of Medicaid HCBS programs.
D. Fee-For-Service (FFS) Payment
Section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act requires States to ``assure that
payments are consistent with efficiency, economy, and quality of care
and are sufficient to enlist enough providers so that care and services
are available under the plan at least to the extent that such care and
services are available to the general population in the geographic
area.'' Regulations at Sec. 447.203 require States to develop and
submit to CMS an access monitoring review plan (AMRP) for a core set of
services. Currently, the regulations rely on available State data to
support a determination that the State's payment rates are sufficient
to ensure access to care in Medicaid FFS that is at least as great for
beneficiaries as is generally available to the general population in
the geographic area, as required under section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the
Act.
In the May 6, 2011, Federal Register, we published the Medicaid
Program; Methods for Assuring Access to Covered Medicaid Services
proposed rule (76 FR 26341; hereinafter ``2011 proposed rule''), which
outlined a data-driven process for States with Medicaid services paid
through a State plan under FFS to follow in order to document their
compliance with section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act. We finalized the
2011 proposed rule in the November 2, 2015, Federal Register when we
published the ``Medicaid Program; Methods for Assuring Access to
Covered Medicaid Services'' final rule with comment period (80 FR
67576; hereinafter ``2015 final rule with comment period''). Among
other requirements, the 2015 final rule with comment period required
States to develop and submit to CMS an AMRP for certain Medicaid
services that is updated at least every 3 years. Additionally, the rule
required that when States submit a SPA to reduce or restructure
provider payment rates, they must consider the data collected through
the AMRP and undertake a public process that solicits input on the
potential impact of the proposed reduction or restructuring of Medicaid
FFS payment rates on beneficiary access to care. We published the
``Medicaid Program; Deadline for Access Monitoring Review Plan
Submissions'' final rule in the April 12, 2016 Federal Register (81 FR
21479; hereinafter ``2016 final rule'') with a revised deadline for
States' AMRPs to be submitted to us.
Following the implementation of the AMRP process, numerous States
have expressed concern regarding the administrative burden associated
with the 2015 final rule with comment period requirements, especially
those States with high rates of beneficiary enrollment in managed care.
In an attempt to address some of the States' concerns regarding
unnecessary administrative burden, we issued a State Medicaid Director
letter (SMDL) on November 16, 2017 (SMDL #17-004), which clarified the
circumstances in which provider payment reductions or restructurings
would likely not result in diminished access to care, and therefore,
would not require additional analysis and monitoring procedures
described in the 2015 final rule with comment period.\36\ Subsequently,
in the March 23, 2018 Federal Register, we published the ``Medicaid
Program; Methods for Assuring Access to Covered Medicaid Services-
Exemptions for States With High Managed Care Penetration Rates and Rate
Reduction Threshold'' proposed rule (83 FR 12696; hereinafter ``2018
proposed rule''), which would have exempted States from requirements to
analyze certain data or monitor access when the vast majority of their
covered beneficiaries receive services through managed care plans. That
proposed rule, if it had been finalized, would have provided similar
flexibility to all States when they make nominal rate reductions or
restructurings to FFS payment rates. Based on the responses received
during the public comment period, we decided not to finalize the
proposed exemptions.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\36\ State Medicaid Director Letter #17-0004 Re: Medicaid Access
to Care Implementation Guidance. Accessed at https://www.medicaid.gov/federal-policy-guidance/downloads/smd17004.pdf
(November 2017).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In the July 15, 2019, Federal Register, we published the ``Medicaid
Program; Methods for Assuring Access to Covered Medicaid Services-
Rescission'' proposed rule (84 FR 33722; hereinafter ``2019 proposed
rule'') to rescind the regulatory access requirements at Sec. Sec.
447.203(b) and 447.204, and
[[Page 40548]]
concurrently issued a CMCS Informational Bulletin (CIB) \37\ stating
the agency's intention to establish a new access strategy. Based on the
responses we received during the public comment period, we decided not
to finalize the 2019 proposed rule, and instead continue our efforts
and commitment to develop a data-driven strategy to understand access
to care in the Medicaid program.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\37\ CMCS Informational Bulletin: Comprehensive Strategy for
Monitoring Access in Medicaid, Accessed at https://www.medicaid.gov/federal-policy-guidance/downloads/CIB071119.pdf (July 2019).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
States have continued to question whether the AMRP process is the
most effective or accurate reflection of access to care in a State's
Medicaid program, and requested we provide additional clarity on the
data necessary to support compliance with section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the
Act. In reviewing the information that States presented through the
AMRPs, we also have questioned whether the data and analysis
consistently address the primary access-related question posed by
section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act--namely, whether rates are sufficient
to ensure access to care at least as great as that enjoyed by the
general population in geographic areas. The unstandardized nature of
the AMRPs, which largely defer to States to determine appropriate data
measures to review and monitor when documenting access to care, have
made it difficult to assess whether any single State's analysis
demonstrates compliance with section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act.
While the AMRPs were intended to be a useful guide to States in the
overall process to monitor beneficiary access, they are generally
limited to access in FFS delivery systems and focus on targeted payment
rate changes rather than the availability of care more generally or
population health outcomes (which may be indicative of the population's
ability to access care). Moreover, the AMRP processes are largely
procedural in nature and not targeted to specific services for which
access may be of particular concern, requiring States to engage in
triennial reviews of access to care for certain broad categories of
Medicaid services--primary care services, physician specialist
services, behavioral health services, pre- and post-natal obstetric
services, and home health services. Although the 2016 final rule
discussed that the selected service categories were intended to be
indicators for available access in the overall Medicaid FFS system,
these categories do not directly translate to the services authorized
under section 1905(a) of the Act, granting States deference as to how
broadly or narrowly to apply the AMRP analysis to services within their
programs. For example, the category ``primary care services'' could
encompass several of the Medicaid service categories described within
section 1905(a) of the Act and, without clear guidance on which section
1905(a) services categories, qualified providers, or procedures we
intended States to include within the AMRP analyses, States were left
to make their own interpretations in analyzing access to care under the
2016 final rule.
Similarly, a number of the AMRP data elements, both required and
suggested within the 2016 final rule, may be overly broad, subject to
interpretation, or difficult to obtain. Specifically, under the 2016
final rule provisions, States are required to review: the extent to
which beneficiary needs are fully met; the availability of care through
enrolled providers to beneficiaries in each geographic area, by
provider type and site of service; changes in beneficiary utilization
of covered services in each geographic area; the characteristics of the
beneficiary population (including considerations for care, service and
payment variations for pediatric and adult populations and for
individuals with disabilities); and actual or estimated levels of
provider payment available from other payers, including other public
and private payers, by provider type and site of service. Although
service utilization and provider participation are relatively easy
measures to source and track using existing Medicaid program data, an
analysis of whether beneficiary needs are fully met is at least
somewhat subjective and could require States to engage in a survey
process to complete. Additionally, while most Medicaid services have
some level of equivalent payment data that can be compared to other
available public payer data, such as Medicare, private payer
information may be proprietary and difficult to obtain. Therefore, many
States struggled to meet the regulatory requirement to compare Medicaid
program rates to private payer rates because of their inability to
obtain private payer data.
Due to these issues, States produced varied AMRPs through the
triennial process that were, as a whole, difficult to interpret or to
use in assessing compliance with section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act. In
isolation, a State's specific AMRP most often presented data that could
be meaningful as a benchmark against changes within a State's Medicaid
program, but did not present a case for Medicaid access consistent with
the general population in geographic areas. Frequently, the data and
information within the AMRPs were presented without a formal
determination or attestation from the State that the information
presented established compliance with section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the
Act. Because the States' AMRPs generally varied to such a great degree,
there was also little to glean in making State-to-State comparisons of
performance on access measures, even for States with geographic and
demographic similarities.
Based on results of the triennial AMRPs, we were uncertain of how
to make use of the information presented within them other than to make
them publicly available. We published the AMRPs on Medicaid.gov but had
little engagement with States on the content or results of the AMRPs
since much of the information within the plans could not meaningfully
answer whether access in Medicaid programs satisfied the requirements
of section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act. Additionally, we received little
feedback from providers, beneficiaries, or advocates on whether or how
interested parties made use of the triennial AMRPs. However, portions
of the 2016 final rule related to public awareness and feedback on
changes to Medicaid payment rates and the analysis that we received
from individual States proposing to make rate changes was of great
benefit in determining approvals of State payment change proposals.
Specifically, the portion of the AMRP process where States update their
plans to describe data and measures to serve as a baseline against
which they monitor after reducing or restructuring Medicaid payments
allows States to document consistency with section 1902(a)(30)(A) of
the Act at the time of SPA submission, usually as an assessment of how
closely rates align with Medicare rates, and to understand the impact
of reductions through data monitoring after SPA approval.
Under this final rule, we balance elimination of unnecessary
Federal and State administrative burden with robust implementation of
the Federal and State shared obligation to ensure that Medicaid payment
rates are set at levels sufficient to ensure access to care for
beneficiaries consistent with section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act. The
provisions of this final rule, as discussed in more detail later, will
better achieve this balance through improved transparency of Medicaid
FFS payment rates, through publication of a comparative payment rate
analysis to Medicare and payment rate disclosures,
[[Page 40549]]
and through a more targeted and defined approach to evaluating data and
information when States propose to reduce or restructure their Medicaid
payment rates. Payment rate transparency is a critical component of
assessing compliance with section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act. In
addition, payment rate transparency helps to ensure that interested
parties have basic information available to them to understand Medicaid
payment levels and the associated effects of payment rates on access to
care so that they may raise concerns to State Medicaid agencies via the
various forms of public processes discussed within this final rule.
Along with improved payment rate transparency and disclosures as well
as comparative payment rate analyses, we are finalizing a more
efficient process for States to undertake when submitting rate
reduction or restructuring SPAs to CMS for review. As we move toward
aligning our Medicaid access to care strategy across FFS and managed
care delivery systems, we will consider additional rulemaking to help
ensure that Medicaid payment rate information is appropriately
transparent and rates are fully consistent with broad access to care
across delivery systems, so that interested parties have a more
complete understanding of Medicaid payment rate levels and resulting
access to care for beneficiaries.
II. Summary of the Proposed Provisions and Analysis of and Responses to
the Public Comments
We received 2,123 public comments from individuals and
organizations, including, but not limited to, individuals, State
government agencies, non-profit health care organizations, advocacy
groups, associations, law firms, managed care plans, academic groups,
and tribal organizations. We thank and appreciate the commenters for
their consideration of the proposed requirements for ensuring access to
care, quality and health outcomes, and better addressing health equity
issues in the Medicaid program across FFS and managed care delivery
systems, and in HCBS programs. In general, commenters supported the
proposed rule. In this section, arranged by subject area, we summarize
the proposed provisions, the public comments received, and our
responses. For a complete and full description of the proposed
requirements, see the 2023 proposed rule, ``Medicaid Program; Ensuring
Access to Medicaid Services'' (88 FR 27960, May 5, 2023) hereafter
referred to as the ``proposed rule.''
We also received a number of out-of-scope comments that are not
addressed in this final rule. In addition, we received some comments
which were s solely applicable to the Managed Care proposed rule.
Please see the Managed Care final rule for a for a summary of the
comments CMS received pertaining to that proposed rule.
We are clarifying and emphasizing our intent that if any provision
of this final rule is held to be invalid or unenforceable by its terms,
or as applied to any person or circumstance, or stayed pending further
action, it shall be severable from this final rule, and from rules and
regulations currently in effect, and not affect the remainder thereof
or the application of the provision to other persons not similarly
situated or to other, dissimilar circumstances. If any provision is
held to be invalid or unenforceable, the remaining provisions which
could function independently, should take effect and be given the
maximum effect permitted by law. Through this rule, we adopt provisions
that are intended to and will operate independently of each other, even
if each serves the same general purpose or policy goal. Where a
provision is necessarily dependent on another, the context generally
makes that clear.
Finally, we note that we are finalizing with modification several
of the dates for when we expect States to begin complying with the
requirements being finalized in this rule, instead of what we proposed.
Generally, we are finalizing that this rule, including the proposals
being finalized herein, will be effective 60 days after publication of
this final rule. However, we are finalizing that States are not
required to begin compliance with most requirements being finalized in
this rule until a specified applicability date, which we have specified
for each such individual proposal being finalized. We discuss in detail
the applicability date we are finalizing for each proposal being
finalized in this rule in the respective section of this preamble. We
encourage States, providers, and interested parties to confirm the
applicability dates indicated in this final rule for any changes from
the proposed. To assist, we are including Table 1 with the provisions
and relevant timing information and dates.
BILLING CODE 4120-01-P
[[Page 40550]]
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR10MY24.023
BILLING CODE 4120-01-C
[[Page 40551]]
A. Medicaid Advisory Committee and Beneficiary Advisory Council (Sec.
431.12)
The current regulations at Sec. 431.12 require States to have a
Medical Care Advisory Committee (MCAC) to advise the State Medicaid
agency about health and medical care services. The regulations are
intended to ensure that State Medicaid agencies had a way to receive
feedback regarding health and medical care services from interested
parties. However, these regulations lacked specificity related to how
these committees can be used to ensure the proper and efficient
administration of the Medicaid program more expressly by more fully
promoting beneficiary perspectives.
Under the authority of section 1902(a)(4) of the Act, section
1902(a)(19) of the Act, and our general rulemaking authority in section
1102 of the Act, we are finalizing proposals to Sec. 431.12 to replace
the current MCAC requirements with a committee framework designed to
ensure the proper and efficient administration of the Medicaid program
and to better ensure that services under the Medicaid program will be
provided in a manner consistent with the best interests of the
beneficiaries. States will be required to establish and operate the
newly named Medicaid Advisory Committee (MAC) and a Beneficiary
Advisory Council (BAC). Please note that in the proposed rule, the BAC
was referred to as the Beneficiary Advisory Group, or BAG. The MAC and
its corresponding BAC will serve as vehicles for bi-directional
feedback between interested parties and the State on matters related to
the effective administration of the Medicaid program as determined by
the State and MAC. With the changes in this final rule FFP, or Federal
match, for Medicaid administrative activities will remain available to
States for expenditures related to MAC and BAC activities in the same
manner as the former MCAC.
The proposed and finalized requirements of the MAC amend previous
and add new Federal requirements to: (1) expand the scope and use of
States' MACs; (2) rename the Medicaid Advisory Committee, which will
advise the State on a range of issues including medical and non-medical
services; (3) require States to establish a BAC; (4) establish minimum
requirements for Medicaid beneficiary representation on the MAC,
membership, meetings materials, and attendance; and (5) promote
transparency and accountability between the State and interested
parties by making information on the MAC and BAC activities publicly
available. The finalized requirements aimed at promoting transparency
and accountability also include a requirement for States to create and
publicly post an annual report summarizing the MAC and BAC activities.
We note that some commenters expressed general support for all of
the provisions in section II.A. of this rule, as well as for this rule
in its entirety. In response to commenters who supported some, but not
all, of the policies and regulations we proposed in the proposed rule,
we are clarifying and emphasizing our intent that each final policy and
regulation is distinct and severable to the extent it does not rely on
another final policy or regulation that we proposed.
While the provisions in section II.A. of this final rule are
intended to present a comprehensive approach to implementing Medicaid
Advisory Committees and Beneficiary Advisory Councils, and these
provisions complement the goals expressed and policies and regulations
being finalized in sections II.B. (Home and Community-Based Services)
and II.C.(Documentation of Access to Care and Service Payment Rates) of
this final rule, we intend that each of them is a distinct, severable
provision, as finalized. Unless otherwise noted in this rule, each
policy and regulation being finalized under this section II.A is
distinct and severable from other final policies and regulations being
finalized in this section or in sections II.B. or II.C of this final
rule, as well as from rules and regulations currently in effect.
Consistent with our previous discussion earlier in section II. of
this final rule regarding severability, we are clarifying and
emphasizing our intent that if any provision of this final rule is held
to be invalid or unenforceable by its terms, or as applied to any
person or circumstance, or stayed pending further State action, it
shall be severable from this final rule, and from rules and regulations
currently in effect, and not affect the remainder thereof or the
application of the provision to other persons not similarly situated or
to other, dissimilar circumstances. For example, we intend that the
policies and regulations we are finalizing related to the State Plan
requirement (section II.A.2 of this final rule) are distinct and
severable from the policies and regulations we are finalizing related
to the MAC Membership and Composition requirement and the Annual Report
requirement (sections II.A.4 and II.A.9 of this final rule, which we
further intend are severable from each other).
1. Basis and Purpose (Sec. 431.12(a))
Under Sec. 431.12 of the current regulation, paragraph (a) Basis
and Purpose, sets forth a State plan requirement for the establishment
of a committee (Medical Care Advisory Committee) to advise the Medicaid
agency about health and medical care services. In the proposed rule, we
proposed to amend the title of Sec. 431.12 and paragraph (a) to update
the name of the existing MCAC to the Medicaid Advisory Committee (MAC),
and to add the requirement for States to establish and operate a
dedicated advisory council comprised of Medicaid beneficiaries, the
Beneficiary Advisory Group. In this final rule, we are changing the
name from the Beneficiary Advisory Group to the Beneficiary Advisory
Committee (BAC).
In the proposed rule, we stated that our goal was for the committee
and its corresponding advisory council to serve in an advisory role to
the State on issues related to health and medical services, as the MCAC
did, as well as on other matters related to policy development and to
the effective administration of the Medicaid program consistent with
the language of section 1902(a)(4)(B) of the Act, which requires a
State plan to meaningfully engage Medicaid beneficiaries and other low-
income people in the administration of the plan.\38\ The Medicaid
program covers medical services and is increasingly also covering
services designed to address beneficiaries' social determinants of
health and their health-related social needs more generally. Therefore,
we believe that the MAC should discuss topics directly related to
covered services as well as the potential need for the coverage of
additional services that may be necessary to ensure that beneficiaries
are able to meaningfully access these services. Expanding the scope of
the current committee is necessary in order to align with the expanding
scope of the Medicaid program. These changes are consistent with
section 1902(a)(4)(B) of the Act because the MAC creates a formalized
way for interested parties and beneficiary representatives to provide
feedback to the State about issues related to the Medicaid program and
the services it covers. The feedback from the MAC and BAC will be used
by the State to ensure that the program operates efficiently and as it
was designed to operate.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\38\ Medicaid Program; Ensuring Access to Medicaid Services,''
(88 FR 27967).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We received public comments on these proposals. The following is a
[[Page 40552]]
summary of the comments we received and our responses.
Comment: We received a large number of comments in support of the
proposed changes to the MCAC regulation and structure as proposed in
Sec. 431.12(a). The commenters expressed broad support for creation of
the dual structure of the MAC and BAC. They noted that the creation of
the BAC was a positive and welcome step to better capturing the lived
experiences of people enrolled in Medicaid. Commenters also noted that
having the BAC advise the MAC on policy development was a way to
prioritize beneficiaries' perspectives. Commenters noted that the
improvements proposed to the existing MCAC structure had the potential
to be transformative and make the State more attuned to the needs and
priorities of Medicaid beneficiaries.
Response: We thank commenters for their support of our overhaul of
the MCAC. We are finalizing as proposed, with minor technical changes,
the creation of the MAC and BAC.
Comment: We also received comments in opposition to the creation of
a BAC. Generally, opposing commenters wanted CMS to be less
prescriptive and allow States to engage Medicaid beneficiaries in other
ways (for example, using existing State committees to serve as the BAC,
conducting focus groups, and fielding surveys). Other commenters noted
that States would need resources to implement the BAC, citing the
additional administrative burden and layering of meetings for certain
members.
Response: We encourage States to engage with their Medicaid
beneficiaries in a variety of ways, and we understand that many States
may already operate groups or committees comprised of Medicaid
beneficiaries. However, having a formalized structure to work directly
with Medicaid beneficiaries will help to ensure a level and manner of
engagement across all State programs. For the commenters concerned with
the BAC adding administrative burden, we acknowledge that implementing
these changes will create administrative burden. We discuss
administrative burden to States in the Regulatory Impact Analysis
section of this rule. However, in an effort to minimize administrative
burden for States, we note that existing committees can be used to
fulfill the BAC requirement as long as the committees meet the
membership requirements specified in Sec. 431.12(e). Later in this
section, we also note that States do not have to use the same BAC
members to join all MAC meetings. While it may not be an ideal way to
create long-term consistency of the MAC membership, States could, in an
effort to lessen the time commitment of BAC members, choose to rotate
which members attend the quarterly MAC meetings.
Comment: We received several comments asking for the BAG name to be
changed. The commenters cited potentially negative connotations that
could be associated with the acronym BAG. Additionally, a few
commenters requested that States with existing beneficiary groups be
able to maintain their names.
Response: We have changed the name of the BAG to the BAC, as noted
earlier in this final rule. For commenters concerned with duplicative
efforts, we noted in the proposed rule that States with existing BAC-
like committees can use those committees to fulfil the BAC requirement
as long as they meet the membership requirements specified Sec.
431.12(e). States are not required to change their existing group names
to match the BAC name as long as interested parties understand what
existing group or committee is being used to fulfill regulatory
requirement of the BAC. To clarify this for interested parties, States
must note in their publicly posted by-laws (Sec. 431.12 (f)(1)) that
the group is being used to fulfill the regulatory requirements of Sec.
431.12.
Comment: Several commenters asked CMS to clarify the role of the
MAC and BAC, citing that in the proposals, the language varies from
``advisory'' to ``providing feedback.'' Other commenters expressed that
they do not want the MAC and BACs to be approval bodies that lack the
ability to make decisions.
Response: The primary role of the MAC and BAC is to advise the
State Medicaid agency on policy development and on matters related to
the effective administration of the Medicaid program. It is our
intention that the MAC and BAC serve in an advisory capacity to the
State. However, serving in an advisory capacity does not preclude the
MAC and BAC members from sharing experiential feedback. We did not
propose to give the MAC or BAC a decision-making role because we want
to allow States the freedom to administer their Medicaid programs in
the manner they see fit, but be guided by these two entities'
recommendations and experiences with the Medicaid program.
Comment: We received a comment asking CMS to require that the MAC
and BAC not be used to take the place of a State's tribal consultation
requirements.
Response: We do not anticipate that the MAC or BAC could be used to
fulfill tribal consultation requirements under section 1902(a)(73) of
the Act. For States with one or more Indian Health Programs or Urban
Indian Organizations that furnish health care services, the State must
consult with such Programs and Organizations on a regular, ongoing
basis. While the statute specifically permits representatives of such
Programs and Organizations to be included on the MCAC [now known as the
MAC], this alone would not meet the requirement to consult on any State
plan amendments (SPAs), waiver requests, and proposals for
demonstration projects likely to have a direct effect on Indians,
Indian Health Programs, or Urban Indian Organizations prior to
submission.
Comment: We received a few comments requesting that CMS conduct a
study to assess which States already have MCACs or BACs to ensure they
are no duplicative efforts. Another commenter asked CMS to solicit
feedback from existing MCAC members to see how it can be improved
before making beneficiary groups a requirement.
Response: We clarify that MCACs are currently required of all
States so conducting an assessment to see which States already have
MCACs would not necessarily result in a lot of new information.
However, we agree that understanding which States already have BAC-like
committees in place would be helpful. In fact, when developing the
proposed rule, we engaged with interested parties, both from State
Medicaid agencies and the wider Medicaid community, to determine what
improvements were needed to the MCACs to allow States and beneficiaries
to obtain the most benefit from their work. For commenters concerned
with duplicative BAC activities, we note again that States with an
existing beneficiary group or beneficiary committee that meets the
requirement of the BAC, as finalized in this rule at Sec. 431.12(e),
do not need to set up a second beneficiary committee.
Comment: We received a few comments asking CMS to require the MAC
and BAC to coordinate with other State advisory committees.
Response: States will vary in how they run their advisory
committees. Some States may choose to coordinate across their different
advisory committees, while other States may have reasons for keeping
their advisory committees and their processes separate. We do not want
to add more administrative burden by adding a requirement to Sec.
431.12 for States to coordinate across State advisory committees.
However, if coordinating
[[Page 40553]]
across these committees in some manner would be advantageous for the
Medicaid program, then we encourage the State to do so.
After consideration of public comments, we are finalizing Sec.
431.12(a) as proposed with the following change:
Language modifications to reflect the new name of the ``Beneficiary
Advisory Council (BAC).''
2. State Plan Requirement (Sec. 431.12(b))
Under Sec. 431.12 of the current regulation, paragraph (b) State
Plan Requirement, calls for a State plan to provide for a MCAC to
advise the Medicaid agency director about health and medical care
services.
We proposed conforming updates to paragraph (b) regarding the State
plan requirements, to reflect the addition of the BAC and the expanded
scope.
The Interested Parties Advisory Group, described in a later section
of this final rule (Interested Parties Advisory Group Sec.
447.203(b)(6)), is designed to advise States on rate setting and other
matters for certain HCBS and is not related to the MAC or BAC specified
here. In section II.C.2.c. of this final rule, under Sec.
447.203(b)(6), we explain that States will have the option to use its
MAC and BAC to provide recommendations for payment rates, thereby
satisfying the requirements of Sec. 447.203(b)(6). However, the MAC
and BAC requirements finalized here are wholly separate from the
Interested Parties Advisory Group.
We did not receive public comments on Sec. 431.12(b). However, we
are making one conforming edit to this paragraph based on a language
change identified in Sec. 431.12(c) to replace the term State Medicaid
Director. We are finalizing as proposed with the following changes:
Language modifications to reflect the new name of the
``Beneficiary Advisory Council (BAC).''
Replacing the term Medicaid Agency Director with the term,
``director of the single State Agency for the Medicaid program.''
3. Selection of Members (Sec. 431.12(c))
Under Sec. 431.12 of the current regulation, paragraph (c)
Appointment of members, the agency director, or a higher State
authority, must appoint members to the advisory committee on a rotating
and continuous basis.
We proposed to revise paragraph (c) to specify that the members of
the MAC and BAC must be appointed by the agency director or a higher
State authority on a rotating and continuous basis. We also proposed to
require the State to create a process for the recruitment and
appointment of members of the MAC and BAC. Additionally, we proposed to
require the State to post this information on the State's website. As
discussed in the proposed rule,\39\ the website page where this
information is located would be required to be easily accessible by the
public. These proposed updates align with how some States' existing
MCACs are already run, which will facilitate the transition of these
MCACs into MAC/BACs. Additionally, the proposed changes are designed to
provide additional details to support States' operation of the MAC and
BAC. Further, we believe these proposed updates will facilitate
transparency, improving the current regulations, which did not mention
nor promote transparency of information related to the MCAC with the
public. We also believe that transparency of information can lead to
enhanced accountability on the part of the State in making its MAC and
BAC as effective as possible.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\39\ Medicaid Program; Ensuring Access to Medicaid Services,''
(88 FR 27960, 27968).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We received public comments on these proposals. The following is a
summary of the comments we received and our responses.
Comment: We received several comments regarding the terms used to
describe who should be given the authority to appoint members to the
MAC and BAC. Many commenters supported the proposal of having the State
Medicaid Director appoint the members. A few commenters suggested that
we make clarifications to the proposed regulation language so that only
the State Medicaid Director and not ``a higher State authority'' is
referenced, since the work of the MAC and BAC is to advise the State
Medicaid Director. Others noted that the correct term to use in the
regulation when referring to the State Medicaid Director is the
director of the single State agency for the Medicaid program. There was
another category of commenters that did not believe the authority to
select MAC and BAC members should sit with either the State Medicaid
Director or a higher State Authority. These commenters instead stated
it would be more equitable if prospective MAC and BAC members were
selected by an outside company, a computer, at random, or by a lottery
system. They noted that in their experiences sometimes parents or
family members are excluded from selection processes. Finally, other
commenters noted that the term ``appointed'' implied that the State did
not use any kind of a ``selection process'' to choose its MAC and BAC
members. These commenters may have felt that the term ``appoint'' means
that the State can simply pick whomever it wants to serve as a member
rather than ``selecting'' members from a pool of people who submitted
applications to serve as MAC or BAC members.
Response: We appreciate the comments provided on this section and
acknowledge the complicated work that comes with selecting MAC and BAC
members. Since the MAC and BAC serve in an advisory role to the
Medicaid program, we believe strongly that the authority to select
should lie with the director of the State Medicaid agency. We know that
Medicaid agencies' names may vary from State to State, and thus, agree
that language in the regulation can be changed to more clearly reflect
a more commonly used term for the Medicaid agency (that is, the single
State Agency for the Medicaid Program). For commenters that expressed
concern that parents or family members are excluded from the selection
processes, we note that the BAC regulations require both Medicaid
beneficiaries and individuals with direct experience supporting
Medicaid beneficiaries, such as family members to be selected. Finally,
we agree that the word ``appoint'' in the proposed rule does not
accurately reflect the intention of the regulation and could be
misinterpreted to mean that the State did not use a selection process
where interested parties submit an application and then the State
reviews those applications before selecting its MAC and BAC members.
Based on the comments we received, we now understand that the term
``appoint'' can be taken to mean that a selection process did not
occur. We want to avoid any confusion that the requirements are asking
the State to appoint members without using a selection process, which
was not our intention. For clarity, we are also amending the regulatory
language in Sec. 431.12(c) to now state that the ``director of the
single State Agency for the Medicaid program,'' must ``select'' members
for the MAC and BAC.
Comment: We received comments on the proposed changes to Sec.
431.12(c) related to term limits of the MAC and BAC members. The
commenters were generally divided across wanting CMS to require States
to have set term limits for members, not wanting any term limits, and
not wanting short term limits. Commenters who expressed support for set
term limits noted that setting term limits ensured that new
perspectives would be added on a regular basis while others noted that
setting term limits allowed members to
[[Page 40554]]
share recommendations or constructive criticism without fear of
retaliation. The commenters who opposed term limits noted that finding
people with Medicaid expertise may be difficult in some geographic
areas and, as a result, the State would benefit from having the same
members serve without term limits. Other commenters noted that it takes
time for members to build their expertise and understanding of the
Medicaid program and setting short term limits may not take into
account the time needed to accumulate enough knowledge to contribute
fully to the MAC and BAC. These commenters suggested term limits with
lengths ranging from 2 to 6 years.
Response: States have the ability to determine the tenure of
members, as States are best situated to assess their members' ability
to participate in and meaningfully contribute to the MAC and BAC and
for what length of time. In the proposed rule, we described the
requirement for States to determine the length of terms for committee
and council members. For clarity, we are amending the regulatory
language in Sec. 431.12(c) to reflect this information as well, to now
state ``. . . members to the MAC and BAC for a term of a length
determined by the State, which may not be followed immediately by a
consecutive term for the same member, on a rotating and continuous
basis.'' We proposed this type of term because we believe there is
value in ensuring new voices and perspectives are introduced to the
committee and council. We further clarify that once a MAC or BAC
member's term has been completed, the State will select a new member,
thus ensuring that MAC and BAC memberships rotate continuously. Setting
memberships as continuously rotating means that the State must seek to
recruit members to fill open seats on the MAC and BAC on an ongoing
basis. States can also select members to serve multiple non-consecutive
terms.
After consideration of public comments, we are finalizing Sec.
431.12(c) with the following changes:
Language modifications to reflect the new name of the BAC.
Replacing the term agency director or higher authority
with the term, ``director of the single State Agency for the Medicaid
program.''
Replacing the word ``appoint'' with ``select'' in various
places.
Adding language to the regulation to reflect that ``the
term of length for MAC and BAC members will be term of a length
determined by the State, which may not be followed immediately by a
consecutive term for the same member, on a rotating and continuous
basis.''
4. MAC Membership and Composition (Sec. 431.12(d))
Under Sec. 431.12 of the current regulation, paragraph (d),
Committee Membership, States are required to select three types of
committee members: (1) Board-certified physicians and other
representatives of the health professions who are familiar with the
medical needs of low-income population groups and with the resources
available and required for their care; (2) Members of consumers'
groups, including Medicaid beneficiaries, and consumer organizations
such as labor unions, cooperatives, consumer-sponsored prepaid group
practice plans, and others; and (3) the director of the public welfare
department or the public health department, whichever does not head the
Medicaid agency.
In the proposed rule, paragraph (d) of Sec. 431.12, MAC membership
and composition, we proposed in (d)(1) to require that a minimum of 25
percent of the MAC must be individuals with lived Medicaid beneficiary
experience from the BAC. The BAC, which is defined later in Sec.
431.12(e), is comprised of people who: (1) are currently or have been
Medicaid beneficiaries, and (2) individuals with direct experience
supporting Medicaid beneficiaries (family members or caregivers of
those enrolled in Medicaid).
We proposed 25 percent as the minimum threshold requirement for
(d)(1) to reflect the importance of including the beneficiary
perspective in the administration of the Medicaid program and to ensure
that the beneficiary perspective has meaningful representation in the
feedback provided by the MAC. We did not propose a higher percentage
because we acknowledge that States will benefit from a MAC that
includes representation from a diverse set of interested parties who
work in areas related to Medicaid but are not beneficiaries, their
family members, or their caregivers.
In terms of the required representation from the remaining MAC
members, as specified in the proposed rule, paragraph (d)(2), we
proposed that a State must include at least one from each category: (A)
State or local consumer advocacy groups or other community-based
organizations that represent the interests of, or provide direct
service, to Medicaid beneficiaries; (B) clinical providers or
administrators who are familiar with the health and social needs of
Medicaid beneficiaries and with the resources available and required
for their care; (C) participating Medicaid managed care organizations
or the State health plan association representing such organizations,
as applicable; and (D) other State agencies serving Medicaid
beneficiaries, as ex-officio members.
We believe that advisory committees and councils can be most
effective when they represent a wide range of perspectives and
experiences. Since we know that each State environment is different, we
aimed to provide the State with discretion on how large the MAC and BAC
should be. In the proposed changes we did, however, specify the types
of categories of Committee members that can best reflect the needs of a
Medicaid program. We believe that diversely populated MACs and BACs can
provide States with access to a broad range of perspectives, and
importantly, beneficiaries' perspective, which can positively impact
the administration of the Medicaid program. This approach is consistent
with the language of section 1902(a)(4)(B) of the Act, which requires a
State plan to meaningfully engage Medicaid beneficiaries and other low-
income people in the administration of the plan. The changes in
membership we proposed and are finalizing will support States to set up
MACs that align with section 1902(a)(4)(B) since States will now have
to select the membership composition to reflect the community members
who represent the interests of Medicaid beneficiaries. The State also
benefits from having a way to hear how the Medicaid program can be
responsive to its beneficiaries' and the wider Medicaid community's
needs.
We also noted in the proposed rule that we encourage States to take
into consideration, as part of their member selection process, the
demographics of the Medicaid population in their State. Keeping diverse
representation in mind as a goal for the MAC membership can be a way
for States to help ensure that specific populations and those receiving
critically important services are appropriately represented on the MAC.
For example, in making MAC membership selections, the State may want to
balance the representation of the MAC according to geographic areas of
the State with the demographics and health care needs of the Medicaid
program of the State. The State will want to consider geographical
diversity (for example, urban and rural areas) when making its
membership selections. We noted in the proposed rule, that a State
could also consider demographic representation of its membership by
including members representing or serving Medicaid beneficiaries who
receive services in the
[[Page 40555]]
following categories: (1) pediatric health care; (2) behavioral health
services; (3) preventive care and reproductive health services; (4)
health or service issues pertaining specifically to people over age 65;
and (5) health or service issues pertaining specifically to people with
disabilities. By offering these considerations, we seek to support
States in their efforts to eliminate differences in health care access
and outcomes experienced by diverse populations enrolled in Medicaid.
We intend that the MAC and the BAC can support several of the
priorities for operationalizing health equity across CMS programs as
outlined in the CMS Framework for Health Equity (2022-2032) and the HHS
Equity Action Plan which is consistent with E.O. 13985, which calls for
advancing equity for underserved communities.
Rather than prescribing specific percentages for the other (non-
BAC) categories in the proposed rule, we only required representation
from each category as part of the MAC. The specific percentage of each
of category (other than the BAC members) relative to the whole
committee can be determined by each State. This approach will provide
States with the flexibility to determine how to best represent the
unique landscape of each State's Medicaid program. We solicited comment
on what should be the minimum percentage requirement that MAC members
be current/past Medicaid beneficiaries or individuals with direct
experience supporting Medicaid beneficiaries (such as family members or
caregivers of those enrolled in Medicaid). In addition to hearing
directly from beneficiaries, the State can gain insights into how to
effectively administer its program from other members of the Medicaid
community.
States will determine which types of providers to include under the
clinical providers or administrators category, and we recommend they
consider a wide range of providers or administrators that are
experienced with the Medicaid program including, but not limited to:
(1) primary care providers (internal or family medicine physicians or
nurse practitioners or physician assistants that practice primary
care); (2) behavioral health providers (that is, mental health and
substance use disorder providers); (3) reproductive health service
providers, including maternal health providers; (4) pediatric
providers; (5) dental and oral health providers; (6) community health,
rural health clinic or Federally Qualified Health Center (FQHC)
administrators; (7) individuals providing long-term care services and
supports; and (8) direct care workers \40\ who can be individuals with
direct experience supporting Medicaid beneficiaries (such as family
members or caregivers).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\40\ As finalized in Sec. 441.302(k) of this final rule, CMS
defines as Direct care worker as any of the following individuals
who may be employed by a Medicaid provider, State agency, or third
party; contracted with a Medicaid provider, State agency, or third
party; or delivering services under a self-directed service model:
(A) A registered nurse, licensed practical nurse, nurse
practitioner, or clinical nurse specialist who provides nursing
services to Medicaid beneficiaries receiving home and community-
based services available under this subpart; (B) A licensed or
certified nursing assistant who provides such services under the
supervision of a registered nurse, licensed practical nurse, nurse
practitioner, or clinical nurse specialist; (C) A direct support
professional; (D) A personal care attendant; (E) A home health aide;
or (F) Other individuals who are paid to provide services to address
activities of daily living or instrumental activities of daily
living, behavioral supports, employment supports, or other services
to promote community integration directly to Medicaid beneficiaries
receiving home and community-based services available under this
subpart, including nurses and other staff providing clinical
supervision.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We have also identified managed care plans, including Primary Care
Case Management (PCCM) entities and Primary Care Case Managers
(PCCMs),\41\ as an important contributor to the MAC, but we acknowledge
that not all States have managed care delivery systems. We know many
Medicaid managed care plans administer similar committees and thus
allow for States to tailor managed care plan representation based on
its delivery system and the experience and expertise of managed care
plans in the State. For example, States, if applicable, can fulfill
this category with only one or with multiple managed care plans
operating in the State. In addition, we also give States the
flexibility to meet the managed care plan representation requirements
with either participating Medicaid managed care plans or a health plan
association representing more than one such organization.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\41\ Throughout this document, the use of the term ``managed
care plan'' includes managed care organizations (MCOs), prepaid
inpatient health plans (PIHPs), and prepaid ambulatory health plans
(PAHPs) [as defined in 42 CFR 438.2] and is used only when the
provision under discussion applies to all three arrangements. An
explicit reference is used in the preamble if the provision applies
to primary care case managers (PCCMs) or primary care case
management entities (PCCM entities).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The language in paragraph (d)(2)(D) broadens the previous MCAC
requirement to allow for additional types of representatives from other
State agencies to be on the committee. Specifically, the previous MCAC
regulation requires membership by ``the director of the public welfare
department or the public health department, whichever does not head the
Medicaid agency.'' In the proposed rule, we expanded the requirement
for external agency representation to be broader than the welfare or
public health department, which would give States more flexibility in
representing the Medicaid program's interests based on States' unique
circumstances and organizational structure. States can work with sister
State agencies to determine who should participate in the MAC (for
example, foster care agency, mental health agency, department of public
health). We also proposed that these representatives be part of the
committee as ex-officio members, meaning that they hold the position
because they work for the relevant State agency. In finalizing the
proposals, we reviewed this requirement closer. While we believe it
will be essential to have these State-interested parties present for
program coordination and information-sharing, we intended to reflect in
the proposed rule that the formal representation of the MAC should be
comprised of beneficiaries, advocates, community organizations, and
providers that serve Medicaid beneficiaries. Therefore, we clarify in
this final rule that while these ex-officio members will sit on the
MAC, they will not be voting members of the MAC. Therefore, on matters
that the MAC decides by vote, including but not necessarily limited to
finalizing the MAC's recommendations to the State, the ex-officio
members will not participate in voting.
We received public comments on these proposals. The following is a
summary of the comments we received and our responses.
Comment: We received many comments about the proposed requirement
of having some BAC members serving on the MAC. Commenters either agreed
with the importance of having a subset of Medicaid beneficiaries serve
on both the BAC and the MAC, or they noted that having a subset of BAC
members on both committees could lead to undue burden for these members
based on the number of meetings they would have to attend. One
commenter suggested a phased-in approach where the BAC members meet
only as the BAC for a time (for example, a year) and then transition to
serving on the MAC only.
Response: We understand the concerns raised by the commenters about
putting undue burden on a subset of BAC members. We believe it is vital
for the success of both the BAC and MAC that there is a point of
integration via the crossover membership requirement since this is the
way to ensure that the Medicaid beneficiary perspective is included in
both groups.
[[Page 40556]]
We created this crossover requirement to reflect the importance of
including the beneficiary perspective in the administration of the
Medicaid program and to ensure that the beneficiary perspective has
meaningful representation in the feedback provided by the MAC. For
commenters that are concerned with undue burden of having a subset of
BAC members also attend MAC meetings, in Sec. 431.12(f)(3), we note
that MACs and BACs are only required to meet once per quarter. While
the regulation does not state that the subset of BAC members that join
each MAC meeting has to be the same, we recognize that it would be more
effective to have consistency in the BAC members that attend the MAC
meetings in many cases. However, if States or the BAC are concerned
with overburdening its BAC members, a potentially less efficient but
workable alternative could be to rotate which BAC members attend the
MAC in an effort to further reduce the number of meetings attended for
a given BAC member. Nevertheless, the suggestion of having a member
transition from solely being on the BAC to solely being on the MAC
might not always promote the crossover concept we are seeking with the
requirement that the MAC membership consist of 10 to 25 percent members
from the BAC, since we are striving for inclusion of the Medicaid
beneficiary perspective in both groups via the BAC members.
Comment: In response to our solicitation about having 25 percent as
the minimum threshold of BAC membership crossover on the MAC, the
majority of the commenters stated that a minimum 25 percent was the
appropriate amount of crossover members. They noted that 25 percent
crossover membership would help to center and amplify beneficiary
voices on the MAC. A few commenters stated that the percentage should
be lower (for example 10 or 15 percent). These commenters cited several
reasons why having a lower threshold number would be better. Some
commenters noted that having a smaller number of BAC members would
allow States to better support or train their members so they could
fully participate in the MAC. Other commenters stated that having a
smaller number of BAC members could lessen the burden on States of
finding and recruiting members to participate. Another group of
commenters wanted the percentage of BAC crossover to be higher than 25
percent (for example 33, 50, 51, or 75 percent). These commenters
sought a higher BAC crossover in order to: safeguard against
marginalization of beneficiary members on the MAC; amplify diverse
voices through a higher crossover number; and rectify any power
imbalances that may exist. There were also a few commenters who noted
that States should have the ability to determine their own percentages
for the BAC crossover. Finally, we received comments asking CMS to
consider allowing States to use a graduated approach to reach the 25
percent minimum requirement of BAC crossover on the MAC.
Response: We thank the commenters who agreed with our proposed
threshold of the requirement for a minimum of 25 percent BAC crossover
on the MAC. For commenters who thought the percentage should be lower,
we understand States may face challenges with finding, recruiting, and
training beneficiary members to serve on the BAC. To account for these
challenges, we are extending the timeframe for implementation of this
requirement in this final rule so that States have 2 years to achieve
the 25 percent minimum threshold requirement of MAC members that come
from the BAC. Instead of the 25 percent minimum threshold coming into
effect right away, we are revising this final rule to provide in Sec.
431.12(d)(1) that, for the period from July 9, 2024 through July 9,
2025, 10 percent of the MAC members must come from the BAC; for the
period from July 10, 2025 through July 9, 2026 20 percent of MAC
members must come from the BAC; and thereafter, 25 percent of MAC
members must come from the BAC.
For commenters who expressed the need for a percentage higher than
25 for the BAC member crossover, we note that the policy we proposed
and are finalizing establishes a minimum percentage threshold for
States to meet. If a State so chooses, it can select a percentage
higher than the minimum of 25 percent, provided the MAC membership also
satisfies the requirements of Sec. 431.12(d)(2) of this final rule.
For commenters who raised the issue of providing training for BAC
members, we have a comment/response on this topic under Sec.
431.12(h)(3).
Comment: The majority of comments received on Sec. 431.12(d) were
about Sec. 431.12(d)(2), MAC composition categories. We received
comments that fell into four groups. The first group of commenters
shared their broad support for the MAC committee member categories that
we proposed and also urged CMS to ensure that States select members
that represented the Medicaid community and who were geographically as
well as racially/ethnically diverse. The second group of commenters
asked for the MAC to include representation from members who would
qualify for the BAC (for example, Medicaid beneficiaries, their
families, and caregivers). It is unclear from the comments if these
commenters were asking for an additional group of Medicaid
beneficiaries be added to the MAC (in addition to the 25 percent of MAC
we proposed to require be from the BAC) or if they did not understand
that the MAC composition already includes a category which accounts for
this category of members. The third group of commenters asked that
specific types of interested parties be required to be represented on
the MAC categories (for example, specific provider types, unions, HCBS
provider agencies, hospitals, protection and advocacy programs, legal
professionals, and medical billing professionals). The fourth group of
commenters suggested ideas for types of MAC members that States could
use to meet categories specified in the proposed rule (for example add
a State Ombudsman to the ex-officio category). We also received a few
suggestions to add specific member categories (for example, a member
category for FFS members, a member category for people with behavioral
health conditions, and a youth member category).
Response: We appreciate the wide range of comments that were
submitted about the MAC membership composition. We developed the MAC
composition framework in the proposed rule by creating broad membership
categories that captured a range of interested parties who are members
of the Medicaid community while giving States as much flexibility as
possible to build their MACs in ways that account for the unique
features of the State's environment. All of the membership categories,
as currently written, are broad enough to accommodate the types of
members described by the commenters. For example, a State Ombudsman can
be used to fulfil the State agency category; a State with both managed
care and FFS could chose to select two members (one for each type of
delivery system) for the MAC; a person with behavioral health
condition(s) could be suitable for multiple categories depending on
whether they are a Medicaid beneficiary (current or former) or
represent a consumer advocacy or community-based organization. Finally,
for the commenter asking for a specific youth member category, we will
note that there are no Federal requirements or limitations concerning
youth participation on the MAC or BAC, and this is in the State's
discretion. The
[[Page 40557]]
State could select a youth member to fulfill a MAC or BAC member
category as long as that person meets the requirements of that
membership category.
We also want to clarify for commenters that Medicaid beneficiaries,
their families, and caregivers have their own MAC category in the
regulation, because the BAC is listed in the final regulation as one of
the categories of MAC members at Sec. 431.12(d)(1).
After consideration of public comments, for Sec. 431.12(d), we are
finalizing as proposed with:
Language modifications to reflect the new name of the BAC;
Replacing the language at Sec. 431.12 (d)(1) to clarify
the timeframe for States to reach 25 percent of MAC members coming from
the BAC. The new sentence will now read, ``For the period from July 9,
2024 through July 9, 2025, 10 percent of the MAC members must come from
the BAC; for the period from July 10, 2025 through July 10, 2026 20
percent of MAC members must come from the BAC; and thereafter, 25
percent of MAC members must come from the BAC.''
Language modifications to Sec. 431.12 (d)(2)(C) to
replace ``managed care plan'' with ``MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs, PCCM entities
or PCCMs as defined in Sec. 438.2''; and
Adding the word ``non-voting'' to ex-officio members at
the end of Sec. 431.12 (d)(2)(D).
5. Beneficiary Advisory Council (Sec. 431.12(e))
The current requirements governing MCACs require the presence of
beneficiaries in committee membership but do little else to ensure
their contributions are considered or their voices heard. For example,
in the current regulations of Sec. 431.12, paragraph (e) Committee
participation, only briefly mentions the participation of beneficiary
members. The current requirement provides little guidance about how to
approach the participation of beneficiary members on the committee.
We proposed to add new paragraph Sec. 431.12(e). The proposed rule
noted that in the new paragraph, (e) Beneficiary Advisory Council,
States would be required to create a BAC, a dedicated Beneficiary
Advisory Council, that will meet separately from the MAC on a regular
basis and in advance of each MAC meeting.
Specifically, at new paragraph (e)(1), we proposed to require that
the MAC members described in paragraph (d)(1) must also be members of
the BAC. This requirement will facilitate the bi-directional
communication essential to effective beneficiary engagement and allow
for meaningful representation of diverse voices across the MAC and BAC.
In paragraph (e)(2), we proposed to require that the BAC meetings occur
in advance of each MAC meeting to ensure BAC member preparation for
each MAC discussion. BAC meetings will also be subject to requirements
in paragraph (f)(5), described later in this section, that the BAC
meetings must occur virtually, in-person, or through a hybrid option to
maximize member attendance. We plan to expound on best practices for
engaging beneficiary participation in committees like the MAC in a
future toolkit.
We proposed the addition of the BAC because we believe that it will
result in providing States with increased access to beneficiary
perspectives. The creation of a separate beneficiary-only advisory
council also aligns with what we have learned from multiple interviews
with State Medicaid agencies and other Medicaid interested parties (for
example, Medicaid researchers, former Medicaid officials) conducted
over the course of 2022 on the operation of the existing MCACs. These
interested parties described the importance of having a comfortable,
supportive, and trusting environment that facilitates beneficiaries'
ability to speak freely on matters most important to them. Further, we
believe that the crossover structure for the MAC and BAC proposed in
Sec. 431.12(d) allows for the beneficiary-only group to meet
separately while still having a formal connection to the broader, over-
arching MAC. It is important the MAC members can directly engage with
the beneficiaries and hear from their experience. We noted earlier that
some States may already have highly effective BAC-type councils
operating as part of their Medicaid program. These existing councils
may represent specific constituencies such as children with complex
medical needs or older adults or may be participants receiving services
under a specific waiver. In these instances, States may use these
councils to satisfy the requirements of this rule, as long as the pre-
existing BAC-type council membership includes the type of members
required in the proposed paragraph of Sec. 431.12(e).
We received public comments on these proposals. The following is a
summary of the comments we received and our responses.
Comment: We received many comments in support of the BAC as
specified in the newly proposed Sec. 431.12(e). Commenters noted that
the BAC would provide a necessary and less-intimidating venue where
Medicaid beneficiaries along with their families and caregivers can
share first-person experiences and feedback to the State. While many
commenters stated the BAC was needed and a welcomed improvement, a few
commenters cautioned that States would need more than just to set up a
BAC; they will also need to invest in creating opportunities for
meaningful engagement.
Response: We agree that the BAC must be supported and used by the
State in ways that create opportunities for BAC members to be actively
involved and have their contributions considered.
Comment: A few commenters asked CMS to clarify how existing
community groups or advisory councils could be used to satisfy the
requirements of the BAC. One commenter asked if the BAC would meet a
State's inclusive Community First Choice (CFC) requirements.
Response: The proposed new paragraph (e) requires that States form
a BAC, but notes that the State can use an existing beneficiary group.
Prior to rulemaking, CMS spoke to several States and researchers to
understand how States were implementing the MCAC requirements. From the
information gathered, we know that many States already have active
Medicaid beneficiary groups that could fill these requirements and can
function as their BACs. In these instances, it is not our intention to
ask a State to create a second Medicaid beneficiary group to meet the
BAC requirements. If a State wants to use an existing group to satisfy
the BAC requirements, they will need to ensure that the existing
committee's membership meets the membership requirements of the BAC and
that the existing committee's bylaws are developed or updated, and
published, to explain that the committee functions to meet the BAC
requirements.
Regarding the ability to use the BAC to meet CFC requirements of
the State, CMS notes in the ``Medicaid Program; State Plan Home and
Community-Based Services, 5-Year Period for Waivers, Provider Payment
Reassignment, and Home and Community-Based Setting Requirements for
Community FirstChoice and Home and Community Based Services (HCBS)
Waivers'' final rule,\42\ that States may utilize existing
[[Page 40558]]
advisory bodies in the implementation of CFC, as long as the statutory
requirements as specified in Sec. 441.715 for the Development and
Implementation Council are met. We acknowledge the benefits of the
Implementation Council coordinating with related interested parties
councils and commissions and encourage States to do so. States may also
choose to leverage these councils and/or include members from these
councils to meet the requirements for CFC.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\42\ ``Medicaid Program; State Plan Home and Community-Based
Services, 5-Year Period for Waivers, Provider Payment Reassignment,
and Home and Community-Based Setting Requirements for Community
FirstChoice and Home and Community Based Services (HCBS) Waivers
https://www.medicaid.gov/sites/default/files/2019-12/cfc-final-settings.pdf,'' (79 FR 2948, 2982).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Comment: The majority of the comments received related to the newly
proposed Sec. 431.12(e) were commenters providing recommendations on
which groups of people should also be required to be included as BAC
members. We received a range of suggestions such as: HCBS
beneficiaries, individuals with specific chronic diseases and
disabilities, individuals using long term care services and supports
(LTSS), individuals who are receiving perinatal health services,
individuals who have lived experience with behavioral health
conditions, and Medicaid beneficiaries who are deaf, hard of hearing,
or deaf blind. Commenters also requested that the BAC members represent
a cross-section of Medicaid beneficiaries that can also be regarded as
demographically and geographically diverse.
Response: We agree with commenters that the States should select
the types of BAC members that can provide them with representative
views of the experience of Medicaid beneficiaries in their State. The
regulatory language provides States with the flexibility to make those
determinations based on the characteristics of their individual State
Medicaid program. It can be challenging to find beneficiaries available
to serve on a council, particularly if the requirements of membership
are very specific. By keeping our regulations broad for what types of
beneficiaries should be selected for the BAC, we seek to ensure States
are able to recruit members with fewer challenges.
Comment: A few commenters asked for CMS to clarify or further
define a few terms used in newly proposed Sec. 431.12(e).
Specifically, a couple of commenters asked CMS to clarify the phrase
``individuals with direct care experience supporting Medicaid
beneficiaries.'' Another commenter asked if CMS could define whether
the term ``caregivers'' included paid caregivers.
Response: In the proposed and in this final rule, we have described
individuals with direct experience supporting Medicaid beneficiaries as
``family members or caregivers of those enrolled in Medicaid.'' In the
proposed rule's preamble,\43\ we state that caregivers can be paid or
unpaid caregivers. To better clarify these definitions, we are adding
the words ``paid or unpaid'' before the word caregiver to the proposed
regulatory language at new paragraph Sec. 431.12(e) so that the phrase
reads, ``. . . individuals who are currently or have been Medicaid
beneficiaries and individuals with direct experience supporting
Medicaid beneficiaries (family members and paid or unpaid caregivers of
those enrolled in Medicaid), to advise the State. . . .''
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\43\ ``Medicaid Program; Ensuring Access to Medicaid Services,''
(88 FR 27960, 27968).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Comment: As noted in an earlier section, several commenters asked
CMS to clarify the role of the BAC, citing that in the proposals, the
language varies from ``advisory'' to ``providing feedback.''
Response: The primary role of the BAC is to advise the State
Medicaid agency on policy development and on matters related to the
effective administration of the Medicaid program. To better clarify the
BAC's advisory role, we are removing from the proposed regulatory
language at new paragraph Sec. 431.12(e) the words and to ``provide
input to.'' The phrase now reads ``. . . to advise the State regarding
their experience with the Medicaid program, on matters of concern
related to policy development and matters related to the effective
administration of the Medicaid program.''
Comment: A few commenters shared suggestions related to the BAC
meetings described in new paragraph Sec. 431.12(e)(2). One commenter
asked CMS to encourage States to hold BAC and MAC meetings on the same
day, with the BAC meeting occurring first in an effort to minimize
travel. Other commenters asked CMS for additional meetings for the BAC
to be required to attend (for example, meetings with the State Medicaid
Director and meetings with CMS regional administrators).
Response: The meeting structure specified in the BAC proposal is
focused on the interplay between the BAC and MAC meetings. In new
paragraph Sec. 431.12(e)(2), we are requiring that the BAC meetings be
held separate from the MAC and in advance of the MAC, so that the BAC
members have the opportunity to prepare and hold an internal discussion
among themselves. Holding MAC and BAC meetings in the same day could be
in line with the meeting requirements. States may wish to hold
additional BAC meetings with other parties, as needed.
Comment: Some commenters asked CMS to create a Federal-level BAC to
ensure consistency across States.
Response: A Federal-level BAC would not further the goal of
providing States with beneficiary input into their programs because it
would not focus on the particular features of each individual State's
Medicaid program or beneficiary and provider communities. Such a group
is beyond the scope of this rulemaking.
After consideration of public comments, we are finalizing new Sec.
431.12(e) as proposed, with changes to:
Language modifications to reflect the new name of the BAC;
Adding language that caregivers on the BAC can be ``paid
or unpaid.'' Section 431.12 (e) will now state, ``. . . individuals who
are currently or have been Medicaid beneficiaries and individuals with
direct experience supporting Medicaid beneficiaries (family members and
paid or unpaid caregivers of those enrolled in Medicaid) . . . .''
Deleting the phrase ``. . . and provide input to . . . .''
Section 431.12(e) will now state ``. . . to advise the State regarding
their experience with the Medicaid program, on matters of concern
related to policy development and matters related to the effective
administration of the Medicaid program.''
6. MAC and BAC Administration (Sec. 431.12(f))
We proposed to add new paragraph Sec. 431.12(f), MAC and BAC
administration, to provide an administrative framework for the MAC and
BAC that ensures transparency and a meaningful feedback loop to the
public and among the members of the committee and council.\44\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\44\ ``Medicaid Program; Ensuring Access to Medicaid Services,''
(88 FR 27960, 27920).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Specifically, in new paragraph (f)(1), we proposed that State
agencies would be required to develop and post publicly on their
website bylaws for governance of the MAC and BAC, current lists of MAC
and BAC memberships, and past meeting minutes for both the committee
and council. In paragraph (f)(2), we proposed that State agencies would
be required to develop and post publicly a process for MAC and BAC
member recruitment and selection along with a process for the selection
of MAC and BAC leadership. In paragraph (f)(3), we proposed that State
agencies would be required to develop, publicly post, and implement a
regular meeting schedule for the MAC and BAC. The proposed
[[Page 40559]]
requirement specified that the MAC and BAC must each meet at least once
per quarter and hold off-cycle meetings as needed. In paragraph (f)(4),
we proposed requiring that that at least two MAC meetings per year must
be opened to the public. For the MAC meetings that are open to the
public, the meeting agenda would be required to include a dedicated
time for public comment to be heard by the MAC. None of the BAC
meetings were required to be open to the public unless the State's BAC
members decided otherwise. We also proposed that the State ensure that
the public is provided adequate notice of the date, location, and time
of each public MAC meeting and any public BAC meeting at least 30
calendar days in advance. We solicited comment on this approach. In
paragraph (f)(5), we proposed that States would be required to offer
in-person, virtual, and hybrid attendance options including, at a
minimum telephone dial-in options at the MAC and BAC meetings for its
members to maximize member participation at MAC and BAC meetings. If
the MAC or BAC meeting was deemed open to the public, then the State
must offer at a minimum a telephone dial-in option for members of the
public.
With respect to in-person meetings, we proposed in paragraph (f)(6)
that States would be required to ensure that meeting times and
locations for MAC and BAC meetings were selected to maximize
participant attendance, which may vary by meeting. For example, States
may determine, by consulting with their MAC and BAC members, that
holding meetings in various locations throughout the State may result
in better attendance. In addition, States may ask the committee and
council members about which times and days may be more favorable than
others and hold meetings at those times accordingly. We also proposed
that States use the publicly posted meeting minutes, which lists
attendance by members, as a way to gauge which meeting times and
locations garner maximum participate attendance.
Finally, in paragraph (f)(7), we proposed that State agencies were
required to facilitate participation of beneficiaries by ensuring that
meetings are accessible to people with disabilities, that reasonable
modifications are provided when necessary to ensure access and enable
meaningful participation, that communication with individuals with
disabilities is as effective as with others, that reasonable steps are
taken to provide meaningful access to individuals with Limited English
Proficiency, and that meetings comply with the requirements at Sec.
435.905(b) and applicable regulations implementing the ADA, section 504
of the Rehabilitation Act, and section 1557 of the Affordable Care Act
at 28 CFR part 35 and 45 CFR parts 84 and 92.
Interested parties' feedback and recent reports 45 46
published on meaningful beneficiary engagement illuminate the need for
more transparent and standardized processes across States to drive
participation from key interested parties and to facilitate the
opportunity for participation from a diverse set of members and the
community. Further, we believe that in order for the State to comply
with the language of section 1902(a)(4)(B) of the Act, which requires a
State plan to meaningfully engage Medicaid beneficiaries and other low-
income people in the administration of the plan, it needs to be
responsive to the needs of its beneficiaries. To be responsive to the
needs of its beneficiaries, the State needs to be able to gather
feedback from a variety of people that touch the Medicaid program, and
the MAC and BAC will serve as a vehicle through which States can obtain
this feedback.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\45\ Resources for Integrated Care and Community Catalyst,
``Listening to the Voices of Dually Eligible Beneficiaries:
Successful Member Advisory Councils'', 2019. Retrieved from https://www.resourcesforintegratedcare.com/listening_to_voices_of_dually_eligible_beneficiaries/.
\46\ Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, Person & Family
Engagement Strategy: Sharing with Our Partners. Retrieved from:
https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-
Instruments/QualityInitiativesGenInfo/Downloads/Person-and-Family-
Engagement-Strategic-Plan-12-12-
16.pdf#:~:text=person%E2%80%99s%20priorities%2C%20goals%2C%20needs%20
and%20values.%E2%80%9D%20Using%20these,to%20guide%20all%20clinical%20
decisions%20and%20drives%20genuine.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We acknowledge that interested parties may face a range of
technological and internet accessibility limitations, and proposed
requiring that, at a minimum, States provide a telephone dial-in option
for MAC and BAC meetings. While we understand that in-person
interaction can sometimes assist in building trusted relationships, we
also recognize that accommodations for members and the public to
participate virtually is important, particularly since the beginning of
the COVID-19 pandemic. We solicited comment on ways to best strike this
balance.
We received public comments on these proposals. The following is a
summary of the comments we received and our responses.
Comment: We received many comments expressing broad support of
Sec. 431.12(f)(1) proposals requiring States to post publicly
information on the MAC and BAC (bylaws, meeting minutes). The
commenters noted that transparency plays an important role in promoting
multi-directional accountability and could also help ensure the success
of the MAC and BAC. While commenters were supportive, they also
recommended that States consider their Medicaid communities'
communication access needs, including cultural competency and
linguistic needs, when posting these materials to their websites.
Response: We agree with commenters that States should take steps to
ensure that any publicly posted materials are accessible to the various
interested parties that comprise their Medicaid community.
Comment: We received a few comments asking us to reconsider the
requirement of having States to post their BAC membership list on their
websites. Several commenters suggested that States should give BAC
members the choice of being publicly identified.
Response: We thank commenters for raising this issue, as we want to
avoid any situation where a Medicaid beneficiary, family member or
caregiver, does not want to be publicly identified. In response to
these comments, we are updating and finalizing the proposed regulations
to permit BAC members to choose whether to be publicly identified in
materials such as membership lists and meeting minutes. If BAC members
choose not to be identified in public materials, they can be referred
to as BAC member 1, BAC member 2 and so on. Specifically, we are
updating and finalizing the proposed language under new paragraph Sec.
431.12(f)(1) to state, ``Develop and publish by posting publicly on its
website, bylaws for governance of the MAC and BAC along with a current
list of members . . . States will give BAC members the option to
include their names on the membership list and meeting minutes that
will be posted publicly.''
Comment: We received comments supporting the Sec. 431.12(f)(2)
requirement of having States publicly post their process for
recruitment and selection. Commenters emphasized that these processes
must be inclusive and reflect the diversity of their State's Medicaid
community and beneficiaries. Other commenters asked for CMS to provide
guidance or best practices on how to recruit members, as well as
marketing best practices and the preferred format for print and audio
materials.
Response: We agree that States should develop recruitment
strategies that will result in identifying members that are
[[Page 40560]]
representative of a State's Medicaid community and beneficiaries.
However, we have kept the requirements flexible to be cognizant of the
fact that States can experience challenges in recruiting Medicaid
beneficiaries to serve on the BAC. We also encourage States to examine
best practices from entities that specialize in marketing, recruitment,
and the accessibility of published materials as outlined on
Digital.gov.\47\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\47\ https://digital.gov/resources/an-introduction-to-accessibility/?dg.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Comment: We received some comments asking that States have a
process for identifying conflicts of interest when making member
selections.
Response: We agree that avoiding conflicts of interest is
important, and we encourage States to establish conflict of interest
policies, to be documented in the MAC/BAC bylaws or other organizing
documents that govern the membership and operations of the MAC/BAC, and
to ensure these policies are respected when selecting MAC/BAC members.
Since MAC and BAC membership represent a variety of backgrounds and
interest relevant to Medicaid, we also believe that building in a time
for conflict-of-interest disclosure into each meeting's agenda is
important. Specifically, under new Sec. 431.12(f)(3) we are now adding
that each MAC and BAC meeting agenda should have time set aside for
members to disclose any matters that are not incompatible with their
participation on the MAC and/or BAC under the State's conflict of
interest policy, but which nevertheless could give rise to a perceived
or actual conflict of interest and therefore should be disclosed. We
also believe our requirements for MAC and BAC meetings, including the
posting of meeting minutes and membership lists, will provide the
public and States with the transparency needed to know if a conflict of
interest (perceived, apparent, or actual) occurred during a meeting.
Comment: We received comments regarding the requirement in Sec.
431.12(f)(3) for both the MAC and BAC to each meet at a minimum of once
quarterly. Commenters noted the number of meetings could pose a burden
to the States and members. Several commenters suggested that CMS allow
Medicaid agencies to hold meetings in a way that matches their
administrative resources and goals.
Response: We selected a quarterly meeting versus a monthly meeting
schedule for the MAC and BAC because we believe it will provide States
with more flexibility in determining when to meet. For example, rather
than having the MAC and BAC members meeting every month (12 times
annually), we reduce the time commitment for members by having the
State select which month per quarter works best for the MAC and BAC
members (4 times annually). Further, the goal of the MAC and BAC is to
advise the State on matters related to policy development and to the
effective administration of the Medicaid program. We believe that
holding a quarterly meeting, as a minimum, allows States to integrate
their Medicaid community's voice into the effective administration of
the Medicaid program in a way that is timely and meaningful. Further,
we believe that holding quarterly meetings would result in the least
amount of burden for States. Holding more meetings per year would
likely result in additional strain of time and resources for the State
and its members. Holding meetings less frequently than quarterly would
not assist the timely integration of the community voice into the
administration of the Medicaid program. We also strive to further
reduce the burden to MAC and BAC members by structuring the meeting
requirements in a way that allows States to select non-traditional
meeting times and to use different telecommunications options (for
example, online meetings) for its meetings which would eliminate
members' commuting times to meetings.
Comment: We received several comments about new Sec. 431.12(f)(4)
in support of the requirement that each MAC meeting must have a public
comment period, citing the importance of all interested parties to be
able to share feedback. Additionally, a few commenters asked that
States also have a process to accept input from interested parties
while developing MAC agendas.
Response: States will have the flexibility to develop the MAC
agendas in accordance with their own processes and procedures. We
encourage commenters to work with their State regarding those
processes.
Comment: A couple of commenters suggested that all MAC and BAC
meetings be open to the public.
Response: We place great importance on meeting transparency, but we
also believe that States may need the flexibility to keep closed some
of their meetings each year. The proposed requirement in Sec.
431.12(f)(4) related to BAC meetings notes that BAC meetings are not
required to be open to the public unless the State and the BAC members
decide otherwise. It is important for States to create a dedicated
space for this group of Medicaid beneficiaries and people with lived
Medicaid experience to share their interactions with and perceptions of
the Medicaid program. Having a comfortable, supportive, and trusting
environment will encourage members to speak freely on matters most
important to them. We note that in order to support overall
transparency, we proposed that the meeting minutes of the BAC meetings
be required to be posted online and MAC members who are also on the BAC
will share input from the BAC with the broader MAC.
Comment: We received comments in response to our request for
comments about in-person and virtual attendance options for the MAC and
BAC meetings. The comments emphasized the need for States to offer both
in-person and virtual attendance options. One commenter questioned if
the proposed requirement meant that offering an in-person attendance
option was a requirement for each meeting.
Response: We thank commenters for responding to our request for
comments. In response to those comments, we are updating new Sec.
431.12(f)(5) to list the different types of meeting options.
Specifically, Sec. 431.12(f)(5) states, ``Offer a rotating, variety of
meeting attendance options. These meeting options are: all in-person
attendance, all virtual attendance, and hybrid (in-person and virtual)
attendance options. Regardless of which attendance type of meeting it
is, States are required to always have, a minimum, telephone dial-in
option at the MAC and BAC meetings for its members.'' For the commenter
who questioned if States had to always provide in-person attendance
options, we are clarifying that if the meeting is designated as a
virtual-only meeting, States do not need to have in-person attendance.
Comment: One commenter suggested we add a requirement for meetings
to be held both during and after work hours.
Response: In new Sec. 431.12(f)(6), we require that States ensure
that the meeting times selected for MAC and BAC meetings maximize
member attendance. We encourage States to consider working hours and
the impact on their MAC and BAC membership, as appropriate.
Comment: Several commenters expressed broad support for the
proposal to ensure that MAC and BAC meetings are accessible by people
with disabilities and Limited English Proficiency (LEP). Commenters
also provided suggestions to better ensure meaningful participation,
such as making sure States have available: interpreter services,
American Sign Language translation services, closed captioning for
virtual meeting, and
[[Page 40561]]
making materials available in plain language.
Response: As reflected in Sec. 431.12(f)(7), we agree that MAC and
BAC members with disabilities and LEP should have access to the types
of supports needed to meaningfully engage in meetings. We have updated
the relevant Federal requirements for States to meet in this final
rule.
Comment: One commenter requested that CMS clarify what is meant by
the phrase, ``that reasonable steps are taken to provide meaningful
access to individuals with Limited English Proficiency . . . .''
Response: Title VI of the Civil Rights Act requires recipients of
Federal financial assistance, including State Medicaid programs, to
take reasonable steps to provide meaningful access to their programs or
activities for individuals with Limited English Proficiency.\48\
Section 1557 of the Affordable Care Act similarly requires recipients
of Federal financial assistance to take reasonable steps to provide
meaningful access to their health programs or activities for
individuals with Limited English Proficiency, and the implementing
regulation requires the provision of interpreting services and
translations when it is a reasonable step to provide meaningful
access.\49\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\48\ Lau v. Nichols, 414 U.S. 563, 566 (1974) (interpreting
Title VI and its implementing regulations to require a school
district with students of Chinese origin with limited English
proficiency to take affirmative steps to provide the students with a
meaningful opportunity to participate in federally funded
educational programs).
\49\ 45 CFR 92.101; see alsohttps://www.hhs.gov/civil-rights/for-providers/laws-regulations-guidance/guidance-federal-financial-assistance-title-vi/.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
After consideration of public comments, we are finalizing Sec.
[thinsp]431.12(f) as proposed with:
Language modifications to reflect the new name of the BAC.
Updates to Sec. 431.12(f)(1) to now state, ``States will
also post publicly the past meeting minutes of the MAC and BAC
meetings, including a list of meeting attendees. States will give BAC
members the option to include their names in the membership list and
meeting minutes that will be posted publicly.''
Updates to Sec. 431.12(f)(3) to state, ``Each MAC and BAC
meeting agenda must include a time for members and the public (if
applicable) to disclose conflicts of interest.''
Updates to Sec. 431.12(f)(4) to move one sentence up to
be the new second sentence and the deletion of a repetitive sentence so
that third sentence now reads as, ``The public must be adequately
notified of the date, location, and time of each public MAC meeting and
any public BAC meeting at least 30 calendar days in advance of the date
of the meeting.''
Updates to Sec. 431.12(f)(5) to state, ``Offer a
rotating, variety of meeting attendance options. These meeting options
are: all in-person attendance, all virtual attendance, and hybrid (in-
person and virtual) attendance options. Regardless of which attendance
type of meeting it is, States are required to always have at a minimum,
telephone dial-in option at the MAC and BAC meetings for its members.''
Updates to paragraph (f)(7) to reflect additional Federal
requirements (adding reference to the Title VI of the Civil Rights Act
of 1964). The sentence will now state, ``. . . that reasonable steps
are taken to provide meaningful access to individuals with Limited
English Proficiency, and that meetings comply with the requirements at
Sec. 435.905(b) of this chapter and applicable regulations
implementing the ADA, Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, section
504 of the Rehabilitation Act, and section 1557 of the Affordable Care
Act at 28 CFR part 35 and 45 CFR parts 80, 84 and 92, respectively.''
7. MAC and BAC Participation and Scope (Sec. 431.12(g))
We proposed to replace former paragraph (e) Committee
participation, with new paragraph (g) MAC and BAC Participation and
Scope. The original paragraph (e), Committee participation, required
that the MCAC must have opportunity for participation in policy
development and program administration, including furthering the
participation of beneficiary members in the agency program.
In new paragraph Sec. 431.12(g), we proposed and are finalizing
the expansion of the types of topics which provide the MAC and BAC
should advise to the State. The list of topics we proposed included at
a minimum topics related to: (1) addition and changes to services; (2)
coordination of care; (3) quality of services; (4) eligibility,
enrollment, and renewal processes; (5) beneficiary and provider
communications by State Medicaid agency and Medicaid managed care
plans; (6) cultural competency, language access, health equity and
disparities and biases in the Medicaid program; or (7) other issues
that impact the provision or outcomes of health and medical services in
the Medicaid program as identified by the MAC, BAC or State.
In researching States' MCACs, we know that some already use the
MCACs advice on a variety of topics relating to the effective and
efficient administration of the Medicaid program. With these changes,
we aim to strike a balance that reflects some States' current practices
without putting strict limitations on specific topics for discussion in
a manner that would constrict flexibility for all States. Broadening
the scope of the topics that the MAC and BAC discuss will benefit the
State by giving greater insight into how it is currently delivering
coverage and care for its beneficiaries and thereby assist in
identifying ways to improve the way the Medicaid program is
administered.
The State will use this engagement with the MAC and BAC to ensure
that beneficiaries' and other interested parties' voices are considered
and to allow the opportunity to adjust course based on the advice
provided by the committee and council members. The State will base
topics of discussion on State need and will determine the topics in
collaboration with the MAC and BAC to address matters related to policy
development and matters related to the effective administration of the
Medicaid program. In finalizing the proposals, we reviewed the wording
for this requirement closer. When listing the types of topics on which
the MAC and BAC should advise to the State, we used the term ``or''.
However, using the term ``or'' does not represent the intention behind
the regulation. The MAC or BAC should not be limited to advising the
State on one topic at a time. Our intent is that the MAC and BAC, in
collaboration with the State, should be able to provide recommendations
on all or any of the subset of the topics listed. We clarify this
intention in this final rule by making a technical change to replace
the word ``and'' with the word ``or'' in the list of the types of
topics on which the MAC and BAC should advise the State.
We received public comments on these proposals. The following is a
summary of the comments we received and our responses.
Comment: As noted in other sections, we received a few comments
asking CMS to clarify the advisory authority of the MAC and BAC, noting
that language fluctuated between advisory and experiential feedback.
Response: As discussed earlier with respect to Sec. 431.12(a), the
role of the MAC and BAC is to advise the State Medicaid agency. In
reviewing the language proposed in Sec. 431.12(g), we see similar
opportunities where CMS can refine its wording to make clear the
advisory roles that the MAC and BAC hold. The primary role of the MAC
and BAC is to advise the State Medicaid agency on policy development
and on
[[Page 40562]]
matters related to the effective administration of the Medicaid
program. By replacing the wording in Sec. 431.12(g) from ``provide
recommendations'' to ``advise'' we are being consistent with the
wording used in similar updates made in this final rule and also making
clear that our intention is for the MAC and BAC to serve in an advisory
capacity to the State.
Comment: All commenters who addressed Sec. 431.12(g) supported the
change in the MAC and BAC scope. The majority of those commenters also
suggested additional topics for which the MAC and BAC should advise the
State. These topics include getting feedback on Secret Shopper studies,
external quality organization reports, consumer facing materials,
enrollment materials, implementation of integrated programs for dually
eligible individuals, rate reviews, and annual medical loss ratio
report. We also received a comment noting the importance of access to
services with a request that it be added it to the list of topics.
Response: We appreciate the support to the proposed changes. We
clarify that the categories of topics we named in this section were
selected as examples because they represented far-reaching parameters
related to the effective administration of the Medicaid program. We
believe that the proposal we are finalizing in this final rule allows
for a broad interpretation of the topics that are within scope while
leaving the ultimate decision on which topics the MAC and BAC will
advise on to the MAC, BAC, and State. We encourage commenters to work
with their States to define the topics that will be discussed at the
MAC and BAC. Finally, we agree that specifically mentioning access to
services is important, as it represents a key topic area of this
regulation. Therefore, we are redesignating the proposed Sec.
431.12(g)(7) as (g)(8) and adding a new Sec. 431.12(g)(7), access to
services.
After consideration of public comments, we are finalizing Sec.
431.12(g) as proposed with:
Language modifications to reflect the new name of the BAC.
Replacing the wording at Sec. 431.12(g) ``to participate
in and provide recommendations'' with ``advise'' so as to clarify the
advisory role of the MAC and BAC.
Conforming edits to replacing the term State Medicaid
Director at Sec. 431.12(g) with the term, ``director of the single
State Agency for the Medicaid program.''
Language modifications to Sec. 431.12(g)(5) to replace ``managed
care plan'' with ``MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs, PCCM entities or PCCMs as
defined in Sec. 438.2.''
Redesignating and finalizing proposed Sec. 431.12(g)(7)
as (g)(8) and adding a new Sec. 431.12(g)(7), ``access to services.''
Replacing the word ``or'' with the word ``and'' after
431.12(g)(7), access to services.
8. State Agency Staff Assistance, Participation, and Financial Help
(Sec. 431.12(h))
Under Sec. 431.12 of the current regulation, paragraph (f)
Committee staff assistance and financial help, the State was required
to provide the committee with--(1) Staff assistance from the agency and
independent technical assistance as needed to enable it to make
effective recommendations; and (2) Financial arrangements, if
necessary, to make possible the participation of beneficiary members.
In the proposed rule, we proposed to redesignate previous paragraph
Sec. 431.12(f) to new paragraph (h) and expand upon existing State
responsibilities for managing the MAC and BAC regarding staff
assistance, participation, and financial support. The changes we
proposed and are finalizing to new paragraph (h) are for the State to
provide staff to support planning and execution of the MAC and the BAC
to include: (1) Recruitment of MAC and BAC members; (2) Planning and
execution of all MAC and BAC meetings; and (3) The provision of
appropriate support and preparation (providing research or other
information needed) to the MAC and BAC members who are Medicaid
beneficiaries to ensure meaningful participation. These tasks include:
(i) Providing staff whose responsibilities are to facilitate MAC and
BAC member engagement; (ii) Providing financial support, if necessary,
to facilitate Medicaid beneficiary engagement in the MAC and the BAC;
and (iii) Attendance by at least one staff member from the State
agency's executive staff at all MAC and BAC meetings.
The overlap of the current regulation with our proposed changes
will mean much of the work to implement is already occurring. We are
not changing the existing financial support requirements. We understand
from States and other interested parties that many States already
provide staffing and financial support to their MCACs in ways that meet
or go beyond what we require through our updated requirements. We
believe that expanding upon the current standards regarding State
responsibility for planning and executing the functions of the MAC and
BAC will ensure consistent and ongoing standards to further
beneficiaries' and other interested parties' engagement. For example,
we know that when any kind of interested parties council meets, all
members of that council need to fully understand the topics being
discussed in order to meaningfully engage in that discussion. This is
particularly relevant when the topics of discussion are complex or
based in specific terminology as Medicaid related issues often can be.
We believe that when States provide their MACs and BACs with
additional staffing support that can explain, provide background
materials, and meet with the members in preparation for the larger
discussions, the members have a greater chance to provide more
meaningful feedback and be adequately prepared to engage in these
discussions. The proposed changes to the existing requirements seek to
create environments that support meaningful engagement by the members
of the MAC and the BAC, whose feedback can then be used by States to
support the efficient administration of their Medicaid program. We
anticipate providing additional guidance on model practices,
recruitment strategies, and ways to facilitate beneficiary
participation, and we solicited comments on effective strategies to
ensure meaningful interested parties' engagement that in turn can
facilitate full beneficiary participation.
Further, the proposed changes to the requirement for beneficiary
support, including financial support, are similar to the original MCAC
requirements. For example, using dedicated staff to support beneficiary
attendance at both the MAC and BAC meetings and providing financial
assistance to facilitate meeting attendance by beneficiary members are
similar to the current regulations. Staff may support beneficiary
attendance through outreach to the Medicaid beneficiary MAC and BAC
members throughout the membership period to provide information and
answer questions; identify barriers and supports needed to facilitate
attendance at MAC and BAC meetings; and facilitate access to those
supports.
In the proposed rule, we proposed to add a new requirement that at
least one member of the State agency's executive staff attend all MAC
and BAC meetings to provide an opportunity for beneficiaries and
representatives of the State's leadership to interact directly.
We received public comments on these proposals. The following is a
[[Page 40563]]
summary of the comments we received and our responses.
Comment: Many commenters supported the modifications proposed at
Sec. 431.12(h), but they emphasized the importance of requiring States
to appropriately compensate members that are beneficiaries for their
participation. The comments noted that there should be financial
compensation to beneficiary members for the time spent on BAC
activities, as well as financial reimbursement for any travel, lodging,
meals, and childcare associated with their participation in the BAC
and/or MAC. Commenters also asked CMS to exclude the value of any
financial compensation paid to members for their participation in the
MAC and/or BAC from consideration in determining eligibility for
Medicaid. A few commenters expressed that the term ``if necessary''
should be dropped from the regulatory language, noting that States
should offer reimbursement to all participating Medicaid beneficiaries.
Response: Under the policies we are finalizing at Sec.
431.12(h)(3)(ii), States will have the ability to reimburse all
beneficiaries to facilitate Medicaid beneficiary engagement in the MAC
and the BAC. This can include, at the State's discretion, reimbursement
for travel, lodging, meals, and childcare. We did not remove the words
``if necessary'' to account for Medicaid beneficiaries who may not need
financial support to engage in the MAC and BAC activities.
We are also clarifying the circumstances in which compensation
provided to beneficiary members would be considered income for Medicaid
eligibility purposes. For both MAGI and non-MAGI methodologies,
reimbursements (such as for meals eaten away from home, mileage, and
lodging) do not count as income, but other compensation (such as a
daily stipend) for participating in an advisory council is countable
income under applicable financial methodologies. For non-MAGI
methodologies, the State could submit a SPA to CMS to disregard such
stipends or other countable income under section 1902(r)(2) of the Act.
Other means tested programs may have other rules for counting income,
and we encourage States to assess those rules and advise Medicaid
beneficiary members of the MAC and BAC accordingly.
Comment: Many commenters in support of the proposed requirements in
Sec. 431.12(h)(3) noted how critical it will be for States to provide
appropriate technical support and preparation to MAC and BAC members
who are also Medicaid beneficiaries in order to ensure their full and
active participation in discussions. Commenters shared a variety of
suggestions for the type of support that can help prepare these members
to feel comfortable fully and meaningfully engaging in the process. The
suggestions made by the commenters included specific areas to be
addressed in the trainings and materials that the State agency staff
provides, such as providing background materials in plain language,
implementing techniques to empower members to participate successfully
and equally in MAC and BAC discussions, supporting health literacy
needs, and training members on digital access to meetings/technology.
Additionally, some commenters suggested that States be required to
provide MAC and BAC members with a mentor and training on the Medicaid
program throughout the length of their membership term. Several
commenters suggested that States be required to select an independent
(outside of the Medicaid agency) policy advisor or technical expert to
provide BAC members with support in understanding Medicaid topics and
policy.
Response: We appreciate the support for our proposals and
understand the interest in ensuring support for beneficiary members of
the MAC and BAC. The underpinning of meaningful member engagement is
that members have a substantial understanding of the topics to be
discussed. We agree with commenters' suggestions in general, but given
the differences in States' structures and resources, we believe there
is a benefit in leaving the decision of how best to provide training
and support to the MAC and BAC members to the States. As we noted
earlier in the preamble, CMS will post publicly a MAC best practices
toolkit.
Comment: We received a couple of comments asking CMS to clarify the
role of the State Medicaid agency staff attending the MAC and BAC
meetings.
Response: The purpose of requiring a member from the State Medicaid
agency's executive staff to attend MAC and BAC meetings is to provide
an opportunity for beneficiaries and representatives of the State's
Medicaid agency leadership to interact directly. The role of the
executive staff person is not to be a MAC/BAC co-chair, nor to
facilitate these meetings. The executive staff person's role is to hear
directly from and interact with Medicaid beneficiaries and with the
wider Medicaid community in that State. The person attending generally
will be expected to share take-aways from these meetings with State's
Medicaid agency leadership.
After consideration of public comments, we are finalizing Sec.
431.12(h) as proposed with:
Language modifications to reflect the new name of the BAC.
Conforming edits to replace the word ``State Agency'' with
the ``single State agency for the Medicaid program'' in several places
across Sec. 431.12(h).
Language modifications to Sec. 431.12(h)(3) to state, ``. . . MAC
and BAC members who are Medicaid beneficiaries . . .''
9. Annual Report (Sec. 431.12(i)).
In the spirit of transparency and to ensure compliance with the
updated regulations, we added in the proposed rule \50\ and are
finalizing new paragraph Sec. 431.12(i) to require that the MAC, with
support from the State and in accordance with the requirements updated
at this section, must submit an annual report to the State. The State
must review the report and include responses to the recommended
actions. The State must also: (1) provide MAC members with final review
of the report; (2) ensure that the annual report of the MAC includes a
section describing the activities, topics discussed, and
recommendations of the BAC, as well as the State's responses to the
recommendations; and (3) post the report to the State's website. In the
proposed rule, we noted that States had one year to implement the
annual report requirement and we sought comment on that timeline. In
finalizing the proposals, we reviewed these requirements closer. It is
our intention that the MAC is required to submit an annual report to
the State. We clarify this intention in this final rule by making a
technical change to add the word ``must'' which was unintentionally
omitted in the proposed rule.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\50\ ``Medicaid Program; Ensuring Access to Medicaid Services,''
(88 FR 27960, 27971).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The proposed requirements of this paragraph seek to ensure
transparency while also facilitating a feedback loop and view into the
impact of the MAC and BAC's recommendations. We solicited comment on
additional ways to ensure that the State can create a feedback loop
with the MAC and BAC.
We received public comments on these proposals. The following is a
summary of the comments we received and our responses.
Comment: Several commenters supported the proposed requirements in
new Sec. 431.12(i), of having States submit an annual report that
describes activities of the MAC and BAC, including the topics discussed
and their
[[Page 40564]]
recommendations. Commenters noted that requiring these reports is
critical to building trust as well as ensuring transparency and
accountability among the State, MAC, and BAC members. In addition,
several commenters agreed with the annual report requirement, but they
also wanted CMS to stipulate the contents of the annual report. One
commenter suggested that States' annual reports include results from
anonymous surveys of MAC and BAC members indicating whether these
members felt they have been listened to and if they felt the State used
members' feedback.
Response: We appreciate the support for the proposed regulations.
We carefully considered the benefits of national uniformity of the
contents of an annual report. However, due to the differences in how
States may approach setting priorities, creating their MAC and BACs,
and the varying level of resources, we believe that States should have
the flexibility to adopt an approach to the content of the annual
report that works best within their State.
Comment: A few commenters asked CMS to either further require that
the BAC issue its own set of reports and recommendations independently
or as part of the MAC report.
Response: While we fully understand and agree with the importance
of the BAC and ensuring that their voices are heard, we believe that
requiring States to create a second BAC-only annual report would add
administrative burden. The proposed regulatory language requires that
States create an annual report that reflects the activities of both the
MAC and BAC. Since the annual report is required to contain the
priorities and activities of both the MAC and BAC, there is no need for
a separate BAC-only report.
Comment: There were a handful of commenters that wanted CMS to
reconsider the report requirement because they thought the resource
burden was too great to develop an annual report, the reporting
requirement lacked meaning, or they wanted CMS to allow Medicaid
agencies to set their own cadence to the reports.
Response: We understand the concerns of the commenters, but we have
written the annual report requirement broadly to ensure maximal
flexibility for States to meet this requirement. It is critical that
States document the work and key outcomes of the MAC and BAC. Further,
we believe the annual report requirement supports the implementation of
the principles of bi-directional feedback, transparency, and
accountability on the part of the State, MAC, and BAC. In response to
comments about burden to States, we have adjusted the proposed
applicability date for this requirement of 1 year and are now
finalizing it as, States have 2 years from July 9, 2024 to finalize the
first annual MAC report. After the report has been finalized, States
will have 30 days to post the annual report.
Comment: A few commenters asked CMS to require States to conduct
additional activities related to monitoring the MAC and BAC, in
addition to the annual report. The commenters' suggestions included:
implementing a corrective action plan for States that failed to meet
the MAC requirements; requiring process evaluations on the experiences
of the MAC and BAC members be conducted and the findings be made
public; and requiring States to engage in program improvement
activities in response to the recommendations made by the MAC that
appear in the annual report.
Response: We carefully considered the benefits of requiring
additional studies and activities to be captured by States and included
in the annual report. However, we want to keep the parameters of our
expectations on the content of a State's annual report to be as broad
as possible to give each State the ability to create a report that will
help them best document the interested parties' engagement with the MAC
and the BAC and serve as a tool for helping advance programmatic goals
over time.
Comment: A couple of commenters requested CMS publish the annual
reports on its website.
Response: We thank the commenters for this suggestion. Currently,
we believe each respective State Medicaid agency's website to be the
most appropriate place for the annual reports to be published. However,
we will consider whether the needs of interested parties would be
better served with CMS collecting and publishing annual reports as
well.
Comment: A few commenters inquired about how CMS would provide
oversight on compliance with activities such as the annual report and
number of meetings requirements.
Response: We thank commenters for these questions. We are currently
assessing the most effective strategies with which to provide
oversight. As these requirements implement State plan requirements in
section 1902(a)(4) and (a)(19) of the Act, noncompliance with the
provisions of this final rule could result in a State plan compliance
action in accordance with Sec. 430.35.
After consideration of public comments, we are finalizing Sec.
431.12(i) as proposed with:
Language modifications to reflect the new name of the BAC.
Additional sentences at the end of Sec. 431.12(i)(3),
``States have 2 years from July 9, 2024 to finalize the first annual
MAC report. After the report has been finalized, States will have 30
days to post the annual report.''
10. Federal Financial Participation (Sec. 431.12(j))
In the current regulation, paragraph (g) Federal financial
participation, noted that FFP is available at 50 percent in
expenditures for the committee's activities. As noted in the proposed
rule, we are not making changes to, and thus are maintaining, the
current regulatory language on FFP from previous paragraph (g) to
support committee activities, to appear in new paragraph (j) with
conforming edits for the new MAC and BAC names.
We received public comments on these proposals. The following is a
summary of the comments we received and our responses.
Comment: We received a few comments about the newly proposed Sec.
431.12(j), encouraging CMS to offer a higher FFP than 50 percent. One
commenter suggested that 90 percent FFP would be ideal.
Response: For Medicaid, all States receive a statutory 50 percent
Federal matching rate for general administrative activities. States may
also receive higher Federal matching rates for certain administrative
activities, such as design, development, installation, and operation of
certain qualifying systems. Federal matching rates are established by
Congress, and CMS does not have the authority to change or increase
them.
After consideration of public comments, we are finalizing new
paragraph Sec. 431.12(j) as proposed with:
Language modifications to reflect the new name of the BAC.
11. Applicability Dates Sec. 431.12(k)
For this final rule, we are adding new paragraph Sec. 431.12 (k)
Applicability dates. In the proposed rule, we noted that the
requirements of Sec. 431.12 would be effective 60 days after the
publication date of the final rule, although we established different
applicability dates by which States must implement certain provisions.
We then solicited comment on whether 1 year was too much or not enough
time for States to implement the updates in this regulation in an
effective manner. We understand that States may need to modify their
existing MCACs to reflect the finalized requirements for MACs and may
also need to create the BAC and recruit members to participate
[[Page 40565]]
if they do not already have a similar entity already in place.
We received public comments on proposed implementation timeline.
The following is a summary of the comments we received and our
responses.
Comment: We received several comments related to the implementation
timeframes specified in the MAC and BAC provisions of the proposed
rule. The majority of comments fell into two categories: commenters who
noted that 1 year should be sufficient to implement the required
changes; and commenters who suggested that CMS provide at least 2 years
for implementation. Other commenters suggested that CMS consider a
graduated approach that would allow States to demonstrate compliance
with the minimum 25 percent BAC crossover requirement over a period of
time. The commenters who requested additional time shared concerns
about States' many other ongoing priorities, workforce shortages, the
amount of time and resources it would take to set up the MAC and BAC,
and having enough time to submit budget requests to their legislature
so they can get the resources to support the required activities.
Response: We have carefully considered the comments received and
acknowledge that additional time for implementation of the requirements
could be beneficial for States given competing priorities, budgeting
and other challenges States may encounter. Additionally, we weighed the
request for a graduated approach to demonstrate compliance with a 25
percent BAC crossover requirement, and we agree that a graduated
approach will allow States a longer ramp-up time to modify their
current MCACs, as well as to set up the BAC and recruit members to
participate.
In the proposed rule, we proposed that States have 1 year from the
effective date of the final rule to recruit members, set up their MAC
and BAC, hold meetings, and submit their first annual report. Based on
public comment, we understand that 1 year is not enough time to
complete all of these activities. As a result, we are adding and
finalizing in this final rule a second implementation year. Based on
these changes, States would now recruit members and set up their MACs
and BACs during the first year implementation year. In the second
implementation year, States would hold the required MAC and BAC
meetings. At the end of that second implementation year, States would
summarize the information from the MAC and BAC activities and use that
information to complete an annual report. States would then fulfill the
annual report requirement by finalizing the report and posting the
annual report to their websites. This annual report would need to be
posted by States within 30 days of the report being completed.
Additionally, as noted in section II.A.4., and in response to
public comment asking for States to have a more graduated approach to
reach the requirement of having 25 percent of MAC members be from the
BAC, we are finalizing in this rule an extended implementation timeline
for this requirement. The finalized provision at Sec. 431.12(d)(1)
will require that, for the period from July 9, 2024 through July 9,
2025, 10 percent of the MAC members must come from the BAC; for the
period from July 10, 2025 through July 9, 2026, 20 percent of MAC
members must come from the BAC; and thereafter, 25 percent of MAC
members must come from the BAC. We developed this approach based on the
comments we received about competing State priorities and the time and
resources that a State would need to meet the new requirements.
Additionally, we understand States may face challenges with finding,
recruiting, and training beneficiary members to serve on the BAC.
Based on the comments received, we are changing two applicability
dates. We note in this new paragraph Applicability dates Sec.
431.12(k), that except as noted in paragraphs (d)(1) and (i)(3) of this
section, the requirements in paragraphs (a) through (j) are applicable
July 9, 2025.
B. Home and Community-Based Services (HCBS)
To address several challenges that we described in the proposed
rule (88 FR 27964 and 27965), we proposed both to amend and add new
Federal HCBS requirements to improve access to care, quality of care,
and beneficiary health and quality of life outcomes, while consistently
meeting the needs of all beneficiaries receiving Medicaid-covered HCBS.
The preamble of the proposed rule (88 FR 27971 through 27996) outlined
our proposed changes in the context of current law.
As we noted in the proposed rule (88 FR 27971), we have previously
received questions from States about the applicability of HCBS
regulatory requirements to demonstration projects approved under
section 1115 of the Act that include HCBS. As a result, we proposed
that, consistent with the applicability of other HCBS regulatory
requirements to such demonstration projects, the requirements for
section 1915(c) waiver programs and section 1915(i), (j), and (k) State
plan services included in the proposed rule would apply to such
services included in approved section 1115 demonstration projects,
unless we explicitly waive one or more of the requirements as part of
the approval of the demonstration project.
We proposed not to apply the requirements for section 1915(c)
waiver programs and section 1915(i), (j), and (k) State plan services
that we proposed in the proposed rule to the Program of All-Inclusive
Care of the Elderly (PACE) authorized under sections 1894 and 1934 of
the Act, as the existing requirements for PACE either already address
or exceed the requirements outlined in the proposed rule, or are
substantially different from those for section 1915(c) waiver programs
and section 1915(i), (j), and (k) State plan services.
We received public comments on these proposals for HCBS under the
Medicaid program. The following is a summary of the comments we
received and our responses. We discuss the comments we received related
to specific proposals, and our responses, in further detail throughout
the sections in this portion of the final rule (section II.B.).
Comment: Many commenters expressed general support for our efforts
to increase transparency and accountability in HCBS programs, and
ultimately improve access to Medicaid services. Commenters in
particular noted general support for our proposed provisions in this
section that are designed to support HCBS delivery systems through
improvements in data collection around waiting lists and service
delivery, enhancements to person-centered planning, standardization of
critical incident investigation and grievance process requirements, and
establishment of defined quality measures. While overall reaction to
the payment adequacy minimum performance level (discussed in section
II.B.5. of the proposed rule and this final rule) was mixed, many
commenters agreed that HCBS programs are facing shortages of direct
care workers that pose obstacles to beneficiaries' access to high-
quality HCBS.
Commenters also shared several ideas for ways we could improve
beneficiaries' access to, or the overall quality of, HCBS beyond the
provisions presented in the proposed rule.
Some commenters expressed concerns that the HCBS provisions we
proposed, when taken together, could present significant administrative
costs to States and, in some cases, to providers.
[[Page 40566]]
Response: We thank commenters for their support. Comments on
specific provisions that we proposed are summarized below, along with
our responses. We also appreciate the many thoughtful suggestions made
by commenters for other ways they believe HCBS could be improved beyond
what we proposed in the proposed rule. While comments that are outside
the scope of what we proposed in the proposed rule and not relevant are
not summarized in this final rule, we will take these recommendations
under consideration for potential future rulemaking.
We recognize that we must balance our desire to stimulate ongoing
improvements in HCBS programs with the need to give States, managed
care plans, and providers sufficient time to make adjustments and
allocate resources in support of these changes. After consideration of
comments we received, we are finalizing many of our proposals, some
with modifications. These modifications are discussed in this section
(section II.B.) of the final rule.
We also note that some commenters expressed general support for all
of the provisions in section II.B. of this rule, as well as for this
rule in its entirety. In response to commenters who supported some, but
not all, of the policies and regulations we proposed in the proposed
rule (particularly in section II.B related to HCBS), we are clarifying
and emphasizing our intent that each final policy and regulation is
distinct and severable to the extent it does not rely on another final
policy or regulation that we proposed.
While the provisions in section II.B. of this final rule are
intended to present a comprehensive approach to improving HCBS and
complement the goals expressed and policies and regulations being
finalized in sections II.A. (Medicaid Advisory Committee and
Beneficiary Advisory Group) and II.C. (Documentation of Access to Care
and Service Payment Rates) of this final rule, we intend that each of
them is a distinct, severable provision, as finalized. Unless otherwise
noted in this rule, each policy and regulation being finalized under
this section II.B is distinct and severable from other final policies
and regulations being finalized in this section or in sections II.A. or
II.C of this final rule, as well as from rules and regulations
currently in effect.
Consistent with our previous discussion earlier in section II. of
this final rule regarding severability, we are clarifying and
emphasizing our intent that if any provision of this final rule is held
to be invalid or unenforceable by its terms, or as applied to any
person or circumstance, or stayed pending further action, it shall be
severable from this final rule, and from rules and regulations
currently in effect, and not affect the remainder thereof or the
application of the provision to other persons not similarly situated or
to other, dissimilar circumstances. For example, we intend that the
policies and regulations we are finalizing related to person-centered
planning and related reporting requirements (sections II.B.1 and
II.B.7. of this final rule) are distinct and severable from the
policies and regulations we are finalizing related to grievance system
(section II.B.2. of this final rule), and incident management system
and related reporting requirements (sections II.B.3 and II.B.7. of this
final rule). The standalone nature of the finalized provisions is
further discussed in their respective sections in this rule.
Comment: Several commenters addressed the relationship between the
proposed HCBS requirements and HCBS authorized under a section 1115
demonstration project. A few commenters requested clarification about
the application of the proposed HCBS requirements in this section to
services delivered under section 1115 authority. A few commenters
expressed concern about what they perceived was the exclusion of
services provided through a managed care delivery system under section
1115 demonstration authority. One commenter recommended only applying
the finalized rules to new section 1115 demonstration programs; in the
alternative, if applying the finalized requirements to current section
1115 demonstration programs, the commenter recommended that States
develop transition plans and be given a reasonable timeframe for
bringing their programs into compliance. A few commenters recommended
that we add a specific reference to section 1115 demonstration
authority of the Act in our proposed HCBS requirements (if finalized),
including at Sec. 438.72(b) (applying various finalized requirements
to managed care programs) and Sec. 441.302(k) (applying new payment
adequacy requirements to section 1915(c) waiver programs).
Response: We are confirming that, consistent with the applicability
of other HCBS regulatory requirements to such demonstration projects,
the requirements for section 1915(c) waiver programs and section
1915(i), (j), and (k) State plan services included in this final rule,
apply to such services included in approved section 1115 demonstration
projects, unless we explicitly waive one or more of the requirements as
part of the approval of the demonstration project. Further, we have not
identified a compelling reason to treat States operating section 1115
demonstration projects differently from States operating other HCBS
programs in terms of implementation, such as by requiring States with
section 1115 demonstration programs to develop transition plans (as was
recommended by one commenter). We also believe that the timeframes that
are finalized in this rule are reasonable and sufficient to allow all
States operating programs under all relevant authorities to come into
compliance. If States have specific questions or concerns regarding
compliance with the finalized requirements, we will provide assistance
as needed.
We note that we have already included references to managed care
delivery systems implemented under section 1115(a) of the Act in the
implementation requirements at Sec. Sec. 441.301(c)(3)(iii)
(implementing the person-centered planning process minimum performance
requirements), 441.302(a)(6)(iii) (implementing the critical incident
management system minimum performance requirements), 441.302(k)(8)
(implementing the payment adequacy minimum performance requirement),
441.311(f) (implementing reporting requirements), and 441.313(c)
(implementing the website transparency provision). We decline
commenters' recommendations that we include additional references to
section 1115 of the Act, as we believe doing so would be duplicative.
We will ensure that the approved standard terms and conditions of
States' section 1115 demonstration projects are clear that the States
must comply with all applicable HCBS requirements that we are
finalizing in this rule.
We did not receive any comments on our proposal not to extend HCBS
requirements that we are finalizing in this rule to PACE. We are
finalizing our proposal to not apply the requirements we are finalizing
in this rule for section 1915(c) waiver programs and section 1915(i),
(j), and (k) State plan services to PACE authorized under sections 1894
and 1934 of the Act.
1. Person-Centered Service Plans (Sec. Sec. 441.301(c), 441.450(c),
441.540(c), and 441.725(c))
Section 1915(c)(1) of the Act requires that services provided
through section 1915(c) waiver programs be provided under a written
plan of care (hereinafter referred to as person-centered service plans
or service plans). Existing Federal regulations at Sec. 441.301(c)
address the person-centered planning process and
[[Page 40567]]
include a requirement at Sec. 441.301(c)(3) that the person-centered
service plan be reviewed and revised, upon reassessment of functional
need, at least every 12 months, when the individual's circumstances or
needs change significantly, or at the request of the individual.
In 2014, we released guidance for section 1915(c) waiver programs
\51\ (hereinafter the 2014 guidance) that included expectations for
State reporting of State-developed performance measures to demonstrate
compliance with section 1915(c) of the Act and the implementing
regulations in 42 CFR part 441, subpart G through six assurances,
including assurances related to person-centered service plans. The 2014
guidance indicated that States should conduct systemic remediation and
implement a Quality Improvement Project when they score below an 86
percent threshold on any of their performance measures. We refer
readers to section II.B.1. of the proposed rule (88 FR 27972) for a
detailed discussion of the six assurances identified in the 2014
guidance.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\51\ Modifications to Quality Measures and Reporting in Sec.
1915(c) Home and Community-Based Waivers. March 2014. Accessed at
https://www.hhs.gov/guidance/sites/default/files/hhs-guidance-documents/3-cmcs-quality-memo-narrative_0_2.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In the proposed rule (88 FR 27972 through 27975), we proposed a
different approach for States to demonstrate that they meet the
statutory requirements in section 1915(c) of the Act and the regulatory
requirements in 42 CFR part 441, subpart G, including the requirements
regarding assurances around service plans. We proposed this approach
based on feedback CMS obtained during various public engagement
activities conducted with States and other interested parties over the
past several years about the reporting discussed in the 2014 guidance,
as well as feedback received through a request for information (RFI)
\52\ we released in the spring of 2022. Through this feedback, many
States and interested parties expressed, and we identified, that there
is a need to standardize reporting and set minimum standards for HCBS.
We proposed HCBS requirements to establish a new strategy for
oversight, monitoring, quality assurance, and quality improvement for
section 1915(c) waiver programs, including minimum performance
requirements and reporting requirements for section 1915(c) waiver
programs. Further, as is discussed later in this section (section
II.B.1. of the rule), to ensure consistency and alignment across HCBS
authorities, we proposed to apply the proposed requirements for section
1915(c) waiver programs to section 1915(i), (j), and (k) State plan
services, as appropriate.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\52\ CMS Request for Information: Access to Coverage and Care in
Medicaid & CHIP. February 2022. For a full list of question from the
RFI, see https://www.medicaid.gov/medicaid/access-care/downloads/access-rfi-2022-questions.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As support for our proposals, we noted that under section
1902(a)(19) of the Act, States must provide safeguards to assure that
eligibility for Medicaid-covered care and services are determined and
provided in a manner that is consistent with simplicity of
administration and that is in the best interest of Medicaid
beneficiaries. While the needs of some individuals who receive HCBS may
be relatively stable over some time periods, individuals who receive
HCBS experience changes in their functional needs and individual
circumstances, such as the availability of natural supports or a desire
to choose a different provider, that necessitate revisions to the
person-centered service plan to remain as independent as possible or to
prevent adverse outcomes. Thus, the requirements to reassess functional
need and to update the person-centered service plan based on the
results of the reassessment, when circumstances or needs change
significantly or at the request of the individual, are important
safeguards that are in the best interest of beneficiaries because they
ensure that an individual's section 1915(c) waiver program services
change to meet the beneficiary's needs most appropriately as those
needs change.
We also noted that effective State implementation of the person-
centered planning process is integral to ensuring compliance with
section 2402 of the of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act
(Affordable Care Act) (Pub. L. 111-148, March 23, 2010). Section 2402
of the Affordable Care Act requires the Secretary of HHS to ensure that
all States receiving Federal funds for HCBS, including Medicaid,
develop HCBS systems that are responsive to the needs and choices of
beneficiaries receiving HCBS, maximize independence and self-direction,
provide support and coordination to facilitate the participant's full
engagement in community life, and achieve a more consistent and
coordinated approach to the administration of policies and procedures
across public programs providing HCBS.\53\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\53\ Section 2402(a) of the Affordable Care Act--Guidance for
Implementing Standards for Person-Centered Planning and Self-
Direction in Home and Community-Based Services Programs. Accessed at
https://acl.gov/sites/default/files/news%202016-10/2402-a-Guidance.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Finally, we noted that since the release of the 2014 guidance, we
have received feedback from States, the HHS Office of Inspector General
(OIG), Administration for Community Living (ACL), and Office for Civil
Rights (OCR), and other interested parties on how crucial person-
centered planning is in the delivery of care and the significance of
the person-centered service plan for the assurance of health and
welfare for section 1915(c) waiver program participants that
underscored the need for the proposals.\54\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\54\ Ensuring Beneficiary Health and Safety in Group Homes
Through State Implementation of Comprehensive Compliance Oversight.
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Office of the
Inspector General, Administration for Community Living, and Office
for Civil Rights. January 2018. Accessed at https://oig.hhs.gov/reports-and-publications/featured-topics/group-homes/group-homes-joint-report.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
To ensure a more consistent application of person-centered service
plan requirements across States and to protect the health and welfare
of section 1915(c) waiver participants, under our authority at sections
1915(c)(1) and 1902(a)(19) of the Act and section 2402(a)(1) and (2) of
the Affordable Care Act, we proposed several changes to our person-
centered service plan requirements in section II.B.1 of the proposed
rule (88 FR 27972 through 27975), as discussed in more detail in this
section of the final rule. First, we proposed revisions to Sec.
401.301(c)(3)(i) to clarify that: (1) States are required to ensure
person-centered service plans are reviewed and revised in compliance
with requirements set forth therein; and (2) changes to the person-
centered service plans are not required if the reassessment does not
indicate a need for changes. Second, we proposed to establish a minimum
performance level for States to demonstrate they meet the requirements
at Sec. 441.301(c)(3). Specifically, at Sec. 441.301(c)(3)(ii)(A), we
proposed to require that States demonstrate that a reassessment of
functional need was conducted at least annually for at least 90 percent
of individuals continuously enrolled in the waiver for at least 365
days. At Sec. 441.301(c)(3)(ii)(B) we proposed to require that States
demonstrate that they reviewed the person-centered service plan, and
revised the plan as appropriate, based on the results of the required
reassessment of functional need at least every 12 months for at least
90 percent of individuals continuously enrolled in the waiver for at
least 365 days. Finally, we proposed to apply the requirements at Sec.
441.301(c)(3) to section 1915(j), (k), and (i) State plan
[[Page 40568]]
services at Sec. Sec. 441.450(c), 441.540(c), and 441.725(c),
respectively.
We received public comments on these proposals. The following is a
summary of the comments we received and our responses.
Comment: One commenter questioned whether States would continue to
be required to demonstrate compliance with the six assurances and the
related subassurances, including those related to person-centered
service plans described in the 2014 guidance, or whether the minimum
performance requirements and reporting requirements that we proposed in
the proposed rule for the section 1915(c) waiver program, if finalized
in the final rule, supersede these six assurances and related
subassurances.
Response: We noted in the proposed rule (88 FR 27972), and
reiterate here, that States must demonstrate that they meet the
statutory requirements in section 1915(c) of the Act and the regulatory
requirements in part 441, subpart G, including the requirements
regarding assurances around person-centered service plans.
We proposed new minimum performance requirements and new reporting
requirements for section 1915(c) waiver programs that are intended to
supersede and fully replace the reporting requirements and the 86
percent performance level threshold for performance measures described
in the 2014 guidance. Further, to ensure consistency and alignment
across HCBS authorities, we proposed to apply the proposed requirements
for section 1915(c) waiver programs to section 1915(i), (j), and (k)
State plan services as appropriate.
We confirm that the section 1915(c) six assurances and the related
subassurances,\55\ including those related to person-centered service
plans, continue to apply. The requirements proposed at Sec.
441.301(c)(3)(ii)(A) and (B) (discussed in the next section, II.B.1.b.
of this rule) assess State performance with the requirements at Sec.
441.301(c)(3) and we did not intend to suggest that they would fully
supersede the section 1915(c) six assurances and the related
subassurances in the 2014 guidance. Further, as finalized later in this
rule, States will be required to report on the minimum performance
levels at Sec. 441.301(c)(3)(ii)(A) and (B). To reduce unnecessary
burden and to avoid duplicative or conflicting reporting requirements,
we plan to work with States to phase-out the reporting requirements and
the 86 percent performance level threshold for performance measures
described in the 2014 guidance as they implement these requirements in
the final rule.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\55\ Modifications to Quality Measures and Reporting in Sec.
1915(c) Home and Community-Based Waivers. March 2014. Accessed at
https://www.hhs.gov/guidance/sites/default/files/hhs-guidance-documents/3-cmcs-quality-memo-narrative_0_2.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Comment: A commenter requested we clarify what the impacts would be
to the existing section 1915(c) waiver reporting tools as defined in
the Version 3.6 HCBS Waiver Application if we finalize our proposals.
Response: We expect to implement new reporting forms for the new
reporting requirements that we are finalizing in this final rule.
However, some components of the existing reporting forms may remain in
effect to the extent that they cover other requirements that remain
unchanged by the requirements that we are finalizing in this final
rule. States and interested parties will have an opportunity to comment
on the new reporting forms and the revised forms through the Paperwork
Reduction Act notice and comment process.
a. Finalization of Amended Requirement for Review of the Person-
Centered Service Plan (Sec. 441.301(c)(3)(i))
At Sec. 441.301(c)(3), we proposed to revise the regulatory text
so that it is clearer that the State is the required actor under Sec.
441.301(c)(3), and that changes to the person-centered service plan are
not required if the reassessment does not indicate a need for changes.
In the proposed rule (88 FR 27973), we noted that, with this revision
to the regulatory text, the State could, for instance, meet the
requirement that the person-centered service plan was reviewed, and
revised as appropriate, based on the results of the required
reassessment of functional need by documenting that there were no
changes in functional needs or the individual's circumstances upon
reassessment that necessitated changes to the service plan. However,
the State would still be expected to review the service plan to confirm
that no revisions are needed, even if the reassessment identified no
changes in functional needs or the individual's circumstances.
Specifically, we proposed to move the sentence at Sec.
441.301(c)(3) beginning with ``The person-centered service plan must be
reviewed. . .'' to a new paragraph at Sec. 441.301(c)(3)(i) and
reposition the regulatory text under the proposed title, Requirement.
In addition, we proposed to revise the regulatory text at the
renumbered paragraph to clarify that the person-centered service plan
must be reviewed, and revised as appropriate, based on the reassessment
of functional need as required by Sec. 441.365(e), at least every 12
months, when the individual's circumstances or needs change
significantly, or at the request of the individual.
We received public comment on this proposal. Below is the summary
of the comment and our response.
Comment: Commenters did not raise specific concerns about the
proposal at Sec. 441.301(c)(3)(i). However, one commenter raised
concerns about the impact the minimum performance requirement proposed
at Sec. 441.301(c)(3)(ii) (discussed in greater detail in the next
section) would have on the requirement at Sec. 441.301(c)(3)(i). The
commenter expressed concern that States may interpret the 90 percent
minimum performance levels proposed at Sec. 441.301(c)(3)(ii)(A) and
(B) as meaning they are only required to conduct the reassessments and
updates to person-centered service plans as required by Sec.
441.301(c)(3)(i) for 90 percent of beneficiaries, not for 100 percent
of beneficiaries receiving HCBS. This commenter also suggested that CMS
clarify that States should conduct functional assessments and person-
centered plan updates for every individual to make sure that the
requirement at Sec. 441.301(c)(3)(i) is not open to interpretation.
Response: We intend that the 90 percent minimum performance
requirements proposed at Sec. 441.301(c)(3)(ii) would assess States'
minimum performance of the requirements at Sec. 441.301(c)(3)(i); we
do not suggest that reassessments of functional need and reviews, and
revisions as appropriate, of the person-centered service plan, based on
the results of the required reassessment of functional need, are
required for only 90 percent of individuals enrolled in the waiver
program. The minimum performance requirements at Sec.
441.301(c)(3)(ii) (and the associated reporting requirements at Sec.
441.311(b)(3), discussed in section II.B.7. of this final rule), while
important for aiding in our oversight and States' accountability for
complying with Sec. 441.301(c)(3)(i), are distinct and severable
requirements from Sec. 441.301(c)(3)(i). In other words, States would
be expected to comply fully with Sec. 441.301(c)(3)(i) even had we not
also proposed the specific minimum performance requirement at Sec.
441.301(c)(3)(ii). Thus, the minimum performance of 90 percent proposed
in Sec. 441.301(c)(3)(ii) notwithstanding, it is our intent to require
at Sec. 441.301(c)(3)(i) that States ensure that the person-
[[Page 40569]]
centered service plan for every individual is reviewed, and revised as
appropriate, at least every 12 months, when the individual's
circumstances or needs change significantly, or at the request of the
individual. To ensure that this expectation is clear in the
requirement, we are finalizing Sec. 441.301(c)(3)(i) with a
modification to specify that the requirement at Sec. 441.301(c)(3)(i)
applies to every individual.
Upon further review, we also determined that retaining the
reference to Sec. 441.301(c)(3) in Sec. 441.365(e), governing the
frequency of functional assessments for section 1915(d) waiver
programs, at the redesignated Sec. 441.301(c)(3)(i), is both obsolete
and unnecessary. Section 441.365(e) was a standard used by section
1915(d) waiver programs, which were time-limited programs that are no
longer in effect, to establish the frequency of functional assessments.
The requirements at Sec. 441.301(c)(3) establish the frequency of
functional assessments for section 1915(c) programs, thus referencing
Sec. 441.365(e), which is obsolete, is unnecessary.
Accordingly, we are finalizing Sec. 441.301(c)(3)(i) with the
previously noted modifications to specify that the requirement applies
to every individual and removing reference to Sec. 441.365(e), as well
as a minor technical modification to remove an extraneous comma after
the word ``revised.'' As finalized, Sec. 441.301(c)(3)(i) specifies
that the State must ensure that the person-centered service plan for
every individual is reviewed, and revised as appropriate, based upon
the reassessment of functional need at least every 12 months, when the
individual's circumstances or needs change significantly, or at the
request of the individual.
b. Minimum Performance Level (Sec. 441.301(c)(3)(ii))
To ensure a more consistent application of person-centered service
plan requirements across States and to protect the health and welfare
of section 1915(c) waiver participants, under our authority at sections
1915(c)(1) and 1902(a)(19) of the Act and section 2402(a)(1) and (2) of
the Affordable Care Act, we proposed to codify a minimum performance
level to demonstrate that States meet the requirements at Sec.
441.301(c)(3) (88 FR 27973).
Specifically, at new Sec. 441.301(c)(3)(ii)(A), we proposed to
require that States demonstrate that a reassessment of functional need
was conducted at least annually for at least 90 percent of individuals
continuously enrolled in the waiver for at least 365 days. We also
proposed, at new Sec. 441.301(c)(3)(ii)(B), to require that States
demonstrate that they reviewed the person-centered service plan and
revised the plan as appropriate based on the results of the required
reassessment of functional need at least every 12 months for at least
90 percent of individuals continuously enrolled in the waiver for at
least 365 days.
We intended that these proposed minimum performance levels would
strengthen person-centered planning reporting requirements while taking
into account that there may be legitimate reasons why assessment and
care planning processes occasionally are not completed timely in all
instances. We also considered whether to propose allowing good cause
exceptions to the minimum performance level in the event of a natural
disaster, public health emergency, or other event that would negatively
impact a State's ability to achieve a minimum 90 percent performance
level. In the end, we decided not to propose good cause exceptions
because the minimum 90 percent performance level is intended to account
for various scenarios that might impact a State's ability to achieve
these minimum performance levels. Further, we noted that there are
existing disaster authorities that States could utilize to request a
waiver of these requirements in the event of a public health emergency
or a disaster (88 FR 27973).
We received public comments on these proposals. The following is a
summary of the comments we received and our responses.
Comment: Many commenters supported our proposals to codify at Sec.
441.301(c)(3)(ii)(A) and (B) minimum performance levels for States to
demonstrate that they meet the requirements at Sec. 441.301(c)(3)(i).
These commenters noted that, by CMS establishing minimum performance
levels for the person-centered planning requirements, beneficiaries who
receive HCBS may be more empowered to actively participate in decision-
making processes related to their care and services.
Response: We appreciate the support for our proposals.
Comment: One commenter suggested we specify that a beneficiary's
services should not be reduced, suspended, or terminated because the
reassessment of functional need or person-centered service plan update
did not occur within the specified timeframe.
Response: The proposed requirements to reassess functional need and
to update the person-centered service plan based on the results of the
reassessment, when circumstances or needs change significantly, or at
the request of the individual, are important safeguards that are in the
best interest of beneficiaries because they ensure that an individual's
section 1915(c) waiver program services are reassessed to ensure they
continue meeting the beneficiary's needs most appropriately as those
needs change. Any changes in the services and supports included in the
person-centered service plan for beneficiaries should be based on
changes in circumstances or needs or preferences of the individual;
they should not result from a failure by the State or managed care plan
to conduct required assessment and service planning processes timely.
Further, States should not reduce, suspend, or terminate a
beneficiary's services solely to reach the minimum performance level
required at Sec. 441.301(c)(3)(ii)(A) and (B).
Comment: A couple of commenters suggested we clarify whether States
would be required to implement corrective action for noncompliance with
the 90 percent performance level if the same beneficiaries do not
receive timely reassessments or updated person-centered plans
repeatedly. One commenter questioned whether a 90 percent performance
level provides an acceptable margin of error (10 percent) and requested
clarification on whether States will be expected to remediate through
corrective action if this threshold is not met.
Response: Corrective actions or other enforcement actions will be
determined on a case-by-case basis, using our standard enforcement
authority, for States that are determined to not be compliant with the
requirements at Sec. 441.301(c)(3)(ii)(A) and (B). We will take this
feedback into account as we plan technical assistance and develop
guidance for States.
Comment: One commenter stated that the person-centered planning
requirements are essential to ensure choice and access to appropriate
service and suggested that, although the proposed approach meets
compliance oversight and monitoring objectives, a quality improvement
strategy to address improving outcomes with the person-centered
planning requirements is needed.
Response: We note that the proposed requirements at Sec.
441.301(c)(3)(ii)(A) and (B) were intended to strengthen person-
centered planning reporting requirements by codifying a minimum
performance level to demonstrate that States meet the requirements at
Sec. 441.301(c)(3). We encourage States to consider implementing
quality
[[Page 40570]]
improvement processes to strengthen and improve person-centered
planning in their HCBS programs. Further, as discussed in section
II.B.8. of this final rule, we are finalizing the HCBS Quality Measure
Set reporting requirements to include requirements for States to
implement quality improvement strategies in their HCBS programs; while
the HCBS Quality Measure Set is distinct from the person-centered
planning requirements being finalized at Sec. 441.301(c)(3), we
believe the HCBS Quality Measure Set requirements support the quality
improvement objectives described by this commenter.
Comment: A few commenters suggested CMS include a good cause
exception for States that do not meet the minimum performance level to
take into account certain instances that fall outside of the specified
performance standards for appropriate reasons, such as for resource
challenges in rural areas, or for beneficiary-related events that could
delay the ability to complete the assessment, such as medical
emergencies/hospitalizations. Alternatively, a few commenters supported
our proposal to not allow good cause exceptions to the performance
level, observing that the 90 percent minimum performance level already
gives States leeway for unexpected occurrences.
Response: We believe that the 90 percent minimum performance level
proposed at Sec. 441.301(c)(3)(ii)(A) and (B) sets a realistic and
achievable threshold.
As we noted in the proposed rule (88 FR 27973), we decided to not
propose any good cause exceptions because the minimum 90 percent
performance level accounts for various scenarios that might impact the
State's ability to achieve these performance levels, and there are
existing disaster authorities, such as the waiver authority under
section 1135 of the Act, that States could utilize to request a waiver
of these requirements in the event of a public health emergency or a
disaster. We decline to include good cause exceptions in the minimum
performance level in this final rule.
After consideration of public comments, we are finalizing our
proposals at Sec. 441.301(c)(3)(ii) with minor modifications to
clarify that the State must ensure that the minimum performance levels
specified at Sec. 441.301(c)(3)(ii)(A) and (B) are met (since States
typically have person-centered planning requirements carried out by
entities such as case managers or providers, rather than directly by
the State). We are also finalizing Sec. 441.301(c)(3)(ii)(B) with
minor technical modifications to make the same punctuation correction
as the modification finalized in Sec. 441.301(c)(3)(i).
c. Application to Managed Care and Fee-for-Service (Sec.
441.301(c)(3))
To ensure consistency in person-centered service plan requirements
between FFS and managed care delivery systems, we proposed to add the
requirements for services delivered under FFS at Sec. 441.301(c)(3) to
services delivered under managed care delivery systems. Section
2402(a)(3)(A) of the Affordable Care Act requires States to improve
coordination among, and the regulation of, all providers of Federally
and State-funded HCBS programs to achieve a more consistent
administration of policies and procedures across HCBS programs. In the
context of Medicaid coverage of HCBS, it should not matter whether the
services are covered directly on a FFS basis or by a managed care plan
to its enrollees. Therefore, we proposed that a State must ensure
compliance with the requirements in Sec. 441.301(c)(3) with respect to
HCBS delivered both under FFS and managed care delivery systems.
We note that in the proposed rule at 88 FR 27974, we made the
statement that to ensure consistency in person-centered service plan
requirements between FFS and managed care delivery systems, we propose
to add the requirements at Sec. 441.301(c)(3) to 42 CFR 438.208(c).
This statement was published in error, and we did not intend to propose
this specific regulation text include reference to Sec. 438.208(c). We
note that Sec. 438.208(c)(3)(v) already requires that managed care
plans comply with Sec. 441.301(c)(3), generally, so we believe that
referencing Sec. 438.208(c) is not necessary. We also note that Sec.
438.208(c)(3)(ii) requires compliance with the other person-centered
planning requirements at Sec. 441.301(c)(1) and (2). Thus, also
referring to Sec. 438.208(c) would be unnecessary.
We received public comments on this proposal. The following is a
summary of the comments we received and our responses.
Comment: Commenters expressed support for the proposed requirements
at Sec. 441.301(c)(3) to be applied to managed care delivery systems
as well, noting that States must ensure compliance with respect to HCBS
delivered both in FFS and managed care delivery systems. Commenters
also noted that the process of conducting reassessments and making
updates to a person-centered service plan is agnostic to whether a
provider is paid by a managed care plan or through a FFS delivery
system.
Response: We appreciate the support for our proposal.
After consideration of public comments received, we are finalizing
our proposed policy to require that the person-centered planning
requirements at Sec. 441.301(c)(3) finalized in this section are
applied to HCBS delivered under both managed care and FFS delivery
systems. As noted above, we are not finalizing a new reference to Sec.
441.301(c)(3) at Sec. 438.208(c), as Sec. 438.208(c) already requires
that managed care plans comply with Sec. 441.301(c)(1) through (c)(3),
which includes the requirements being finalized in this rule at Sec.
441.301(c)(3)(i) and (ii). Additionally, as is discussed in section
II.B.11. of this rule, we are finalizing our proposal at Sec.
438.72(b) to direct States to comply with the requirements finalized in
this final rule, including the revised person-centered centered
planning requirements at Sec. 441.301(c)(1) through (c)(3), for
services authorized under HCBS authorities and provided under managed
care delivery systems.
d. Person-Centered Planning--Definition of Individual (Sec.
441.301(c)(1))
We also proposed updates to existing language describing the
person-centered planning process specific to section 1915(c) waivers.
Current language describes the role of an individual's authorized
representative as if every waiver participant will require an
authorized representative, which is not the case. This language has
been a source of confusion for States and providers. We proposed to
amend the regulation text at Sec. 441.301(c)(1) to better reflect that
the individual, or if applicable, the individual and the individual's
authorized representative, will lead the person-centered planning
process. When the term individual is used throughout this section, it
includes the individual's authorized representative will lead the
person-centered planning process if applicable. We note that, in the
proposed rule, we described our proposal as removing extraneous
language and not as an amendment of Sec. 441.301(c)(1) (88 FR 27974).
Upon further consideration, we believe characterizing this proposal as
an amendment is more accurate. We intend that this proposed language as
finalized will bring the section 1915(c) waiver regulatory text in line
with person-centered planning process language in both the section
1915(j) and (k) State plan options.
We did not receive public comments on this proposal. However, after
further
[[Page 40571]]
consideration of the proposed requirement, we are finalizing Sec.
441.301(c)(1) with a technical modification to clarify that the
language contained in Sec. 441.301(c)(1), as finalized, applies to the
person-centered planning requirements throughout Sec. 441.301(c)(1)
through (3). (New language identified in bold.) This modification
expresses our intent that Sec. 441.301(c)(1) applies to the person-
centered planning requirements in Sec. 441.301(c)(1) through (3),
rather than Sec. 441.301(c) in its entirety.
e. Applicability Date (Sec. 441.301(c)(3)(iii))
We proposed at Sec. 441.301(c)(3)(iii) to make the performance
levels under Sec. 441.301(c)(3)(ii) effective 3 years after the
effective date of Sec. 441.301(c)(3) (in other words, 3 years after
the effective date of the final rule) in FFS delivery systems. For
States that implement a managed care delivery system under the
authority of sections 1915(a), 1915(b), 1932(a), or 1115(a) of the Act
and include HCBS in the managed care organization's (MCO's), prepaid
inpatient health plan's (PIHP's), or prepaid ambulatory health plan's
(PAHP's) contract, we proposed to provide States until the first rating
period with the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP, beginning on or after 3 years after
the effective date of the final rule to implement these requirements.
We solicited comment on whether the timeframe to implement the proposed
regulations is sufficient, whether we should require a shorter
timeframe or longer timeframe to implement these provisions, and, if an
alternate timeframe is recommended, the rationale for that alternate
timeframe.
We received public comments on these proposals. The following is a
summary of the comments we received and our responses.
Comment: Most commenters supported the 3-year timeframe for the
effective date as defined at Sec. 441.301(c)(3)(iii). A few commenters
expressed concerns about the overall burden they believe will be
associated with the final rule, due to competing priorities, and the
effect it may have on States' ability to implement the proposed person-
centered planning provisions at Sec. 441.301(c)(3)(ii) within 3 years
following the effective date of the final rule. A few commenters
expressed that the performance levels under Sec. 441.301(c)(3)(ii) may
require States to have a longer runway to implement and operationalize
State regulation changes and processes, revise policies, and hire
critical staff. A few commenters also requested we consider alternative
effective dates for the person-centered planning minimum performance
requirements, ranging from 18 months to 4 years.
Response: We noted, in the proposed rule (88 FR 27974), that we
recognize many States may need time to implement the proposed HCBS
requirements we are finalizing in the final rule. We acknowledge that
States will have to expend resources in addressing the person-centered
planning minimum performance requirements, including needing time to
amend provider agreements, make State regulatory or policy changes,
implement process or procedural changes, update information systems for
data collection and reporting, or conduct other activities to implement
these person-centered planning requirements.
We believe that 3 years for States to ensure compliance with the
person-centered planning minimum performance requirements being
finalized at Sec. 441.301(c)(3)(ii) is realistic and achievable for
States. We also note that the minimum performance requirements measure
performance of the requirements at Sec. 441.301(c)(3)(i), which
substantively reflect activities States are currently expected to
perform under existing Sec. 441.301(c)(3). For States implementing a
managed care delivery system under the authority of sections 1915(a),
1915(b), 1932(a), or 1115(a) of the Act and include HCBS in the in the
MCO's, PIHP's, or PAHP's contract, we similarly believe it is realistic
and achievable to provide States with a date to comply that is until
the first rating period with the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP, beginning on or
after 3 years after the effective date of this final rule to implement
these requirements. We will provide technical assistance to States as
needed with meeting the timeframe for compliance.
After consideration of the comments received, we are finalizing the
substance of Sec. Sec. 441.301(c)(3)(iii) as proposed, but with minor
modifications to correct erroneous uses of the word ``effective'' and
to make technical modifications to the language pertaining to managed
care delivery systems to improve accuracy and alignment with common
phrasing in managed care contracting policy. We are retitling the
requirement at Sec. 441.301(c)(3)(iii) as Applicability date (rather
than Effective date). We are also modifying the language at Sec.
441.301(c)(3)(iii) to specify that States must comply with the
requirements at Sec. 441.301(c)(3)(ii) beginning 3 years from the
effective date of this final rule (rather than stating that the
performance levels described in Sec. 441.301(c)(3)(ii) are effective 3
years after the date of enactment of the final rule); and in the case
of the State that implements a managed care delivery system under the
authority of sections 1915(a), 1915(b), 1932(a), or 1115(a) of the Act
and includes HCBS in the MCO's, PIHP's, or PAHP's contract, the first
rating period for contracts with the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP beginning on or
after the date that is 3 years after the effective date of this final
rule. (New language identified in bold.).
f. Application to Other Authorities
Section 2402(a)(3)(A) of the Affordable Care Act requires States to
improve coordination among, and the regulation of, all providers of
Federally and State-funded HCBS programs to achieve a more consistent
administration of policies and procedures across HCBS programs. In
accordance with the requirement of section 2402(a)(3)(A) of the
Affordable Care Act and because HCBS State plan options have similar
person-centered planning and service plan requirements, we proposed to
include the proposed requirements at Sec. 441.301(c)(3) in section
1915(j), (k), and (i) State plan services, at Sec. Sec. 441.450(c),
441.540(c), and 441.725(c), respectively. Consistent with our proposal
for section 1915(c) waivers, we proposed these requirements under
section 1902(a)(19) of the Act, which authorizes safeguards necessary
to assure that eligibility for care and services under the Medicaid
program will be determined, and such care and services will be
provided, in a manner consistent with the best interest of
beneficiaries. We believe these same reasons for proposing these
requirements for section 1915(c) waivers are equally applicable for
these other HCBS authorities.
We considered whether to apply the proposed person-centered plan
requirements at Sec. 441.301(c)(3) to section 1905(a) ``medical
assistance'' State plan personal care services, home health services,
and case management services. However, we did not propose that these
requirements apply to any section 1905(a) State plan services at this
time. First, States do not have the same data collection and reporting
capabilities for these services as they do for other HCBS at section
1915(c), (i), (j), and (k). Second, person-centered planning and
service plan requirements are not required by Medicaid for section
1905(a) services, although we recommend that States implement person-
centered planning processes for all HCBS. We note that the vast
majority of HCBS is delivered under section 1915(c), (i), (j), and (k)
authorities, while only a small percentage of HCBS
[[Page 40572]]
nationally is delivered under section 1905(a) State plan authorities.
However, the small overall percentage includes large numbers of people
with mental health needs who receive case management.
We solicited comment on whether we should establish similar person-
centered planning and service plan requirements for section 1905(a)
State plan personal care services, home health services and case
management services.
We received public comments on these proposals. The following is a
summary of the comments we received and our responses.
Comment: Commenters expressed support for applying the proposed
person-centered planning and person-centered plan requirements at Sec.
441.301(c)(3) to section 1915(j), (k), and (i) State plan services.
Response: We appreciate the support for our proposal. As noted
earlier, we are finalizing modifications to Sec. 441.301(c)(3)(i) to
specify that the requirement applies to every individual and to make a
technical correction to remove an extraneous comma. We are finalizing
corresponding edits for section 1915(k) in Sec. 441.540(c) and section
1915(i) in Sec. 441.725(c). The revised language for both Sec.
441.540(c) and Sec. 441.725(c) will specify that the State must ensure
that the person-centered service plan for every individual is reviewed,
and revised as appropriate, based upon the reassessment of functional
need, at least every 12 months, when the individual's circumstances or
needs change significantly, and at the request of the individual.
States must adhere to the requirements of Sec. 441.301(c)(3).
Comment: A few commenters responded to our request for comment on
whether we should establish similar health and welfare requirements for
section 1905(a) State plan personal care services, home health
services, and case management services. Several commenters supported
that we decided not to propose to extend the person-centered plan
requirements at Sec. 441.301(c)(3) to section 1905(a) services. These
commenters expressed concern that applying these requirements to these
State plan benefits could pose critical challenges for State Medicaid
and other operating agencies, due to varying levels of HCBS provided
and different data reporting infrastructure States have for section
1905(a) services. A few commenters recommended that CMS apply the
person-centered planning requirements to mental health rehabilitative
services delivered under section 1905(a) State plan authority. A couple
of other commenters suggested that mental health rehabilitative
services are considered HCBS under the broader definition enacted by
Congress in the American Rescue Plan Act of 2021 (Pub. L. 117-2, March
11, 2021), suggesting that CMS should consider including these services
in the person-centered plan requirements at Sec. 441.301(c)(3).
Response: At this time and as noted in the proposed rule (88 FR
27974 and 27975), we are not applying the person-centered service plan
requirements at Sec. 441.301(c)(3) to section 1905(a) services, due to
the statutory and regulatory differences between services authorized
under sections 1905(a) and 1915 of the Act. For example, there are no
statutory provisions in section 1905(a) of the Act that attach State-
level reporting requirements to any section 1905(a) service. Relatedly,
States do not have the same data collection and reporting capabilities
for these services as they do for HCBS at section 1915(c), (i), (j),
and (k).
Additionally, we note that section 1905(a) services do not have the
same person-centered planning requirements at Sec. 441.301(c)(1)
through (6). Formal person-centered service planning requirements are
established for section 1915(j) services in Sec. 441.468, for section
1915(k) services in Sec. 441.540, and for section 1915(i) services at
Sec. 441.725. While service planning might be part of some specific
1905(a) services, it is not a required component of all section 1905(a)
services.
We acknowledge that many beneficiaries, particularly those
receiving mental health services, are served by section 1905(a)
services, and encourage States to implement effective person-centered
planning processes that are based on individual preferences and
personal goals and support full engagement in community for Medicaid
beneficiaries receiving section 1905(a) State plan personal care
services, home health services, case management services, and
rehabilitative services. We thank commenters for their feedback on this
request for comment, which we may consider in future rulemaking.
After consideration of public comments, we are finalizing the
application of Sec. 441.301(c)(3), as finalized in this rule, to
section 1915(j), (k), and (i) State plan services by finalizing
relevant requirements at Sec. Sec. 441.450(c), 441.540(c), and
441.725(c), respectively. We are finalizing Sec. Sec. 441.450(c),
441.540(c), and 441.725(c), with a technical modification to clarify
that service plans must meet the requirements of Sec. 441.301(c)(3),
but that references therein to section 1915(c) of the Act are instead
references to section 1915(j), 1915(k), and 1915(i) of the Act,
respectively. We are finalizing the requirements at Sec. Sec.
441.540(c) and 441.725(c) with minor modifications. To maintain
consistency with modifications finalized in Sec. 441.301(c)(3)(i), we
are finalizing Sec. Sec. 441.540(c) and 441.725(c) with modifications
to specify that the requirements apply to every individual and to
remove an extraneous comma.
g. Summary of Finalized Requirements
After consideration of the public comments, we are finalizing the
proposals at Sec. Sec. 441.301(c)(1), 441.301(c)(3), 441.450(c),
441.540(c), and 441.725(c) as follows:
We are finalizing the requirement at Sec. 441.301(c)(1)
with a technical modification to clarify that Sec. 441.301(c)(1)
applies to paragraphs (c)(1) through (3) of this section.
We are finalizing Sec. 441.301(c)(3)(i) with
modifications to specify that the requirement applies to every
individual and to remove the reference to Sec. 441.365(e), as well as
finalizing a minor technical change to remove an extraneous comma.
We are finalizing our proposals at Sec. 441.301(c)(3)(ii)
with minor modifications to clarify that the State must ensure that the
minimum performance levels specified at Sec. 441.301(c)(3)(ii)(A) and
(B) are met. We are also finalizing Sec. 441.301(c)(3)(ii)(B) with
minor technical modifications to correct the punctuation (consistent
with the change finalized in Sec. 441.301(c)(3)(i)).
We are finalizing the applicability date requirement at
Sec. 441.301(c)(3)(iii), with a technical modification to the language
to improve accuracy and alignment with common phrasing in managed care
contracting policy. We also are finalizing Sec. 441.301(c)(3)(iii) to
specify that States must comply with the performance levels described
in paragraph (c)(3)(ii) of this section beginning 3 years after July 9,
2024; and in the case of the State that implements a managed care
delivery system under the authority of sections 1915(a), 1915(b),
1932(a), or 1115(a) of the Act and includes HCBS in the MCO's, PIHP's,
or PAHP's contract, the first rating period for contracts with the MCO,
PIHP, or PAHP beginning on or after the date that is 3 years after July
9, 2024.
We are finalizing Sec. Sec. 441.450(c), 441.540(c), and
441.725(c), with a technical modification to clarify that service plans
must meet the requirements of Sec. 441.301(c)(3), but that references
therein to section 1915(c) of
[[Page 40573]]
the Act are instead references to section 1915(j), 1915(k), and 1915(i)
of the Act, respectively.
We are finalizing Sec. Sec. 441.540(c) and 441.725(c),
consistent with modifications finalized in Sec. 441.301(c)(3)(i), with
a modification to specify that the requirements apply to every
individual, and with technical modification to correct the punctuation.
2. Grievance System (Sec. 441.301(c)(7); Proposed at Sec.
441.464(d)(2)(v), Being Finalized at Sec. 441.464(d)(5); Proposed at
Sec. 441.555(b)(2)(iv), Being Finalized at Sec. 441.555(e); and Sec.
441.745(a)(1)(iii))
a. Scope of Grievance System and Definitions (Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(i)
and Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(ii))
Section 2402(a) of the Affordable Care Act requires the Secretary
of HHS to ensure that all States receiving Federal funds for HCBS,
including Medicaid HCBS, develop HCBS systems that are responsive to
the needs and choices of beneficiaries receiving HCBS, maximize
independence and self-direction, provide support and coordination to
assist with a community-supported life, and achieve a more consistent
and coordinated approach to the administration of policies and
procedures across public programs providing HCBS.\56\ Among other
things, section 2402(a)(3)(B)(ii) of the Affordable Care Act requires
development and monitoring of an HCBS complaint system. Further,
section 1902(a)(19) of the Act requires States to provide safeguards to
assure that eligibility for Medicaid-covered care and services will be
determined and provided in a manner that is consistent with simplicity
of administration and the best interest of Medicaid beneficiaries.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\56\ Section 2402(a) of the Affordable Care Act--Guidance for
Implementing Standards for Person-Centered Planning and Self-
Direction in Home and Community-Based Services Programs. Accessed at
https://acl.gov/sites/default/files/news%202016-10/2402-a-Guidance.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Federal regulations at 42 CFR part 431, subpart E, require States
to provide Medicaid applicants and beneficiaries with an opportunity
for a fair hearing before the State Medicaid agency in certain
circumstances, including for a denial, termination, suspension, or
reduction of Medicaid eligibility, or for a denial, termination,
suspension, or reduction in benefits or services. These fair hearing
rights apply to all Medicaid applicants and beneficiaries, including
those receiving HCBS regardless of the delivery system. Under 42 CFR
part 438, subpart F, Medicaid managed care plans must have in place an
appeal system that allows a Medicaid managed care enrollee to request
an appeal, which is a review by the Medicaid managed care plan of an
adverse benefit determination issued by the plan; and a grievance
system, which allows a Medicaid managed care enrollee to file an
expression of dissatisfaction with the plan about any matter other than
an adverse benefit determination. Currently, our regulations do not
provide for a venue to raise concerns about issues that HCBS
beneficiaries in an FFS delivery system may experience which are not
subject to the fair hearing process, such as the failure of a provider
to comply with the HCBS settings requirements at Sec. 441.301(c)(4)
(which are issues that a managed care enrollee could file a grievance
with their plan).
Under our authority at section 1902(a)(19) of the Act and section
2402(a)(3)(B)(ii) of the Affordable Care Act, we proposed to require
that States establish grievance procedures for Medicaid beneficiaries
receiving services under section 1915(c), (i), (j) and (k) authorities
through a FFS delivery system. Specifically, for section 1915(c) HCBS
waivers, we proposed at Sec. 441.301(c)(7) that States must establish
a procedure under which a beneficiary can file a grievance related to
the State's or a provider's compliance with the person-centered
planning and service plan requirements at Sec. Sec. 441.301(c)(1)
through (3) and the HCBS settings requirements at Sec. Sec.
441.301(c)(4) through (6). This proposal was based on feedback obtained
during various public engagement activities conducted with interested
parties over the past several years about the need for beneficiary
grievance processes in section 1915(c) waiver programs related to these
requirements. We also proposed to apply this requirement to section
1915(i), (j) and (k) authorities, which are discussed below in section
II.B.2.h. of this final rule.
To avoid duplication with the grievance requirements at part 438,
subpart F, we proposed not to apply this requirement to establish a
grievance procedure to managed care delivery systems. We note, though,
that the requirements in this section are similar to requirements for
managed care grievance requirements found at part 438, subpart F, with
any differences reflecting changes appropriate for FFS delivery
systems. The proposed requirements included at Sec. 441.301(c)(7) in
the proposed rule (88 FR 27975) were focused specifically on grievance
systems and did not establish new fair hearing system requirements, as
appeals of adverse eligibility, benefit, or service determinations are
addressed by existing fair hearing requirements at 42 CFR part 431,
subpart E. We solicited comments on any additional changes we should
consider in this section with respect to a grievance system.
As discussed earlier in this section II.B.2. of this final rule,
section 2402(a)(3)(B)(ii) of the Affordable Care Act requires
development and monitoring of an HCBS complaint system. In addition,
section 2402(a)(3)(A) of the Affordable Care Act requires the Secretary
of HHS to ensure that all States receiving Federal funds for HCBS,
including Medicaid HCBS, develop HCBS systems that achieve a more
consistent and coordinated approach to the administration of policies
and procedures across public programs providing HCBS. As such, we
believe the proposed requirement for States to establish grievance
procedures for Medicaid beneficiaries receiving HCBS through a FFS
delivery system is necessary to comply with the HCBS complaint system
requirements at section 2402(a)(3)(B)(ii) of the Affordable Care Act
and to ensure consistency in the administration of HCBS between managed
care and FFS delivery systems. Further, in the absence of a grievance
system requirement for FFS HCBS programs, States may not have
established processes and systems for people receiving HCBS through FFS
delivery systems to express dissatisfaction with or voice concerns
related to States' compliance with the person-centered planning and
service plan requirements at Sec. 441.301(c)(1) through (3) and the
HCBS settings requirements at Sec. 441.301(c)(4) through (6), as such
concerns are not subject to the existing fair hearing process at 42 CFR
part 431 subpart E. As a result, we believe the proposal for a
grievance system for FFS HCBS programs is necessary to assure that care
and services will be provided in a manner that is in the best interests
of the beneficiaries, as required by section 1902(a)(19) of the Act.
We specifically focused our proposed grievance system requirement
on States' and providers' compliance with the person-centered service
plan requirements at Sec. 441.301(c)(1) through (3) and the HCBS
settings requirements at Sec. 441.301(c)(4) through (6) because of the
critical role that person-centered planning and service plans play in
appropriate care delivery for people receiving HCBS. Additionally, we
focused the grievance system requirements on the HCBS settings
requirements because of the importance of the HCBS settings
requirements to ensuring that HCBS beneficiaries have full access to
the benefits of community
[[Page 40574]]
living and are able to receive services in the most integrated setting
appropriate to their needs. Beneficiary advocates and other interested
parties indicated to us that these are especially important areas for
which to ensure that grievance processes are in place for all Medicaid
beneficiaries receiving HCBS. Further, focusing the grievance systems
requirements on the person-centered service plan requirements at Sec.
441.301(c)(1) through (3) and the HCBS settings requirements at Sec.
441.301(c)(4) through (6) helps to ensure that the proposed grievance
requirements do not duplicate or conflict with existing fair hearing
requirements at part 431, subpart E, as HCBS settings requirements and
person-centered planning requirements are outside the scope of the fair
hearing requirements.
At Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(ii), we proposed to define a grievance as an
expression of dissatisfaction or complaint related to the State's or a
provider's compliance with the person-centered service plan
requirements at Sec. 441.301(c)(1) through (3) and the HCBS settings
requirements at Sec. 441.301(c)(4) through (6), regardless of whether
the beneficiary requests that remedial action be taken to address the
area of dissatisfaction or complaint. Also, at Sec. 441.301(a)(7)(ii),
we proposed to define the grievance system as the processes the State
implements to handle grievances, as well as the processes to collect
and track information about them.
We received public comments on these proposals. The following is a
summary of the comments we received and our responses.
Comment: Many commenters expressed support for our proposal to
require that States establish a procedure under which a beneficiary can
file a grievance related to the State's or a provider's compliance with
the person-centered service plan requirements at Sec. Sec.
441.301(c)(1) through (3) and the HCBS settings requirements at
Sec. Sec. 441.301(c)(4) through (6). In general, commenters believed
that clear, transparent, and accessible grievance processes are
critical to ensuring that beneficiaries can address violations of their
rights, provide feedback on their experiences in HCBS, and more fully
participate in HCBS programs. One commenter noted that a Federal
requirement will help establish national best practices.
Some commenters connected a strong grievance process with improved
safety and service quality in HCBS programs. For instance, one
commenter noted that a grievance process can complement other quality
mechanisms (such as performance measures) because a grievance system
can address problems as they happen, thus preventing harm before it can
occur. Another commenter suggested that preventing or remediating poor
service delivery has the potential of improving the HCBS workforce by
promoting professionalism and improving the public perception of HCBS
providers, which could aid providers' worker recruitment and retention
efforts; this commenter noted that a strong workforce would promote
quality in HCBS.
Other commenters noted that a grievance system would allow
beneficiaries to state their rights and provide a fair and unbiased
review of beneficiaries' concerns. Several commenters were specifically
supportive of the proposal's potential to collect and track
standardized information about service system issues, including
obstacles to informed choice and person-centered planning.
A few commenters also described frustrations with current State or
provider grievance processes that they have found difficult to access,
unresponsive, ineffective, or opaque. One commenter described our
proposal as ``overdue,'' but also expressed concerns about whether
providers will comply with requirements moving forward. In this vein, a
few commenters suggested that CMS involvement and oversight may be
critical to ensuring that existing or newly created grievance processes
are effective. One commenter expressed the hope that beneficiaries
would be able to contact CMS if they believe the State is not complying
with grievance process obligations.
Response: We thank commenters for their support. We believe the
personal experiences with grievance systems that commenters shared
underscore the need for national standards. Additionally, while States
will have a great deal of responsibility for developing and monitoring
their own systems, having Federal requirements for grievance systems
will facilitate our ability to engage in oversight. We note that
members of the public are able to share concerns with us about their
State's Medicaid activities, which would include the grievance system,
once implemented.\57\ We also note that in addition to the grievance
process finalized under this rule, individuals who believe they have
been discriminated against in HCBS programs, including the right to be
served in the most integrated setting, may file a civil rights
complaint with the HHS Office for Civil Rights at https://www.hhs.gov/civil-rights/filing-a-complaint/.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\57\ Specific questions or concerns regarding the application or
implementation of the regulations finalized in section II.B. of this
rule may be directed to [email protected].
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Comment: Several commenters expressed opposition to the proposal,
suggesting that it was too prescriptive and would result in unnecessary
information technology (IT) systems changes in States that already have
grievance systems in place. Several commenters also noted concerns that
the proposal would place administrative burdens on providers.
Additionally, several commenters noted that this requirement could be
administratively burdensome for States with a small percentage of their
population enrolled in FFS. One commenter suggested that we provide an
exceptions process in these circumstances.
Response: We address specific concerns from commenters--including
concerns about potential duplication, burden, and provider
involvement--in more detail in subsequent responses. As described
below, we are seeking to balance State flexibility with the need for
accountability and consistency among State systems. We also do not
believe that this proposal should place excessive burdens on providers,
as we are requiring that States, and not providers, bear the primary
responsibility of managing the grievance system. Finally, as part of
our goal of establishing national standards, we do not intend to exempt
States from these requirements based on the size of their FFS
populations.
Comment: One commenter requested clarification on whether the State
or CMS is ``in charge'' of the grievance process.
Response: We have proposed and, as discussed further below, we are
finalizing Federal requirements that States operate and maintain a
grievance system. The State is responsible for this system. However, we
will monitor the States' compliance with these requirements.
Comment: A few commenters raised concerns or expressed confusion
about how the proposed grievance system requirement will affect dually
eligible beneficiaries who are enrolled in managed care plans that
already have grievance processes. One commenter raised concerns about
the possibility of multiple investigations being conducted parallel to
one another. Other commenters inquired if Medicare Advantage care
navigators could be required to help beneficiaries file grievances, or
if the proposed grievance system requirements can be made part of dual
eligible special needs plan (D-
[[Page 40575]]
SNP) contracts. One commenter noted that it is critical for dually
eligible beneficiaries to have one place to file grievances about both
Medicare and Medicaid services. Another commenter requested
clarification on how the grievance systems should work for dually
eligible beneficiaries who have, as described by the commenter,
``multiple, perhaps conflicting plans of care.''
Response: We plan to provide States with technical assistance to
help address issues specific to dually eligible beneficiaries. We note
that we proposed that the grievance system requirements at Sec.
441.301(c)(7), and as finalized in this rule, apply only to
beneficiaries receiving services under section 1915(c), (i), (j), and
(k) authorities through FFS delivery systems, and to issues arising
with these services. The new grievance system requirement would not
affect, for instance, dually eligible beneficiaries who receive
services under section 1915(c), (i), (j), or (k) authorities through
fully integrated dual eligible special needs plans (FIDE SNP), highly
integrated dual eligible special needs plans (HIDE SNP), or D-SNPs
otherwise affiliated with MLTSS plans, as those beneficiaries receive
their HCBS through managed care and not through FFS. We also note that
some dually eligible beneficiaries may be enrolled in managed care
plans known as applicable integrated plans (AIP), which are subject to
the integrated grievance requirements at Sec. 422.630. AIPs must
resolve and notify enrollees within required timeframes for integrated
grievances filed for Medicare and Medicaid services. We will provide
technical assistance as needed regarding the application of the
requirements finalized at Sec. 441.301(c)(7) to beneficiaries in
different categories of dual eligibility.
Comment: One commenter recommended continuity across grievance
systems in FFS and managed care delivery systems to ensure consistent
and equitable processes for addressing enrollee concerns.
Response: We agree that such continuity is important. In drafting
the proposed requirements at Sec. 441.301(c)(7) for FFS grievance
systems, which we are finalizing as described in this section II.B.2 of
the final rule, we attempted to mirror the requirements for managed
care grievance processes in part 438, subpart F, as much as possible in
order to promote consistency between the two systems.
Comment: A few commenters requested that we allow States to arrange
for the operations of the grievance procedures to be performed by a
vendor, local agencies, or other contracted entity. Conversely, a few
other commenters raised concerns about the possibility of the grievance
process being administered by providers. Some of these commenters
expressed concerns that the requirement might be burdensome for local
and regional entities to administer, and one commenter raised concerns
that administration of the grievance process by local agencies might
cause problems in terms of oversight and conflict of interest.
A few commenters also noted that, unlike in managed care where care
is managed under one plan, some FFS delivery systems involve multiple
State agencies or agency divisions operating different programs. The
commenters requested more clarification about which agency or
department is responsible for oversight of the system and coordination
in these circumstances.
Response: The requirements proposed, and being finalized, in Sec.
441.301(c)(7) are applied to the State, by which we refer (as we do in
many of our regulations) to the single State agency as described in
Sec. 431.10(b). However, we believe that some States may find it more
efficient or effective to have the operations of the grievance system
performed by other government agencies or contractors, depending on how
a State's systems are organized. Allowing such contracting may also
help preserve existing State grievance processes; we address additional
comments about preservation of existing grievance systems later in this
section II.B.2. of the final rule. However, the single State agency
must retain ultimate responsibility for ensuring compliance with the
requirements set forth in Sec. 441.301(c)(7). We expect that States
are familiar with their local resources (including the capacity of
local agencies) and would only have the operations of the grievance
system performed by an entity that had the necessary infrastructure and
resources to operate a system that would comply with the requirements
in Sec. 441.301(c)(7). To ensure that the responsibility of the single
State agency is clear, we are finalizing Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(i) with a
modification to specify that the State may contract with contractors or
other government entities to perform activities described in Sec.
441.301(c)(7) provided however that the State retains responsibility
for ensuring performance of and compliance with these provisions.
We also note that we intend that the proposed requirements at Sec.
441.301(c)(7)(iii)(C)(3), which we are finalizing as discussed in
detail later in this section II.B.2. of the final rule, promote an
unbiased review of grievances because they prohibit someone who has
previously made decisions related to the grievance from reviewing the
grievance. While we do not intend to specify any additional
restrictions on the entities operating the grievance system in this
final rule, we believe that it would be difficult to envision scenarios
in which it would be appropriate for the State to contract with a
provider (or local agencies that act as providers) to operate the
grievance system. For example, an employee of a provider who signed off
on the provider's actions that gave rise to the grievance would be
someone who was involved with making a decision about the grievance and
thus neither that employee (nor their subordinates) would be
appropriate decisionmakers in the grievance process. If a State
believed it necessary to arrange for the operations of the grievance
system to be performed by a local agency that also provided services,
firewalls would have to be put in place to ensure that grievances were
reviewed by a neutral decisionmaker within that agency.
Comment: Several commenters supported the definition of grievance
we proposed at Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(ii). Overall, these commenters
supported the focus on compliance with the person-centered planning
process and the HCBS settings rule. One of these commenters observed
that issues with these requirements are often at the core of challenges
experienced by beneficiaries. One commenter, however, questioned the
inclusion of concerns about the HCBS settings requirements, noting that
if a setting violates the HCBS settings requirements, the individual
has the choice of moving to a different setting.
Response: We appreciate commenters' support for the definition of
grievances. We specifically included noncompliance with the HCBS
settings requirements as one of the bases for grievances so that
beneficiaries do not have the burden of addressing violations of their
rights by having to change providers, which could result in some
circumstances in having to move out of their home. We do not believe
that beneficiaries should have to choose between their rights or their
homes. As a practical matter, switching residences can be disruptive,
emotionally and physically demanding, costly, and time-intensive, not
to mention particularly difficult in areas that lack plentiful
affordable and accessible housing options. We also believe that
requiring States to address these issues related to
[[Page 40576]]
compliance with HCBS settings requirements in the context of a
grievance system may encourage States and providers to prevent similar
issues from occurring with other beneficiaries.
Comment: One commenter stated that the definition of grievance was
too broad and requested that CMS narrow the scope of allowable
grievances. The commenter stated that although the proposed
requirements limit the grievance system to person-centered planning,
service plan requirements, and HCBS settings requirements, they would
still allow a beneficiary to file a grievance on nearly every aspect of
their HCBS experience, which would in turn create the potential for an
unreasonably high volume of grievances to which States would be
required to respond.
A few commenters stated that the definition of grievance was
subjective, and asked for general clarification on what is meant by an
``expression of dissatisfaction.'' Conversely, a few commenters stated
the definition of grievance was not broad enough. One commenter stated
that the reference to Sec. Sec. 441.301(c)(1) through (3) would only
allow for the filing of grievances in relation to the person-centered
planning process but would not allow for grievances in relation to
beneficiaries' dissatisfaction with the delivery of the services in the
plan. The commenter provided examples, such as a care provider handling
an HCBS beneficiary roughly, failing to assist the beneficiary with
certain activities of daily living or perform other services in the
care plan, being slow to respond to the beneficiary's requests for
assistance in residential settings, improper administration of chemical
restraints, or general poor care that leads to injuries such as bed
sores. The commenter recommended that the regulatory language be
revised to include the right to file a grievance to protect beneficiary
health and welfare.
One commenter suggested that we specify that grievances may include
issues regarding timeliness, quality, and effectiveness of services, in
addition to the HCBS setting, person-centered planning, and service
plan requirements. The commenter noted that, in the commenter's State,
beneficiaries have had to wait for long periods of time for the
initiation of services after being approved for the services.
Finally, another commenter noted that they believed that the
managed care regulations' grievance definition includes an expression
of dissatisfaction about any matter other than an adverse benefit
determination and recommended adding clarifying language to the
definition of a grievance to ensure that beneficiaries do not
mistakenly file grievances about issues that are adverse benefit
decisions and that entitle them to a fair hearing.
Response: We disagree with commenters that the proposed definition
is overly broad. The definition of grievance proposed at Sec.
441.301(c)(7)(ii) was crafted to strike a balance between providing
beneficiaries with broad, but not unlimited, bases for filing a
grievance. We believe that the requirements in Sec. Sec. 441.301(c)(1)
through (6) provide a clear list of activities that the States and
providers must perform to ensure that HCBS beneficiaries receive
appropriate person-centered planning, receive the services described in
the person-centered service plan to support the individual in the
community, and have full access to the benefits of community living and
are able to receive services in the most integrated setting appropriate
to their needs.\58\ We note that some specific examples of when a
beneficiary may express dissatisfaction by filing a grievance are
discussed further in this section.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\58\ We note that compliance with CMS regulations and reporting
requirements does not imply that a State has complied with the
integration mandate of Title II of the ADA, as interpreted by the
Supreme Court in the Olmstead Decision.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We also disagree that the scope of the definition is too narrow. We
proposed that the definition of grievance include an expression of
dissatisfaction or complaint related to the State's or provider's
compliance with the person-centered service planning process, required
in Sec. Sec. 441.301(c)(1) through (3). We note that some issues
regarding the timeliness, quality, or effectiveness of services may
need to be addressed as part of the person-centered service planning
process itself. For instance, if a beneficiary believes the service is
not effective, the beneficiary may request revision to the person-
centered service plan, as required at Sec. 441.301(c)(3), to identify
either a more effective service or a more effective provider; non-
responsiveness on the part of the entity responsible for updating the
service plan could be a reason to file a grievance.
Additionally, Sec. 441.301(c)(4) requires that home and community-
based settings must meet certain requirements enumerated therein,
including (but not limited to): being integrated in and supporting full
access of individuals to community life; ensuring that an individual
has rights to privacy, dignity and respect, and freedom from coercion
and restraint; optimizing an individual's initiative, autonomy, and
independence in daily activities and the physical environment; and
facilitating an individual's choice in services and supports, as well
as who provides them. If, for instance, a beneficiary believes that a
worker has not treated the beneficiary with respect, or the worker is
chronically late, and the provider has failed to address the worker's
behavior or provide a different worker at the beneficiary's request, it
would be reasonable for a beneficiary to file a grievance, as the
provider is not ensuring that all of the qualities of a home and
community-based setting (as described by Sec. 441.301(c)(4)) are being
met. Accordingly, we believe that the activities set forth in
Sec. Sec. 441.301(c)(1) through (6) (both currently and as are being
amended in this final rule) generally describe the actions of both
providers and States that are necessary to uphold and promote high-
quality service delivery that promotes respect for beneficiaries'
rights.
While we believe the scope of grievances that may be considered
under the grievance system that we proposed, and are finalizing,
appropriately captures activities that promote delivery of quality HCBS
and respect for beneficiaries' rights, we do believe further clarity is
warranted. We believe it is more appropriate and precise to say
grievances may be filed regarding the State's or a provider's
performance of (rather than compliance with) the requirements described
in Sec. Sec. 441.301(c)(1) through (6). We note that the activities
described in Sec. 441.301(c)(1) through (6) must, as required at Sec.
441.301(c), be included in a State's waiver application; we want to
make it clear that grievances may be filed when a State or provider
fails to perform these activities (not solely if the State fails to
include these items in a waiver application). To clarify this point, we
are finalizing the scope of grievances that may be filed under the
grievance system we proposed to set forth at Sec. 441.301(c)(7) with
modification, by revising the language in Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(i) to
specify that beneficiaries may file grievances regarding a State's or
provider's performance of (rather than compliance with) the activities
described in Sec. Sec. 441.301(c)(1) through (6). We are finalizing a
conforming modification to the definition of grievance at Sec.
441.301(c)(7)(ii).
We observe that most of the examples provided by commenters, as
described above, included instances in which a beneficiary experienced
abuse or harm during the performance (or lack thereof) of services in
the person-centered service plan. These types of complaints
[[Page 40577]]
may be more appropriately addressed under the critical incident system
being finalized at Sec. 441.302(a)(6). As discussed in II.B.3. of this
rule, we believe the critical incident system proposed at Sec.
441.302(a)(6) is the appropriate mechanism for investigating harms to
beneficiaries' health and safety. As we discuss in II.B.3 of this rule,
we proposed additional performance measures and reporting requirements
for the critical incident system (beyond what is proposed for the
grievance system) to ensure more formal oversight of the investigations
and resolutions of threats to beneficiary health and safety. We do not
believe a grievance system is an appropriate mechanism for
investigating threats to the beneficiary's health and welfare.
Therefore, we decline to broaden the definition of grievances that may
be addressed under the grievance system we are finalizing at Sec.
441.301(c)(7) in such a way that would suggest that the grievance
system is intended for complaints regarding health and safety. We
believe doing so would create duplicative system requirements for the
grievance process and critical incident system and potentially cause
States to resolve threats to health and safety in the grievance system
that should have been investigated and addressed within the critical
incident system.
We also disagree with the commenter that suggested we align the
definition of grievance we proposed at Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(ii) with the
definition of grievance for managed care grievance processes at Sec.
438.400(b). We believe that, for the purposes of a FFS grievance system
intended to address specific concerns with HCBS, using the same or
similar definition of grievance for managed care grievance processes
would be overly broad and will not diminish confusion about whether an
issue is appropriate to be filed as a grievance, a critical incident,
or a fair hearing. We plan to provide technical assistance to States as
needed on this topic.
We refer readers to section II.B.2.b. of this final rule where we
also address more specific concerns related to ensuring matters are
filed with the correct system in our discussion of Sec.
441.301(c)(7)(iii).
Comment: One commenter suggested that we broaden the definition of
grievance to specify that beneficiaries can file grievances when their
rights are violated, and suggested that the following be included in
the definition of rights:
Right to work and fair pay;
Right to control one's own money;
Right of possessions and ownership;
Right to privacy, dignity, and respect;
Freedom of choice and decision-making;
Right to leisure activities;
Freedom to marry and have children;
Right to food, shelter, and clothing;
Freedom of movement;
Freedom of religion;
Freedom of speech and expression;
Free association and assembly;
Freedom from harm;
Access to health care;
Right to citizenship and right to vote;
Right to equal education;
Right to equal access; and
Due process.
Response: We believe that some of the consumer rights listed by the
commenter are addressed in or mirrored by components of the existing
HCBS settings rule requirements at Sec. 441.301(c)(4), such as:
ensuring that the individuals have access to the greater community,
including engagement in community life, opportunities for employment in
competitive integrated settings, and control over personal resources
(Sec. 441.301(c)(4)(i)); the right to privacy, dignity and respect,
and freedom from coercion and restraint (Sec. 441.301(c)(4)(ii));
allowing for individuals to choose their activities and set their own
schedules (Sec. 441.301(c)(4)(iv) and (vi)(C)); the ability to
determine with whom the individual will interact, as well as to have
visitors of the individual's choosing at any time (Sec.
441.301(c)(4)(iv) and (vi)(D)); and control over the individual's own
physical environment, living and sleeping space, and access to food
(Sec. 441.301(c)(4)(iv), (v)(B), and (vi)(C)).
We note that many of the other rights suggested by the commenter
are either addressed by other systems (such as access to health care
which, if related to an adverse benefit determination made by the State
Medicaid agency, may be subject to the fair hearings process or are out
of scope of the State Medicaid agency's authority) or by other
authorities (such as fair wages, equal access to education, or
violations of constitutional rights).
Comment: Several commenters requested that the grievance process
include issues such as authorization disputes and the provision of
services.
Response: We are not certain if the commenters are referring to
using the grievance system to allow beneficiaries or providers to
challenge denials of services. We are also uncertain if disputes over
``provision of services'' refers to the quantity or quality of
services. We note that the fair hearings process at 42 CFR part 431,
subpart E, sets out the parameters that allow beneficiaries to
challenge an adverse action by the State Medicaid agency. For the
purposes of a fair hearing, an ``action'' is defined at Sec. 431.201
in part, as the termination, suspension of, or reduction in covered
benefits or services, or a termination, suspension of, or reduction in
Medicaid eligibility. A State must provide an individual the
opportunity for a fair hearing in the circumstances described in Sec.
431.220(a), which include when the Medicaid agency has denied
eligibility, services, or benefits, and when the claim for medical
assistance has not been acted on with reasonable promptness. In most
circumstances, a refusal of a State Medicaid agency to authorize a
particular service for a beneficiary, or to authorize the quantity of
services the beneficiary believes is necessary, would be addressed in
the fair hearings process. In contrast, the grievance process we have
proposed is intended to allow beneficiaries to raise concerns about
specific aspects of their services that have been authorized.
Comment: Several commenters who supported this proposal did so
because they agreed that, currently, concerns regarding person-centered
planning and HCBS settings requirements are not subject to the existing
fair hearings process at 42 CFR part 431 subpart E. One commenter,
however, suggested that, rather than create a grievance process to hear
complaints about person-centered service plans and the HCBS settings
requirements, we should require that concerns about person-centered
service plans or the HCBS settings requirements be added to fair
hearings processes. The commenter stated the belief that fair hearings
permit an unbiased third-party Administrative Law Judge (ALJ) to
consider the facts and render an objective decision. By contrast, the
commenter believed that, in their State, the current State grievance
process did not permit unbiased or effective review.
Response: We agree that it is important to provide beneficiaries
with the opportunity to raise concerns about the person-centered
service plans and planning process and the HCBS settings requirements.
We do not, however, believe that these are necessarily appropriate
matters for the fair hearings process. The authority for the fair
hearings process comes from section 1902(a)(3) of the Act, which
requires that States provide beneficiaries and
[[Page 40578]]
applicants an opportunity for a fair hearing before the State agency to
any individual whose claim for medical assistance is denied or is not
acted upon with reasonable promptness.
While beneficiaries can request a fair hearing to address concerns
about service denials (including partial denials) and other concerns
described under Sec. 431.220(a), we believe that an individual's
concerns about person-centered service plans, the planning process, and
HCBS settings are outside the scope of issues for which the statute
requires that a fair hearing be provided, and therefore we cannot
require States to provide an opportunity for a fair hearing to address
such issues. We note, however, that States have discretion to decide
whether integrating their grievance processes with other State systems,
including their fair hearings systems, is feasible and appropriate, and
that the requirements for both systems may still be met.
Separate from the fair hearing requirement at section 1902(a)(3) of
the Act, section 2402(a)(3)(B)(ii) of the Affordable Care Act requires
the development and monitoring of an HCBS complaint system. To address
this statutory requirement, we proposed that the grievance system
address matters that do not arise from a denial of Medicaid eligibility
or denial of services, or failure to act upon the individual's claim
for medical assistance with reasonable promptness, which are addressed
separately under the required fair hearing process. We expect the
grievance system will help beneficiaries resolve concerns about the
quality of the services they are receiving. We also note that the
purpose of our proposals in this section II.B.2. is to require that
States create, implement, and maintain grievance systems that, while
not necessarily as formal as a fair hearings process in all cases, will
nevertheless result in unbiased and effective reviews of grievances.
We note that, while States may choose to use ALJs as hearing
officers to conduct a Medicaid fair hearing, hearing officers are not
required to be ALJs. Medicaid regulations at Sec. 431.240(a)(3)
require that all fair hearings be conducted by one or more impartial
officials or other individuals who were not directly involved in the
initial determination in question. We also note that the proposed
requirements at Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(C)(3), which we are finalizing
as discussed in detail later in this section II.B.2. of the final rule,
are intended to promote an unbiased review of grievances because they
prohibit someone who has previously made decisions related to the
grievance from reviewing the grievance.
Comment: A few commenters expressed concerns that, in States that
already have grievance systems, the proposed requirements could result
in duplication of processes and confusion for beneficiaries about where
and how to report grievances. Several of these commenters requested we
allow States to use existing grievance systems to meet the Federal
requirement. One commenter also suggested that if the State's existing
system meets our proposed criteria, the State should be considered in
compliance with the requirements. Another commenter suggested that
providers or States with existing grievance systems should not have to
modify their systems.
Commenters were especially concerned about the impact on States
that already had multiple grievance systems for different programs,
administered by different operating agencies. These commenters
requested that we allow States flexibility to design grievance systems
and processes to fit their unique program and systems structures and
implement multiple grievance systems or processes tailored to their
programs. One commenter raised specific concerns about having to
consolidate current grievance systems into a single electronic system.
One commenter, however, requested that we require States to have a
single grievance system; the commenter stated that having multiple
grievance processes can be confusing and burdensome for beneficiaries.
Response: We acknowledge that many States already have grievance
processes in place for HCBS, and it is not our intent for States to
abandon these systems or create additional systems. We agree with the
suggestion that, if a State already has a grievance process in place
that meets the requirements that we are finalizing in this rule, that
State will be considered in compliance with these requirements.
However, we disagree that States with existing grievance systems should
be allowed to maintain the system without modification where their
systems do not meet Federal requirements. While we encourage States to
economize by maintaining current systems as much as possible, we do
expect that States will make any needed adjustments to bring their
systems into compliance with the requirements we are finalizing in this
rule. We believe that having Federal requirements for grievance systems
will promote consistency and accountability across the country.
Additionally, we note that the definition of grievance system that
we proposed referred to ``processes,'' suggesting that a grievance
system may be made up of one or more processes (88 FR 28080). If a
State wishes to maintain multiple grievance processes, and each of
these processes comply with the Federal requirements we are finalizing
in this rule, the State will be considered in compliance.
We did not propose a requirement for a State to maintain a single
electronic system for their grievance system and, as discussed above,
believe it would be acceptable to maintain multiple grievance
processes. However, we also emphasize that part of the definition of
grievance system we proposed, and are finalizing, in Sec.
441.307(c)(7)(ii) is that the system allows States to collect and track
information about grievances. If States choose to maintain separate
systems, including separate electronic systems, they must develop ways
to ensure that they are able to track trends across systems in
meaningful ways. We refer readers to section II.B.2.f of this final
rule, where we discuss our proposals related to recordkeeping
requirements for the required grievance system.
Although not required, we encourage States to implement a single
integrated system across their HCBS programs, as we echo one
commenter's concerns that a single integrated system would likely
reduce confusion for beneficiaries and facilitate their ability to
access the system. We also believe that a single system would best
permit States to track trends across their HCBS programs and use the
data and information generated by the grievance system to address
systemic issues in their HCBS programs. Additionally, a single
integrated system may be more cost-effective for States to operate once
implemented.
Comment: One commenter requested clarification on whether there is
a difference between a complaint and a grievance, as well as what would
elevate a complaint to the level of a grievance.
One commenter asked for clarification on the role of conflict-free
case managers in the grievance system.
Response: While section 2402(a)(3)(B)(ii) requires that we
promulgate regulations to ensure that all States develop service
systems that include development and monitoring of a complaint system,
the Affordable Care Act does not define the terms complaint or
complaint system. In developing our proposal to implement this
requirement from the Affordable Care Act, we have chosen to use the
term grievance, instead of complaint, and proposed to define grievance
and grievance system at Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(ii). If a State has
implemented a system it calls a
[[Page 40579]]
complaint system that meets the requirements we proposed, and are
finalizing, at Sec. 441.301(c)(7), it is possible that this system
could satisfy the requirement for a State to have a grievance system.
We do not understand the specific nature of the comment regarding
conflict-free case managers. We note, in general, that we will provide
technical assistance to States to assist in adapting their HCBS
programs and any associated existing grievance processes to comply with
the requirements finalized at Sec. 441.301(c)(7).
Comment: Several commenters observed that some States currently
require providers to have policies and procedures in place related to
service-delivery complaints. One commenter requested that we provide
clarification, either in the final rule or subregulatory guidance,
regarding the inclusion of the proposed grievance system requirements
in existing provider-level complaint and grievance processes.
Commenters stated that additional guidance is needed to help all
interested parties understand when beneficiaries should file a
grievance with their provider and when they should file with the State.
One commenter recommended that beneficiaries be required to exhaust
these processes at the provider level before a complaint is submitted
to the State agency for investigation or intervention.
Response: Our goal for proposing uniform requirements for grievance
systems applicable to all States providing HCBS under section 1915(c)
waiver program authority, and other HCBS authorities as discussed in
section II.B.2.h of this final rule, is to ensure consistent processes
are available for Medicaid beneficiaries receiving such services. We
decline to require in this final rule that beneficiaries exhaust their
provider-level complaint process prior to accessing the State grievance
system. We believe that such a Federal requirement would be
inapplicable or confusing in States that do not have provider-level
complaint process requirements, do not require all providers to have
them, or do not require that providers have uniform complaint
processes. We have attempted to provide States with as much flexibility
as possible in the design of their grievance system. Additionally, we
have concerns that such an exhaustion requirement would be a barrier,
or would cause unnecessary delay, for beneficiaries where the
relationship between the beneficiary and the provider is contentious,
or where the provider does not have an effective or efficient complaint
process.
Comment: Commenters requested that grievance processes be developed
with input from providers, beneficiaries, families, and advocacy groups
to create a grievance system that is accessible, practical, and sets
realistic expectations for its users.
Response: We have attempted to provide States with as much
flexibility as possible in the design of their grievance system and
decline to add a specific requirement on this point in this final rule.
We encourage States to include input from interested parties when
developing their grievance system policies and procedures to comply
with the requirements we are finalizing in this rule.
Comment: Several commenters suggested that the grievance system be
integrated with the critical incident system. One commenter stated that
States should be required to enter the grievance information and data
into a State database with standardized fields that is either part of,
or integrated with an incident management system, so that grievance
data can be compared to data on relevant individuals, providers, and
incidents (both reported and unreported). Similarly, a few commenters
suggested that the grievance system should be integrated with the fair
hearings system in States.
Response: While we agree that States may find it useful to have a
single, integrated system for grievances, critical incidents, and fair
hearings, we are not requiring in this final rule that States do so. We
believe it is important for States to have flexibility in how they
design their grievance systems so that they may expand on
infrastructures and processes they already have in place and tailor the
grievance systems to meet their programmatic and operational needs,
even as they are held to standardized Federal grievance system
requirements.
After consideration of the comments received, we are finalizing the
language at Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(i) and (ii) with modifications. For the
reasons discussed above, we are modifying Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(i) to
include language specifying the State may have activities described in
paragraph (c)(7) of this section performed by contractors or other
government entities, provided, however, that the State retains
responsibility for ensuring performance of and compliance with these
provisions. Additionally, we are finalizing Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(i) and
the definition of grievance in Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(ii) with the
modification that States must establish a procedure under which a
beneficiary can file a grievance related to the State's or a provider's
performance of (rather than compliance with) the person-centered
planning and service plan requirements at Sec. Sec. 441.301(c)(1)
through (3) and the HCBS settings requirements at Sec. Sec.
441.301(c)(4) through (6). We are otherwise finalizing the definition
of grievance system at Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(ii) as proposed.
b. Grievance Process Requirements (Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(iii))
At Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(A) through (C), we proposed new general
requirements for States' grievance procedures for section 1915(c) HCBS
waiver programs and other HCBS authorities as discussed in section
II.B.2.h of this final rule. Specifically, at Sec.
441.301(c)(7)(iii)(A), we proposed to require that a beneficiary or
authorized representative be permitted to file a grievance under the
section 1915(c) HCBS waiver program. As discussed below in section
II.B.2.h. of this final rule, we also proposed to apply these same
requirements to section 1915(i), (j) and (k) HCBS programs. Under the
proposal, another individual or entity may file a grievance on a
beneficiary's behalf, so long as the beneficiary or authorized
representative provides written consent. We noted that our proposal
would not permit a provider to file a grievance that would violate
conflict of interest guidelines, which States are required to have in
place under Sec. 441.540(a)(5). At Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(A), we
also proposed to specify that all references to beneficiary in the
regulatory text of this section includes the beneficiary's
representative, if applicable.
At Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(B)(1) through (7), we proposed to
require States to:
Have written policies and procedures for their grievance
processes that at a minimum meet the requirements of this proposed
section and serve as the basis for the State's grievance process;
Provide beneficiaries with reasonable assistance in
completing the forms and procedural steps related to grievances and to
ensure that the grievance system is consistent with the availability
and accessibility requirements at Sec. 435.905(b);
Ensure that punitive action is not threatened or taken
against an individual filing a grievance;
Accept grievances, requests for expedited resolution of
grievances, and requests for extensions of timeframes from
beneficiaries;
Provide beneficiaries with notices and other information
related to the grievance system, including information on their rights
under the grievance
[[Page 40580]]
system and on how to file grievance, and ensure that such information
is accessible for individuals with disabilities and individuals who are
limited English proficient in accordance with Sec. 435.905(b);
Review grievance resolutions with which beneficiaries are
dissatisfied; and
Provide information on the grievance system to providers
and subcontractors approved to deliver services under section 1915(c)
of the Act.
At Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(C)(1) through (6),\59\ we proposed to
require that the processes for handling grievances must:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\59\ At 88 FR 27976, we incorrectly stated that we were
proposing these requirements at Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(C)(1)
through (5), rather than (1) through (6). This typo has been
corrected.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Allow beneficiaries to file a grievance either orally or
in writing;
Acknowledge receipt of each grievance;
Ensure that decisions on grievances are not made by anyone
previously involved in review or decision-making related to the problem
or issue for which the beneficiary has filed a grievance or a
subordinate of such an individual, are made by individuals with
appropriate expertise, and are made by individuals who consider all of
the information submitted by the beneficiary related to the grievance;
Provide beneficiaries with a reasonable opportunity, face-
to-face (including through the use of audio or video technology) and in
writing, to present evidence and testimony and make legal and factual
arguments related to their grievance;
Provide beneficiaries, free of charge and in advance of
resolution timeframes, with their own case files and any new or
additional evidence used or generated by the State related to the
grievance; and
Provide beneficiaries, free of charge, with language
services, including written translation and interpreter services in
accordance with Sec. 435.905(b), to support their participation in
grievance processes and their use of the grievance system.
We received public comments on these proposals. The following is a
summary of the comments we received and our responses.
Comment: Several commenters supported the proposal at Sec.
441.301(c)(7)(iii)(A) to require that a beneficiary or the
beneficiary's authorized representative be permitted to file a
grievance, including allowing another individual or entity to file a
grievance on a beneficiary's behalf, with written consent from the
beneficiary or the beneficiary's authorized representative.
However, several commenters raised concerns about the proposed
requirement that beneficiaries or their authorized representatives must
provide written consent to another individual or entity to file a
grievance on the beneficiary's behalf. A few commenters noted that some
beneficiaries may not be able to give written consent, or that waiting
for written consent to be obtained could create unnecessary delays in
grievance filings and investigations. One commenter suggested that we
either remove the word ``written'' or specify that consent may be
verbal or written. Another commenter, using their State as an example,
suggested that a grievance could be filed with verbal consent from the
beneficiary or authorized representative, with written consent obtained
later. One commenter suggested an agency could obtain a beneficiary or
authorized representative's consent over the phone to allow another
individual or entity to file a grievance on the beneficiary's behalf.
Response: As discussed further herein, we are finalizing the
requirement that consent must be written as proposed. We modelled the
proposed requirement and language at Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(A) on
requirements for the managed care grievance process at Sec.
438.402(c)(1)(ii), which provides that, if State law permits and with
the written consent of the enrollee, a provider or an authorized
representative may request an appeal or file a grievance, or request a
State fair hearing, on behalf of a managed care enrollee. Our general
intent is to align the FFS grievance system and managed care grievance
process to the greatest extent possible. We also believe it is
important to ensure that there is some documentation demonstrating that
beneficiaries or their authorized representatives have provided consent
for a grievance to be filed on the beneficiary's behalf, especially as
the investigation of a grievance may involve reviewing records
pertaining to the beneficiary's care.
We note that written consent may be broadly interpreted to include
electronic signatures, voice signatures, or other methods that provide
reasonable accommodations to individuals who might face challenges
providing traditional written signatures. States will have flexibility
in determining how written consent is obtained and verified, so long as
the system States develop ensures that the process presents as few
administrative barriers as possible for a beneficiary or authorized
representative to provide the necessary consent.
Comment: Several commenters recommended that we clarify that
beneficiaries be able to choose who represents them throughout the
grievance process. One commenter recommended that the grievance process
should provide the beneficiary with the opportunity to indicate who
they want to assist them in the process, and this should serve as a
type of release.
Response: It was our intent that beneficiaries and their authorized
representatives be able to involve other individuals or entities of
their choosing to assist them throughout the grievance process, in
addition to filing a grievance. We believe that it is logical to assume
that if a beneficiary or their authorized representative needs
assistance filing a grievance, they may also need assistance with other
parts of the process (such as requesting and reviewing their case file,
or presenting information to support their concerns at a hearing). We
also note that while States are required at Sec.
441.301(c)(7)(iii)(B)(2) to provide beneficiaries with reasonable
assistance in completing forms and taking other procedural steps
related to a grievance, beneficiaries may prefer to get this assistance
from an individual or entity of their own choosing, particularly in
situations where the beneficiary has filed a grievance against the
State. To clarify this intent, we are finalizing Sec.
441.301(c)(7)(iii)(A)(1) with a modification to specify that another
individual or entity may file a grievance on behalf of the beneficiary,
or provide the beneficiary with assistance or representation throughout
the grievance process, with the written consent of the beneficiary or
authorized representative. We note that we expect that, as part of
ensuring the process is person-centered, beneficiaries or their
authorized representatives will be able to withdraw consent for this
third-party representation at any time, and that beneficiaries can
generally terminate the grievance process at any time.
We are finalizing Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(B)(1) with a
modification to correct an erroneous reference to subchapter in the
regulatory language and replace subchapter with paragraph (c)(7).
Comment: Several commenters requested clarifications or made
suggestions regarding our proposal at Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(B)(2) to
require that States provide beneficiaries reasonable assistance in
completing forms and taking other procedural steps related to a
grievance. One commenter
[[Page 40581]]
recommended that we set minimum criteria for reasonable assistance in
filing a grievance, including but not limited to the State making
someone available to meet with the beneficiary in person. Another
commenter observed that many individuals who receive section 1915(c)
waiver services, for example, have significant intellectual and
developmental disabilities and as a result may need substantially more
assistance than other beneficiaries to complete forms and procedural
steps. The commenter requested clarification as to whether, in these
circumstances, the reasonable threshold is determined by the needs of
the beneficiary or the burden is on the State to determine how to
provide reasonable assistance.
Response: We disagree that the term reasonable assistance that we
proposed at Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(B)(2) is unclear. We intentionally
proposed language that would require States to determine, on a case-by-
case basis, what constitutes reasonable assistance for beneficiaries
utilizing the grievance system. Reasonable assistance may vary among
beneficiaries and thus we intended to provide States with flexibility
in determining what assistance is reasonable to provide. We decline to
include additional formal definitions or criteria for the term
reasonable assistance in this final rule lest we inadvertently set
rigid standards that would, counterproductively, inhibit States from
modifying processes for beneficiaries. For instance, if we were to
require that States make someone available to meet with the beneficiary
in person, we would not want this misinterpreted as a requirement that
grievances may only be filed in person, which could pose significant
barriers to individuals who lack transportation or live far from the
physical locations in which grievances could be filed, even though we
recognize that some beneficiaries may prefer to file a grievance in
person.
We agree with the commenter that some beneficiaries may need more
assistance, or different types of assistance, than other beneficiaries.
We decline, however, to weigh in on what would be the threshold for
determining reasonableness, as this appears to be a request for an
opinion on hypothetical situations. We note that the concept of
reasonableness is central to many areas of law and bodies of guidance
regarding reasonableness are well-developed. We also note that the
grievance system in general, by virtue of being administered by State
Medicaid programs, will be subject to Title II of the Americans with
Disabilities Act (ADA) of 1990, and section 504 of the Rehabilitation
Act of 1973 (section 504), which may provide some specific guidance for
what may be considered a reasonable modification in a government
service.
Comment: A number of commenters advocated for the creation of a
requirement for an HCBS Ombudsman program, similar to those required by
the Older Americans Act. Many commenters noted an independent ombuds
program could provide more effective assistance to individuals in
filing grievances, helping them navigate the process, and representing
them during the proceedings, rather than relying on assistance provided
by the State.
Response: We thank commenters for their interest in this issue. As
commenters noted, Title VII of the Older American Act authorizes and
provides Federal funding for the national Long-Term Care Ombudsman
Program, which is administered at the State level. These programs
provide advocacy on behalf of residents of long-term care facilities.
While there is no similar Federal statutory requirement for States to
create an HCBS ombuds program, States may create such a program or
similar programs at their own discretion to assist during grievance
processes or to provide other advocacy supports.
Comment: Several commenters expressed concerns that it will be
challenging for beneficiaries to understand when and how to file
grievances. Several commenters noted the possibility that beneficiaries
will be confused by the grievance and fair hearings processes and will
file grievances or appeals with the wrong entities. One commenter
suggested that beneficiaries enrolled in managed care for some medical
services but receive FFS HCBS may be confused when presented with
multiple grievance processes.
A number of commenters recommended that the grievance system should
be set up with a ``no wrong door'' process so that, for example, a
managed care plan receiving a grievance related to a FFS service would
be responsible for forwarding the grievance to the appropriate entity.
Similarly, another commenter suggested that if an enrollee mistakenly
files a grievance about an adverse benefit determination, we require
that this submission be treated as a fair hearing request unless the
beneficiary objects. One commenter cautioned that, based on the
commenter's experience, creating a ``no wrong door'' approach to
grievances can be complicated and resource intensive. Another commenter
requested that, if setting up a ``no wrong door'' approach, we ensure
that the burden does not fall entirely on local entities, such as local
Area Agencies on Aging.
One commenter requested clarification on whether appropriate
referral of a grievance to the critical incident management process
will count as a successful resolution of the grievance.
Response: We take very seriously the concerns raised by commenters
regarding potential confusion among beneficiaries about which matters
should be filed with which system. Our understanding of the commenters'
suggestions is that such system should be coordinated for accepting
grievances, fair hearing requests, and reports of critical incidents,
among other engagements with beneficiaries, and ensure that each
grievance, fair hearing request, or report of a critical incident is
appropriately and seamlessly processed once it has been received by
that system. However, we are not adding a formal ``no wrong door''
requirement in this final rule. Rather, we are finalizing the grievance
system requirements we proposed with modifications as described below.
We understand that, despite efforts to provide beneficiaries and
interested parties with information and to make systems as user-
friendly as possible, there will be instances in which beneficiaries
attempt to access the ``wrong'' system. Additionally, there may be some
matters where it is not immediately clear to the beneficiary if the
problem, for instance, is a matter for the grievance system, critical
incident investigation, or the fair hearings process. We also note that
the beneficiary (or someone on their behalf) may report a critical
incident (as defined at Sec. 441.302(a)(6) of this final rule), or
file an appeal under the fair hearings process that may not, as a
whole, meet the definition of a grievance, but may contain elements
that are more appropriate for consideration under the grievance system,
while the remaining elements should still proceed as a critical
incident investigation or in the fair hearing process. (We note that
additional concerns about perceived overlap between grievances and
critical incidents are addressed more fully later in this section.)
Further, we agree that something akin to a ``no wrong door'' approach
may be a good solution, to ensure that matters that are brought to the
grievance system are not rejected because they are really a matter for
a fair hearing or critical incident investigation. We encourage States
to create a ``no wrong door'' policy and system or integrate grievance
filings with existing ``no wrong door'' systems,
[[Page 40582]]
if feasible. We believe that such a system would help ensure that
matters are filed correctly, which could reduce administrative burden
on the grievance system.
However, we did not propose, nor are we requiring, that States
create a ``no wrong door'' system. We note that some States may already
have ``no wrong door'' systems that could be used to support
beneficiary filings in the grievance system. While we encourage States
that do not have such ``no wrong door'' systems to consider developing
them, we recognize that there is variety among State systems and we do
not wish to create a potentially rigid requirement that misaligns with
States' existing infrastructures. We also want to ensure that the
grievance process requirements finalized in this section focus on
standardizing the grievance process itself, and are concerned that an
attempt to further standardize ancillary processes would distract from
this intention. We will take commenters' suggestions regarding ``no
wrong door'' systems under consideration for potential future policy
development or rulemaking.
While we are not requiring States develop a ``no wrong door''
system, we do take seriously commenters' concerns that beneficiaries
may attempt to file grievances with other systems operated by the
State. We proposed a requirement at Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(B)(2) that
States must provide reasonable assistance to beneficiaries both with
filing grievances and completing other procedural steps; we believe it
is logical to expect that if a beneficiary needs reasonable assistance
from the State for the procedural steps, then they may need assistance
with determining where to file their grievance in the first place. To
better address the concern about potential beneficiary confusion about
the grievance, incident management, fair hearings, and managed care
grievance and appeal systems, we are modifying the language in Sec.
441.301(c)(7)(iii)(B)(2) to indicate more clearly that States must
provide reasonable assistance to ensure that grievances are
appropriately filed with the grievance system (in other words, that
States help beneficiaries identify whether their concern should be
filed in the grievance system and, to the greatest extent possible,
redirect grievances filed with other State systems to the grievance
system).
Additionally, we note that the disposition of matters that are not
grievances is outside the scope of the grievance process requirements
at Sec. 441.301(c)(7) finalized in this section regarding the
grievance system; however, we strongly encourage States to ensure that
grievances filed with the grievance system that contain matters that
are appropriate for other systems, including the critical incident
system (as finalized in section II.B.3. of this rule), the fair
hearings system (as described in part 431, subpart E), or the managed
care grievance or appeal system (as described in part 438, subpart F)
are also considered filings with the appropriate system or systems in
accordance with the requirements and timeframes for those systems.
We also remind States that States have the option under current
regulations to assist beneficiaries with filing fair hearing requests
(as described in part 431, subpart E). Section 431.221(c) provides that
State Medicaid agencies may assist applicants or beneficiaries in
submitting fair hearings requests and section 2901.3 of the State
Medicaid Manual instructs States to make every effort to assist
applicants and beneficiaries to exercise their appeal rights.
Additionally, section 2902.1 of the State Medicaid Manual states that
oral inquiries about the opportunity to appeal should be treated as an
appeal for purposes of establishing the earliest possible date for an
appeal. Thus, if a beneficiary submits a matter to the grievance system
which the State recognizes as a matter more appropriate for a fair
hearing, the State should treat this matter in accordance with the
requirements of Sec. 431.221(c) and the State Medicaid Manual by
assisting the beneficiary with filing a fair hearing request and using
the grievance submission date to establish the earliest possible
submission date for the fair hearing requests. States also have the
option to establish procedures that treat the request made to the
grievance system as a submission of a fair hearing request described at
Sec. 431.221(a) when the matter raised in the grievance filing is more
appropriate for a fair hearing.
Finally, we clarify that matters that are mistakenly filed with the
grievance system but are appropriately referred to another system may
be considered ``resolved grievances'' unless the State determines that
the matter also contains separate grounds for a grievance review. We
note that should a matter be resolved through referral to another
system, this matter would still be subject to the requirements at Sec.
441.301(c)(7)(v) and (vi) (notifying the beneficiary of the resolution
of a grievance) and Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(B)(6) (review of grievance
resolutions with which the beneficiary is dissatisfied), which are
being finalized in this section II.B.2. of the final rule.
Comment: A few commenters provided support for our proposal at
Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(B)(2) that the reasonable assistance provided
by the State includes, but is not limited to, ensuring the grievance
system is accessible to individuals with disabilities and individuals
with Limited English Proficiency. These commenters noted the importance
of providing accessible information to beneficiaries, to ensure
beneficiaries have full participation in the process.
Some commenters suggested modifications or additions to the
accessibility requirements, including:
Replacing the term, interpreter services, with the term,
linguistic accommodations, noting this would better capture the need
for trans creative supports that addresses differences in cultural
norms and understandings;
Requiring plain language explanations of the grievance
procedures; and
Adding mention of the regulations implementing section
1557 of the Affordable Care Act, particularly to reflect Sec. Sec.
92.201-92.205 of the 2022 Nondiscrimination in Health Programs and
Activities proposed rule (87 FR 47824).
Response: As discussed further herein, we are not making
modifications to Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(B)(2) in response to these
comments. While it may be a term of art used in some fields, there is
no Federal guidance or definition of the term, linguistic
accommodations. We retain the term, interpreter services, as defined at
Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(B)(2), in this final rule to remain consistent
with other Federal requirements. We thank the commenter for bringing
the term linguistic accommodations to our attention, and we will take
it into consideration for future technical assistance related to this
provision.
We note that the proposed requirement at Sec.
441.301(c)(7)(iii)(B)(2) already included a mention of existing
accessibility requirements at Sec. 435.905(b). Section 435.905(b)
includes a requirement that communications be provided in plain
language. We believe it would be duplicative to add a specific
requirement that information be provided in plain language.
We also decline to add specific reference to section 1557 of the
Affordable Care Act or its implementing regulations, as we find such an
addition to be unnecessary. State Medicaid agencies must comply with
all relevant requirements in section 1557 in all aspects of their
programs, including the grievance process.
[[Page 40583]]
Upon review, we are finalizing Sec. 441.307(c)(7)(iii)(B)(2) with
some modifications to better align the provision with other
regulations. We are finalizing a modification to revise the term
``individuals who are limited English proficient'' to ``individuals
with Limited English Proficiency.'' This modification conforms with the
language being finalized in Sec. 431.12(f)(7) (discussed in section
II.A. of this final rule). We are finalizing a modification to clarify
that auxiliary aids and services are to be available where necessary to
ensure effective communication (instead of upon request as originally
proposed), which we believe better conforms to access standards such as
those set forth in the ADA and section 504.
Comment: One commenter noted that the repeated references to the
regulation at Sec. 435.905(b) (in the proposed requirements at Sec.
441.301(c)(7)(iii)(B)(2), (c)(7)(iii)(C)(6), and (c)(7)(vi)(A)) may
suggest that these accessibility services are not necessary outside of
the specific provisions for which they are listed. The commenter
suggested we create a separate provision related to language and
disability access under the general requirements for the grievance
system and specify that it applies to all components of the grievance
system.
Response: We disagree that a separate, standalone accessibility
requirement would add clarity to States' accessibility requirements. We
also do not believe that we have overlooked a part of the process that
must be accessible and note that the entire grievance system is subject
to other accessibility requirements, including the ADA and section 504,
by virtue of being administered by government agencies. As discussed
further herein, we are finalizing the references to Sec. 435.905(b)
included in the provisions in Sec. 441.301(c)(7) as proposed, as we
believe that it is helpful to reiterate the importance of compliance
with Sec. 435.905(b) in the various steps of the grievance process.
Comment: One commenter recommended that we mandate that States
accept electronic grievances with fill-in forms that could be completed
by someone using a smart phone. Another commenter also requested that
we require that the grievance system be web-based. One commenter,
however, expressed concerns about a grievance system that is only
accessible electronically, noting that some people may not have access
to or be able to use computers.
Another commenter suggested that we specify that States must
maintain a toll-free number, a regularly monitored email address for
receiving grievances from Medicaid HCBS beneficiaries, and multiple
modes of submitting a grievance, including a request for assistance
with articulating and submitting a grievance as a reasonable
accommodation.
Response: We appreciate commenters' many thoughtful suggestions on
how to ensure that the grievance process system is accessible and user-
friendly. At this time, we are not making changes in this final rule at
Sec. 441.301(c)(7) to include specific regulatory requirements for
exactly how States should implement an electronic system for filing
grievances. We believe that the diversity of comments on this issue
demonstrates that beneficiaries will likely need the ability to access
the grievance filing process through multiple modalities. We encourage
States to consider user access (in addition to legally required
accessibility considerations) and engage the interested parties within
the HCBS community regarding the construction of a user-friendly
grievance filing process that accommodates beneficiaries' different
communication and technology needs.
Comment: A few commenters expressed support for our proposal to
prohibit punitive actions against individuals who file grievances. One
commenter noted that, in their State, beneficiaries are reluctant to
complain about care due to fear of retaliation. Another commenter
requested that CMS clarify that the requirement applies to punitive
actions taken by either the State or a provider. The commenter also
requested that CMS clarify that States must investigate punitive
actions from providers. One commenter requested that CMS clarify that
punitive action includes implying that an individual or family might
lose services if they access the grievance process. Another commenter
stated that the State should provide operational definitions of
punitive actions and provide easily understood guidance to providers
and State entities as to what types of actions would be considered
punitive.
Several commenters offered specific suggestions for revising the
proposed requirement at Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(B)(3). One commenter
suggested we revise the language to read ``retaliatory action'' or
``retaliatory or punitive action.'' Another commenter suggested that we
amend the proposed regulatory text to define such action as ``any
negative action following a grievance, complaint, and appeal or
reporting of any issue to any regulatory body.''
Response: We clarify that this requirement is intended to prohibit
punitive actions from either the State or providers. We do expect that,
as part of ensuring that beneficiaries (as well as authorized
representatives or other individuals who have filed a grievance on the
beneficiary's behalf) are protected from punitive action, States will
have a system for both identifying and investigating allegations of
punitive action. We agree with the commenter that verbal threats from a
provider directed at the beneficiary, or the beneficiary's family,
would be the type of punitive action contemplated by this provision
that would merit investigation. We also agree that providing additional
definitions and examples of punitive actions will be an important part
of States' grievance system policies.
To better clarify who is protected from punitive actions (both
beneficiaries and those filing grievances on their behalf), we are
finalizing a modification to Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(B)(3) to clarify
that prohibited actions are neither threatened nor taken against an
individual filing a grievance or who has had a grievance filed on their
behalf. As discussed in this section (section II.B.2.b.), we are
finalizing our proposal at Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(A)(1) to allow
beneficiaries to have another individual or entity file a grievance on
their behalf with written consent. We intend to make it clear that
punitive action may not be taken against a beneficiary, whether the
beneficiary personally filed the grievance or received assistance
filing the grievance. We also want to ensure that authorized
representatives or other individuals (including family members or other
beneficiaries) are protected from punitive action when helping
beneficiaries file grievances.
We agree that amending the regulatory language to ``punitive or
retaliatory actions'' would further clarify the intent of the
requirement, as ``retaliation'' is a common term associated with
prohibited behavior in other types of complaints systems. While there
is overlap in the connotations of ``punitive'' and ``retaliatory''
actions, we also believe that some actions that could be taken against
individuals in response to the filing of a grievance could be perceived
as ``retaliatory'' rather than ``punitive.'' We believe that the word
``retaliatory'' may particularly capture threats or actions that could
negatively affect a beneficiary's access to services, whether or not
the threat or negative outcome actually materializes. For instance, if
a provider noted negative things to other providers about a beneficiary
or the beneficiary's authorized representative and discouraged other
providers from accepting that beneficiary as client after a grievance
was filed against the
[[Page 40584]]
provider, this action could be perceived as ``retaliatory'' rather than
``punitive,'' particularly if this did not ultimately result in a
reduction or alteration of the beneficiary's services. Therefore, we
are finalizing Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(B)(3) with modification in this
final rule to specify that States must ensure that punitive or
retaliatory action is neither threatened nor taken against an
individual filing a grievance or who has had a grievance filed on their
behalf.
We decline to make the other modifications that commenters
suggested. We believe the requirement we proposed at Sec.
441.301(c)(7)(iii)(B)(3), as modified herein, is sufficiently broad and
clear to address the essential concerns raised by commenters. We
believe including language prohibiting ``any negative action'' may be
ambiguous and overly broad. Additionally, we do not believe the
grievance system regulations should be used to prohibit punitive or
retaliatory actions in response to actions performed outside of the
grievance process. However, we note that, if a beneficiary believes
they are experiencing poor treatment from a provider because the
beneficiary has filed a complaint about the provider in a system other
than the grievance system, the beneficiary may have grounds to file a
grievance on the basis of the poor treatment.
Comment: Several commenters recommended the addition of more
specific provisions to protect against punitive or retaliatory action,
including a post-grievance follow-up with the beneficiary and assessing
fines or other penalties against a provider who has taken retaliatory
action. One commenter also requested that CMS require States to make
the results of investigations into allegations of punitive behavior
available to the public.
Response: We decline to make modifications to Sec.
441.301(c)(7)(iii)(B)(3) based on these commenters' suggestions because
we believe that the proposed regulation text at Sec.
441.301(c)(7)(iii)(B)(3), which we are finalizing with modification as
discussed herein, is sufficient. To comply with the requirement that
States ensure that punitive or retaliatory actions are neither
threatened nor taken against individuals who have filed a grievance or
have had a grievance filed on their behalf, we expect that States will
develop a system for identifying, investigating, and deterring punitive
or retaliatory actions. We believe creating more regulatory
requirements as commenters suggested would not provide States with
flexibility in how they comply with this requirement. Instead, States
may develop processes in accordance with their grievance system's
structure and other relevant considerations, such as provider
agreements and State laws.
Comment: We received a few comments on the requirement we proposed
at Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(B)(4) that States must accept grievances,
requests for expedited resolution of grievances, and requests for
extensions of timeframes from beneficiaries. One commenter recommended
that Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(B)(4) be revised to specify that no
``magic language'' is needed to initiate the grievance process. The
commenter noted that a ``demonstrated intent'' to obtain assistance
with an HCBS-related problem should be accepted as a grievance.
Response: We are concerned that the language proposed by the
commenter is overly broad. We agree that States should make filing a
grievance as simple and accessible as possible for beneficiaries, their
authorized representatives, and other individuals or entities filing on
a beneficiary's behalf. For example, we believe that it would be
inappropriate for a State to create a complex grievance filing form and
then refuse to review a grievance because the form was not filled out
completely or properly. We note that this scenario would also be a
plausible illustration of a State's failure to provide reasonable
assistance and accessibility as required at Sec.
441.301(c)(7)(iii)(B)(2). We also believe it is critical that States
make every effort to ensure that beneficiaries and their advocates know
that a grievance system exists and how to access it. We do not,
however, expect that every expression of dissatisfaction, in any
context, must be treated as a presumptive grievance filing. We believe
it is acceptable for States to develop a grievance filing process that
requires a clear intent to file a grievance. Further, we do not want to
encourage situations in which grievances are pursued on the
beneficiary's behalf without the beneficiaries' knowledge or consent.
Comment: We received a number of comments regarding the requirement
we proposed at Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(B)(5) that States provide
beneficiaries with notices and other information related to the
grievance system, including information on their rights under the
grievance system and on how to file grievances. One commenter expressed
particular support for this requirement. Other commenters provided
several suggestions for additional requirements to ensure that
beneficiaries receive information regarding the grievance process,
including:
Requiring that States add an explanation of grievance
rights in any HCBS-related communication from the State to the
beneficiary;
Requiring that providers include an explanation of
grievance rights in the person-centered service planning process;
Requiring that information on grievance procedures be
posted in each group home or other provider owned or controlled
residential setting, along with a toll-free number and email address
for filing grievances; and
Including common examples of grievances in the information
given to beneficiaries, so that beneficiaries are better able to
understand the potential utility of the process.
A few commenters noted that, regardless of where or how the
information was shared, the information should be in accessible plain
language and large print formats.
Response: We do not intend to add additional requirements in this
final rule regarding how States must inform beneficiaries about the
grievance system, as we believe it is important for States to retain
flexibility in how they communicate with beneficiaries. We believe the
ideas shared by commenters are great examples of what could be done. We
note that there is a lot of diversity among beneficiaries receiving
HCBS, States' existing communication pathways, and HCBS program
design--all factors that will affect the methods of informing
beneficiaries about the grievance process. Therefore, we believe it may
be necessary for the information about the grievance system to be
presented in multiple ways and through multiple modalities. We
encourage States to engage with interested parties to determine the
most effective ways to inform beneficiaries. We will also work with
States to identify effective ways to inform beneficiaries about the
State's grievance system.
We also highlight that our proposed text at Sec.
441.301(c)(7)(iii)(B)(5) requires that information provided to
beneficiaries must comply with Sec. 435.905(b), which does require
that materials use plain language. In addition, States generally must
comply with the ADA and section 504, and their implementing
regulations. We are finalizing Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(B)(5) largely
as proposed, although with a modification to change mention of
individuals who are limited English proficient to individuals with
Limited English Proficiency, consistent with the change to Sec.
441.301(c)(7)(iii)(B)(2) discussed previously in this section.
Comment: One commenter requested clarification whether States have
an
[[Page 40585]]
ongoing obligation to provide this notice and information to
beneficiaries, including to people who begin HCBS after the effective
date of the grievance system requirements that we proposed at Sec.
441.301(c)(7).
Response: We agree and clarify that States will have an ongoing
responsibility to ensure that both new and current beneficiaries
receive information about the grievance system to comply with Sec.
441.301(c)(7)(iii)(B)(5), which we are finalizing as described in this
section (section II.B.2. of the final rule).
Comment: One commenter noted that our proposal at Sec.
441.301(c)(7)(iii)(B)(6), requiring the State to review any grievance
resolution with which the beneficiary is dissatisfied, is too vague.
This commenter suggested that the regulations should specify that the
reviewer be someone not involved in the original determination, and the
beneficiary should have a process to submit information as to why the
original resolution was insufficient. The commenter also suggested that
we specify that the beneficiary must request review, believing that
otherwise the expectation appears to be that the State must decide
whether the beneficiary is dissatisfied. Finally, the commenter
suggested that the notice of the original resolution should inform the
beneficiary of this review process and how to initiate it.
One commenter also requested clarification on how beneficiaries
should express dissatisfaction with a resolution for the purpose of
seeking review of a resolution under Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(B)(6).
Response: We believe that the requirements at Sec.
441.301(c)(7)(iii)(C)(3), which we are finalizing as described in this
section II.B.2, address several of the commenter's concerns. We clarify
that the requirements at Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(ii)(C)(3) apply to
initially filed grievances and review of grievances under Sec.
441.301(c)(7)(iii)(B)(6). We note that Sec.
441.301(c)(7)(iii)(C)(3)(i) requires that the individual making a
decision on a grievance is an individual who was neither involved in
any previous level of review or decision-making related to the
grievance nor a subordinate of any such individual. Section
441.301(c)(7)(iii)(C)(3)(iii) specifies that the individual must
consider all comments, documents, records, and other information
submitted by the beneficiary without regard to whether such information
was submitted to or considered previously by the State.
We expect that beneficiaries would express dissatisfaction by
affirmatively requesting review of a grievance resolution. We agree
that beneficiaries have the responsibility of requesting the review,
and expect that States will include, as part of their written policies,
the method for how beneficiaries may request review and how
beneficiaries will be notified of this right.
Comment: We did not receive comments on the requirement we proposed
at Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(B)(7) that States must provide information
on the grievance system to providers and subcontractors. However, one
commenter requested that we require States to give providers 14 days'
notice if the provider is a party to the grievance.
Response: We believe that whether, and how, a State chooses to
involve providers in individual grievances filed pursuant to Sec.
441.301(c)(7) will vary on a case-by-case basis and, thus, a
standardized notification requirement may not be appropriate. For
instance, some grievances may be resolvable without the provider's
involvement, and in some cases, the beneficiary may not want the
provider to know the beneficiary's identity. If the beneficiary and the
State believe it is necessary to have the provider involved in the
investigation, including appearing at the resolution meeting, we expect
that States will give the provider reasonable notice and ensure that
the provider is able to participate in the process. Therefore, we
intend to provide States with flexibility in determining their
grievance system policies in this respect.
Comment: One commenter supported the requirement we proposed at
Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(C)(1) to allow beneficiaries to file
grievances orally but recommended that we revise the requirement to
specify that States must follow up with a written summary of the oral
grievance so the beneficiary can ensure accuracy. Another commenter
suggested that we revise the requirement at Sec.
441.301(c)(7)(iii)(C)(2) to specify that acknowledgement of the receipt
of a grievance must be in writing.
Response: We appreciate the comments and believe it is a best
practice for States to provide a summary of the grievance to the
beneficiary for accuracy. However, we decline to mandate that States
provide a written summary, as we intend to allow flexibility for States
to decide their own policies to operationalize this requirement. We
believe that part of acknowledging the grievance, as required at Sec.
441.301(c)(7)(iii)(C)(2), involves developing an appropriate system for
providing beneficiaries with confirmation of their grievance.
Comment: One commenter requested that we specify whether all
grievances filed must receive a full resolution or whether there are
instances in which the acknowledgement of the grievance is sufficient.
The commenter anticipated that because of the current direct care
workforce crisis, many grievances may be filed related to provider
shortages. While acknowledging that understaffing is a serious problem,
the commenter believed that the grievance process is unlikely to be
able to address the problem to the beneficiary's satisfaction.
Response: We note that the definition of grievance that we are
finalizing at Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(ii) indicates that a beneficiary may
file a grievance regardless of whether remedial action is requested. We
agree that, in instances in which the beneficiary does not wish to
pursue remedial action and indicates they are not interested in
presenting and debating their grievance as we proposed at Sec.
441.301(c)(7)(iii)(C)(4), acknowledging the grievance may be considered
resolving the complaint (rather than conducting additional inquiry). We
note that should a matter be resolved with an acknowledgment, this
matter would still be subject to the requirements at Sec.
441.301(c)(7)(v) and (vi) (notifying the beneficiary of the resolution
of a grievance) and Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(B)(6) (review of grievance
resolutions with which the beneficiary is dissatisfied).
Comment: A few commenters commented on our proposal at Sec.
441.301(c)(7)(iii)(C)(3), establishing requirements for decisionmakers
reviewing grievances considered under the grievance system. Several of
these commenters supported our efforts to require a system that would
provide a fair and unbiased review of beneficiaries' concerns. However,
one commenter noted that the requirement at Sec.
441.301(c)(7)(iii)(C)(3) would require a separate set of personnel to
respond to and investigate grievances than the staff that is currently
allocated for program management, administration, and support, and
expressed concern that this would require additional resources.
Response: We note that the requirement we proposed at Sec.
441.301(c)(7)(iii)(C)(3) requires that individuals reviewing and making
decisions about grievances are not the same individuals, nor
subordinates of individuals, who made the original decision or action
that has given rise to the grievance. This would require that the
provider that made the decision or performed the action giving rise to
the
[[Page 40586]]
grievance would not be able to be the decisionmaker for the grievance.
However, this would not preclude State Medicaid agency personnel from
reviewing a grievance filed against a provider. Additionally, even for
grievances filed about the State's performance, the requirement does
not necessarily require review from separate departments or entities.
With firewalls as needed, reviewers may be from the same department (or
a different department) so long as the necessary expertise and
independence standards are met, and the reviewer takes into account the
information described in Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(C)(3)(ii). We are not
making modifications to Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(C)(3) based on these
comments.
Comment: One commenter questioned if the intent of the requirement
we proposed at Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(C)(3)(iii) is to require a ``de
novo'' review of the grievances.
Response: De novo review typically refers to a standard of review
of a matter on appeal after a trial court or administrative body has
reached a determination. If a matter is being reviewed de novo, the
reviewer is reviewing the whole matter as if it is freshly presented to
them, without regard for what the prior decisionmaker determined, or
their rationale supporting that determination. We did not specify in
the regulation text (either proposed or finalized) whether this process
is intended as a de novo review of grievances, as reference to de novo
review would have been inapplicable. The general intent of the
grievance system we proposed at Sec. 441.301(c)(7) is not to address
specific determinations that are being appealed, as would be the case
in the fair hearing process. The grievance system is intended to
address a beneficiary's dissatisfaction or complaint related to the
State's or provider's performance of person-centered planning or HCBS
settings requirements. We expect that the grievance system will
typically represent the first opportunity a beneficiary has had to
present their concerns directly to the State. Because there likely has
not been an initial determination to consider and possibly affirm or
reverse, we do not believe de novo review is applicable.
For example, consider two scenarios in which a provider fails to
send a personal care assistant to two beneficiary's homes. For
Beneficiary A, the failure was because the provider forgot to ensure a
worker was scheduled to deliver the services. For Beneficiary B, the
provider decided, unilaterally, that Beneficiary B had been authorized
more personal care services than the provider believed was necessary
and thus refused to send a personal care assistant to Beneficiary B's
home. In both scenarios, Beneficiary A and Beneficiary B could file
grievances about the provider's failure to provide services as outlined
in the person-centered care plan or attempt to change the service plan
without going through the process required in Sec. 441.301(c)(1)
through (3). The proper focus in both cases would be on whether the
provider provided services in accordance with the current person-
centered care plan. We would not expect in Beneficiary B's situation
that the State would treat the provider's actions as a formal
determination requiring de novo review (such as reviewing whether the
provider's objections to the number of service hours in the service
plan were valid, or making the beneficiary prove that the service hours
were needed). Further, even if there has been an initial decision by a
provider or State that the beneficiary disputes, we did not intend the
grievance system to operate like a formal legal proceeding (that is, an
administrative hearing or trial) and, again therefore, we do not
believe the concept of de novo review is applicable.
Comment: One commenter suggested that we amend the definition of
``skilled professional medical personnel'' to allow the designation to
apply to staff administering the grievance process, which would make
the activity eligible for a 75 percent Federal matching rate.
Response: We are not amending the definition of skilled
professional medical personnel in this final rule. The term ``skilled
professional medical personnel'' is defined at Sec. 432.2 as
physicians, dentists, nurses, and other specialized personnel who have
professional education and training in the field of medical care or
appropriate medical practice and who are in an employer-employee
relationship with the Medicaid agency. The term explicitly does not
include other, nonmedical health professionals such as public
administrators, medical analysts, lobbyists, senior managers, or
administrators of public assistance programs of the Medicaid program.
Per Sec. 432.50, the FFP rate for skilled professional medical
personnel and directly supporting staff of the Medicaid agency is 75
percent. We do not intend to require that the administrative activities
required for grievance process must be administered by personnel with
specialized medical education and training. Even for those who meet the
criteria to be considered skilled professional medical personnel, only
the portion of their activities that require their advanced skills and
expertise would be eligible for the enhanced matching rate. If similar
functions are performed by non-skilled professional medical personnel,
then the activities themselves would not qualify for the higher
matching rate.
Comment: One commenter requested clarification as to whether a
telephonic communication would satisfy the proposed requirement at
Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(C)(4) that the State provide a beneficiary
with a reasonable opportunity face-to-face, including through the use
of audio or video technology.
Response: We believe that audio-only telephone calls, when
requested by the beneficiary and with the inclusion of any necessary
accommodations, satisfy this requirement.
Comment: One commenter recommended that we revise proposed Sec.
441.301(c)(7)(iii)(C)(4) by removing the word ``limited'' from before
``time available,'' as the commenter believed the inclusion of the word
``limited'' was unnecessary.
Response: We disagree with the commenter's statement that the word
``limited'' is unnecessary. The language in this requirement was
intended to mirror similar language in the managed care grievance
process requirements at Sec. 438.406(b)(4). Further, we believe it is
important that beneficiaries understand the timeframes associated with
the grievance resolutions and understand that it is intended, for their
benefit, to be a time-limited process.
Comment: One commenter recommended that we mandate a minimum number
of days afforded to a beneficiary to review their record and submit
additional germane evidence and testimony to the State agency before
resolution. The commenter noted that the proposed regulation merely
requires that the State agency provide the beneficiary with ``a
reasonable opportunity.'' The commenter regarded this as a vague
standard and was concerned that States would not grant beneficiaries
sufficient time. The commenter noted that beneficiaries with
disabilities or complex medical issues may need additional time and
supports to prepare evidence and testimony. The commenter suggested
that granting beneficiaries a minimum of 21 days to prepare their
evidence and testimony after receipt of the agency record would ensure
that the State provided the record well in advance of the resolution
deadline and would protect beneficiaries from the imposition of
unreasonable timeframes to prepare.
Response: We note that Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(C)(4) requires that
[[Page 40587]]
the State provide the beneficiary a reasonable opportunity to present
evidence and testimony and make legal and factual arguments related to
their grievance, while Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(C)(5) requires the
State to provide the beneficiary with their case file and other records
sufficiently in advance of the resolution timeframe for grievances. We
are unclear on which provision the commenter is recommending we modify.
We decline to modify either provision by prescribing specific deadlines
within the overall resolution timeframe, to allow States to develop
flexible processes to accommodate beneficiaries. We expect that States
will develop appropriate processes to allow beneficiaries to request
postponements or rescheduling of any face-to-face hearings that they
have requested if they find they need more time to prepare, or other
situations arise that would prevent a beneficiary from being able to
participate in the hearing.
We also note that we are finalizing a requirement at Sec.
441.301(c)(7)(v)(C) to allow beneficiaries to have the option of
requesting 14-day extensions if (for any reason) a beneficiary requires
additional time beyond the 90-day resolution timeframe we are
finalizing at Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(v)(B).
Comment: Several commenters expressed concern about legal
representation during the process. One commenter stated that
beneficiaries should get access to State-provided legal assistance.
Another commenter requested that, if a beneficiary is unable to afford
an attorney, the opposing party not be allowed an attorney.
Response: As discussed in a prior response, beneficiaries have
flexibility in determining who will assist them throughout the
grievance process--which could, if the beneficiary chose, include
assistance from a legal professional. We believe that the grievance
system should be easy to navigate and largely non-adversarial, such
that beneficiaries would not be required, nor feel pressured, to have
legal representation. We also believe that at least some portion of
grievances filed will be for minor issues that do not require a formal
inquiry. We agree with commenters that it is preferable that hearings
neither be, nor have the appearance of being, imbalanced in terms of
support for the beneficiary. We encourage States, as they develop their
policies, to consider what level of assistance beneficiaries will need
during face-to-face meetings and ensure that reasonable assistance is
provided.
Comment: One commenter stated that Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(C)(5)
should be revised to expand the documents beyond the beneficiary's
``case file.'' The commenter recommended that the regulations require
that the State obtain relevant files and other information held by the
provider and then provide that information to the beneficiary. The
commenter stated that, particularly in cases involving residential
providers, provider-maintained information will be relevant and often
pivotal.
Response: We disagree and believe adding this language is
unnecessary. We believe that the term, case file, could have several
meanings, depending on the circumstances, and could include the records
related to the beneficiary's services maintained by the provider that
would be obtained by the State as part of review of the grievance. We
also note that proposed Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(C)(5) already requires
beneficiaries to receive other documents and records, as well as new
and current evidence considered or relied upon by the State related to
the grievance. We believe relevant records from providers could fall
into these categories, depending on the record and the circumstances by
which the State obtained it. We do not intend our requirement at Sec.
441.301(c)(7)(iii)(C)(5), as proposed and being finalized in this rule,
to amend any existing obligations for confidentiality of certain
records and we expect States to comply with applicable Federal and
State laws and regulations governing confidentiality of those records
in determining what records to provide to the beneficiary related to
their grievance in compliance with Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(C)(5). We
decline to make modifications to Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(C)(5) as
requested by the commenter.
Comment: One commenter suggested that we require that the grievance
system be compliant with the Health Insurance Portability and
Accountability Act of 1996 (HIPAA).
Response: We had proposed at Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(C)(5) that
medical records being used as part of a grievance be handled in
compliance with 45 CFR 164.510(b) (a provision of the HIPAA Privacy
Rule), to ensure that protected health information (PHI) used during
the grievance review are obtained and used with beneficiaries'
authorization. In general, whenever a beneficiary's PHI may be
obtained, maintained, or disclosed by a State agency that is a covered
entity as defined in 45 CFR 160.103 (such as a State Medicaid agency),
States are responsible for ensuring compliance with the requirements of
HIPAA and its implementing regulations, as well as any other applicable
Federal or State privacy laws governing confidentiality of a
beneficiary's records. We also note that 45 CFR 164.510(b) is just one
provision of the HIPAA Privacy Rule that permits the disclosure of PHI,
and other provisions may also permit the disclosure of PHI (such as
disclosure of PHI to personal representatives under 45 CFR 164.502(g));
other permissions may also apply in addition to what is cited here and
included in the regulatory text of this final rule. Upon further
review, we have determined that, given that a number of requirements of
the HIPAA Privacy Rule may apply to the obtaining and sharing of
beneficiaries' information, we are finalizing Sec.
441.301(c)(7)(iii)(C)(5) with a modification to change the citation of
45 CFR 164.510(b) to a broader reference to the HIPAA Privacy Rule (45
CFR part 160 and part 164 subparts A and E).
Finally, we also note that individuals who believe their health
information privacy has been violated may file a complaint with the HHS
Office for Civil Rights at https://www.hhs.gov/hipaa/filing-a-complaint/.
After consideration of public comments, we are finalizing Sec.
441.301(c)(7)(iii)(A) as proposed, with the following modification. We
are finalizing Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(A)(1) with modification to
specify that another individual or entity may file a grievance on
behalf of the beneficiary or provide the beneficiary with assistance or
representation throughout the grievance process with the written
consent of the beneficiary or authorized representative. We are
finalizing Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(A)(2) as proposed.
We are finalizing requirements at Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(B) as
proposed, with the following modifications. We are finalizing Sec.
441.301(c)(7)(iii)(B)(1) with a modification to correct an erroneous
reference to subchapter by replacing subchapter with paragraph (c)(7).
We are finalizing Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(B)(2) with modifications by:
(1) adding to States' obligation the requirement that States must
provide beneficiaries reasonable assistance in ensuring grievances are
appropriately filed with the grievance system; (2) modifying language
to refer to individuals with Limited English Proficiency; and (3)
clarifying that auxiliary aids and services must be made available
where necessary to ensure effective communication. We are finalizing
Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(B)(3) with modifications to require that
States ensure that punitive or retaliatory actions (rather than just
punitive actions) are neither threatened nor taken. We are also adding
language to specify that the punitive or retaliatory actions cannot be
threatened or taken
[[Page 40588]]
against an individual filing a grievance or who has had a grievance
filed on their behalf. (New language identified in bold.)
For reasons we discuss in greater detail in the next section
(section II.B.2.c. of this rule) we are finalizing Sec.
441.301(c)(7)(iii)(B)(4) with a modification to remove the reference to
expedited grievances. We are finalizing Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(B)(5)
with a modification to change the language to refer to individuals with
Limited English Proficiency. We are finalizing Sec.
441.301(c)(7)(iii)(B)(6) and (7) as proposed.
We are finalizing Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(C)(1) through (5) with
minor technical modifications. We are replacing the periods at the end
of each paragraph with semi-colons and adding the word and at the end
of Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(C)(5) to accurately reflect that Sec.
441.301(c)(7)(iii)(C)(1) through (6) are elements of a list, not
separate declarative statements. Additionally, for reasons we discuss
in greater detail in a later section (section II.B.2.d.) because we are
not finalizing the expedited resolution timeframe at Sec.
441.301(c)(7)(v)(B)(2), we are finalizing Sec.
441.301(c)(7)(iii)(C)(5) with modifications to remove references to
Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(v)(B)(1) and (2) and add a reference to Sec.
441.301(c)(7)(v). We are also finalizing Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(C)(5)
with a modification to change the citation of 45 CFR 164.510(b) to a
broader reference to the HIPAA Privacy Rule (45 CFR part 160 and part
164 subparts A and E).
c. Filing Timeframe (Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(iv))
At Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(iv)(A), we proposed to require that the
beneficiary be able to file a grievance at any time. At Sec.
441.301(c)(7)(iv)(B), we proposed to require that beneficiaries be
permitted to request expedited resolution of a grievance, whenever
there is a substantial risk that resolution within standard timeframes
will adversely affect the beneficiary's health, safety, or welfare,
such as if, for example, a beneficiary cannot access personal care
services authorized in the person-centered service plan.
We received public comments on these proposals. The following is a
summary of the comments we received and our responses.
Comment: A few commenters made suggestions or submitted clarifying
questions about our proposal at Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(iv)(A) that
beneficiaries be able to file a grievance at any time. One commenter
requested clarification on whether our intent was to prohibit limits on
the timeframe between the occurrence of the subject of the grievance
and the date when the individual files a grievance. Another commenter
noted that there should be a 90-day time limit on when beneficiaries
can file grievances.
Response: We do not intend for beneficiaries' ability to file
grievances to be time-limited. We appreciate commenters' concerns
regarding this issue; however, we defer to the rationale we used when
declining to add a timeframe cap in the managed care grievance filing
process (81 FR 27511). In the managed care grievance process, Sec.
438.402(c)(2)(i) specifies that enrollees may file a grievance with
their managed care plan at any time. As we previously noted, grievances
do not progress to the level of a State fair hearing, which is a time-
sensitive process; therefore, we found it unnecessary to include filing
limits because grievances are resolved without having to consider the
time limits of other processes (81 FR 27511).
We understand that States may be concerned about revisiting
grievance issues that occurred in the past, but we believe this is a
normal part of providing services and that beneficiaries should be
permitted to file a grievance at any time. We also note, that, as
discussed in more detail below, States believe that educating
beneficiaries about the grievance process will take time; therefore, we
do not want to prevent beneficiaries from filing grievances in cases
where the delay in filing was because the beneficiary was not initially
aware of their ability to file a grievance.
Comment: A few commenters supported the proposal at Sec.
441.301(c)(7)(iv)(B) to create a pathway for expedited resolutions when
there is a substantial risk that resolution within standard timeframes
will adversely affect the beneficiary's health, safety, or welfare.
Several commenters, however, believed that the proposal at Sec.
441.301(c)(7)(iv)(B) to create a pathway for an expedited resolution
was unclear or overly broad and requested additional clarification as
to what would constitute a grievance warranting expedited resolution.
Some of these commenters stated that technical assistance would be
needed to help States identify the criteria for determining whether a
resolution should be expedited, and how to proceed if a beneficiary
disagrees with the State's determination that a grievance request
should be expedited or resolved in the standard timeframe. One
commenter raised the concern that if a beneficiary's request for an
expedited resolution was denied, they may follow up with submitting
another grievance or file a fair hearing request. Another commenter
suggested that expedited resolutions should be defined as being
contingent on the timely receipt of information from the beneficiary.
Some commenters noted that the expedited resolution process's focus
on health, safety, and welfare could lead to duplication with other
systems, including the critical incident system. They expressed the
belief that there are separate channels to address health and safety
concerns. For this reason, a few commenters suggested that there should
only be one standard grievance resolution and notice timeline of 90
calendar days. A few commenters also suggested that we should not have
an expedited resolution process in the FFS grievance system because
there is not such a process in the managed care grievance system (as
described in 42 CFR part 438, subpart F).
One commenter stated that, in their experience, few grievances were
about issues affecting beneficiaries' health and safety, and thus it
would not be appropriate to create a requirement for an expedited
process as it was defined in proposed Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(iv)(B). The
commenter offered examples of typical grievances, based on the
commenter's experience with operating a State grievance system. The
commenter noted that many grievances involve education about the HCBS
program (for example, additional services and limitations), information
about available providers in their area as an alternative to their
current provider, dissatisfaction with their paid caregiver, and
frustrations with provider workforce shortages.
Response: We are persuaded by commenters' feedback summarized here,
as well as comments summarized later in this section regarding the
expedited resolution timeframe. After consideration of public comments,
as discussed here in section II.B.2, we are not finalizing Sec.
441.301(c)(7)(iv)(B) and are removing other references to the expedited
resolution process where it appears in Sec. 441.301(c)(7) in this
final rule.
In particular, we are persuaded by the concern that the expedited
resolution process as proposed could create overlap with the critical
incident system, which is described in section II.B.3 of this final
rule. We believe that the critical incident system is the most
appropriate mechanism for investigating situations when a beneficiary
has experienced actual harm or substantial risks to their health and
safety. We do not want there to be a delay in the investigation of a
critical incident
[[Page 40589]]
because it was incorrectly filed as a grievance, nor do we want matters
that should be investigated as critical incidents resolved only in the
grievance process.
In addition, as some commenters correctly noted, the managed care
requirements at 42 CFR part 438, subpart F, do not include an expedited
grievance resolution process. We have not identified a compelling
reason why beneficiaries receiving HCBS through FFS systems should need
an expedited resolution process for grievances when no similar process
has, as yet, been deemed necessary in the managed care system. After
reexamining these requirements in light of comments received, we do not
wish to create misalignment between managed care and FFS systems'
grievance resolution processes.
In general, we agree with the commenter that it is likely that many
grievances filed would not meet the standard we proposed for expedited
resolution (and, as noted above, if they did meet the standard, they
are likely candidates for the critical incident or fair hearings
systems). However, we envision that there remains the potential for
some grievances to require immediate attention and intervention, even
if they do not rise to the level of a critical incident (as defined in
Sec. 441.302(a)(6)(i)(A)) or do not qualify for a fair hearing (as set
out in part 431, subpart E). Therefore, we encourage States to include
in their grievance system a system for identifying, triaging, and
expediting resolution of grievances that require, according to the
State's criteria, prioritization and prompt resolution.
After consideration of the comments received about Sec.
441.301(c)(7)(iv), we are finalizing our proposal at Sec.
441.301(c)(7)(iv) with modification by removing the expedited
resolution requirement at Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(iv)(B) and redesignating
Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(iv)(A) as Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(iv). Additionally, we
are removing references to the expedited resolution process in Sec.
441.301(c)(7)(iii)(B)(4). We are also removing requirements related to
the expedited resolution process in Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(v). These
changes are discussed in their respective sections below.
d. Resolution and Notification (Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(v))
At Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(v), we proposed resolution and notification
requirements for grievances. Specifically, at Sec.
441.301(c)(7)(v)(A), we proposed to require that States resolve and
provide notice of resolution related to each grievance as quickly as
the beneficiary's health, safety, and welfare requires and within
State-established timeframes that do not exceed the standard and
expedited timeframes proposed in Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(v)(B). At Sec.
441.301(c)(7)(v)(B)(1), we proposed to require that standard resolution
of a grievance and notice to affected parties must occur within 90
calendar days of receipt of the grievance. At Sec.
441.301(c)(7)(v)(B)(2), we proposed to require that expedited
resolution of a grievance and notice must occur within 14 calendar days
of receipt of the grievance.
At Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(v)(C), we proposed that States be permitted
to extend the timeframes for the standard resolution and expedited
resolution of grievances by up to 14 calendar days if the beneficiary
requests the extension, or the State documents that there is need for
additional information and how the delay is in the beneficiary's
interest. At Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(v)(D), we proposed to require that
States make reasonable efforts to give the beneficiary prompt oral
notice of the delay, give the beneficiary written notice, within 2
calendar days of determining a need for a delay but no later than the
timeframes in paragraph (c)(7)(v)(B), of the reason for the decision to
extend the timeframe, and resolve the grievance as expeditiously as the
beneficiary's health condition requires and no later than the date the
extension expires, if the State extends the timeframe for a standard
resolution or an expedited resolution.
We also proposed at Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(iv)(B) and (c)(7)(v)(B)(2)
that beneficiaries be permitted to request, and the State provide for,
expedited resolution of a grievance. However, we noted that these
proposed requirements differ from the current grievance system
requirements for Medicaid managed care plans at part 438, subpart F,
which do not include specific requirements for an expedited resolution
of a grievance. We solicited comment on whether part 438, subpart F
should be amended to include the proposed requirements for expedited
resolution of a grievance at Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(iv)(B) and (v)(B)(2).
We received public comments on these proposals. The following is a
summary of the comments we received and our responses. We note that, as
discussed in the previous section, we are not finalizing the expedited
resolution process at Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(iv)(B). We will discuss the
impact of this change to the requirements in Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(v) in
our response to the comments below.
Comment: A few commenters requested that we provide additional
information to clarify what is expected for a grievance to be
considered resolved.
Response: We believe that the resolutions of grievances can take
many forms and may vary on a case-by-case basis, and thus we decline to
revise the requirements at Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(v) to provide a more
specific definition. We proposed and are finalizing as discussed in
this section II.B.2 that a beneficiary may file a grievance even if the
beneficiary does not request remedial action. We expect that grievances
will vary not only in severity and urgency but will also vary according
to the formality of the response. Some grievances, as noted in a
response above, may require only a simple acknowledgment of the
concern. Others may require immediate action(s), including
intervention(s) with or action(s) taken against the provider. Still
others may involve the State setting up a long-term corrective action
plan or monitoring, consistent with applicable State laws governing
such. We believe that a critical part of the grievance process involves
collecting input from the beneficiary filing the grievance on the
resolution or outcome they hope to achieve through the grievance
process. This may include instances in which the beneficiary wishes to
bring a concern to the State's attention but is not necessarily
pursuing a specific resolution.
Comment: A few commenters raised concerns or questions about how
States should ensure compliance with resolutions. One commenter noted
the importance of ensuring corrective actions are taken in response to
grievances so that policy and systems transformation can take place in
a timely manner. One commenter requested that we provide States with
more tools to ensure provider compliance, including appropriate
monetary and nonmonetary penalties. Another commenter stated that the
grievance resolution process should include an order for the creation
of a corrective action plan and subsequent monitoring.
Response: We appreciate the commenters' suggestions, but we decline
to add specific actions to the requirements at Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(v).
As noted above, we believe that there will be variety in both
grievances and resolutions. It would be difficult, and perhaps
detrimental, to establish a set of Federal penalties that may be over-
or under-responsive to the range of matters heard in the grievance
process. Thus, we want to retain flexibility in the
[[Page 40590]]
regulatory requirements to allow State grievance systems to respond
appropriately to each situation. We expect that States will apply a
reasonable interpretation to the requirement that the States
``resolve'' the grievance. For instance, if resolution reasonably
requires a corrective action plan for a provider (for grievances
resolved against providers) or a corrective action plan for the State
(for grievances resolved against the State), we expect that a
corrective action plan would be executed and monitored as part of the
resolution in accordance with applicable State laws. Through State law
and regulations, States can create penalties, whether monetary or non-
monetary, for providers that have violated their obligations as set
forth by the State Medicaid program.
Comment: Several commenters suggested that the grievance resolution
process should include formal follow-up requirements. To ensure proper
follow-up, one commenter recommended that the regulations specify that
grievances and their resolutions be reviewed at the subsequent person-
centered planning process. One commenter recommended that the State
should perform a follow up at 30 and 90 days after the resolution.
Response: We decline to add specific follow-up requirements to
Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(v). As discussed in prior responses, we believe
that grievances are likely to take many forms. We agree that, in some
instances, follow-up or ongoing monitoring may be a critical element of
a particular resolution and, thus, should be included. In other cases,
the grievance may not require follow-up and, thus, a formal follow-up
requirement would impose an unnecessary administrative burden. There
may also be instances in which a beneficiary may not wish to be
repeatedly contacted after they believe the matter has been resolved.
We believe that determining the appropriateness of when, and how, to
monitor outcomes of grievances should be part of policies States
develop for their grievance system.
Comment: One commenter recommended that we revise the requirement
at Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(v)(A) to require that the State solicit more
information from beneficiaries on how a delayed resolution could hurt
the beneficiary. One commenter suggested that we include the language
from this provision in the timeframe requirement for expedited
grievances at Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(v)(B)(2) so that the requirement
reads, ``as expeditiously as the beneficiary's health condition
requires and no longer than 14 calendar days after the State receives
the grievance.''
Response: We decline to make the suggested modifications to the
requirement at Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(v)(A). We clarify that this
requirement at Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(v)(A) sets a general expectation for
expeditious resolutions for all grievances. We encourage States to
ensure that beneficiaries provide, in their grievances, detailed
information about their concerns (including negative impacts they are
experiencing or believe they will experience). However, we have
specifically not set requirements for the amount or type of information
beneficiaries must submit when filing a grievance, as we do not wish to
inadvertently mandate a process that is administratively burdensome for
beneficiaries. We believe that commenters may have interpreted this
requirement as a means of identifying grievances being filed for
expedited resolution, which was not the intent. Additionally, as
discussed above, we are not finalizing the requirement for an expedited
resolution at Sec. 441.301(c)(iv)(B)(2).
We also note that, consistent with our discussion above related to
concerns about confusion between the purpose of the grievance system
and the critical incident system described in Sec. 441.302(a)(6), we
are revising the language in this provision. Specifically, we are
finalizing our proposal at Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(v)(A) with modification
to require that the State resolve each grievance and provide notice as
expeditiously as the beneficiary's health condition requires, instead
of our proposal, which would have required that such notice be provided
as expeditiously as the beneficiary's health, safety, and welfare
requires. We believe this avoids confusion with the critical incident
system and aligns the language with a parallel requirement in the
managed care grievance requirements at Sec. 438.408(a), as well as our
language in Sec. Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(v)(D)(3) (pertaining to
expeditious resolution during extensions). We believe that ``health
condition'' may be broadly interpreted to refer both to physical and
mental health and well-being of the beneficiary.
Comment: A few commenters supported our proposal at Sec.
441.301(c)(7)(v)(B)(1) that standard resolution of a grievance and
notice to affected parties must occur within 90 calendar days of
receipt of the grievance. However, some commenters, while not
specifically opposing the 90-day timeframe, expressed concerns that the
timeframe proposed for resolving grievances may not always allow for a
thorough investigation. One commenter noted that, while this timeframe
might allow for investigation and resolution of some grievances, other
grievances might require more extensive investigation (such as
interviews, on-site visits, legal review and consultation, and request
for additional documentation) and could take longer. The commenter also
worried about the time involved in allowing the beneficiary a
reasonable opportunity to present evidence face-to-face and in writing,
as well as access to their case file to review in advance.
Conversely, a number of commenters recommended that the standard
resolution timeframe be shortened to 45 days. Many of these commenters
stated that 90 days is too long for an individual to wait for
resolution if they are experiencing a serious violation of their rights
or access to services.
Response: We agree with commenters that some grievances may take
longer than 90 days to resolve properly and note that these extenuating
circumstances can be addressed through the use of the 14-day extension
we are finalizing at Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(v)(C) if the conditions set
forth in that requirement are met. We also agree with commenters that
grievances should be resolved as expeditiously as possible, but we do
not agree that cutting the proposed timeframe in half (to 45 days)
would be a sufficient timeframe. We based our proposal of 90 calendar
days on the current timeframe for resolution in the managed care
grievance system at Sec. 438.408(b), and we do not find reason to
believe that FFS grievances would require less time to resolve than
grievances in the managed care system. We do not wish to set a
timeframe that encourages hasty investigations, nor the overuse of the
14-day extensions. We also note that 90 calendar days is the maximum
allowed timeframe and that States may choose to set a shorter
timeframe, or several timeframes for different types of grievances, so
long as none of the timeframes exceed 90 calendar days. We are
finalizing the 90-calendar day timeframe for resolutions as proposed.
Comment: One commenter noted that the proposed timeframe of 14 days
for expedited resolution was too long and suggested that it be reduced
to 7 days. On the other hand, many commenters expressed concerns about
staff capacity necessary to respond to expedited grievances within 14
calendar days, as well as the feasibility of completing investigations
within the proposed 14-day timeframe. Commenters believed that, given
the potential seriousness of grievance inquiries, it may be difficult
[[Page 40591]]
for all necessary information to be gathered in 14 days and to grant
the beneficiary a reasonable opportunity to present evidence in a face-
to-face meeting. Several commenters recommended that, if finalizing an
expedited resolution timeframe, we extend the timeframe to 30 calendar
days, and one commenter recommended 30 business days.
Response: As discussed above, we are not finalizing the requirement
for an expedited resolution process. In addition to the comments
summarized above about the process itself, we agree with commenters
that if a beneficiary has filed a grievance and wishes to present
evidence and participate in a face-to-face meeting with the
decisionmaker, 7 calendar days, or even 14 calendar days, may not be
sufficient time for all relevant materials to be gathered and reviewed
by the beneficiary and decisionmaker, nor to arrange for a resolution
meeting. As discussed above, we are encouraging States to create their
own processes for expediting resolution of certain grievances. We
believe that there will be some grievances filed that may (and should)
be resolved almost immediately, including by a referral to the critical
incident system or fair hearings process. We note that several
commenters suggested that 30 days is a reasonable timeframe for
expediting resolutions, and States may want to take that recommendation
under consideration when developing their own processes.
Consistent with our decision not to finalize the expedited
resolution process at Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(iv)(B), we are not finalizing
Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(v)(B)(2).
Comment: One commenter noted that imposing any timelines for
resolving grievances could detract from staff resources needed to
investigate critical incidents, particularly if the grievance and
critical incident systems use the same staff.
Response: We recognize that States will have to supply staff and
resources for both the grievance and critical incident systems that we
are finalizing in this rule. We will provide technical assistance to
States as needed to help identify ways to manage both systems,
including setting priorities and managing the critical incident
investigation and grievance resolution timeframes.
Comment: A number of commenters responded to our invitation to
comment on whether part 438, subpart F should be amended to include the
proposed expedited resolution requirements at Sec.
441.301(c)(7)(iv)(B) and (v)(B)(2). Several commenters recommended that
expedited procedures be extended to the managed care grievance
procedures at part 438 subpart F. However, several commenters opposed
adding expedited resolution timeframes to part 438 subpart F. Similar
to the opposition presented to including expedited resolutions in the
FFS grievance system, these commenters believed that very few
expressions of dissatisfaction require expedited resolution and that
other mechanisms exist to address health and safety concerns in a
timely manner. A few commenters also provided suggestions on possible
changes to the managed care grievance requirements, such as adding a
prohibition of punitive action against beneficiaries who file
grievances.
Response: We will take these comments under consideration. We note
that we are not, at this time, finalizing an expedited resolution
process in the FFS grievance system and are not finalizing the
requirements we proposed at Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(iv)(B) and at Sec.
441.301(c)(7)(v)(B)(2) for such a process. We also note that, while
outside the scope of this proposal, we will take other recommendations
regarding potential changes to the managed care grievance process under
consideration as well.
Comment: A few commenters noted support for the proposal at Sec.
441.301(c)(7)(v)(C) that States be permitted to extend the timeframes
for the resolution of grievances by up to 14 calendar days.
Response: We thank the commenters for their support.
We did not receive comments on the requirements we proposed at
Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(v)(D).
After consideration of public comments, we are finalizing our
proposal at Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(v)(A) with modification to require that
the State resolve each grievance, and provide notice, as expeditiously
as the beneficiary's health condition (instead of health, safety, and
welfare) requires. Additionally, consistent with our decision not to
finalize the expedited resolution process at Sec.
441.301(c)(7)(iv)(B), we are not finalizing the expedited resolution
timeframe at Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(v)(B)(2), redesignating Sec.
441.301(c)(7)(v)(B)(1) as Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(v)(B), and retitling
Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(v)(B) as ``Resolution timeframes.'' We are also
removing the word ``standard'' in Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(v)(B)(1) (which
we are finalizing at Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(v)(B)) since the finalized
requirements do not distinguish between ``standard resolution'' and
other types of resolutions.
We are finalizing Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(v)(C), with a technical
correction to redesignate paragraphs (C)(1)(i) and (C)(1)(ii) as (C)(1)
and (C)(2), respectively. We are finalizing Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(v)(D)
as proposed, with minor technical corrections. Specifically, we are
changing the periods at the end of Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(v)(D)(1) and (2)
to semi-colons and adding ``and'' at the end of Sec.
441.301(c)(7)(v)(D)(2).
e. Notice of Resolution (Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(vi))
We proposed at Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(vi) requirements related to the
notice of resolution for beneficiaries. Specifically, at Sec.
441.301(c)(7)(vi)(A), we proposed to require that States establish a
method for written notice to beneficiaries and that the method meet the
availability and accessibility requirements at Sec. 435.905(b). At
Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(vi)(B), we proposed to require that States make
reasonable efforts to provide oral notice of resolution for expedited
resolutions.
We received public comments on these proposals. The following is a
summary of the comments we received and our responses.
Comment: Several commenters recommended that we expand the
requirements proposed at Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(vi) pertaining to the
information beneficiaries receive at the resolution of their grievance.
The commenters requested we include a requirement that the notice
explain what the grievance is, the information considered, the
necessary remedial actions (if any) for resolution, and the ability to
request further review.
Response: We encourage States to include this information in
resolution notices as appropriate, but we decline to make changes to
this requirement in our final rule. We note that this requirement, as
written, is consistent with the parallel requirement in Sec.
438.408(d), which provides States with flexibility in developing a
method by which managed care plans will notify enrollees of
resolutions. We intend to provide States with this same flexibility in
the FFS system, as we see no compelling reason to impose more rigid
requirements on one system than the other.
We also note that, consistent with the discussion above not to
finalize the expedited resolution process, we are not finalizing Sec.
441.301(c)(7)(vi)(B), which requires oral notice for expedited
resolutions. We expect that States, should they decide to include an
expedited resolution process in their grievance system, would develop
an
[[Page 40592]]
appropriate system for notifying beneficiaries of these resolutions.
After consideration of the comments received, we are finalizing
Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(vi)(A) without substantive changes. However,
consistent with our decision (discussed above) not to finalize the
expedited resolution process at Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(iv)(B), we are not
finalizing the requirement we proposed relating to the expedited
resolution process at Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(vi)(B) and redesignating
Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(vi)(A) as Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(vi).
f. Recordkeeping (Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(vii))
We proposed at Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(vii) recordkeeping requirements
related to grievances. Specifically, at Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(vii)(A), we
proposed to require that States maintain records of grievances and
review the information as part of their ongoing monitoring procedures.
At Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(vii)(B), we proposed to require that the record
of each grievance must contain at a minimum the following information:
a general description of the reason for the grievance, the date
received, the date of each review or review meeting (if applicable),
resolution and date of the resolution of the grievance (if applicable),
and the name of the beneficiary for whom the grievance was filed.
Further, at Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(vii)(C), we proposed to require that
grievance records be accurately maintained and in a manner that would
be available upon our request.
We received public comments on these proposals. The following is a
summary of the comments we received and our responses.
Comment: A few commenters supported the proposal at Sec.
441.301(c)(7)(vii)(A) to require that States maintain records of
grievances and review the information as part of their ongoing
monitoring procedures, and for the proposal at Sec.
441.301(c)(7)(vii)(C) that grievance records would be available upon
CMS's request. A few commenters were also specifically supportive of
what they regarded as the proposal's potential to collect and track
standardized information about service system issues, including
obstacles to informed choice and person-centered planning.
One commenter observed that there will be important lessons and
conclusions that may be drawn from the data that should help the State
to take steps to deter future service provider actions that lead to
grievances. The commenter also hoped that such data could lead to
educational opportunities to refine State and service provider
knowledge of HCBS settings and person-centered service plan rules, and
data should be collected on the efficacy of such educational
interventions. One commenter suggested that we require qualitative, as
well as quantitative, reporting.
Response: We decline to make any additional changes to our proposal
at Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(vii) in this final rule, but we agree with the
commenters that the data and records that States collect as part of the
grievance process may be critical in helping States improve their HCBS
programs. While we are not finalizing specific requirements for how
States must use this data, promising practices related to data
collection and analysis, including methods of capturing qualitative
data from the records, will likely be included in the technical
assistance that will be available to States during the implementation
period.
Comment: A few commenters recommended requiring States to make
information on grievances publicly available, such as by releasing an
annual report on the anonymized grievances received in the previous 12
months, categorized by issue, severity, and resolution or lack of
resolution. One commenter suggested that such a report would enhance
transparency and could assist with quality improvement by providing
States, providers, and consumer advocates with insight into grievance
patterns and trends. Another commenter recommended that we require
public online disclosure of grievance details and resolutions. The
commenter noted this would help individuals make informed choices about
providers and would encourage compliance with person-centered planning
and settings requirements. One commenter, presuming that the State's
recordkeeping system would be made publicly available, suggested that
we include the name of the decision maker in the records so that CMS,
researchers, and advocacy groups can ensure that decision makers are
making unbiased decisions.
Response: We did not propose that States publicly report
information about grievance resolutions in this final rule; we note,
for instance, that we did not include reporting on the grievance system
as part of the reporting requirement being finalized at Sec. 441.311,
nor are we requiring that States report information about grievances as
part of the website posting requirement being finalized at Sec.
441.313. We decline to make any changes in this final rule to require
such public reporting.
We believe that some public disclosures may not be suitable or
appropriate in every instance, and it would be difficult to tailor a
meaningful requirement to anticipate all of these circumstances. We are
concerned that, for example, in States with smaller HCBS populations,
it may be difficult to truly anonymize information about grievances.
Relatedly, some beneficiaries may not want grievances published about
specific providers, as some commenters suggest, as this would further
complicate anonymity when some providers only serve a few clients. We
are concerned also that public disclosure could have a chilling effect
if beneficiaries believed their grievance could be made part of a
public report. While we agree that, over time, data about trends in
grievances could be useful to both the States and external interested
parties in promoting systemic improvements of HCBS, we defer to States
to determine when and how to make this information public and for what
purpose. We also note that the specific recommendation to add the name
of the decision maker to the record is addressed in another response
later in this section.
Comment: One commenter recommended that we establish a process for
an annual or regular review of the States' summary of issues and the
States' resolution of the issues. Another commenter recommended
requiring an independent evaluator periodically review States'
grievance processes to identify common barriers, trends, participation
rates, and effectiveness of resolutions.
Response: When developing the proposed requirements at Sec.
441.301(c)(7), we did not intend to create a formal system in which we
would routinely review individual resolutions made by States' grievance
systems and are not persuaded otherwise after review of public comments
received. As discussed further in this section II.B., we proposed, and
are finalizing, the requirement at Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(vii)(C) that
States must make records available to us upon request. This provides
CMS with authority to review records should we need to review the
functioning of a State's grievance system on a case-by-case basis.
We believe that the grievance system's designated decision makers
are generally in the best position to determine appropriate resolutions
to beneficiaries' concerns and that the need to review individual
records should be decided on a case-by-case basis. We do agree regular
review of the States' grievance systems is a good
[[Page 40593]]
suggestion, and we will take it under consideration for future guidance
and rulemaking. Similarly, we are not requiring that States have their
grievance system reviewed by an independent evaluator in this final
rule--in part because we believe many States will likely do this
anyway, as part of their standard audit processes. However, we agree
that having the system regularly reviewed by an independent entity is a
good practice that States may consider.
Comment: A few commenters suggested specific categories of
information to be added to the record of each grievance proposed at
Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(vii)(B). One commenter suggested that all
information considered should be included as a category in the record
of each grievance. A few commenters recommended we add that the name of
the decisionmaker be included in the record to ensure that conflict of
interest requirements at Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(C)(3) are preserved.
Response: We thank commenters for their suggestions, but we decline
to add new record requirements for States at Sec.
441.301(c)(7)(vii)(B). We believe capturing the names of staff and
individuals who decided the outcome of each grievance is an operational
and internal matter for States. States can record whatever information
about a grievance resolution that they deem appropriate in addition to
what is required. We believe Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(vii)(B) as finalized
reflects an appropriate minimum level of detail. We note that Sec.
441.301(c)(7)(vii)(B) aligns with the managed care grievance system
recordkeeping requirement at Sec. 438.416.
After consideration of public comments received, we are finalizing
Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(vii) without substantive modifications. However, we
are finalizing Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(viii)(B)(1) through (5) with minor
technical modifications. We are replacing the periods at the end of
each paragraph with semi-colons, to accurately reflect that Sec.
441.301(c)(7)(vii)(B)(1) through (6) are elements of a nonexhaustive
list, not separate declarative statements. We are also adding the word
``and'' to the end of Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(vii)(B)(5).
g. Applicability Date (Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(viii))
In the proposed rule (88 FR 27977), we recognized that many States
may need time to implement the proposed grievance system requirements,
including needing time to amend provider agreements, make State
regulatory or policy changes, implement process or procedural changes,
update information systems for data collection and reporting, or
conduct other activities to implement these requirements. However, we
noted that the absence of a grievance system in FFS HCBS systems poses
a substantial risk of harm to beneficiaries. We proposed at Sec.
441.301(c)(7)(viii) that the requirements at Sec. 441.301(c)(7) be
effective 2 years after the effective date of the final rule. A 2-year
time period after the effective date of the final rule for States to
implement these requirements reflected our attempt to balance two
competing challenges: (1) the fact that there is a gap in existing
regulations for FFS HCBS grievance processes related to important HCBS
beneficiary protection issues involving person-centered planning and
HCBS settings requirements; and (2) feedback from States and other
interested parties that it could take 1 to 2 years to amend State
regulations and work with their State legislatures, if needed, as well
as to revise policies, operational processes, information systems, and
contracts to support implementation of the proposals outlined in this
section. We also considered all of the HCBS proposals outlined in the
proposed rule (88 FR 27971 through 27995) as whole. We solicited
comments on overall burden for States to meet the requirements of this
section, whether this timeframe is sufficient, whether we should
require a shorter timeframe (1 year to 18 months) or longer timeframe
(3 to 4 years) to implement these provisions, and if an alternate
timeframe is recommended, the rationale for that alternate timeframe.
We received public comments on these proposals. The following is a
summary of the comments we received and our responses.
Comment: One commenter supported our proposal at Sec.
441.301(c)(7)(viii) that the requirement at Sec. 441.301(c)(7) be
effective 2 years after the effective date of the final rule. However,
one commenter, stating that these grievance protections will be vital
to HCBS beneficiaries, recommended that States be required to come into
compliance within 18 months after the effective date of the
regulations.
A few commenters expressed concerns about the burden they believe
will be associated with developing a grievance system, particularly in
States that do not already have grievance processes in place.
Commenters believed that it would take significant resources to help
beneficiaries understand what rights they can claim under the grievance
system. Commenters also described costs or activities such as: funding
and statutory change requests to State legislatures; administrative
rulemaking; IT and administrative system design and development, which
may include vendor procurement; collaboration with other State agencies
or agency divisions; partnering with providers for implementation;
hiring and training new staff; and approval of implementation advance
planning documents by CMS. These commenters suggested alternative
effective dates ranging from 3 to 5 years. One commenter also suggested
an effective date of 4 years after CMS releases relevant subregulatory
guidance.
Response: We appreciate the fact that States will have to expend
resources in developing the grievance system, particularly States that
do not currently have grievance systems for Medicaid beneficiaries
receiving services under section 1915(c), (i), (j) and (k) authorities
through a FFS delivery system. Because of the activities that some
States will have to perform to develop the grievance system shared by
commenters, we agree that requiring an earlier timeframe of 18 months
is not realistic. We also appreciate, and agree with, the sense of
urgency expressed by commenters. We believe it is important to
prioritize giving beneficiaries the opportunity to have their concerns
heard. In this final rule, we have provided States with as much
flexibility as possible to build on or retain existing grievance
systems and have kept specific information systems requirements to a
minimum. We have also reduced some potential initial administrative
challenges by not finalizing a formal expedited resolution requirement
and by allowing States to decide whether, and how, to implement such a
policy. After consideration of public comments received as discussed
herein, we are finalizing the substance of Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(viii) as
proposed, but with minor modifications to correct erroneous uses of the
word ``effective'' and retitle the requirement as Applicability date
(rather than Effective date). We are also modifying the language at
Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(viii) to specify that States must comply with the
requirements at Sec. 441.301(c)(7) beginning 2 years from the
effective date of this final rule, rather than stating that this
requirement is effective 2 years after the date of enactment of the
final rule. (New text in bolded font). We are finalizing Sec.
441.301(c)(7)(viii) with a technical modification to specify that the
applicability date applies to the requirements at Sec. 441.301(c)(7).
Comment: A few commenters requested enhanced FMAP to support
implementation and operationalization
[[Page 40594]]
of the grievance process. Two commenters recommended that, in addition
to providing 90 percent FFP for information systems improvements, we
should offer 75 percent FFP for all quality-related activities,
including operational costs associated with a grievance system. The
commenters suggested this would create parity between the States whose
service delivery systems are largely FFS and the States with managed
care services that can receive 75 percent FFP for External Quality
Review (EQR) activities.
Response: We note that enhanced FMAP is available for certain
activities related to administering the Medicaid program and designing,
developing, implementing, and operating certain IT systems.\60\
However, Federal matching rates are established by Congress and CMS
does not have the authority to change or increase them, nor do we have
the authority to add additional activities not specified in statute
into the scope of an existing enhanced FMAP. We also do not agree that
providing broader enhanced match for the FFS grievance system would
create parity with managed care, as we believe this is an inaccurate
characterization of payments related to the managed care grievance
systems. While commenters are correct that States can receive 75
percent enhanced match for EQR activities, which are listed at Sec.
438.358, these activities are primarily validation and review of data
on performance measures; the operation of a grievance system is not
listed as an EQR activity. We also note that the associated
administrative costs for MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs are variable and
negotiated with the State as part of their contracts.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\60\ For a current list of activities eligible for this enhanced
FMAP, refer to: MACPAC, ``Federal Match Rates for Medicaid
Administrative Activities,'' last access: October 22, 2023. https://www.macpac.gov/federal-match-rates-for-medicaid-administrative-activities/.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
After consideration of public comments received, we are finalizing
the substance of Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(viii) as proposed, but with minor
modifications to correct erroneous uses of the word ``effective'' and
retitle the requirement as Applicability date (rather than Effective
date). We are also modifying the language at Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(viii)
to specify that States must comply with the requirements at Sec.
441.301(c)(7) beginning 2 years from the effective date of this final
rule, rather than stating that this requirement is effective 2 years
after the date of enactment of the final rule. (New text in bolded
font.) We are finalizing Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(viii) with a technical
modification to specify that the applicability date applies to the
requirements at Sec. 441.301(c)(7).
h. Application to Other Authorities
As discussed earlier in section II.B.1. of this preamble, section
2402(a)(3)(A) of the Affordable Care Act requires States to improve
coordination among, and the regulation of, all providers of Federally
and State-funded HCBS programs to achieve a more consistent
administration of policies and procedures across HCBS programs. In
accordance with the requirement of section 2402(a)(3)(A) of the
Affordable Care Act for States to achieve a more consistent
administration of policies and procedures across HCBS programs and
because HCBS State plan options also must comply with the HCBS Settings
Rule and with similar person-centered planning and service plan
requirements, we proposed to include these grievance requirements
within the applicable regulatory sections. Specifically, we proposed to
apply these proposed requirements in Sec. 441.301(c)(7) to sections
1915(j), (k), and (i) State plan services at Sec. Sec.
441.464(d)(2)(v), 441.555(b)(2)(iv), and 441.745(a)(1)(iii),
respectively.
Also, consistent with our proposal for section 1915(c) waivers, we
proposed to apply the proposed grievance requirements in Sec.
441.301(c)(7) to sections 1915(j), (k), and (i) State plan services
based on our authority under section 1902(a)(19) of the Act to assure
that there are safeguards for beneficiaries and our authority at
section 2402(a)(3)(B)(ii) of the Affordable Care Act to require a
complaint system for beneficiaries. We stated that the same arguments
for applying these requirements for section 1915(c) waivers are equally
applicable to these other HCBS authorities. We requested comment on the
application of the grievance system provisions to section 1915(i), (j),
and (k) authorities. We also noted that, in the language added to Sec.
441.464(d)(2)(v), the proposed grievance requirements apply when self-
directed personal assistance services authorized under section 1915(j)
include services under a section 1915(c) waiver program.
As described in the proposed rule (88 FR 27978), we did not propose
to apply these requirements to section 1905(a) services. Specifically,
we considered whether to also apply the proposed requirements to
section 1905(a) ``medical assistance'' in the form of State plan
personal care services, home health services, and case management
services, but did not propose these requirements apply to any section
1905(a) State plan services because section 1905(a) services are not
required to comply with HCBS settings requirements and because the
person-centered planning and service plan requirements for most section
1905(a) services are substantially different from those for section
1915(c), (i), (j), and (k) services. Further, the vast majority of HCBS
is delivered under section 1915(c), (i), (j), and (k) authorities,
while only a small percentage of HCBS nationally is delivered under
section 1905(a) State plan authorities. We solicited comment, seeing
the value in discussing and seeking public input, on whether we should
establish grievance requirements for section 1905(a) State plan
personal care services, home health services and case management
services.
We received public comments on these proposals. The following is a
summary of the comments and our responses.
Comment: A few commenters supported the proposal to apply the
grievance system provisions proposed for section 1915(c) at Sec.
441.301(c)(7) to sections 1915(i), (j) and (k) authorities. They agreed
with the goal of aligning the different HCBS program authorities and
promoted consistency with managed care.
Response: We thank commenters for their support.
Comment: One commenter supported the application of the grievance
requirements to self-directed personal assistance services under
section 1915(j) of the Act as well. This commenter noted that, during
the pandemic, there was no clear way to file a grievance with Medicaid
concerning a lack of access to direct care workers, for example.
One commenter, on the other hand, questioned the operationalization
of the grievance process for self-directed personal care service models
under sections 1915(j) and (k), where the beneficiary acts as the
employer for purposes of hiring, training, supervising, and firing,
their provider, if necessary. This commenter was concerned that
allowing beneficiaries to file grievances against their provider would
erode a beneficiary's responsibilities as the employer. Another
commenter, while supporting application of the grievance process to
section 1915(j) self-directed services, did suggest that implementing
this requirement in self-directed models may require additional time
and guidance.
Response: We believe it would be inappropriate to exclude
beneficiaries enrolled in self-directed services delivery models from
the grievance system and decline to do so in this final rule. As noted
by other commenters, beneficiaries enrolled in self-directed
[[Page 40595]]
services may experience systemic challenges with their services; they
may also interact with other providers in addition to their self-
directed service provider (such as the entity providing financial
management services). We also note that the grievance system is a venue
for expressing concerns about violations of the HCBS settings
requirements, which may be relevant to some beneficiaries in self-
directed programs. We do not believe that additional time needs to be
granted specifically for inclusion of beneficiaries using self-directed
services.
Comment: Several commenters responded to our request for comment on
whether we should establish grievance requirements for section 1905(a)
State plan personal care services, home health services and case
management services. A few commenters supported the proposal not to
extend the requirements to section 1905(a) services on the basis that
these services are not subject to the same person-centered planning and
HCBS settings rules. Additionally, several commenters also believed the
expansion of these requirements to section 1905(a) State plan services
would pose additional challenges to State Medicaid and operating
agencies. One commenter noted that, in States that deliver section
1905(a) State plan services and section 1915(c) services through
different agencies or agency divisions, implementation could prove
challenging and costly. A few commenters stated that States should be
encouraged (but not required) to implement the proposed provisions to
their section 1905(a) State plan services.
However, a few commenters supported extending the grievance system
requirements to section 1905(a) services. Among these commenters, a few
commenters recommended that CMS apply the grievance system requirements
specifically to mental health rehabilitative services delivered under
section 1905(a) services. These services, some commenters stated, are
delivered to large numbers of Medicaid beneficiaries, particularly
those with mental health needs. These commenters elaborated on concerns
that, otherwise, there would be disparities between individuals
receiving similar services from the same State Medicaid agency under
different authorities, and that many Medicaid recipients with mental
health disabilities receiving services under the section 1905(a)
authority would not have recourse if their rights were violated. One
commenter also suggested that mental health rehabilitative services are
considered ``home- and community-based services'' under the broader
definition enacted by Congress in the American Rescue Plan Act of 2021.
Response: At this time, we are not requiring inclusion of section
1905(a) services in the State grievance system. That said, we are not
convinced by the argument that including section 1905(a) services would
simply be too much work, as we do believe it is critical that
beneficiaries have access to mechanisms to claim their rights and have
their concerns heard. Rather, we note that there are statutory and
regulatory differences between services authorized under sections
1905(a) and 1915 of the Act. We would need to consider how to define
the nature of the grievances that would be filed for section 1905(a)
services, given that they do not have the same person-centered planning
and HCBS settings rule requirements at Sec. 441.301(c)(1) through (6).
As we discussed extensively in this section, the bases for a grievance
are providers' and States' performance of the requirements at Sec.
441.301(c)(1) through (6). We believe this definition of grievance
provides clear parameters for matters that would be the subject of
grievances. We note that person-centered service planning requirements
are established for section 1915(j) services in Sec. 441.468, for
section 1915(k) services in Sec. 441.540, and for section 1915(i)
services at Sec. 441.725. While person-centered service planning might
be part of some specific 1905(a) services, it is not a required
component of all section 1905(a) services.
Similarly, the HCBS settings requirements a Sec. 441.301(c)(3)
through (6) that apply to section 1915(c) services have counterparts
for section 1915(k) services at Sec. 441.530 and for 1915(i) services
at Sec. 441.710. (For more discussion of the application of the HCBS
settings rule's application to section 1915(c), (i), and (k) services,
we refer readers to the final rule published in 2014 at 79 FR 2948.)
Section 1915(j) services offered through a section 1915(c) waiver (as
specified, for instance, at Sec. 441.452(a)) would also be subject to
the HCBS settings requirements at Sec. 441.301(c)(3) through (6).
There is not a similar application of the HCBS settings rule to section
1905(a) services.
If we are to apply a grievance process to 1905(a) services, it is
likely we would weigh proposing a grievance process for all section
1905(a) services versus for only specific section 1905(a) services.
These services are diverse, are offered in diverse settings, and lack
the clear regulatory framework that we were able to use in constructing
the bases for grievances in section 1915 services. We believe this
requires additional consideration and discussion with the public beyond
what could be finalized in this current rule.
Though we are not finalizing inclusion of section 1905(a) services
in the State grievance system in this rule, we acknowledge that many
beneficiaries, including those receiving mental health services, are
served by section 1905(a) services and encourage States to consider
development of grievance processes to address these beneficiaries'
concerns. We appreciate the commenters' suggestions. Given that our
work to better ensure access in the Medicaid program is ongoing, we
intend to gain implementation experience with this final rule, and we
will consider the recommendations provided on the proposed rule to help
inform any future rulemaking in this area, as appropriate.
After consideration of public comments, we are finalizing the
application of the grievance system requirements for section 1915(c)
waivers, as finalized in this rule at Sec. 441.301(c)(7), to the other
HCBS authorities under sections 1915(j), 1915(k), and 1915(i). However,
after further review, we determined it is necessary to make
modifications to our regulations for these other HCBS authorities to
clarify this intention. Our proposed regulation text for these HCBS
authorities did not accurately reflect or effectuate our proposal to
require States to implement and maintain a grievance system, in
accordance with Sec. 441.301(c)(7), for these HCBS authorities as
well. We are finalizing the regulation text we proposed at Sec. Sec.
441.464 (for section 1915(j)), 441.555 (for section 1915(k)), and
441.745 (for section 1915(i)) with modification to more clearly specify
that a State must implement and maintain a grievance system in
accordance with the requirements we are finalizing at Sec.
441.301(c)(7) for HCBS programs they administer under these
authorities.
For application to section 1915(j) services, we are not finalizing
the amendment we proposed at Sec. 441.464(d)(2)(v), but rather
finalizing this new requirement for a grievance system at Sec.
441.464(d)(5). We will retain the current language at Sec.
441.464(d)(2)(v), which indicates that States must include grievance
processes, generally, among the support activities about which States
provide information, counseling, training, and assistance. At Sec.
441.464(d)(5), we are finalizing with modification for clarity and
precision that the State must implement and maintain a grievance
process in accordance with Sec. 441.301(c)(7), rather
[[Page 40596]]
than the language we proposed at Sec. 441.464(d)(2)(v) (Grievance
process, as defined in Sec. 441.301(c)(7) when self-directed PAS
include services under a section 1915(c) waiver program). We are also
finalizing Sec. 441.464(d)(5) with a technical modification to clarify
that the grievance system must meet the requirements of Sec.
441.301(c)(7), but that references therein to section 1915(c) of the
Act are instead references to section 1915(j) of the Act.
For application to section 1915(k) services, we are not finalizing
the amendment we proposed at Sec. 441.555(b)(2)(iv), but rather
finalizing this new requirement for a grievance system at Sec.
441.555(e). We will retain the current language at Sec.
441.555(b)(2)(iv), which indicates that States must include grievances
processes, generally, among the support activities about which States
provide information, counseling, training, and assistance. At Sec.
441.555(e), we are finalizing with modification for clarity and
precision that the State must implement and maintain a grievance
process in accordance with Sec. 441.301(c)(7), rather than the
language we proposed at Sec. 441.555(b)(2)(iv) (Grievance process, as
defined in Sec. 441.301(c)(7)). We are also finalizing Sec.
441.555(e) with a technical modification to clarify that the grievance
system must meet the requirements of Sec. 441.301(c)(7), but that
references therein to section 1915(c) of the Act are instead references
to section 1915(k) of the Act.
For application to section 1915(i) services, we are finalizing the
amendment we proposed at Sec. 441.745(a)(1)(iii) with modifications.
As proposed, Sec. 441.745(a)(1)(iii) had indicated that a State must
provide beneficiaries receiving section 1915(i) services with the
opportunity to file a grievance. To clarify that the State must
maintain a grievance process in accordance with Sec. 441.301(c)(7) for
beneficiaries receiving HCBS under section 1915(i), we are finalizing
Sec. 441.745(a)(1)(iii) to specify that the State must implement and
maintain a grievance process in accordance with Sec. 441.301(c)(7). We
note that several requirements being finalized at Sec. 441.301(c)(7)
(such as Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(A), (B)(2), and (C)(1), discussed in
section II.B.2.b. of this final rule) require States to provide the
beneficiary with the opportunity to file grievances in the grievance
system. We are also finalizing Sec. 441.745(a)(1)(iii) with a
technical modification to clarify that the grievance system must meet
the requirements of Sec. 441.301(c)(7), but that references therein to
section 1915(c) of the Act are instead references to section 1915(i) of
the Act. Additionally, as we are finalizing a new Sec.
441.745(a)(1)(iii) in this rule, we are redesignating the current Sec.
441.745(a)(1)(iii) as Sec. 441.745(a)(1)(iv).
We also note that while we are finalizing these amendments to
regulations under section 1915(j), (k) and (i) authorities, we are not
suggesting that States that provide HCBS through multiple authorities
must operate a separate grievance process for each program. As
discussed earlier in II.B.2. of this preamble, while States are allowed
to maintain multiple grievance processes (so long as each process
complies with Sec. 441.301(c)(7)), we strongly encourage States to
maintain a single, integrated grievance system for all HCBS
beneficiaries.
i. Summary of Finalized Requirements
After consideration of the public comments, we are finalizing the
proposals at Sec. Sec. 441.301(c)(7) as follows:
We are finalizing the requirement describing the grievance
system purpose at Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(i) with technical modifications
to specify that States must establish a procedure under which a
beneficiary can file a grievance related to the State's or a provider's
performance of (rather than compliance with) the activities described
in paragraphs (c)(1) through (6) of Sec. 441.301(c)(7). (New language
identified in bold.) We are also adding language to Sec.
441.301(c)(7)(i) stating that the State may contract with other
entities to perform activities described in Sec. 441.301(c)(7) but
retains responsibility for ensuring performance of and compliance with
these provisions. The finalized requirement at Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(i)
will read: Purpose. The State must establish a procedure under which a
beneficiary may file a grievance related to the State's or a provider's
performance of the activities described in paragraphs (c)(1) through
(6) of this section. This requirement does not apply to a managed care
delivery system under the authority of sections 1915(a), 1915(b),
1932(a), or 1115(a) of the Act. The State may have activities described
in paragraph (c)(7) of this section performed by contractors or other
government entities, provided, however, that the State retains
responsibility for ensuring performance of and compliance with these
provisions.
We are finalizing the definition of grievance at Sec.
441.301(c)(7)(ii) with a technical modification, conforming with the
modification at Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(i), to specify that a grievance
will mean an expression of dissatisfaction or complaint related to the
State's or a provider's performance of (rather than compliance with)
the activities described in paragraphs (c)(1) through (6), regardless
of whether remedial action is requested. (New language identified in
bold.) We are finalizing the definition of grievance system at Sec.
441.301(c)(7)(ii) as proposed.
We are finalizing the process requirement at Sec.
441.301(c)(7)(iii)(A) as proposed, with the following exceptions. We
are finalizing Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(A)(1) with modification to
specify that another individual or entity may file a grievance on
behalf of the beneficiary, or provide the beneficiary with assistance
or representation throughout the grievance process, with the written
consent of the beneficiary or authorized representative. The finalized
requirement at Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(ii)(A)(1) will read: Another
individual or entity may file a grievance on behalf of the beneficiary,
or provide the beneficiary with assistance or representation throughout
the grievance process, with the written consent of the beneficiary or
authorized representative. We are finalizing Sec.
441.301(c)(7)(iii)(A)(2) as proposed.
We are finalizing the process requirement at Sec.
441.301(c)(7)(iii)(B) as proposed.
We are finalizing Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(B)(1) with a
modification to correct an erroneous reference to subchapter by
replacing subchapter with paragraph (c)(7).
We are finalizing the process requirements at Sec.
441.301(c)(7)(iii)(B)(2) with a modification to specify that States
must provide beneficiaries with reasonable assistance in ensuring
grievances are appropriately filed with the grievance system. We are
also finalizing Sec. 441.307(c)(7)(iii)(B)(2) with modifications to
change the term ``individuals who are limited English proficient'' to
``individuals with Limited English Proficiency.'' We are also
finalizing with modification to clarify that auxiliary aids and
services are to be available where necessary to ensure effective
communication. As finalized, Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(B)(2) specifies
that States must provide beneficiaries reasonable assistance in
ensuring grievances are appropriately filed with the grievance system,
completing forms, and taking other procedural steps related to a
grievance. This includes, but is not limited to, ensuring the grievance
system is accessible to individuals with disabilities and to provide
meaningful access to individuals with Limited English Proficiency,
consistent with Sec. 435.905(b) of this chapter, and includes
auxiliary aids and services
[[Page 40597]]
where necessary to ensure effective communication, such as providing
interpreter services and toll-free numbers that have adequate TTY/TTD
and interpreter capability.
We are finalizing the process requirement at Sec.
441.301(c)(7)(iii)(B)(3) with modifications to require that States
ensure that punitive or retaliatory action (rather than just punitive
actions) is neither threatened nor taken against an individual filing a
grievance or who has had a grievance filed on their behalf. The
finalized requirement at Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(iii)(B)(3) will read:
Ensure that punitive or retaliatory action is neither threatened nor
taken against an individual filing a grievance or who has had a
grievance filed on their behalf. (New language identified in bold.)
We are finalizing the process requirement Sec.
441.301(c)(7)(iii)(B)(4) with a modification to remove the reference to
expedited grievances. The finalized requirements at Sec.
441.301(c)(7)(iii)(B)(4) will read: Accept grievances and requests for
extension of timeframes from the beneficiary.
We are finalizing the process requirements at Sec.
441.301(c)(7)(iii)(B)(5) with a modification to change mention of
individuals who are limited English proficient to individuals with
Limited English Proficiency.
We are finalizing the process requirements at Sec.
441.301(c)(7)(iii)(B)(6) and (7) as proposed.
We are finalizing the requirements at Sec.
441.301(c)(7)(iii)(C)(4) and (5) with a modification to replace the
reference to Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(v)(B)(1) and (2) and adding a
reference to Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(v). We are also finalizing Sec.
441.301(c)(7)(iii)(C)(5) with a modification to change the reference to
45 CFR 164.510(b) to a broader reference to the HIPAA Privacy Rule (45
CFR part 160 and part 164 subparts A and E).
Aside from the modifications noted previously to Sec.
441.301(c)(7)(iii)(C)(4) and (5), we are finalizing Sec.
441.301(c)(7)(iii)(C) as proposed, with minor formatting changes.
We are finalizing the filing timeframe requirement at
Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(iv) with modifications by removing the expedited
resolution requirement at Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(iv)(B) and redesignating
Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(iv)(A) as Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(iv). The finalized
requirement at 441.301(c)(7)(iv) will read: Filing timeframes. A
beneficiary may file a grievance at any time.
We are finalizing the resolution and notification
requirement at Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(v)(A) with a modification to require
that the State resolve each grievance, and provide notice, as
expeditiously as the beneficiary's health condition (instead of health,
safety, and welfare) requires. The finalized requirement at Sec.
441.301(c)(7)(v)(A) will read: Basic rule. The State must resolve each
grievance, and provide notice, as expeditiously as the beneficiary's
health condition requires, within State-established timeframes that may
not exceed the timeframes specified in this section.
We are not finalizing the expedited resolution timeframe
at Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(v)(B)(2). Instead, we are redesignating Sec.
441.301(c)(7)(v)(B)(1) as Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(v)(B) and retitling Sec.
441.301(c)(7)(v)(B) as ``Resolution timeframes.'' We are also removing
the word ``standard'' from Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(v)(B). The finalized
requirement at Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(v)(B) will read: Resolution
timeframes. For resolution of a grievance and notice to the affected
parties, the timeframe may not exceed 90 calendar days from the day the
State receives the grievance. This timeframe may be extended under
paragraph (c)(7)(v)(C) of this section.
We are finalizing the timeframe extension requirement at
Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(v)(C) and (D) without substantive changes. We are
finalizing Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(v)(C) with a technical modification to
redesignate paragraphs (C)(1)(i) and (C)(1)(ii) as (C)(1) and (C)(2),
respectively. We are finalizing Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(v)(D) as proposed,
but with a technical modification to change the periods at the end of
Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(v)(D)(1) and (2) to semi-colons, and adding ``and''
at the end of Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(v)(D)(2).
We are finalizing the notice format requirement at Sec.
441.301(c)(7)(vi)(A) without substantive modification. However, we are
not finalizing the proposal relating to the expedited resolution
process at Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(vi)(B). Therefore, we are redesignating
Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(vi)(A) as Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(vi).
We are finalizing the recordkeeping requirements at Sec.
441.301(c)(7)(vii) without substantive modifications. However, we are
finalizing Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(viii)(B)(1) through (5) with semi-colons
rather than periods at the end of each paragraph, and with the word
``and'' at the end of Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(vii)(B)(5).
We are finalizing the applicability date requirements at
Sec. 441.301(c)(7)(viii) to specify that States must comply with the
requirement at paragraph (c)(7) beginning 2 years from the effective
date of this final rule.
Additionally, we are finalizing the application of the grievance
process requirements at Sec. 441.301(c)(7) to section 1915(j), (k) and
(i) authorities as follows:
For application to section 1915(j) services, we are not
finalizing a reference at Sec. 441.464(d)(2)(v), as we had proposed,
but rather finalizing a new requirement at Sec. 441.464(d)(5) that
specifies that States must implement and maintain a grievance process
in accordance with Sec. 441.301(c)(7), except that the references to
section 1915(c) of the Act are instead references to section 1915(j) of
the Act.
For application to section 1915(k) services, we are not
finalizing a reference at Sec. 441.555(b)(2)(iv), as we had proposed,
but rather finalizing a new requirement at Sec. 441.555(e) that
specifies that States must implement and maintain a grievance process
in accordance with Sec. 441.301(c)(7), except that the references to
section 1915(c) of the Act are instead references to section 1915(k) of
the Act.
For application to section 1915(i) services, we are
finalizing a new Sec. 441.745(a)(1)(iii) with modification to clarify
that the State must maintain a grievance process in accordance with
Sec. 441.301(c)(7), except that the references to section 1915(c) of
the Act are instead references to section 1915(i) of the Act. We are
redesignating the existing Sec. 441.745(a)(1)(iii) as Sec.
441.745(a)(1)(iv).
3. Incident Management System (Sec. Sec. 441.302(a)(6), 441.464(e),
441.570(e), 441.745(a)(1)(v) and 441.745(b)(1)(i))
Section 1902(a)(19) of the Act requires States to provide
safeguards as may be necessary to assure that eligibility for care and
services will be determined, and that such care and services will be
provided, in a manner consistent with simplicity of administration and
the best interests of the recipients. Section 1915(c)(2)(A) of the Act
and current Federal regulations at Sec. 441.302(a) require that States
have in place necessary safeguards to protect the health and welfare of
individuals receiving section 1915(c) waiver program services. Further,
as discussed previously in section II.B.1. of this rule, section
2402(a) of the Affordable Care Act requires the Secretary of HHS to
ensure that all States receiving Federal funds for HCBS, including
Medicaid, develop HCBS systems that are responsive to the needs and
choices of beneficiaries receiving HCBS, maximize independence and
self-direction, provide support and coordination to assist with a
community-supported life, and achieve a more a more consistent
[[Page 40598]]
and coordinated approach to the administration of policies and
procedures across public programs providing HCBS.\61\ Among other
things, section 2402(a)(3)(B)(ii) of the Affordable Care Act requires
development and oversight of a system to qualify and monitor providers.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\61\ Section 2402(a) of the Affordable Care Act--Guidance for
Implementing Standards for Person-Centered Planning and Self-
Direction in Home and Community-Based Services Programs. Accessed at
https://acl.gov/sites/default/files/news%202016-10/2402-a-Guidance.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As noted earlier in section II.B.1. of this rule, we released
guidance for section 1915(c) waiver programs included in the 2014
guidance,\62\ which noted that States should report on State-developed
performance measures to demonstrate that they meet six assurances,
including a Health and Welfare assurance for States to demonstrate that
they have designed and implemented an effective system for assuring
waiver participant health and welfare. Specifically, the 2014 guidance
highlighted, related to the Health and Welfare assurance, the
following:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\62\ Modifications to Quality Measures and Reporting in Sec.
1915(c) Home and Community-Based Waivers. March 2014. Accessed at
https://www.hhs.gov/guidance/sites/default/files/hhs-guidance-documents/3-cmcs-quality-memo-narrative_0_2.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The State demonstrates on an ongoing basis that it
identifies, addresses, and seeks to prevent instances of abuse,
neglect, exploitation, and unexplained death;
The State demonstrates that an incident management system
is in place that effectively resolves incidents and prevents further
similar incidents to the extent possible;
The State's policies and procedures for the use or
prohibition of restrictive interventions (including restraints and
seclusion) are followed; and
The State establishes overall health care standards and
monitors those standards based on the responsibility of the service
provider as stated in the approved waiver.
Consistent with the expectations for other performance measures,
the 2014 guidance noted that States should conduct systemic remediation
and implement a Quality Improvement Project when they score below 86
percent on any of their Health and Welfare performance measures.
Despite States implementing these statutory and regulatory
requirements to protect the health and welfare of individuals receiving
section 1915(c) waiver program services, and States' adherence to
related subregulatory guidance, there have been notable and high-
profile instances of abuse and neglect in recent years that highlight
the risks associated with poor quality care and with inadequate
oversight of HCBS in Medicaid. For example, a 2018 report, ``Ensuring
Beneficiary Health and Safety in Group Homes Through State
Implementation of Comprehensive Compliance Oversight,'' \63\ (referred
to as the Joint Report, developed by ACL, OCR, and the OIG), found
systemic problems with health and safety policies and procedures being
followed in group homes and that failure to comply with these policies
and procedures left beneficiaries in group homes at risk of serious
harm.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\63\ Ensuring Beneficiary Health and Safety in Group Homes
Through State Implementation of Comprehensive Compliance Oversight.
US Department of Health and Human Services, Office of the Inspector
General, Administration for Community Living, and Office for Civil
Rights. January 2018. Accessed at https://oig.hhs.gov/reports-and-publications/featured-topics/group-homes/group-homes-joint-report.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In addition, in 2016 and 2017, OIG released several reports on
their review of States' compliance with Federal and State requirements
regarding critical incident reporting and
monitoring.64 65 66 OIG found that several States did not
comply with Federal waiver and State requirements for reporting and
monitoring critical incidents involving individuals receiving HCBS
through waivers. In particular, the reports indicated that:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\64\ HHS OIG. ``Connecticut did not comply with Federal and
State requirements for critical incidents involving developmentally
disabled Medicaid beneficiaries.'' May 2016. Accessed at https://oig.hhs.gov/oas/reports/region1/11400002.pdf.
\65\ HHS OIG. ``Massachusetts did not comply with Federal and
State requirements for critical incidents involving developmentally
disabled Medicaid beneficiaries.'' July 2016. Accessed at https://oig.hhs.gov/oas/reports/region1/11400008.pdf.
\66\ HHS OIG. ``Maine did not comply with Federal and State
requirements for critical incidents involving Medicaid beneficiaries
with developmental disabilities.'' August 2017. Accessed at https://oig.hhs.gov/oas/reports/region1/11600001.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Critical incidents were not reported correctly;
Adequate training to identify appropriate action steps for
reported critical incidents or reports of abuse or neglect was not
provided to State staff;
Appropriate data sets to trend and track critical
incidents were not accessible to State staff; and
Critical incidents were not clearly defined, making it
difficult to identify potential abuse or neglect.
In 2016, we conducted three State audits based at least in part on
concerns regarding health and welfare and media coverage on abuse,
neglect, or exploitation issues.\67\ We found that these three States
had not been meeting their section 1915(c) waiver assurances, similar
to findings reported by the OIG. In two cases, for the incidents of
concern, tracking and trending of critical incidents were not present.
Further, in at least two of the States, staffing at appropriate levels
was identified as an issue.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\67\ Presentation by CMS for Advancing States: Quality in the
HCBS Waiver--Health and Welfare. See: https://www.nasuad.org/sites/nasuad/files/Final%20Quality%20201.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In January 2018, the United States Government Accountability Office
(GAO) released a report on a study of 48 States that covered assisted
living services.\68\ The GAO found large inconsistencies between States
in their definition of a critical incident and their system's ability
to report, track, and collect information on critical incidents that
have occurred. States also varied in their oversight methods, as well
as the type of information they were reviewing as part of this
oversight. The GAO recommended that requiring States to report
information on incidents (such as the type and severity of incidents
and the number of incidents) would strengthen the effectiveness of
State and Federal oversight.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\68\ Government Accountability Office. ``Medicaid assisted
living services--improved Federal oversight of beneficiary health
and welfare is needed.'' January 2018. Accessed at https://www.gao.gov/assets/690/689302.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In July 2019, we issued a survey to States that operate section
1915(c) waivers, requesting information on their approach to
administering incident management systems. The goal of the survey was
to obtain a comprehensive understanding of how States organize their
incident management system to best respond to, resolve, monitor, and
prevent critical incidents in their waiver programs. The survey found
that:
Definitions of critical incidents vary across States and,
in some cases, within States for different HCBS programs or
populations;
Some States do not use standardized forms for reporting
incidents, thereby impeding the consistent collection of information on
critical incidents;
Some States do not have electronic incident management
systems, and, among those that do, many use systems with outdated
electronic platforms that are not linked with other State systems,
leading to the systems operating in silos and the need to consolidate
information across disparate systems; and
Many States cited the lack of communication within and
across State agencies, including with investigative agencies, as a
barrier to incident resolution.
[[Page 40599]]
Additionally, during various public engagement activities conducted
with interested parties over the past several years, we have heard that
ensuring access to HCBS requires that we must first ensure health and
safety systems are in place across all States, a theme underscored by
the Joint Report.
a. Incident Management System Requirements (Sec. 441.302(a)(6))
Based on these findings and reports, under the authorities at
sections 1902(a)(19) and 1915(c)(2)(A) of the Act and section
2402(a)(3)(B)(ii) of the Affordable Care Act, we proposed a new
requirement at Sec. 441.302(a)(6) to require that States provide an
assurance that they operate and maintain an incident management system
that identifies, reports, triages, investigates, resolves, tracks, and
trends critical incidents. This proposal is intended to ensure
standardized requirements for States regarding incidents that harm or
place a beneficiary at risk of harm and is based on our experience
working with States as part of the section 1915(c) waiver program and
informed by the incident management survey described previously in this
section of the final rule. In the absence of an incident management
system, people receiving section 1915(c) waiver program services are at
risk of preventable or intentional harm. As such, we believe that such
a system to identify and address incidents of abuse, neglect,
exploitation, or other harm during the course of service delivery is in
the best interest of and necessary for protecting the health and
welfare of individuals receiving section 1915(c) waiver program
services. We proposed similar requirements for section 1915(i), (j) and
(k) HCBS programs at Sec. Sec. 441.464(e), 441.570(e),
441.745(a)(1)(v), and 441.745(b)(1)(i); these are discussed further in
section II.B.3.i of this final rule.
We received public comments on these proposals. The following is a
summary of the comments we received and our responses.
Comment: Many commenters supported the proposal at Sec.
441.302(a)(6) to require States to provide an assurance that they
operate and maintain an incident management system that identifies,
reports, triages, investigates, resolves, tracks, and trends critical
incidents. Additionally, these commenters noted that the proposed
requirements for this incident management system can ensure States
standardize data and processes for critical incident monitoring,
identify trends, and influence timely oversight of responses to
incidents to minimize health and safety risks for beneficiaries
receiving HCBS.
Several commenters stated that establishing an incident management
system, including requirements for data-driven analytics and trend
reporting, would help to better inform States and providers by creating
new collaborative models to measure improvements to better ensure
quality of life for HCBS beneficiaries. In the same vein, one commenter
noted that States should use the data and information collected on
critical incidents to develop strategies to reduce or eliminate the
risk of abuse, neglect, or exploitation; to enable discovery of root
cause for occurrence of critical incidents; and to identify actions to
influence critical incidents proactively, instead of reactively.
Response: We appreciate the support for our proposal and agree that
requiring States to provide an assurance that they operate and maintain
an incident management system that identifies, reports, triages,
investigates, resolves, tracks, and trends critical incidents will
ensure that States are better informed and more able to identify root
causes for the occurrence of critical incidents, enabling them to act
more proactively to influence and prevent the occurrence of such
incidents.
Comment: A few commenters requested we clarify how States can fully
address critical incidents for dually eligible beneficiaries who are
enrolled in managed care plans, when the managed care plan does not
have access to Medicare claims data. In the same vein, they were also
concerned that States would require extensive resources to utilize the
Medicare claims data.
These commenters also requested clarification on the feasibility of
reporting across Medicare and Medicaid in dual eligible special needs
plan (D-SNP) contracts.
Response: Since 2011, we have provided States access to Medicare
data for dually-eligible beneficiaries, including for beneficiaries in
different categories of dual eligibility, free-of-charge via the
Medicare-Medicaid Data Sharing Program.\69\ Information on the
Medicare-Medicaid Data Sharing Program, including how to request data
and the standard data sharing agreements, is available through the
State Data Resource Center.\70\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\69\ See Medicare-Medicaid Data Sharing Program at https://www.cms.gov/Medicare-Medicaid-Coordination/Medicare-and-Medicaid-Coordination/Medicare-Medicaid-Coordination-Office/StateAccesstoMedicareData.
\70\ See State Data Resource Center at https://www.statedataresourcecenter.com/home/contact-us.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We proposed that the incident management system requirements, as
specified at Sec. 441.302(a)(6) and as finalized in this rule, will
apply to section 1915(c)(i), (j), and (k) services delivered through
managed care plans. We also note that dually eligible beneficiaries
enrolled in managed care plans known as fully integrated dual eligible
special needs plans (FIDE SNP) and highly integrated dual eligible
special needs plans (HIDE SNP), are subject to the incident management
requirements at Sec. 441.302(a)(6) as finalized. We will provide
technical assistance regarding the application of these requirements to
beneficiaries in different categories of dual eligibility.
Comment: A few commenters expressed concern that the requirements
we proposed for this incident management system generally seemed to be
more focused on documentation of critical incidents, rather than
impacting quality and outcomes for HCBS participants to ensure optimal
health and welfare. One commenter recommended that States should assure
that resolution of critical incidents focuses on preventing harm to the
HCBS participant(s) involved in the critical incident. This commenter
also suggested that States should take actions to not only prevent
further harm to HCBS participant(s) involved in a critical incident,
but actions based on the critical incident should be taken to prevent
further harm to all HCBS participants.
Response: We believe the requirements we proposed at Sec.
441.302(a)(6), and as finalized in this rule, give States the
flexibility to decide how to design and implement their incident
management system. We encourage States to consider implementing quality
improvement processes as part of their incident management systems, as
quality improvement processes can help States to promote the health and
welfare of beneficiaries by addressing systemic issues in their HCBS
programs. We also note that the purpose of tracking and trending
critical incidents is to assist States in understanding patterns that
require interventions to promote improvement and prevent the recurrence
of harm to beneficiaries.
We also refer readers to the requirements currently set forth at
Sec. 438.330(b)(5)(ii) that MCOs, PHIPs, and PAHPs participate in
efforts by the State to prevent, detect, and remediate critical
incidents, consistent with assuring beneficiary health and welfare as
required in Sec. 441.302 and Sec. 441.703(a). Further, as noted
herein, the six assurances and related
[[Page 40600]]
subassurances for section 1915(c) waiver programs, including the Health
and Welfare assurance, as set forth in the 2014 guidance, continue to
apply. In addition, as discussed in section II.B.8. of this final rule,
the HCBS Quality Measure Set reporting requirements include
requirements for States to implement quality improvement strategies in
their HCBS programs; while the HCBS Quality Measure Set requirements
being finalized in this rule are distinct and severable from the
incident management requirements being finalized at Sec.
441.302(a)(6), we believe the HCBS Quality Measure Set requirements
support the quality improvement objectives described by this commenter.
After consideration of these public comments, we are finalizing our
proposal to require at Sec. 441.302(a)(6) that States must provide an
assurance that the State operates and maintains an incident management
system that identifies, reports, triages, investigates, resolves,
tracks, and trends critical incidents as proposed.
b. Critical Incident Definition (Sec. 441.302(a)(6)(i)(A))
At Sec. 441.302(a)(6)(i)(A) through (G), we proposed new
requirements for States' incident management systems. Specifically, at
Sec. 441.302(a)(6)(i)(A), we proposed to establish a standard
definition of a critical incident to include, at a minimum, verbal,
physical, sexual, psychological, or emotional abuse; neglect;
exploitation including financial exploitation; misuse or unauthorized
use of restrictive interventions or seclusion; a medication error
resulting in a telephone call to or a consultation with a poison
control center, an emergency department visit, an urgent care visit, a
hospitalization, or death; or an unexplained or unanticipated death,
including but not limited to a death caused by abuse or neglect.
We proposed the Federal minimum standard definition of a critical
incident at Sec. 441.302(a)(6)(i)(A) to address the lack of a
standardized Federal definition for the type of events or instances
that States should consider a critical incident that must be reported
by a provider to the State and considered for an investigation by the
State to assess whether the incident was the result of abuse, neglect,
or exploitation, and whether it could have been prevented. The
definition we proposed at Sec. 441.302(a)(6)(i)(A) is based on
internal analyses of data and information obtained through a CMS survey
of States' incident management systems, commonalities across
definitions, and common gaps in States' definitions of critical
incidents (for instance, that many States do not consider sexual
assault to be a critical incident).
We also requested comment on whether there are specific types of
events or instances of serious harm to section 1915(c) waiver
participants, such as identity theft or fraud, that would not be
captured by the proposed definition and that should be included, and
whether the inclusion of any specific types of events or instances of
harm in the proposed definition would lead to the overidentification of
critical incidents.
We received public comments on these proposals. The following is a
summary of the comments we received and our responses.
Comment: Several commenters supported the proposed minimum standard
definition of a critical incident. Commenters expressed that the
proposed requirements at Sec. 441.302(a)(6)(i)(A) establish a minimum
Federal definition of a critical incident which would help to
standardize practices across States and HCBS programs to better serve
and prevent harm or risk of harm for beneficiaries. A few commenters
noted the standardized Federal minimum definition of a critical
incident will increase consistency across States, section 1915(c)
waivers, and HCBS programs. A few commenters suggested CMS further
explain the critical incident definition to minimize misinterpretation,
stating that explanations of definitions for each type of critical
incident could ensure reporting is uniform and consistent across all
State programs and services. These commenters stated that without a
uniform understanding of each type of critical incident, critical
incidents could be over or under reported. Similarly, several other
commenters suggested that the definition of critical incident we
proposed is overly broad, expressing it could impede the State's
coordination with other agencies and interested parties. These
commenters indicated that more explanation of the definitions of
critical incident at Sec. 441.302(a)(6)(i)(A) could help to address
varying interpretations in implementation of the proposed requirements,
noting that each State Medicaid agency or interested parties could
independently establish meaning.
Response: We disagree with commenters that the proposed definition
of critical incident is overly broad. We believe that the proposed
requirements at Sec. 441.302(a)(6)(i)(A) provide States with a
comprehensive minimum standard definition of a critical incident. We
recommend that States view the definition as a minimum Federal
standard. States may consider expanding the definition to include other
health and safety concerns based on the unique needs of their HCBS
populations and the specific characteristics of their HCBS programs. We
plan to provide technical assistance, as needed, to States if they have
questions about the types of incidents that should be included in the
standardized definition, and how this definition relates to existing
critical incident definitions already in use.
Comment: Commenters responded to our request for comment on whether
there were specific types of events or instances of serious harm that
would not be captured by the proposed critical incident definition and
should be included. A few commenters suggested that we broaden the
definition of critical incident and suggested that the following types
of incidents be included in the proposed definition of critical
incident at Sec. 441.302(a)(6)(i)(A): abuse between HCBS waiver
housemates; expression of racism, sexism, homophobia, or transphobia by
a provider toward a beneficiary; lack of direct care workers; physical
or emotional harm suffered by participant; falls with severe or
moderate injury/illness; missed or delayed provision of services
identified in the person-centered plan; refusal of service; self-
neglect; and a range of harmful things beneficiaries may experience.
Alternatively, a few commenters recommended that CMS not expand the
minimum definition of critical incident further, indicating the
critical incident definition offers flexibility to States to expand
their critical incident definition to fit the HCBS program and
population served by the State. Commenters expressed that CMS should
provide technical assistance, for all States, including for States that
already have an incident management system with critical incident
definitions and policies and programs in place.
Response: We appreciate commenters sharing these suggestions. We
note that many of these types of events would be captured by the
minimum standard definition. For instance, we would consider abuse
between HCBS waiver housemates to fall under verbal, physical, sexual,
psychological, or emotional abuse. Similarly, expressions of racism,
sexism, homophobia, or transphobia by a provider toward a beneficiary
may be considered a critical incident. If a lack of direct care
workers, a refusal of service, or missed or delayed provision of
services identified in the person-centered service plan results in
[[Page 40601]]
harm or risk of risk from the failure of a provider to deliver needed
services, we would expect a State to consider those events as instances
of neglect. Physical or emotional harm suffered by a participant as a
result of one or more types of events included in our definition of
critical incidents or that results in death would also be captured as a
critical incident. Falls with severe or moderate injury/illness may be
considered critical incidents depending on whether they occur as a
result of an event included in our definition of critical incidents.
They would also be considered critical incidents if they result in
death. Some of these events, such as missed or delayed provision of
services identified in the person-centered service plan, could also
meet the definition of a grievance and be appropriate for consideration
under the grievance system, which we are finalizing as part of a
separate provision in Sec. 441.301(c)(7) (discussed in section II.B.2
of this rule.)
We decline to include refusing a service or self-neglect in the
minimum standard definition because we intend this definition to focus
on incidents that occur during the course of service delivery. However,
States may include these events in their own definitions.
We are unsure what the commenter intended by ``range of harmful
things beneficiaries may experience'' and are unable to respond
directly to that recommendation.
We appreciate these comments and will take this feedback into
consideration when developing resources for States on the incident
management system's requirements.
Comment: One commenter stated that we should consider whether what
constitutes a critical incident might differ between adult and child
beneficiaries and recommended that pediatricians could assist States in
development and implementation of incident management requirements,
including critical incident requirements. This commenter also stated
that data and information for children receiving HCBS and housed in
pediatric health systems should be linked with the State electronic
critical incident system proposed at Sec. 441.302(a)(6)(i)(B).
Response: As previously discussed, our proposal is to establish a
minimum Federal definition, and States may consider expanding the
definition to include other health and safety concerns based on the
unique needs of their HCBS populations. We also encourage States to
include input from interested parties, including experts in children
receiving HCBS, when developing and implementing their incident
management systems and policies and procedures to meet the proposed
requirements. We discuss requirements for data and information sharing
and electronic systems in more detail below in this section II.B.3. of
the rule.
Comment: Several commenters provided feedback about the inclusion
of medication errors resulting in a telephone call to or a consultation
with a poison control center in the proposed critical incident
definition at Sec. 441.302(a)(6)(i)(A)(5). One commenter expressed
support for the reporting of a medication error resulting in a
telephone call to or a consultation with a poison control center, and
agreed they should be reported by the provider to the State. Another
commenter expressed that beneficiaries receiving HCBS are encouraged to
be independent and have the right to self-determination, and completing
investigations on medication errors could be infringing upon HCBS
beneficiaries' self-determination. One commenter requested we consider
that managed care plans do not typically receive member data from
poison control centers unless they are contracted with the managed care
plan to provide this notification, making it difficult to track
incidents that result in a consultation with the poison control center
unless this data is captured elsewhere in member claims data. One
commenter expressed concern that including a medication error in the
definition of critical incidents could be problematic since not all
providers who serve HCBS beneficiaries are clinical staff who can
render a professional clinical determination of medication error, which
could result in medication errors being over or under reported and skew
data reports.
Response: We plan to provide States with technical assistance to
help address issues raised by providers in reporting any critical
incidents that occur during the delivery of services as specified in a
beneficiary's person-centered service plan, or any critical incidents
that are a result of the failure to deliver authorized services,
including medication errors resulting in a telephone call to or a
consultation with a poison control center. Because we also are
finalizing Sec. 441.302(a)(6)(i)(C) as described in II.B.3.d. of this
rule, we confirm that States must require providers to report to them
any critical incidents that occur during the delivery of services as
specified in a beneficiary's person-centered service plan, or any
critical incidents that are a result of the failure to deliver
authorized services. As such, a provider would be expected to report a
medication error resulting in a contact with a poison control center if
the medication error occurred during the delivery of services or a
result of the failure to deliver services. We believe that such a
system to identify and address incidents of abuse, neglect,
exploitation, or other harm during the course of service delivery is in
the best interest of and necessary for protecting the health and
welfare of individuals receiving HCBS.
Comment: One commenter requested that CMS clarify that in addition
to audio-only telephone, that the use of audio or video technology be
made acceptable to satisfy the requirement proposed at Sec.
441.302(a)(6)(i)(A)(5) that the State adopt the minimum standard
definition for critical incident for a medication error resulting in
contact with a poison control center.
Response: We do not have the authority to define additional
communication types or consultation methods for poison control centers.
We decline to add ``use of audio or video technology'' to the
requirement proposed at Sec. 441.302(a)(6)(i)(A)(5). We encourage
States to collaborate with their State and local poison control centers
to understand the types of consultation that are acceptable and make
requests for additional communication types or consultation methods for
poison control centers.
Comment: Several commenters responded to our solicitation to
comment on whether the proposed critical incident definition at Sec.
441.302(a)(6)(i)(A) should include other specific types of events or
instances of serious harm to beneficiaries receiving HCBS, such as
identity theft or fraud. Most commenters responding to the request for
comment recommended that CMS not expand the critical incident
definition to include identity theft or fraud, noting it could create
duplication of existing investigative and reporting processes.
Alternatively, a few commenters supported the inclusion of identity
theft and fraud in the critical incident definition. One commenter
recommended that CMS provide additional guidance on identity theft or
fraud in the context of exploitation, including financial exploitation
if added to the minimum critical incident definition. One commenter
expressed concern with including identity theft or fraud in the
proposed critical incident definition, except when the individual has
been formally and legally judged incompetent to make relevant
decisions.
Response: We agree with commenters that expanding the critical
incident definition at Sec. 441.302(a)(6)(i)(A) to include identity
theft or fraud could
[[Page 40602]]
create duplication of existing Federal investigative agencies and
reporting processes. Therefore, we have not identified a compelling
reason to add other types of incidents, such as identity theft or
fraud, to the standardized minimum definition of critical incidents we
proposed and are finalizing in this rule.
Comment: One commenter specifically responded to the request for
comment soliciting whether the proposed critical incident definition at
Sec. 441.302(a)(6)(i)(A) includes any specific types of events or
instances of harm that would lead to the overidentification of critical
incidents. The commenter supported the proposed definition, noting it
would not result in overidentification of critical incidents. This
commenter noted that, although the events included in the critical
incident definition they use are not the same as those in the proposed
critical incident definition at Sec. 441.302(a)(6)(i)(A), they
believed that the proposed definition would not cause
overidentification of critical incidents because their policies require
any incident, not solely those that are defined, to be reported.
Response: We appreciate the support for our proposal.
After consideration of these public comments, we are finalizing
Sec. 441.302(a)(6)(i)(A) as proposed with the following minor
modifications: a minor formatting modification at Sec.
441.302(a)(6)(i)(A)(3) to correct an improper italicization; a minor
technical modification at Sec. 441.302(a)(6)(i)(A)(5) to correct
missing punctuation; and a minor formatting modification to conclude
Sec. 441.302(a)(6)(i)(A)(6) with a semi-colon.
c. Electronic Critical Incident Systems (Sec. 441.302(a)(6)(i)(B))
At Sec. 441.302(a)(6)(i)(B), we proposed that States must have
electronic critical incident systems that, at a minimum, enable
electronic collection, tracking (including of the status and resolution
of investigations), and trending of data on critical incidents. We also
solicited comment on the burden associated with requiring States to
have electronic critical incident systems and whether there is specific
functionality, such as unique identifiers, that should be required or
encouraged for such systems. As part of our proposal, we also
encouraged, but did not propose to require, States to advance the
interoperable exchange of HCBS data and support quality improvement
activities by adopting standards in 45 CFR part 170 and other relevant
standards identified in the Interoperability Standards Advisory
(ISA).\71\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\71\ Relevant standards adopted by HHS and identified in the ISA
include the USCDI (https://www.healthit.gov/isa/united-states-core-data-interoperability-uscdi), eLTSS (https://www.healthit.gov/isa/documenting-care-plans-person-centered-services), and Functional
Assessment Standardized Items (https://www.healthit.gov/isa/representing-patient-functional-status-andor-disability).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We received public comments on these proposals. Below is a summary
of the public comments we received and our responses.
Comment: Several commenters supported the proposed requirements at
Sec. 441.302(a)(6)(i)(B), that a State have an electronic critical
incident system that, at a minimum, enables electronic collection,
tracking (including of the status and resolution of investigations),
and trending of data on critical incidents. A few commenters expressed
concern about the impact of the proposed requirements on States that
already have multiple incident management systems, including electronic
systems, for different programs, administered by different operating
agencies. Commenters requested that we allow States flexibility to
design the electronic critical incident systems, which we proposed to
require at Sec. 441.302(a)(6)(i)(B), by taking into account existing
State incident management systems and processes which fit their unique
program and systems structures. A few commenters were especially
concerned about the impact on States that already enable electronic
collection of critical incidents and questioned whether a single
incident management system is required to be implemented across all
waivers and authorities, or whether a separate system can be
implemented for each waiver or program. Commenters expressed concern
about having to consolidate current incident management systems,
designed based on State infrastructure, into a single electronic
system.
Response: We acknowledge that some States currently have electronic
incident management systems in place for HCBS, and it is not our intent
for States to abandon these systems. We encourage States to build upon
existing incident management system infrastructure and protocols to
meet the electronic critical incident systems requirements we proposed
at Sec. 441.302(a)(6)(i)(B) and are finalizing in this rule.
We believe that a single electronic critical incident system may
best enable the State to prevent the occurrence of critical incidents
and protect the health and safety of beneficiaries across their
lifespan. For example, in the absence of a single electronic critical
incident system, States may have more difficulty developing and
implementing a comprehensive plan to address and resolve critical
incidents across HCBS programs and authorities. A single electronic
incident management system could also better enable the State to track
critical incidents for providers that deliver services in multiple HCBS
programs or under different HCBS authorities, identify systemic causes
of critical incidents, or detect patterns of preventable critical
incidents and, in turn, implement strategies to more effectively
prevent critical incidents.
We assume that some States may need to make at least some changes
to their existing systems to fully comply with the requirements at
Sec. 441.302(a)(6)(i)(B). We have attempted to provide the State with
as much flexibility as possible in the design of their incident
management system. As such, the State may opt to maintain multiple
systems that comply with the requirements at Sec. 441.302(a)(6).
We encourage each State to consider developing a single electronic
critical incident system for all of their HCBS programs under section
1915(c), (i), (j), and (k) authorities.
However, if a State chooses to implement multiple systems, we
strongly encourage the State to share data among those systems to
enable the development and implementation of a comprehensive plan to
address and resolve critical incidents for HCBS beneficiaries and track
and trend incidents for specific providers. We note that the State is
responsible for ensuring compliance with the requirements of applicable
Federal or State laws and regulations governing confidentiality,
privacy, and security of certain information and records.
Comment: Several commenters recommended that CMS consider providing
additional funding opportunities to assist States in the development
and implementation of electronic critical incident systems we proposed
to require at Sec. 441.302(a)(6)(i)(B).
Response: As noted in the proposed rule (88 FR 27979), in Medicaid,
enhanced Federal financial participation (FFP) is available at a 90
percent Federal Medical Assistance Percentage (FMAP) for the design,
development, or installation of improvements of mechanized claims
processing and information retrieval systems, in accordance with
applicable
[[Page 40603]]
Federal requirements.\72\ Enhanced FFP at a 75 percent FMAP is also
available for operations of such systems, in accordance with applicable
Federal requirements.\73\ However, we reiterate that receipt of these
enhanced funds is conditioned upon States meeting a series of standards
and conditions to ensure investments are efficient and effective.\74\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\72\ See section 1903(a)(3)(A)(i) and Sec. 433.15(b)(3), 80 FR
75817-75843; https://www.medicaid.gov/state-resourcecenter/faq-medicaid-and-chip-affordable-care-act-implementation/downloads/affordable-care-act-faq-enhancedfunding-for-medicaid.pdf; https://www.medicaid.gov/federal-policy-guidance/downloads/SMD16004.pdf.
\73\ See section 1903(a)(3)(B) and Sec. 433.15(b)(4).
\74\ See Sec. 433.112 (b, 80 FR 75841; https://www.ecfr.gov/current/title-42/chapter-IV/subchapter-C/part-433/subpart-C.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Comment: A few commenters supported CMS encouraging States to
advance the interoperable exchange of HCBS data by adopting standards
in the Interoperability Standards Advisory (ISA), and requested we
further promote, support, and incentivize the development of better
interoperability infrastructure to facilitate more seamless data
sharing between States, providers, and managed care plans.
Response: While we did not propose any specific requirements
related to interoperability for the electronic incident management
system, States should ensure the advancement of the interoperable
exchange of HCBS data, to further improve the identification and
reporting on the prevalence of critical incidents for HCBS
beneficiaries to support quality improvement activities that can help
promote the health and safety of HCBS beneficiaries. We clarify that,
to receive enhanced FMAP funds, the State Medicaid agency is required
at Sec. 433.112(b)(12) to ensure the alignment with, and incorporation
of, standards and implementation specifications for health information
technology adopted by the Office of the National Coordinator for Health
IT in 45 CFR part 170, subpart B, among other requirements set forth in
Sec. 433.112(b)(12). States should also consider adopting relevant
standards identified in the Interoperability Standards Advisory (ISA)
\75\ to bolster improvements in the identification and reporting on the
prevalence of critical incidents for HCBS beneficiaries and present
opportunities for the State to develop improved information systems
that can support quality improvement activities that can help promote
the health and safety of HCBS beneficiaries.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\75\ Relevant standards adopted by HHS and identified in the ISA
include the USCDI (https://www.healthit.gov/isa/united-states-core-data-interoperability-uscdi), eLTSS (https://www.healthit.gov/isa/documenting-care-plans-person-centered-services), and Functional
Assessment Standardized Items (https://www.healthit.gov/isa/representing-patient-functional-status-andor-disability).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Comment: A few commenters recommended CMS not require States to
include additional specific functionalities, including unique
identifiers.
Response: We agree with commenters to not require or encourage a
specific functionality, such as unique identifiers.
After consideration of public comments received, we are finalizing
our proposal to require at Sec. 441.302(a)(6)(i)(B) that States use an
information system, meeting certain requirements, for electronic data
collection, tracking, and trending of critical incident data, as
proposed, with minor modifications. We are finalizing Sec.
441.302(a)(6)(i)(B) with the addition of the word ``enables'' and
striking ``enables'' from Sec. 441.302(a)(6)(i)(B)(1) so that it
applies to all paragraphs in Sec. 441.302(a)(6)(i)(B). We are
finalizing minor formatting changes to conclude paragraphs
(a)(6)(i)(B)(2) and (3) with semi-colons.
d. Provider Critical Incident Reporting--During Delivery of or Failure
To Deliver Services (Sec. 441.302(a)(6)(i)(C))
At Sec. 441.302(a)(6)(i)(C), we proposed that States must require
providers to report to the State any critical incidents that occur
during the delivery of section 1915(c) waiver program services as
specified in a waiver participant's person-centered service plan, or
any critical incidents that are a result of the failure to deliver
authorized services. We believe that this proposed requirement will
help to specify provider expectations for reporting critical incidents
and to ensure that harm that occurs because of the failure to deliver
services will be appropriately identified as a critical incident.
We received public comments on these proposals. The following is a
summary of the comments we received and our responses.
Comment: A few commenters supported the requirement we proposed at
Sec. 441.302(a)(6)(i)(C) that a State must require providers to report
to the State any critical incidents that occur during the delivery of
services as specified in a beneficiary's person-centered service plan,
or any critical incidents that are a result of the failure to deliver
authorized services. One commenter expressed that requiring providers
to report on any critical incidents that occur during service delivery,
or as a result of the failure to deliver authorized services,
encourages better, more transparent reporting and provides a more
accurate reflection of the prevalence and types of critical incidents
occurring in HCBS delivery. Another commenter noted missed or delayed
services, especially a pattern of missed or delayed service
appointments, can lead to poor health outcomes for beneficiaries.
Response: We appreciate the expressions of support for our
proposal.
Comment: A few commenters raised concerns with the requirement we
proposed at Sec. 441.302(a)(6)(i)(C) that States require providers to
report to them any critical incidents that occur during the delivery of
section 1915(c) waiver program services as specified in a waiver
participant's person-centered service plan, or as a result of the
failure to deliver services authorized under a section 1915(c) waiver
program and as specified in the waiver participant's person-centered
service plan. One commenter expressed that this requirement would
require reviewers of critical incidents to draw conclusions about the
service provider's role, without taking into account a beneficiary's
right to privacy, decision making, personal preferences, and autonomy,
especially for beneficiaries who live in their own home and/or receive
care from different providers. Another commenter expressed concern
that, even after a thorough investigation, it is often impossible to
definitively substantiate certain allegations of abuse or neglect or
determine whether a negative outcome, such as a hospitalization, was
the direct result of a critical incident that occurred during the
delivery of services or as a result of the failure to deliver services
as authorized. A commenter expressed concern that the requirement for
providers to report to States any critical incidents that are a result
of the failure to deliver authorized services is too broad and could
cause critical incident reporting to be ineffective and inconsistent.
Response: We proposed requirements for States regarding the
reporting of critical incidents by providers that we believe are
important for identifying and addressing incidents of abuse, neglect,
exploitation, or other harms that occur during the course of service
delivery or as a result of the failure to deliver services. We note
that the reporting of a critical incident does not necessarily mean
that an action should be taken by the State in response to the critical
incident. Further, even if no action is warranted or it is not possible
to substantiate an allegation of abuse or neglect, it is still
important to have the critical incident reported, and investigation
conducted if appropriate, in case, for instance, a pattern later
[[Page 40604]]
emerges that indicates systemic causes of critical incidents or that
warrants action by the State.
Comment: A few commenters suggested we modify Sec. 441.302(a)(6)
to specify that critical incident records be collected in accordance
with applicable privacy laws, such as HIPAA and its implementing
regulations.
Response: In consideration of public comments received, we have not
identified a compelling reason, and therefore decline, to add a
reference to specific privacy laws to the requirements at Sec.
441.302(a)(6). We note that States have existing obligations to comply
with applicable Federal and State laws and regulations governing
confidentiality, privacy, and security of information, records, and
data obtained and maintained in a critical incident system. We note
that this regulatory requirement does not modify these obligations to
comply with applicable laws.
Comment: One commenter suggested we require States to accept
critical incident reports, and acknowledge receipt of the report,
directly from beneficiaries or other interested parties, establish a
process to accept such reports, and allow reports to be made orally or
in writing. The commenter recommended that we should require that
punitive action is neither threatened nor taken against any individual
who makes a report in good faith.
Response: We decline to modify our proposal to broaden the
requirements related to critical incidents we proposed at Sec.
441.302(a)(6)(i)(C) in this final rule. Although we proposed to only
require providers to report critical incidents at Sec.
441.301(a)(6)(i)(C), the State is not precluded from accepting the
reporting of critical incidents from others, who are not providers,
including beneficiaries or other interested parties. We believe that
our proposal that the State assure a system to identify and address
incidents of abuse, neglect, exploitation, or other harm during the
course of service delivery, or as a result of the failure to deliver
services, is in the best interest of, and necessary for, protecting the
health and welfare of beneficiaries receiving HCBS in section 1915(c)
waiver programs and under section 1915(i), (j) and (k) State plan
services.
We encourage States to include in their policies and procedures
that beneficiaries would not be prohibited from reporting critical
incidents and, in doing so, would be free from any punitive action when
reporting a critical incident to the State. We have provided States
with flexibility to establish their own policies and procedures related
to addressing punitive actions against beneficiaries involved in the
critical incident process.
After consideration of these public comments, we are finalizing our
proposal at Sec. 441.302(a)(6)(i)(C) with a modification to require
providers to report to the State, within State-established timeframes
and procedures, any critical incident that occurs during the delivery
of services authorized under section 1915(c) of the Act and as
specified in the beneficiary's (instead of waiver participant's)
person-centered service plan, or occurs as a result of the failure to
deliver services authorized under section 1915(c) of the Act and as
specified in the beneficiary's (instead of waiver participant's)
person-centered service plan. (New language identified in bold.) We are
also finalizing Sec. 441.302(a)(6)(i)(C) with minor formatting changes
to conclude Sec. 441.302(a)(6)(i)(C) with a semi-colon.
e. Data Sources To Identify Unreported Critical Incidents (Sec.
441.302(a)(6)(i)(D))
At Sec. 441.302(a)(6)(i)(D), we proposed to require that States
use claims data, Medicaid Fraud Control Unit data, and data from other
State agencies such as Adult Protective Services or Child Protective
Services to the extent permissible under applicable State law to
identify critical incidents that are unreported by providers and occur
during the delivery of section 1915(c) waiver program services, or as a
result of the failure to deliver authorized services. We believe that
such data can play an important role in identifying serious instances
of harm to waiver program participants, which may be unreported by a
provider, such as a death that occurs as a result of choking of an
individual with a developmental disability residing in a group home, or
a burn that occurs because a provider failed to appropriately supervise
someone with dementia and that results in an emergency department
visit.
We solicited comment on whether States should be required to use
these data sources to identify unreported critical incidents, and
whether there are other specific data sources that States should be
required to use to identify unreported critical incidents.
We received public comments on these proposals. The following is a
summary of the comments we received and our responses.
Comment: Several commenters expressed support for our proposal at
Sec. 441.302(a)(6)(i)(D). One commenter noted that these data sources
could help establish pathways at the beneficiary and systems levels for
reporting, tracking, and addressing issues with person-centered
planning and provider noncompliance, and they will also advance efforts
to ensure States' ongoing compliance with the HCBS Settings Rule.
Another commenter approved of the requirement that States use data
sources to identify unreported critical incidents, including claims
data, Medicaid Fraud Control Unit data, and data from other State
agencies such as Adult Protective Services or Child Protective Services
to the extent permissible under applicable State law, expressing that
implementation of this requirement could result in a more accurate
reflection of the prevalence and types of critical incidents occurring
in HCBS delivery, in working with managed care plans and providers.
Response: We appreciate the support for our proposal.
Comment: Two commenters requested that collaboration with police
and law enforcement be included in the data sources under Sec.
441.302(a)(6)(i)(D). One commenter noted CMS should require providers
to report to law enforcement in a timely manner any reasonable
suspicion of a crime committed against a beneficiary receiving HCBS.
Another commenter recommended CMS require providers to report suspicion
of a crime to law enforcement. A commenter also questioned whether an
investigative agency includes law enforcement. Additionally, a few
commenters also recommended that collaboration with the designated
Protection & Advocacy (P&A) system for the State be included in the
data sources under Sec. 441.302(a)(6)(i)(D), citing that P&A systems
have the authority to investigate incidents of abuse and neglect of
individuals with developmental disabilities if the incidents are
reported to the system or if there is probable cause to believe that
the incidents occurred.
Response: While we intend that Sec. 441.302(a)(6)(i)(D)
establishes the minimum requirements for States to use certain data
sources to detect unreported critical incidents, States retain
flexibility to use additional data sources, such as police and law
enforcement data and P&A systems, to identify critical incidents that
are unreported by providers. However, we decline to include additional
data sources in the regulation at this time. We are concerned that it
would be difficult for States to use non-Medicaid data sources, such as
data from P&A systems and law enforcement records, to effectively
identify unreported critical incidents for Medicaid beneficiaries and
that such requirements would be administratively and operationally
[[Page 40605]]
burdensome for States to implement. At Sec. 441.302(a)(6)(i)(D), we
proposed to require that States use claims data, Medicaid Fraud Control
Unit data, and data from other State agencies to the extent permissible
under applicable State law to identify critical incidents that are
unreported by providers and occur during the delivery of section
1915(c) waiver program services, or as a result of the failure to
deliver authorized services, identifying Adult Protective Services or
Child Protective Services as examples of State agencies. We encourage
the State to include additional State agency data sources to detect
unreported critical incidents as defined at Sec. 441.302(a)(6)(i)(D)
as appropriate.
Comment: A couple commenters stated that CMS should direct States
to take definitive enforcement actions to address provider compliance
with the incident management requirements. One commenter proposed to
penalize HCBS providers that do not timely report critical incidents by
imposing monetary penalties or suspension from the Medicaid program.
Another commenter recommended that we allow States to implement an
escalation of remedies to address provider reporting, up to and
including a separate investigation with sanctions, if necessary.
Response: We reiterate that States already have broad authority to
create penalties, whether monetary or non-monetary, for providers that
have violated their obligations as set forth by the State Medicaid
program.
After consideration of public comments we received, we are
finalizing our proposal at Sec. 441.302(a)(6)(i)(D), with a
modification to require providers to report to the State, within State-
established timeframes and procedures, any critical incident that
occurs during the delivery of services authorized under section 1915(c)
of the Act and as specified in the beneficiary's (instead of waiver
participant's) person-centered service plan, or occurs as a result of
the failure to deliver services authorized under section 1915(c) of the
Act and as specified in the beneficiary's (instead of waiver
participant's) person-centered service plan. (New language identified
in bold.) We are also finalizing Sec. 441.302(a)(6)(i)(D) with minor
formatting changes to conclude Sec. 441.302(a)(6)(i)(D) with a semi-
colon.
f. Critical Incident Data Sharing (Sec. 441.302(a)(6)(i)(E))
At Sec. 441.302(a)(6)(i)(E), we proposed States share information,
consistent with the regulations in 42 CFR part 431, subpart F on the
status and resolution of investigations. We set the expectation that
data sharing could be accomplished through the use of information
sharing agreements with other entities in the State responsible for
investigating critical incidents if the State refers critical incidents
to other entities for investigation.
We received public comments on these proposals. The following is a
summary of the comments we received and our responses.
Comment: Several commenters recommended CMS provide technical
assistance related to the data sharing requirements. Commenters noted
data sharing barriers in and between the State, agencies, and divisions
within in the same agency, influencing successful implementation of the
proposed requirements at Sec. 441.302(a)(6)(i)(G).
Response: We appreciate these comments identifying the need for
technical assistance related to data and information sharing
agreements. We will take this feedback into consideration when
developing resources for States on the incident management system
requirements.
Further, we generally note that the State is responsible for
ensuring its critical incident system(s) comply with all applicable
Federal and State laws and regulations governing confidentiality,
privacy, and security of records obtained, maintained, and disclosed
via this incident management system.
After consideration of public comments, we are finalizing the
proposed Sec. 441.302(a)(6)(i)(E) as proposed, with a minor technical
modification to clarify that mention of critical incident in Sec.
441.302(a)(6)(i)(E) refers to critical incidents as defined in
paragraph (a)(6)(i)(A) of this section (meaning Sec. 441.302).
g. Separate Investigation of Critical Incidents (Sec.
441.302(a)(6)(i)(F))
At Sec. 441.302(a)(6)(i)(F), we proposed to require the State be
required to separately investigate critical incidents if the
investigative agency fails to report the resolution of an investigation
within State-specified timeframes. These proposed requirements are
intended to ensure that the failure to effectively share information
between State agencies or other entities in the State responsible for
investigating incidents does not impede a State's ability to
effectively identify, report, triage, investigate, resolve, track, and
trend critical incidents, particularly where there could be evidence of
serious harm or a pattern of harm to a section 1915(c) waiver program
participant for which a provider is responsible.
We received public comments on these proposals. The following is a
summary of the comments we received and our responses.
Comment: Many commenters expressed serious concerns about the
requirements we proposed at Sec. 441.302(a)(6)(i)(F), that the State
is required to separately investigate critical incidents if the
investigative agency fails to report the resolution of an investigation
within State-specified timeframes. Commenters recognized the importance
of cross-agency collaboration but identified that the timeframes for
investigations by investigative agencies, such as Adult Protective
Services and Child Protective Services, can be prolonged. Further,
opening a separate concurrent investigation at the State level, if the
investigative agency fails to report the resolution of an investigation
within State-specified timelines, could compromise the integrity of
both investigations. Some commenters questioned the feasibility of the
requirements at Sec. 441.302(a)(6)(i)(F) due to State statutory
provisions around investigative agency responsibilities and allowable
data sharing.
Response: These proposed requirements are intended to ensure that
the failure to effectively share information between State agencies or
other entities in the State responsible for investigating incidents
does not impede a State Medicaid agency's ability to effectively
identify, report, triage, investigate, resolve, track, and trend
critical incidents to protect the health and welfare of HCBS
beneficiaries. We believe that requiring the State to separately
investigate critical incidents if the investigative agency fails to
report the resolution of an investigation within State-specified
timeframes will strengthen the ability of the State Medicaid agency to
act quickly and/or separately if investigations by Adult Protective
Services, Child Protective Services, or other State agencies are taking
longer to address and resolve. Further, it will ensure that the State
has the information it needs to take action to protect beneficiary
health and safety if a provider is responsible (intentionally or
unintentionally) for causing harm to beneficiaries or putting
beneficiaries at risk of harm. Additionally, we note that the State
Medicaid agency may have the authority to take certain actions against
the provider (such as suspend their Medicaid enrollment) that other
State agencies, such as Adult Protective
[[Page 40606]]
Services or Child Protective Services, are unable to take.
We have provided States with flexibility to establish State-
specified timelines to separately investigate critical incidents if the
investigative agency fails to report the resolution of an investigation
and encourage States to take into account specific nuances that may
impact the timelines.
After consideration of public comments, we are finalizing the
proposed Sec. 441.302(a)(6)(i)(F) as proposed.
h. Reporting (Sec. Sec. 441.302(a)(6)(i)(G) and 441.302(a)(6)(ii))
Section 1902(a)(6) of the Act requires State Medicaid agencies to
make such reports, in such form and containing such information, as the
Secretary may from time to time require, and to comply with such
provisions as the Secretary may from time to time find necessary to
assure the correctness and verification of such reports. Under our
authority at section 1902(a)(6) of the Act, we proposed to modernize
the health and welfare reporting by requiring all States to report on
the same Federally prescribed quality measures as opposed to the State-
developed measures, which naturally vary State by State. Specifically,
at Sec. 441.302(a)(6)(i)(G), we proposed to require that States meet
the reporting requirements at Sec. 441.311(b)(1) related to the
performance of their incident management systems. We discuss these
reporting requirements in our discussion of proposed Sec.
441.311(b)(1). Further, under our authority at sections 1915(c)(2)(A)
and 1902(a)(19) of the Act, we proposed to codify a minimum performance
level to demonstrate that States meet the requirements at Sec.
441.302(a)(6). Specifically, at Sec. 441.302(a)(6)(ii), we proposed to
require that States demonstrate that: an investigation was initiated,
within State-specified timeframes, for no less than 90 percent of
critical incidents; an investigation was completed and the resolution
of the investigation was determined, within State-specified timeframes,
for no less than 90 percent of critical incidents; and corrective
action was completed, within State-specified timeframes, for no less
than 90 percent of critical incidents that require corrective action.
This minimum performance level strengthens health and welfare reporting
requirements while taking into account that there may be legitimate
reasons for delays in investigating and addressing critical incidents.
In the proposed rule (88 FR 27980), we considered whether to allow
good cause exceptions to the minimum performance level in the event of
a natural disaster, public health emergency, or other event that would
negatively impact a State's ability to achieve a minimum 90 percent. We
opted not to propose good cause exceptions because the minimum 90
percent performance level accounts for various scenarios that might
impact a State's ability to achieve these performance levels, and there
are existing disaster authorities that States could utilize to request
a waiver of these requirements in the event of a public health
emergency or a disaster.
We received public comments on these proposals. The following is a
summary of the comments we received and our responses.
Comment: A couple of commenters expressed concern about
implementing the performance levels at the 90 percent threshold at
Sec. 441.302(a)(6)(ii). Alternatively, one commenter recommended the
performance level should instead be 100 percent to protect the health
and welfare of HCBS beneficiaries, since the minimum performance level
to demonstrate that States meet the requirements at Sec. 441.302(a)(6)
should gauge State performance by how efficiently they conduct critical
incident investigations.
Response: We believe the performance levels at the 90 percent
threshold sets a high, but achievable standard, for complying with the
requirements at Sec. 441.302(a)(6)(ii). Our intention in proposing
minimum performance requirements at Sec. 441.302(a)(6)(ii) was to
provide a standard by which we could oversee, and hold States
accountable, for complying with the requirements for an incident
management system that we are finalizing at Sec. 441.302(a)(6).
Further it, was intended to strengthen the critical incident
requirements while also recognizing that there may be legitimate
reasons why critical incident processes occasionally are not completed
timely in all instances. However, it is our expectation that States
make reasonable efforts to ensure every critical incident is
investigated, resolved, and (if necessary) subject to corrective action
within State-specified timeframes.
Comment: A few commenters suggested CMS include a good-cause
exception to the incident management performance level for certain
instances that fall outside of the specified performance standards for
appropriate reasons, such as for resource challenges or when the
investigating agency requests that the State refrain from contact due
to an ongoing and active investigation. Alternatively, a few commenters
supported the approach in the proposed rule to not allow good-cause
exceptions to the incident management performance level, observing that
the 90 percent minimum performance level already gives States leeway
for unexpected occurrences.
Response: We reiterate our belief that the 90 percent minimum
performance level sets a high, but achievable standard for States'
incident management systems. We underscore that the minimum 90 percent
performance level accounts for various scenarios that might impact the
State's ability to achieve these performance levels, and there are
existing disaster authorities that States could utilize to request a
waiver of these requirements in the event of a public health emergency
or a disaster. The 90 percent minimum performance level is intended to
strengthen incident management system requirements. We also recognize
that there may be legitimate reasons why incident management processes
occasionally are not completed timely in all instances. We reiterate
that our expectation is that States make reasonable efforts to ensure
every critical incident is investigated, resolved, and (if necessary)
subject to corrective action within State-specified timeframes.
After consideration of public comments, we are finalizing our
proposals at Sec. Sec. 441.302(a)(6)(i)(G) and 441.302(a)(6)(ii) as
proposed.
i. Applicability Date
We proposed at Sec. 441.302(a)(6)(iii) to provide States with 3
years to implement these requirements in FFS delivery systems following
the effective date of the final rule. For States with managed care
delivery systems under the authority of sections 1915(a), 1915(b),
1932(a), or 1115(a) of the Act and that include HCBS in the MCO's,
PIHP's, or PAHP's contract, we proposed to provide States until the
first rating period that begins on or after 3 years after the effective
date of the final rule to implement these requirements.
We received public comments on these proposals. The following is a
summary of the comments we received and our responses.
Comment: Several commenters expressed concerns about the burden
they believe will be associated with the proposed provision to
implement the incident management requirements at Sec. 441.302(a)(6)
within 3 years following the effective date of the final rule.
Commenters stated that implementation of the incident management
requirements as proposed at Sec. 441.302(a)(6)(i)(B) could require
[[Page 40607]]
potential State statute and regulatory amendments, lead time for
securing additional technology resources, and operational and workflow
changes. Commenters requested CMS consider alternative effective dates
for the incident management system ranging from 4 to 7 years, with the
most frequent suggestions at 4 to 5 years to address these concerns.
Response: We believe that 3 years for States to comply with the
requirements at Sec. 441.302(a)(6) is realistic and achievable for
most of the incident management provisions. However, we agree that the
proposed 3-year implementation timeframe for States to comply with the
electronic incident management requirements at Sec.
441.302(a)(6)(i)(B) could create hardships for States. We agree that
States and managed care plans may require a timeframe longer than 3
years to address funding needs, policy changes, IT procurements, and
other systems changes, necessary to implement an electronic incident
management system as required at Sec. 441.302(a)(6)(i)(B), which may
necessitate 5 years.
After consideration of public comments, we are finalizing Sec.
441.302(a)(6)(iii) with minor modifications to correct erroneous uses
of the word ``effective.'' We are retitling the requirement at Sec.
441.302(a)(6)(iii) as Applicability date (rather than Effective date).
We are also modifying the applicability date to require that States
must comply with the requirements in paragraph (a)(6) beginning 3 years
from the effective date of this final rule, except for the requirement
at paragraph (a)(6)(B) of this section, with which the State must
comply beginning 5 years from the effective date of the final rule. In
addition, we are making a technical correction to clarify that the
applicability dates in Sec. 441.302(a)(6)(iii) apply only to the
requirements in Sec. 441.302(a)(6). Additionally, we are also
finalizing with modification the language pertaining to managed care
delivery systems to improve accuracy and alignment with common phrasing
in managed care contracting policy at Sec. 441.302(a)(6)(iii).
j. Application to Other Authorities
At Sec. 441.302(a)(6)(iii), we proposed to apply these
requirements to services delivered under FFS or managed care delivery
systems. Section 2402(a)(3)(A) of the Affordable Care Act requires
States to improve coordination among, and the regulation of, all
providers of Federally and State-funded HCBS programs to achieve a more
consistent administration of policies and procedures across HCBS
programs. In the context of Medicaid coverage of HCBS, it should not
matter whether the services are covered directly on an FFS basis or by
a managed care plan to its enrollees. The requirement for consistent
administration should require consistency between these two modes of
service delivery. We proposed that a State must ensure compliance with
the requirements in Sec. 441.302(a)(6) with respect to HCBS delivered
both under FFS and managed care delivery systems.
Section 2402(a)(3)(A) of the Affordable Care Act requires States to
improve coordination among, and the regulation of, all providers of
Federally and State-funded HCBS programs to achieve a more consistent
administration of policies and procedures across HCBS programs. In
accordance with the requirement of section 2402(a)(3)(A) of the
Affordable Care Act for States to achieve a more consistent
administration of policies and procedures across HCBS programs and
because of the importance of assuring health and welfare for other HCBS
State plan options, we proposed to include the incident management
requirements at Sec. 441.302(a)(6) within the applicable regulatory
sections, including section 1915(j), (k), and (i) State plan services
at Sec. Sec. 441.464(e), 441.570(e), and 441.745(a)(1)(v),
respectively. We note that a conforming reference to Sec.
441.745(b)(1)(i), although not discussed in preamble of the proposed
rule, was included in the proposed rule (88 FR 28086); the reference
supports the application of incident management requirements to section
1915(i) services. Consistent with our proposal for section 1915(c)
waivers, we based on our authority under section 1902(a)(19) of the Act
to assure that there are safeguards for beneficiaries. We believe the
same arguments for these requirements for section 1915(c) waivers are
equally applicable for these other HCBS authorities.
We received public comments on these proposals. The following is a
summary of the comments we received and our responses.
Comment: Several commenters supported the requirements at Sec.
441.302(a)(6)(iii), expressing that States must ensure compliance with
the requirements in Sec. 441.302(a)(6) with respect to HCBS delivered
both in FFS and managed care delivery systems, noting there is no
meaningful difference between abuse, neglect, or exploitation
perpetrated by a provider paid through a managed care plan or by a
provider paid through a FFS delivery system. One commenter recommended
we assist States in developing instructions for State incident
management systems for work with Medicaid managed care plans and
contracted providers in implementing the requirements in Sec.
441.302(a)(6).
Response: We appreciate the support for our proposal. We will take
this feedback into consideration when developing technical assistance
and other resources for States on the incident management system
requirements.
After consideration of public comments received, we are finalizing
the proposal at Sec. 441.302(a)(6)(iii) for HCBS delivered under both
FFS and managed care delivery systems.
Comment: Several commenters supported the proposal to apply the
incident management system requirements at Sec. 441.302(a)(6) to
sections 1915(i), (j) and (k) authorities. Commenters expressed that
equally applicable requirements for States across waiver authorities
can ensure better access, equity, quality, and reporting for HCBS
beneficiaries.
Response: We appreciate the support for our proposal.
Comment: A few commenters responded to our request for comment on
whether we should establish similar health and welfare requirements for
section 1905(a) State plan personal care, home health, and case
management services. Several commenters supported the proposal not to
extend the incident management requirements at Sec. 441.302(a)(6) to
section 1905(a) services and expressed that applying these requirements
to State plan benefits would pose critical challenges for State
Medicaid and other operating agencies, due to varying levels of HCBS
provided and different data reporting infrastructure States have for
1905(a) services. A few commenters recommended that CMS apply the
incident management system requirements to mental health rehabilitative
services delivered under section 1905(a) State plan authority. A couple
of commenters suggested that mental health rehabilitative services are
considered home- and community-based services under the broader
definition enacted by Congress in the American Rescue Plan Act of 2021.
They also indicated that many Medicaid beneficiaries with mental health
disorders and disabilities receiving services under the section 1905(a)
authority would benefit from the beneficiary protections afforded
through the incident management system requirements at Sec.
441.302(a)(6).
[[Page 40608]]
Response: At this time, we are not mandating inclusion of section
1905(a) services in the State requirements for incident management
systems, due to the statutory and regulatory differences between
services authorized under sections 1905(a) and 1915 of the Act. That
said, we are not persuaded by the argument that including section
1905(a) services would simply be too much work, as we do believe it is
critical that Medicaid beneficiaries have protections for freedom from
harm. We acknowledge that many beneficiaries, particularly those
receiving mental health services, are served by section 1905(a)
services, and encourage States to consider development of critical
incident processes to address protections for beneficiaries from harm
or events that place a beneficiary at risk of harm.
After consideration of public comments, we are finalizing
application of the requirements at Sec. 441.302(a)(6) to other HCBS
program authorities within the applicable regulatory sections,
including section 1915(j), (k), and (i) State plan services. We are
finalizing the requirements at Sec. Sec. 441.464(e), 441.570(e), and
441.745(a)(1)(v) and (b)(1)(i) as proposed, with minor modifications to
clarify that the references to section 1915(c) of the Act are instead
references to section 1915(j), 1915(k), and 1915(i) of the Act,
respectively.
k. Summary of Finalized Requirements
After consideration of the public comments, we are finalizing the
requirements at Sec. Sec. 441.302(a)(6), as follows:
We are finalizing Sec. 441.302(a)(6)(i)(A) as proposed
with the following minor modifications: a minor formatting modification
at Sec. 441.302(a)(6)(i)(A)(3) to correct an improper italicization; a
minor technical modification at Sec. 441.302(a)(6)(i)(A)(5) to correct
missing punctuation; and a minor formatting modification to conclude
Sec. 441.302(a)(6)(i)(A)(6) with a semi-colon.
We are finalizing Sec. 441.302(a)(6)(i)(B) as proposed
with the following minor modifications: adding the word ``Enables'' to
Sec. 441.302(a)(6)(i)(B) and striking it from Sec.
441.302(a)(6)(i)(B)(1); and minor formatting modifications to conclude
Sec. 441.302(a)(6)(i)(B)(2) and (3) with a semi-colon.
We are finalizing the requirements at Sec.
441.302(a)(6)(i)(C) with a modification to require providers to report
to the State, within State-established timeframes and procedures, any
critical incident that occurs during the delivery of services
authorized under section 1915(c) of the Act and as specified in the
beneficiary's person-centered service plan, or occurs as a result of
the failure to deliver services authorized under section 1915(c) of the
Act and as specified in the beneficiary's person-centered service plan.
We are also finalizing Sec. 441.302(a)(6)(i)(C) with a minor
formatting change so that it concludes with a semi-colon.
We are finalizing the requirements at Sec.
441.302(a)(6)(i)(D, with a modification to require providers to report
to the State, within State-established timeframes and procedures, any
critical incident that occurs during the delivery of services
authorized under section 1915(c) of the Act and as specified in the
beneficiary's person-centered service plan, or occurs as a result of
the failure to deliver services authorized under section 1915(c) of the
Act and as specified in the beneficiary's person-centered service plan.
We are also finalizing Sec. 441.302(a)(6)(i)(D) with a minor
formatting change so that it concludes with a semi-colon.
We are finalizing the requirement at Sec.
441.302(a)(6)(i)(E) with a minor formatting modification to change a
reference to Sec. 441.302(a)(6)(i)(A) to paragraph (a)(6)(i)(A).
We are finalizing the requirements at Sec.
441.302(a)(6)(i)(F) and (G) and (a)(6)(ii) as proposed.
We are finalizing the requirement at Sec.
441.302(a)(6)(iii) with modifications to specify that States must
comply with the requirements in paragraph (a)(6) beginning 3 years from
the effective date of this final rule; except for the requirement at
paragraph (a)(6)(B) of this section, with which the State must comply
beginning 5 years after the date that is the effective date of this
final rule; and in the case of the State that implements a managed care
delivery system under the authority of sections 1915(a), 1915(b),
1932(a), or 1115(a) of the Act and includes HCBS in the MCO's, PIHP's,
or PAHP's contract, the first rating period for contracts with the MCO,
PIHP, or PAHP beginning on or after 3 years from the effective date of
this final rule, except for the requirement at paragraph (a)(6)(B) of
this section, with which the first rating period for contracts with the
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP beginning on or after 5 years from the effective
date of this final rule.
We are finalizing the requirements at Sec. Sec.
441.464(e), 441.570(e), and 441.745(a)(1)(v) and (b)(1)(i) with minor
modifications to clarify that the references to section 1915(c) of the
Act are instead references to section 1915(j), 1915(k), and 1915(i) of
the Act, respectively.
4. Reporting (Sec. 441.302(h))
As discussed earlier in section II.B.1. of this rule, section
2402(a)(3)(A) of the Affordable Care Act requires HHS to promulgate
regulations to ensure that States develop HCBS systems that are
designed to improve coordination among, and the regulation of, all
providers of Federally and State-funded HCBS programs to achieve a more
consistent administration of policies and procedures across HCBS
programs. We also believe that standardizing reporting across HCBS
authorities will streamline and simplify reporting for providers,
improve States' and CMS's ability to assess HCBS quality and
performance, and better enable States to improve the quality of HCBS
programs through the availability of comparative data. Further, section
1902(a)(6) of the Act requires State Medicaid agencies to make such
reports, in such form and containing such information, as the Secretary
may from time to time require, and to comply with such provisions as
the Secretary may from time to time find necessary to assure the
correctness and verification of such reports.
To avoid duplicative or conflicting reporting requirements at Sec.
441.302(h), we proposed to amend Sec. 441.302(h) by removing the
following language: ``annually''; ``The information must be consistent
with a data collection plan designed by CMS and must address the
waiver's impact on -''; and by removing paragraphs (1) and (2) under
Sec. 441.302(h). Further, we proposed to add ``, including the data
and information as required in Sec. 441.311'' at the end of the new
amended text, ``Assurance that the agency will provide CMS with
information on the waiver's impact.'' By making these changes, we
proposed to consolidate reporting expectations in one new section at
proposed Sec. 441.311, described in section II.B.7. of the proposed
rule, under our authority at section 1902(a)(6) of the Act and section
2402(a)(3)(A) of the Affordable Care Act. As noted earlier in section
II.B.1. of the proposed rule, this reporting will supersede existing
reporting for section 1915(c) waivers and standardize reporting across
section 1915 HCBS authorities.
We did not receive specific comments on this proposal.
We are finalizing our proposed amendment of Sec. 441.302(h) as
proposed.
We did receive comments on proposed Sec. 441.311, described in
section II.B.7. of this rule, which establishes a new Reporting
Requirements section. Comments on this proposal and our
[[Page 40609]]
responses are summarized in section II.B.7. of this final rule.
5. HCBS Payment Adequacy (Sec. Sec. 441.302(k), 441.464(f),
441.570(f), 441.745(a)(1)(vi))
Section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act requires State Medicaid programs
to ensure that payments to providers are consistent with efficiency,
economy, and quality of care and are sufficient to enlist enough
providers so that care and services are available to beneficiaries at
least to the extent as to the general population in the same geographic
area. Access to most HCBS generally requires hands-on and in-person
services to be delivered by direct care workers. Direct care workers
are referred to by various names, such as direct support professionals,
personal care attendants, and home health aides, within and across
States. They perform a variety of roles, including nursing services,
assistance with activities of daily living (such as mobility, personal
hygiene, and eating) and instrumental activities of daily living (such
as cooking, grocery shopping, and managing finances), behavioral
supports, employment supports, and other services to promote community
integration for older adults and people with disabilities. We discuss
the definition of direct care workers in more detail below in the
context of our proposed definition of direct care workers.
Direct care workers typically earn low wages and receive limited
benefits 76 77 78 contributing to a shortage of direct care
workers and high rates of turnover in this workforce, which can limit
access to and impact the quality of HCBS. Workforce shortages can also
reduce the cost-effectiveness of services for State Medicaid agencies
that take into account the actual cost of delivering services when
determining Medicaid payment rates, such as by increasing the reliance
on overtime and temporary staff, which have higher hourly costs than
non-overtime wages paid to permanent staff. Further, an insufficient
supply of HCBS providers can prevent individuals from transitioning
from institutions to home and community-based settings and from
receiving HCBS that can prevent institutionalization. HCBS is, on
average, less costly than institutional services,79 80 and
most older adults and people with disabilities prefer to live in the
community. Accordingly, limits on the availability of HCBS lessen the
ability for State Medicaid programs to deliver LTSS in a cost-
effective, beneficiary friendly manner.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\76\ MACPAC Issue Brief. State Efforts to Address Medicaid Home-
and Community-Based Services Workforce Shortages. March 2022.
Accessed at https://www.macpac.gov/wp-content/uploads/2022/03/MACPAC-brief-on-HCBS-workforce.pdf.
\77\ Campbell, S., A. Del Rio Drake, R. Espinoza, K. Scales.
2021. Caring for the future: The power and potential of America's
direct care workforce. Bronx, NY: PHI https://phinational.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/01/Caring-for-the-Future-2021-PHI.pdf.
\78\ We recognize that there are workforce shortages that may
impact access to other Medicaid-covered services aside from HCBS. We
are focusing in this rule on addressing workforce shortages in HCBS
and continue to assess the feasibility and potential impact of other
actions to address workforce shortages in other parts of the health
care sector.
\79\ Reaves, E.L., & Musumeci, M.B. December 15, 2015. Medicaid
and Long-Term Services and Supports: A Primer. Kaiser Family
Foundation. Accessed at https://www.kff.org/medicaid/report/medicaid-and-long-term-services-and-supports-a-primer/.
\80\ Kim, M-Y, Weizenegger, E., & Wysocki, A. July 22, 2022.
Medicaid Beneficiaries Who Use Long-Term Services and Supports:
2019. Chicago, IL: Mathematica. Accessed at https://www.medicaid.gov/medicaid/long-term-services-supports/downloads/ltss-user-brief-2019.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Shortages of direct care workers and high rates of turnover also
reduce the quality of HCBS. For instance, workforce shortages can
prevent individuals from receiving needed services and, in turn, lead
to poorer outcomes for people who need HCBS. Insufficient staffing can
also make it difficult for providers to achieve quality standards.\81\
High rates of turnover can reduce quality of care,\82\ including
through the loss of experienced and qualified workers and by reducing
continuity of care for people receiving HCBS,\83\ which is associated
with the reduced likelihood of improvement in function among people
receiving home health aide services.\84\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\81\ American Network of Community Options and Resources
(ANCOR). 2021. The state of America's direct support workforce 2021.
Alexandria, VA: ANCOR. Accessed at https://www.ancor.org/sites/default/files/the_state_of_americas_direct_support_workforce_crisis_2021.pdf.
\82\ Newcomer R, Kang T, Faucett J . Consumer-directed personal
care: comparing aged and non-aged adult recipient health-related
outcomes among those with paid family versus non-relative providers.
Home Health Care Serv Q. 2011;30(4):178- 97.
\83\ Campbell, S., A. Del Rio Drake, R. Espinoza, K. Scales.
2021. Caring for the future: The power and potential of America's
direct care workforce. Bronx, NY: PHI https://phinational.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/01/Caring-for-the-Future-2021-PHI.pdf.
\84\ Russell D, Rosati RJ, Peng TR, Barr[oacute]n Y,
Andreopoulos E . Continuity in the provider of home health aide
services and the likelihood of patient improvement in activities of
daily living. Home Health Care Manage Pract. 2013;25(1):6-12.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
While workforce shortages have existed for years, the COVID-19
pandemic exacerbated the problem, leading to higher rates of direct
care worker turnover (for instance, due to higher rates of worker-
reported stress), an inability of some direct care workers to return to
their positions prior to the pandemic (for instance, due to difficulty
accessing child care or concerns about contracting COVID-19 for people
with higher risk of severe illness), workforce shortages across the
health care sector, and wage increases in retail and other jobs that
tend to draw from the same pool of workers.85 86 87 Further,
demand for direct care workers is expected to continue rising due to
the growing needs of the aging population, the changing ability of
aging caregivers to provide supports, the increased provision of
services in the most integrated community setting rather than
institutional services, and a decline in the number of younger workers
available to provide services.88 89 90
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\85\ MACPAC Issue Brief. State Efforts to Address Medicaid Home-
and Community-Based Services Workforce Shortages. March 2022.
Accessed at https://www.macpac.gov/wp-content/uploads/2022/03/MACPAC-brief-on-HCBS-workforce.pdf.
\86\ Campbell, S., A. Del Rio Drake, R. Espinoza, K. Scales.
2021. Caring for the future: The power and potential of America's
direct care workforce. Bronx, NY: PHI https://phinational.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/01/Caring-for-the-Future-2021-PHI.pdf.
\87\ American Network of Community Options and Resources
(ANCOR). 2021. The state of America's direct support workforce 2021.
Alexandria, VA: ANCOR. Accessed at https://www.ancor.org/sites/default/files/the_state_of_americas_direct_support_workforce_crisis_2021.pdf.
\88\ MACPAC Issue Brief. State Efforts to Address Medicaid Home-
and Community-Based Services Workforce Shortages. March 2022.
Accessed at https://www.macpac.gov/wp-content/uploads/2022/03/MACPAC-brief-on-HCBS-workforce.pdf.
\89\ Campbell, S., A. Del Rio Drake, R. Espinoza, K. Scales.
2021. Caring for the future: The power and potential of America's
direct care workforce. Bronx, NY: PHI https://phinational.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/01/Caring-for-the-Future-2021-PHI.pdf.
\90\ Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services. November 2020.
Long-Term Services and Supports Rebalancing Toolkit. Accessed at
https://www.medicaid.gov/medicaid/long-term-services-supports/downloads/ltss-rebalancing-toolkit.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Section 2402(a) of the Affordable Care Act requires the Secretary
of HHS to ensure that all States receiving Federal funds for HCBS,
including Medicaid, develop HCBS systems that are responsive to the
needs and choices of beneficiaries receiving HCBS, maximize
independence and self-direction, provide coordination for and support
each person's full engagement in community life, and achieve a more
consistent and coordinated approach to the administration of policies
and procedures across public programs providing HCBS.\91\ In
particular, section 2402(a)(1) of the Affordable Care Act requires
States to allocate resources for
[[Page 40610]]
services in a manner that is responsive to the changing needs and
choices of beneficiaries receiving HCBS, while section
2402(a)(3)(B)(iii) of the Affordable Care Act requires States to
oversee and monitor HCBS system functions to assure a sufficient number
of qualified direct care workers to provide self-directed personal
assistance services. To comply with sections 2402(a)(1) and
2402(a)(3)(B)(iii) of the Affordable Care Act, States must have a
sufficient direct care workforce to be able to deliver services that
are responsive to the changing needs and choices of beneficiaries, and,
specifically, a sufficient number of qualified direct care workers to
provide self-directed personal assistance services. We proposed
requirements across section 1915(c), (i), (j) and (k) HCBS programs to
further this outcome.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\91\ Section 2402(a) of the Affordable Care Act--Guidance for
Implementing Standards for Person-Centered Planning and Self-
Direction in Home and Community-Based Services Programs. Accessed at
https://acl.gov/sites/default/files/news%202016-10/2402-a-Guidance.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
a. Assurance of Sufficient Rates (Sec. 441.302(k))
Consistent with section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act and sections
2402(a)(1) and 2402(a)(3)(B)(iii) of the Affordable Care Act, we
proposed to require at Sec. 441.302(k) that State Medicaid agencies
provide assurance that payment rates for certain HCBS authorized under
section 1915(c) of the Act are sufficient to ensure a sufficient direct
care workforce (defined and explained later in this section of the
rule) to meet the needs of beneficiaries and provide access to services
in accordance with the amount, duration, and scope specified in the
person-centered service plan, as required under Sec. 441.301(c)(2). We
believe that this proposed requirement supports the economy,
efficiency, and quality of HCBS authorized under section 1915(c) of the
Act, by ensuring that a sufficient portion of State FFS and managed
care payments for HCBS go directly to compensation of the direct care
workforce.
We received public comments on these proposals. The following is a
summary of the comments we received and our responses.
Comment: A significant number of commenters raised the issue of
State Medicaid rates for homemaker, home health aide, and personal care
services. Many commenters suggested that requiring that a sufficient
portion, or even requiring a specific percent, of Medicaid payments be
spent on compensation for direct care workers will not address rate
sufficiency, which they regard as the underlying cause of low wages for
direct care workers. Even commenters who were supportive of Sec.
441.302(k) generally or the proposed minimum performance level at Sec.
441.302(k)(3) (discussed further below) acknowledged that the policies
may be more successful if they coincided with rate increases to ensure
that providers' service operations remain fully supported. Many
commenters recommended that as an alternative to (or in addition to)
this proposal, we create requirements that States regularly review and
update or increase their rates.
Several commenters were concerned that wages for direct care
workers will not increase if the underlying Medicaid payment rates for
the services remain low and are not increased. However, one commenter
suggested that if a State's Medicaid rates are low, this places even
greater importance on ensuring that as much of the rate as possible is
going to compensation for direct care workers.
A few commenters expressed the belief that the accountability and
transparency created by the proposal, in addition to the associated
reporting requirement we proposed at Sec. 441.311(e) (discussed
further in section II.B.7. of this rule), would encourage providers to
pass more of their Medicaid payments along to direct care worker wages.
A few commenters offered anecdotal observations that, when their State
allocated additional funds to HCBS providers, the commenters believed
the increased funding was not passed along to direct care worker wages.
One commenter noted that a permanent payment adequacy requirement is
preferable to the temporary pass-through policies that have been
enacted for one-time rate increases, because a permanent requirement
would not be dependent on rate increases.
Response: While section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act does not provide
us with authority to require specific payment rates or rate-setting
methodologies, section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act does provide us with
authority to oversee that States assure that payments are consistent
with efficiency, economy, and quality of care and are sufficient to
enlist enough providers so that care and services are available under
the plan, at least to the extent that such care and services are
available to the general population in the geographic area. We did not
propose to establish, and are not finalizing, specific payment rates
for HCBS under the Medicaid program. Instead, we reiterate that under
section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act payments must be sufficient to
recruit and retain enough providers to ensure care and services are
available to beneficiaries; we proposed to implement this requirement
by specifying a percentage of Medicaid payments be spent on
compensation to direct care workers. We believe this policy will also
promote, and be consistent with, economy, efficiency, and quality of
care.
Broadly speaking, we also do not believe that simply increasing
rates alone, without setting guardrails for how the payments are
allocated, would ensure that direct care workers' wages will increase.
Rather, we agree with commenters who believed that, regardless of the
underlying Medicaid rate, requiring a certain amount of Medicaid
payments be spent on compensation will help ensure that Medicaid
payments are distributed in a way that supports direct care workers,
including their recruitment and retention, to the greatest extent
possible. While we did not propose, and are not finalizing, a
requirement that State Medicaid agencies increase their rates, we
anticipate that States will examine their rates to assure they are
sufficient to support the direct care workforce to comply with the
policy we proposed and are finalizing with modifications, as discussed
further herein. We also direct commenters to the proposals discussed in
section II.C. of this final rule, which includes a number of provisions
related to rate transparency that are intended to support FFS rate
sufficiency.
Comment: One commenter recommended that we revise Sec. 441.302(k)
to specify that rates must be sufficient to ensure a sufficient number
of providers, including members of the direct care workforce. The
commenter stated that this revision would match the broader term
``provider'' in section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act while highlighting
the importance of the direct care workforce.
Response: We appreciate the commenter's feedback, but we decline to
make the recommended revision. At this time, we want to make the focus
of the requirement explicitly on the individuals who are part of the
direct care workforce, whether they act as individual providers (such
as by working as an independent contractor), are employed by a provider
entity, or otherwise. We agree with the commenter that section
1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act requires that Medicaid payments must be
sufficient to enlist enough providers so that care and services are
available to beneficiaries at least to the extent that such care and
services are available to the general population in the geographic
area. We note that section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act also requires that
States assure that payments are consistent with efficiency, economy,
and quality of care. We agree that enrolling sufficient numbers of
[[Page 40611]]
providers is critical to Medicaid service delivery, and that providers
in turn may not be able to deliver services if they do not have a
sufficient number of direct care workers. As noted in a previous
response, we proposed to implement these requirements by specifying a
percentage of Medicaid payments be spent on compensation to direct care
workers. We believe this policy will promote, and be consistent with,
economy, efficiency, and quality of care, as required by statute at
section 1902(a)(3)(A) of the Act.
Comment: One commenter requested clarification on whether the
payment adequacy requirement applies only to the voluntary, nonprofit
sector or whether it also applies to State-operated services.
Response: Given the varied nature of HCBS programs, we specifically
proposed for the payment adequacy requirement to apply broadly to
compensation paid to direct care workers by providers receiving
payments for furnishing homemaker, home health aide, or personal care
services from the State; we did not propose to apply these requirements
to only certain types of providers or their ownership arrangements. We
specifically proposed at Sec. 441.302(k)(1)(ii)(G) (which we are
finalizing at Sec. 441.302(k)(1)(ii) as discussed later in this
section) that a direct care worker, to whom this requirement would
apply, may be employed by or contracted with a Medicaid provider, State
agency, or third party or delivering services under a self-directed
service model. The requirements we proposed, and are finalizing in this
section II.B.5, under Sec. 441.302(k) require States to assure that
payment rates are adequate to ensure a sufficient direct care workforce
by, in turn, ensuring that providers spend a certain percentage of
their total payments for certain HCBS on compensation for direct care
workers furnishing those HCBS.
After consideration of the comments received, we are finalizing the
assurance requirement at Sec. 441.302(k) with modifications as
discussed in this section II.B.5 of this final rule. We are finalizing
the language we proposed in the introductory paragraph at Sec.
441.302(k) with technical modifications so that it is clear that the
reference to person-centered service plans is to beneficiaries' person-
centered service plans. The finalized language at Sec. 441.302(k) will
read: HCBS payment adequacy. Assurance that payment rates are adequate
to ensure a sufficient direct care workforce to meet the needs of
beneficiaries and provide access to services in the amount, duration,
and scope specified in beneficiaries' person-centered service plans.
b. Minimum Performance Requirement and Flexibilities (Sec.
441.302(k)(2), (3), (4), (5), and (6))
Our proposal at Sec. 441.302(k)(2) and (3) was designed to affect
the inextricable link between sufficient payments being received by the
direct care workforce and access to and, ultimately, the quality of
HCBS received by Medicaid beneficiaries. We believe that this proposed
requirement would not only benefit direct care workers but also
individuals receiving Medicaid HCBS because supporting and stabilizing
the direct care workforce will result in better qualified employees,
lower turnover, and a higher quality of care. The direct care workforce
must be able to attract and retain qualified workers in order for
beneficiaries to access providers of the services they have been
assessed to need and for the direct care workforce to be comprised of
workers with the training, expertise, and experience to meet the
diverse and often complex HCBS needs of individuals with disabilities
and older adults. Without access to a sufficient pool of direct care
workers, individuals are forced to forgo having their needs met, or
have them addressed by workers without sufficient training, expertise,
or experience to meet their unique needs, both of which could lead to
worsening health and quality of life outcomes, loss of independence,
and institutionalization.92 93 94 95 Further, we believe
that ensuring adherence to a Federal standard of the percentage of
Medicaid payments going to direct care workers is a concrete step in
recruitment and retention efforts to stabilize this workforce by
enhancing salary competitiveness in the labor market. In the absence of
such requirements, we may be unable to support and stabilize the direct
care workforce because we would not be able to ensure that the payments
are used primarily and substantially to pay for care and services
provided by direct care workers. Therefore, at Sec. 441.302(k)(3)(i),
we proposed to require that at least 80 percent of all Medicaid
payments, including but not limited to base payments and supplemental
payments, with respect to the following services be spent on
compensation to direct care workers: homemaker services, home health
aide services, and personal care services.\96\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\92\ MACPAC Issue Brief. State Efforts to Address Medicaid Home-
and Community-Based Services Workforce Shortages. March 2022.
Accessed at https://www.macpac.gov/wp-content/uploads/2022/03/MACPAC-brief-on-HCBS-workforce.pdf.
\93\ Campbell, S., A. Del Rio Drake, R. Espinoza, K. Scales.
2021. Caring for the future: The power and potential of America's
direct care workforce. Bronx, NY: PHI https://phinational.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/01/Caring-for-the-Future-2021-PHI.pdf.
\94\ American Network of Community Options and Resources
(ANCOR). 2021. The state of America's direct support workforce 2021.
Alexandria, VA: ANCOR. Accessed at https://www.ancor.org/sites/default/files/the_state_of_americas_direct_support_workforce_crisis_2021.pdf.
\95\ Chong, N., I. Akorbirshoev, J. Caldwell, H.S. Kaye, and M.
Mitra. 2021. The relationship between unmet need for home and
community-based services and health and community living outcomes.
Disability Health Journal. Accessed at https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S1936657421001953.
\96\ We note that section 2402(a) of the Affordable Care Act
applies broadly to all HCBS programs and services funded by HHS.
Further, section 2402(a) does not include limits on the scope of
services, HCBS authorities, or other factors related to its use of
the term HCBS. Therefore, we believe that there is no indication
that personal care, homemaker, and home health aide services would
fall outside the scope of section 2402(a).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
While many States have already voluntarily established such
minimums for payments authorized under section 1915(c) of the Act,\97\
we believe a Federal standard would support ongoing access to, and
quality and efficiency of, HCBS. Our proposal was based on feedback
from States that have implemented similar requirements for payments for
certain HCBS under section 9817 of the ARP \98\ or other State-led
initiatives. We refer readers to our proposed rule for more specific
discussion of the feedback we received from States regarding their
implementation of similar requirements (88 FR 27984).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\97\ For instance, as part of their required activities to
enhance, expand, or strengthen HCBS under ARP section 9817, some
States have required that a minimum percentage of rate increases and
supplemental payments go to the direct care workforce. See https://www.medicaid.gov/medicaid/home-community-based-services/guidance/strengthening-and-investing-home-and-community-based-services-for-medicaid-beneficiaries-american-rescue-plan-act-of-2021-section-9817/ for more information on ARP section 9817.See https://www.medicaid.gov/medicaid/home-community-based-services/guidance/strengthening-and-investing-home-and-community-based-services-for-medicaid-beneficiaries-american-rescue-plan-act-of-2021-section-9817/ for more information on ARP section 9817.
\98\ Information on State activities to expand, enhance, or
strengthen HCBS under ARP section 9817 can be found on Medicaid.gov
at https://www.medicaid.gov/medicaid/home-community-based-services/guidance/strengthening-and-investing-home-and-community-based-services-for-medicaid-beneficiaries-american-rescue-plan-act-of-2021-section-9817/.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We focused our proposed requirement on homemaker services, home
health aide services, and personal care services because they are
services for which we
[[Page 40612]]
expect that the vast majority of payment should be comprised of
compensation for direct care workers. These services are comprised of
individualized supports for Medicaid beneficiaries delivered by direct
care workers and generally have low equipment or supply costs relative
to other services. Further, these are services that would most commonly
be conducted in individuals' homes and general community settings. As
such, there should be low facility or other indirect costs associated
with the services. We requested comment on the following options for
the minimum percentage of payments that must be spent on compensation
to direct care workers for homemaker services, home health aide
services, and personal care services: (1) 75 percent; (2) 85 percent;
and (3) 90 percent. If an alternate minimum percentage was recommended,
we requested that commenters provide the rationale for that minimum
percentage.
We received public comments on these proposals. The following is a
summary of the comments we received and our responses.
Comment: Many commenters (regardless of whether they supported the
overall proposal itself) applauded our acknowledgement of, and efforts
to address, HCBS workforce shortages, which many commenters
characterized as a ``crisis.'' Many commenters appeared to agree that
wages to direct care workers are generally low, and that these low
wages contribute to overall workforce challenges. Both providers and
beneficiaries submitted comments detailing struggles they have had in
hiring and retaining qualified direct care workers. Some of these
commenters described the frustration of having to constantly recruit
and train new direct care workers. Some commenters described having to
turn away new clients due to staff shortages, and beneficiaries
reported experiencing delays or reductions in their services due to
difficulty in finding direct care workers to provide the services. Many
direct care workers also submitted personal examples of the hardships
caused by financial strain due to inadequate pay, including having to
work long hours at multiple jobs to earn extra income, missing time
with their own families, struggling to pay bills, risking exposure to
(or contracting) COVID-19, and experiencing burnout and psychological
stress. A few of these commenters indicated they had left the direct
care workforce due to low wages.
Several commenters stated that the proposed minimum performance
requirement, if finalized, would likely lead to increases in wages for
direct care workers and strengthen the workforce, which in turn could
improve the quality of HCBS. In particular, a number of commenters
noted the potential for the proposal to have a positive impact on
workers who are Black, other people of color, and women, who are
disproportionately represented in the direct care workforce--groups
that have historically experienced low wages due to discrimination.
Commenters were able to draw anecdotal connections between wages
and worker retention. A few providers, for instance, noted that they
had made efforts to increase their workers' wages, and observed that
the increase in wages had a positive impact on their staff retention
and the number of beneficiaries the providers were able to serve.
A few other commenters noted that there are other factors that may
contribute to worker shortages, and recommended that we continue to
partner with the Administration for Community Living and other Federal
agencies to promote a comprehensive, integrated campaign that addresses
multiple facets of the workforce shortage, including promotion of and
improvement of social valuation of this work, support of workforce
pipelines, changes to immigration policy, and creative strategies for
atypical workforce development.
Response: We thank commenters for sharing their personal
experiences and perspectives on how they have been affected by the
direct care workforce shortage and the low wages paid to many direct
care workers. We share the belief that this requirement will create a
foundation of support for the direct care workforce, which we believe
is fundamental to HCBS delivery. We focused in this proposal on
compensation for direct care workers because, as we noted above and
many commenters confirmed anecdotally, many direct care workers have
been paid low wages for a long time.99 100 We recognize that
other factors also play important roles in worker retention and
shortages. While we will continue to partner with other Federal
agencies to address these issues, some of the factors affecting the
workforce lie outside of our regulatory purview and are outside of the
scope of this proposal.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\99\ MACPAC Issue Brief. State Efforts to Address Medicaid Home-
and Community-Based Services Workforce Shortages. March 2022.
Accessed at https://www.macpac.gov/wp-content/uploads/2022/03/MACPAC-brief-on-HCBS-workforce.pdf.
\100\ Campbell, S., A. Del Rio Drake, R. Espinoza, K. Scales.
2021. Caring for the future: The power and potential of America's
direct care workforce. Bronx, NY: PHI https://phinational.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/01/Caring-for-the-Future-2021-PHI.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Comment: A significant number of commenters provided feedback on
the idea of having a national minimum performance level (separate from
providing comment on what the percentage should be). One commenter,
representing several State agencies, supported the intent of the
proposal and indicated that the proposed requirements could ``improve
recruitment, retention and economic security of the HCBS direct care
workforce.'' While offering cautions, the commenter indicated that many
States generally support a single national minimum performance
requirement, but they also recommended that we consider providing
States with flexibility related to the requirement based on provider
size, rural/urban status, and risk of closure.
Many commenters expressed concerns that a single national minimum
performance level could fail to take into account various factors that
might affect the percent of Medicaid payments that is spent on
compensation for direct care workers including substantial differences
among HCBS waiver programs, such as size, services, populations,
service area, and staffing needs; State requirements for providers,
such as differences in business operations requirements, licensure
costs, staff training requirements, or whether States require providers
to maintain physical office space; and local economic environments,
including cost of living, taxes, and wage laws. Many commenters
requested that we not finalize a minimum performance level, so that
providers may be allowed flexibility to allocate their Medicaid
payments as they determine to be appropriate. One commenter, while
acknowledging a workforce crisis, noted that Area Agencies on Aging and
provider organizations are taking steps to improve recruitment and
retention and that a Federal mandate such as the 80 percent minimum
performance level proposed in the rule is unnecessary, may have
unintended consequences, and may complicate State and local efforts
currently underway.
Response: After consideration of public comments as described in
this section II.B.5 of this rule, we are finalizing a national minimum
performance level in this final rule. We believe that not doing so
would fail to help address the chronic shortages in the HCBS direct
care workforce. In this context, the status quo amounts to minimal
oversight over how much of the Medicaid payment is going to support the
direct care workers who are
[[Page 40613]]
performing the core activities of homemaker, home health aide, and
personal care services. While some States have already implemented
initiatives to ensure that a certain percentage of Medicaid payments or
rate increases are going to direct care worker compensation, as noted
above, we believe a Federal requirement is necessary and would be more
effective to promote consistency and transparency nationwide.
We agree that there may be State or local circumstances that impact
the percent of Medicaid payments that is spent on compensation for
direct care workers. Where possible, we have built flexibilities into
this requirement as discussed further in this section II.B.5 to ensure
that it addresses certain differences among HCBS programs and
providers. Specifically, as we discuss in detail later in this section,
we are modifying the policy we proposed at Sec. 441.302(k) by: (1)
adding a definition of excluded costs at Sec. 441.302(k)(1)(iii) to
ensure certain costs are not included in the minimum performance level
calculation of the percentage of Medicaid payments to providers that is
spent on compensation for direct care workers; (2) revising the
definition of direct care worker proposed at Sec. 441.301(k)(1)(ii) to
clarify that clinical supervisors are included in the definition of
direct care workers; (3) revising Sec. 441.302(k)(3)(ii) to allow
States to set a separate minimum performance level for small providers;
(4) adding a new provision at Sec. 441.302(k)(4) to provide an option
for States to develop reasonable, objective criteria to identify small
providers to meet a small provider minimum performance level set by the
State; (5) adding a new provision at Sec. 441.302(k)(5) to allow
States to develop reasonable, objective criteria to exempt certain
providers from meeting the minimum performance level requirement; and
(6) adding a new provision at Sec. 441.302(k)(7) to exempt the Indian
Health Service (IHS) and Tribal health programs subject to 25 U.S.C.
1641 from the HCBS payment adequacy requirements at Sec. 441.302(k).
The specific modifications and the rationale for these modifications
are discussed in greater detail in this section II.B.5. of the final
rule.
Further, we are modifying the policy we proposed at Sec.
441.302(k) to require States to comply with this HCBS payment adequacy
policy beginning 6 years after the effective date of this final rule,
rather than the 4 years we proposed. (We discuss this modification to
Sec. 441.302(k)(4), being redesignated as Sec. 441.302(k)(8), in
section II.B.5.h., of this rule.) We will continue to use our standard
enforcement tools and discretion, as appropriate, when States must
comply with Sec. 441.302(k).
Ultimately, while we agree that providers generally have
flexibility to determine how to spend their Medicaid payments, we
believe it is important to reiterate the parameters for payment rates
required under section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act. Section
1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act requires that payment rates must be economic
and efficient; they must not be so high as to be uneconomic or
inefficient. This provision also requires payment rates to be
consistent with quality of care and sufficient to enlist enough
providers to ensure a specified level of access to services for
beneficiaries; rates must not be so low as to impermissibly limit
beneficiaries' access to care or the quality of care they receive. The
Supreme Court in Armstrong v. Exceptional Child Center, Inc., in
considering this provision, recognized that Congress was ``explicitly
conferring enforcement of this judgment-laden standard upon the
Secretary[,] . . . thereby achieving `the expertise, uniformity,
widespread consultation, and resulting administrative guidance that can
accompany agency decision-making.' '' \101\ We believe that
implementing this statutory requirement includes some degree of
oversight into how providers are allocating the Medicaid payments that
they receive for delivering HCBS to beneficiaries. For example, if
providers are spending a high proportion of their Medicaid payments on
compensation to direct care workers but beneficiaries have difficulty
accessing services and quality is compromised due to an insufficient
number of direct care workers, then the payment rate may be too low to
satisfy section 1902(a)(30)(A). Conversely, if concerns about access to
and quality of services were not present and providers were spending a
low proportion of their Medicaid payments on compensation to direct
care workers, then the Medicaid payment rate may exceed a level that is
economic and efficient, contributing to overhead spending and/or
operating margin at levels higher than needed to ensure access and
quality.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\101\ Armstrong v. Exceptional Child Center, Inc., 575 U.S. 320,
328-29 (2015) (internal citations omitted).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Comment: While several commenters agreed that a national minimum
performance level is authorized by section 1902(a)(30) of the Act, a
few other commenters disagreed that this policy is authorized by
section 1902(a)(30) of the Act. These latter commenters noted that
section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act requires each State plan for medical
assistance to provide such methods and procedures relating to the
utilization of, and the payment for, care and services available under
the plan as may be necessary to assure that payments are consistent
with efficiency, economy, and quality of care and are sufficient to
enlist enough providers so that care and services are available under
the plan at least to the extent that such care and services are
available to the general population in the geographic area. As such,
these commenters contended that this statutory provision applies to
State plans, not to CMS, and speaks to the adequacy of payments to
Medicaid-enrolled healthcare providers, not the providers' workforce.
They stated that section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act cannot be read to
delegate authority to us to prescribe specific wage pass-through
requirements that States must impose upon providers.
Response: We believe that the statutes we cited support the
components of our proposal. Regarding the applicability of section
1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act, we refer readers to our prior discussion of
section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act in section II.B.5.a. of this rule. As
we noted in that discussion, section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act provides
us with authority to oversee that States assure that payments are
consistent with efficiency, economy, and quality of care and are
sufficient to enlist enough providers so that care and services are
available under the plan, at least to the extent that such care and
services are available to the general population in the geographic
area. We did not propose to establish, and are not finalizing, specific
payment rates. Instead, we proposed that States demonstrate that
payments are sufficient to ensure care and services are available to
beneficiaries by specifying a percentage of Medicaid payments that
States must ensure is spent on compensation to direct care workers. We
believe this policy will also promote, and be consistent with, economy,
efficiency, and quality of care. We also disagree that section
1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act speaks only to provider enrollment. We
believe that setting a performance level at which States support their
State plan assurance that payments are consistent with efficiency,
economy, and quality of care is an appropriate use of our oversight
authority under section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act.
Comment: A few commenters agreed that sections 2402(a)(1) and
2402(a)(3) of the Affordable Care Act authorize the creation of a
national minimum
[[Page 40614]]
performance requirement to support the direct care workforce. However,
a few commenters disagreed with this application of section 2402(a)(1)
of the Affordable Care Act. These commenters noted that section
2402(a)(1) of the Affordable Care Act requires the Secretary of the
Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) to promulgate regulations
to ensure that all States develop service systems that are designed to
allocate resources for services in a manner that is responsive to the
changing needs and choices of beneficiaries receiving non-
institutionally-based long-term services and supports and that provides
strategies for beneficiaries receiving such services to maximize their
independence, including through the use of client-employed providers.
Commenters stated that, although this provision speaks to HHS's
authority to promulgate regulations, those regulations must pertain to
ensuring that States develop systems to appropriately allocate
resources to the types of services their beneficiaries need. These
commenters contended that section 2402 of the Affordable Care Act
allows HHS to, for example, require States to assess whether they
should provide services such as delivering healthy meals to certain
populations or allow beneficiaries to hire a family member to assist
them (and fund the wages), but it does not provide HHS the authority to
require States to impose upon providers wage pass-through requirements
that are set at a specific minimum performance level.
Response: We disagree with commenters' interpretation of section
2402(a)(1) of the Affordable Care Act. Section 2402(a)(1) of the
Affordable Care Act requires States to allocate resources for services
in a manner that is responsive to the changing needs and choices of
beneficiaries receiving HCBS. As discussed throughout this section, one
of the most fundamental ways that HCBS programs meet the needs of
beneficiaries is by having a sufficient direct care workforce to
provide the services beneficiaries have been assessed to need. Without
an adequate supply of workers, beneficiaries may not be able to access
all the services that they need and that fully reflect their choices or
preferences. We believe that setting a benchmark that helps measure
whether Medicaid payments are being allocated in a way that is
responsive to the HCBS workforce shortage and supports essential
aspects of HCBS delivery is an appropriate application of our authority
under section 2402(a)(1) of the Affordable Care Act.
Comment: One commenter did not agree that section
2402(a)(3)(B)(iii) of the Affordable Care Act authorized the
application of a minimum performance requirement. The commenter noted
that section 2402(a)(3)(B)(iii) of the Affordable Care Act requires the
Secretary of HHS to promulgate regulations to ensure that all States
develop service systems that are designed to improve coordination
among, and the regulation of, all providers of such services under
Federally and State-funded programs in order to oversee and monitor all
service system functions to assure an adequate number of qualified
direct care workers to provide self-directed personal assistance
services. The commenter stated that this statutory provision both
bestows authority upon HHS to promulgate regulations and specifically
references the need to ensure an adequate number of direct care
workers. However, the commenter noted that, like section 2402(a)(1) of
the ACA, section 2402(a)(3)(B)(iii) specifies that HHS's role--and its
authority to promulgate such regulations--is limited to ensuring that
States develop service systems that assure an adequate number of
qualified direct care workers to provide self-directed personal
assistance services. The commenter also stated that this statutory
provision applies only to the self-directed service delivery model and
does not authorize HHS to promulgate wage pass-through requirements
with respect to services delivered by provider agencies. The commenter
stated, generally, that the Medicaid program's fundamental premise is
to allow each State or Territory the ability to tailor its program to
reflect its unique needs, and that this is at odds with a requirement
for States to direct providers' behavior.
Response: We generally disagree with the commenter's analysis of
section 2402(a)(3)(B)(iii) of the Affordable Care Act that it does not
authorize the application of a minimum performance requirement. Section
2402(a)(3)(B)(iii) of the Affordable Care Act requires States to
oversee and monitor HCBS system functions to assure there is a
sufficient number of qualified direct care workers to provide self-
directed personal assistance services. We believe that, to comply with
this statutory requirement, States must have a sufficient direct care
workforce to be able to deliver services that are responsive to the
changing needs and choices of beneficiaries (regardless of delivery
model), and, specifically, States must have a sufficient number of
qualified direct care workers to provide self-directed personal
assistance services. In other words, an insufficient direct care
workforce generally will impact whether a State has a sufficient number
of qualified direct care workers to provide self-directed personal
assistance services in compliance with this requirement. However, we do
agree that section 2402(a)(3)(B)(iii) of the Affordable Care Act speaks
specifically to self-directed services. We cited this authority for the
purposes of supporting our inclusion of self-directed services in this
proposal.
As noted in prior responses, we believe that section 1902(a)(30)(A)
of the Act and 2402(a)(1) of the Affordable Care Act authorize us to
set parameters or benchmarks for HCBS expenditures (both including and
in addition to expenditures for self-directed personal care services).
Section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act provides us with authority to oversee
that States assure that Medicaid payments for services are consistent
with efficiency, economy, and quality of care and are sufficient to
enlist enough providers so that care and services are available under
the plan, at least to the extent that such care and services are
available to the general population in the geographic area. Section
2402(a)(1) of the Affordable Care Act requires HHS to ensure States to
allocate resources for services in a manner that is responsive to the
changing needs and choices of beneficiaries receiving HCBS. States
retain flexibility in how they construct their HCBS systems. Rather, we
believe the minimum performance requirement we proposed, and are
finalizing with modifications in this section II.B.5, sets a benchmark
to help us determine whether States are ensuring that their HCBS
systems are allocating sufficient resources to support the direct care
workforce to ensure there are sufficient providers so that care and
services are available to beneficiaries and that these services are
consistent with efficiency, economy, and quality of care. We believe
that setting such a benchmark that helps measure whether Medicaid
payments are being allocated in a way that is responsive to the HCBS
workforce shortage and supports essential aspects of HCBS delivery is
an appropriate application of our authority under section 2402(a)(1) of
the Affordable Care Act and applies to other HCBS in addition to the
self-directed personal care services specifically addressed in section
2402(a)(iii)(B).
Comment: A number of commenters stated that we did not provide
enough data to support the proposal for an 80 percent minimum
performance level. One commenter suggested that by not providing
sufficient data to support the
[[Page 40615]]
proposal, we have not fulfilled our obligations under the
Administrative Procedure Act.
A number of commenters recommended we collect more data before
finalizing a certain percent for the national minimum performance
level. Some commenters suggested that a State-by-State analysis of
rates and the potential impact of a minimum performance level would
need to be performed before setting a minimum performance level. A few
of these commenters suggested that helpful data could be collected from
States' rate studies, HCBS waiver rates, provider cost reports, or the
data we proposed in the proposed rule to be reported to us (including
our proposals at Sec. 441.311(e) and Sec. 447.203, which we discuss
in sections II.B.7. and II.C. of this rule, respectively). One
commenter suggested using the electronic visit verification (EVV)
system \102\ as a tool for gathering relevant data. Several commenters
also suggested that any additional data collection performed to support
a national minimum performance level be used to assess unintended
consequences of such a level.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\102\ Section 12006 of the 21st Century Cures Act (Pub. L. 114-
255) requires States to have EVV systems for Medicaid personal care
services and home health care services.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
A few commenters questioned the specific data relied on for the
proposal of an 80 percent minimum performance level. They noted
concerns including:
A lack of support for the claim in the proposed rule that
some States have set wage pass-through requirements as high as 90
percent;
Use of data on the American Rescue Plan Act of 2021
section 9817 funds by a few States to increase worker wages, which have
only been relatively recently distributed, and thus reflect limited
data;
State wage pass-through requirements as part of their
activities to enhance, expand, or strengthen HCBS under section 9817
the American Rescue Plan Act of 2021were generally only applied to
temporary rate increases, not entire rates; and
Minnesota and Illinois, two States that have wage pass-
through requirements, have their requirements set at 72 percent and 77
percent, respectively, and both use different definitions of
compensation or direct care worker than what was proposed.
Response: As discussed in the proposed rule (88 FR 27982), we based
our proposal on feedback from States that have implemented similar
requirements for payments for certain HCBS under section 9817 of the
ARP \103\ or other State-led initiatives. For example, as noted by
commenters, Minnesota has established a minimum threshold of 72.5
percent,\104\ while Illinois has implemented a minimum threshold of 77
percent, for similar requirements for HCBS payments as we
proposed.\105\ To further clarify the data that we used to inform our
proposal, which was referenced in footnote 81 in the proposed rule (88
FR 27983 to 27984), we note the following examples of different types
of States' wage pass-through requirements that States added to spending
plans for ARP section 9817:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\103\ Information on State activities to expand, enhance, or
strengthen HCBS under ARP section 9817 can be found on Medicaid.gov
at https://www.medicaid.gov/medicaid/home-community-based-services/guidance/strengthening-and-investing-home-and-community-based-services-for-medicaid-beneficiaries-american-rescue-plan-act-of-2021-section-9817/.
\104\ See https://www.revisor.mn.gov/statutes/cite/256B.85/pdf
for more information.
\105\ See https://casetext.com/regulation/illinois-administrative-code/title-89-social-services/part-240-community-care-program/subpart-t-financial-reporting/section-2402040-minimum-direct-service-worker-costs-for-in-home-service for more
information.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Indiana announced a Direct Service Workforce Investment
Grant in which 95 percent of the grant funds must be spent on direct
service professionals.\106\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\106\ Indiana Family and Social Services Administration, ``HCBS
Enhanced FMAP Spending Plan: Direct Service Workforce Investment
Grant Program,'' https://www.in.gov/fssa/ompp/hcbs-enhanced-fmap-spending-plan/.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Massachusetts required that HCBS providers use 90 percent
of a rate increase to support their direct care workers.\107\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\107\ Massachusetts Executive Office of Health and Human
Services, ``Strengthening Home and Community Based Services and
Behavioral Health Services Using American Rescue Plan (ARP)
Funding,'' https://www.mass.gov/info-details/strengthening-home-and-community-based-services-and-behavioral-health-services-using-american-rescue-plan-arp-funding.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
North Carolina required that 80 percent of its rate
increases for certain HCBS be spent on direct care worker wages.\108\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\108\ North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services,
North Carolina ``January 2023 Quarterly Report for the
Implementation of the American Rescue Plan Act of 2021, Section
9817--10% FMAP Increase for HCBS'' https://medicaid.ncdhhs.gov/hcbs-spending-plan-narrative-january-2023/download?attachment.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
West Virginia set different wage pass-through requirements
(ranging from 50 percent to 100 percent) for the amount of the rate
increase that would be allocated to direct care workers providing
services to beneficiaries in several of the State's waiver
programs.\109\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\109\ West Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources,
``Spending Plan for Implementation of American Rescue Plan Act of
2021, Section 9817.'' https://dhhr.wv.gov/bms/News/Documents/WV%20State%20ARP%20HCBS%20Spending%20Plan.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We acknowledge that we are unable to present a State-by-State study
of the impact of a specific minimum performance level on all State
Medicaid programs and providers. The variability among HCBS programs
(including staffing requirements, service definitions, and rate
methodologies) poses challenges to performing and presenting a multi-
State analysis of the allocation of Medicaid payments to direct care
workers using existing available data, such as rate studies or cost
reports. We also note that information from EVV system reporting would
only pertain to use of personal care services or home health aide
services (not homemaker services) and would not speak to rates. We
agree that the reporting requirement we proposed, and are finalizing in
this rule, at Sec. 441.311(e) may generate standardized data that is
more amenable to national comparisons.
We also believe that the reporting requirement at Sec. 441.311(e)
may yield important data that will support transparency around the
portion of Medicaid payments being shared with direct care workers;
such transparency in and of itself may well encourage States and
providers to look critically at their rates and how they are allocated.
Further, we believe that gathering and sharing data about the amount of
Medicaid dollars that are going to the compensation of workers is a
critical step in understanding the ways we can enact policies that
support the direct care workforce and thereby help advance access to
high quality care for Medicaid beneficiaries. However, we believe that
a reporting requirement alone will not be as effective at stabilizing
the direct care workforce.
We believe that compensation levels are a significant factor in the
creation of a stable workforce, and that a stable workforce will result
in better qualified employees, lower turnover, and safer and higher
quality care. If individuals are attracted to the HCBS workforce and
incentivized to remain employed in it with sufficient compensation, the
workforce is more likely to be comprised of workers with the training,
knowledge, and experience to meet the diverse and often complex needs
of individuals with disabilities and older adults receiving HCBS. A
stable and qualified workforce will also enable beneficiaries to access
providers of the services they have been assessed to need. As noted in
an earlier comment
[[Page 40616]]
summary, commenters almost unanimously agreed that the direct care
workforce shortage is posing extensive challenges to HCBS access and
quality of care. We believe that setting a minimum performance
requirement that we have determined to be reasonable based on available
information (and is supported by many commenters) is an appropriate
exercise of our responsibility to oversee the sufficiency of Medicaid
payments under section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act and States' allocation
of resources under section 2402(a) of the Affordable Care Act.
We agree that the data from States that implemented wage pass-
throughs through activities in their ARP section 9817 spending plans is
relatively recent. However, we do not believe that data should be
disqualified simply because it was generated recently; such data is
likelier to provide a more current snapshot of States' Medicaid rates
and the needs of their direct care workforce.
We also agree that States applied wage pass-through requirements to
rate increases that they were implementing as part of their ARP section
9817 spending plans and that at least some of these wage pass-through
requirements were temporary. As such, these percentages might not be as
relevant to the selection of a minimum performance level as a permanent
wage pass-through requirement applied to the entire Medicaid rate. That
said, we do believe that these data are useful for illustrating that
the need to support direct care workers' wages is relevant across the
country, and that States and interested parties have not only
identified increases in wages for direct care workers as a priority,
but they have also identified allocating specific portions of Medicaid
rates as an appropriate mechanism for addressing low wages. We echo a
comment summarized earlier that the advantage of establishing a
permanent minimum performance requirement is that it creates a stable
support for the direct care workforce, rather than intermittent
increases in compensation that are dependent on specific actions taken
by State or Federal legislatures.
As observed by some commenters, the percent we proposed, at 80
percent, is slightly higher than the wage pass-through requirements set
by Minnesota and Illinois. We believe that the 80 percent minimum
performance level we are finalizing is informed by the current range of
the wage pass-through requirements set by those States, but is set
slightly higher to encourage further steps towards improving
compensation for workers. We also note that we are not required to
replicate precisely what certain States have done.
We continue to believe 80 percent is the feasible performance level
to ensure that payments made for Medicaid HCBS are appropriately
allocated to direct care workers' compensation to ensure sufficient
providers for beneficiaries to access HCBS as approved in their person-
centered plans. However, given that the 80 percent minimum performance
is higher than what States have currently set in terms of permanent
wage pass-through requirements, we will provide States with additional
time to come into compliance with the 80 percent performance level. We
are finalizing at Sec. 441.302(k)(8) a modification to the
applicability date for Sec. 441.302(k) to indicate that States must
comply with this requirement at Sec. 441.302(k) beginning 6 years
after the effective date of this rule, rather than 4 years as proposed.
We will continue to use our standard enforcement tools and discretion,
as appropriate, when States must comply with Sec. 441.302(k). As
discussed in greater detail below, we are also finalizing additional
flexibilities that States, at their option, may utilize to apply a
different percentage for small providers and exempt certain providers
that experience hardships from the State's calculation for meeting
these performance levels. We also describe below an exemption of the
Indian Health Service (IHS) and Tribal health programs subject to 25
U.S.C. 1641 from the HCBS payment adequacy requirements.
Comment: A significant number of commenters stated that an 80
percent minimum performance level, if finalized, would not leave
providers enough money for costs associated with administrative tasks,
programmatic activities, supervision, technology, office or facility
expenses, training, or travel reimbursement. Many commenters noted the
80 percent minimum performance level would result in unintended
consequences--namely that affected HCBS providers would cut back on
services, limit or stop serving Medicaid beneficiaries, or close
altogether. A few commenters expressed concern that our proposal would
result in fewer new providers enrolling as Medicaid HCBS providers.
Many commenters worried that such reductions in available services or
the provider pool would reduce, rather than increase, beneficiaries'
access to high-quality HCBS. A few commenters worried that HCBS
provider closures, as a result of the proposed policy, could result in
more beneficiaries moving into institutional settings.
Several commenters also expressed the belief that the 80 percent
minimum performance level would discourage innovation among providers.
One commenter suggested that providers would be penalized if they
relied on assistive technology, remote supports, or other technology
solutions to support beneficiaries in lieu of human assistance.
Response: We thank commenters for their feedback. As discussed in
greater detail later in this section, we are modifying the policy we
proposed at Sec. 441.302(k)(3) to establish certain exceptions from
the minimum performance level, and to establish a 6-year effective
date, rather than the 4 years we had proposed. We will continue to use
our standard enforcement tools and discretion, as appropriate, when
States must comply with Sec. 441.302(k). As discussed in greater
detail below, we are also: (1) adding a definition of excluded costs at
Sec. 441.302(k)(1)(iii) to exclude certain costs from the minimum
performance level calculation of the percentage of Medicaid payments to
providers that is spent on compensation for direct care workers; (2)
revising the definition of direct care worker proposed at Sec.
441.301(k)(1)(ii) to clarify that clinical supervisors are included in
the definition of direct care workers; (3) revising Sec.
441.302(k)(3)(ii) to allow States to set a separate minimum performance
level for small providers; (4) adding a new provision at Sec.
441.302(k)(4) to provide an option for States to develop reasonable,
objective criteria to identify small providers to meet a small provider
minimum performance level set by the State; (5) adding a new provision
at Sec. 441.302(k)(5) to allow States to develop reasonable, objective
criteria to exempt certain providers from meeting the minimum
performance level requirement; and (6) adding a new provision at Sec.
441.302(k)(7) to exempt the Indian Health Service (IHS) and Tribal
health programs subject to 25 U.S.C. 1641 from the HCBS payment
adequacy requirements at Sec. 441.302(k).
We believe that these amended requirements will address some
commenters' concerns about leaving providers sufficient administrative
funds for certain personnel and administrative activities and will meet
the needs of providers that are small or experiencing other challenges
in meeting the minimum performance level.
We always encourage providers to find innovative ways to deliver
services but believe that these services (even if delivered with the
assistance of
[[Page 40617]]
technology or telehealth) at their core require direct care workers to
provide them. It is difficult to imagine how strategies that do not aim
to stabilize direct care worker wages would improve the efficacy or
quality of these services. We do believe, however, that placing a limit
on the amount of the Medicaid payment going to expenses other than
direct care worker compensation could encourage innovative efforts to
improve and streamline administrative activities.
In response to commenters' concerns that this proposal would have
the unintended consequence of causing program cuts or provider
closures, we do not believe this outcome would be the result from
implementing the proposed minimum performance level. We believe that
the current environment--in which providers and beneficiaries routinely
struggle to find qualified direct care workers, and direct care workers
leave the HCBS workforce for better-paying jobs--poses a significant
threat to access and community integration because there are an
insufficient number of direct care workers to meet beneficiaries'
needs. In addition, the direct care worker shortage threatens
beneficiary access to services and community integration as such
shortage may lead to provider closures if providers are unable to find
enough workers to deliver services. This shortage also threatens
service quality through the loss of well-trained and experienced direct
care workers, if left unaddressed. Further, we believe that the
modifications we are finalizing to this requirement will help to
mitigate these concerns.
Comment: Some commenters (including beneficiaries, providers, labor
organizations, disability or legal advocacy organizations, and research
and policy organizations) agreed that 80 percent was an appropriate or
reasonable payment adequacy requirement. A couple of these commenters
based their support on personal experience, including a few who
indicated that they were providers, and stated that 80 percent was an
achievable minimum performance level. A few commenters pointed out that
the medical loss ratio (MLR) for managed care is 85 percent. One
commenter suggested that the minimum performance level be increased to
85 percent to align with the MLR. One commenter recommended that the 80
percent standard should account for necessary administration of HCBS
programs, including training. This commenter stated that, if it does
not account for necessary administration, the payment rates that States
and managed care programs have established are likely too low. The
commenter also recommended that, once the requirement is implemented,
we review whether the percentage should be higher than 80 percent.
A number of commenters suggested alternative, lower minimum
performance levels. Several commenters (including providers, State
Medicaid agencies, a labor organization, and an advocacy organization)
suggested minimum performance levels ranging from 70 percent to 75
percent. A few of the commenters who recommended 75 percent self-
identified as providers and believed that 75 percent was achievable
based on their own experiences and expenditure calculations. One
commenter recommended we mandate a 72.35 percent minimum performance
level and change the definition of compensation to exclude the 7.65
percent employer share of FICA taxes for direct care workers; the
commenter believed this would reduce confusion regarding employers'
shares of taxes and align the definition of compensation with that used
by some States. A few commenters recommended 70 percent based on
experience with rate studies or provider expenditures in their States.
Several commenters, including providers and commenters representing
State agencies, recommended setting a minimum performance level at
either 60 percent or 65 percent, based on the commenters' personal
experience running a provider agency or overseeing provider agencies.
One commenter suggested a minimum performance level of 60 percent based
on a hypothetical analysis of one State's HCBS rates and projected
expenditures.
While not making specific recommendations, several commenters
(mostly providers and State Medicaid agencies) submitted comments that
included anecdotal data of what providers spend on compensation; these
percentages ranged from 55 to 81 percent.
Response: We thank commenters for engaging in this issue, including
sharing their own experiences allocating Medicaid payments. While we
found the feedback provided by commenters instructive, both the range
of recommendations and the anecdotal nature of information supporting
most of the recommendations prevented us from relying on the
recommendations to finalize additional modifications to the proposed
minimum performance at the provider level requirement at Sec.
441.302(k)(3).
We do not agree that we should increase the minimum performance
level upward to match the 85 percent MLR required in managed care as
the MLR is a calculation and associated reporting requirement for
Medicaid managed care contracts in accordance with Sec. 438.8 and is
not specific to HCBS.
Additionally, as discussed previously and in more detailed
responses below, we are finalizing some modifications related to the
exclusion of certain costs, the inclusion of clinical supervisors in
the definition of direct care workers, and options for a small provider
minimum performance level and hardship exemptions for some providers
that will change somewhat the impact of the minimum performance level.
Further, we are modifying the policy we proposed at Sec. 441.302(k) to
establish certain exceptions from the minimum performance level
proposed at Sec. 441.302(k)(3), and requiring States to comply
beginning 6 years after the effective date of this final rule, rather
than the 4 years we had proposed. We will continue to use our standard
enforcement tools and discretion, as appropriate, when the minimum
performance level requirement go into effect. We believe these
modifications are necessary to balance the goal of stabilizing the
direct care workforce with the operational realities faced by providers
of varying sizes and locations.
Comment: A few commenters suggested that the minimum performance
level, if finalized, should be applied at the State level, rather than
the provider level. Commenters suggested that applying the minimum
performance level at the State level would create some flexibility, as
this would require only that all providers in the State meet the
minimum performance level in aggregate. However, a few other commenters
recommended that we clarify that the minimum performance level applies
at the provider level.
Response: We clarify that we intended to propose that the minimum
performance level policy would apply at the provider level, meaning
that the State must ensure that each provider spends Medicaid payments
they receive for certain HCBS on direct care worker compensation in
accordance with the minimum performance level requirement. As noted
previously, we believe it is important for States to hold providers
individually accountable for how they allocate their Medicaid payments
and are finalizing other policies, discussed below and elsewhere in
this section II.B.5. of the final rule, for States to accommodate
providers that need additional flexibility. We note that there was an
error in the heading of Sec. 441.302(k)(3), which was proposed
[[Page 40618]]
as ``Minimum performance at the State level.'' We apologize for any
confusion this may have caused; we believe that most commenters, based
on their comments, understood the minimum performance requirement to
apply at the provider level. Accordingly, we are finalizing Sec.
441.302(k)(3) with modification by revising the heading for Sec.
441.302(k)(3) to read ``Minimum performance at the provider level,'' as
it was originally intended to read.
Additionally, to ensure that it is understood that the minimum
performance level that must be met by the State is calculated as the
percentage of total payment (not including excluded costs, which are
discussed in greater detail in section II.B.5.d. of this final rule) to
a provider for furnishing homemaker, home health aide, or personal care
services, as set forth at Sec. 440.180(b)(2) through (4), represented
by the provider's total compensation to direct care workers. (New text
in bold font).
Comment: A significant number of commenters worried that a national
minimum performance level, regardless of the percentage, would have a
disparate impact on providers that are small, new, in rural or
underserved areas, or run by/for people from specific underserved
communities (such as indigenous people) or individuals for whom English
is a second language. Some commenters worried that the proposal favors
large providers and would lead to consolidation of providers. A few
other commenters worried that this would mean that beneficiaries would
have fewer choices of providers and have to work with larger corporate
providers. One commenter worried that a national minimum performance
level would have a disparate impact on agency providers (which may have
more overhead costs), as opposed to providers of self-directed
services.
A number of commenters requested that if we finalize a national
payment adequacy requirement, we include additional flexibilities to
minimize unintended consequences on certain providers, particularly
small and rural providers. One commenter suggested that we allow for
``hardship exemptions'' on a case-by-case basis. One commenter
suggested that we allow States to exempt providers that pay workers 200
percent of the Federal Poverty Level. Another commenter suggested that
we exempt States from the payment adequacy requirement if the State has
a minimum hourly base wage of $15 per hour applicable to direct care
workers delivering the affected services.
Other commenters recommended adjustments to the national minimum
performance level, rather than exemptions. A few commenters suggested
that we allow for a variable payment adequacy requirement or for
``scaling'' of the minimum performance level, adjusted for different
provider sizes or different types of services. A few other commenters
recommended requiring a range to identify rates, which could vary by
provider size, number of Medicaid beneficiaries served, rural or urban
status, hardship status (risk of closure), or other characteristics.
One commenter suggested the rate could vary by delivery system or
service type. A number of commenters recommended that we allow States
to set their own payment adequacy requirement.
A small number of commenters raised concerns that requiring a
minimum performance level would conflict with 25 U.S.C. 1641, governing
how IHS and Tribal health programs (as defined in 25 U.S.C. 1603(25))
may use Medicare and Medicaid funds, and other applicable laws
providing for Tribal self-governance and self-determination. One
commenter recommended that we exempt IHS and Tribal health programs
from the requirement.
Response: We believe that at least some of commenters' concerns
about provider impact may be alleviated by some of the modifications we
are finalizing to our proposed policy in this section II.B.5. of the
final rule. In particular, we are excluding travel costs from the
calculation of the minimum performance level, as increased travel
expenses were cited as a primary concern for rural providers. (We refer
readers to the discussion of the definition of compensation and
excluded costs in section II.B.5.d. of this rule, below.)
We note that the purpose of this proposal is not to set a
particular wage for direct care workers, but to ensure that Medicaid
payments are being allocated in ways that promote efficiency, economy,
and quality of care. We believe that all States are accountable to this
requirement and should hold their providers accountable. However, we
also agree that some small providers may experience additional
challenges in meeting a payment adequacy requirement, as any fixed
costs must be covered by a smaller pool of revenues than for larger
providers, and small providers have fewer opportunities for
administrative efficiencies than larger providers do. We share
commenters' desires that the minimum performance level not have a
disparate impact on small providers, new providers that may still be
developing their processes, providers that may, for various reasons,
have additional administrative tasks (such as an increased need for
interpreter or translation services), or providers that face
disparately high costs, such as providers that may have to pay for
temporary lodging for direct care workers delivering services to
clients in extremely rural areas.
While we are finalizing a minimum performance level at Sec.
441.302(k)(3)(i) as previously discussed that States must apply to most
of their providers, we also agreed with commenters' suggestions. We are
finalizing our policy with modifications at Sec. 441.302(k)(3)(ii) to
provide that States may apply a different minimum percentage to small
providers that the States develop in accordance with requirements at
Sec. 441.302(k)(4). These modifications at Sec. 441.302(k)(3)(ii) and
(k)(4) will allow States the option to require a reasonable number of
small providers, as defined using reasonable, objective criteria set by
the State through a transparent process that must include public notice
and opportunities for comment from interested parties, to meet a
different minimum performance level. This separate minimum performance
level would also be set by the State based on reasonable, objective
criteria through a transparent process that must include public notice
and opportunities for comment from interested parties. In order to
apply a small provider minimum performance level, States must ensure it
is supported by data or other reasonable factors in the State. We also
note that States would still need to collect and report data as
required in Sec. 441.302(k)(2) and Sec. 441.311(e) (discussed in
section II.B.7. of this rule) for providers subject to the small
provider minimum performance level.
Further, under our authority at section 1902(a)(6) of the Act, we
are finalizing an additional provision at Sec. 441.302(k)(6)(i), to
require that States that establish a small provider minimum performance
level in accordance with Sec. 441.302(k)(4) must report to CMS
annually, in the form and manner, and at a time, specified by CMS, on
the following: the State's small provider criteria; the State's small
provider minimum performance level; the percent of providers of
services set forth at Sec. 440.180(b)(2) through (4) that qualify for
the small provider performance level; and a plan, subject to CMS review
and approval, for small providers to meet the minimum performance
requirement at Sec. 441.302(k)(3)(i) within a reasonable period of
time.
[[Page 40619]]
We also agree with commenters that some providers may experience
hardships with meeting a payment adequacy requirement because, for
instance, they are new to serving Medicaid beneficiaries and thus have
not had time to develop administrative efficiencies. Additionally, we
agree that special attention needs to be paid where a provider may be
at risk of closure and could cause beneficiaries to lose access to HCBS
in a particular area. We also agree that States are best positioned to
identify the nature of the hardships and which providers are
experiencing these hardships. As a result, we are finalizing a
modification at Sec. 441.302(k)(5) to allow States to develop
reasonable, objective criteria through a transparent process to exempt
from the minimum performance requirement at Sec. 441.302(k)(3) a
reasonable number of providers determined by the State to be facing
extraordinary circumstances that prevent their compliance with Sec.
441.302(k)(3). The State must develop these criteria through a
transparent process that includes public notice and opportunities for
comment from interested parties. If a provider meets the State's
hardship exemption criteria, the provider should be excluded from the
State's calculation of the minimum performance level at Sec.
441.302(k)(3). We note that we expect that most providers would be
subject to a hardship exemption on a temporary basis, and that States
would still need to collect and report data as required in Sec.
441.302(k)(2) and Sec. 441.311(e) for providers with hardship
exemptions.
Further, under our authority at section 1902(a)(6) of the Act, we
are finalizing an additional provision at Sec. 441.302(k)(6)(ii) to
require that States that provide a hardship exemption to providers
facing extraordinary circumstances must report to CMS annually, in the
form and manner, and at a time, specified by CMS, on the State's
hardship criteria, the percentage of providers of services set forth at
Sec. 440.180(b)(2) through (4) that qualify for a hardship exemption,
and a plan, subject to CMS review and approval, for reducing the number
of providers that qualify for a hardship exemption within a reasonable
period of time.
We plan to issue guidance on both the small provider performance
level and the hardship exemption and encourage States to consult with
CMS as they develop their criteria. However, we note that, for States
in which a small proportion of providers (less than 10 percent of the
total number of providers of services at Sec. 440.180(b)(2) through
(4)) qualify for either the small provider performance level or a
hardship exemption, CMS may waive the requirements, at Sec.
441.302(k)(6)(i)(D), for States to report on a plan for small providers
to meet the minimum performance level at Sec. 441.302(k)(3)(i) within
a reasonable period of time, and at Sec. 441.302(k)(6)(ii)(C), for
States to report on a plan for reducing the number of providers that
qualify for a hardship exemption within a reasonable period of time. We
are finalizing this waiver at Sec. 441.302(k)(6)(iii).
In addition, we are modifying the date for when States must comply
with the requirements at Sec. 441.302(k) to be beginning 6 years after
the effective date of the final rule, rather than the 4 years we had
proposed. (We refer readers to our discussion in II.B.5.h. of this
rule.) We will continue to use our standard enforcement tools and
discretion, as appropriate, when the minimum performance level
requirement goes into effect.
Finally, we are persuaded by commenters who raised concerns about
interactions between statutory requirements for IHS and certain Tribal
health programs health programs subject to 25 U.S.C. 1641 and the
proposed requirement at Sec. 441.302(k). Congress has already passed
laws, such as 25 U.S.C. 1641, specifying how IHS and Tribal health
programs (as defined in 25 U.S.C. 1603(25)) are to use their Medicaid
collections. Because Congress has already specified how such funds must
be used, we are finalizing an exemption at Sec. 441.302(k)(7) to the
HCBS payment adequacy requirements at Sec. 441.302(k) for IHS and
Tribal health programs subject to 25 U.S.C. 1641.
After consideration of the comments received, we are finalizing
Sec. 441.302(k)(3) with modifications, as well as finalizing new
requirements at Sec. 441.302(k)(4), (5), and (6). The requirements we
are finalizing with modifications are as follows:
We are finalizing Sec. 441.302(k)(3) with several modifications to
retitle the requirement as Minimum performance at the provider level
and clarify the components of the required calculation and the services
that fall within this requirement. We also made modifications at Sec.
441.302(k)(3) to clarify that excluded costs are not included in the
calculation of the percentage of total payments to a provider that is
spent on compensation to direct care workers and to specify the
specific services (homemaker, home health aide, and personal care
services) to which the payment adequacy requirement applies. We are
also modifying Sec. 441.302(k)(3) to note the exceptions to the
minimum performance level that we are adding at (k)(5) (hardship
exemption) and (k)(7) (IHS and Tribal health programs subject to 25
U.S.C. 1641). As finalized, Sec. 441.302(k)(3) specifies that, except
as provided in paragraphs (k)(5) and (7), the State must meet the
following minimum performance level as applicable, calculated as the
percentage of total payment (not including excluded costs) to a
provider for furnishing homemaker, home health aide, or personal care
services, as set forth at Sec. 440.180(b)(2) through (4), represented
by the provider's total compensation to direct care workers. (New text
in bold font).
We are modifying the language at Sec. 441.302(k)(3)(i) to read
that the minimum performance level of 80 percent applies to all
payments to a provider, except as provided in paragraph (k)(3)(ii). We
are finalizing a new requirement at Sec. 441.302(k)(3)(ii) to read
that at the State's option, for providers determined by the State to
meet its State-defined small provider criteria in paragraph (k)(4)(i)
of this section, the State must ensure that each provider spends the
percentage set by the State in accordance with paragraph (k)(4)(ii) of
this section of total payments the provider receives for services it
furnishes as described in paragraph (k)(3) of this section on total
compensation for direct care workers who furnish those services.
We are redesignating the applicability date we proposed at Sec.
441.302(k)(4) as Sec. 441.302(k)(8), as discussed further in section
II.B.5.f. of this rule. We are finalizing a new Sec. 441.302(k)(4) and
adding new paragraphs (i) and (ii) to provide an option for States to
develop reasonable, objective criteria through a transparent process to
identify small providers to meet the State-defined small provider
minimum performance level; require that the transparent process for
developing criteria to identify providers that meet the small provider
minimum performance level must include public notice and opportunities
for comment from interested parties; and require that the small
provider minimum performance level be set based on reasonable,
objective criteria the State develops through a transparent process
that includes public notice and opportunities for comment from
interested parties.
We are finalizing a new Sec. 441.302(k)(5) to allow States to
develop reasonable, objective criteria through a transparent process to
exempt from the minimum performance requirement at Sec. 441.302(k)(3)
a reasonable number of providers determined by the State to be facing
[[Page 40620]]
extraordinary circumstances that prevent their compliance with Sec.
441.302(k)(3). The State must develop these criteria through a
transparent process that includes public notice and opportunities for
comment from interested parties. If a provider meets the State's
hardship exemption criteria, the provider should be excluded by the
State from its calculation of the State's compliance with the minimum
performance level at Sec. 441.302(k)(3).
We are finalizing a new provision at Sec. 441.302(k)(6) to require
States to report on their development and use of the small provider
minimum performance level and hardship exemption. Specifically, at
Sec. 441.302(k)(6)(i), States that establish a small provider minimum
performance level in accordance with Sec. 441.302(k)(4) must report to
CMS annually, in the form and manner, and at a time, specified by CMS,
on the following: the State's small provider criteria; the State's
small provider minimum performance level; the percent of providers of
services at Sec. 440.180(b)(2) through (4) that qualify for the small
provider performance level; and a plan, subject to CMS review and
approval, for small providers to meet the minimum performance
requirement at Sec. 441.302(k)(3)(i) within a reasonable period of
time. We are also requiring at Sec. 441.302(k)(6)(ii) that States that
provide a hardship exemption to providers facing extraordinary
circumstances must report to CMS annually, in the form and manner, and
at a time, specified by CMS, on the State's hardship criteria, the
percentage of providers of services at Sec. 440.180(b)(2) through (4)
that qualify for a hardship exemption, and a plan, subject to CMS
review and approval, for reducing the number of providers that qualify
for a hardship exemption within a reasonable period of time.
Additionally, we are finalizing a waiver at Sec. 441.302(k)(6)(iii)
that specifies that CMS may waive the reporting requirements in
paragraphs (6)(i)(D) or (6)(ii)(C), as applicable, if the State
demonstrates it has applied the small provider minimum performance
level at Sec. 441.302(k)(4)(ii) or the hardship exemption at Sec.
441.302(k)(5) to a small proportion of the State's providers.
Finally, we are finalizing a new Sec. 441.302(k)(7) specifying
that the Indian Health Service and Tribal health programs subject to
the requirements at 25 U.S.C. 1641 are exempt from the requirements at
Sec. 441.302(k).
c. Other Services (Sec. 441.302(k)(3))
We considered whether the requirements we proposed at Sec.
441.302(k)(3)(i) related to the percent of Medicaid payments going to
the direct care workforce should apply to other services in addition to
homemaker, home health aide, or personal care services (as set forth at
Sec. 440.180(b)(2) through (4)), such as adult day health,
habilitation, day treatment or other partial hospitalization services,
psychosocial rehabilitation services, and clinic services for
individuals with chronic mental illness. However, these services may
have facility or other indirect costs for which we do not have adequate
information to determine a minimum percent of the payment that should
be spent on compensation for the direct care workforce. We requested
comment on whether the proposed requirements at Sec. 441.302(k)(3)(i)
related to the percent of payments going to the direct care workforce
should apply to other services listed at Sec. 440.180(b). In
particular, in recognition of the importance of services provided to
individuals with intellectual or developmental disabilities, we
requested comment on whether the proposed requirements at Sec.
441.302(k)(3)(i) related to the percent of payments going to the direct
care workforce should apply to residential habilitation services, day
habilitation services, and home-based habilitation services.
We also requested comment on the following options for the minimum
percentage of payments that must be spent on compensation to direct
care workers for each specific service that this provision should apply
if this provision should apply to other services at Sec. 440.180(b):
(1) 65 percent; (2) 70 percent; (3) 75 percent; and (4) 80 percent.
Specifically, we requested that commenters respond separately on the
minimum percentage of payments for services delivered in a non-
residential community-based facility, day center, senior center, or
other dedicated physical space, which would be expected to have higher
other indirect costs and facility costs built into the Medicaid payment
rate than other HCBS. If an alternate minimum percentage is
recommended, we requested that commenters provide the rationale for
that minimum percentage.
We further clarified that we were requesting comment on a different
range of options for the other services at Sec. 440.180(b) than for
the services at Sec. 440.180(b)(2) through (4) because we expect that
some of the other services at Sec. 440.180(b), such as adult day
health and day habilitation services, may have higher other indirect
costs and facility costs than the services at Sec. 440.180(b)(2)
through (4). We also requested that commenters respond separately on
the minimum percentage of payments for facility-based residential
services and other facility-based round-the-clock services that have
other indirect costs and facility costs that would be paid for at least
in part by room and board payments that Medicaid does not cover. If a
minimum percentage is recommended for any services, we requested that
commenters provide the rationale for that minimum percentage.
We received public comments on these proposals. The following is a
summary of the comments we received and our responses.
Comment: One commenter requested additional clarification on how
the services we proposed to be included in the requirements at Sec.
441.302(k)(3) were selected. One commenter suggested that we only apply
the minimum performance requirement to personal care services. The
commenter suggested we could align the requirement with the EVV system
reporting requirement,\110\ which applies to personal care services,
including personal care services delivered as part of habilitation
services.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\110\ Section 12006 of the 21st Century Cures Act (Pub. L. 114-
255).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Response: The priority of this proposal is to support the direct
care workforce, and to this end we have focused on accountability for
services that rely on direct care workers to perform the core
activities. As noted in the background discussion of this provision and
in previous responses, the services subject to the minimum performance
requirement were selected because they are unlikely to have facility
costs as part of the rate or as a component of the core service. We
also note that the data we reviewed when determining an appropriate
minimum performance requirement focused on home-based services, not
facility-based services. Additionally, as identified in an analysis
performed by CMS, the three services we proposed to be subject to this
requirement at Sec. 441.302(k) fall within the taxonomy of home-based
services, which are both high-volume and high-cost.\111\ Thus, we
believe that targeting these services will maximize the impact of this
requirement by addressing the needs of many beneficiaries and promoting
better oversight of the allocation of Medicaid rates for frequently
used services. Given these similarities among homemaker, home health
aide, and personal care
[[Page 40621]]
services, we cannot find a justification for removing homemaker and
home health aide services from this requirement.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\111\ Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services. ``Trends in Rate
Methodologies for High-Cost, High Volume Taxonomies.'' https://www.medicaid.gov/sites/default/files/2019-12/trends-in-rate-august-2017.pdf. Last access October 2, 2023.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Comment: A few commenters requested that we provide a more specific
definition of personal care services. Commenters noted that States do
not always use HCBS taxonomies consistently, and personal care services
can be applied to a different constellation of activities in different
waivers. Similarly, one commenter noted that the lack of definitions in
the proposed rule for homemaker, home health aide, and personal care
services is problematic because States do not use these terms
consistently and use a variety of different terms to describe these
services.
Response: We understand that States have service definitions for
homemaker, home health aide, and personal care services that differ
from the definition of homemaker, home health aide, and personal care
services in the section 1915(c) waiver Technical Guide \112\ and that
States do not always use these terms consistently. However, codifying
definitions of homemaker, home health aide, and personal care services
would have broad implications for State's HCBS programs that would
extend beyond the HCBS payment adequacy requirements in this final
rule. We will provide additional subregulatory guidance and technical
assistance to aid in implementation of the HCBS payment adequacy
requirements and may consider addressing in future rulemaking.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\112\ See Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services,
``Application for a Sec. 1915(c) Home and Community Based Waiver:
Instructions, Technical Guide and Review Criteria.'' January 2019.
Available at https://wms-mmdl.cms.gov/WMS/help/35/Instructions_TechnicalGuide_V3.6.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Comment: Many commenters responded to our solicitation for comment
on whether we should include habilitation services in the services
subject to the minimum performance requirement. Most commenters who
responded did not believe that habilitation services should be included
in the requirement. They echoed our concerns that these services are
likelier to include at least some activities in a provider-operated
facility or residential setting, which changes the expected costs of
providing and allocation of the payment for these services.
Much of the public feedback around habilitation services focused on
the facility or residential portion of those services. Commenters noted
that rent, utilities, property maintenance, and other costs associated
with residential or facility-based services can vary significantly. One
commenter suggested that if residential habilitation was included in
the minimum performance requirement, the minimum performance level for
residential habilitation should be set at 75 percent to account for
additional administrative costs. A few other commenters suggested that
a different minimum performance level should be set for habilitation
services, if included, but did not specify a particular percentage.
Some commenters also suggested that residential services might
require more, or different staffing levels, as well as different types
of staff than home-based services, which might change the necessary
minimum performance level. Commenters disagreed, however, on whether
these staffing differences would necessitate a higher or lower minimum
performance level than for in-home services, and commenters did not
recommend a percentage to specifically address the perceived
differences in staffing. One commenter objected to any discussion of
residential settings, out of concern that this would appear to promote
congregate settings in violation of the home and community-based
settings requirements; the commenter stated that all services should be
provided in the community.
Several commenters recommended that we not apply the minimum
performance level at Sec. 441.302(k)(3)(i) to habilitation services
and encouraged us to collect data on the percent of payments for
habilitation services.
Response: We believe that the comments we received affirm our
decision not to apply the HCBS payment adequacy policy we are
finalizing at Sec. 441.302(k) to habilitation or other facility-based
services (in which services are delivered in a provider-operated
physical location and for which facility-related costs are included in
the Medicaid payment rate) due to the number of additional or variable
expenses associated with facility-based services. While outside the
scope of this final rule, we refer readers to and our requirements for,
and the criteria of, a home and community-based setting at Sec.
441.301(c)(4) and (5).
We agree with commenters that additional data collection on
habilitation services would be useful. Please refer to the discussion
of Sec. 441.311(e) in section II.B.7. of this rule, below.
Comment: Although not necessarily supporting the inclusion of
habilitation services in the minimum performance requirement,
commenters worried about the impact on beneficiaries receiving
habilitation services, who are largely individuals with intellectual or
developmental disabilities or behavioral health needs. Some commenters
stated that direct care workers who had been providing habilitation
services might switch to working for providers that offer homemaker,
home health aide, or personal care services because they believed that
the requirements at Sec. 441.302(k), if finalized, would lead to
increased wages paid to these workers or to Medicaid agencies
allocating more resources for these services. One commenter speculated
that, if a lower minimum performance level was set for residential
habilitation, this would encourage more services to be provided in
congregate settings because providers would try to take advantage of
the lower minimum performance level. Several commenters that provided
services to people with intellectual disabilities and people with
mental illness suggested we amend Sec. 441.302(k)(3)(i) to specify an
exclusion for direct care workers (or direct service professionals)
providing services for individuals with intellectual and developmental
disabilities or severe mental illness, as they believed that many of
these services are delivered as facility-based habilitation services;
the commenters were concerned that these providers have additional non-
compensation expenses that are not considered by the proposal, and that
it was unclear whether facility-based services were already excluded
from the proposal.
Response: We agree that, by excluding habilitation services from
this requirement, we are excluding services that are used more
frequently by certain populations. This was not our intent, and we do
not intend to explicitly exclude certain services from this requirement
on the basis of the population receiving the service. However, as noted
above, because of differences in these services, we do not believe we
can set an appropriate minimum performance level for these services at
this time. Although we are not requiring that habilitation or other
facility-based services (in which services are delivered in a provider-
operated physical location and for which facility-related costs are
included in the Medicaid payment rate) be included in the minimum
performance requirement, States are able to set wage pass-through
requirements of their own for such services to promote the stability of
the workforce; we also believe that States may naturally adjust rates
or wages in other services in response to the implementation of the
minimum performance requirement for homemaker, home health aide, and
personal care services.
[[Page 40622]]
Comment: One commenter expressed a concern that the minimum
performance requirement would apply to skilled nursing facilities.
Several commenters requested that we clarify in Sec. 441.302(k)(3)(i)
that direct care workers would be excluded from the minimum performance
requirement if they are providing services in residential settings. One
commenter requested that we clarify that assisted living facilities or
assisted living services are not included in the minimum performance
requirement, while another commenter raised concern about a lack of
clarity about whether the requirement applies to assisted living
facilities.
Response: The requirements we are finalizing in this section II.B.
of this rule only apply to HCBS, and the minimum performance
requirement at Sec. 441.302(k)(3) applies specifically to homemaker,
home health aide, and personal care services as set forth at Sec.
440.180(b)(2) through (4). However, while the minimum performance
requirement would not apply to institutional services (because those
are not HCBS), we decline to explicitly restrict the application of
this requirement on the basis of different community-based settings. As
we noted in prior responses, we selected homemaker, home health aide,
and personal care services because these are typically services
delivered in the home. However, we acknowledge that beneficiaries may
live in different residential settings that are considered homes, and
that these services may be bundled with other services delivered to
beneficiaries in residential settings.
Comment: A number of commenters requested that we add private duty
nursing to the services subject to the minimum performance requirement.
Response: We believe that at least some commenters may be referring
to private duty nursing as defined at section 1905(a)(8) of the Act and
Sec. 440.80 of our regulations. As discussed in greater detail below
in section II.B.5.g. of this rule, we are not planning to require that
the minimum performance level be applied to services authorized under
section 1905(a) at this time. We note that home health aide services,
included in Sec. 440.180(b)(3) but authorized as part of a section
1915(c) waiver, are included in the minimum performance requirement. It
is possible that some services that commenters are characterizing as
``private duty nursing'' may fall within the category of a section
1915(c) home health aide service, even as we acknowledge that Federal
requirements for private duty nursing specify that these are skilled
care services provided by a registered nurse or licensed practical
nurse.
Comment: A few commenters recommended that we apply the minimum
performance requirement to a number of other services that are
experiencing staffing shortages, including: job supports; respite
provided in the community; community habilitation services; in-home
cognitive rehabilitation therapy; and in-home physical, occupational
and speech therapy services. A few commenters suggested, without
specifying which services, that the minimum performance requirement
ought to be expanded to other services, or that it would be easier to
administer if applied to a broader array of services than just
homemaker, home health aide, and personal care services.
Response: We thank the commenters for their suggestions and will
take them under consideration for potential future rulemaking. As we
noted earlier in this section of the final rule, we selected homemaker,
home health aide, and personal care services because they are services
for which we expect that the vast majority of payment to be comprised
of compensation for direct care workers. Further, they are high-volume
and high-cost services,\113\ and as a result, we believe that targeting
these services will maximize the impact of this requirement by
addressing the needs of many beneficiaries and promoting better
oversight of the allocation of Medicaid rates for frequently used
services. We note that States are able to apply wage pass-through
requirements to additional services if they choose.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\113\ Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services. ``Trends in Rate
Methodologies for High-Cost, High Volume Taxonomies.'' https://www.medicaid.gov/sites/default/files/2019-12/trends-in-rate-august-2017.pdf. Last access October 2, 2023.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
After consideration of the comments received, we are finalizing our
proposed language at Sec. 441.302(k)(3) to apply the minimum
performance requirement to homemaker, home health aide, and personal
care services as set forth at Sec. 440.180(b)(2) through (4).
d. Definition of Compensation (Sec. 441.302(k)(1)(i))
At Sec. 441.302(k)(1)(i), we proposed to define compensation to
include salary, wages, and other remuneration as defined by the Fair
Labor Standards Act and implementing regulations (29 U.S.C. 201 et
seq., 29 CFR parts 531 and 778), and benefits (such as health and
dental benefits, sick leave, and tuition reimbursement). In addition,
we proposed to define compensation to include the employer share of
payroll taxes for direct care workers delivering services under section
1915(c) waivers. We considered whether to include training or other
costs in our proposed definition of compensation. However, we
determined that a definition that more directly assesses the financial
benefits to workers would better ensure that a sufficient portion of
the payment for services went to direct care workers, as it is unclear
that the cost of training and other workforce activities is an
appropriate way to quantify the benefit of those activities for
workers. We requested comment on whether the definition of compensation
should include other specific financial and non-financial forms of
compensation for direct care workers.
We received public comments on these proposals. The following is a
summary of the comments we received and our responses.
Comment: A couple of commenters noted support for our definition of
compensation and encouraged us to finalize the definition as proposed.
Response: We thank the commenters for their support.
Comment: Several commenters expressed concern that workers'
overtime pay would not be considered part of the definition of
compensation.
Response: Our definition of compensation as proposed at Sec.
441.302(k)(1)(i)(A) included salary, wages, ``and other remuneration as
defined by the Fair Labor Standards Act'' and its regulations. As the
Fair Labor Standards Act includes overtime pay in its definition of
wages, overtime pay therefore is included in our definition of
compensation as well.
Comment: Many commenters supported the inclusion of health and
dental insurance and sick leave in the definition of benefits at Sec.
441.302(k)(1)(i)(B). A few commenters requested that life insurance,
disability insurance, and retirement contributions also be added to
this definition. Several commenters also requested clarification as to
whether paid time off was included in the definition of compensation,
and a few suggested that it should be included.
One commenter noted that our definition of compensation was too
broad, particularly the use of the term ``such as'' when describing the
inclusion of benefits. The commenter expressed concern that employers
could over-include items in compensation by calling them ``benefits.''
One commenter worried that if too many benefits were included in
compensation, this would reduce workers' take-home pay.
One commenter expressed concerns that it will be difficult for
State
[[Page 40623]]
Medicaid agencies to quantify benefits included in direct care worker
compensation.
Response: We believe that all the items identified by these
commenters--life insurance, disability insurance, retirement, and paid
time off--would be reasonably considered part of compensation. In its
glossary, the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) defines compensation as
``employer costs for wages, salaries, and employee benefits,'' and
notes that the National Compensation Survey includes the following
categories in employee benefits: insurance (life insurance, health
benefits, short-term disability, and long-term disability insurance);
paid leave (vacations, holidays, and sick leave); and retirement
(defined benefit and defined contribution plans).\114\ We believe the
items suggested by the commenters align with our intent and are
reflected by a common understanding of ``benefits'' as exemplified in
the BLS glossary.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\114\ See BLS ``Glossary'' at https://www.bls.gov/bls/glossary.htm.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
To help clarify what is meant by ``benefits,'' we are modifying the
language we proposed at Sec. 441.302(k)(1)(i)(B) in this final rule.
We are retaining ``health and dental benefits'' but also are adding to
the list ``life and disability insurance.'' We note that the definition
used by BLS simply refers to health benefits, life insurance, and
different types of disability insurance collectively as ``insurance,''
but we believe that spelling out examples of types of insurance is
useful here. In the context of our definition, ``insurance'' listed by
itself might be unclear (since it could be confused with other types of
insurance that would not be considered compensation, like employers'
liability insurance), and we wish to make it clear that the benefits
must benefit the employee directly. We are also modifying ``sick
leave'' to the broader term ``paid leave,'' as this should be
understood to cover any time for which the employee is paid, whether it
be for sick leave, holidays, vacations, and so forth. We also are
adding retirement, which we believe is also a useful blanket term for
different types of retirement plans or contributions on the employee's
behalf. After consideration of public comments, we are finalizing Sec.
441.302(k)(1)(i)(B) with modification to specify that compensation
includes benefits, such as health and dental benefits, life and
disability insurance, paid leave, retirement, and tuition
reimbursement.
When proposing that benefits be included in the definition of
compensation, we intentionally included the phrase ``such as'' to
indicate that the examples of benefits provided in the definition is
not exhaustive. We did not attempt to list all possible benefits in the
regulatory definition, as we believe that would run the risk of
creating a definition that is too narrow. We plan to provide technical
assistance to States on how to help ensure that providers are applying
a reasonable definition of ``benefits'' and are only counting expenses
thereunder that would reasonably be considered an employee benefit.
Comment: Some commenters supported including employers' share of
payroll taxes in the definition of compensation at Sec.
441.302(k)(1)(i)(C). However, several commenters recommended that this
expense be removed from the definition, as these are not expenses
included in employees' take-home pay and are the responsibility of the
employer. Several commenters requested that employers' contributions to
worker's compensation and unemployment insurance be included in the
definition of compensation.
Response: It is our intent to include employers' payroll tax
contributions for unemployment insurance and workman's compensation (as
well as payments required by the Federal Insurance Compensation Act)
under Sec. 441.302(k)(1)(i)(C) and thus as part of our definition of
compensation for the purposes of the requirements at Sec. 441.302(k).
While not necessarily paid directly to the workers, these expenses are
paid on their behalf. We also note, for instance, that per the BLS, the
National Compensation Survey calls these payroll taxes ``legally
mandated employee benefits'' and includes them as part of the
definition of ``employee benefits'' for the purposes of determining
compensation.\115\ We plan to provide technical assistance to States on
how to help ensure that providers are including payroll tax
contributions for unemployment insurance and workman's compensation
when reporting on compensation to workers.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\115\ See BLS ``Glossary'' at https://www.bls.gov/bls/glossary.htm.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Comment: Several commenters noted support for including tuition
reimbursement in the definition of compensation. Several commenters
suggested that costs associated with continuing education should also
be included as compensation.
Response: We appreciate the commenters' support. We believe the
term ``tuition reimbursement'' is broad enough to cover a variety of
scenarios in which a provider may choose to reimburse a worker for
tuition costs incurred either prior to or during their period of
employment.
Comment: A number of commenters supported either including training
in the definition of compensation or excluding training from the
administrative and other expenses that are not considered compensation
under this rule. Some of these commenters noted that certain types of
services or programs might involve additional training for staff, such
as services delivered to beneficiaries with complex needs. One
commenter suggested that raising workers' wages will not necessarily
increase service quality if it is not accompanied by better training
for staff. Another commenter worried that providers could decide to cut
back on training in order to meet the minimum performance level, which
could endanger workers. Commenters cited examples of trainings,
including in-service trainings and cardiopulmonary resuscitation
trainings, as being critical for caring for beneficiaries. Several
commenters suggested that direct care workers who serve beneficiaries
with higher-acuity needs may require additional training than other
direct care workers.
Commenters suggested that, if training was included in the
definition of ``compensation'' (or was excluded from administrative and
other expenses that are not considered compensation under this rule),
training should be defined to include time spent in training, training
materials, trainers, and training facilities.
Conversely, one commenter stated that if training was included in
the definition of compensation, the minimum performance level should be
adjusted further upward (above 80 percent). One commenter stated that
if training was included as compensation to direct care workers, this
cost should be restricted to the time workers spend in training and not
include training materials and payments made to the trainer. One
commenter stated that the cost of onboarding new staff should not be
considered ``training.'' One commenter expressed skepticism that
training was truly a major cost for providers.
Response: We clarify that the time direct care workers spend in
training would already be accounted for in the definition of
compensation. We agree with commenters on several points: that training
is critical to the quality of services; that training needs might vary
across (or even within) States' Medicaid HCBS programs, depending on
the nature of the services or the acuity of
[[Page 40624]]
the beneficiaries served; that training costs may be difficult to
standardize; and that worker training is essential to quality, as well
as the health and safety of both the direct care worker and the
beneficiary. We do not want to encourage providers to reduce training
to cut administrative costs.
However, we are also reluctant upon considering comments to treat
all training costs as ``compensation'' to the direct care worker.
Trainings, as commenters noted, are often required as part of the job
and may vary depending on the services or the needs of the
beneficiaries they serve. We are concerned that including training
costs in the definition of compensation could mean that direct care
workers with higher training requirements would see more of their
``compensation'' going to training expenses, which could cause them to
receive lower take-home pay than colleagues with fewer training
requirements.
Rather than include training costs in the definition of
compensation at Sec. 441.302(k)(1)(i)), we are creating a new
definition at Sec. 441.302(k)(1)(iii) to define excluded costs for the
purposes of the payment adequacy requirement at Sec. 441.302(k)(3).
Excluded costs are those that are not included in the State's
calculation of the percentage of Medicaid payments that is spent on
compensation for direct care workers required at Sec. 441.302(k)(3).
In other words, States would ensure providers deduct these costs from
their total Medicaid payments before performing the calculation. We are
specifying at Sec. 441.302(k)(3)(iii) that excluded costs are limited
to: training costs (such as costs for training materials or payment to
qualified trainers); travel costs for direct care workers (such as
mileage reimbursement or public transportation subsidies); and costs of
personal protective equipment for direct care workers. This would mean
that providers could deduct the total eligible training expenses,
travel costs, and personal protective equipment for direct care workers
from the total payments they receive for homemaker, home health aide,
and personal care services before the compensation percentage is
determined for the minimum performance level as required under Sec.
441.302(k)(3).
The training costs that are excluded costs under Sec.
441.302(k)(1)(iii) are limited to those costs associated with the
training itself (such as qualified trainers and materials) and are
distinct from the compensation paid to a direct care worker
participating in the training as part of their employment duties under
Sec. 441.302(k)(1)(i).
Comment: One commenter requested clarification as to whether travel
expenses were part of the definition of ``compensation.'' Many
commenters stated that travel or transportation expenses should be
included in the definition of compensation, or not treated as an
administrative expense. Many commenters also expressed the concern that
it would be difficult to cover the cost of travel as part of
administrative expenses and other expenses that are not considered
compensation under this rule, especially in rural areas where direct
care workers may have to travel large distances to visit clients or
transport them to appointments. A few commenters worried that if travel
were considered an administrative expense, providers would be reluctant
to serve beneficiaries outside of a narrow service area to save on
travel expenses. A number of direct care workers shared experiences of
having to pay for gas out-of-pocket when they transported beneficiaries
and having to shoulder the financial burden of wear-and-tear on their
cars. One commenter noted that travel costs are frequently included in
rate calculations. Several commenters suggested that ``travel,'' if
included in the definition of compensation, should include time workers
spent travelling, mileage reimbursement, and public transportation
reimbursement.
However, a few commenters specifically noted that travel should not
be considered part of the definition of compensation. One commenter
noted that due to the variability of travel costs, it would be
difficult to include travel in a standardized definition of
compensation.
Response: We agree with commenters that certain travel-related
expenses should not be considered compensation to direct care workers.
Travelling to beneficiaries' homes or assisting them in the community
is an essential function of the job, and thus, travel reimbursement is
not for the direct care worker's personal benefit.\116\ We also agree
that travel costs will vary significantly by region and even by
beneficiary. We too are concerned that including travel in the
definition of compensation could mean that direct care workers with
higher travel demands would see more of their compensation going to
travel, which could cause them to receive lower take-home pay than
colleagues with lower travel demands.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\116\ See 29 U.S.C. 207(e)(2) (permitting employers to exclude
``reasonable payments for traveling expenses'' when determining an
employee's regular rate of pay under the FLSA); see also 29 CFR
778.217 (same).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
At the same time, we are aware of the critical importance of travel
to the delivery of these services and do not want to create unintended
consequences. We are persuaded by commenters' concerns that counting
travel as an administrative expense could induce some providers to stop
serving beneficiaries that live outside certain regions. We would also
be concerned if direct care workers were expected to shoulder the
financial burden of travel out-of-pocket, as appears to be happening in
some cases now.
To preserve beneficiary access to services and avoid burden or
disparate impact on beneficiaries, direct care workers, and providers
in rural or underserved areas, we are excluding travel costs in this
final rule from the calculation of the percent of Medicaid payments for
certain services going to compensation for direct care workers. This
means that providers can deduct the total travel expenses for direct
care workers that providers incur from the total Medicaid payments they
receive before the compensation percentage is determined.
In order to reflect the exclusion of travel costs from the payment
calculation, we are adding a new Sec. 441.302(k)(1)(iii)(B) that
specifies that travel costs (such as reimbursement for mileage or
public transportation) may be considered an excluded cost for the
purposes of the minimum performance requirement at Sec. 441.302(k)(3).
The travel costs that are excluded costs under Sec. 441.302(k)(1)(iii)
are limited to those costs associated with the travel itself (such as
reimbursement for mileage or public transportation) and are distinct
from the compensation paid to a direct care worker for any time spent
traveling as part of their employment duties under Sec.
441.302(k)(1)(i). Please refer to our discussion in an earlier response
regarding the new definition of excluded costs at Sec.
441.302(k)(1)(iii) and its effect for the calculation required at Sec.
441.302(k)(3).
Comment: Several commenters expressed concerns about covering the
cost of vehicle purchases or maintenance as an administrative expense.
One commenter suggested that if travel were included in the definition
of compensation, it should include the cost of vehicles or vehicle
maintenance.
Response: We note that the payment adequacy requirement applies to
Medicaid payments for homemaker services, home health aide services,
and personal care services. In our
[[Page 40625]]
experience, it is rare that providers would be purchasing vehicles for
these services or that vehicle purchases would be part of the rate. We
do not expect that the cost of vehicles would be part of excludable
travel costs, but we plan to provide technical assistance to States on
a case-by-case basis.
Comment: Several commenters noted that personal protective
equipment (PPE) for staff should be counted as compensation or that
these expenses should not count as an administrative expense. Several
direct care workers also shared experiences of having to provide their
own PPE during the COVID-19 public health emergency (PHE), and the
harms caused to them both physically and financially by contracting
COVID-19.
Response: We agree, particularly given the recent experience with
the COVID-19 PHE, that PPE should not be treated as an administrative
expense. Providing direct care workers with adequate PPE is critical
for the health and safety of both the direct care workers and the
beneficiaries they serve. We also do not believe that direct care
workers should have to pay for PPE out-of-pocket or that it is
considered part of their compensation.
Similar to our approach with training and travel above, we are
excluding the cost of PPE for direct care workers in this final rule
from the calculation of the percentage of payments spent on
compensation for direct care workers. In order to reflect the exclusion
of PPE costs from the payment calculation, we are adding new Sec. Sec.
441.302(k)(1)(iii) that specifies that PPE costs for direct care
workers may be considered an excluded cost for the purposes of the
minimum performance requirement at Sec. 441.302(k). Please refer to
our discussion in an earlier response regarding the new definition of
excluded costs at Sec. 441.302(k)(1)(iii) and its effect for the
calculation required at Sec. 441.302(k)(3).
Comment: Several commenters requested clarification as to what
activities and costs would not be counted as compensation under this
rule. A significant number of commenters described other activities or
costs they believed should count as compensation, should not be counted
as part of non-compensation costs, or simply would not be affordable if
providers were left with only 20 percent of the Medicaid rate for
personal care, homemaker, or home health aide services. These included
costs associated with:
Administration, including wages paid to administrative and
human resources staff, who perform activities such as billing, payroll
processing, contracts management, or scheduling client appointments;
Other business expenses, such as organization
accreditation, liability insurance, and licensure.
Human resources activities, including recruitment
activities or advertising for new staff.
Background checks, drug screening, and medical screening
for employees (such as testing staff for tuberculosis prior to starting
service delivery).
Office space and utilities (especially for providers that
are required by State law to have a physical office).
Office supplies, medical supplies, food, or other out-of-
pocket expenses for clients, IT, mobile devices (including those used
for electronic visit verification), and staff uniforms.
Non-cash awards to direct care workers, such as parties,
staff retreats, gifts for staff, Employee Assistance Programs, or other
wellness programs.
Recordkeeping and complying with quality measures and
other reporting requirements.
Commenters noted that these costs are essential to operating a
service organization. Commenters also noted that at least some of these
costs, such as office space, are fixed costs, or costs that are beyond
providers' control.
Response: We believe that most of the items listed above would
qualify as administrative expenses, but some activities may be
considered compensation or excluded costs under the definitions we are
finalizing at Sec. 441.302(k)(1), depending on the context. We clarify
that, by designating activities as administrative and other expenses
that are not considered compensation under this rule, we do not suggest
that they are inessential. However, we also believe, as has been
discussed in prior responses, that a vast majority of the payment for
homemaker, home health aide, and personal care services must be spent
supporting core activities that are performed by direct care workers.
As noted by commenters in earlier comment summaries, we also do not
want States to allow providers to add so many non-cash benefits to a
worker's compensation that their take-home pay is excessively reduced.
We plan to provide technical assistance to States to help ensure that
States understand what are considered administrative and other expenses
that are included in the percentage calculation and what are considered
excluded costs.
Comment: Several commenters raised concerns that wages spent for
staff conducting certain beneficiary support activities would not be
considered compensation. These activities include completing person-
centered service plans or scheduling client appointments.
Response: We believe that some of the activities described by
commenters are activities that would be performed by staff who would
classify as direct care workers, as we proposed to define at Sec.
441.302(k)(1)(ii). We refer readers to our discussion of our proposed
definition of direct care workers in the next section below. We plan to
provide technical assistance to help States appropriately identify
direct care workers and, separately, administrative staff,
administrative activities, and other costs that are not considered
compensation under this rule.
Comment: A few commenters expressed the concern that employers will
shift more administrative activities to direct care workers, to avoid
having these activities fall under administrative and other costs that
are not considered compensation under this rule. The commenter stated
that this could increase burnout for direct care workers.
Response: As discussed earlier, the definition of compensation we
proposed, and are finalizing with modification, includes all
compensation paid to direct care workers for activities related to
their roles as direct care workers. States should ensure providers do
not count in the percentage calculation at Sec. 441.302(k)(3)
compensation for the time that workers spend on administrative or other
tasks unrelated to their roles as direct care workers as compensation
to direct care workers. We would not view as permissible under this
regulation the shifting of administrative tasks to direct care workers
as a way to inflate compensation for direct care workers. However,
providers can count as compensation to direct care workers the time
that direct care workers spend on tasks, including administrative
tasks, such as completing timecards, that are directly related to their
roles as direct care workers in providing services to beneficiaries. We
plan to provide States with technical assistance on how to accurately
capture compensation for workers who provide direct care and perform
administrative or other roles. However, we decline to make changes in
this final rule based on these comments.
Comment: Several commenters requested clarification on what was
included in the denominator of the calculation (in other words, what is
meant by ``payments'' when calculating the percent of payments being
spent on compensation for direct care workers). One commenter suggested
that rather
[[Page 40626]]
than requiring 80 percent of Medicaid payments be spent on
compensation, we require that 80 percent of all revenue be spent on
compensation. One commenter requested clarification about whether, for
managed care delivery systems, payment is the State's capitation
payment to the MCO or the MCO's payment to the home care provider
agency. The commenter also recommended that we require States to set a
minimum payment rate that MCOs or other entities pay home care agencies
and that the minimum rates be set at a level to pay workers the locally
required minimum wage and other compensation as defined in the
regulation, and for the home care agency to reserve 20 percent
overhead.
A few commenters made specific suggestions for parameters of what
should be included or excluded in the denominator, such as:
Only collected revenue (and not billed charges) would be
considered as base or supplemental payments;
Excluding refunded or recouped payments from current or
prior years based on program financial audits;
Excluding chargebacks; and
Excluding bad debt.
Response: For Medicaid FFS payments in the denominator of the
calculation should include base and supplemental payments (as described
in SMDL 21-006 \117\). Those base and supplemental payments should only
include payments actually collected, or revenue, rather than billed
charges. In addition, refunded or recouped payments from current or
prior years based on program financial audits, chargebacks, and bad
debt should be excluded from those base and supplemental payment
amounts. We are available to provide States with technical assistance
related to calculating payments for the purpose of determining the
percent of all payments that is spent on compensation.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\117\ CMS State Medicaid Director Letter: SMDL 21-006. December
2021. New Supplemental Payment Reporting and Medicaid
Disproportionate Share Hospital Requirements under the Consolidated
Appropriations Act, 2021. Available at https://www.medicaid.gov/sites/default/files/2021-12/smd21006.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
For Medicaid managed care, payments refer to payments from the
managed care plan to the provider and not the capitation payment from
the State to the managed care plan. Further, for Medicaid managed care,
payments in the denominator of the calculation should include only
those payments actually collected and exclude refunded or recouped
payments from current or prior years based on program financial audits,
chargebacks, and bad debt. We note that section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the
Act does not provide us with authority to require specific payment
rates or rate-setting methodologies.
As discussed throughout this section (II.B.5), we proposed the
requirements at Sec. 441.302(k) using our authority under section
1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act, which requires State Medicaid programs to
ensure that payments to providers are consistent with efficiency,
economy, and quality of care and are sufficient to enlist enough
providers so that care and services are available to beneficiaries at
least to the extent as to the general population in the same geographic
area. We believe section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act speaks specifically
to Medicaid payments, not to all revenue received by providers (which
may be from various sources); thus, we decline to modify the
requirement to affect non-Medicaid revenues.
Comment: One commenter requested that revenue from value-based care
(VBC) arrangements in managed care be exempt from the calculation so as
not to disrupt State or managed care efforts moving toward VBC or to
disincentivize providers from pursuing innovative strategies to improve
health and financial outcomes such as lowering emergency room visits,
inpatient utilization, and admissions from HCBS to inpatient settings
such as nursing facilities. The commenter also noted that providers
must make numerous additional investments above and beyond typical
compensation rates for a VBC or pay-for-performance (PFP) arrangement
to work. Additionally, the commenter noted, VBC and PFP programs rely
on lengthy cycles of data, tracking, analysis, and reconciliation
before additional payments are made. The commenter stated that, if
these types of payments are included in the denominator of the
calculation, this will prove disruptive to these programs.
Response: We appreciate the commenter raising these concerns and
agree that VBC, PFP, and other unique payment arrangements that reward
and support quality over quantity are important, and it was not our
intention to appear to discourage them or minimize their value.
However, given the wide-ranging designs of such payments and that most
HCBS are often not included in these arrangements, we are not requiring
a specific way to address them in this final rule. We also decline to
adopt the commenter's suggestion to exempt revenue from VBC
arrangements in managed care from the calculation of the percent of
Medicaid payments for certain HCBS that is spent on compensation of
direct care workers, as such an exemption would undermine the intent of
the proposal and the usefulness of the data for assessing the
percentage of all Medicaid payments for certain HCBS that is spent on
compensation for direct care workers. We plan to provide States with
technical assistance as needed on how to include revenues from VBC,
PFP, and other unique payment arrangements in the calculation.
After consideration of the comments received, we are finalizing
Sec. 441.302(k)(1)(i) with a modification to clarify at Sec.
441.302(k)(1)(i)(B) that compensation includes benefits, such as health
and dental benefits, life and disability insurance, paid leave,
retirement, and tuition reimbursement.
We are also finalizing a new definition at Sec. 441.302(k)(1)(iii)
to define excluded costs, which are costs that are not included in the
calculation of the percentage of Medicaid payments that is spent on
compensation for direct care workers. In other words, States must
ensure providers deduct these costs from their total Medicaid payments
before performing the calculation required at Sec. 441.302(k)(3)).
Such costs are limited to: (A) Costs of required trainings for direct
care workers (such as costs for qualified trainers and training
materials); (B) Travel costs for direct care workers (such as mileage
reimbursement or public transportation subsidies) provided to direct
care workers; and (C) Costs of personal protective equipment for direct
care workers.
e. Definition of Direct Care Worker (Sec. 441.302(k)(1)(ii))
At Sec. 441.302(k)(1)(ii), we proposed to define direct care
workers to include workers who provide nursing services, assist with
activities of daily living (such as mobility, personal hygiene, eating)
or instrumental activities of daily living (such as cooking, grocery
shopping, managing finances), and provide behavioral supports,
employment supports, or other services to promote community
integration. Specifically, we proposed to define direct care workers to
include nurses (registered nurses, licensed practical nurses, nurse
practitioners, or clinical nurse specialists) who provide nursing
services to Medicaid-eligible individuals receiving HCBS, licensed or
certified nursing assistants, direct support professionals, personal
care attendants, home health aides, and other individuals who are paid
to directly provide services to Medicaid beneficiaries receiving HCBS
to address activities of daily living or instrumental activities of
daily living, behavioral supports, employment supports, or
[[Page 40627]]
other services to promote community integration. We further identified
in the preamble of the proposed rule that our definition of direct care
worker is intended to exclude nurses in supervisory or administrative
roles who are not directly providing nursing services to people
receiving HCBS.
Our proposed definition of direct care worker was intended to
broadly define such workers to ensure that the definition appropriately
captures the diversity of roles and titles across States that direct
care workers may have. We included workers with professional degrees,
such as nurses, in our proposed definition because of the important
roles that direct care workers with professional degrees play in the
care and services of people receiving HCBS, and because excluding
workers with professional degrees may increase the complexity of
reporting, and may unfairly punish States, managed care plans, and
providers that disproportionately rely on workers with professional
degrees in the delivery of HCBS. We also proposed to define direct care
workers to include individuals employed by a Medicaid provider, State
agency, or third party; contracted with a Medicaid provider, State
agency, or third party; or delivering services under a self-directed
service model. This proposed definition is in recognition of the varied
service delivery models and employment relationships that can exist in
HCBS waivers. We requested comment on whether there are other specific
types of direct care workers that should be included in the definition,
and whether any of the types of workers listed should be excluded from
the definition of direct care worker.
We received public comments on these proposals. The following is a
summary of the comments we received and our responses.
Comment: Several commenters supported finalizing the definition of
direct care worker as proposed. However, one commenter opposed the
entire definition. The commenter noted that the definition, which
resembles a definition of direct care worker used by the Department of
Labor, is distinguishable from the definition used by the Bureau of
Labor Statistics. The commenter recommended that no definition should
be finalized until there has been an interagency workgroup to review
and coordinate the different definitions.
Response: As discussed earlier in this section II.B.5.e. of this
rule, our proposed definition of direct care worker was intended to
capture the diversity of roles and titles across States that direct
care workers may have. It was also intended to include individuals in
the varied service delivery models and employment relationships that
can exist in HCBS waivers. As discussed later in this section II.B.5.e.
of this rule, we are finalizing the definition of direct care worker
largely as proposed with a modification to clarify that direct care
workers include nurses and other staff providing clinical supervision,
as we do not want to discourage clinical oversight that contributes to
the quality of services by creating a disincentive for providers to
hire clinicians when necessary. We believe that the definition of
direct care worker, as finalized, appropriately defines direct care
worker for the specific purposes of the requirements in Sec.
441.302(k), and we note that it was subject to interagency review.
Comment: Several commenters supported including clinicians (such as
those we proposed at Sec. 441.302(k)(1)(ii)(A)) in the definition of
direct care worker. Commenters noted that providers are often required
to have clinicians on staff and that such clinicians are critical to
ensuring quality of care. A few commenters, however, expressed
ambivalence or reservations about including clinicians in the
definition of direct care worker. One commenter noted that some States
do not include nurses in their State definitions of direct care worker.
A few commenters observed that because clinicians (including nurses)
generally earn higher wages, providers that employ clinicians will have
an easier time reaching the minimum performance level for direct care
worker compensation or that the higher wages of clinicians will mask
the lower wages of direct care workers who do not have professional
degrees and generally earn lower wages.
Response: We continue to believe it is appropriate to include
clinicians (such as registered nurses, licensed practical nurses, nurse
practitioners, or clinical nurse specialists) in the definition of
direct care worker and are finalizing the definition in this final rule
with these clinicians included. There is a shortage of nurses and other
clinicians delivering HCBS, and we believe it is important to support
these members of the HCBS workforce (especially as they also work
directly with beneficiaries). We echo observations from commenters that
some services are required to be delivered or monitored by clinicians.
We also would not want to discourage clinical oversight that
contributes to the quality of services by creating a disincentive for
providers to hire clinicians when necessary. Therefore, we are
clarifying that our definition of direct care worker is intended to
include nurses and other staff who directly provide services to
beneficiaries or who provide clinical supervision. However, consistent
with the proposed rule, our definition is intended to exclude staff who
provide administrative supervision. We are finalizing a modification at
the end of Sec. 441.302(k)(1)(ii)(F) to specifically include nurses
and other staff providing clinical supervision.
Comment: One commenter suggested that if a State requires that a
program employ a nurse to perform occasional beneficiary visits, the
State should pay the nurses directly, rather than requiring the
providers to pay them.
Response: We thank the commenter for this suggestion. While we do
not intend to establish specific requirements for how States pay for
services provided by nurses, we agree that this could be a solution for
States that would prefer for providers to reach the payment adequacy
requirement without relying on salaries for clinical staff. We decline
to make changes in this final rule based on this comment.
Comment: A number of commenters requested that we include private
duty nurses, including registered nurses, licensed practical nurses,
and certified nursing assistants, in the definition of direct care
worker.
Response: We note that private duty nurses are not necessarily a
separate category of worker, but rather registered nurses, licensed
practical nurses, or certified nursing assistants who provide services
classified and billed as private duty nursing. As a technical matter,
we clarify that only registered nurses and licensed practical nurses
may provide private duty nursing services authorized under Sec.
440.80. As discussed above, these types of clinicians are included in
the definition of direct care worker in Sec. 441.302(k)(1)(i)(A) so
long as they are providing one of the three HCBS services specified in
the minimum performance requirement (homemaker, home health aide, or
personal care services). However, private duty nursing is not one of
the services we have proposed, and are finalizing, for application of
this the minimum performance requirement.
Comment: Many commenters recommended that nurse supervisors be
included in the definition of direct care workers. Several of these
commenters noted that these are required positions for their programs.
Some commenters observed that nurse supervisors perform important
activities like supervising and training other direct care workers,
[[Page 40628]]
coordinating beneficiaries' care, or completing documentation and other
paperwork specific to beneficiaries' care (as opposed to paperwork
related to business administration). Several commenters stated that
clinical supervision is critical to the quality of HCBS. A few
commenters noted that nurse supervisors sometimes visit beneficiaries
or provide direct services when filling in for absent direct care
workers.
One commenter noted support for excluding general administrative or
supervisory staff from the definition of direct care workers. A few
commenters expressed concerns about the exclusion of administrative or
supervisory staff who may sometimes also provide services to
beneficiaries. Some of these commenters noted that especially during
workforce shortages, administrative staff or supervisors may fill in
for direct care workers. A couple of commenters requested clarification
on how wages for staff who perform both direct care work and
administrative or supervisory work should be counted for the purposes
of complying with the minimum performance level. One commenter
requested clarification on whether first line supervisors of direct
support professionals are included in the definition of direct care
workers.
Several commenters stated that they opposed the exclusion of
supervisory or managerial staff because these are required positions
for their programs. Several commenters noted that staff who provide
supervision or perform administrative tasks, such as understanding and
reviewing compliance and other regulatory requirements, are critical to
quality. One commenter expressed the concern that excluding supervisory
or managerial staff from the 80 percent minimum performance level would
mean that providers would have to lower the salaries of these
positions, and then in turn may have trouble filling these positions.
One commenter raised concerns about ``wage compression,'' with
providers reducing wages for higher-skilled jobs or paying these jobs
more like entry-level jobs.
Response: We are persuaded that nurses or other staff who provide
clinical oversight and training for direct care workers participate in
activities directly related to beneficiary care (such as completing or
reviewing documentation of care), are qualified to provide services
directly to beneficiaries, and periodically interact with beneficiaries
should be included in the definition of direct care workers at Sec.
441.302(k)(1)(ii). As noted earlier, we are modifying our definition of
direct care worker at Sec. 441.302(k)(1)(ii)(F) to clarify that it
includes nurses and other staff providing clinical supervision.
However, consistent with the proposed rule, our definition is intended
to exclude staff who provide administrative supervision (such as
overseeing business operations).
While we acknowledge that administrative staff and administrative
supervisors are often required staff and perform essential functions
(including quality and compliance reporting and recordkeeping), we
believe it is critical for the economic and efficient use of Medicaid
funds that the vast majority of Medicaid payment for homemaker, home
health aide, and personal care services must go to supporting the core
activities of that service; the core activities of homemaker, home
health aide, and personal care services are performed by direct care
workers. As discussed above, evidence specifically shows that direct
care workers are paid low wages and, thus, our priority is ensuring a
greater share of Medicaid payments go to direct care workers'
compensation. If there is an insufficient number of direct care workers
employed by a provider, then those HCBS cannot be delivered, and
beneficiaries may not be able to access the HCBS they need. We will
continue to partner with States to help providers find efficient ways
to support their administrative and reporting requirements.
Comment: Many commenters expressed concern that direct support
professionals were excluded from the definition of direct care worker,
as direct care workers are often associated with provision of services
to older adults and people with physical disabilities, while direct
service professionals typically provide services to people with
intellectual and developmental disabilities.
Response: We note that direct support professionals are explicitly
included in the definition of direct care worker at Sec.
441.302(k)(1)(ii)(C), so there is no need to further modify the
definition of direct care worker in response to these comments. If
someone designated by their State as a direct support professional
provides a service that is subject to the minimum performance
requirement, their compensation will be included in the calculation for
the minimum performance level.
Comment: One commenter suggested that payments to contract
employees should not count toward the minimum performance level.
Response: Given the varied nature of HCBS programs, we specifically
proposed for the definition of direct care worker at Sec.
441.302(k)(1)(ii)(G) to encompass a broad array of employment
relationships. We cannot find sufficient justification for excluding
certain types of employment relationships from this requirement and are
finalizing our definition of direct care worker to include individuals
employed by a Medicaid provider, State agency, or third party;
contracted with a Medicaid provider, State agency, or third party; or
delivering services under a self-directed service model, as proposed.
However, we are making a technical modification for clarity to not
finalize Sec. 441.302(k)(1)(ii)(G) and to add language proposed at
Sec. 441.302(k)(1)(ii)(G) to the end of Sec. 441.302(k)(1)(ii).
Comment: One commenter opposed including workers who deliver
services via a self-directed services delivery model in the definition
of direct care workers. They noted that including these workers would
``chip away at the uniqueness at the heart of the self-direction
paradigm,'' unintentionally burden self-directed employers and
employees, reduce autonomy by introducing a single title for a wide
variety of caregiving types, and would not recognize the flexible and
interdependent nature of self-direction or the fact that Medicaid
beneficiaries who self-direct their services do not retain the funds
that remain in budgets at the end of the year.
Response: We thank the commenter for raising their concerns. We
decline to make modifications to the definition of direct care worker
to exclude direct care workers providing services in self-directed
services delivery models generally. We believe it is important for
States to have a sufficient direct care workforce to be able to deliver
services that are responsive to the changing needs and choices of
beneficiaries, as required by section 2402(a)(1) of the Affordable Care
Act, regardless of whether they are receiving services through a self-
directed services delivery model or a model that is not self-directed.
Further, we believe it is important for States to have a sufficient
number of qualified direct care workers to provide self-directed
personal assistance services, as required by section 2402(a)(3)(B)(iii)
of the Affordable Care Act.
However, we do agree that there are certain self-directed services
delivery models for which the minimum performance level at (k)(3) would
not be appropriate. We intend to apply the requirements at Sec.
441.302(k)(3) to models in which the beneficiary directing the services
is not setting the payment rate for the worker (such as
[[Page 40629]]
agency-provider models). We do not intend to apply the requirements to
self-directed services delivered through models in which the
beneficiary sets the payment rate for the worker (such as in individual
budget authority models). In the latter scenario, we expect that all or
nearly all of that payment rate routinely is spent on the direct care
worker's compensation. We are finalizing a new requirement at Sec.
441.302(k)(2)(ii) that clarifies this policy; this requirement is
discussed in greater detail in section II.B.5.g. of this final rule.
After consideration of the comments received, we are finalizing the
definition of direct care worker at Sec. 441.302(k)(1)(ii) with
technical modifications for clarity to change the term, Medicaid-
eligible individuals, to the term, Medicaid beneficiaries, in both
Sec. 441.302(k)(1)(ii)(A) and (F). We are finalizing Sec.
441.302(k)(1)(ii) with a modification at the end of Sec.
441.302(k)(1)(ii)(F) to provide that direct care workers include nurses
and other staff providing clinical supervision. The finalized revised
text at Sec. 441.302(k)(1)(ii)(F) will read: Other individuals who are
paid to provide services to address activities of daily living or
instrumental activities of daily living, behavioral supports,
employment supports, or other services to promote community integration
directly to Medicaid beneficiaries receiving HCBS available under this
subpart, including nurses and other staff providing clinical
supervision. We are making a technical modification to not finalize
Sec. 441.302(k)(1)(ii)(G) and add language proposed at Sec.
441.302(k)(1)(ii)(G) to the end of Sec. 441.302(k)(1)(ii) to clarify
that a direct care worker may be employed by a Medicaid provider, State
agency, or third party; contracted with a Medicaid provider, State
agency, or third party; or delivering services under a self-directed
service model.
f. Reporting (Sec. 441.302(k)(2))
Section 1902(a)(6) of the Act requires State Medicaid agencies to
make such reports, in such form and containing such information, as the
Secretary may from time to time require, and to comply with such
provisions as the Secretary may from time to time find necessary to
assure the correctness and verification of such reports. At Sec.
441.302(k)(2), under our authority at section 1902(a)(6) of the Act, we
proposed to require that States demonstrate that they meet the minimum
performance level at Sec. 441.302(k)(3)(i) through new Federal
reporting requirements at Sec. 441.311(e). We discuss these reporting
requirements in our discussion of proposed Sec. 441.311(e) in section
II.B.7 of this final rule.
We received public comments on these proposals. The following is a
summary of the comments we received and our responses. We also direct
the reader to the discussion of Sec. 441.311(e) in section II.B.7. of
this final rule for additional comments and responses.
Comment: A number of commenters, while not supporting the minimum
performance requirement, did express support for the requirement that
States must collect and report data on the percent of Medicaid payments
for certain HCBS going to compensation of direct care workers.
Commenters noted this reporting could yield important data about the
compensation to workers and allow for national comparisons.
Response: We agree with commenters that the reporting requirement
proposed at Sec. 441.311(e) will yield important data about
compensation to workers that will help support the HCBS direct care
workforce and promote better oversight of how Medicaid payments for
certain services are used.
We note that, while several commenters encouraged us to finalize
the reporting requirement at Sec. 441.311(e) without finalizing the
minimum performance requirement at Sec. 441.302(k)(3), no commenter
suggested that we finalize the minimum performance requirement without
a reporting requirement. We believe that the reference included in
Sec. 441.302(k)(2) to the reporting requirement at Sec. 441.311(e) is
necessary for CMS to oversee States' compliance with the minimum
performance requirement at Sec. 441.302(k)(3); however, the reporting
requirement at Sec. 441.311(e) is distinct and severable from the
minimum performance requirement at Sec. 441.302(k). As discussed in
more detail in section II.B.7, the reporting requirement at Sec.
441.311(e), which we are finalizing with modifications, addresses a
broader universe of services than is included in the minimum
performance level at Sec. 441.302(k)(3) and has an earlier
applicability date than the date we are finalizing at Sec.
441.302(k)(8) (discussed later in this section). While we are
finalizing both the minimum performance requirement at Sec.
441.302(k)(3) and the payment adequacy reporting requirement, as
amended, at Sec. 441.311(e), these represent distinct policies, and we
believe that the reporting requirement can (and will) function
independently from the minimum performance requirement.
Comment: Several commenters suggested that we add a requirement to
Sec. 441.302(k)(2) that would require States, as part of their
assurances of compliance with the minimum percentage requirement, to
acknowledge and explain any differences between the actual payment
rates for home care services and the rate most recently recommended by
the interested parties' advisory group under Sec. 447.203(b)(6) of
this final rule and discussed in section II.C. of this rule. The
commenters suggested that if the actual rate is lower than the
recommended rate, the State would also need to explain why it is
sufficient to ensure access to services.
Response: Although the interested parties' advisory group will
provide an invaluable perspective on the adequacy of rates, as
discussed in greater detail later in this preamble, the role of the
group finalized at Sec. 447.203(b)(6) is advisory. States will not be
required to follow the recommendations of the group. We believe the
policies as we are finalizing strike the right balance of
accountability and flexibility for wholly new rate processes. We
further note the recommendations of the interested parties' advisory
group will be posted publicly for review. Finally, we note that we are
also finalizing steps a State must take to demonstrate adequate access
to services when proposing a rate reduction or restructuring in
circumstances that could result in diminished access to care.
After consideration of the comments received, we are finalizing
Sec. 441.302(k)(2) with modifications. For reasons discussed in
section II.B.5.g. of this final rule, at Sec. 441.302, we are
redesignating paragraph (k)(2) as paragraph (k)(2)(i) to allow for the
addition of a new requirement at paragraph (k)(2)(ii) regarding
treatment of certain payment data under self-directed services delivery
models.
As discussed in section II.B.5.b. of this rule, we are finalizing
reporting requirements at Sec. 441.302(k)(6) to ensure accountability
in the States' use of the small provider minimum performance level and
hardship exemptions. To clarify that States must comply with this
requirement, as well as the reporting requirement at Sec. 441.311(e),
we are finalizing references to Sec. 441.302(k)(6) in Sec.
441.302(k)(2)(i). We also are finalizing a technical modification for
clarity that the State must demonstrate annually, consistent with the
reporting requirements at Sec. Sec. 441.302(k)(6) and 441.311(e), that
they meet the minimum performance level at Sec. 441.302(k)(3). (New
text in bold font).
[[Page 40630]]
g. Application to Other Authorities (Proposed at Sec. 441.302(k)(4),
Finalized at Sec. 441.302(k)(8); and Sec. Sec. 441.464(f),
441.570(f), and 441.745(a)(1)(vi))
At Sec. 441.302(k)(4), we proposed to apply the HCBS requirements
described in the proposed rule to services delivered under FFS or
managed care delivery systems. As discussed earlier in section II.B.1.
of this preamble, section 2402(a)(3)(A) of the Affordable Care Act
requires States to improve coordination among, and the regulation of,
all providers of Federally and State-funded HCBS programs to achieve a
more consistent administration of policies and procedures across HCBS
programs. In the context of Medicaid coverage of HCBS, it should not
matter whether the services are covered directly on an FFS basis or by
a managed care plan to its enrollees. The requirement for consistent
administration should require consistency between these two modes of
service delivery. We accordingly proposed to specify that a State must
ensure compliance with the requirements in Sec. 441.302(k) with
respect to HCBS delivered both under FFS and managed care delivery
systems.
Similarly, because workforce shortages exist under other HCBS
authorities, which include many of the same types of services to
address activities of daily living or instrumental activities of daily
living as under section 1915(c) waiver authority, we proposed to
include these requirements within the applicable regulatory sections.
Specifically, we proposed to apply the proposed requirements at Sec.
441.302(k) to section 1915 (j), (k), and (i) State plan at Sec. Sec.
441.464(f), 441.570(f), and 441.745(a)(1)(vi), respectively. Consistent
with our proposal for section 1915(c) waivers, we proposed these
requirements based on our authority under section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the
Act to ensure payments to HCBS providers are consistent with
efficiency, economy, and quality of care and are sufficient to enlist
enough providers so that care and services are available to
beneficiaries at least to the extent as to the general population in
the same geographic area. We believed the same arguments for proposing
these requirements for section 1915(c) waivers are equally applicable
for these other HCBS authorities. We requested comment on the
application of payment adequacy provisions across section 1915(i), (j),
and (k) authorities. As noted earlier in section II.B.4. of the
proposed rule, to accommodate the addition of new language at Sec.
441.464(e) and (f), we proposed to renumber existing Sec. 441.464(e)
as paragraph (g) and existing Sec. 441.464(f) as paragraph (h). We
requested comment on whether we should exempt, from these requirements,
services delivered using any self-directed service delivery model under
any Medicaid authority.
We considered whether to also apply these proposed payment adequacy
requirements to section 1905(a) ``medical assistance'' State plan
personal care and home health services. However, we did not propose
that these requirements apply to any section 1905(a) State plan
services based on State feedback that they do not have the same data
collection and reporting capabilities in place for section 1905(a)
services as they do for section 1915(c), (i), (j), and (k) services.
Further, the vast majority of HCBS is delivered under section 1915(c),
(i), (j), and (k) authorities, while only a small percentage of HCBS
nationally is delivered under section 1905(a) State plan authorities.
We requested comment on whether we should apply these requirements to
section 1905(a) State plan personal care and home health services.
We received public comments on these proposals. The following is a
summary of the comments we received and our responses.
Comment: A few commenters supported holding providers delivering
care in managed care delivery systems accountable for paying a
sufficient amount to direct care workers. A few commenters requested
that we clarify how this requirement would apply to MCOs, PIHPs, and
PAHPs. One commenter noted that managed care plans do not control the
payment rates that contracted providers pay their direct care workers.
A few commenters requested that we clarify managed care plans'
responsibility for tracking and reporting expenditures. A few
commenters expressed concern that this proposal would pose particular
reporting or accounting burdens for providers that participate in
multiple Medicaid managed care plans, serve non-Medicaid clients, or
receive bundled payments.
Response: We acknowledge commenters' broad concerns about how these
requirements will apply to managed care plans and will provide
technical assistance regarding specific questions as they are raised
during implementation. However, we are finalizing our proposal to apply
the requirements at Sec. 441.302(k) to both managed care and FFS
delivery systems. We clarify here that the requirements in Sec.
441.302(k) are the ultimate responsibility of States, regardless of
whether their HCBS are delivered through an FFS delivery system,
managed care delivery system, or both. The minimum performance
requirement applies at the provider level, not the managed care plan
level. We expect that States will develop an appropriate process with
their managed care plans should the State determine that managed care
plans have some role in activities such as the data collection or
reporting required in Sec. 441.302(k)(2) (being finalized as Sec.
441.302(k)(2)(i)). We agree that managed care plans do not control
payment rates that contracted providers pay their direct care workers
and reiterate that the focus of Sec. 441.302(k) is on the percentage
of the payment to providers that is passed along as compensation to
direct care workers.
We plan to provide technical assistance to States with managed care
delivery systems to minimize provider reporting and accounting burden
and to address questions related to bundled payments that include the
affected services (homemaker, home health aide, and personal care
services).
Comment: A few commenters specifically noted support for applying
the payment adequacy requirement to programs authorized under all
section 1915 authorities. One commenter did not support applying this
requirement to ``all 1915 waiver authorities'' but did not provide a
specific rationale for their recommendation.
Response: We are finalizing Sec. Sec. 441.464(f), 441.570(f), and
441.745(a)(1)(vi) (applying Sec. 441.302(k) to section 1915(j), (k)
and (i) services, respectively) with minor technical modifications as
noted later in this section II.B.5.g. of this final rule.
Comment: A number of commenters expressed concerns about the
application of the minimum performance level to self-directed services
authorized under sections 1915(j) and 1915(k) of the Act. A few
commenters, while not necessarily suggesting that self-directed
services should be excluded from the payment adequacy requirement,
believed that it would take more time and additional guidance to
implement the requirement for self-directed services.
Some commenters raised concerns about the application of the
requirement to specific models of self-direction, particularly the
self-directed model with service budget (as defined in Sec.
441.545(b)) (often referred to as the individual budget authority
model), in which the beneficiary sets the direct care worker's wages.
Some commenters worried that the application of the minimum performance
level to such
[[Page 40631]]
models would put the individual beneficiary in the position of acting
as a provider for this purpose. Other commenters were concerned that if
the minimum performance level was applied to these self-directed
services delivery models, beneficiaries would have to apply a set
percent of their budget to compensation of workers and thus would lose
the flexibility of determining how their budget was spent or what to
pay their direct care workers. One commenter pointed out that
beneficiaries in self-directed services delivery models do not
personally keep unspent funds and, thus, do not stand to profit by
lowering direct care workers' wages. A few commenters also requested
clarification of how the payment adequacy requirement would impact the
co-employment relationship in self-directed services. One commenter
noted that the vast majority of HCBS furnished under self-directed
services delivery models are paid so that the entire payment rate goes
toward direct care worker's wages and other associated costs such as
employer taxes, workers' compensation, and other employer requirements
such as State-mandated paid sick leave, while payment for financial
management services is paid separately. In these models, nearly 100
percent of the payment rate goes toward the direct care worker's wages
and associated costs, which would create an unfair comparison to
agency-directed services.
A few commenters noted that it would be undesirable to apply the
minimum performance level to HCBS furnished via self-directed services
delivery models because these services involve additional activities
and costs not associated with other types of services. These commenters
noted that services furnished via self-directed services delivery
models involve more training and human resources support for the
beneficiaries to help them hire and direct their workers. One commenter
stated that the proposed minimum performance level of 80 percent would
be too high to accommodate other non-compensation activities included
in self-directed services delivery models, such as employment or day
activities, case management, and back up supports.
On the other hand, some commenters noted that self-directed
services delivery models should be included in the payment adequacy
requirements and that it is important to support compensation for
direct care workers who provide HCBS via self-directed services
delivery models. One commenter noted that most personal care services
in the commenter's State are furnished via self-directed services
delivery models.
Response: We agree with commenters that the minimum performance
requirement may be difficult to apply (and, in fact, may simply be
inapplicable) to self-directed services delivery models with service
budget authority in which the beneficiary directing the services sets
the worker's wages as the payment rate for the service (such as models
meeting the definition of Sec. 441.545(b) for section 1915(k)
services, or self-directed services typically authorized under the
section 1915(j) authority).
We also agree with one commenter who noted that, because of the
separate payment of financial management services, nearly all of the
payments for personal care, homemaker, and home health aide services
furnished via self-directed services delivery models with service
budget authority are spent on compensation for direct care workers. We
believe that applying the minimum performance requirement to such
models would be ineffectual and an unnecessary burden on States.
We believe the minimum performance requirement is appropriate when
applied to a Medicaid rate for self-directed services that includes
both compensation to direct care workers and administrative activities
and in which the beneficiary did not set the payment rate for the
worker.
We note that at least some of the ``non-compensation activities''
identified by one commenter, such as employment or day activities and
case management, do not appear to fall under the specific services to
which we proposed, and are finalizing, for the minimum performance
requirement to apply, and therefore, they would not likely be subject
to the minimum performance requirement as finalized.
To clarify the application of Sec. 441.302(k) to HCBS furnished
via self-directed services delivery models, we are finalizing a new
requirement at Sec. 441.302(k)(2)(ii), specifying that, if the State
provides that homemaker, home health aide, or personal care services,
as set forth at Sec. 440.180(b)(2) through (4), may be furnished under
a self-directed services delivery model in which the beneficiary
directing the services sets the direct care worker's payment rate, then
the State does not include such payment data in its calculation of the
State's compliance with the minimum performance levels at paragraph
(k)(3).
We are finalizing the general application of Sec. 441.302(k) to
HCBS authorized under section 1915(j), (k), and (i) authorities, with
the understanding that some services delivered under these authorities
will fall under the exception for self-directed services delivery
models being finalized at Sec. 441.302(k)(2)(ii).
We note that the exception at Sec. 441.302(k)(2)(ii) directs
States to exclude certain data from the specified excluded self-
directed services models when establishing compliance with the minimum
performance level or small provider performance level at Sec.
441.302(k)(3). We believe, however, that the regulation text at Sec.
441.302(k) requiring States to assure that payment rates are adequate
to ensure a sufficient direct care workforce to meet the needs of
beneficiaries and provide access to services in the amount, duration,
and scope specified in beneficiaries' person-centered service plans
applies to all self-directed services models offered under all section
1915 authorities.
Comment: Commenters were mixed in their support for excluding
section 1905(a) services from the payment adequacy requirement. A few
commenters expressed strong support for extending the payment adequacy
requirement to services authorized under section 1905(a), particularly
commenters writing from States in which larger numbers of beneficiaries
receive section 1905(a) State plan services. One commenter expressed
concern that not including section 1905(a) services would
disproportionately exclude direct care workers providing services to
children or adults with intellectual and developmental disabilities.
One commenter noted that section 1902(a)(6) of the Act gives CMS the
authority to apply the requirement section 1905(a) services.
However, several commenters did not support applying the
requirement to section 1905(a) State plan services. Many of these
commenters simply did not support applying the minimum performance
requirement to services under any authority. A few commenters agreed
with our concerns that applying the payment adequacy requirement to
section 1905(a) State plan services would pose a particular burden on
States due to differences in how these services are delivered and
monitored.
Several commenters expressed concerns about potential unintended
consequences of not applying the minimum performance requirement to
section 1905(a) State plan services. In particular, some commenters
raised concerns that direct care workers would stop working for
providers that deliver section 1905(a) services, in favor of working
for providers that were subject to the minimum performance requirement.
On the other hand, a few
[[Page 40632]]
commenters worried that providers would stop providing services under
section 1915 authorities and switch to providing section 1905(a)
services to avoid having to comply with the payment adequacy
requirement.
Response: At this time, we are not requiring the application of the
HCBS payment adequacy requirements at Sec. 441.302(k) to section
1905(a) services. Given our work to better ensure access in the
Medicaid program is ongoing, we intend to gain implementation
experience with this final rule, and we will take these comments under
consideration for any potential future rulemaking regarding section
1905(a) services.
Comment: One commenter requested clarification as to whether the
payment adequacy requirements would apply to services delivered under
section 1115 authority.
Response: At Sec. 441.302(k)(4) (which we are finalizing at Sec.
441.302(k)(8)), we proposed to apply these requirements to services
delivered under FFS or managed care delivery systems, including those
authorized under section 1115(a) of the Act. We are finalizing this
requirement in this final rule, with modifications as noted herein,
including retaining the application to managed care delivery systems
authorized section 1115(a).
After consideration of public comments, and for reasons discussed
in sections II.B.5.b. and II.B.5.h. of this rule, we are finalizing
Sec. 441.302(k)(4) with modifications to redesignate Sec.
441.302(k)(4) as Sec. 441.302(k)(8) and change the date for States to
comply with the requirements at Sec. 441.302(k) from 4 years to 6
years. We are finalizing Sec. 441.302(k)(8) with minor modifications
to correct erroneous uses of the word ``effective.'' We are retitling
the requirement at Sec. 441.302(k)(8) as Applicability date (rather
than Effective date). We are also modifying the language at Sec.
441.302(k)(8) to specify that States must comply with the requirements
in Sec. 441.302(k) beginning 6 years after the effective date of this
final rule, rather than stating that Sec. 441.302(k)(8) is effective 6
years after the effective date of the final rule. In addition, we are
finalizing technical modifications to the language pertaining to the
applicability date for States providing services through managed care
delivery systems to improve accuracy and alignment with common phrasing
in managed care contracting policy.
As finalized, the redesignated Sec. 441.302(k)(8) reads:
Applicability date. States must comply with the requirements set forth
in paragraph (k) of this section beginning 6 years after the effective
date of this paragraph; and in the case of the State that implements a
managed care delivery system under the authority of section 1915(a),
1915(b), 1932(a), or 1115(a) of the Act and includes homemaker, home
health aide, or personal care services, as set forth at Sec.
440.180(b)(2) through (4) in the MCO's, PIHP's, or PAHP's contract, the
first rating period for contracts with the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP beginning
on or after the date that is 6 years after the effective date of this
paragraph. (New language identified in bold.)
After consideration of the comments, as noted above in this
section, we are finalizing a requirement at Sec. 441.302(k)(2)(ii)
specifying that if the State provides that homemaker, home health aide,
or personal care services, as set forth at Sec. 440.180(b)(2) through
(4), may be furnished under a self-directed services delivery model in
which the beneficiary directing the services sets the direct care
worker's payment rate, then the State does not include such payment
data in its calculation of the State's compliance with the minimum
performance levels at paragraph (k)(3).
We are finalizing the application of Sec. 441.302(k) to section
1915(j), (k), and (i) services with minor modifications. We are
finalizing a technical modification to clarify that the reference to
person-centered service plans in Sec. Sec. 441.464(f), 441.570(f), and
441.745(a)(1)(vi) is to beneficiaries' person-centered service plans.
We are also clarifying in Sec. Sec. 441.464(f), 441.570(f), and
441.745(a)(1)(vi) that while Sec. 441.302(k) applies to services
delivered under these authorities, references to section 1915(c) of the
Act are instead references to sections 1915(j), (k), or (i), as
appropriate.
Additionally, to ensure application of all relevant requirements of
Sec. 441.302(k) to section 1915(i) and (k) authorities, we are also
finalizing a modification to Sec. Sec. 441.474(c), 441.580(i) and
441.745(a)(1)(vii) to clarify that the reporting requirement at Sec.
441.302(k)(6) applies to section 1915(j), (k) and (i) authorities,
respectively. (We note that discussion of the finalization of
Sec. Sec. 441.474(c), 441.580(i) and 441.745(a)(1)(vii) is in II.B.7.
of this final rule.) We note that while we are applying the requirement
at Sec. 441.302(k)(6) to section 1915(j), (k), and (k) authorities,
States would only be required to comply with this reporting requirement
if the State provided services under these authorities described in
Sec. 441.302(k)(2)(i) and if the State meets the other criteria set
forth in Sec. 441.302(k)(6).
h. Applicability Date (Proposed at Sec. 441.302(k)(4), Being Finalized
at Sec. 441.302(k)(8))
As noted throughout the HCBS provisions in this preamble, we
recognize that many States may need time to implement these
requirements, including to amend provider agreements or managed care
contracts, make State regulatory or policy changes, implement process
or procedural changes, update information systems for data collection
and reporting, or conduct other activities to implement these proposed
payment adequacy requirements. We expect that these activities will
take longer than similar activities for other HCBS provisions in the
rule. Further, we expect that it will take a substantial amount of time
for managed care plans and providers to establish the necessary
systems, data collection tools, and processes necessary to collect the
required information to report to States. As a result, we proposed at
Sec. 441.302(k)(4), to provide States with 4 years to implement these
requirements in FFS delivery systems following the effective date of
the final rule. For States that implement a managed care delivery
system under the authority of sections 1915(a), 1915(b), 1932(a), or
1115(a) of the Act and include HCBS in the MCO's, PIHP's, or PAHP's
contract, we proposed to provide States until the first rating period
for contracts with the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP, beginning on or after 4
years after the effective date of the final rule to implement these
requirements. Similar to our rationale in other sections, this proposed
timeline reflects feedback from States and other interested parties
that it could take 3 to 4 years for States to complete any necessary
work to amend State regulations and work with their State legislatures,
if needed, as well as to revise policies, operational processes,
information systems, and contracts to support implementation of the
proposals outlined in this section. We also considered the overall
burden of the proposed rule as a whole in proposing the effective date
for the payment adequacy provision. We invited comments on the overall
burden associated with implementing this section, whether this
timeframe is sufficient, whether we should require a shorter timeframe
(such as 3 years) or longer timeframe (such as 5 years) to implement
the payment adequacy provisions and if an alternate timeframe is
recommended, the rationale for that alternate timeframe.
We received public comments on these proposals. The following is a
[[Page 40633]]
summary of the comments we received and our responses.
Comment: A few commenters supported our proposal that the minimum
performance requirement go into effect four years after the publication
of this final rule. One commenter noted that 4 years should be
sufficient time for States and providers to make necessary adjustments.
A few commenters noted that 4 years was too long, given the urgency of
the workforce shortage. One commenter suggested that we require the
minimum performance requirement go into effect January 1, 2025, while
another commenter suggested a 2-year effective date. One commenter
suggested the requirement should go into effect in 3 years, to align
with some of the other proposed effective dates in this rule.
Other commenters recommended that we allow for a longer effective
date, such as 6 years. Commenters noted that large-scale changes, such
as what would be required to comply with the minimum performance
requirement, would take time.
Several commenters suggested that compliance with the minimum
performance requirement be phased in over time to give providers and
States an opportunity to adjust their systems and policies.
Response: While we are sympathetic to commenters' sense of urgency
regarding the workforce shortage, we do not believe it is realistic for
States to comply with the requirements earlier than the proposed four
years. We agree with commenters that, for some States, ensuring that a
minimum percent of Medicaid payments go to direct care worker
compensation (and tracking compliance with this requirement) will
require a period of adjustment. We do expect that providers should
already be aware of their Medicaid revenues and what they pay their
workers; however, we acknowledge that they may not already be reporting
this information to the States and that the States will need to work
with their providers to develop an appropriate reporting mechanism. We
also understand that some providers will have to adjust how they
operate their business in order to meet the required minimum
performance level. We also acknowledge that we will need to provide
additional subregulatory guidance and technical assistance to aid in
implementation.
We agree with commenters that a slightly longer date for States to
comply with the requirements is necessary. We believe that the
complementary reporting requirement at Sec. 441.311I (discussed in
section II.B.7. of this rule) can be leveraged to create a transition
period to aid States in their compliance with Sec. 441.302(k)(3). As
such, we are finalizing Sec. 441.302(k)(8) with a modification to
change the date for States to comply with the requirements from 4 years
to 6 years. The data collected as part of Sec. 441.311(e) will give
States feedback on how close they are to reaching the minimum
performance level and will help CMS develop targeted technical
assistance for States that are farther away from attaining compliance.
For States electing to create a State-defined minimum performance level
for small providers, this period between reporting and performance will
also allow States to make any necessary adjustments to their State-
defined minimum performance levels. It will also allow States to make
any necessary adjustments to their criteria for hardship exemptions and
to identify providers who need hardship exemptions. We will continue to
use our standard enforcement tools and discretion, as appropriate, when
the requirements at Sec. Sec. 441.302(k) go into effect.
As noted in section II.B.5.b. and II.B.5.h. of this section, we are
creating new requirements at Sec. 441.302(k)(4) through (7) and thus
are redesignating proposed Sec. 441.302(k)(4) as Sec. 441.302(k)(8)
and finalizing Sec. 441.302(k)(8) with the modifications as noted in
section II.B.5.b. of this final rule. We are finalizing Sec.
441.302(k)(8) with minor modifications to correct erroneous uses of the
word ``effective.'' We are retitling the requirement at Sec.
441.302(k)(8) as Applicability date (rather than Effective date). We
are also modifying the language at Sec. 441.302(k)(8) to specify that
States must comply with the requirements in Sec. 441.302(k) beginning
6 years after the effective date of this final rule, rather than
stating that Sec. 441.302(k)(8) is effective 6 years after the
effective date of the final rule. In addition, we are finalizing
technical modifications to the language pertaining to the applicability
date for States providing services through managed care delivery
systems to improve accuracy and alignment with common phrasing in
managed care contracting policy.
i. Summary of Finalized Requirements
After consideration of the public comments, we are finalizing the
requirements at Sec. 441.302(k) as follows:
We are finalizing the assurance requirement at Sec.
441.302(k) with technical modifications.
We are finalizing Sec. 441.302(k)(1) with a technical
modification.
The definition of compensation at Sec. 441.302(k)(1)(i)
(now also at Sec. 441.311(e)(1)(i)) and finalized as proposed, with
the exception of Sec. 441.302(k)(1)(i)(B) (now also at Sec.
441.311(e)(1)(i)(B)), which is revised to read: Benefits (such as
health and dental benefits, life and disability insurance, paid leave,
retirement, and tuition reimbursement).
The definition of direct care worker at Sec.
441.302(k)(1)(ii) (now also at Sec. 441.311(e)(ii)) is finalized with
technical modifications to Sec. 441.302(k)(1)(ii)(A) and (F) (now also
at Sec. 441.311(e)(1)(ii)(A) and (F)). We are also finalizing the
following addition at the end of Sec. 441.302(k)(1)(ii)(F) (now also
at Sec. 441.311(e)(1)(ii)(F)), including nurses and other staff
providing clinical supervision. The revised text at Sec.
441.302(k)(1)(ii)(F) (now also at Sec. 441.311(e)(1)(ii)(F)) will read
as follows: Other individuals who are paid to provide services to
address activities of daily living or instrumental activities of daily
living, behavioral supports, employment supports, or other services to
promote community integration directly to Medicaid beneficiaries
receiving home and community-based services available under this
subpart, including nurses and other staff providing clinical
supervision. In addition, we are making a technical modification to not
finalize Sec. 441.302(k)(1)(ii)(G) and add language proposed at Sec.
441.302(k)(1)(ii)(G) to the end of Sec. 441.302(k)(1)(ii) to clarify
that a direct care worker may be employed by a Medicaid provider, State
agency, or third party; contracted with a Medicaid provider, State
agency, or third party; or delivering services under a self-directed
services delivery model.
A definition of excluded costs is finalized at Sec.
441.302(k)(1)(iii) (now also at Sec. 441.311(e)(1)(iii)) as follows:
Excluded costs means costs that are not included in the calculation
of the percentage of Medicaid payments to providers that is spent on
compensation for direct care workers. Such costs are limited to:
(A) Costs of required trainings for direct care workers (such as
costs for qualified trainers and training materials);
(B) Travel costs for direct care workers (such as mileage
reimbursement or public transportation subsidies); and
(C) Costs of personal protective equipment for direct care workers.
Section 441.302(k)(2) is finalized with modifications. We
are redesignating the language at Sec. 441.302(k)(2) as Sec.
441.302(k)(2)(i). We are finalizing Sec. 441.302(k)(2)(i) to include
references to the reporting requirements that are finalized at
[[Page 40634]]
Sec. Sec. 441.302(k)(6) and 441.311(e) and the exception finalized at
Sec. 441.302(k)(2)(ii). We also made a technical modification for
clarity that the State must demonstrate annually, consistent with the
reporting requirements at Sec. Sec. 441.302(k)(6) and 441.311(e), that
they meet the minimum performance level at Sec. 441.302(k)(3). In
addition, we made technical modifications for clarity and precision to
specify the specific services (homemaker, home health aide, and
personal care services) to which the payment adequacy requirement
applies and to specify that these requirements apply to services
authorized under section 1915(c) of the Act, unless excepted under
Sec. 441.302(k)(2)(ii).
We are finalizing at new requirement at Sec.
441.302(k)(2)(ii) that clarifies that if the State provides that
homemaker, home health aide, or personal care services, as set forth at
Sec. 440.180(b)(2) through (4), may be furnished under a self-directed
services delivery model in which the beneficiary directing the services
sets the direct care worker's payment rate, then the State would not
include such payment data in its calculation of the State's compliance
with the minimum performance levels at paragraph (k)(3).
Section 441.302(k)(3) is finalized with several
modifications to retitle the requirement as ``Minimum performance at
the provider level'' and clarify the components of the required
calculation and the services that fall within this requirement. Section
441.302(k)(3) is also finalized with modifications to clarify that
excluded costs are not included in the calculation of the percentage of
total payments to a provider that is spent on compensation to direct
care workers and to specify the specific services (homemaker, home
health aide, and personal care services) to which the payment adequacy
requirement applies. We are also modifying Sec. 441.302(k)(3) to note
the exceptions to the minimum performance level that we are adding at
(k)(5) (hardship exemption) and (k)(7) (IHS and Tribal health programs
subject to 25 U.S.C. 1641).
Section 441.302(k)(3)(i) is finalized with a clarification
that the minimum performance level of 80 percent applies to all
payments to a provider, except as provided in paragraph (k)(3)(ii).
Section 441.302(k)(3)(ii) is amended to add an option for
States to set a State-defined small provider minimum performance level.
As finalized, Sec. 441.302(k)(3)(ii) reads: (ii) At the State's
option, providers determined by the State to meet its State-defined
small provider criteria in paragraph (k)(4)(i) of this section, the
State must ensure that each provider spends the percentage set by the
State in accordance with paragraph (k)(4)(ii) of this section of total
payments the provider receives for services it furnishes as described
in paragraph (k)(3) on total compensation for direct care workers who
furnish those services.
An option for States to develop criteria to identify small
providers to meet the State-defined small provider minimum performance
level is added at new Sec. 441.302(k)(4).
An option for States to provide some providers with a
hardship exemption is added at new Sec. 441.302(k)(5).
Reporting requirements are finalized at Sec.
441.302(k)(6), establishing reporting requirements for States that
utilize the small provider minimum performance level and hardship
exemption options finalized at Sec. 441.302(k)(4)(ii) and (k)(5), as
well as a waiver of these requirements that may be granted under
certain circumstances.
An exemption from the requirements at Sec. 441.302(k) is
finalized for IHS and Tribal health programs subject to 25 U.S.C. 1641
at Sec. 441.302(k)(7).
Section 441.302(k)(4) is renumbered as Sec. 441.302(k)(8)
and is finalized, with other technical modifications, to specify that
States must comply with the requirements set forth at Sec.
441.302(k)(8) beginning 6 years from the effective date of this final
Rule.
We are finalizing Sec. Sec. 441.464(f), 441.570(f), and
441.745(a)(1)(vi) with technical modification to clarify that the
references to person-centered service plans in Sec. Sec. 441.464(f),
441.570(f), and 441.745(a)(1)(vi) are to beneficiaries' person-centered
service plans. We are also finalizing modifications to clarify that
Sec. 441.302(k) applies to services delivered under these authorities,
except that references to section 1915(c) of the Act are instead
references to sections 1915(j), (k), or (i) of the Act, as appropriate.
We are finalizing a modification to Sec. Sec. 441.474(c),
441.580(i), and 441.745(a)(1)(vii) to clarify that the reporting
requirement at Sec. 441.302(k)(6) applies to section 1915(j), (k) and
(i) authorities, respectively.
6. Supporting Documentation Required (Sec. 441.303(f)(6))
As discussed in the proposed rule (88 FR 27986), States vary in
whether they maintain waiting lists for section 1915(c) waivers, and if
a waiting list is maintained, how individuals may join the waiting
list. Section 1915(c) of the Act authorizes States to set enrollment
limits or caps on the number of individuals served in a waiver, and
many States maintain waiting lists of individuals interested in
receiving waiver services once a spot becomes available. While some
States require individuals to first be determined eligible for waiver
services to join the waiting list, other States permit individuals to
join a waiting list after an expression of interest in receiving waiver
services. This can overestimate the number of people who need Medicaid-
covered HCBS because the waiting lists may include individuals who are
not eligible for services. According to the Kaiser Family Foundation,
over half of people on HCBS waiting lists live in States that do not
screen people on waiting lists for eligibility.\118\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\118\ Burns, A., M. O'Malley Watts, M. Ammula. A Look at Waiting
lists for Home and Community-Based Services from 2016 to 2021.
Kaiser Family Foundation. https://www.kff.org/47f8e6f/.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We have not previously required States to submit any information on
the existence or composition of waiting lists, which has led to gaps in
information on the accessibility of HCBS within and across States.
Further, feedback obtained during various public engagement activities
conducted with States and other interested parties over the past
several years about reporting requirements for HCBS, as well as
feedback received through the RFI \119\ discussed earlier, indicate
that there is a need to improve public transparency and processes
related to States' HCBS waiting lists. In addition, we have found, over
the past several years in particular, that some States are operating
waiting lists for their section 1915(c) waiver programs despite serving
fewer people than their CMS-approved enrollment limit or cap, even
though States are expected to enroll individuals up to their CMS-
approved enrollment limit or cap before imposing a waiting list.
However, because we do not routinely collect information on States' use
of waiting lists and the number of people on waiting lists, we are
unable to determine the extent to which States are operating such
unauthorized waiting lists or to work with States to address these
unauthorized waiting lists.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\119\ CMS Request for Information: Access to Coverage and Care
in Medicaid & CHIP. February 2022. For a full list of question from
the RFI, see https://www.medicaid.gov/medicaid/access-care/downloads/access-rfi-2022-questions.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Section 1902(a)(6) of the Act requires State Medicaid agencies to
make such reports, in such form and containing such information as the
Secretary may from time to time require, and to comply with such
provisions as the
[[Page 40635]]
Secretary may from time to time find necessary to assure the
correctness and verification of such reports. Based on the authority
found at section 1902(a)(6) of the Act, we proposed to require
information from States on waiting lists to improve public transparency
and processes related to States' HCBS waiting lists and ensure that we
are able to adequately oversee and monitor States' use of waiting lists
in their section 1915(c) waiver programs. To address new proposed
requirements at Sec. 441.311(d)(1), described in section II.B.7. of
this rule, on State reporting on waiting lists, we proposed to amend
Sec. 441.303(f)(6) by adding a sentence to the end of the existing
regulatory text to require that if the State has a limit on the size of
the waiver program and maintains a list of individuals who are waiting
to enroll in the waiver program, the State must meet the reporting
requirements at Sec. 441.311(d)(1).
We received public comments on these proposals. The following is a
summary of the comments we received and our responses. We also received
a number of comments on the related reporting requirement at Sec.
441.311(d). Those comments are addressed in section II.B.7.
Comment: A few commenters shared local data and anecdotal
experiences about States' waiting lists, which some described as
containing thousands of people and requiring beneficiaries to wait for
long periods of time, even years, before accessing services. One
commenter observed that as demand for HCBS grows, the waiting lists
will also grow. A few commenters expressed concerns that the long
waiting times may result in beneficiaries having to enter institutional
care. Commenters also noted that beneficiaries and their families
experience confusion regarding waiting lists, including how long they
will have to remain on the waiting list before receiving services;
commenters noted that this confusion or lack of transparency can make
it difficult for beneficiaries to make informed decisions or plan for
future care needs.
A few commenters specifically supported our proposed amendment to
Sec. 441.303(f) that would require States to report information on
waiting lists for section 1915(c) waiver programs, which commenters
believed would contribute to transparency and provide additional data
to help make future changes within HCBS programs. Commenters believed
that a requirement to report this information would improve CMS's
ability to provide oversight and to hold States accountable for waiting
list practices. A few commenters believed that creating reporting
requirements for waiting lists is a necessary step toward the larger
goal of reducing HCBS waiting lists through expansion of HCBS programs.
A few commenters noted this information is critical when requesting
additional appropriations from State legislatures to expand HCBS
programs.
Response: We thank the commenters for their support and for sharing
their experiences and perspectives. We agree that collecting and
reporting data on waiting lists is a critical step in identifying unmet
needs among beneficiaries and can support the efficient administration
and expansion of HCBS programs.
Comment: A few commenters expressed opposition to adding a
reporting requirement for section 1915(c) waiver programs. Commenters
noted concerns that this requirement would necessitate changes in
States' data collection processes and IT systems.
Response: We address commenters' concerns in more detail in the
discussion of Sec. 441.311(d) in section II.B.7. of this rule. As we
note in that section, we have designed the reporting requirement to
minimize administrative burden on States while still generating
valuable data about waiting lists needed to support transparency and
accountability. We plan to offer States technical assistance as needed
to help align their current data collection practices with what will be
needed to comply with this reporting requirement.
After consideration of the public comments, we are finalizing the
requirements at Sec. 441.303(f) as proposed. We note that specific
recommendations regarding the reporting requirement are addressed in
section II.B.7. as part of the discussion of Sec. 441.311(d).
7. Reporting Requirements (Sec. Sec. 441.311, 441.474(c), 441.580(i),
and 441.745(a)(1)(vii))
Section 1902(a)(6) of the Act requires State Medicaid agencies to
make such reports, in such form and containing such information, as the
Secretary may from time to time require, and to comply with such
provisions as the Secretary may from time to time find necessary to
assure the correctness and verification of such reports. As discussed
in section II.B.1. of the proposed rule, in 2014, we released guidance
for section 1915(c) waiver programs in which we requested States to
report on State-developed performance measures across several domains,
as part of an overarching HCBS waiver quality strategy. The 2014
guidance established an expectation that States conduct systemic
remediation and implement a Quality Improvement Project when they score
below 86 percent on any of their performance measures. Under our
authority at section 1902(a)(6) of the Act, we proposed requirements at
Sec. 441.311, in combination with other proposed requirements
identified throughout the proposed rule, to supersede and fully replace
the reporting metrics and the minimum 86 percent performance level
expectations for States' performance measures described in the 2014
guidance.
The reporting requirements we proposed in the proposed rule
represented consolidated feedback from States, consumer advocates,
managed care plans, providers, and other HCBS interested parties on
improving and enhancing section 1915(c) waiver performance to integrate
nationally standardized quality measures into the reporting
requirements, address gaps in existing reporting requirements related
to access and the direct service workforce, strengthen health and
welfare and person-centered planning reporting requirements, and
eliminate annual performance measure reporting requirements that
provide limited useful data for assessing State compliance with
statutory and regulatory requirements. The intent of the proposed
reporting requirements was to allow us to better assess State
compliance with the statutory and regulatory requirements for section
1915(c) waiver programs. As indicated at the end of this preamble
section, we proposed that the reporting requirements at Sec. 441.311
also apply to State plan options authorized under section 1915(i), (j)
and (k) of the Act, as well as to both FFS and managed care delivery
systems, unless otherwise indicated.
We proposed, at Sec. 441.311(a), a regulation setting forth the
statutory basis and scope of the reporting requirements in Sec.
441.311.
We did not receive comments on Sec. 441.311(a). Based on further
consideration, we are finalizing Sec. 441.311(a) with a modification
for clarity to remove ``simplification'' and make a minor formatting
change to ensure Sec. 441.311(a) aligns directly with the statutory
requirement at section 1902(a)(19) of the Act.
We also note that, consistent with statements we made in the
introduction of sections II. and II.B. of this final rule regarding
severability, we intend that each provision in Sec. 441.311 of this
final rule is, as finalized, distinct and severable to the extent it
does not rely on another final policy or regulation that we proposed.
While we intend that each of the provisions being finalized
[[Page 40636]]
within Sec. 441.311, and policies and regulations being finalized
elsewhere in this rule, present a comprehensive approach for our
oversight of States' Medicaid programs and improving HCBS, we also
intend that each reporting requirement within Sec. 441.311 is distinct
and severable from one another and from other policies and regulations,
being finalized in this rule as well as those rules and regulations
currently in effect, to the extent applicable.
Specifically, we proposed, and are finalizing, various reporting
requirements in Sec. 441.311 to provide mechanisms for us to oversee
States' compliance with other policies being finalized in this rule,
such as reporting requirements at Sec. 441.311(b)(1) through (2) for
incident management system and critical incident requirements under
Sec. 441.302(a)(6), as well as to collect data to support future
policy considerations to address the direct care worker shortage at
Sec. 441.311(e). While we intend them to be distinct and severable, we
are finalizing these reporting requirements in Sec. 441.311 to
consolidate them in one place in regulation so they are easier to find.
They are not interdependent to the extent each does not rely on another
final policy or regulation that we proposed and are finalizing in this
rule. We believe that the reporting requirements being finalized herein
at Sec. 441.311(b)(1) through (4), (c), (d)(1) and (2), and (e) are
each valuable on their own and would provide critical data and
oversight even in a circumstance where individual provisions within
Sec. 441.311 were not finalized or implemented; however, we note that
in this final rule, we are finalizing all reporting requirements in
Sec. 441.311, albeit some with modifications, as discussed in this
section.
a. Compliance Reporting
(1) Incident Management System Assessment (Sec. 441.311(b)(1) and (2))
As noted earlier in section II.B.3. of this rule, there have been
notable and high-profile instances of abuse and neglect in recent years
that highlight the risks associated with poor quality care and with
inadequate oversight of HCBS in Medicaid. This is despite State efforts
to implement statutory and regulatory requirements to protect the
health and welfare of individuals receiving section 1915(c) waiver
program services, and State adoption of related subregulatory guidance.
In addition, a July 2019 survey of States that operate section 1915(c)
waivers found that:
Definitions of critical incidents vary across States and,
in some cases, within States for different HCBS programs or
populations;
Some States do not use standardized forms for reporting
incidents, thereby impeding the consistent collection of information on
critical incidents;
Some States do not have electronic incident management
systems, and, among those that do, many use systems with outdated
electronic platforms that are not linked with other State systems,
leading to the systems operating in silos and the need to consolidate
information across disparate systems; and
Many States cited the lack of communication within and
across State agencies, including with investigative agencies, as a
barrier to incident resolution.
Based on these findings and reports, as well as feedback obtained
during various public engagement activities conducted with interested
parties over the past several years to standardize and strengthen
health and welfare reporting requirements, we proposed new requirements
for States' incident management systems at Sec. 441.302(a)(6), as
discussed in section II.B.3. of this preamble. We also proposed new
reporting requirements that will allow us to better assess State
compliance with the requirements at Sec. 441.302(a)(6).
Relying on our authority at section 1902(a)(6) of the Act, at Sec.
441.311(b), we proposed to establish new compliance reporting
requirements. Specifically, at Sec. 441.311(b)(1)(i), we proposed to
require that States report every 24 months on the results of an
incident management system assessment to demonstrate that they meet the
requirements at Sec. 441.302(a)(6) that the State operate and maintain
an incident management system that identifies, reports, triages,
investigates, resolves, tracks, and trends critical incidents,
including that:
The State define critical incidents to meet the proposed
minimum standard definition at Sec. 441.302(a)(6)(i)(A);
The State have an electronic critical incident system
that, at a minimum, enables electronic collection, tracking (including
of the status and resolution of investigations), and trending of data
on critical incidents as proposed at Sec. 441.302(a)(6)(i)(B);
The State require that providers report any critical
incidents that occur during the delivery of section 1915(c) waiver
program services as specified in a waiver participant's person-centered
service plan, or are a result of the failure to deliver authorized
services, as proposed at Sec. 441.302(a)(6)(i)(C);
The State use claims data, Medicaid Fraud Control Unit
data, and data from other State agencies such as Adult Protective
Services or Child Protective Services to the extent permissible under
applicable State law to identify critical incidents that are unreported
by providers and occur during the delivery of section 1915(c) waiver
program services, or as a result of the failure to deliver authorized
services, as proposed at Sec. 441.302(a)(6)(i)(D);
The State ensure records being used as part of the
incident management system are handled in compliance with 45 CFR
164.510(b), and records with protected health information are obtained
and used with beneficiary consent at Sec. 441.302(a)(6)(i)(E);
The State share information on reported incidents, the
status and resolution of investigations, such as through the use of
information sharing agreements, with other entities in the State
responsible for investigating critical incidents, if the State refers
critical incidents to other entities for investigation, as proposed at
Sec. 441.302(a)(6)(i)(E); and
The State separately investigate critical incidents if the
investigative agency fails to report the resolution of an investigation
within State-specified timeframes as proposed at Sec.
441.302(a)(6)(i)(F).
Given the risk of preventable and intentional harm to beneficiaries
when effective incident management systems are not in place, documented
instances of abuse and neglect among people receiving HCBS, and
identified shortcomings and weaknesses of States' incident management
systems discussed earlier, we believed the proposed requirement for
States to report every other year on the results of an incident
management system assessment is in the best interest of and necessary
for protecting the health and welfare of individuals receiving section
1915(c) waiver program services. In the absence of such a reporting
requirement, we believed that we are unable to determine whether States
have effective systems in place to identify and address incidents of
abuse, neglect, exploitation, or other harm during the course of
service delivery; ensure that States are protecting the health and
welfare of individuals receiving section 1915(c) waiver program
services; and safeguard people receiving section 1915(c) waiver program
services from preventable or intentional harm.
In proposing an every 24-month timeframe for reporting, we were
attempting to take into account the
[[Page 40637]]
likely frequency of State changes to policies, procedures, and
information systems, while also balancing State reporting burden and
the potential risk to beneficiaries if States have incident management
systems that are not compliant with the proposed requirements at Sec.
441.302(a)(6). We believed an every 24-month timeframe for reporting is
sufficient to detect substantial changes to policies, procedures, and
information systems and ensure that we have accurate information on
States' incident management systems. We also proposed, at Sec.
441.311(b)(1)(ii), to allow States to reduce the frequency of reporting
to up to once every 60 months for States with incident management
systems that are determined to meet the requirements at proposed Sec.
441.302(a)(6). We invited comments on whether the timeframe for States
to report on the results of the incident management system assessment
is sufficient or if we should require reporting more frequently (every
year) or less frequently (every 3 years). We also invited comment on
whether we should require reporting more frequently (every 3 years or
every 4 years) for States that are determined to have an incident
management system that meets the requirements at Sec. 441.302(a)(6).
If an alternate timeframe is recommended, we requested that commenters
provide the rationale for that alternate timeframe.
We received public comments on this proposal. The following is a
summary of the comments we received and our responses. We also received
comments on the incident management system requirements. Those comments
and our responses are in section II.B.3. of this final rule.
Comment: A few commenters generally supported the proposed incident
management requirements being finalized at Sec. 441.302(a)(6), which
are the subject of the reporting requirement at Sec. 441.311(b)(1).
One commenter questioned how these reporting requirements would
interact with current State reporting requirements related to critical
incidents or other waiver reporting requirements.
Response: We thank commenters for their support. We expect to
implement new reporting forms for the new reporting requirements that
we are finalizing in this final rule, including the critical incident
reporting requirements. We also expect to modify existing reporting
forms, particularly to remove the reporting requirements in the 2014
guidance \120\ that are being superseded and fully replaced by the
requirements in this final rule. We note that some components of the
existing reporting forms may remain in effect to the extent that they
cover other requirements that remain unchanged by the requirements that
we are finalizing in this final rule. States and interested parties
will have an opportunity to comment on the new reporting forms and the
revised forms through the Paperwork Reduction Act notice and comment
process. Further, we expect that States will be able to build on
existing systems to comply with the requirements being finalized in
this rule at Sec. Sec. 441.302(a)(6) and 441.311(b)(1) (discussed in
sections II.B.3. and II.B.7. of this rule, respectively.) We plan to
provide technical assistance to specific State questions, as needed,
about how these requirements can align and interact with current
practices.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\120\ We note that, although States will no longer be expected
to meet the reporting requirements and 86 percent minimum
performance level in the 2014 guidance, the six assurances and
related subassurances in the 2014 guidance continue to apply.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Comment: A few commenters requested clarification on the assessment
that is mentioned in Sec. 441.311(b)(1)(i). Commenters requested more
information on the contents of the assessment States must perform of
their incident management systems and how States should report the
results of the assessment. A few commenters requested more detail on
the reporting template and when the report would need to be submitted.
A few commenters expressed the hope that the reporting timing could be
aligned with waiver years or other administrative deadlines. One
commenter inquired if States were expected to pay for the assessment.
One commenter requested clarification on the deadline for when this
assessment must be completed. A few commenters noted that the
assessment was required to be performed annually.
Response: The assessment that States perform of their systems will
include review of the elements being finalized at Sec. 441.302(a)(6).
The requirements we are finalizing in Sec. 441.302(a)(6) is discussed
in detail in section II.B.3. of this final rule. The assessment results
will be collected as part of the overall data collection activities
associated with the reporting requirements in Sec. 441.311. Per Sec.
441.311(f), as finalized herein (and discussed below in this section
II.B.7.), States will be required to comply with the reporting
requirement for Sec. 441.311(b)(1) beginning 3 years after the
effective date of this final rule. This means that States will be
required to submit the assessment results to CMS in three years; thus,
assessments should be performed in time for States to meet this
timeframe. We will be making the required assessment and reporting
template available for public comment through the Paperwork Reduction
Act notice and comment process. Specific reporting due dates will be
determined through subregulatory guidance.
We anticipate that the costs that States incur to conduct and
report on the results of the assessment will be eligible for Federal
match as an administrative activity. Current Medicaid Federal matching
funds are available for State expenditures on the design, development,
and installation (including enhancements), and for operation, of
mechanized claims processing and information retrieval systems. Under
section 1903(a)(7) of the Act, Federal matching funds are available for
administrative activities necessary for the proper and efficient
administration of the Medicaid State plan. This may include the costs
that States incur to conduct and report on the results of the incident
management assessment.
We also clarify that there is not a requirement that the incident
management assessment be performed annually. As discussed in greater
detail below, Sec. Sec. 441.311(b)(1)(i) and (ii) require that States
must submit an incident management assessment every 24 months unless
CMS determines the system meets the requirements at Sec.
441.302(a)(6), at which point the assessment must be made every 60
months. Assessments of the incident management system need to be
performed as part of this assurance schedule. However, States are
welcome to perform assessments more frequently than this schedule
requires.
Comment: A few commenters requested that we require States to
assess whether the State system tracks the reporting of critical
incidents to the designated State Protection and Advocacy system at the
same time the incident was reported to the State.
Response: We are declining to make modifications to requirements
for States system assessments. We note that commenters made a similar
request to add this requirement to the system requirements proposed at
Sec. 441.302(a)(6). We also declined to add the requirement to Sec.
441.302(a)(6). We refer readers to section II.B.3. of this rule for the
related discussion. However, States are welcome to add other factors to
their system assessment beyond the requirements we are finalizing in
this rule.
[[Page 40638]]
Comment: One commenter requested clarification on the consequences
of a State's incident management system being found to be non-compliant
with Sec. 441.302(a)(6).
Response: Corrective actions or other enforcement actions will be
determined on a case-by-case basis, using our standard enforcement
authority, for States with incident management systems that are
determined by the assessment to not be compliant with the requirements
at Sec. 441.302(a)(6). Additionally, States that do not have compliant
systems will be required to perform assessments every 24 months, as
required by Sec. 441.311(b)(1)(i) until CMS determines that the system
meets the requirements of Sec. 441.302(a)(6) and the State can reduce
reporting frequency to every 60 months, as provided by Sec.
441.311(b)(1)(ii). We are not making any changes in this final rule
based on this comment.
Comment: A few commenters supported the proposals at Sec.
441.311(b)(1)(i) and (ii) that States must provide the required
assessment every 24 months and, if the system is determined to be
compliant, every 60 months. One commenter encouraged us to reduce the
frequency in Sec. 441.311(b)(1)(i) to one year. One commenter
suggested that States should provide assessments on their systems every
1 to 2 years, and if the State's system has been deemed to be in
compliance, the assessment should be provided every 3 to 4 years.
A few commenters, however, believed that the reporting frequency
should be increased. One commenter recommended this reporting should
occur every three years. A few commenters worried that 24 months would
not be sufficient time for States to submit the assessment to CMS, and
implement any system changes, which might require IT systems updates
and acquiring additional funding from State legislatures. One commenter
suggested that the assessment should be submitted every 5 years to
align with the waiver renewal cycle.
One commenter noted that requiring an assessment every 24 months
will create an unnecessary duplication of work. The commenter agreed
with the need for an initial assessment but contended that the ongoing
assessments were unnecessary, as States could independently monitor
ongoing operations and make quality improvements and system updates as
needed.
Response: We continue to believe that 24 months (and, for compliant
systems, 60 months) is an appropriate frequency that ensures
accountability without being overly burdensome. We refer readers to our
prior response regarding situations in which we determine, based on the
State's assessment, that its system does not meet the requirements
finalized at Sec. 441.302(a)(6).
We do not agree that requiring a regular schedule of system review
is duplicative. If a State is already conducting regular system reviews
as part of a quality improvement process, that review can form the
basis for the every 24-month or, as appropriate, every 60-month
assessment. We believe that for States that may not already have such
processes in place, some regular schedule of review is necessary to
ensure that over time, systems do not fall out of compliance. We also
would encourage States to use these assessments as opportunities to
conduct more comprehensive audits or reviews to identify opportunities
for system improvements.
After consideration of the comments received, we are finalizing the
reporting frequency in Sec. 441.311(b)(1)(i) with a technical
modification for clarity that the State must report on the results of
an incident management system assessment, every 24 months, in the form
and manner, and at a time, specified by CMS, rather than according to
the format and specifications provided by CMS. We are finalizing Sec.
441.311(b)(1)(ii) as proposed.
(2) Critical Incidents (Sec. 441.311(b)(2))
As discussed earlier in section II.B.4. of the proposed rule, at
Sec. 441.302(a)(6)(i)(A), we proposed to require States to define
critical incidents at a minimum as verbal, physical, sexual,
psychological, or emotional abuse; neglect; exploitation including
financial exploitation; misuse or unauthorized use of restrictive
interventions or seclusion; a medication error resulting in a telephone
call to or a consultation with a poison control center, an emergency
department visit, an urgent care visit, a hospitalization, or death; or
an unexplained or unanticipated death, including but not limited to a
death caused by abuse or neglect.
Based on the same rationale as discussed previously in section
II.B.7.a.(1) of this preamble related to the proposed incident
management system assessment reporting requirement, at Sec.
441.311(b)(2), relying on our authority under section 1902(a)(6) of the
Act, we proposed to require that States report annually on the number
and percent of critical incidents for which an investigation was
initiated within State-specified timeframes; number and percent of
critical incidents that are investigated and for which the State
determines the resolution within State-specified timeframes; and number
and percent of critical incidents requiring corrective action, as
determined by the State, for which the required corrective action has
been completed within State-specified timeframes. We intended to use
the information generated from the proposed reporting requirements at
Sec. 441.311(b)(2)(i) through (iii) to determine if States meet the
requirements at Sec. 441.302(a)(6)(ii).\121\ Given the risk of harm to
beneficiaries when effective incident management systems are not in
place, documented instances of abuse and neglect among people receiving
HCBS, and identified shortcomings and weaknesses of States' incident
management systems discussed earlier, we believed the proposed
requirement at Sec. 441.311(b)(2) for States to report annually on
critical incidents is in the best interest of and necessary for
protecting the health and welfare of individuals receiving section
1915(c) waiver program services. We invited comments on the timeframe
for States to report on the critical incidents, whether we should
require reporting less frequently (every 2 years), and if an alternate
timeframe is recommended, the rationale for the alternate timeframe.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\121\ We note that there was a typographical error in the NPRM
at 88 FR 27987, incorrectly identifying the proposed reporting
requirements at Sec. 441.311(b)(2)(ii) through (iv), rather Sec.
441.311(b)(2)(i) through (iii).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We received public comments on this proposal. The following is a
summary of the comments we received and our responses. We also received
comments on the minimum performance requirements for critical incident
investigations proposed in Sec. 441.302(a)(6), which form the basis of
the reporting requirement at Sec. 441.311(b)(2). These comments and
our responses are in section II.B.3. of this final rule.
Comment: A few commenters generally supported our proposal at Sec.
441.311(b)(2). One commenter observed that the current lack of
standardized incident management systems across all States puts
beneficiaries at risk and believed that the critical incident reporting
requirements will help to prevent adverse experiences, increase
accountability for States, and provide beneficiaries with an avenue of
redress when they experience harm.
Response: We thank commenters for their support.
Comment: A few commenters opposed the reporting requirement at
Sec. 441.311(b)(2). One commenter
[[Page 40639]]
believed that building the necessary IT systems to complete the
reporting will impose an extraordinary cost to States and take years to
develop, test, and implement. Another commenter expressed concerns that
the reporting requirements would necessitate a restructuring of some
States' critical incident management, including revising policies,
procedures, trainings, and processes.
Response: As discussed in the proposed rule (88 FR 27978), since
2014, States operating section 1915(c) waiver programs have been
expected to demonstrate on an ongoing basis that they identify,
address, and seek to prevent instances of abuse, neglect, exploitation,
and unexplained death, and demonstrate that an incident management
system is in place that effectively resolves incidents and prevents
further similar incidents to the extent possible. While we acknowledge
that some States may have to make some adjustments to their systems, we
expect that most will be able to build on existing systems to achieve
this reporting. We plan to offer States technical assistance as needed
to support questions they may have about adjustments they need to make
to existing policies, tracking, and reporting systems. We decline to
make any changes in this final rule based on these comments.
Comment: A few commenters requested that we share more details
about the reporting template and when the report would need to be
submitted. A few commenters expressed the hope that the reporting
timing could be aligned with waiver years or other administrative
deadlines.
Response: The reporting requirement at Sec. 441.311(b)(2) will be
collected as part of the overall data collection activities associated
with the reporting requirements in Sec. 441.311. Per Sec. 441.311(f),
as finalized herein and discussed in this section II.B.7. of the rule,
States must comply with the reporting requirement at Sec.
441.311(b)(2) beginning 3 years from the effective date of this final
rule]. Prior to that applicability date, we will be making the
reporting template available for public comment through the Paperwork
Reduction Act notice and comment process. Specific reporting due dates
will be determined through subregulatory guidance.
Comment: One commenter requested clarification on whether the
reporting was statewide or could be submitted for each program. The
commenter noted that for States operating multiple critical incident
systems, or tracking critical incidents at the program level, reporting
of data at an aggregate statewide level will not only prove
operationally challenging, but it could also limit the ability to
identify and address program-specific issues.
Response: States are expected to report aggregated statewide data
for this requirement. We believe that a State could track critical
incidents by program at the State level and then aggregate this data
for the purposes of the reporting requirement at Sec. 441.311(b)(2).
We plan to offer technical assistance to States, as needed, that have
decentralized critical incident systems to facilitate the aggregated
statewide reporting. We also note that States will be able to provide
input into the reporting instrument when it is shared for public
comment during the Paperwork Reduction Act notice and public comment
process.
Comment: One commenter was critical of the proposed reporting
metrics at Sec. 441.311(b)(2), believing that the focus of the metrics
was too much on timeliness: timely initiation of investigations, timely
resolutions, and timely corrective action. The commenter did not
believe that there was sufficient focus on the substance of the
incidents. A few commenters recommended that we add the following
metrics to Sec. 441.311(b)(2): the number of critical incidents in
each year, categorized by type of incident and extent of injury or by
severity; whether corrective action was needed; whether corrective
action was performed; whether any corrective action addressed the needs
of current participants or future participants (or both); and whether
corrective action adequately addressed participants' needs.
One commenter stated that the information should be reported to the
public, although in a format that protects the anonymity of the
beneficiary and filer. The commenter also suggested that a separate
section of the public report should provide information on
substantiated critical incidents by provider, including the service
provider's owner and the name under which they are doing business.
Response: We disagree that the metrics in Sec. 441.311(b)(2) focus
only on timeliness. Inherent in these metrics is the expectation that
States will promptly investigate and resolve critical incidents, which
we believe is the essential purpose of the critical incident system. We
developed the reporting requirement at Sec. 441.311(b)(2) to strike a
balance between collecting enough information to enable Federal
oversight of the States' system designed to investigate and resolve
critical incidents and imposing as minimal an administrative burden on
States and providers as possible. We believe it is important for States
to have flexibility in how they design their system to identify,
report, triage, investigate, resolve, track, and trend critical
incidents as set forth in the proposed requirements at Sec.
441.302(a)(6), which we are finalizing as discussed in section II.B.3.
We also believe that requiring a broad, national reporting requirement
for States to report critical incident timeliness data will provide a
mechanism to assess whether States are complying with their own
timeframes for investigating, resolving, and implementing corrective
actions, and to ensure States are complying with their own established
processes for reviewing and addressing critical incidents.
We did not propose, and are not finalizing, specific requirements
for how States must use this data. We will likely include promising
practices related to data collection and analysis, including methods of
capturing qualitative data from the records, in technical assistance
for States to aid in implementation.
We note that the data required in Sec. 441.311(b)(2) is included
in the public posting requirement we are finalizing at Sec. 441.313
(discussed in greater detail in II.B.9. of this final rule). We are not
requiring that States publicly report specific information about
critical incidents, including the names of providers involved in
critical incidents. We believe that some public disclosures may not be
suitable or appropriate in every instance, and it would be difficult to
tailor a meaningful requirement to anticipate all of these
circumstances. We are concerned that, for example, in States with
smaller HCBS populations, it may be difficult to truly anonymize
information about critical incidents. While we agree that, over time,
qualitative data about trends in critical incidents could be useful to
both States and other interested parties in promoting systemic
improvements in their HCBS programs, we defer to States to determine
when and how to make this information public, in accordance with
applicable laws governing confidentiality of such information, and for
what purpose.
Comment: A few commenters supported the proposal that this data
should be reported on an annual basis. A few commenters recommended
less frequent reporting, such as every two years, to reduce burden.
One commenter, while not necessarily recommending a different
reporting frequency, noted that reporting requirements must take into
account the unique factors that impact the length of time it could take
to complete an
[[Page 40640]]
investigation or conduct corrective action. The commenter noted that
depending on the nature of the corrective action and when the
corrective action process begins in a reporting year, annual reporting
may result in misleading data about the number of resolved critical
incidents or completed corrective actions.
Response: Given the importance and time-sensitive nature of
critical incident investigations, resolutions, and corrective actions,
we believe it is necessary to collect this data on an annual basis so
we may monitor these systems. We also clarify that the reporting is not
intended to track how many critical incidents were investigated,
resolved, or resulted in completed corrective actions in a reporting
year; the requirement is to report how many critical incidents were
investigated, resolved, or resulted in completed corrective actions
within State-specified timeframes during the reporting period. Thus,
even if the reporting period falls in the middle of a critical incident
resolution or corrective action, these incidents would not be reported
as ``non-compliant'' if they were still within the State-specified
timeframes for completion.
After consideration of these comments, we are finalizing the
introductory text at Sec. 441.311(b)(2), with a technical modification
for clarity that the State must report to CMS annually in the form and
manner, and at a time, specified by CMS, rather than according to the
format and specifications provided by CMS. We are also simplifying the
title and moving the reference to Sec. 441.302(a)(6)(i)(A) from the
title of Sec. 441.311(b)(2) to the introductory text. As finalized,
the introductory text at Sec. 441.311(b)(2) will specify that the
State must report to CMS annually on the following information
regarding critical incidents as defined in Sec. 441.302(a)(6)(i)(A),
in the form and manner, and at a time, specified by CMS. We are
finalizing Sec. 441.311(b)(2)(i) through (iii) as proposed.
(3) Person-Centered Planning (Sec. 441.311(b)(3))
Under the authority of section 1902(a)(6) of the Act, we proposed
at Sec. 441.311(b)(3) to require that States report annually to
demonstrate that they meet the requirements at Sec. 441.301(c)(3)(ii).
Specifically, at Sec. 441.311(b)(3)(i), we proposed to require that
States report on the percent of beneficiaries continuously enrolled for
at least 365 days for whom a reassessment of functional need was
completed within the past 12 months. At Sec. 441.311(b)(3)(ii), we
proposed to require that States report on the percent of beneficiaries
continuously enrolled for at least 365 days who had a service plan
updated as a result of a reassessment of functional need within the
past 12 months. These proposed requirements were based on feedback
obtained during various interested parties' engagement activities
conducted with States and other interested parties over the past
several years about the reporting discussed in the 2014 guidance. As
discussed in section II.B.7. of the preamble for the proposed rule,
this feedback indicated that we should strengthen person-centered
planning reporting requirements and eliminate annual performance
measure reporting requirements that provide limited useful data for
assessing State compliance with statutory and regulatory requirements.
These proposed requirements were also based on feedback received
through the RFI \122\ discussed earlier about the need to standardize
reporting and set minimum standards for HCBS.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\122\ CMS Request for Information: Access to Coverage and Care
in Medicaid & CHIP. February 2022. For a full list of question from
the RFI, see https://www.medicaid.gov/medicaid/access-care/downloads/access-rfi-2022-questions.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As discussed in section II.B.1. of the preamble for the proposed
rule, we proposed a revision to the regulatory text so that it is clear
that changes to the person-centered service plan are not required if
the re-assessment does not indicate a need for changes. As such, for
the purpose of the reporting requirement at Sec. 441.311(b)(3)(ii),
beneficiaries would be considered to have had a person-centered service
plan updated as a result of the re-assessment if it is documented that
the required re-assessment did not indicate a need for changes.
For both of the metrics at Sec. 441.301(c)(3)(ii), we proposed to
allow States to report a statistically valid random sample of
beneficiaries, rather than for all individuals continuously enrolled in
the waiver program for at least 365 days.
We invited comments on whether there are other specific compliance
metrics related to person-centered planning that we should require
States to report, either in place of or in addition to the metrics we
proposed. We also invited comments on the timeframe for States to
report on person-centered planning, whether we should require reporting
less frequently (every 2 years), and if an alternate timeframe is
recommended, the rationale for the alternate timeframe.
We received public comments on this proposal. The following is a
summary of the comments we received and our responses. We also received
comments on the person-centered service plans minimum performance
requirements proposed in Sec. 441.301(c)(3)(ii), which form the basis
of the reporting requirement at Sec. 441.311(b)(3). These comments and
our responses are in section II.B.1. of this final rule.
Comment: A few commenters expressed support for the requirement
that States report annually on the specified performance metrics for
person-centered planning. Commenters echoed sentiments that are
reflected in section II.B.1. of this final rule, that many States are
already regularly performing the assessment and reassessment activities
in compliance with the minimum performance standards being finalized in
Sec. 441.301(c)(3)(ii) and, thus, reporting on these activities is
reasonable.
We did not receive feedback in response to our request for comment
on additional or alternative metrics that should be included in the
reporting requirement at Sec. 441.311(b)(3).
Response: We thank commenters for their support. We note that the
metrics in Sec. 441.311(b)(3) are based on the minimum performance
requirements being finalized at Sec. 441.301(c)(3)(ii); comments on
these minimum performance standards are discussed in section II.B.1. of
this final rule.
Comment: A few commenters expressed reservations about the proposal
to allow States to report data on a statistically valid sample of
beneficiaries, suggesting instead that we require complete reporting on
all relevant beneficiary data.
Response: We intended that the proposed requirement allow States to
report data and information for the person-centered service planning
reporting metrics at Sec. 441.311(b)(3) using a statistically valid
random sampling of beneficiaries would reduce State burden, while still
providing valuable data for strengthening States' person-centered
service planning processes. We will consider expanding the reporting to
capture the full population of beneficiaries receiving HCBS in future
rulemaking if it is determined that such an approach gives a more
complete picture of person-centered service planning. We note that
States may choose to report on the total population for this measure as
opposed to a sample, for instance, if doing so better aligns with their
data collection process or needs.
We note that, as proposed, we stated in Sec. 441.311(b)(3)(i) and
(ii) that the State may report these metrics for a statistically valid
random sample of
[[Page 40641]]
beneficiaries. We are finalizing the requirements at Sec.
441.311(b)(3)(i) and (ii) with a technical modification to specify that
the State may report this metric using statistically valid random
sampling of beneficiaries. (Revised language identified in bold.) We
make this technical correction to better align the language with
standard terminology for the sampling methodology we intended in these
requirements.
Comment: One commenter specifically noted that the frequency of
annual reporting was feasible. One commenter noted that while the
reporting frequency is reasonable, it is important to align with other
reporting requirements already placed on States and managed care plans
to minimize State and managed care plan reporting burdens.
A few commenters requested clarification on when the report
required in Sec. 441.311(b)(3) would be due to CMS and whether we
would provide a template for the reporting. One commenter requested
clarification on how this aggregated data should be reported, noting
that current mechanisms for reporting similar data are waiver specific.
Response: We will be releasing subregulatory guidance, including
technical specifications for the new reporting requirements in this
final rule, and making the required reporting templates available for
public comment through the Paperwork Reduction Act notice and comment
process. Per Sec. 441.311(f) below, States must comply with the
reporting requirement for Sec. 441.311(b)(3) beginning 3 years from
the effective date of this final rule]. Specific reporting due dates
will be determined through subregulatory guidance; we will work with
States to align these due dates with other obligations to minimize
administrative burden to the greatest extent possible.
After consideration of the public comments received, we are
finalizing the reporting requirement at Sec. 441.311(b)(3)(i) and
(ii), with the technical modification noted above to specify that the
State may report this metric using statistically valid random sampling
of beneficiaries. We are also finalizing a technical correction to the
regulation text at Sec. 441.311(b)(3). In the proposed rule (88 FR
27988), we indicated that we were proposing at Sec. 441.311(b)(3) to
require that States report annually to demonstrate that they meet the
requirements at Sec. 441.301(c)(3)(ii). In the publication of the
proposed rule, this language was omitted from the regulatory text in
error. We are finalizing Sec. 441.311(b)(3) with technical
modifications to specify that, to demonstrate that the State meets the
requirements at Sec. 441.301(c)(3)(ii) regarding person-centered
planning (as described in Sec. 441.301(c)(1) through (3)), the State
must report to CMS annually. We are also making a technical
modification to indicate that the reporting must be in the form and
manner, and at a time, specified by CMS. We believe, based on the
language included in the proposed rule (88 FR 27988) and the comments
received, that commenters understood the intent of this regulation even
with language omitted.
(4) Type, Amount, and Cost of Services (Sec. 441.311(b)(4))
As discussed previously in section II.B.4. of this preamble, we
proposed to amend Sec. 441.302(h) to avoid duplicative or conflicting
reporting requirements with the new Reporting Requirements section at
proposed Sec. 441.311. In particular, at Sec. 441.302(h), we proposed
to remove paragraphs (1) and (2). At Sec. 441.311(b)(4), we proposed
to add the language previously at Sec. 441.302(h)(1). In doing so, we
proposed to retain the current requirement that States report on the
type, amount, and cost of services and to include the reporting
requirement in the new consolidated reporting section at Sec. 441.311.
We received public comments on this proposal. The following is a
summary of the comments we received and our responses.
Comment: One commenter supported this proposal.
Response: We thank the commenter for their support.
Comment: One commenter requested clarification on whether the
reporting requirement at Sec. 441.311(b)(4) will apply to managed care
plans.
Response: The requirement at Sec. 441.311(b)(4) replicates the
current requirement at Sec. 441.302(h), which applies to section
1915(c) programs, regardless of whether they are part of a FFS or
managed care delivery system.
As stated in the proposed rule (88 FR 27988), it was our intent to
consolidate the current reporting requirement at Sec. 441.302(h)(1)
with the new requirements being finalized at Sec. 441.311. We note
that as this requirement was presented in the proposed rule, we
inadvertently struck part of the language from Sec. 441.302(h) that we
intended to retain in Sec. 441.311(b)(4) that clarified the reporting
frequency (annually) and the object (the 1915(c) waiver's impact on the
State plan) of the requirement currently at Sec. 441.302(h)(1). We are
concerned that without this omitted language, Sec. 441.311(b)(4) does
not include information needed to implement this requirement. We
believe that, as we expressed our intent in the proposed rule (88 FR
27988) to retain the reporting requirement at Sec. 441.302(h)(1),
readers would have understood that we intended to preserve the
essential elements of the reporting.
To ensure that this requirement can be implemented as intended, we
are finalizing Sec. 441.311(b)(4) with language from Sec. 441.302(h)
to specify that, annually, the State will provide CMS with information
on the waiver's impact on the type, amount, and cost of services
provided under the State plan. (Restored language is noted in bold.)
We also specify here that, as the requirement at Sec. 441.302(h)
specifies certain reporting for programs authorized under section
1915(c), this new requirement at Sec. 441.311(b)(4) will similarly
apply only to section 1915(c) waiver programs. We discuss the impact of
this clarification on references to section 1915(j), (k), and (i)
services (at Sec. Sec. 441.474(c), 441.580(i), and 441.745(a)(1)(vii))
later in this section.
After consideration of the comments received, and in light of the
clarification outlined above, we are finalizing the provision at Sec.
441.311(b)(4) to specify that annually, the State will provide CMS with
information on the waiver's impact on the type, amount, and cost of
services provided under the State plan. Further, we are finalizing
Sec. 441.311(b)(4) with a technical modification to specify that the
information is to be reported in the form and manner, and at a time,
specified by CMS.
b. Reporting on the Home and Community-Based Services (HCBS) Quality
Measure Set (Sec. 441.311(c))
At Sec. 441.311(c), relying on our authority under section
1902(a)(6) of the Act, we proposed to require that States report every
other year on the HCBS Quality Measure Set, which is described later in
section II.B.8. of the preamble. Specifically, we proposed, at Sec.
441.311(c)(1)(i), to require that States report every other year,
according to the format and schedule prescribed by the Secretary
through the process for developing and updating the HCBS Quality
Measure Set described in section II.B.8. of the final rule, on measures
identified in the HCBS Quality Measure Set as mandatory measures for
States to report or are identified as measures for which the Secretary
will report on behalf of States, and, at Sec. 441.311(c)(1)(ii), to
allow States to report on measures in the HCBS Quality Measure Set that
are not
[[Page 40642]]
identified as mandatory, as described later in this section of the
rule.
We proposed every other year for State reporting in recognition of
the fact that the current, voluntary HCBS Quality Measure Set is
heavily comprised of survey-based measures, which are more burdensome,
including for beneficiaries who would be the respondents for the
surveys, and costlier to implement than other types of quality
measures. Further, we believed that requiring reporting every other
year, rather than annually, would better allow States to use the data
that they report for quality improvement purposes, as it would provide
States with sufficient time to implement interventions that would
result in meaningful improvement in performance scores from one
reporting period to another. We also proposed this frequency in
recognition of the overall burden of the proposed requirement.
Because the delivery of high quality services is in the best
interest of Medicaid beneficiaries, we proposed at Sec.
441.311(c)(1)(iii), under our authority at section 1902(a)(19) of the
Act, to require States to establish performance targets, subject to our
review and approval, for each of the measures in the HCBS Quality
Measure Set that are identified as mandatory for States to report or
are identified as measures for which we will report on behalf of
States, as well as to describe the quality improvement strategies that
they will pursue to achieve the performance targets for those
measures.\123\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\123\ We note that compliance with CMS regulations and reporting
requirements does not imply that a State has complied with the
integration mandate of Title II of the ADA, as interpreted by the
Supreme Court in the Olmstead Decision.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
At Sec. 441.311(c)(1)(iv), we proposed to allow States to
establish State performance targets for other measures in the HCBS
Quality Measure Set that are not identified as mandatory for States to
report or as measures for which the Secretary will report on behalf of
States as well as to describe the quality improvement strategies that
they will pursue to achieve the performance targets for those targets.
At Sec. 441.311(c)(2), we proposed to report on behalf of the
States, on a subset of measures in the HCBS Quality Measure Set that
are identified as measures for which we will report on behalf of
States. Further, at Sec. 441.311(c)(3), we proposed to allow, but not
require, States to report on measures that are not yet required but
will be, and on populations for whom reporting is not yet required but
will be phased-in in the future.
We solicited comments on whether there should be a threshold of
compliance that would exempt the State from developing improvement
strategies, and if so, what that threshold should be. We also invited
comments on whether the timeframe for States to report on the measures
in HCBS Quality Measure Set is sufficient, whether we should require
reporting more frequently (every year) or less frequently (every 3
years), and, if an alternate timeframe is recommended, the rationale
for that alternate timeframe. We welcomed comments on any additional
changes we should consider in this section.
We received public comments on this proposal. The following is a
summary of the comments we received and our responses. We also received
comments on the HCBS Quality Measure Set requirements proposed at Sec.
441.312. These comments and our responses are in section II.B.8. of
this final rule.
Comment: Regarding whether there should be a threshold of
compliance that would exempt the State from developing improvement
strategies, one commenter recommended exemptions for States to develop
improvement strategies if they are performing within the top 5th to
10th percentile of performance targets for the quality measures in the
HCBS Quality Measure Set, to alleviate administrative burden. Another
commenter discouraged CMS from permitting a compliance threshold
exemption for States from developing improvement strategies,
emphasizing that all States should be held accountable for providing
high-quality care and services to beneficiaries receiving HCBS
regardless of performance.
Response: We continue to believe that, for each of the measures in
the HCBS Quality Measure Set that are identified as mandatory for
States to report, or are identified as measures for which we will
report on behalf of States, States should establish and describe the
quality improvement strategies to achieve the performance targets for
those measures.\124\ We reiterate our belief that the HCBS Quality
Measure Set will promote more common and consistent use within and
across States of nationally standardized quality measures in HCBS
programs, and will allow CMS and States to have comparative quality
data on HCBS programs. As such, exempting States from developing
improvement strategies for quality measures in the HCBS Quality Measure
Set does not align with this intent.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\124\ We note that compliance with CMS regulations and reporting
requirements does not imply that a State has complied with the
integration mandate of Title II of the ADA, as interpreted by the
Supreme Court in the Olmstead Decision.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Comment: Several commenters recommended either faster or slower
implementation for reporting of the measures in the HCBS Quality
Measure Set. A few commenters recommended we change the timeframe
requirement for States to report on the quality measures in the HCBS
Quality Measure Set to every year. In this same vein, one commenter
suggested we align the reporting timelines required for reporting
measures in the HCBS Quality Measure Set to other Medicaid, CHIP,
Medicare, and Marketplace measure sets, expressing that reporting
biennially (every other year) could lock in data lags that could hinder
State progress in improving HCBS for beneficiaries. A few commenters
recommended alternatives to the HCBS Quality Measure Set biennial
reporting time frame. These alternatives included the following:
initiating reporting based on State choice; reporting on odd- or even-
numbered years; and beginning State reporting upon renewal of their
section 1915(c) waiver or based on the State reporting years for their
waiver program.
A few commenters expressed concern that the timeframe for reporting
measures in the HCBS Quality Measure Set should be longer than every
other year, emphasizing the significant amount of systems work,
contracting, and survey data needed to capture the necessary data and
implement reporting on HCBS measures. Commenters recommended we
consider that the implementation of the HCBS Quality Measure Set
reporting requirements as proposed at Sec. 441.311(c)(1)(iii) could
require State statutory and regulatory amendments, lead time for
securing additional technology resources, and operational and workflow
changes. Commenters requested CMS consider alternative dates for States
beginning reporting on the measures in the HCBS Quality Measure Set,
ranging from an additional 3 to 5 years to address these concerns.
Response: We continue to believe that a biennial timeframe
requirement for States to report on the measures in HCBS Quality
Measure Set is an appropriate frequency that ensures accountability
without being overly burdensome and are finalizing the frequency of
reporting as proposed. We determined that a shorter annual reporting
timeframe would not likely be operationally feasible because of the
potential systems and contracting changes (to existing contracts or the
establishment of new contracts) that States may be required to make.
For
[[Page 40643]]
example, additional reporting requirements may need to be added to
State contracts, changes may be needed to data sharing agreements with
managed care plans, and modifications of databases or systems might be
required to record new variables.
However, to provide States sufficient time to comply with the
requirements finalized at Sec. 441.311(c), we are finalizing at Sec.
441.311(f)(2) an applicability date beginning 4 years, rather than 3
years, from the effective date of this final rule for the HCBS Quality
Measure Set reporting at Sec. 441.311(c). Our primary purpose in
extending the effective date is to ensure States have sufficient time
for interested parties to provide input into the measures, as required
by Sec. 441.312(g), which we are finalizing in section II.B.8. of this
rule.
In general, we anticipate that States will not need more than 4
years after the effective date of the final rule, to implement systems
and contracting changes, or acquire any additional support needed to
report on the quality measures in the HCBS Quality Measure Set.
We plan to work collaboratively with States to provide the
technical assistance and reporting guidance through the Paperwork
Reduction Act process necessary to support reporting.
Comment: A few commenters requested confirmation of whether States
with section 1115 demonstrations are expected to comply with the HCBS
Quality Measures Set requirements in this final rule.
Response: Yes, consistent with the applicability of other HCBS
regulatory requirements to such demonstration projects, the reporting
requirements for section 1915(c) waiver programs and section 1915(i),
(j), and (k) State plan services included in this rule, including the
requirements at Sec. 441.311 (and the related quality measure
requirements at Sec. 441.312), would apply to such services included
in approved section 1115 demonstration projects, unless we explicitly
waive or exclude one or more of the requirements as part of the
approval of the demonstration project.
Comment: A couple of commenters recommended that we offer States
financial assistance to develop and deploy the ability to report the
quality measures in the HCBS Quality Measure Set.
Response: We note that Medicaid Federal matching funds are
available for State expenditures on the design, development, and
installation (including of enhancements), and for operation, of
mechanized claims processing and information retrieval systems. We also
note that under section 1903(a)(7) of the Act, Federal matching funds
are available for administrative activities necessary for the proper
and efficient administration of the Medicaid State plan. This may
include developing and deploying the ability to report the quality
measures in the HCBS Quality Measure Set.
Comment: A few commenters expressed that instructions related to
the reporting requirements for the quality measures in the HCBS Quality
Measures Set, and how they are related to the section 1915(c) waiver
reporting requirements, would be helpful for implementing the reporting
of the measure set.
Response: We thank commenters for the feedback. We plan to work
collaboratively with States to provide the technical assistance and
reporting guidance through the Paperwork Reduction Act process
necessary to support reporting and help facilitate compliance with this
requirement.
After consideration of public comments received, we are finalizing
the HCBS Quality Measure Set reporting requirements at Sec. 441.311(c)
with modifications. At Sec. 441.311(f)(2), we are finalizing that
States must comply with the reporting requirements at Sec. 441.311(c)
beginning 4 years, rather than 3 years, from the effective date of this
final rule for the HCBS Quality Measure Set. Our primary purpose in
extending the applicability date is to ensure States have sufficient
time for interested parties to provide input into the measures, as
required by Sec. 441.312(g), which we are finalizing in section
II.B.8. of this rule.
c. Access Reporting (Sec. 441.311(d))
As noted earlier in section II.B.6. of this preamble, feedback
obtained during various public engagement activities conducted with
States and other interested parties over the past several years about
reporting requirements for HCBS, as well as feedback received through
the RFI \125\ discussed earlier, indicated that there is a need to
improve public transparency and processes related to States' HCBS
waiting lists and for standardized reporting on HCBS access, including
timeliness of HCBS and the comparability to services received to
eligibility for services. At Sec. 441.311(d) we proposed that the
State must report to CMS annually on the following, according to the
format and specifications provided by CMS. We are finalizing in this
rule Sec. 441.311(d) with a technical modification for clarity that
requires that the State must report to CMS annually on the following,
in the form and manner, and at a time, specified by CMS. (New language
identified in bold.)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\125\ CMS Request for Information: Access to Coverage and Care
in Medicaid & CHIP. February 2022. For a full list of question from
the RFI, see https://www.medicaid.gov/medicaid/access-care/downloads/access-rfi-2022-questions.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
(i) Waiver Waiting Lists (Sec. 441.311(d)(1)(i))
At Sec. 441.311(d)(1)(i), relying on our authority under section
1902(a)(6) of the Act, we proposed to require that States provide a
description annually, according to the format and specifications
provided by CMS, on how they maintain the list of individuals who are
waiting to enroll in a section 1915(c) waiver program, if they have a
limit on the size of the waiver program and maintain a list of
individuals who are waiting to enroll in the waiver program, as
described in Sec. 441.303(f)(6). We further proposed to require that
this description must include, but be not limited to, information on
whether the State screens individuals on the waiting list for
eligibility for the waiver program, whether the State periodically re-
screens individuals on the waiver list for eligibility, and the
frequency of re-screening if applicable. We also proposed to require
States to report, at Sec. 441.311(d)(1)(ii), the number of people on
the waiting list, if applicable, and, at Sec. 441.311(d)(1)(iii), the
average amount of time that individuals newly enrolled in the waiver
program in the past 12 months were on the waiting list, if applicable.
We invited comments on whether there are other specific metrics or
reporting requirements related to waiting lists that we should require
States to report, either in place of or in addition to the requirements
we proposed. We also invited comments on the timeframe for States to
report on their waiting lists, whether we should require reporting less
frequently (every 2 or 3 years), and if an alternate timeframe was
recommended, the rationale for that alternate timeframe.
We received public comments on this proposal. The following is a
summary of the comments we received and our responses. We also received
comments on the related requirement at Sec. 441.303(f). Those comments
are addressed in section II.B.6. of this rule.
Comment: Many commenters supported the proposal at Sec.
441.311(d)(1) to require States to report on waiting lists, including
whether the State screens individuals on the list for eligibility,
frequency of re-screening, number of individuals waiting to enroll, and
average amount of time newly enrolled individuals were on the waiting
list. Commenters
[[Page 40644]]
believed that this reporting would promote consistency, transparency,
oversight, and accountability of waiting list practices and help States
identify unmet needs among their Medicaid beneficiaries. Commenters
noted that this additional information will better allow interested
parties to advocate for policy changes to address underlying causes of
waiting lists and expand HCBS programs; one commenter described this
requirement as a good ``first step'' to understanding access issues for
HCBS waivers.
A few commenters stated this requirement, with its potential to
support policies that reduce waiting lists, would help beneficiaries
avoid having to turn to institutional care for their LTSS needs.
Commenters also noted transparent, understandable data about waiting
lists may help individuals and families to make more informed decisions
about accessing coverage as they plan for their future.
A few commenters noted that nationally comparable data and
information-sharing among States will encourage standardization of
waiting list processes and help States identify best practices for
reducing waiting lists. Commenters noted that inconsistencies in the
way States report data about their waiting lists and the current lack
of standardized reporting requirements makes it difficult to form a
clear picture of how many people are waiting to receive services, as
well as how many of these individuals on the waiting list are actually
eligible for services. One commenter suggested that making the waiting
list public may lead to needed administrative updates to waiting lists,
such as removing duplicate applications or applications from
beneficiaries who have moved out of State or passed away.
Response: We agree that this critical data is not currently
available in a way that allows for monitoring or comparison on a
national level. We believe that this reporting requirement is an
important first step in making data publicly available that can be used
to identify unmet needs among Medicaid beneficiaries, support
policymaking, and improve administrative efficiency.
Comment: A few commenters expressed opposition to, or concerns
about, the waiting list reporting requirement at Sec. 441.311(d)(1). A
few commenters expressed concerns that the reporting requirement did
not align with current State waiting list practices and would require
significant change in data collection and IT systems. One commenter was
concerned that due to differences in States' HCBS programs,
infrastructure, and waiting list practices, attempting to collect and
compare data on a national level could be misleading. A few commenters
requested clarification on how CMS would use this data to drive
meaningful policy changes and improvement in HCBS access. A few
commenters stated that the proposed requirements would not address the
underlying causes of waiting lists, which they attributed to limited
funding for HCBS waiver slots, low Medicaid reimbursement rates, delays
or barriers within States' Medicaid eligibility determination
processes, or shortages of HCBS direct care workers. A few commenters,
while not necessarily opposing the requirement at Sec. 441.311(d)(1),
suggested that we focus on gathering information about why States have
caps on the number of beneficiaries who may be served by HCBS waivers
and why States have waiting lists when they have not met their waiver
caps.
One commenter raised a concern that the reporting requirement would
cause States to redirect or prioritize resources for waivers with
waiting lists at the expense of waivers that currently do not have
waiting lists.
Response: We are not currently collecting States' data on their
waiting lists and understand that States may have to update data
collection systems to comply with this new requirement. We proposed the
reporting requirement at Sec. 441.311(d) to strike a balance between
collecting enough information to enable Federal oversight of States'
waiting list practices and imposing as minimal an administrative burden
on States and providers as possible. We plan to offer States technical
assistance as needed to help align their current data collection
practices with what will be needed to comply with this reporting
requirement. The reporting requirement at Sec. 441.311(d)(1) is a
first step in what will be an evolving process to promote transparency,
oversight, and data-driven improvements in States' waiting list
practices. We acknowledge that differences in States' HCBS programs may
initially make comparing States' data challenging, but we believe that
collecting this data will help highlight such differences and draw
connections between different States' policies and the impact on their
beneficiaries' access to HCBS. As noted by other commenters, States may
be able to use this data to learn from the experiences of other States.
We acknowledge that there are many underlying causes for States to
have long waiting lists, but we believe that the first step toward
addressing these challenges, where possible, is to quantify the scope
of these waiting lists through data collection. This data will not only
help identify situations in which a State appears to be maintaining a
waiting list when not all of the waiver's slots are taken but can also
facilitate conversations with States about reasons for limitations on
waiver enrollment.
We clarify that the purpose of this requirement is to document
unmet needs for individuals who are seeking enrollment in HCBS waivers
and to identify resources or practices that could be used to improve
waiting list processes. As such, our goal is not to require that States
shift needed resources away from other areas of their Medicaid
programs.
Comment: One commenter requested that we provide reporting tools to
help States track the required data. One commenter requested that the
data needed for this reporting requirement be derived from the State's
own eligibility and service authorization processes, not from providers
and beneficiaries, particularly for self-directed services.
Response: We plan to release subregulatory guidance and other tools
to assist States with implementation of this reporting requirement. We
will also be making the reporting template available for public comment
through the Paperwork Reduction Act notice and comment process.
While States have flexibility as to how they will gather the data
needed to complete this reporting, we encourage States to find ways to
rely on administrative data rather than gathering data directly from
beneficiaries to meet the reporting requirements.
Comment: A few commenters requested that the information about
waiting lists be made available to the public in a consumer-friendly
and accessible format in order to facilitate program accountability and
potentially improve beneficiary understanding of waiting list
information. One commenter suggested that publishing data about the
waiting list may help publicize the need for more direct care workers.
Response: As discussed in more detail later in section II.B.9 of
this rule, we are finalizing a requirement at Sec. 441.313(a) to
require States to operate a website that meets the availability and
accessibility requirements at Sec. 435.905(b) of this chapter and that
provides the results of the reporting requirements at Sec. 441.311
(including this access reporting requirement at Sec. 441.311(d), as
well as the incident management, critical incident, person-centered
planning, and service provision compliance data; data on the HCBS
Quality Measure Set; and
[[Page 40645]]
payment adequacy data, discussed in this section) and the reporting
requirements at Sec. 441.302(k)(6). Please refer to the discussion of
the website posting requirements in section II.B.9. of this rule.
Comment: One commenter suggested that we consider offering
incentives for States to reduce or end waiting lists through a higher
FMAP rate for a limited time period. One commenter requested that
States be given a grace period and allowed to update their section
1915(c) waivers prior to any punitive action.
Response: We note that the requirement at Sec. 441.311(d)(1) is a
reporting requirement intended to encourage transparency and does not
include any specific performance measures with which States must
comply. To the extent that States are in compliance with existing
requirements for section 1915(c) waiver programs, it is also not
intended to require that States make changes to their waiver programs
or processes. We intend to use our standard enforcement discretion to
require State compliance with the reporting requirement, which (as
discussed under Sec. 441.311(f) below) will go into effect three years
after the effective date of this final rule. In addition, we note that
CMS does not have authority to provide States with a higher FMAP rate
for any expenditures than has been authorized by statute.
Comment: A number of commenters noted that waiting list
terminology, definitions, and processes vary widely among States and
even among individual State programs. Commenters observed that some
States operate what they refer to as interest lists, preauthorization
lists, or similarly named lists, rather than waiting lists. In some
cases, individuals can sign up to express interest in a waiver program
but may not have yet been assessed for eligibility at the time they
joined the interest list. Commenters questioned whether these
individuals would be considered ``waiting to enroll'' as described in
the proposed rule, as they are waiting to be determined eligible to
enroll. Commenters requested clarification as to what data would be
collected from States that maintain interest lists or similarly named
lists of individuals who have not yet been determined to be eligible
for the waiver.
A few commenters expressed concerns that if interest lists are not
included in this requirement, States may be encouraged to stop
maintaining waiting lists. One commenter noted that if the requirement
does apply to interest lists, States that use an interest list approach
would have to make significant changes to their processes to meet the
waiting list reporting requirement. One commenter observed that in
their State, the State maintains a single waiting list for all waivers,
which could complicate reporting.
Several commenters requested that we create a definition of a
waiting list. One commenter supported what they believed to be our
proposed standardized definition of a waiting list (but did not specify
what they thought that definition to be). A few commenters requested
that we require States to have waiting lists for their waiver programs
and that States screen individuals for eligibility prior to placing the
individuals on the waiting list.
Response: We intended for the reporting requirement to apply to all
States that maintain a list of individuals interested in enrolling in a
section 1915(c) waiver program, whether or not the individual has been
assessed for eligibility. As we stated in the proposed rule (88 FR
27986), many States maintain waiting lists of individuals interested in
receiving waiver services once a spot becomes available. While some
States require individuals to first be determined eligible for waiver
services to join the waiting list, other States permit individuals to
join a waiting list after an expression of interest in receiving waiver
services.
We note that the requirement at Sec. 441.311(d)(1) requires States
to submit a description of their waiting list that includes information
on whether the State screens individuals on the waiting list for
eligibility for the waiver program, whether the State periodically re-
screens individuals on the waiver list for eligibility, and the
frequency of re-screening if applicable. This requirement indicates
that Sec. 441.311(d)(1) applies to States even if they do not screen
the individuals on their list for eligibility. We believe that for the
purposes of this requirement individuals who are waiting to be screened
for eligibility for the waiver are considered ``waiting to enroll.''
We believe that States that maintain an interest list (or a
similarly named list of individuals who have expressed interest in the
waiver and are waiting to be assessed for eligibility) can report the
same information required in Sec. 441.311(d)(1) as States that
maintain lists of individuals who have been screened for eligibility.
We expect, for instance, that States typically would have information
about the number of individuals who are on an interest list and how
long those individuals have been on those lists. If a State maintains
two separate lists for a waiver--a list of individuals who have been
screened for eligibility for the waiver and a list of individuals who
have expressed interest in enrolling in the waiver but have not yet
been screened--the State should report on both to meet the reporting
requirements at Sec. 441.311(d)(1).
As we did not propose a formal definition of waiting list, nor a
requirement for States to maintain a waiting list of individuals who
have been screened for eligibility, we will not add these components to
the finalized Sec. 441.311(d). States retain flexibility in
determining whether or not to maintain a list of individuals who are
interested in enrolling in the waiver (whether or not the individual
has been screened for eligibility). We will take commenters'
recommendations into consideration for future policymaking if, after
monitoring reporting generated by Sec. 441.311(d), we identify the
need for further standardization of these processes.
Comment: We received responses to our comment solicitation on
additional metrics that could be collected regarding the waiting list.
One commenter recommended that we not add more metrics to Sec.
441.311(d)(1). Several commenters did suggest additional metrics. Many
of these commenters believed that more detailed data would allow for a
better assessment of overall unmet needs and disparities within the
waiting lists. Additional metrics suggested by commenters included:
Disaggregated data about beneficiaries, by demographic
categories, including race, ethnicity, Tribal status, language status,
sex or gender identification, sexual orientation, age, and geographic
location;
Disaggregated data on beneficiaries' dual eligible status,
disability, diagnosis, functional status, level of care, and risk of
institutionalization;
Whether States maintain separate waiting lists or
registries for beneficiaries who are eligible for HCBS but have been
determined by the State to not have a need prioritized by the State for
enrollment in the waiver;
The criteria used to determine beneficiaries' placement
and movement within a waiting list;
How much time individuals spend waiting for an eligibility
assessment and how much time elapses between an assessment and service
authorization;
The number of eligibility screens performed on each
beneficiary on the waiting list in the past year, and why a rescreen
was performed;
The number of beneficiaries removed from the waiting list
due to death, admission to an institutional
[[Page 40646]]
setting, or having been rescreened and deemed ineligible;
The number of beneficiaries on the waiting list who are
receiving care through another State Medicaid program, reasons why
beneficiaries prefer to remain on the waiting list rather than enroll
in other services, and what beneficiary needs remain unmet by other
Medicaid programs while a beneficiary is on a waiting list; and
Whether a participant who has been approved for HCBS
waiver services is able to find a provider, how long it took for them
to find that provider, and what services they wanted, but could not
access because no provider was available.
Response: We thank commenters for their feedback. We will take
these recommendations under consideration for future policymaking, but
at this time decline to make modifications to the requirements based on
these comments.
We believe it is important to strike a balance between collecting
enough information to promote transparency around waiting lists and
imposing as minimal an administrative burden on States and providers as
possible. We also believe that information on whether States screen
individuals on their waiting lists, the number of beneficiaries on the
waiting list, and the average amount of time beneficiaries enrolled in
HCBS waivers spent on the waiting list provides important preliminary
data on the States' waiting list practices. As we gather and review
this data, we will consider what additional information may be needed
to further improve our oversight of HCBS programs and improve
beneficiaries' access to services.
However, we agree that some of the granular data elements suggested
by commenters could provide States with valuable insight into their own
programs and beneficiary needs. We encourage States to consider what
information they have the capacity to collect and would find useful for
developing local policies to support beneficiaries' access to section
1915(c) HCBS waiver programs in their State.
Comment: One commenter recommended requiring that States report
duplicated and unduplicated counts of individuals across waiver program
waiting lists.
Response: We have not identified a compelling reason to require
that States report unduplicated counts of beneficiaries for all waiver
programs. We clarify that the reporting required for Sec.
441.331(d)(1) is for each waiting list; if an individual is on multiple
waiting lists, we believe that person should be counted among
individuals on each of those waiting lists.
Comment: A few commenters recommended additional metrics that fall
outside the scope of reporting on waiting list practices or waiver
enrollment, including:
Whether individuals on waiting lists are also being
screened for eligibility for other programs that they may be able to
benefit from (for example, Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program);
How long it takes a State to approve enrollment in any
program that provides Medicaid LTSS, from the date that it receives an
application until the date of the approval letter; and
Additional measures to assess the needs of populations
that face barriers to navigating the HCBS programs, applying, and
getting on a waiting list.
Response: While these metrics lie outside the scope of the proposed
reporting requirements, we will add these to other comments regarding
broader HCBS access and equity issues that we will consider for future
policymaking.
Comment: A few commenters suggested that we collect data on reasons
for long waiting times, such as challenges with workforce availability
or provider capacity. Some commenters, particularly those representing
States or providers, were concerned that without this information,
States and providers would be held responsible for long waiting lists
or long waiting times for services that are due to reasons beyond
States' or providers' control. One commenter recommended adding a
requirement that States describe any conditions, such as State funding
priorities, that serve to limit access to the HCBS described in the
waiver application. A few commenters recommended adding a requirement
to the interested parties' advisory group being finalized at Sec.
447.203 that would require States, through their interested parties'
advisory groups, to examine reasons for gaps in services that are
revealed by the reporting on waiting lists.
Response: We do not believe it would be feasible at this stage to
standardize the collection of qualitative data regarding the causes of
waiting lists; this data would also be difficult to validate. As noted
in prior responses, the purpose of the requirement at Sec.
441.311(d)(1) is to encourage transparency; the requirement does not
include any specific performance measures with which States or
providers must comply. We believe that collecting the number of
individuals on the waiting list and the length of time individuals
spend on waiting list will present quantifiable and comparable baseline
data that can facilitate more nuanced conversations with States about
potential unmet beneficiary needs and the underlying causes of these
unmet needs.
We note that, regarding the interested parties' advisory group
being finalized at Sec. 447.203, the requirements at Sec. 447.203
already include an expectation that access reporting that is required
by 441.311(d) would be appropriate data for the Interested Parties
Advisory Group (IPAG) to consider when making recommendations regarding
the sufficiency of rates. We decline to add a specific requirement as
suggested by the commenter, as we wish to allow both States and the
IPAGs some discretion in determining their approach to examining the
impact on payments rates in their State.
Comment: A few commenters supported annual reporting for Sec.
441.311(d)(1). One commenter observed that one of their State agencies
had already identified annual reporting on the waiting list as a best
practice and was publishing an annual report. One commenter recommended
quarterly reporting to encourage States to take more aggressive steps
to reduce the size of their waiting lists. A few commenters believed
that biennial (every other year) reporting would reduce burden on
States and better account for fluctuations in waiting list size that
are beyond the State Medicaid agency's control.
One commenter highlighted that waiting list volumes may vary at
certain times of year or from year to year, depending on how States
structure the release of new waiver slots and the timing of the State
legislative sessions where new funding for waiver slots may be
approved. The commenter stated that it is important to take these
factors into account when considering reporting frequency and when
evaluating reported data from year to year.
Response: We are finalizing the annual reporting frequency as
proposed at Sec. 441.311(d)(1). We continue to believe that annual
reporting on waiting lists strikes the right balance between collecting
current data on waiting lists and minimizing burden on States to the
greatest extent possible. We believe reporting more frequently than
annually may represent an undue burden on States, although States are
encouraged to share information with interested parties within their
State on a more frequent basis if they are able to do so. We are
concerned that if we extend the reporting to a biennial frequency, the
information will become outdated prior
[[Page 40647]]
to the next public report. We also note that States will likely have to
develop or maintain the same data tracking systems regardless of
whether the reporting itself is done annually or biennially; we believe
the potential reduction in administrative burden by biennial reporting
is outweighed by the need for more timely information on waiting lists.
Comment: One commenter requested clarification that the reporting
requirement at Sec. 441.311(d)(1) is limited to the section 1915(c)
authority and to the section 1915(j) authority, where it is used as the
State's authority for self-direction in a section 1915(c) waiver. This
commenter recommended limiting this requirement to these authorities.
Response: We agree that, because section 1915(i) and section
1915(k) State plan services cannot have capped enrollment, the
reporting requirements at Sec. 441.311(d)(1) would not apply to these
authorities. We also agree that the reporting requirements at Sec.
441.311(d)(1) would also apply to section 1915(j) authority only where
section 1915(j) is used as the State's authority for self-direction in
a section 1915(c) waiver. We note that the reporting requirements at
Sec. 441.311(d)(1) would apply to section 1115(a) demonstration
projects that include HCBS if the State caps enrollment for the HCBS
under the section 1115(a) demonstration project. As discussed later in
this section, section II.B.7. of this final rule, we are finalizing the
application of the reporting requirements at Sec. 441.311 to section
1915(j), (k), and (i) authorities with modifications to specify that
States must only comply with the reporting requirements applicable to
the services under these authorities.
After consideration of the commenters received, we are finalizing
Sec. 441.311(d)(1) as proposed.
(ii) Reporting on Wait Times for Services and Authorized Service Hours
Provided (Sec. 441.311(d)(2))
At Sec. 441.311(d)(2)(i), based on our authority under section
1902(a)(6) of the Act, we proposed to require States report annually on
the average amount of time from when homemaker services, home health
aide services, or personal care services, as listed in Sec.
440.180(b)(2) through (4), are initially approved to when services
began, for individuals newly approved to begin receiving services
within the past 12 months. We proposed to focus on these specific
services for this reporting requirement because of feedback from
States, consumer advocates, managed care plans, providers, and other
HCBS interested parties that timely access to these services is
especially challenging and because the failure of States to ensure
timely access to these services poses substantial risk to the health,
safety, and quality of care of individuals residing independently and
in other community-based residences. We believed that having States
report this information will assist us in our oversight of State HCBS
programs by helping us target our technical assistance and monitoring
efforts. We requested comment on whether this requirement should apply
to additional services authorized under section 1915(c) of the Act.
For this metric, we proposed to allow States to report on a
statistically valid random sample of individuals newly approved to
begin receiving these services within the past 12 months, rather than
for all individuals newly approved to begin receiving these services
within the past 12 months. We invited comments on the timeframe for
States to report on this metric, whether we should require reporting
less frequently (every 2 or 3 years), and if an alternate timeframe is
recommended, the rationale for that alternate timeframe. We also
invited comments on whether there are other specific metrics related to
the amount of time that it takes for eligible individuals to begin
receiving homemaker services, home health aide services, or personal
care services that we should require States to report, either in place
of or in addition to the metric we proposed.
At Sec. 441.311(d)(2)(ii), also based on our authority under
section 1902(a)(6) of the Act, we proposed to require States to report
annually on the percent of authorized hours for homemaker services,
home health aide services, or personal care services, as listed in
Sec. 440.180(b)(2) through (4), that are provided within the past 12
months. For this metric, we further proposed to allow States to report
on a statistically valid random sample of individuals authorized to
receive these services within the past 12 months, rather than all
individuals authorized to receive these services within the past 12
months. We invited comments on the timeframe for States to report on
this metric, whether we should require reporting less frequently (every
2 or 3 years), and if an alternate timeframe is recommended, the
rationale for that alternate timeframe. We also invited comments on
whether there are other specific metrics related to individuals' use of
authorized homemaker services, home health aide services, or personal
care services that we should require States to report, either in place
of or in addition to the metric we proposed. We further requested
comment on whether this requirement should apply to additional services
authorized under section 1915(c) of the Act.
We received public comments on this proposal. The following is a
summary of the comments we received and our responses.
Comment: Several commenters supported our proposals at Sec.
441.311(d)(2) that States report on the time it takes between service
authorization and service delivery and the number of authorized hours
compared to the number of hours provided. A few commenters, while
characterizing these as imperfect measures, nevertheless noted that the
data measurements can help assess systematic issues with provider
enrollment and access to care. One commenter observed that similar data
is not currently available from their State, and believed this type of
data would be useful.
Commenters noted that in their experience, beneficiaries might wait
months after being authorized to receive services for the services to
actually begin, or do not receive all of the services indicated in
their person-centered care plan; these delays and underutilization of
services cause a wide array of issues for the beneficiary and their
families.
Commenters also noted these proposals complemented the waiver
waiting list requirement at Sec. 441.311(d)(1), noting that even when
individuals are enrolled in a waiver, this does not always mean that
their services start immediately. A few commenters also stated that in
their experience, even in States that do not have waiting lists for
their waiver programs, beneficiaries may wait long periods of time for
the waiver services to begin.
Response: As we discuss further in responses below, we recognize
that the reasons for service delays and underutilization are nuanced.
The reporting requirements at Sec. 441.311(d)(2) are a first step in
what will be an evolving process to promote transparency, oversight,
and data-driven improvements in States' waiting list practices.
Comment: A few commenters cited factors that may contribute to
delays or underutilization of services, some of which are beyond the
control of State Medicaid agencies, managed care plans, or providers.
Commenters cited challenges including administrative inefficiency,
shortages of direct care workers or available providers, and geographic
constraints. Other
[[Page 40648]]
commenters cited specific obstacles, such as: difficulty in obtaining
complete medical information from the beneficiary, delays in the care
planning process, additional training requirements for self-directed
service workers, lags in providers submitting claims or other delays in
claims processing, or unavailability of the beneficiary due to travel,
hospitalization, changes in provider, withdrawal from the program, or
loss of Medicaid eligibility. A few commenters suggested that in some
cases, beneficiaries decline services or are already receiving a
different service that meets their needs prior to the new services
being authorized.
One commenter noted that there are service delivery delays in care
provided under private payers and wondered how these delays compare to
those in Medicaid HCBS and whether they may be attributable to the
adequacy of the provider network or to reimbursement rates.
A few commenters believed that the requirements at Sec.
441.311(d)(2) would not address these underlying causes of service
delays or underutilization and, thus, would not improve access to
services. One commenter requested clarification on how this data would
be used to promote meaningful change.
On the other hand, some commenters believed that the requirements
at Sec. 441.311(d)(2) can help identify unmet needs and uncover some
of the causes of these challenges, which in turn can focus efforts on
efficient solutions.
Response: We acknowledge that there are many underlying causes for
service delays or service underutilization. We believe that the first
step toward addressing these challenges, where possible, is to quantify
the scope of these delays or underutilization through data collection.
Additionally, some of the challenges commenters cited are within the
purview of States, managed care plans, or providers to address. If the
data demonstrates what appears to be significant delays or
underutilization, we believe this information can help facilitate
conversations with States, managed care plans, and providers about the
reasons for these reporting results.
We also note that the purpose of the data is to track trends in
service delivery times and utilization, not to track the outcomes for
each beneficiary. The reporting will be the average amount of time a
random sample of beneficiaries waited between service authorization and
the start of services, and the total percent of authorized services
that were provided. Thus, some of the factors that commenters cited,
particularly those involving the behavior of specific beneficiaries,
such as failure to provide timely medical data, declining services, or
traveling, we believe should not significantly impact the reported
numbers unless these obstacles are particularly prevalent (in which
case, this may also be an area to identify for policy or program
improvement).
Comment: A few commenters opposed the requirements at Sec.
441.311(d)(2). A few commenters suggested that some States or managed
care plans are not currently tracking the time between service
authorization and the start of services and that it would take
significant resources to develop, test, and deploy changes to the
State's documentation management system. One commenter noted that it
may be difficult to track this data because services are authorized,
and claims are paid using different systems or are overseen by
different parts of State government. One commenter noted that, while
their State does track service utilization data, it would take
additional staff resources to comply with the reporting requirements.
Response: We are not currently collecting States' data on the times
between service authorization and when services begin, or the number of
authorized hours that are being utilized and understand that States may
not be tracking all of this data; the absence of this data is what has
prompted us to propose the requirement at Sec. 441.311(d)(2). We
recognize that, because this data has not previously been tracked by
all States, some States may have to update their data collection
systems to comply with this new requirement. As discussed elsewhere in
this rule, in Medicaid, enhanced FFP is available at a 90 percent FMAP
for the design, development, or installation of improvements of
mechanized claims processing and information retrieval systems, in
accordance with applicable Federal requirements. Enhanced FFP at a 75
percent FMAP is also available for operations of such systems, in
accordance with applicable Federal requirements. We reiterate that
receipt of these enhanced funds is conditioned upon States meeting a
series of standards and conditions to ensure investments are efficient
and effective. We also note that, under section 1903(a)(7) of the Act,
Federal matching funds are available for administrative activities
necessary for the proper and efficient administration of the Medicaid
State plan.
We developed the reporting requirement at Sec. 441.311(d)(2) to
strike a balance between collecting enough information to enable
Federal oversight of service delivery and utilization and imposing as
minimal an administrative burden on States and providers as possible.
We believe the long-term benefits of collecting this data outweigh the
initial burden of implementation. Accordingly, we decline to make any
changes in this final rule based on these comments.
We are finalizing Sec. 441.311(d)(2)(i) with a modification that
we believe will further reduce administrative burden on States. As
noted in an earlier comment summary, some commenters noted that in some
instances beneficiaries may wait long periods of time to receive
services. Upon further consideration, we have determined that the
requirement at Sec. 441.311(d)(2) as written may present some data
collection challenges in situations in which the beneficiary's date of
approval of service and the date when services actually begin are
separated by enough time that they fall in two different reporting
periods. For instance, if the reporting period aligned with the
calendar year, if an individual was approved for services on November
1, 2028, but did not start receiving services until February 1, 2029,
it is not clear how that beneficiary's wait time for services would be
captured in the reporting period for January 1, 2028, through December
31, 2028. (We note that we are using the calendar year as the reporting
period only for the purposes of this example. As discussed later in
this section, we will work with States and other interested parties
through the Paperwork Reduction Act process to determine the actual
reporting period.) It appears that in this circumstance, the State
would have to first indicate that the beneficiary had waited 2 months
(November 1, 2028, through the end of the reporting period on December
31, 2028); then the State would need to submit updated information for
this beneficiary to report the beneficiary's total wait time. This
process would need to be repeated on a rolling basis for other
beneficiaries whose approval date and service start date fell in
different reporting periods. Repeated updates to States' data would be
burdensome, make it difficult for States to share meaningful data with
CMS and the public, and lead to delays in State reporting of complete
data for each reporting period.
To avoid this type of confusion in reporting, we are amending the
requirement at Sec. 441.311(d)(2)(i) to specify that the reporting is
for individuals newly receiving services, rather than for individuals
newly approved to begin receiving services. (Revised language is noted
in bold.) As applied to the example above, this
[[Page 40649]]
modification to Sec. 441.311(d)(2)(i) means that the beneficiary whose
services began on February 1, 2029 would be included in the January 1,
2029, through December 31, 2029, reporting period; the State would be
able to ``look back'' to identify when the services were approved (in
the example, services were approved November 1, 2028) and the State
would report the beneficiary's total wait time between November 1, 2028
and February 1, 2029. We believe this modification preserves the
intention of what we proposed in Sec. 441.311(d)(2)(i)--to measure the
time between when a beneficiary was approved to receive services and
when the services actually begin--but clarifies and streamlines the
reporting process.
Comment: A few commenters expressed concerns that States would use
information about unfilled service hours to infer whether or not
authorized services are necessary for the beneficiary. These commenters
noted that many reasons exist as to why an individual would be unable
to receive authorized care on a particular day but still need the care,
such as the service provider was unavailable or there was confusion
around when and what services were to be delivered on that day. One
commenter requested reassurance that the reporting requirement at Sec.
441.311(d)(2)(ii) to report on the average number of hours authorized
that are provided would not be used to reduce or limit beneficiaries'
access to services. One commenter suggested that we monitor services to
ensure that States are not reducing services in response to this data.
Response: The purpose of this reporting requirement at Sec.
441.311(d)(2)(ii) is not to audit individual beneficiaries' service
utilization or to use the information as a reason to reduce their
authorized service hours. The purpose and intent of the requirement is
to identify barriers to beneficiaries' access to services. Accordingly,
we decline to make any changes in this final rule based on these
comments. However, we note that the State is required at Sec.
441.301(c)(2) to ensure that the person-centered service plan reflects
the services and supports that are important for the individual to meet
the needs identified through an assessment of functional need, as well
as what is important to the individual with regard to preferences for
the delivery of such services and supports, and this requirement
remains unchanged. States and managed care plans should not use the
data collected to meet the reporting requirement at Sec.
441.311(d)(2)(ii) to reduce authorized hours.
Comment: One commenter requested clarification on when the approval
of services occurs, such as at the time of enrollment or when a
physician signs the plan of treatment. The commenter also observed that
it will be critical to standardize the data elements that must be
captured in this reporting.
Response: Given the variable nature of States' processes, we defer
to States to determine when services are considered to have been
approved and how this approval date can be tracked consistently for the
reported services. We intend to provide States with technical
assistance, including technical specifications and sampling guidance,
for the new reporting requirements in this final rule, which will aid
in consistent data reporting. We will also be making the reporting
template available for public comment through the Paperwork Reduction
Act notice and comment process.
Comment: A couple of commenters recommended requiring States to set
a target for timeliness (such as 7 days) and measure the percentage of
all cases in which the wait time exceeded that target.
Response: At this time, we are focusing on creating baseline data-
reporting standards. We will take these recommendations for setting or
requiring benchmarks under consideration should we pursue future
rulemaking in this area.
Comment: We received responses to our comment solicitation on
whether Sec. 441.311(d)(2) should apply to other section 1915(c)
services aside from homemaker, home health aide, and personal care
services as set forth at Sec. 440.180(b)(2) through (4).
One commenter recommended narrowing the scope of this requirement
to personal care services only and removing homemaker and home health
aide services from the requirement. The commenter contended that
homemaker services do not cover activities of daily living which are
typically associated with direct care to HCBS beneficiaries. The
commenter also noted that home health aide services are typically
offered under the Medicaid State plan rather than a section 1915(c)
waiver. The commenter concluded that limiting the requirement to
personal care services would allow CMS and States to concentrate on
highly utilized personal care services and would make the requirement
more operationally feasible for States.
On the other hand, a few commenters advocated for extending the
reporting requirements to all HCBS. One of these commenters suggested
that applying the requirement to only a few services would create an
unintended consequence of focusing more attention on certain services
and the populations receiving those services, at the expense of other
beneficiaries. A few of these commenters also pointed out that other
services are experiencing direct care worker shortages that could be
contributing to service delays or underutilization that need to be
identified.
One commenter suggested that we add services offered by specialty
providers, such as occupational therapists, physical therapists, or
speech-language pathologists, to the requirement.
A couple of commenters recommended extending the requirement to
include services typically delivered to people with intellectual or
developmental disabilities, such as habilitation services. Similar to
the reasons cited by commenters for extending the requirement to all
HCBS, commenters in favor of extending the requirements to include
habilitation noted that these services are critical and beneficiaries
who receive them are experiencing delays in services or other access
issues. However, one commenter requested that we not extend these
requirements to habilitation services, citing concerns that some
States' information systems are not equipped to track this information
for habilitation services. The commenter also noted that differences
between habilitation services and other types of HCBS require
additional study and consideration prior to applying these reporting
requirements for habilitation services.
Response: We believe that the services proposed for inclusion in
this requirement include activities of daily living that are critical
to beneficiaries' health, safety, and ability to live successfully in
the community. Additionally, as identified in an analysis performed by
CMS, the three services fall within the taxonomy of home-based
services, which are both high-volume and high cost.\126\ Thus, we
believe that targeting these services will maximize the impact of this
requirement by addressing the needs of many beneficiaries and promoting
better oversight of frequently used services. Given the similarities
among homemaker, home health aide, and personal care services, we
cannot find a justification for removing homemaker
[[Page 40650]]
and home health aide services from this requirement.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\126\ Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services. ``Trends in Rate
Methodologies for High-Cost, High Volume Taxonomies.'' https://www.medicaid.gov/sites/default/files/2019-12/trends-in-rate-august-2017.pdf. Last access October 2, 2023.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Because we want to start by focusing on a selection of high-volume,
high-cost services, we do not at this time intend to expand the
reporting requirement to all HCBS. We do agree with commenters that
services in addition to homemaker, home health aide, and personal care
services may be particularly vulnerable to delays due to shortages in
the direct care workforce. For that reason, we are extending the
requirement to habilitation services in this final rule which, like
homemaker, home health aide, and personal care services, tend to be
hands-on services that are delivered by direct care workers who often
earn lower wages. We believe that expanding the reporting to include
habilitation services will ensure that beneficiary populations, namely
individuals with intellectual or developmental disabilities who
commonly receive personal care services as part of their habilitation
services, are not excluded from our efforts to support the direct care
workforce.
We acknowledge the comment that habilitation services are unique
from other services, but also cannot identify reasons why these
differences should exclude them from this reporting requirement.
After consideration of these comments and the benefits of aligning
reporting requirements across services, we are finalizing the reporting
requirements at Sec. 441.311(d)(2)(i) and (ii) with a modification to
include homemaker, home health aide, personal care, and habilitation
services, as set forth at Sec. 440.180(b)(2) through (4) and (6).
Comment: One commenter requested clarification on whether Sec.
441.311(d)(2) would apply to services in both managed care and FFS
delivery systems. One commenter requested that we require reporting on
managed care plans' prior authorization practices, including differing
lengths of authorizations and untimely authorizations that were not in
place or renewed prior to the date of expected services. The commenter
noted that missing authorizations may cause disruptions in payments to
providers and threaten the continuity of beneficiaries' access to the
services.
Response: The reporting requirements apply to services delivered
under both FFS and managed care delivery systems. For additional
information, we refer readers to the discussion of Sec. Sec.
441.311(f) and 438.72(b) below. We note that a State may consider
requiring reporting on specific managed care processes through its
contracts with managed care plans.
Comment: A few commenters requested clarification as to whether the
requirements at Sec. 441.311(d)(2) would apply to self-directed
services. A few commenters raised specific questions or concerns about
the application of the reporting requirements at Sec. 441.311(d)(2) to
self-directed services, particularly self-directed service models with
individual budget authority. Commenters noted that the inherent
flexibility of these services might make reporting on the utilization
of service hours particularly misleading. One commenter noted that,
when an individual selects an independent worker to provide services,
that worker might have to go through background checks and training
that would make it appear that the service delivery is delayed. One
commenter worried that States would become concerned with the
appearance of delays in the delivery of self-directed services and
discourage beneficiaries from seeking self-directed services. Another
commenter pointed out that since beneficiaries might use their budget
authority to purchase equipment or devices that replace some hands-on
services, or may choose to adjust their service schedules, service
utilization data on these services might inaccurately suggest that the
beneficiary is being underserved. On the other hand, one commenter
recommended that self-directed services be included in this reporting.
Another commenter stated that from their personal experience as a
provider, beneficiaries receiving self-directed services tend to have
higher service utilization rates than beneficiaries in agency-directed
services. One commenter suggested that data on all models of self-
directed services be tailored to the unique needs of the model, such as
by requiring reporting on the percent of the budget used rather than
the number of service hours. Another commenter suggested that
additional guidance would be needed to apply the reporting requirements
to self-directed models.
Response: As discussed in section II.B.7.e. of this final rule,
these reporting requirements will apply to self-directed services. We
thank commenters for raising these concerns. As noted earlier, we
intend to provide States with technical assistance, including technical
specifications and sampling guidance, for the new reporting
requirements in this final rule, which should aid in reporting on self-
directed services. As noted in a prior response, the purpose of the
data is to track trends in service delivery times and utilization, not
to track the outcomes for each beneficiary. The reporting will be the
average amount of time a random sample of beneficiaries waited between
service authorization and the start of services, and the total percent
of authorized services that are provided. Thus, some of the factors
that commenters cited, such as additional training for self-directed
service workers or individual beneficiaries' changes in schedules,
should not significantly impact the reported numbers. However, we will
work with States to monitor this issue.
Comment: A few commenters raised concerns about the proposal to
allow States to report data on a statistically valid sample of
beneficiaries, suggesting instead that we require complete reporting on
all relevant beneficiary data. Commenters were concerned that using a
sample could mask disparities or fail to identify individuals with
particularly acute unmet needs. One commenter suggested that if we
permit reporting on a random sample, we add a requirement that the data
must include information on race, ethnicity, and population (such as
older adults, people with intellectual and developmental disabilities,
and people with physical disabilities) in order to identify disparities
in service delivery.
Response: To minimize State reporting burden, we are finalizing the
requirement to allow States to report data for Sec. 441.311(d)(2)
using statistically valid random sampling. We believe that due to
variety in States' current tracking systems, some States might find
reporting using statistically valid random sampling to be more
manageable and auditable than attempting to report on all
beneficiaries. We will consider expanding reporting to the full
population in future rulemaking if it is determined that such an
approach gives a more complete picture of service delivery. We note
that States may choose to report on the full population, as opposed to
sampling their beneficiaries, if for instance, doing so better aligns
with their data collection process or needs.
We are finalizing the requirements at Sec. 441.311(d)(2)(i) and
(ii) with a technical modification to specify that the State may report
this metric using statistically valid random sampling of beneficiaries.
(Revised language identified in bold.) We make this technical
correction to better align the language with standard terminology for
the sampling methodology we intended in these requirements.
Comment: We received responses to our comment solicitation on
additional metrics that could be collected regarding service delivery
and utilization. One commenter
[[Page 40651]]
recommended that we not add more metrics to Sec. 441.311(d)(2).
Several commenters did suggest additional metrics. Many of these
commenters noted that more detailed data would allow for a better
assessment of overall unmet needs and disparities within service
delivery. Additional metrics suggested by commenters included:
Disaggregated data about beneficiaries, by demographic
categories, including race, ethnicity, language status, sex or gender
identification, sexual orientation, age, and geographic location;
Tracking the total number of beneficiaries who received
service authorizations versus the number of beneficiaries who received
services;
Tracking why services are not provided or why a
beneficiary declines a service;
Disaggregated data by HCBS authority and population
(including dual eligibility), delivery system, provider type, and
managed care plan; and
Tracking beneficiaries' long-term access to services or
other metrics to measure continuity of care and how the care
contributes to beneficiaries' goals and outcomes.
One commenter, while not recommending that we require the measure
for all States, shared a State's experience of including a measure to
assess missed visits in its managed LTSS program. The commenter
observed that this required a significant amount of time to identify
legitimate reasons for services to not have been provided and to build
the system mechanisms to capture that data, which was primarily
identified through case management record review.
Response: We thank commenters for their thoughtful feedback. We
will take these recommendations under consideration for future
policymaking, but at this time, we decline to modify the metrics
required at Sec. 441.311(d)(2) based on these comments.
As noted in previous responses, we do not believe it would be
feasible at this stage to standardize the collection of certain types
of qualitative data, such as reasons for delayed or undelivered
services, or how the services contribute to beneficiaries' outcomes;
this data would also be difficult to validate and, as noted by one
commenter, time-consuming to implement.
We believe it is important to strike a balance between collecting
information to promote transparency around service times and
utilization and imposing as minimal an administrative burden on States
and providers as possible. We also believe that the reporting
requirements at Sec. 441.311(d)(2) are straightforward metrics on
which to begin reporting. As we gather and review this data, we will
consider what additional information may be needed to further improve
our oversight of HCBS programs and improve beneficiaries' access to
services and may consider additional reporting requirements in the
future.
However, we agree that some of the granular data elements suggested
by commenters could provide States with valuable insight into their own
programs and beneficiary needs. We encourage States to consider what
information they have the capacity to collect and would find useful for
developing local policies to support beneficiaries' access to HCBS
waivers in their State.
Comment: A few commenters recommended additional metrics that fall
outside the scope of the reporting in Sec. 441.311(d)(2). One
commenter recommended collecting data on case manager or service
coordinator caseloads. A few commenters recommended measuring time
between an individual's date of application and their eligibility
determination, and the time between an individual's eligibility
determination and the plan of care development or authorization for
services.
Another commenter noted that a cause of delay in receiving HCBS may
be due to delays in the development of care plans that are required for
HCBS delivery to begin. The commenter noted that a potential solution
to this specific barrier is the use of provisional plans of care, which
are discussed in Olmstead Letter #3.\127\ The commenter recommend that
we affirm that HCBS provisional plans of care are an available option
and require States to report on usage of such plans.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\127\ Refer to Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services,
``Olmstead Letter #3, Attachment 3-a.'' July 25, 2000. Available at
https://www.medicaid.gov/sites/default/files/Federal-Policy-Guidance/downloads/smd072500b.pdf;. The commenter notes that in
Olmstead Letter #3, Attachment 3-a (https://www.medicaid.gov/Federal-Policy-Guidance/downloads/smd072500b.pdf), CMS explains that
it ``will accept as meeting the requirements of the law a
provisional written plan of care which identifies the essential
Medicaid services that will be provided in the person's first 60
days of waiver eligibility, while a fuller plan of care is being
developed and implemented.'' During this time, the relevant agencies
work with the beneficiary to develop and finalize a ``comprehensive
plan of care,'' which goes into effect as soon as practically
possible, and at least within 60 days.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Response: We thank commenters and note these comments are not
directly related to the proposed requirements in Sec. 441.311(d), and
thus we decline to make modifications to Sec. 441.311(d) based on
these suggestions. We plan to consider the comments as we regard
broader HCBS access and equity issues for future policymaking. We also
note that while requiring use of provisional care plans would be
outside the of scope of this requirement, we agree with the commenter
that the use of provisional care plans as described in Olmstead Letter
#3 may help avoid the delay of services pending the development of the
care plan.\128\ In this letter, we explain that we will accept, as
meeting requirements, a provisional written plan of care which
identifies the essential Medicaid services that will be provided in the
person's first 60 days of waiver eligibility, while a fuller plan of
care is being developed and implemented. During this time, the relevant
agencies work with the beneficiary to develop and finalize a
``comprehensive plan of care,'' which goes into effect as soon as
practically possible, and at least within 60 days.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\128\ Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, ``Olmstead
Letter #3, Attachment 3-a.'' July 25, 2000, which is available at
https://www.medicaid.gov/sites/default/files/Federal-Policy-Guidance/downloads/smd072500b.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Comment: One commenter recommended that we allow States the option
to choose one of the proposed criteria in Sec. 441.311(d)(2) on which
to report or to propose a different metric on which to report. The
commenter believed this would permit flexibility in reporting on and
context for data related to timeliness of initiation of service
planning and service delivery. The commenter believed that this could
serve as the first stage in a phased approach for access reporting.
Response: We thank the commenter for their suggestion. However, we
believe it is important to take steps to establish nationally
comparable data, which would require States to report on the same
metrics. As discussed in previous responses, we are not finalizing any
additional metrics for Sec. 441.311(d)(2) and believe that the two
metrics included in this requirement are a reasonable first step in
data collection.
Comment: A few commenters supported annual reporting for Sec.
441.311(d)(2). One commenter noted that annual reporting will better
monitor service interruptions due to shortages of direct care workers.
One commenter noted that a beneficiary's service utilization can
fluctuate significantly even from month to month. One commenter
believed that biennial (every other year) reporting would reduce burden
on States.
Response: We are finalizing the annual reporting frequency as
proposed
[[Page 40652]]
in Sec. 441.311(d)(2). We continue to believe that annual reporting
strikes the right balance between collecting current data and
minimizing burden on States to the greatest extent possible. We are
concerned that if we extend the reporting to a biennial frequency, the
information will become outdated prior to the next public report.
After consideration of the comments received, we are finalizing the
requirements at Sec. 441.311(d)(2), with modifications. We are
finalizing Sec. 441.311(d)(2)(i) with a modification to specify that
the reporting is for individuals newly receiving services within the
past 12 months, rather than for individuals newly approved to begin
receiving services. We are also finalizing a modification so that both
reporting requirements at Sec. 441.311(d)(2)(i) and (ii) require
reporting on homemaker services, home health aide services, personal
care, or habilitation services, as set forth in Sec. 440.180(b)(2)
through (4) and (6), and allow States to report using statistically
valid random sampling of beneficiaries.
We note that we are finalizing Sec. 441.311(d)(2) with technical
corrections. As a result of modifying Sec. 441.311(d)(2) to include
habilitation services, we are modifying the title of this provision to
specify Access to homemaker, home health aide, personal care, and
habilitation services. We are also finalizing a technical modification
in both Sec. 441.311(d)(2)(i) and (ii) to indicate that the services
are as ``set forth'' in Sec. 440.180(b)(2) through (4) and (6), rather
than as ``listed'' in.
d. Payment Adequacy (Sec. 441.311(e))
At Sec. 441.311(e), we proposed new reporting requirements for
section 1915(c) waivers, under our authority at section 1902(a)(6) of
the Act, requiring that States report annually on the percent of
payments for homemaker, home health aide, and personal care services,
as listed at Sec. 440.180(b)(2) through (4), spent on compensation for
direct care workers. For the same reasoning discussed in section
II.B.5. of this preamble, we have focused this requirement on homemaker
services, home health aide services, and personal care services because
they are services for which we expect that the vast majority of payment
should be comprised of compensation for direct care workers and for
which there would be low facility or other indirect costs. These are
services that would most commonly be conducted in individuals' homes
and general community settings. As such, there should be low facility
or other indirect costs associated with the services. We also believed
that this reporting requirement could serve as the mechanism by which
States demonstrated that they meet the proposed HCBS Payment Adequacy
requirements at Sec. 441.302(k).
We considered whether the proposed reporting requirements at Sec.
441.311(e) related to the percent of payments going to the direct care
workforce should apply to other services, such as adult day health,
habilitation, day treatment or other partial hospitalization services,
psychosocial rehabilitation services and clinic services for
individuals with chronic mental illness. We had selected homemaker,
home health aide, and personal care services (as defined at Sec.
440.180(b)(2) through (4)) for this reporting requirement to align with
the payment adequacy minimum performance requirement at Sec.
441.302(k)(3), which is discussed in section II.B.5. of this preamble.
However, we requested comment on whether States should be required to
report annually on the percent of payments for other services listed at
Sec. 440.180(b) spent on compensation for direct care workers and, in
particular, on the percent of payments for residential habilitation
services, day habilitation services, and home-based habilitation
services spent on compensation for direct care workers.
We further proposed that States separately report for each service
subject to the reporting requirement and, within each service,
separately report on payments for services that are self-directed. We
considered whether other reporting requirements such as a State
assurance or attestation or an alternative frequency of reporting could
be used to determine State compliance with the requirement at Sec.
441.302(k) and decided that the proposed requirement would be most
effective to demonstrate State compliance. We requested comment on
whether we should allow States to provide an assurance or attestation,
subject to audit, that they meet the requirement in place of reporting
on the percent of payments, and whether we should reduce the frequency
of reporting to every other year.
To minimize burden on States and providers, we proposed that States
report in the aggregate for each service across all of their services
across all programs as opposed to separately report for each waiver or
HCBS program. However, we requested comment on whether we should
require States to report on the percent of payments for certain HCBS
spent on compensation for direct care workers at the delivery system,
HCBS waiver program, or population level. We also requested comment on
whether we should require States to report on median hourly wage and on
compensation by category.
In consideration of additional burden reduction for certain
providers, we requested comment on whether we should allow States the
option to exclude, from their reporting to us, payments to providers of
agency directed services that have low Medicaid revenues or serve a
small number of Medicaid beneficiaries, based on Medicaid revenues for
the service, number of direct care workers serving Medicaid
beneficiaries, or the number of Medicaid beneficiaries receiving the
service. We also requested comment on whether we should establish a
specific limit on this exclusion and, if so, the specific limit we
should establish, such as to limit the exclusion to providers in the
lowest 5th, 10th, 15th, or 20th percentile of providers in terms of
Medicaid revenues for the service, number of Medicaid beneficiaries
served, or number of direct care workers serving Medicaid
beneficiaries.
We proposed that payments for self-directed services by States
should be included in these reporting requirements, although we noted
feedback from interested parties indicating that compensation for
direct care workers in self-directed models tends to be higher and may
comprise a higher percentage of the payments for services than other
HCBS. This decision not to exclude them was based on the importance of
ensuring a sufficient direct care workforce for self-directed services.
We requested comment on whether we should allow States to exclude
payments for self-directed services from these reporting requirements.
We note that, for clarity, we are aligning the definitions of
compensation, direct care worker, and excluded costs at Sec.
441.311(e)(1) with those we are finalizing in Sec. 441.302(k)(1). As a
result, the reporting requirement we proposed at Sec. 441.311(e) is
finalized at Sec. 441.311(e)(2)(i), as discussed below. While we
consider the reporting requirement at Sec. 441.311(e) to be distinct
and severable from the payment adequacy requirements in Sec.
441.302(k), we believe that the reverse is not the case--that Sec.
441.302(k) does rely on the reporting mechanism at Sec. 441.311(e) to
establish compliance with the minimum performance requirement at Sec.
441.302(k)(3). As such, we believe it is advantageous to have aligned
definitions.
We received public comments on this proposal. The following is a
summary of
[[Page 40653]]
the comments we received and our responses.
Comment: Several commenters expressed general support for our
proposed requirement at Sec. 441.311(e) that States report annually on
the percent of payments for homemaker, home health aide, and personal
care services, as listed at Sec. 440.180(b)(2) through (4), spent on
compensation for direct care workers. Commenters believed that this
requirement would provide data about how Medicaid payments are being
spent, which would improve oversight and enable meaningful comparisons
across programs. One commenter requested clarification on the intent of
the reporting requirement.
Commenters also believed that this requirement would ensure
compliance with the payment adequacy minimum performance requirement at
Sec. 441.302(k)(3). Several commenters, however, expressed support for
finalizing this reporting requirement, but not for finalizing the
minimum performance requirement at Sec. 441.302(k)(3). These
commenters noted that the reporting requirement by itself would yield
useful data that would support payment transparency in HCBS programs.
Response: This requirement is intended to help track the percent of
Medicaid payments for certain HCBS that is spent on compensation for
direct care workers. As we discussed extensively in section II.B.5. of
this rule, we believe that ensuring that a significant portion of
payments for these hands-on services is spent on compensation for
direct care workers aligns with our responsibility under section
1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act to require assurance that payments are
consistent with efficiency, economy, and quality of care. We do note
that this reporting requirement also is a mechanism by which States
demonstrate compliance with the payment adequacy requirements at Sec.
441.302(k), which is discussed in detail in section II.B.5. of this
rule.
While we are finalizing the payment adequacy requirements at Sec.
441.302(k), we agree that the value provided by this reporting
requirement is distinct and severable from the minimum performance
requirement and serves as a standalone requirement. To clarify the
distinction between this reporting requirement and the payment adequacy
requirement at Sec. 411.302(k), we are revising the language at Sec.
411.311(e)(2) to remove the reference to the minimum performance
requirement at Sec. 411.302(k)(3). We believe this will better
demonstrate that the reporting requirement has a function aside from
demonstrating compliance with Sec. 411.302(k). We also believe this to
be necessary because, as discussed further below, we are finalizing the
reporting requirement at Sec. 411.311(e)(2) to include reporting of
data related to habilitation services, which are not subject to the
minimum performance requirement at Sec. 411.302(k)(3). Thus, we
believe retaining the reference to Sec. 411.302(k)(3) would cause some
confusion.
Comment: A few commenters opposed the reporting requirement
proposed at Sec. 441.311(e) (which we are finalizing at Sec.
411.311(e)(2)). These commenters noted that the reporting requirement
would increase administrative burden and administrative costs for
providers; a few commenters believed the increase in administrative
tasks would undermine the goal of the minimum performance requirement
at Sec. 441.302(k)(3) to reduce providers' spending on administrative
activities.
Other commenters expressed concern that this requirement would
create a burden for States. One commenter, although recognizing the
need for more data about compensation to direct care workers, believed
that most States do not currently collect this type of data and would
require significant time, administrative effort, and expense to
collect, compile, report, and analyze the data in a meaningful way. A
few commenters stated that States would need to make significant
changes to current billing and reporting practices and IT in order to
isolate the use of reimbursements for the three specified services from
the larger menu of services a provider typically offers. A couple of
commenters expressed concerns about the time and resources it would
take to educate providers about the requirements and their reporting
responsibilities.
Additionally, a few commenters expressed concerns about whether
States have the capacity to validate the accuracy of providers' reports
and conduct audits, especially in States with a large number of
providers. One commenter expressed concern about the cost associated
with hiring and training independent auditors to audit providers'
reported compensation of direct care workers. One commenter shared
first-hand experience with implementing a wage pass-through requirement
as part of the State's spending plan under ARP section 9817; the
commenter regarded the process of monitoring and validating the
percentage of payments going to direct care workers as administratively
burdensome.
Response: We acknowledge that complying with this reporting
requirement will necessitate certain expenditures of resources and time
on the part of providers and States. As noted by commenters, we believe
that the value of the data collected through their efforts makes these
expenditures of resources worthwhile. As discussed further below, we
are finalizing the redesignated Sec. 441.311(e)(2)(i) to require only
aggregated data by service, as proposed, which we believe will reduce
burden on both providers and States.
We believe that, generally speaking, States and providers should
already have information about the amount of Medicaid payments
providers receive for specific services, and that providers likely
already track expenditures on wages and benefits for their workers. We
also believe that the simpler, aggregated reporting will be easier for
States to validate and include in their existing auditing processes.
However, to ensure that States are prepared to comply with this
reporting, we are adding a requirement at Sec. 441.311(e)(3) to
require that States must report, one year prior to the applicability
date for (e)(2)(i) of this section, on their readiness to comply with
the reporting requirement in (e)(2)(i) of this section. This will allow
us to identify States in need of additional support to come into
compliance with Sec. 441.311(e)(2)(i) and provide targeted technical
assistance to States as needed.
Comment: A couple of commenters requested that CMS issue
subregulatory guidance or share best practices to assist with
strategies for collecting data and ensuring compliance with the
requirement. One commenter recommended that we work with States to
determine the most efficient way to gather comparable, useful data to
inform future rate policies, including exploring whether existing State
tools could meet the requirement or could do so with modification.
A few commenters raised particular concerns about cost reports,
which they believed would be necessary for implementing the reporting
requirement. Commenters stated that without standardized cost reports,
it will be difficult to ensure consistent and comparable data reporting
across programs. Some of these commenters noted that, in States that do
not currently require cost reports, this will present a new burden for
both providers and States. A couple of commenters worried that
providers may lack both the familiarity and the resources to complete
cost reports. A few commenters requested that CMS
[[Page 40654]]
develop a standard cost reporting template to ensure accurate data
collection and assessment of compliance across all States.
A couple of commenters, noting the language proposed in Sec.
441.311(e) (which we are finalizing at Sec. 441.311(e)(2)(i)) that the
reporting will be at the time and in the form and matter specified by
CMS, requested additional information regarding the method of
submission and the methodology that will be required for the
calculations used in the report.
Response: We intend to release subregulatory guidance to assist
States with implementation of this requirement, and we plan to also
provide technical assistance and best practices to help States identify
ways to use existing infrastructure or tools to gather and report.
Further, as noted earlier, we intend to provide States with technical
specifications for the new reporting requirements in this final rule,
which will aid in consistent data reporting. In addition, we will be
making the reporting template available for public comment through the
Paperwork Reduction Act notice and comment process. Through that
process, the public will have the opportunity to review and provide
feedback on the elements of the required State reports, including the
methodology of the calculations, as well as the timing and format of
the report to us.
As discussed further below, we are finalizing the requirement at
Sec. 441.311(e)(2)(i) (originally proposed at Sec. 441.311(e)) that
States need only report aggregated data by service. We believe this
will reduce the overall burden on States and providers and reduce the
need for complex cost reporting.
Comment: One commenter requested enhanced FMAP for costs associated
with the reporting requirement.
Response: Enhanced FFP is available at a 90 percent FMAP for the
design, development, or installation of improvements of mechanized
claims processing and information retrieval systems, in accordance with
applicable Federal requirements.\129\ Enhanced FFP at a 75 percent FMAP
is also available for operations of such systems, in accordance with
applicable Federal requirements.\130\ We reiterate that receipt of
these enhanced funds is conditioned upon States meeting a series of
standards and conditions to ensure investments are efficient and
effective.\131\ We decline to make any changes in this final rule based
on this comment.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\129\ See section 1903(a)(3)(A)(i) and Sec. 433.15(b)(3), 80 FR
75817-75843; https://www.medicaid.gov/state-resourcecenter/faq-medicaid-and-chip-affordable-care-act-implementation/downloads/affordable-care-act-faq-enhancedfunding-for-medicaid.pdf; https://www.medicaid.gov/federal-policy-guidance/downloads/SMD16004.pdf.
\130\ See section 1903(a)(3)(B) and Sec. 433.15(b)(4).
\131\ See Sec. 433.112 (b, 80 FR 75841; https://www.ecfr.gov/current/title-42/chapter-IV/subchapter-C/part-433/subpart-C.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Comment: One commenter suggested that, instead of requiring
reporting on the percentage of Medicaid payments going to compensation
for direct care workers, we should require States to report annually on
how their rates are determined and if the State's rate review included
factors such as current wage rates, inflation, required costs of
business, and increasing health insurance rates. Another commenter
recommended that CMS consider implementing a regular review and
assessment to determine if State Medicaid rates provide competitive
wages for the direct care workforce and review how these wages are
funded in the various payment models.
Response: We focused this particular proposal on the allocation of
Medicaid payments, not on rate setting or rate methodology. Such
considerations are outside the scope of this proposal. However, we
direct readers to the discussion in Documentation of Access to Care and
Service Payment Rates (section II.C. of this final rule) which may
speak to readers' interests in rate transparency and analysis. We
decline to make any changes in this final rule based on this comment.
Comment: A few commenters requested clarification of the
enforcement mechanisms for the reporting requirement.
Response: In terms of enforcing compliance of the States'
obligation to submit reports as required at Sec. 441.311(e), we intend
to use our standard enforcement discretion. In terms of providers'
cooperation with States in submitting the data States need to make
their reports, we note that States already have broad authority to take
enforcement action and create penalties, whether monetary or non-
monetary, for providers that have violated their obligations as set
forth by the State Medicaid program. We decline to make any changes in
this final rule based on this comment.
Comment: A few commenters requested that we clarify managed care
plans' responsibility for tracking and reporting expenditures. A few
commenters expressed concern that this proposal would pose particular
reporting or accounting burdens for providers that participate in
multiple Medicaid managed care plans, serve non-Medicaid clients, or
receive bundled payments.
Response: We plan to provide technical assistance to States to
address the role of managed care plans in adhering to this reporting
requirement, as well as to assist with strategies for addressing
bundled payments that include the services affected by this
requirement. Also, as discussed in greater detail below, we are not
proposing granular reporting (such as requiring data be disaggregated
by managed care plan or by HCBS waiver program). Additionally, we would
like to emphasize that our intention is that the State requires
providers share information about the percent of all of their Medicaid
FFS payments and the payment they receive from managed care plans that
is being spent on compensation for the direct care workforce; we do not
intend that the State should expect providers to provide a separate
percent of Medicaid payments from each managed care plan in which they
are enrolled, or provide separate calculations based on payment from
services provided to non-Medicaid beneficiaries that is separate and
distinct from their participation in the Medicaid managed care program.
We therefore decline to make any changes in this final rule based on
this comment.
Comment: A couple of commenters suggested that we expand reporting
to include more HCBS than the three services specified, or even to
apply this requirement to all HCBS. One of the commenters noted that,
while more work, it would be administratively simpler to report on a
broader array of services, rather than trying to isolate data for a few
HCBS. One of the commenters recommended that we could phase in these
expanded reporting requirements, beginning with homemaker, home health
aide, and personal care services.
Response: As discussed below, we are expanding this reporting
requirement in this final rule to include habilitation services. We
tailored this requirement to address the services that are most likely
to be delivered by direct care workers who predominantly earn lower
wages. At this time, we do not intend to expand the requirement beyond
homemaker, home health aide, personal care, and habilitation services.
However, we note that States are free to collect additional information
for State use if the States believe this would simplify administration
or they would like to track allocations of Medicaid payments to direct
care workers providing other types of HCBS.
[[Page 40655]]
Comment: In response to our request for comments, a few commenters
recommended expanding the reporting requirement to include the percent
of payments for residential habilitation services, day habilitation
services, and home-based habilitation services that is spent on
compensation for direct care workers. One commenter believed that it
was important to include habilitation because, in the absence of such
data, individuals with developmental disabilities will be disadvantaged
since habilitation is a primary vehicle for the delivery of support
services to people with intellectual and developmental disabilities in
most States. Another commenter believed this information would be
critical for determining any future minimum performance level for
compensation to direct care workers that was applied to habilitation
services.
A few commenters, on the other hand, did not support including
habilitation services, but did not specify reasons why these services
should be excluded.
Response: We agree with commenters that collecting information
about habilitation services would yield useful data about the
allocation of Medicaid payments in support of the direct care
workforce. Like homemaker, home health aide, and personal care
services, habilitation services also tend to be hands-on services that
are delivered by direct care workers who often earn lower wages.
However, a key difference between habilitation services and the
services that were initially selected for this reporting requirement is
that they may include facility costs if the service includes
residential habilitation or day habilitation. Reporting on habilitation
could be useful in better understanding these costs as well, as it will
allow for a comparison between the facility-based habilitation services
and in-home services. We also agree with commenters that, as
habilitation services are more often delivered to people with
intellectual and developmental disabilities, excluding habilitation
services will disproportionately impact beneficiaries with intellectual
and developmental disabilities.
While we agree with commenters that it is important to collect data
on habilitation services, we also acknowledge that, as noted above,
some services include facility costs that may impact the percent of
Medicaid payments being spent on compensation for direct care workers.
Similar to our proposed requirement at Sec. 441.311(e), that self-
directed services be reported separately, we also are requiring that
services that include facility costs in the Medicaid rate be reported
separately; this way, we can observe the differences between the
allocation of payments in facility-based services versus services that
are provided solely in the beneficiary's home or in community settings
that are not facilities.
After consideration of the comments, we are adding habilitation
services to this reporting requirement being finalized at Sec.
441.311(e)(2)(i). We are modifying the requirement at Sec.
441.311(e)(2)(i) to specify that the services included in this
requirement are those set forth at Sec. 440.180(b)(2) through (4) and
(6). We note that Sec. 440.180(b)(6) refers to habilitation services,
without distinguishing between residential habilitation services, day
habilitation services, and home-based habilitation services. Thus, we
are also specifying that services with facility costs included in the
Medicaid rate must be reported separately. These categories will be
further described in subregulatory guidance. We approximate this
distinction in this reporting requirement through the separate
depiction of services with facility costs.
Comment: One commenter recommended that we exclude nurses and
direct care workers who provide nursing assistance from this reporting
requirement. Another commenter suggested that we should require data to
be stratified by workforce. This commenter worried that without this
disaggregation, workers who typically earn lower wages (such as
personal care assistants) will be ``overshadowed'' in the data by
workers who typically earn higher wages (such as nurses). The commenter
believed this lack of transparency within the data would limit targeted
interventions and advocacy for the lowest-paid positions within HCBS.
Response: Nurses and staff who provide nursing assistance are
included in the definition of direct care worker we are finalizing at
Sec. 441.311(e)(1)(ii), as discussed previously. While some of the
underlying rationale of this reporting requirement is related to
concerns about low wages earned by some direct care workers, our
broader concern is the health of the HCBS workforce as a whole. The
HCBS workforce is experiencing a shortage of workers in all categories,
including clinicians and nursing assistants. These workers provide
direct, hands-on services to beneficiaries and may in some cases be
required to provide or supervise the services. We do not believe
excluding them from the reporting serves our larger interests in
supporting the direct care workforce overall. For that reason, we also
do not believe that it is necessary to include a Federal reporting
requirement that compensation to nurses should be reported separately,
as our primary interest is in tracking the allocation of Medicaid
payments to the direct care workers who are delivering the services. As
noted above, States may choose to disaggregate data (for State use) for
different categories of direct care workers in order to examine
workforce issues at the State level.
Comment: Several commenters responded to our request for comment on
whether we should allow States to provide an assurance or attestation,
subject to audit, that they meet the requirement in place of reporting
on the percent of payments. A few commenters opposed an attestation
rather than a reporting requirement. These commenters agreed that the
reporting requirement is the most effective means of verifying States'
compliance with the payment adequacy minimum performance requirement at
Sec. 441.302(k)(3). Commenters also noted that the reporting
requirement, rather than an attestation only, will yield granular data
that will allow for comparison across States and, within States, across
providers and service categories; such data, commenters believe, will
enable States to better understand the impact of payment levels on
access and adjust their rates accordingly, as well as prove useful for
CMS's Federal oversight of beneficiaries' access.
A few commenters, on the other hand, supported requiring an
attestation in lieu of a reporting requirement. Commenters, who mostly
represented State agencies, preferred the option as being less
burdensome and allowing for more flexibility. One commenter suggested
that such an attestation could still be a means of limited data
collection and proposed that, as part of an attestation, we provide
States with a standardized reporting tool to assess whether their rates
are sufficient to ensure a livable wage for direct care workers.
A couple of commenters noted that, while an attestation would be
helpful to Medicaid programs, some Medicaid agencies noted that they
would still need to collect at least some provider-level data to ensure
compliance.
Response: We agree with commenters that a reporting requirement
will be more effective and useful at monitoring and understanding the
allocation of Medicaid payments to compensation for direct care
workers, especially as this reporting requirement is intended to do
more than simply demonstrate compliance with the payment adequacy
requirements at Sec. 441.302(k). We also
[[Page 40656]]
are persuaded by commenters' observations that, even with an
attestation, States would still need to collect data from providers to
ascertain the accuracy of their attestation. In light of the fact that
an attestation would only slightly reduce burden and would not result
in data collection that would allow for national comparisons, we are
moving forward with the reporting requirement rather than replacing it
with an attestation.
Comment: Several commenters responded to our proposal at Sec.
441.311(e) (which we are finalizing at Sec. 441.311(e)(2)(i)) that
reporting would be required annually as well as our request for comment
on whether we should reduce the frequency of reporting to every other
year. A few commenters supported our proposal that this reporting would
be collected annually. One commenter believed that reporting less
frequently than every year would result in the reporting of out-of-date
data and would delay identification of problems in the HCBS system that
could cause access issues for beneficiaries. Another commenter noted
that the value of the data for rate-setting and the work of the
interested party advisory group (discussed in section II.C.2. of this
final rule, specifically in the discussion of Sec. 447.203(b)(6))
outweighs any potential burden of annual reporting.
A few commenters supported reporting every two years, rather than
an annual reporting period. One commenter made the specific suggestion
that the reporting should be every two years with a 12-month lag to
better ensure accurate reporting. Commenters who supported reporting
every 2 years stated that this would allow States sufficient time to
collect data, conduct necessary follow-up activities, and publish data
while also helping them better balance this requirement with other
compliance and reporting activities. One commenter opposed an annual
reporting period because it misaligned with their State's cycle of rate
methodology review, which occurs every three to five years.
One commenter proposed an alternative reporting frequency of 3
years, but with the expectation that States would be collecting the
data quarterly and analyzing the data annually. The commenter noted
this frequency would also give the MAC and BAG (discussed in section
II.A. of this rule) time to react to the data prior to its being
reported to CMS.
Response: We agree that if too much time lapses between each
reporting period, the reports, when released, will become quickly out
of date. We also appreciate commenters' observations that interested
parties, including advisory groups, might rely on this data when making
recommendations for Medicaid rates or examining HCBS workforce issues;
this places even greater importance on timely data. We also note that,
as discussed further below, we are finalizing the requirement that only
aggregated data must be reported, which should reduce burden on States
and providers and make annual reporting manageable. We note that while
annual reporting may be more frequent than States' rate review process,
collecting this data annually will allow States to track trends in
workforce compensation that they could include in their rate reviews.
We decline to add a requirement specifying how frequently States
should review the data they collect. The purpose of this requirement
is, in part, to establish the frequency with which States must submit a
report to CMS, which we proposed as being on an annual basis. We do not
intend to require that States collect and internally review their data
quarterly; however, States may choose to do so if feasible and useful.
We expect that, at minimum, States will review and analyze the data
they receive on an annual basis as part of their submission of the
report required by Sec. 441.311(e)(2)(i).
Comment: One commenter specifically noted support for the
requirement at Sec. 441.311(e) that States report separately for each
service subject to the reporting requirement. A few commenters
requested that we finalize the requirement to allow States to report
aggregated data to minimize burden. A few commenters suggested that
aggregate reporting would be preferable to a more granular approach
(such as reporting on the percent of payments for certain HCBS spent on
compensation for direct care workers at the delivery system, HCBS
waiver program, or population level; reporting on median hourly wage
and on compensation by category).
Response: As noted in our background discussion of this provision,
we believe that reporting on aggregated data by service strikes the
best balance between monitoring the proportion of Medicaid payments
that are being spent on compensation for direct care workers and
avoiding unnecessary data collection and burden on States and
providers.
Comment: We received responses to our request for comment on
whether we should require States to report on the percent of payments
for certain HCBS that is spent on compensation for direct care workers
at the delivery system, HCBS waiver program, or population level. A
number of commenters supported more granular reporting, which they
believed would yield more valuable data and support transparency.
Several commenters supported reporting at the delivery system level,
which commenters believed would help capture differences between
managed care and FFS. A few of these commenters also suggested that for
managed care delivery systems, reporting should also be disaggregated
by plan. One commenter also suggested that within managed care
reporting, States should report separately for services delivered to
dually eligible beneficiaries.
A few commenters supported breaking down the reporting by HCBS
program.
One commenter noted that both provider payments and direct care
worker compensation can have considerable variations across all of a
State's programs and having this information would be useful for State
policymakers as they develop payment rates. This commenter believed
that States and providers must already be tracking which services are
provided under each program.
A few commenters supported reporting at the population level.
Suggestions for what would be included in the population level
reporting included race, ethnicity, and geographic location. One
commenter believed that demographic information about beneficiaries and
their geographic regions would help address barriers to access that are
unique to certain populations and areas (such as access issues in rural
regions). One commenter, however, believed that collecting data at the
population level was not feasible.
Commenters made suggestions for additional details to add to the
reporting requirement, including reporting on:
Direct care worker turnover;
Compensation to workers by setting (services delivered at
home, residential, or facility-based day settings); and
The number of direct care workers who are considered W-2
employees versus independent contractors.
Response: We thank commenters for their thoughtful feedback. We
will take these recommendations under consideration for future
policymaking, but at this time are moving forward with finalizing the
language in the requirement at Sec. 441.311(e)(2)(i) specifying that
States must report the percent of total Medicaid payments spent on
compensation to direct care workers by service. We note that a few of
the suggestions are outside of the
[[Page 40657]]
scope of this proposal, which is intended for States to report data
about the percent of payments for certain HCBS that is spent on
compensation for direct care workers, not for providers to report on
the demographics or employment status of each of their workers, nor on
granular beneficiary-level data. We direct readers who are interested
to data collection about beneficiaries, including demographic data, to
the discussion of the HCBS Quality Measure Set in section II.B.8. of
this rule.
As noted in previous responses, we believe it is important to
strike a balance between collecting enough information to enable
Federal oversight of how Medicaid payments are being allocated and
imposing as minimum an administrative burden on States and providers as
possible. We believe that the data on the percent of Medicaid payments
going to compensation for direct care workers is sufficient to help us
ensure that a significant portion of Medicaid payments for these hands-
on services goes to the direct care workforce, which in turn supports
our responsibility under section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act to require
assurance that payments are consistent with efficiency, economy, and
quality of care.
However, we agree that some of the granular data elements suggested
by commenters could provide States with valuable insight into their own
programs and workforce needs. We encourage States to consider what
information they have the capacity to collect and would find useful for
developing local policies to support direct care workers in their
State.
Comment: One commenter also recommended collecting data
specifically designed to measure the impact of the payment adequacy
minimum performance requirement (which we are finalizing at Sec.
441.302(k)) on the HCBS provider network. The commenter suggested we
collect data on:
The number of providers employing direct care workers that
opened or closed before and after the effective date of the minimum
performance requirement;
The number of beneficiaries (particularly those with
higher needs) for whom providers started or discontinued service
provision before and after the effective date of the minimum
performance requirement;
The number of health and safety waiver requests that were
received before and after the effective date of the minimum performance
requirement; and
The causal factors service providers cite when closing
their business before and after the rule becomes effective.
Response: As the reporting requirement proposed at Sec. 441.311(e)
was intended only to measure the percent of Medicaid rates going to
direct care worker compensation, recommendations for data collection
regarding provider behavior are outside of the scope of our proposal.
However, we note that there are already data collection
requirements for some HCBS regarding the number of beneficiaries served
through a section 1915(k) program (as required at Sec. 441.580) or
annual reporting on the projected number of beneficiaries who will be
served under section 1915(i) (as required at Sec. 441.745(a)(1)).
Additionally, we are finalizing other reporting requirements in
this final rule that may speak to some of the commenter's concerns.
Specifically, we note that we are finalizing a rate disclosure process
(discussed in section II.C., particularly under Sec. 447.203(c)),
which will include identification of the number of Medicaid-paid claims
and the number of Medicaid enrolled beneficiaries who received a
service within a calendar year for certain services, including
homemaker, home health aide, personal care, and habilitation services
defined at Sec. 440.180(b)(2) through (4) and (6). We also note that
the reporting requirement finalized in the previous section of this
rule (under Sec. 441.311(d)) will require reporting on the following
metrics related to beneficiary access to homemaker, home health aide,
personal care, and habilitation services: the average amount of time
from when services are initially approved to when services began, for
individuals newly approved to begin receiving services within the past
12 months; and the percent of authorized hours for the services that
are provided within the past 12 months. We note that these other
reporting requirements, as finalized, will go into effect prior to the
finalized effective date for the payment adequacy minimum performance
requirement. This means that there will be data collected for these
metrics both before and after the implementation of the payment
adequacy requirement at Sec. 441.302(k). Finally, we note that we do
not know what the commenter is referring to by using the term, health
and safety waiver requests.
Comment: Commenters responded to our request for comment on whether
we should require States to report on median hourly wage and on
compensation by category. A number of commenters supported adding this
level of detail to the reporting requirement. Commenters noted that
this level of reporting would help monitor workforce compensation
generally, including identifying whether there were compensation
disparities across service types. A few commenters also suggested this
data would help track the impact of the payment adequacy minimum
performance requirement (required at Sec. 441.302(k)(3)) on workforce
compensation. One commenter also suggested that this data could be
helpful to the interested parties advisory group (discussed further in
section II.C.2. of this rule, under Sec. 447.203(b)(6)). A few
commenters also recommended that we require collection of specific
details on other provider expenditures, such as for travel, training,
administrative expenses, or other non-compensation program expenses.
One commenter, however, noted that median hourly wage and
compensation by category reporting could be duplicative of other
measures and required reporting.
Response: We thank commenters for their thoughtful feedback. In the
proposed rule, in addition to requesting comment on whether we should
require reporting on median hourly wages, in a separate proposal (under
Sec. 447.203(b)(3)) we had proposed a payment rate disclosure process
for HCBS that included providing information about the hourly Medicaid
rates paid for homemaker, home health aide, and personal care services.
The proposals under Sec. 447.203(b)(3) were standalone reporting
requirements unrelated to the reporting requirement at Sec.
441.311(e). As discussed in section II.C. of this final rule, the
payment rate disclosure process at Sec. 447.203(b)(3) is being
finalized with modifications to include habilitation services in the
reporting requirement. We do not see a need to finalize an additional
reporting process that may be duplicative of both data and burden.
Additionally, upon consideration of the comments, we have
identified no compelling reason to require a Federal requirement for
disaggregating the data by compensation category. We believe that
employee benefits, in addition to wages, are also integral to direct
care workers. (We refer readers to the discussion in section II.B.5. of
this rule, which includes concerns raised by public commenters about
the lack of benefits for direct care workers.) Additionally, the third
component of compensation--employers' share of payroll taxes--is a
fixed cost. While States may want to collect this disaggregated data
from providers to observe local compensation trends or to
[[Page 40658]]
share with the interested parties advisory group, we are not adding a
requirement for this disaggregation as part of the required State
reporting at Sec. 441.311(e).
Comment: In response to our request for comment, a few commenters
recommended that we allow States to exclude from their reporting to CMS
payments to providers of agency-directed services that have low
Medicaid revenues or serve a small number of beneficiaries. We did not
receive feedback on metrics for determining which providers would be
eligible for such an exclusion, nor on possible caps or limits for an
exclusion.
One commenter noted that excluding certain providers due to size,
revenue, or geography would create further inequities in the HCBS field
and be administratively infeasible to implement. A couple of commenters
worried that excluding small providers would create perverse incentives
for providers to remain small by failing to hire additional workers or
declining to serve additional beneficiaries.
Response: We are concerned that excluding certain providers from
the reporting requirement at Sec. 441.311(e) would not support the
goals of this requirement to promote transparency about how Medicaid
payments are being allocated.
For clarity, we also note that the reporting requirement we
proposed at Sec. 441.311(e), and are finalizing at Sec.
441.311(e)(2)(i), requires each State to report to CMS annually on the
percentage of Medicaid payments for certain services that is spent on
compensation for direct care workers. We intend that each State collect
and report this data regardless of whether the State establishes, and
their providers meet, the hardship exemption we are finalizing at Sec.
441.302(k)(5) or the small provider requirements at Sec.
441.302(k)(3)(ii) and (4). We do note that, under the requirements we
are finalizing at Sec. 441.302(k)(6), the State must report additional
information regarding any small provider requirements or hardship
exemptions the State develops and implements.
However, we are finalizing the reporting requirement at Sec.
441.311(e) with modification, adding Sec. 441.311(e)(4) to exclude
data from Indian Health Service and Tribal health programs subject to
the requirements at 25 U.S.C. 1641 from the required reporting. As
discussed in section II.B.5.b. of this final rule, the requirements
being finalized at Sec. 441.302(k) conflict with statutory
requirements at 25 U.S.C. 1641, and we are finalizing, at Sec.
441.302(k)(7), an exemption to the payment adequacy requirement at
Sec. 441.302(k) for IHS and Tribal health programs subject to 25
U.S.C. 1641. Given the conflict between Sec. 441.302(k) and the
statutory requirements at 25 U.S.C. 1641, we would likely be unable to
use HCBS payment adequacy data from IHS and the Tribal health programs
subject to 25 U.S.C. 1641 to inform future policymaking related to how
IHS or Tribal health programs spend Medicaid payments they receive,
including on direct care worker compensation. Further, we do not want
data from the exempted IHS and Tribal health programs to skew the other
data States would collect and report to CMS under Sec. 441.311(e),
which CMS intends to use to evaluate direct care worker compensation
nationally and inform policymaking to address the workforce shortage.
Comment: A few commenters suggested other metrics that could be
used as the basis for an exception to the reporting requirement. One
commenter suggested that an exception could be made for providers in
areas (defined as a city, county, or grouping of zip codes) with a
documented deficit of service providers accepting new clients. One
commenter recommended that any provider who pays a full-time direct
care worker at an hourly rate that exceeds 200 percent of the Federal
poverty level be exempted from reporting. Another commenter suggested
that if a provider can demonstrate they spend more than 85 percent of
Medicaid payments on compensation should be exempted from any detailed
cost reporting.
Response: As noted above, we are finalizing the reporting
requirement without exceptions for providers. However, we appreciate
the recommendations for possible exceptions criteria and will take
these into consideration for future policymaking.
Comment: One commenter requested that we exclude self-directed
services from reporting. However, we received a number of comments
encouraging us to include self-directed services in the reporting as
proposed and agreeing that these services should be reported
separately. A few of these commenters stated that self-directed
services should be reported separately from agency-provided services,
due to the differences in these service models.
A few commenters, however, believed that the reporting for self-
directed services should be further broken down by whether the service
is provided by an independent worker or by a worker who is employed by
an agency. One commenter noted that our rationale for separating out
self-directed services was that compensation for workers in self-
directed models tends to be higher and to comprise a greater percentage
of Medicaid payment for services, which the commenter believed to be
true of services delivered by independent providers, but not
necessarily of self-directed services delivered through agency models.
One commenter noted that some States might have challenges in
distinguishing payments for self-directed services delivered via agency
models, as these payments may appear in claims processing as
traditional HCBS agency payments, rather than as self-directed
services.
Response: We agree with commenters that, in terms of the percent of
the payment going to compensation for direct care workers, there will
be significant differences between the percent for services delivered
by independent workers hired by the beneficiary for whom the
beneficiary sets the payment rate under a self-directed services
delivery model versus those delivered by a worker employed by a
provider. In particular, we are concerned that this reporting
requirement might not yield meaningful data if applied to the self-
directed services delivery models in which the individual beneficiary
determines the wage paid directly to the direct care worker out of the
beneficiary's service budget (such as models meeting the definition at
Sec. 441.545(b) for section 1915(k) services, self-directed services
typically authorized under section 1915(j)). We believe the reporting
requirement on the percentage of payments going to compensation for
direct care workers is only appropriate when applied to a Medicaid rate
that includes both compensation to direct care workers and
administrative activities. In the former scenario, we expect that all
or nearly all of that payment rate routinely is spent on the direct
care worker's compensation; in the latter scenario, we expect the
payment rate to a provider includes both the direct care worker's
compensation and administrative costs for the provider.
Based on the comments received, and to ensure we are collecting
only meaningful data that demonstrates the percent of Medicaid payments
that are going to direct care worker compensation, we are finalizing a
new requirement at Sec. 441.311(e)(2)(ii) that specifies, if the State
provides that homemaker, home health aide, personal care services, or
habilitation services, as set forth at Sec. 440.180(b)(2) through (4)
[[Page 40659]]
and (6), may be furnished under a self-directed services delivery model
in which the beneficiary directing the services sets the direct care
worker's payment rate, then the State must exclude such payment data
from the reporting required in paragraph (e) of this section. We note
that self-directed homemaker, home health aide, personal care, or
habilitation services delivered through self-directed services models
not described in Sec. 441.311(e)(2)(ii) would still be part of the
reporting requirements finalized at Sec. 441.311(e)(2)(i).
After consideration of the comments received, we are finalizing
Sec. 441.311(e) with modifications. As discussed in section II.B.5. of
this final rule, we are replicating at Sec. 441.311(e)(1)(i), (1)(ii),
and (1)(iii) the finalized definitions at Sec. 441.302(k)(1)(i),
(k)(1)(ii), and (k)(1)(iii), respectively.
At Sec. 441.311, we are redesignating paragraph (e) as paragraph
(e)(2)(i). At finalized Sec. 441.311(e)(2)(i), we are making a
technical modification to remove the reference to the definition of
direct care workers at Sec. 441.302(k)(1). As we are also adding the
definition of direct care workers at Sec. 441.311(e)(1)(ii), the
reference to Sec. 441.302(k)(1) is unnecessary. We are finalizing
Sec. 441.311(e)(2)(i) with substantive modifications to specify that
the State must report to CMS annually on the percentage of total
payments (not including excluded costs), to include habilitation
services (as set forth in Sec. 440.180(b)(6)) in the reporting, and to
specify that States must report separately for services delivered in a
provider-operated physical location for which facility-related costs
are included in the payment rate. (Revised text in bold font). We are
also finalizing Sec. 441.311(e)(2)(i) with technical modifications to:
include references to Sec. 441.311(e)(2)(ii) and (4); clarify that the
provision applies to services as set forth in Sec. 440.180(b)(2)
through (4) and (6) (as opposed to services at Sec. 440.180(b)(2)
through (4) that are authorized under section 1915(c) of the Act); and
clarify that reporting is at the time and in the form and manner
specified by CMS.
We are finalizing a new requirement at Sec. 441.311(e)(2)(ii) that
specifies if the State provides that homemaker, home health aide,
personal care services, or habilitation services, as set forth at Sec.
440.180(b)(2) through (4) and (6), may be furnished under a self-
directed services delivery model in which the beneficiary directing the
services sets the direct care worker's payment rate, then the State
must exclude such payment data from the reporting required in paragraph
(e) of this section.
We are finalizing a new Sec. 441.311(e)(3), requiring that the
State must report, one year prior to the applicability date for
paragraph (e)(2)(i) of this section, on its readiness to comply with
the reporting requirement in paragraph (e)(2)(i) of this section.
We are finalizing a new Sec. 441.311(e)(4) to require States to
exclude data from the Indian Health Service and Tribal health programs
subject to the requirements at 25 U.S.C. 1641 from the required
reporting at Sec. 441.311(e), as well as to require that States not
require submission of data by, or include any data from, the Indian
Health Service or Tribal health programs subject to the requirements at
25 U.S.C. 1641 for the State's reporting required under Sec.
441.311(e)(2).
e. Applicability Date (Sec. 441.311(f))
We proposed at Sec. 441.311(f)(1) to provide States with 3 years
to implement the compliance reporting requirements at Sec. 441.311(b),
the HCBS Quality Measure Set reporting requirements at Sec.
441.311(c), and the access reporting requirements at Sec. 441.311(d)
in FFS delivery systems following the effective date of the final rule.
For States that implement a managed care delivery system under the
authority of sections 1915(a), 1915(b), 1932(a), or 1115(a) of the Act
and include HCBS in the MCO's, PIHP's, or PAHP's contract, we proposed
to provide States until the first rating period for contracts with the
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP, beginning on or after 3 years after the effective
date of the final rule to implement these requirements. This time
period was based on feedback from States and other interested parties
that it could take 2 to 3 years to amend State regulations and work
with their State legislatures, if needed, as well as to revise
policies, operational processes, information systems, and contracts to
support implementation of these proposed reporting requirements. We
also considered all of the HCBS proposals outlined in the proposed rule
as whole. We invited comments on whether this timeframe was sufficient,
whether we should require a shorter timeframe (2 years) or longer
timeframe (4 years) to implement these provisions, and if an alternate
timeframe was recommended, the rationale for that alternate timeframe.
In addition, we proposed at Sec. 441.311(f)(2) to provide States
with 4 years to implement the payment adequacy reporting requirements
at Sec. 441.311(e) in FFS delivery systems following the effective
date of the final rule. For States that implement a managed care
delivery system under the authority of sections 1915(a), 1915(b),
1932(a), or 1115(a) of the Act and include HCBS in the MCO's, PIHP's,
or PAHP's contract, we proposed to provide States until the first
rating period for contracts with the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP beginning on or
after 4 years after the effective date of the final rule to implement
these requirements. This time period was intended to align with the
effective date for the HCBS payment adequacy requirements at Sec.
441.302(k), which are discussed in section II.B.5. of this preamble. It
was also based on feedback from States and other interested parties
that it could take 3 to 4 years to amend State regulations and work
with their State legislatures, if needed, as well as to revise
policies, operational processes, information systems, and contracts to
support implementation of these reporting requirements. We also
considered all of the HCBS proposals outlined in the proposed rule as a
whole. We solicited comments on whether this timeframe was sufficient,
whether we should require a shorter timeframe (3 years) or longer
timeframe (5 years) to implement these provisions, and if an alternate
timeframe is recommended, the rationale for that alternate timeframe.
We received public comments on this proposal. The following is a
summary of the comments we received and our responses.
Comment: A few commenters supported the effective dates in Sec.
441.311(f). One commenter noted that the effective dates appear to be
appropriate and necessary to ensure that data is reported accurately
and uniformly. One commenter suggested that States should begin to
report on person-centered planning within 2 years. One commenter noted
particular support for the longer four-year timeframe for the payment
adequacy reporting requirements at Sec. 441.311(e), which the
commenter noted recognized the additional complexity of this provision.
A few commenters stated that they support the 4-year effective date for
Sec. 441.311(e) but would advocate for a 6-year effective date if the
payment adequacy minimum performance level in Sec. 441.302(k) is also
being finalized.
A number of commenters noted that while they are supportive of each
of these proposals individually, they were nevertheless concerned that
the number of new requirements will be difficult to implement cost-
effectively and accurately in the proposed timeframes. Several
commenters noted that proposed data elements required in Sec. 441.311
are beyond what the States
[[Page 40660]]
currently collect and--even if the States are able to expand on
existing systems--will require policy and process changes and system
updates and will place strain on existing staff resources; some
commenters stated these changes may require seeking appropriations from
State legislatures for additional staff or system upgrades, as well as
acquiring vendor support, which could take additional time. A few
commenters noted their States would face challenges in coordinating
data collection across multiple systems, which may be administered by
different agencies or contracted entities. A few commenters noted the
feasibility of compliance with Sec. 441.311 will depend on how quickly
CMS can provide subregulatory guidance on the reporting requirements;
these commenters requested that we set an effective date of 3 or 4
years after the release of subregulatory guidance.
While commenters requested that we extend the timeframes in Sec.
441.311(f), we received few suggestions for how much additional time
would be needed. A few commenters suggested alternative timeframes of 4
to 6 years for the provisions in Sec. 441.311. One commenter suggested
that timeframes should be specifically waived for self-directed
services and that States should be required to submit transition plans
for implementing the requirements for self-directed services.
Response: We are finalizing the substance of Sec. 441.311(f) as
proposed, but with minor modifications to correct erroneous uses of the
word ``effective.'' We are retitling the requirement at Sec.
441.311(f) as Applicability dates (rather than Effective dates). We are
also modifying the language at Sec. 441.311(f) to specify the dates
when States must comply with the requirements in Sec. 441.311(f),
rather than stating the dates when the requirements in Sec. 441.311(f)
are effective, beginning a specified number of years after the
effective date of the final rule.
As noted above in section II.B.7.b. of the rule, we have determined
it is necessary to provide States with an additional year for
compliance with the quality measure set reporting requirement at Sec.
441.311(c). Our primary purpose in extending the date for States to
comply is to ensure States have sufficient time for interested parties
to provide input into the measures, as required by Sec. 441.312(g),
which we are finalizing in section II.B.8. of this rule.
Regarding the dates for States to comply with the other
requirements in Sec. 441.311, as discussed throughout this section, we
continue to believe that many of these requirements build on activities
that States have already been doing as part of the administration of
their HCBS programs and will work with States to identify ways to
leverage existing data collection tools and update their current
systems as efficiently as possible.
We also acknowledge that complying with these reporting
requirements will necessitate expenditures of resources and time on the
part of States, managed care plans, and (in some cases) providers. We
believe that the value of the data collected through their efforts
makes this expenditure of resources worthwhile. This data captures
information related to beneficiaries' health and safety (addressed by
the incident management system and critical incident reporting in Sec.
441.311(b)(1) and (2)) and beneficiaries' long-standing concerns about
access to HCBS waivers and services (addressed by the person-centered
planning and access reporting requirements in Sec. 441.311(b)(3) and
(d)). These data are urgently needed, and we do not want to postpone
implementation of this reporting further than proposed.
Additionally, the data collected as part of the payment adequacy
reporting requirement in Sec. 441.311(e) not only addresses the
current workforce shortages that are impacting service delivery, but
the data are also going to be relied on by the interested parties
advisory group (discussed further in section II.C.2. of this rule,
under Sec. 447.203(b)(6)) to develop recommendations to the State on
Medicaid rates for certain HCBS. We do not believe the interests of
beneficiaries, providers, workers, or States are served by delaying the
collection and publication of this information. As a result, we are
declining to make changes in this final rule based on these comments.
We plan to provide technical assistance to States experiencing
challenges implementing specific reporting requirements.
Comment: A few commenters, while not opposing the proposed dates
that the reporting requirements become effective, noted that it is
important to align these reporting requirements with other reporting
requirements in States and for managed care plans to minimize State and
managed care plan reporting burdens. Commenters also believed that
streamlining reporting requirements across programs could help to
ensure that States and CMS do not analyze similar data that report on
the same populations and same or similar programs across different
timeframes, which would complicate findings.
Response: We will be releasing subregulatory guidance, including
technical specifications for the new reporting requirements in this
final rule, and making the required reporting templates available for
public comment through the Paperwork Reduction Act notice and comment
process. Specific reporting due dates will be determined through
subregulatory guidance; we plan to work with States to align these due
dates with other obligations to minimize administrative burden to the
greatest extent possible.
After consideration of public comments, we are finalizing Sec.
441.311(f) with minor modifications to correct erroneous uses of the
word ``effective.'' We are removing from Sec. 441.311(f)(1) the date
for States to comply with the quality measure set reporting
requirements date and adding it to Sec. 441.311(f)(2) so that States
will have 4 years from the effective date of this final rule to comply
with those requirements.
We are also finalizing in Sec. 441.311(f)(1) and (2) a
modification to the language pertaining to managed care delivery
systems to improve accuracy and alignment with common phrasing in
managed care contracting policy. We are specifying at Sec.
441.311(f)(1) that States must comply with the reporting requirements
at paragraphs (b) and (d) of this section beginning 3 years after the
effective date of this final rule; and in the case of a State that
implements a managed care delivery system under the authority of
sections 1915(a), 1915(b), 1932(a), or 1115(a) of the Act and includes
HCBS in the MCO's, PIHP's, or PAHP's contract, the first rating period
for contracts with the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP beginning on or after the
date that is 3 years after the effective date of this final rule.
We are specifying at Sec. 441.311(f)(2) that States must comply
with the reporting requirements at paragraphs (c) and (e) of this
section beginning 4 years after the effective date of this final rule;
and in the case of a State that implements a managed care delivery
system under the authority of sections 1915(a), 1915(b), 1932(a), or
1115(a) of the Act and includes HCBS in the MCO's, PIHP's, or PAHP's
contract, the first rating period for contracts with the MCO, PIHP or
PAHP beginning on or after the date that is 4 years after the effective
date of this final rule.
f. Application to Other Authorities (Sec. Sec. 441.311(f), 441.474(c),
441.580(i), and 441.745(a)(1)(iii))
At Sec. 441.311(f), we proposed to apply all of the reporting
requirements described in Sec. 441.311 to services delivered under FFS
and managed care
[[Page 40661]]
delivery systems. As discussed earlier in section II.B.1. of this
preamble, section 2402(a)(3)(A) of the Affordable Care Act requires
States to improve coordination among, and the regulation of, all
providers of Federally and State-funded HCBS programs to achieve a more
consistent administration of policies and procedures across HCBS
programs, and as noted in the Medicaid context this would include
consistent administration between FFS and managed care programs. We
accordingly proposed to specify that a State must ensure compliance
with the requirements in Sec. 441.302(a)(6) with respect to HCBS
delivered both under FFS and managed care delivery systems.
As discussed earlier in section II.B.1. of this preamble, the
proposed requirements at Sec. 441.311, in combination with other
proposed requirements identified throughout the proposed rule, are
intended to supersede and fully replace the reporting expectations and
the minimum 86 percent performance level for State's performance
measures described in the 2014 guidance, also discussed earlier in
section II.B.1. of this preamble. We expect that States may implement
some of the requirements proposed in the proposed rule in advance of
any effective date. We will work with States to phase out the 2014
guidance as they implement the requirements in this final rule to
reduce unnecessary burden and to avoid duplicative or conflicting
reporting requirements.
In accordance with the requirement of section 2402(a)(3)(A) of the
Affordable Care Act for States to achieve a more consistent
administration of policies and procedures across HCBS programs, and
because these reporting requirements are relevant to other HCBS
authorities, we proposed to include these requirements within the
applicable regulatory sections for other HCBS authorities.
Specifically, we proposed to apply the requirements at Sec. 441.311 to
section 1915(j), (k), and (i) State plan services at Sec. Sec.
441.474(c), 441.580(i), and 441.745(a)(1)(vii), respectively.
Consistent with our proposal for section 1915(c) waivers, we proposed
these requirements based on our authority under section 1902(a)(6) of
the Act, which requires State Medicaid agencies to make such reports,
in such form and containing such information, as the Secretary may from
time to time require, and to comply with such provisions as the
Secretary may from time to time find necessary to assure the
correctness and verification of such reports. We believed the same
arguments for these requirements for section 1915(c) waivers are
equally applicable for these other HCBS authorities. We requested
comment on the application of these provisions across section 1915(i),
(j), and (k) authorities. To accommodate the addition of new language
at Sec. 441.580(i), we proposed to renumber existing Sec. 441.580(i)
as Sec. 441.580(j).
We considered whether to also apply these reporting requirements to
section 1905(a) ``medical assistance'' State plan personal care, home
health, and case management services. However, we proposed that these
requirements not apply to any section 1905(a) State plan services based
on State feedback that they do not have the same data collection and
reporting capabilities in place for section 1905(a) services as they do
for sections 1915(c), (i), (j), and (k) services and because the
person-centered planning, service plan, and waiting list requirements
that comprise a significant portion of these reporting requirements
have little to no relevance for section 1905(a) services, in comparison
to section 1915(c), (i), (j), and (k) services. Further, the vast
majority of HCBS is delivered under section 1915(c), (i), (j), and (k)
authorities, while only a small percentage of HCBS nationally is
delivered under section 1905(a) State plan authority. We requested
comment on whether we should establish similar reporting requirements
for section 1905(a) ``medical assistance'' State plan personal care,
home health, and case management services.
We noted that we expected that we would establish new processes and
forms for States to meet the reporting requirements, provide additional
technical information on how States can meet the reporting requirements
including related to sampling requirements (where States are permitted
to report on a sample of beneficiaries rather than on all individuals
who meet the inclusion criteria for the reporting requirement), and
amend existing templates and establish new templates under the
Paperwork Reduction Act.
We received public comments on this proposal. The following is a
summary of the comments we received and our responses.
Comment: A few commenters supported applying the proposed reporting
requirements at Sec. 441.311 to services delivered under managed care,
noting that it is important to gather data on services across delivery
systems. A few commenters requested clarification on whether, or how,
the reporting requirements applied to services delivered under managed
care.
Response: The reporting requirements in this section apply to
services in both FFS and managed care delivery systems. We note that
comments about the application of specific provisions to managed care
are addressed in the sections above. As needed, we plan to provide
technical assistance to States that have additional questions.
Comment: A few commenters expressed support for applying reporting
requirements at Sec. 441.311 to services delivered through other
section 1915 authorities. A few commenters, while not necessarily
recommending that we exclude self-directed services authorized under
section 1915(j), noted that because of differences in self-directed
services, we should consider extending timeframes for implementation in
self-directed services or release additional guidance specific to self-
directed services.
Response: We are finalizing our proposal to extend the reporting
requirements in this section to services offered under sections
1915(i), (j), and (k). We note that comments about the application of
specific provisions to self-directed care are addressed in the sections
above. While we do not believe it is necessary to extend timeframes for
the implementation of the reporting requirements in section 1915(j)
self-directed services, we plan to provide technical assistance to
States that have additional questions.
Comment: One commenter requested clarification that the waiver
reporting requirement at Sec. 441.311(d)(1) is limited to the section
1915(c) authority and to the section 1915(j) authority, where it is
used as the State's authority for self-direction in a section 1915(c)
waiver. This commenter recommended limiting this requirement to these
authorities.
Response: We agree that, because section 1915(i) and section
1915(k) State plan services cannot have capped enrollment, the
reporting requirements at Sec. 441.311(d)(1) would not apply to these
authorities. We also agree that the reporting requirements at Sec.
441.311(d)(1) would also apply to section 1915(j) authority only where
section 1915(j) is used as the State's authority for self-direction in
a section 1915(c) waiver. We note that the reporting requirements at
Sec. 441.311(d)(1) would apply to section 1115(a) demonstration
projects that include HCBS if the State caps enrollment for the HCBS
under the section 1115(a) demonstration project.
We also note that, similar to the concern raised by commenters
about the applicability of Sec. 441.311(d)(1), as discussed in section
II.B.7.a.4. of this
[[Page 40662]]
rule, Sec. 441.311(b)(4) also applies only to section 1915(c)
programs.
Comment: A few commenters requested that we extend the reporting
requirements at Sec. 441.311 to section 1905(a) services. Commenters
noted that, in some States, many people receive services through
section 1905(a). A few commenters also raised concerns that there would
be a disparate impact on certain populations or less oversight of
certain services if reporting requirements were not extended to
services under section 1905(a), such as personal care, home health, or
rehabilitative services. A few commenters recommended not extending the
reporting requirements to section 1905(a) services at this time, citing
concerns about additional burden.
Response: At this time, we are not mandating inclusion of section
1905(a) services in the reporting requirements at Sec. 441.311. Given
that our work to better ensure access in the Medicaid program is
ongoing, we intend to gain implementation experience with this final
rule, and we will consider these comments provided on the proposed rule
to help inform any future rulemaking in this area, as appropriate. We
are not persuaded by the argument that including section 1905(a)
services would simply be too much work, as we do agree that
transparency, accountability, and oversight are critical for all HCBS.
However, we are continuing to review statutory and regulatory
differences between services authorized under sections 1905(a) and 1915
of the Act that could impact how these requirements would apply to
section 1905(a) services. We also note that we have not extended the
minimum performance requirements for incident management, person-
centered planning, or payment adequacy to section 1905(a) services
(refer to discussions in sections II.B.1., II.B.3, and II.B.5. of this
final rule, respectively, for more detail on those discussions).
Furthermore, as section 1905(a) service do not have waiting lists, the
requirement at Sec. 441.311(d)(1) would not be applicable to these
services.
After consideration of the comments received, we are finalizing
application of Sec. 441.311 to section 1915(j), (k), and (i)
authorities. We are making modifications at Sec. Sec. 441.474(c),
441.580(i) and 441.745(a)(1)(vii) with modifications to clarify that
the references to section 1915(c) of the Act are instead references to
section 1915(j), (k) and (i) of the Act, respectively.
g. Summary of Finalized Requirements
After consideration of the public comments, we are finalizing the
requirements at Sec. 441.311 as follows:
We are finalizing Sec. 441.311(a) with a modification for
clarity to remove ``simplification'' and make a minor formatting change
to ensure Sec. 441.311(a) aligns directly with the statutory
requirement at section 1902(a)(19) of the Act .
We are finalizing the incident management system
compliance requirement at Sec. 441.311(b) with a technical
modification for clarity in Sec. 441.311(b)(1)(i) that the State must
report on the results of an incident management system assessment,
every 24 months, in the form and manner, and at a time, specified by
CMS, rather than according to the format and specifications provided by
CMS.
We are finalizing the critical incident compliance
requirement at Sec. 441.311(b)(2) with a technical modification for
clarity that the State must report to CMS annually in the form and
manner, and at a time, specified by CMS, rather than according to the
format and specifications provided by CMS. For consistency, we are also
simplifying the title and removing the reference to Sec.
441.302(a)(6)(i)(A) from the title of Sec. 441.311(b)(2).
We are finalizing the person-centered planning reporting
requirement at Sec. 441.311(b)(3) with a technical modification to
specify at Sec. 441.311(b)(3), to demonstrate that the State meets the
requirements at Sec. 441.301(c)(3)(ii) regarding person-centered
planning (as described in Sec. 441.301(c)(1) through (3)), the State
must report to CMS annually on the following, in the form and manner,
and at a time, specified by CMS, rather than according to the format
and specifications provided by CMS. We are also finalizing the
reporting requirement at Sec. 441.311(b)(3)(i) and (ii), with the
technical modification noted previously, to specify that the State may
report this metric using statistically valid random sampling of
beneficiaries.
We are finalizing the reporting requirement at Sec.
441.311(b)(4) with a modification to restore language that was
erroneously omitted, and with additional technical modifications so
that Sec. 441.311(b)(4) specifies that annually, the State will
provide CMS with information on the waiver's impact on the type,
amount, and cost of services provided under the State plan, in the form
and manner, and at a time, specified by CMS.
We are finalizing the HCBS Quality Measure Set reporting
requirements at Sec. 441.311(c) with modifications. At Sec.
441.311(c), we are finalizing a date of 4 years, rather than 3 years,
for States to comply with the HCBS Quality Measure Set reporting
requirements at Sec. 441.311(c).
We are finalizing the access reporting requirement at
Sec. 441.311(d) with a technical modification to specify that
reporting will be in the form and manner, and at a time, specified by
CMS. We are finalizing Sec. 441.311(d)(1) as proposed. We are
finalizing Sec. 441.311(d)(2)(i) with a modification to specify that
the reporting is for individuals newly receiving services within the
past 12 months, rather than for individuals newly approved to begin
receiving services. We are finalizing the requirements at Sec.
441.311(d)(2), with modifications so that both reporting requirements
at Sec. 441.311(d)(2)(i) and (ii) require reporting on homemaker
services, home health aide services, personal care, or habilitation
services, as set forth in Sec. 440.180(b)(2) through (4) and (6), and
allow States to report using statistically valid random sampling of
beneficiaries. We are modifying the title of this provision at Sec.
441.311(d)(2) to specify Access to homemaker, home health aide,
personal care, and habilitation services. We are also finalizing a
technical modification in both Sec. 441.311(d)(2)(i) and (ii) to
indicate that the services are, as set forth in Sec. 440.180(b)(2)
through (4) and (6), rather than, as listed in, as noted in the
proposed rule.
We are replicating at Sec. 441.311(e)(1)(i) through (iii)
the finalized definitions at Sec. 441.302(k)(1)(i), through (iii),
respectively.
We are redesignating Sec. 441.311(e) as Sec.
441.311(e)(2)(i) and finalizing Sec. 441.311(e)(2)(i) with
modifications to specify that, except as provided at (e)(2)(ii) and
(4), the State must report to CMS annually on the total percentage of
payments (not including excluded costs) for furnishing homemaker
services, home health aide services, personal care, and habilitation
services, as set forth in Sec. 440.180(b)(2) through (4) and (6), that
is spent on compensation for direct care workers, at the time and in
the form and manner specified by CMS. The State must report separately
for each service and, within each service, must separately report
services that are self-directed and services delivered in a provider-
operated physical location for which facility-related costs are
included in the payment rate.
[[Page 40663]]
We are finalizing a new requirement at Sec.
441.311(e)(2)(ii) that specifies if the State provides that homemaker,
home health aide, personal care services, or habilitation services, as
set forth at Sec. 440.180(b)(2) through (4) and (6), may be furnished
under a self-directed services delivery model in which the beneficiary
directing the services sets the direct care worker's payment rate, then
the State must exclude such payment data from the reporting required in
paragraph (e) of this section.
We are finalizing a new Sec. 441.311(e)(3), requiring
that the State must report, 1 year prior to the applicability date for
paragraph (e)(2)(i) of this section, on its readiness to comply with
the reporting requirement in paragraph (e)(2)(i) of this section.
We are finalizing a new Sec. 441.311(e)(4) to require
States to exclude the Indian Health Service and Tribal health programs
subject to the requirements at 25 U.S.C. 1641 from the reporting
required in paragraph (e) of this section, and not require submission
of data by, or include any data from, the Indian Health Service or
Tribal health programs subject to the requirements at 25 U.S.C. 1641
for the State's reporting required under paragraph (e)(2).
We are finalizing Sec. 441.311(f) with modification to
move the date that States are required to comply with the quality
measure reporting at Sec. 441.311(c) from Sec. 441.311(f)(1) to Sec.
441.311(f)(2), and to clarify the language regarding applicability
dates in the case of a State that implements a managed care delivery
system under the authority of sections 1915(a), 1915(b), 1932(a), or
1115(a) of the Act and includes HCBS in the MCO's, PIHP's, or PAHP's
contract.
We are finalizing Sec. Sec. 441.474(c), 441.580(i), and
441.745(a)(1)(vii) with modifications to clarify that the references to
section 1915(c) of the Act are instead references to section 1915(j),
(k), and (i) of the Act, respectively.
8. Home and Community-Based Services (HCBS) Quality Measure Set
(Sec. Sec. 441.312, 441.474(c), 441.585(d), and 441.745(b)(1)(v)).
On July 21, 2022, we issued State Medicaid Director Letter #22-003
\132\ to release the first official version of the HCBS Quality Measure
Set. The HCBS Quality Measure Set is a set of nationally standardized
quality measures for Medicaid-covered HCBS. It is intended to promote
more common and consistent use within and across States of nationally
standardized quality measures in HCBS programs, create opportunities
for CMS and States to have comparative quality data on HCBS programs,
drive improvement in quality of care and outcomes for people receiving
HCBS, and support States' efforts to promote equity in their HCBS
programs. It is also intended to reduce some of the burden that States
and other interested parties may experience in identifying and using
HCBS quality measures. By providing States and other interested parties
with a set of nationally standardized measures to assess HCBS quality
and outcomes and by facilitating access to information on those
measures, we believe that we can reduce the time and resources that
States and other interested parties expend on identifying, assessing,
and implementing measures for use in HCBS programs.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\132\ CMS State Medicaid Director Letter. SMD# 22-003 Home and
Community-Based Services Quality Measure Set. July 2022. Accessed at
https://www.medicaid.gov/federal-policy-guidance/downloads/smd22003.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
a. Basis and Scope (Sec. 441.312(a))
Section 1102(a) of the Act provides the Secretary of HHS with
authority to make and publish rules and regulations that are necessary
for the efficient administration of the Medicaid program. Section
1902(a)(6) of the Act requires State Medicaid agencies to make such
reports, in such form and containing such information, as the Secretary
may from time to time require, and to comply with such provisions as
the Secretary may from time to time find necessary to assure the
correctness and verification of such reports. Under our authority at
sections 1102(a) and 1902(a)(6) of the Act, we proposed a new section,
at Sec. 441.312, Home and Community-Based Services Quality Measure
Set, to require use of the HCBS Quality Measure Set in section 1915(c)
waiver programs and promote public transparency related to the
administration of Medicaid-covered HCBS. We proposed to describe the
basis and scope for this requirement at Sec. 441.312(a).
In proposing this requirement, we believed that quality is a
critical component of efficiency, and as such, having a standardized
set of measures used to assess the quality of Medicaid HCBS programs
supports the efficient operation of the Medicaid program. Further, we
believed that it is necessary for the efficient administration of
Medicaid-covered HCBS authorized under section 1915(c) of the Act,
consistent with section 1902(a)(4) of the Act, as it would establish a
process through which we regularly update and maintain the required set
of measures at Sec. 441.311(c) in consultation with States and other
interested parties (as described later in this section of the rule).
The process, as proposed, would ensure that the priorities of
interested parties are reflected in the selection of the measures
included in the HCBS Quality Measure Set. The process, as proposed,
also would ensure that the required set of HCBS quality measures is
updated to address gaps in the HCBS Quality Measure Set as new measures
are developed and to remove measures that are less relevant or add less
value than other available measures, and the HCBS quality measures
meets scientific and other standards for quality measures. Due to the
constantly evolving field of HCBS quality measurement, we proposed
these requirements based on our belief that the failure to establish
such a process would result in ongoing reporting by States of measures
that do not reflect the priorities of interested parties, measures that
offer limited value compared to other measures, and measures that do
not meet strong scientific and other standards. It would also result in
a lack of reporting on key measurement priority areas, which could be
addressed by updating the HCBS Quality Measure Set as new measures are
developed. The failure to establish such a process would lead to
inefficiency in States' HCBS quality measurement activities through the
continued reporting on an outdated set of measures. In other words, we
believed that such a process is necessary for the efficient
administration of Medicaid-covered HCBS by ensuring that quality
measure reporting requirements are focused on the most valuable,
useful, and scientifically supported areas of quality measurement, and
that quality measures with limited value are removed timely from
quality measure reporting requirements.
We received public comments on this proposal. The following is a
summary of the comments we received and our responses.
Comment: Many commenters supported the proposed basis and scope at
Sec. 441.312(a). Several commenters supported the requirements at
Sec. 441.312 (a) in its entirety.
Response: We thank the commenters for their support for our
proposal.
Comment: A few commenters raised concerns that the HCBS Quality
Measure Set is overly prescriptive from a Federal perspective and sets
a one-size-fits-all approach, expressing that the responsibility for
safeguarding quality in HCBS belong to each State.
Response: We disagree with commenters that the proposed requirement
for States to use the HCBS Quality Measure Set is overly
[[Page 40664]]
prescriptive. CMS and States have worked for decades to support the
increased availability and provision of high-quality HCBS for Medicaid
beneficiaries. While there are quality and reporting requirements for
Medicaid HCBS, the requirements vary across authorities and are often
inadequate to provide the necessary information for ensuring that HCBS
are provided in a high-quality manner that best protects the health and
welfare of beneficiaries. Consequently, quality measurement and
reporting expectations are not consistent across services, and instead
vary depending on the authorities under which States are delivering
services. While we support State flexibility, the lack of standardized
measures has resulted in thousands of metrics and measures currently in
use across States, with different metrics and measures often used for
different HCBS programs within the same State. As a result, CMS and
States are limited in the ability to compare HCBS quality and outcomes
within and across States or to compare the performance of HCBS programs
for different Medicaid beneficiary populations. We underscore our
belief that use of the HCBS Quality Measure Set will promote more
common and consistent use within and across States of nationally
standardized quality measures in HCBS programs, create opportunities
for CMS and States to have comparative quality data on HCBS programs,
drive improvement in quality of care and outcomes for people receiving
HCBS, and support States' efforts to promote equity in their HCBS
programs. As discussed further in this section II.B.8. of this rule, we
are finalizing the requirements at Sec. 441.312(a) as proposed and
plan to provide technical assistance to States as needed to address the
concerns raised by commenters.
Comment: Several commenters requested that CMS align the HCBS
quality measures universally across Medicaid programs, recommending
streamlining measures across the HCBS Quality Measure Set, the Medicaid
and CHIP (MAC) Quality Rating System (QRS), and the Adult Core Set.
Further, commenters recommended we consider a minimum set of mandatory
quality measures and limit them to a small set, similar to the MAC QRS,
and allow States the flexibility to utilize voluntary measures in
addition to the minimum mandatory measures, as appropriate. Commenters
further noted that States already have implemented measures that may
not be included in the quality measures identified in the HCBS Quality
Measure Set, and this approach for a small set of mandatory measures
could minimize disruption to the quality-related work that is currently
being undertaken by States in their Medicaid programs.
One commenter observed that creating a unified reporting structure
on mandatory measures would bring a level of discipline and consistency
that would foster more reliable data across the Medicaid program,
noting that it is imperative to create alignment for data collection
across States.
Response: We thank the commenters for this feedback. We will take
these comments into consideration when developing and updating the HCBS
Quality Measure Set and developing subregulatory guidance on the
required use of the HCBS Quality Measure Set. We agree with the
commenters on the importance of parsimony, alignment, and harmonization
in quality measurement across the Medicaid program, to the extent
possible. While we aim to align measures across programs as much as
possible, the HCBS Quality Measure Set is designed to promote more
common and consistent use of nationally standardized quality measures
in HCBS programs and to support States with improving quality and
outcomes specifically for beneficiaries receiving HCBS. As a result, we
expect the HCBS Quality Measure Set to be in alignment with the MAC QRS
and the Child and Adult Core Sets.
We also acknowledge that States are already using quality measures
to assess quality in their HCBS programs, and it is not our intent for
States to abandon this quality-related work. The measure set is
intended to reduce some of the burden that States and other interested
parties may experience in identifying and using HCBS quality measures.
However, States may continue to utilize existing measures not found in
the HCBS Quality Measure Set if the States believe they generate
valuable information, as long as the measures in the HCBS Quality
Measures Set are implemented in accordance with Sec. 441.312, which we
are finalizing as discussed further in this section II.B.8. of this
rule.
After consideration of the comments received, we are finalizing
Sec. 441.312(a) with a minor formatting change to correct punctuation.
b. Definitions (Sec. 441.312(b))
We proposed a definition at Sec. 441.312(b)(1) for ``Attribution
rules,'' to mean the process States use to assign beneficiaries to a
specific health care program or delivery system for the purpose of
calculating the measures in the HCBS Quality Measure Set as described
at Sec. 441.312(d)(6). We also proposed a definition at Sec.
441.312(b)(2) for ``Home and Community-Based Services Quality Measure
Set'' to mean the Home and Community-Based Services Quality Measures
for Medicaid established and updated at least every other year by the
Secretary through a process that allows for public input and comments,
including through the Federal Register.
We received public comments on these proposals. The following is a
summary of the comments we received and our responses.
Comment: Commenters generally supported the proposed definitions at
Sec. 441.312(b).
Response: We thank these commenters for their support.
After consideration of the comments received, we are finalizing at
Sec. 441.312(b)(1) the definition of attribution rules as proposed. As
discussed in more detail in our discussion of Sec. 441.312(c) in the
next section below (section B.8.c. of this rule), we are making several
changes related to the frequency of updates to the HCBS Quality Measure
Set. To accommodate those changes, we are striking the words, at least
every other year, from the definition of the Home and Community-Based
Services Quality Measure Set we proposed at Sec. 441.312(b)(2).
As finalized at Sec. 441.312(b)(2) the definition of Home and
Community-Based Services Quality Measure Set means the Home and
Community-Based Services Quality Measures for Medicaid established and
updated by the Secretary through a process that allows for public input
and comment, including through the Federal Register, as described in
paragraph (d) of this section. We note that the measure updates are
specified in Sec. 441.312(c) as finalized, and thus the frequency of
updates do not need to be set forth in the definition of the HCBS
Quality Measure Set. Additionally, we are finalizing Sec. 441.312(b)
with a minor technical modification to correct an inadvertent omission
in the regulatory text in the proposed rule and are finalizing the
addition of the numbers (1) and (2) in front of each definition.
c. Responsibilities of the Secretary (Sec. 441.312(c))
At Sec. 441.312(c), we described the proposed general process for
the HCBS Quality Measure Set that the Secretary will follow to update
and maintain the HCBS Quality Measure Set. Specifically, at Sec.
441.312(c)(1), we proposed that the Secretary will identify, and update
at
[[Page 40665]]
least every other year, through a process that allows for public input
and comment, the quality measures to be included in the HCBS Quality
Measure Set. At Sec. 441.312(c)(2), we proposed that the Secretary
will solicit comment at least every other year with States and other
interested parties, which we identified later in this section of the
preamble of the proposed rule, to:
Establish priorities for the development and advancement
of the HCBS Quality Measure Set.
Identify newly developed or other measures that should be
added, including to address gaps in the measures included in the HCBS
Quality Measure Set.
Identify measures that should be removed as they no longer
strengthen the HCBS Quality Measure Set.
Ensure that all measures included in the HCBS Quality
Measure Set are evidence-based, are meaningful for States, and are
feasible for State-level and program-level reporting as appropriate.
The proposed frequency for updating the quality measures included
in the HCBS Quality Measure Set was aligned with the proposed frequency
at Sec. 441.311(c)(1) for States' reporting of the measures in the
HCBS Quality Measure Set. We based other aspects of the proposed
process that the Secretary will follow to update and maintain the HCBS
Quality Measure Set in part on the processes for the Secretary to
update and maintain the Child, Adult, and Health Home Core Sets as
described in the Medicaid Program and CHIP; Mandatory Medicaid and
Children's Health Insurance Program (CHIP) Core Set Reporting final
rule (88 FR 60278); (hereinafter the ``Mandatory Medicaid and CHIP Core
Set Reporting final rule''). We believed that such alignment in
processes will ensure consistency and promote efficiency for both CMS
and States across Medicaid quality measurement and reporting
activities.
At Sec. 441.312(c)(3), we proposed that the Secretary will, in
consultation with States and other interested parties, develop and
update the measures in the HCBS Quality Measure Set, at least every
other year, through a process that allows for public input and comment.
We solicited comments on whether the timeframes for updating the
measures in the HCBS Quality Measure Set and conducting the process for
developing and updating the HCBS Quality Measure Set is sufficient,
whether we should conduct these activities more frequently (every year)
or less frequently (every 3 years), and if an alternate timeframe was
recommended, the rationale for that alternate timeframe.
We received public comments on these proposals. The following is a
summary of the comments we received and our responses.
Comment: Several commenters expressed support for our proposal at
Sec. 441.312(c)(1) to identify and update the quality measures
included in the HCBS Quality Measure Set at least every other year,
through a process that allows for public input and comment. One
commenter noted that identifying and updating the measures annually,
instead of every other year, could maximize the effectiveness of the
HCBS Quality Measure Set, especially with a new and rapidly evolving
field of HCBS measures, suggesting that an every other year frequency
might impact the use of innovative approaches to inform quality
improvement in HCBS. Alternatively, several commenters expressed
concern and recommended less frequent updates to the HCBS Quality
Measure Set, questioning the usefulness of the measures that change
every other year and suggesting that taking a longer time between
updates to the HCBS Quality Measure Set will minimize financial burden
and allow States to more accurately measure improvement over time. In
the same vein, one commenter expressed that every other year updates to
the measure set might have an effect and impact the usefulness of
longitudinal data. These commenters suggested alternative timeframes
ranging from 3 to 5 years, with 3 years being the most frequently
suggested frequency for updates to the HCBS Quality Measure Set.
Response: We thank commenters for their feedback. In consideration
of comments received, we agree that clarification of the frequency in
updates to the HCBS Quality Measure Set is required. We note that the
proposed process for updating the quality measures included in the
Quality Measure Set differs in frequency from, though is based in part
on, the processes for the Secretary to update and maintain the Child,
Adult, and Health Home Core Sets as described in the final rule,
``Medicaid Program and CHIP; Mandatory Medicaid and Children's Health
Insurance Program (CHIP) Core Set Reporting'' (88 FR 60278)
(hereinafter the ``Mandatory Medicaid and CHIP Core Set Reporting final
rule''). We proposed a frequency for updating the quality measures
included in the HCBS Quality Measure Set, which is different from the
mandatory annual State reporting of the Core Set measures in the
Mandatory Medicaid and CHIP Core Set Reporting final rule, because the
HCBS Quality Measure Set was only first released for voluntary use by
States in July 2022, while Child, Adult, and Health Home Core Sets
voluntary reporting has been in place for a number of years. Further, a
substantial portion of the measures included in the HCBS Quality
Measure Set, particularly compared to the Child, Adult, and Health Home
Core Sets, is derived from beneficiary experience of care surveys,
which are costlier to implement than other types of measures. We
recognize that States may need to make enhancements to their data and
information systems or incur other costs in implementing the HCBS
Quality Measure Set. Upon further consideration, we assure States that
CMS will not update the measure set to add new measures or retire
existing measures more frequently than every other year, and are
modifying the beginning date as no later than December 31, 2026,
instead of 2025. We note that, while the finalized requirement will
allow CMS to add new measures or retire existing measures every other
year, CMS intends to retain each of the measures in the measure set for
at least 5 years to ensure the availability of longitudinal data,
unless there are serious issues associated with the measures (such as
related to measure reliability or validity) or States' use of the
measures (such as excessive cost of State data collection and reporting
or insurmountable technical issues with State reporting on the
measures).
After consideration of the comments received about the frequency of
updating the quality measures in Sec. 441.312(c)(1), we are finalizing
Sec. 441.312(c)(1) with modifications to require that the Secretary
shall identify and update quality measures no more frequently than
every other year, beginning no later than December 31, 2026, the
quality measures to be included in the Home and Community-Based
Services Quality Measure Set as defined in paragraph (b) of this
section). (New language identified in bold.)
We are also finalizing a new requirement at Sec. 441.312(c)(2) to
require the Secretary to make technical updates and corrections to the
Home and Community-Based Services Quality Measure Set annually as
appropriate. This addition is intended to ensure that the measures
included in the measure set are accurate and up to date, and that we
may correct errors, clarify information related to the measures, and
align with updated technical specifications of measure stewards,
particularly given the revision to Sec. 441.312(c)(2) to indicate that
CMS will not update the HCBS Quality Measure Set more frequently than
every other
[[Page 40666]]
year. To accommodate the new requirement at Sec. 441.312(c)(2), we
have renumbered the provisions proposed at Sec. Sec. 441.312(c)(2) and
(3) to Sec. Sec. 441.312(c)(3) and (4), respectively.
We are finalizing redesignated Sec. 441.312(c)(3)(iv) with a minor
technical modification for clarity to specify that the Secretary shall
ensure that all measures included in the Home and Community-Based
Services Quality Measure Set reflect an evidence-based process
including testing, validation, and consensus among interested parties;
are meaningful for States; and are feasible for State-level, program-
level, or provider-level reporting as appropriate. We are also
finalizing the redesignated requirement at Sec. 441.312(c)(4) with a
modification to replace the words, at least, with the words, no more
frequently than, to require that the Secretary, in consultation with
States, develop and update, no more frequently than every other year,
the Home and Community-Based Services Quality Measure Set using a
process that allows for public input and comment as described in
paragraph (d) of this section.
As noted in the proposed rule, in Medicaid, enhanced FFP is
available at a 90 percent FMAP for the design, development, or
installation of improvements of mechanized claims processing and
information retrieval systems, in accordance with applicable Federal
requirements.\133\ Enhanced FFP at a 75 percent FMAP is also available
for operations of such systems, in accordance with applicable Federal
requirements.\134\ However, we reiterate that receipt of these enhanced
funds is conditioned upon States meeting a series of standards and
conditions to ensure investments are efficient and effective.\135\ We
clarify, to receive enhanced FMAP funds, the State Medicaid agency is
required at Sec. 433.112(b)(12) to ensure the alignment with, and
incorporation of, standards and implementation specifications for
health information technology adopted by the Office of the National
Coordinator for Health IT in 45 CFR part 170, subpart B, among other
requirements set forth in Sec. 433.112(b)(12). States should also
consider adopting relevant standards identified in the Interoperability
Standards Advisory (ISA) \136\ to bolster improvements in the
identification and reporting on the prevalence of critical incidents
for HCBS beneficiaries and present opportunities for the State to
develop improved information systems that can support quality
improvement activities that can help promote the health and safety of
HCBS beneficiaries.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\133\ See section 1903(a)(3)(A)(i) and Sec. 433.15(b)(3), 80 FR
75817-75843; https://www.medicaid.gov/state-resourcecenter/faq-medicaid-and-chip-affordable-care-act-implementation/downloads/affordable-care-act-faq-enhancedfunding-for-medicaid.pdf; https://www.medicaid.gov/federal-policy-guidance/downloads/SMD16004.pdf.
\134\ See section 1903(a)(3)(B) and Sec. 433.15(b)(4).
\135\ See Sec. 433.112 (b, 80 FR 75841; https://www.ecfr.gov/current/title-42/chapter-IV/subchapter-C/part-433/subpart-C.
\136\ Relevant standards adopted by HHS and identified in the
ISA include the USCDI (https://www.healthit.gov/isa/united-states-core-data-interoperability-uscdi), eLTSS (https://www.healthit.gov/isa/documenting-care-plans-person-centered-services), and Functional
Assessment Standardized Items (https://www.healthit.gov/isa/representing-patient-functional-status-andor-disability).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We plan to provide States with technical assistance and
subregulatory guidance to support implementation of the HCBS Quality
Measure Set.
After consideration of the comments received, we are finalizing
Sec. 441.312(c) with modifications. We are finalizing Sec.
441.312(c)(1) with modifications to require that the Secretary shall
identify, and update no more frequently than every other year,
beginning no later than December 31, 2026, the quality measures to be
included in the Home and Community-Based Services Quality Measure Set
as defined in paragraph (b) of this section. (New language identified
in bold.)
We are finalizing Sec. 441.312(c)(2) without substantive changes,
but we are redesignating the requirement as Sec. 441.312(c)(3). We are
finalizing a new requirement at Sec. 441.312(c)(2) that the Secretary
shall make technical updates and corrections to the Home and Community-
Based Services Quality Measure Set annually as appropriate. We are also
redesignating what had been proposed as Sec. 441.312(c)(3) as (c)(4)
and finalizing the redesignated Sec. 441.312(c)(4) with a modification
to replace the word at least with no more frequently than.
d. Process for Developing and Updating the HCBS Quality Measure Set
(Sec. 441.311(d))
At proposed Sec. 441.312(d), we described the proposed process for
developing and updating the HCBS Quality Measure Set. Specifically, we
proposed that the Secretary will address the following through a
process to:
Identify all measures in the HCBS Quality Measure Set,
including newly added measures, measures that have been removed,
mandatory measures, measures that the Secretary will report on States'
behalf, measures that States can elect to have the Secretary report on
their behalf, as well as the measures that the Secretary will provide
States with additional time to report and the amount of additional
time.
Inform States how to collect and calculate data on the
measures.
Provide a standardized format and reporting schedule for
reporting the measures.
Provide procedures that States must follow in reporting
the measure data.
Identify specific populations for which States must report
the measures, including people enrolled in a specific delivery system
type such as those enrolled in a managed care plan or receiving
services on a fee-for-service basis, people who are dually eligible for
Medicare and Medicaid, older adults, people with physical disabilities,
people with intellectual or developmental disabilities, people who have
serious mental illness, and people who have other health conditions;
and provide attribution rules for determining how States must report on
measures for beneficiaries who are included in more than one
population.
Identify the measures that must be stratified by race,
ethnicity, Tribal status, sex, age, rural/urban status, disability,
language, or such other factors as may be specified by the Secretary.
Describe how to establish State performance targets for
each of the measures.
As discussed in section II.B.8. of the proposed rule (88 FR 27992
through 27993), we anticipated that, for State reporting on the
measures in the HCBS Quality Measure Set, as outlined in the reporting
requirements we proposed at Sec. 441.311, the technical information on
attribution rules described at proposed Sec. 441.312(d)(6), would call
for inclusion in quality reporting based on a beneficiary's continuous
enrollment in the Medicaid waiver. This ensures the State has enough
time to furnish services during the measurement period. In the
technical information, we anticipated we would set attribution rules to
address transitions in Medicaid eligibility, enrollment in Medicare, or
transitions between different delivery systems or managed care plans,
within a reporting year, for example, based on the length of time
beneficiaries was enrolled in each. We invited comment on other
considerations we should address in the attribution rules or other
topics we should address in the technical information.
We received public comments on these proposals. The following is a
summary of the comments we received and our responses.
Comment: Several commenters provided input on the proposed process
[[Page 40667]]
that the Secretary will follow to update and maintain the HCBS Quality
Measure Set. A few commenters recommended that, to advance meaningful
quality improvement and measurement, we should prioritize the
importance of a measure and a measure's usability and use for measure
selection and suggested an additional evaluative category of advancing
equity. A couple of commenters suggested that we should consider
implementing a process to determine if quality measures are based on
person-centered planning principles, emphasizing that many of the
measures in the HCBS Quality Measure Set are more system and process-
oriented, rather than focused on assessing and improving person-
centered experiences and preferences. One commenter recommended we
conduct a broad-based public review of possible quality measures and
domains for individuals with intellectual and developmental
disabilities to inform the quality measures process. Another commenter
suggested that we include an oral health measure for beneficiaries
receiving HCBS in the selection of measures for the HCBS Quality
Measure Set. A few commenters recommended we prioritize the development
and inclusion of culturally and linguistically appropriate measures
within the HCBS Quality Measure Set, prioritizing reporting of the most
feasible measures, aligning the CMS Core Sets, to capture the
experiences and outcomes of diverse populations and ensure that HCBS
programs address the unique needs and preferences of beneficiaries from
different cultural backgrounds.
Response: At Sec. 441.312(d), we described the general process
that the Secretary will follow to update and maintain the HCBS Quality
Measure Set.
We underscore the importance of alignment in quality measurement
across the Medicaid program, to the extent possible. We proposed at
Sec. 441.312(d)(7), that the process for developing and updating the
HCBS Quality Measure Set will address the subset of measures that must
be stratified by race, ethnicity, Tribal status, sex, age, rural/urban
status, disability, language, or such other factors as may be specified
by the Secretary and informed by consultation every other year with
States and interested parties.
After further consideration, we have identified that including
Tribal status as a measure stratification factor is misaligned, as it
is not included as a measure stratification factor for the Adult Core
Set as defined in the Mandatory Medicaid and CHIP Core Set Reporting
final rule. We are also concerned that this additional measure
stratification factor will create additional burden for States. After
further consideration, to ensure alignment in Medicaid quality
measurement and alignment of the HCBS Quality Measure Set with the
Adult Core Set, we are removing Tribal status as a measure
stratification factor at Sec. 441.312(d)(7). We note that Tribal
status could be included as a measure stratification factor under such
other factors as may be specified by the Secretary and informed by
consultation every other year with States and interested parties in
accordance with Sec. 441.312(b)(2) and (g).
At Sec. 441.312(d), we proposed and are finalizing the process for
developing and updating the HCBS Quality Measure Set. At Sec.
441.312(d)(5) the process for developing and updating the HCBS Quality
Measure Set includes the identification of the beneficiary populations
for which States are required to report the HCBS quality measures
identified by the Secretary. We are finalizing Sec. 441.312(d)(5)(i)
with a technical modification, including the identification of the
beneficiaries receiving services through specified delivery systems for
which States are required to report the HCBS quality measures
identified by the Secretary, replacing managed care plan with MCO,
PIHP, or PAHP as defined in Sec. 438.2. (New language identified in
bold.)
Comment: A few commenters requested we clarify how the HCBS Quality
Measure Set would relate to measurement for beneficiaries who are
dually eligible for Medicare and Medicaid. One commenter further
expressed strong support for disaggregation of data for dually eligible
beneficiaries, but also questioned whether partial benefit dually
eligible beneficiaries were required to be included in the population
for quality measurement, as most do not receive HCBS or any other
Medicaid benefits.
Response: We plan to provide States with guidance and technical
assistance to help address issues specific to dually eligible
beneficiaries. Further, inclusion and exclusion criteria for each
measure will be addressed through the technical specifications for the
measure. We note that, to the extent that dual-eligible beneficiaries
are receiving services authorized under section 1915(c), (i), (j), or
(k) Medicaid programs and delivered through managed care plans, and
meet the inclusion criteria for the measure, they are required to be
included in the reporting on that measure. We will provide technical
assistance regarding the application of these requirements to
beneficiaries in different categories of dual eligibility.
Comment: One commenter requested that CMS clarify the requirement
at Sec. 441.312(d)(7) referencing the subset of measures in the HCBS
Quality Measure Set that must be stratified by health equity
characteristics, noting that the proposed Sec. 441.312(f) would
require States to stratify 100 percent of measures by 7 years after the
effective date of the final rule. They emphasized a disconnect between
the two provisions, as a subset of measures is not the same as 100
percent of measures and suggest removing the word subset to avoid
confusion in implementation.
Response: Reporting of stratified data is a cornerstone of our
approach to advancing health equity. We note reporting stratified data
helps identify and eliminate health disparities across HCBS
populations. As we noted in the proposed rule (88 FR 27993), measuring
health disparities, reporting these results, and driving improvements
in quality are cornerstones of the CMS approach to advancing health
equity through data reporting and stratification aligns with E.O.
13985.\137\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\137\ Exec. Order No. 13985 (2021), Accessed at https://www.whitehouse.gov/briefing-room/presidential-actions/2021/01/20/executive-order-advancing-racial-equity-and-support-for-underserved-communities-through-the-federal-government/.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
At Sec. 441.312(f), in specifying which measures, and by which
factors, States must report stratified measures consistent with Sec.
441.312(d)(7), the Secretary will take into account whether
stratification can be accomplished based on valid statistical methods
and without risking a violation of beneficiary privacy and, for
measures obtained from surveys, whether the original survey instrument
collects the variables necessary to stratify the measures, and such
other factors as the Secretary determines appropriate. We reiterate
that we considered giving States the flexibility to choose which
measures they would stratify and by what factors. However, as discussed
in the Mandatory Medicaid and CHIP Core Set Reporting rule (87 FR
51313), consistent measurement of differences in health and quality of
life outcomes between different groups of beneficiaries is essential to
identifying areas for intervention and evaluation of those
interventions.\138\ This consistency could not be achieved if each
State made its own decisions about which data it
[[Page 40668]]
would stratify and by what factors.139 140 We also recognize
that States may be constrained in their ability to stratify measures in
the HCBS Quality Measure Set and that data stratification would require
additional State resources. We also may face constraints in stratifying
measures for which we are able to report on behalf of States, as our
ability to stratify will be dependent on whether the original dataset
or survey instrument: (1) collects the demographic information or other
variables needed and (2) has a large enough sample size. preserved and
model accuracy is improved. In consideration of these factors we are
finalizing at Sec. 441.312(d)(7) that the subset of measures among the
measures in the HCBS Quality Measure Set that must be stratified by
health equity characteristics as proposed.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\138\ Schlotthauer AE, Badler A, Cook SC, Perez DJ, Chin MH.
Evaluating Interventions to Reduce Health Care Disparities: An RWJF
Program. Health Aff (Millwood). 2008;27(2):568-573.
\139\ Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) Office of
Minority Health (OMH). Stratified Reporting. 2022; https://www.cms.gov/About-CMS/Agency-Information/OMH/research-and-data/statistics-and-data/stratified-reporting.
\140\ National Quality Forum. A Roadmap for Promoting Health
Equity and Eliminating Disparities. Sep 2017. Accessed at https://www.qualityforum.org/Publications/2017/09/A_Roadmap_for_Promoting_Health_Equity_and_Eliminating_Disparities__The_Four_I_s_for_Health_Equity.aspx.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In response to the commenter's observation regarding when 100
percent of the measures must be stratified, we note that, for reasons
discussed in greater detail in section II.B.7. and II.B.8.e. of this
final rule, we are modifying the requirement at Sec. 441.311(f) to
change the timing by which measures must be stratified. As finalized,
Sec. 441.311(f) requires that stratification of 25 percent of the
measures in the Home and Community-Based Services Quality Measure Set
for which the Secretary has specified that reporting should be
stratified by 4 years after the effective date of these regulations, 50
percent of such measures by 6 years after the effective date of these
regulations, and 100 percent of measures by 8 years after the effective
date of these regulations.
After consideration of the comments received, we are finalizing
Sec. 441.312(d)(1) through (6) and (8) as proposed. We are finalizing
Sec. 441.312(d)(7) with modification to remove Tribal status as a
stratification factor. As finalized, Sec. 441.312(d)(7) provides that
the process for developing and updating the HCBS Quality Measure Set
will address the subset of measures among the measures in the HCBS
Quality Measure Set that must be stratified by race, ethnicity, sex,
age, rural/urban status, disability, language, or such other factors as
may be specified by the Secretary and informed by consultation every
other year with States and interested parties.
e. Phasing In of Certain Reporting (Sec. 441.311(e) and (f))
At Sec. 441.312(e), we proposed, in the process for developing and
updating the HCBS Quality Measure Set described at proposed Sec.
441.312(d), that the Secretary consider the complexity of State
reporting and allow for the phase-in over a specified period of time of
mandatory State reporting for some measures and of reporting for
certain populations, such as older adults or people with intellectual
and developmental disabilities. At Sec. 441.312(f), we proposed that,
in specifying the measures and the factors by which States must report
stratified measures, the Secretary will consider whether such
stratified sampling can be accomplished based on valid statistical
methods, without risking a violation of beneficiary privacy, and, for
measures obtained from surveys, whether the original survey instrument
collects the variables or factors necessary to stratify the measures.
We considered giving States the flexibility to choose which
measures they would stratify and by what factors. However, as we noted
was discussed in the Mandatory Medicaid and CHIP Core Set Reporting
final rule (88 FR 60278), consistent measurement of differences in
health and quality of life outcomes between different groups of
beneficiaries is essential to identifying areas for intervention and
evaluation of those interventions.\141\ This consistency could not be
achieved if each State made its own decisions about which data it would
stratify and by what factors.142 143
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\141\ Schlotthauer AE, Badler A, Cook SC, Perez DJ, Chin MH.
Evaluating Interventions to Reduce Health Care Disparities: An RWJF
Program. Health Aff (Millwood). 2008;27(2):568-573.
\142\ Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) Office of
Minority Health (OMH). Stratified Reporting. 2022; https://www.cms.gov/About-CMS/Agency-Information/OMH/research-and-data/statistics-and-data/stratified-reporting.
\143\ National Quality Forum. A Roadmap for Promoting Health
Equity and Eliminating Disparities. Sep 2017. Accessed at https://www.qualityforum.org/Publications/2017/09/A_Roadmap_for_Promoting_Health_Equity_and_Eliminating_Disparities__The_Four_I_s_for_Health_Equity.aspx.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In the proposed rule, we recognized that States may be constrained
in their ability to stratify measures in the HCBS Quality Measure Set
and that data stratification would require additional State resources.
We also noted that there are several challenges to stratification of
measure reporting. First, the validity of stratification is threatened
when the demographic data are incomplete. Complete demographic
information is often unavailable to us and to States due to several
factors, including the fact that Medicaid applicants and beneficiaries
are not required to provide race and ethnicity data. Second, when
States with smaller populations and less diversity stratify data, it
may be possible to identify individual data, raising privacy concerns.
Therefore, if the sample sizes are too small, the data would be
suppressed, in accordance with the CMS Cell Size Suppression Policy and
the data suppression policies for associated measure stewards and
therefore not publicly reported to avoid a potential violation of
privacy.\144\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\144\ CMS Cell Size Suppression Policy, Issued 2020: https://www.hhs.gov/guidance/document/cms-cell-suppression-policy or the
cell suppression standards of the associated measure stewards.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We also acknowledged that we may face constraints in stratifying
measures for which we are able to report on behalf of States, as our
ability to stratify would be dependent on whether the original dataset
or survey instrument: (1) collects the demographic information or other
variables needed and (2) has a large enough sample size. The
Transformed Medicaid Statistical Information System (T-MSIS), for
example, currently has the capability to stratify some HCBS Quality
Measure Set measures by sex and urban/rural status, but not by race,
ethnicity, or disability status. This is because applicants provide
information on sex and urban/rural address, which is reported to T-MSIS
by States, whereas applicants are not required to provide information
on their race and ethnicity or disability status, and often do not do
so. However, we have developed the capacity to impute race and
ethnicity using a version of the Bayesian Improved Surname Geocoding
(BISG) method \145\ that includes Medicaid-specific enhancements to
optimize accuracy, and are able to stratify by race and ethnicity,
urban/rural status, and sex.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\145\ Elliott, Marc N., et al. ``Using the Census Bureau's
surname list to improve estimates of race/ethnicity and associated
disparities.'' Health Services and Outcomes Research Methodology 9.2
(2009): 69-83.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
With these challenges in mind, we proposed that stratification by
States in reporting of HCBS Quality Measure Set data would be
implemented through a phased-in approach in which the Secretary would
specify which measures and by which factors States must stratify
reported measures. At Sec. 441.312(f), we proposed that States would
be required to provide stratified data for 25 percent of the measures
in the HCBS Quality Measure Set for
[[Page 40669]]
which the Secretary has specified that reporting should be stratified
by 3 years after the effective date of these regulations, 50 percent of
such measures by 5 years after the effective date of these regulations,
and 100 percent of measures by 7 years after the effective date of
these regulations. We noted that the percentages listed here aligned
with the proposed phase-in of equity reporting in the Mandatory
Medicaid and CHIP Core Set Reporting final rule (88 FR 60278). However,
the timeframe associated with each percentage of measures to phase-in
equity reporting that we proposed in this rule is different with a
slower phase-in, in large part because when compared to the Child,
Adult, and Health Home Core Sets, the HCBS Measure Set in its current
form includes a substantial number of measures that are derived from
beneficiary experience of care surveys, which are costlier to implement
than other types of measures. In addition, the slower phase-in was also
intended to take into consideration the overall burden of the reporting
requirements and that States have less experience with the HCBS Quality
Measure Set. Specifically, the Mandatory Medicaid and CHIP Core Set
Reporting final rule (88 FR 60278) requires States to provide
stratified data for 25 percent of measures within 2 years after the
effective date of the final rule, 50 percent of measures within 3 years
after the effective date of the final rule, and 100 percent of measures
within 5 years after the effective date of the final rule.
In our proposed rule, we determined that our proposed phased-in
approach to data stratification would be reasonable and minimally
burdensome, and thus consistent with E.O. 13985 on Advancing Racial
Equity and Support for Underserved Communities Through the Federal
Government (January 20, 2021),\146\ because we were balancing the
importance of being able to identify differences in outcomes between
populations under these measures with the potential operational
challenges that States may face in implementing these proposed
requirements.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\146\ Exec. Order No. 13985 (2021), Accessed at https://www.whitehouse.gov/briefing-room/presidential-actions/2021/01/20/executive-order-advancing-racial-equity-and-support-for-underserved-communities-through-the-federal-government/.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We recognized that States may need to make enhancements to their
data and information systems or incur other costs in implementing the
HCBS Quality Measure Set. We reminded States that enhanced FFP is
available at a 90 percent match rate for the design, development, or
installation of improvements of mechanized claims processing and
information retrieval systems, in accordance with applicable Federal
requirements.\147\ Enhanced FFP at a 75 percent match rate is also
available for operations of such systems, in accordance with applicable
Federal requirements.\148\ We also encouraged States to advance the
interoperable exchange of HCBS data and support quality improvement
activities by adopting standards in 45 CFR part 170 and other relevant
standards identified in the ISA.\149\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\147\ See section 1903(a)(3)(A)(i) of the Act and Sec.
433.15(b)(3), 80 FR 75817 through 75843; https://www.medicaid.gov/state-resourcecenter/faq-medicaid-and-chip-affordable-care-act-implementation/downloads/affordable-care-act-faq-enhancedfunding-for-medicaid.pdf; https://www.medicaid.gov/federal-policy-guidance/downloads/SMD16004.pdf.
\148\ See section 1903(a)(3)(B) and Sec. 433.15(b)(4).
\149\ Relevant standards adopted by HHS and identified in the
ISA include the USCDI (https://www.healthit.gov/isa/united-states-core-data-interoperability-uscdi), eLTSS (https://www.healthit.gov/isa/documenting-care-plans-person-centered-services), and Functional
Assessment Standardized Items (https://www.healthit.gov/isa/representing-patient-functional-status-andor-disability).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We invited comments on the proposed schedule for phasing in
reporting of HCBS Quality Measure Set data. We also solicited comment
on whether we should phase-in reporting on all of the measures in the
HCBS Quality Measure Set.
We received public comments on these proposals. The following is a
summary of the comments we received and our responses.
Comment: A few commenters supported our proposal at Sec.
441.312(f) in its entirety.
Response: We thank the commenters for their support of our proposed
requirements.
Comment: Several commenters submitted recommendations and requests
related to the details of stratified reporting, such as definitions of
specific categories of populations, data suppression policies, how to
handle missing data, and different measures of delivery systems.
Response: We believe that stratified data would enable us and
States to identify the health and quality of life outcomes of
underserved populations and potential differences in outcomes based on
race, ethnicity, sex, age, rural/urban status, disability, language,
and other such factors on measures contained in the HCBS Quality
Measure Set. We refer readers to section II.B.8. of the proposed rule
(88 FR 27993) for a detailed discussion of stratified data and
sampling.
We expect to align with Department of Health and Human Services
(HHS) data standards for stratification, based on the disaggregation of
the 1997 Office of Management and Budget (OMB) Statistical Policy
Directive No 15.\150\ We expect to update HCBS Quality Measure Set
reporting stratification categories if there are any changes to OMB or
HHS Data Standards. We will take this feedback into account as we plan
technical assistance and develop guidance for States.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\150\ The categories for HHS data standards for race and
ethnicity are based on the disaggregation of the OMB standard:
https://minorityhealth.hhs.gov/omh/browse.aspx?lvl=3&lvlid=53.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Comment: Several commenters supported all the proposed requirements
for stratification but recommended either faster or slower
implementation. A couple of commenters suggested that States be
required to report stratified data by 3 years after the effective date
of this final rule rather than phase in this requirement. Multiple
commenters provided alternate phase-in schedules for stratification of
the HCBS Quality Measure Set, with the most frequent suggestions to add
two to five years to the phase-in timeline for data stratification
requirements for the measures in the HCBS Quality Measure Set. Some
commenters expressed that they supported a staggered implementation
timeline of the data stratification requirements and noted that
additional time and flexibility for States could make compliance more
attainable because of State legislative, budgeting, procurement, and
contracting requirements. Another commenter, who represents State
agencies, emphasized that many States have long-standing challenges
with collecting complete demographic data on Medicaid beneficiaries,
and they expressed concerns with small samples, staffing capacity,
survey fatigue, and problems identifying baseline demographics. One
commenter recommended that the initial implementation of stratification
occur with a rolling start date by State, based on waiver renewal date.
Response: We continue to believe that the time frame for States to
implement stratification of data on quality measures in the HCBS
Quality Measure Set is an appropriate frequency that ensures
accountability without being overly burdensome. We determined that a
shorter phase timeframe would not likely be operationally feasible
because of the potential systems and contracting changes (to existing
contracts or the establishment of new contracts) that
[[Page 40670]]
States may be required to make, in order to collect these data for
reporting. For example, additional reporting requirements may need to
be added to State contracts, changes may be needed to data sharing
agreements with managed care plans, and modifications of databases or
systems might be required to record new variables.
As discussed in section II.B.7. of this final rule, we are
finalizing at Sec. 441.311(f)(2) that States must comply with the HCBS
Quality Measure Set reporting requirement at Sec. 441.311(c) beginning
4 years after the effective date of this final rule, rather than 3
years. We are making this modification in order to allow for sufficient
time for interested parties to provide input into the measures, as
required by Sec. 441.312(g), which we are finalizing as described in
this section II.B.8. of this rule. To align with this modification, we
are finalizing the phase-in requirement at Sec. 441.312(f). As
finalized, Sec. 441.312(f) requires that stratification of 25 percent
of the measures in the Home and Community-Based Services Quality
Measure Set for which the Secretary has specified that reporting should
be stratified by 4 years after the effective date of these regulations,
50 percent of such measures by 6 years after the effective date of
these regulations, and 100 percent of measures by 8 years after the
effective date of these regulations.
We anticipate that States will not need more than 4 years after the
effective date of the final rule, to implement systems and contracting
changes, or any additional support needed to report on the quality
measures in HCBS Quality Measure Set. However, as described at
finalized Sec. 441.312(e), we will consider the complexity of State
reporting and allow for the phase in over a specified period of time of
mandatory State reporting for some measures and of reporting for
certain populations, such as older adults or people with intellectual
and disabilities. Further, we plan to work collaboratively with States
to provide technical assistance and reporting guidance through the
Paperwork Reduction Act process necessary to support reporting.
Comment: A couple of commenters recommended that we offer States
financial assistance to develop and deploy health equity efforts,
including funding support in addressing the capture of self-reported
data.
Response: As discussed above, in Medicaid, enhanced FFP is
available at a 90 percent FMAP for the design, development, or
installation of improvements of mechanized claims processing and
information retrieval systems, in accordance with applicable Federal
requirements. Enhanced FFP at a 75 percent FMAP is also available for
operations of such systems, in accordance with applicable Federal
requirements. We reiterate that receipt of these enhanced funds is
conditioned upon States meeting a series of standards and conditions to
ensure investments are efficient and effective.\151\ This may include
improving data reporting, which could promote greater health equity.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\151\ See Sec. 433.112 (b, 80 FR 75841; https://www.ecfr.gov/current/title-42/chapter-IV/subchapter-C/part-433/subpart-C.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We clarify, to receive enhanced FMAP funds, the State Medicaid
agency is required at Sec. 433.112(b)(12) to ensure the alignment
with, and incorporation of, standards and implementation specifications
for health information technology adopted by the Office of the National
Coordinator for Health IT in 45 CFR part 170, subpart B, among other
requirements set forth in Sec. 433.112(b)(12). States should also
consider adopting relevant standards identified in the ISA \152\ to
bolster improvements in the identification and reporting on the
prevalence of critical incidents for HCBS beneficiaries and present
opportunities for the State to develop improved information systems
that can support quality improvement activities. We further clarify
that States are responsible for ensuring compliance with the
requirements of HIPAA and its implementing regulations, as well as any
other applicable Federal or State privacy laws governing
confidentiality of a beneficiary's records.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\152\ Relevant standards adopted by HHS and identified in the
ISA include the USCDI (https://www.healthit.gov/isa/united-states-core-data-interoperability-uscdi), eLTSS (https://www.healthit.gov/isa/documenting-care-plans-person-centered-services), and Functional
Assessment Standardized Items (https://www.healthit.gov/isa/representing-patient-functional-status-andor-disability).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
After consideration of the comments we received, we are finalizing
Sec. 441.312(e) as proposed.
We are finalizing Sec. 441.312(f) with a modification to require
that stratification of 25 percent of the measures in the Home and
Community-Based Services Quality Measure Set for which the Secretary
has specified that reporting should be stratified by 4 years after the
effective date of these regulations, 50 percent of such measures by 6
years after the effective date of these regulations, and 100 percent of
measures by 8 years after the effective date of these regulations.
e. Consultation With Interested Parties (Sec. 441.312(g))
At Sec. 441.312(g), we proposed the list of interested parties
with whom the Secretary must consult to specify and update the quality
measures established in the HCBS Quality Measure Set. The proposed list
of interested parties included: State Medicaid Agencies and agencies
that administer Medicaid-covered HCBS; health care and HCBS
professionals who specialize in the care and treatment of older adults,
children and adults with disabilities, and individuals with complex
medical needs; health care and HCBS professionals, providers, and
direct care workers who provide services to older adults, children and
adults with disabilities and complex medical and behavioral health care
needs who live in urban and rural areas or who are members of groups at
increased risk for poor outcomes; HCBS providers; direct care workers
and organizations representing direct care workers; consumers and
national organizations representing consumers; organizations and
individuals with expertise in HCBS quality measurement; voluntary
consensus standards setting organizations and other organizations
involved in the advancement of evidence-based measures of health care;
measure development experts; and other interested parties the Secretary
may determine appropriate.
We received public comments on these proposals. The following is a
summary of the comments we received and our responses.
Comment: Several commenters commended our proposal at Sec.
441.312(g) to consult and receive input from interested parties. These
commenters expressed they are encouraged by the continued collaboration
with CMS in identifying and updating the HCBS Quality Measure Set. A
few commenters shared suggestions for others to include as interested
parties, mentioning managed care plans, community representatives from
underserved communities, family members, and caregivers.
Response: We appreciate the submission of these comments and will
take them into consideration as the Secretary carries out the
responsibilities at Sec. 441.312(g).
Comment: One commenter recommended we establish an ongoing process
of consultation with States and interested parties to make updates to
the quality measures in the HCBS Quality Measure Set in a longer cycle
between updates based on consensus, such as 5 years. This commenter
emphasized this
[[Page 40671]]
approach can assure interested parties that the measure set will
continue to be developed over time based on new information and
priorities and help avoid making changes too rapidly to be sustained by
States.
Response: We appreciate the submission of these comments. As noted
previously, we are finalizing Sec. 441.312(c)(1) and (2) with
modifications to indicate that we will identify, and update no more
frequently than every other year, beginning no later than December 31,
2026, the quality measures to be included in the HCBS Quality Measure
Set as defined in paragraph (b) of this section.
We will make technical updates and corrections to the HCBS Quality
Measure Set annually as appropriate. Additionally, as discussed in
greater detail in section II.B.7. of this final rule, we are giving
States more time to engage with interested parties by finalizing an
applicability date of 4 years, rather than 3 years, for the requirement
that States must comply with the HCBS Quality Measure Set reporting at
Sec. 441.311(c). We are making this revision in order to allow for
sufficient time for interested parties to provide input into the
measures, as required by Sec. 441.312(g).
After consideration of the comments received, we are finalizing
Sec. 441.312(g) as proposed.
f. Application to Other Authorities (Sec. Sec. 441.474(c), 441.585(d),
and 441.745(b)(1)(v))
Because these quality measurement requirements are relevant to
other HCBS authorities, we proposed to include these requirements
within the applicable regulatory sections for other HCBS authorities.
Specifically, we proposed to apply the proposed requirements at Sec.
441.312 to section 1915(j), (k), and (i) State plan services at
Sec. Sec. 441.474(c), 441.585(d), and 441.745(b)(1)(v), respectively.
Consistent with our proposal for section 1915(c) waivers, we proposed
these requirements based on our authority under section 1902(a)(6) of
the Act, which requires State Medicaid agencies to make such reports,
in such form and containing such information, as the Secretary may from
time to time require, and to comply with such provisions as the
Secretary may from time to time find necessary to assure the
correctness and verification of such reports. We believed the same
arguments for proposing these requirements for section 1915(c) waivers
are equally applicable for these other HCBS authorities. We requested
comment on the application of these provisions across sections 1915(i),
(j), and (k) authorities.
We received public comments on these proposals. The following is a
summary of the comments we received and our responses.
Comment: Several commenters supported the proposal to apply the
HCBS Quality Measure Set requirements at Sec. 441.312 to sections
1915(i), (j) and (k) authorities, stating there should be equally
applicable requirements for States across authorities to ensure
consistency, coordination, and alignment across quality improvement
activities for these HCBS beneficiaries.
Alternatively, a few commenters expressed that applying the HCBS
Quality Measure Set requirements across sections 1915(i), (j) and (k)
authorities could pose challenges for States since the application of
quality measure data collection and reporting for these HCBS
authorities is mixed among States. One commenter requested an exemption
for the section 1915(i) authority, noting that implementing the HCBS
Quality Measure Set requirements for this authority is onerous, since
the service array for section 1915(i) programs is more limited than in
section 1915(c) programs.
Response: We thank commenters for their support. We note that
States can cover the same services under section 1915(i) as they can
cover under section 1915(c) of the Act. As such, exempting States from
implementing the HCBS Quality Measure Set requirements under section
1915(i) does not align with our intent, which is to ensure consistency
and alignment in reporting requirements across HCBS authorities. We are
finalizing our proposal to apply the HCBS Quality Measure Set
requirements to sections 1915(c), (i), (j) and (k) authorities and plan
to provide technical assistance to States as needed to address the
concerns raised by commenters.
After consideration of the comments received, we are finalizing the
application of Sec. 441.312 to section 1915(j) services by finalizing
a reference to Sec. 441.312 at Sec. 441.474(c). (Note that we also
discuss finalization of Sec. Sec. 441.474(c) in section II.B.7. of
this final rule.) We are finalizing the application of Sec. 441.312 to
sections 1915(k) and 1915(i) services at Sec. Sec. 441.585(d) and
441.745(b)(1)(v) with modifications to clarify that the references to
section 1915(c) of the Act are instead references to section 1915(k)
and 1915(i) of the Act, respectively.
g. Summary of Finalized Requirements
After consideration of the public comments, we are finalizing the
requirements at Sec. 441.312 as follows:
We are finalizing Sec. 441.312(a) with a minor technical
change.
We are finalizing the definition of attribution rules and
Home and Community-Based Services Quality Measure Set at Sec.
441.312(b)(1) with a minor formatting change.
We are finalizing the responsibilities of the Secretary at
Sec. 441.312(c)(1) with technical modifications to revise the
frequency for updating the measure set to no more frequently than every
other year and replace December 31, 2025 with December 31, 2026.
We are finalizing a new requirement at Sec. 441.312(c)(2)
that the Secretary shall make technical updates and corrections to the
Home and Community-Based Services Quality Measure Set annually as
appropriate.
We are redesignating Sec. 441.312(c)(2) as paragraphs
(c)(3) and finalizing with minor technical modification.
We are redesignating Sec. 441.312(c)(3) as Sec.
441.312(c)(4) and finalizing Sec. 441.312(c)(4) with a minor technical
modification to replace ``at least'' with ``no more frequently than.''
We are finalizing Sec. 441.312(d)(i) as proposed with a
modification for clarity to replace managed care plan with MCO, PIHP or
PAHP as defined in Sec. 438.2.
We are finalizing Sec. 441.312(e) as proposed.
We are finalizing the requirement at Sec. 441.312(f) with
a technical modification in the dates by when a certain percent of
measures are to be stratified, delaying each deadline by one year.
We are finalizing Sec. 441.312(g) as proposed.
We are finalizing the reference to Sec. 441.312 in Sec.
441.474(c) as proposed.
We are finalizing the requirements at Sec. Sec.
441.585(d) and 441.745(b)(1)(v) with modification to clarify that the
references to section 1915(c) of the Act are instead references to
section 1915(k) and 1915(i) of the Act, respectively.
9. Website Transparency (Sec. Sec. 441.313, 441.486, 441.595, and
441.750)
Section 1102(a) of the Act provides the Secretary of HHS with
authority to make and publish rules and regulations that are necessary
for the efficient administration of the Medicaid program. Under our
authority at section 1102(a) of the Act, we proposed a new section, at
Sec. 441.313, titled Website Transparency, to promote public
transparency related to the administration of Medicaid-covered HCBS. As
noted in the proposed rule, we believe quality is a critical component
of efficiency, as payments
[[Page 40672]]
for services that are low quality do not produce their desired effects
and, as such, are more wasteful than payments for services that are
high quality. The proposed approach was based on feedback we obtained
during various public engagement activities conducted with States and
other interested parties over the past several years that it is
difficult to find information on HCBS access, quality, and outcomes in
many States. As a result, it is not possible for beneficiaries,
consumer advocates, oversight entities, or other interested parties to
hold States accountable for ensuring that services are accessible and
high quality for people who need Medicaid HCBS. We believe that the
website transparency requirements support the efficient administration
of Medicaid-covered HCBS authorized under section 1915(c) of the Act by
promoting public transparency and the accountability of the quality and
performance of Medicaid HCBS systems, as the availability of such
information improves the ability of interested parties to hold States
accountable for the quality and performance of their HCBS systems.
a. Website Availability and Accessibility (Sec. 441.313(a))
At Sec. 441.313(a), we proposed to require States to operate a
website that meets the availability and accessibility requirements at
Sec. 435.905(b) of this chapter and provides the results of the
reporting requirements under Sec. 441.311 (specifically, incident
management, critical incident, person-centered planning, and service
provision compliance data; data on the HCBS Quality Measure Set; access
data; and payment adequacy data). We solicited comment on whether the
requirements at Sec. 435.905(b) are sufficient to ensure the
availability and accessibility of the information for people receiving
HCBS and other HCBS interested parties and for specific requirements to
ensure the availability and accessibility of the information.
We received public comment on these proposals. The following is a
summary of the comments we received and our responses.
Comment: Several commenters supported the website transparency
provisions at Sec. 441.313(a), emphasizing that advancing the
collection of information and data by States is important to enable the
ability of the public, including beneficiaries, to be able to access
and compare performance results across States for the reporting
requirements proposed at Sec. 441.311.
Response: We appreciate the support for our proposal and thank
commenters for their feedback. We note that consistent with statements
we made in the introduction of sections II. and II.B. of this final
rule regarding severability, while the intent of Sec. 441.313 is for
States to post all information collected under Sec. Sec. 441.302(k)(6)
and 441.311 as required, we believe that the website posting
requirements being finalized herein at Sec. 441.313 would provide
critical data to the public even in a circumstance where individual
provisions at Sec. Sec. 441.302(k)(6) and 441.311 were not finalized
or implemented. We do acknowledge that Sec. 441.313 is interrelated
with Sec. Sec. 441.302(k)(6) and 441.311 to the extent that if one of
the reporting requirements was not finalized or implemented, posting of
the data collected under that particular requirement would not be
available to post on the website as required at Sec. 441.313. However,
if one or more of the reporting requirements at Sec. Sec.
441.302(k)(6) and 441.311 is finalized and implemented, then States
must post this data on the website as required in Sec. 441.313, as
finalized. We note that in this final rule, we are finalizing the
reporting requirement at Sec. 441.302(k)(6) (as discussed in section
II.B.5. of this final rule) and the reporting requirements proposed in
Sec. 441.311 (with modifications, as discussed in section II.B.7. of
this final rule.)
Comment: One commenter requested we consider providing additional
FMAP for the website creation and support needed to conduct the public
posting of information and data required under Sec. 441.311 on the
State web page, including to address increased staff time and effort to
answer questions regarding the public information required to be
reported.
Response: We note we do not have authority to permit States to
claim Medicaid expenditures at enhanced FMAP rates that are not
specified in statute. As noted in the proposed rule, in Medicaid,
enhanced FFP is available at a 90 percent FMAP for the design,
development, or installation of improvements of mechanized claims
processing and information retrieval systems, in accordance with
applicable Federal requirements.\153\ Enhanced FFP at a 75 percent FMAP
is also available for operations of such systems, in accordance with
applicable Federal requirements.\154\ However, receipt of these
enhanced funds is conditioned upon States meeting a series of standards
and conditions to ensure investments are efficient and effective.\155\
We plan to provide States with technical assistance related to the
availability of enhanced FMAP to support the implementation of the
requirements in this final rule.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\153\ See section 1903(a)(3)(A)(i) and Sec. 433.15(b)(3), 80 FR
75817-75843; https://www.medicaid.gov/state-resourcecenter/faq-medicaid-and-chip-affordable-care-act-implementation/downloads/affordable-care-act-faq-enhancedfunding-for-medicaid.pdf; https://www.medicaid.gov/federal-policy-guidance/downloads/SMD16004.pdf.
\154\ See section 1903(a)(3)(B) and Sec. 433.15(b)(4).
\155\ See Sec. 433.112 (b, 80 FR 75841; https://www.ecfr.gov/current/title-42/chapter-IV/subchapter-C/part-433/subpart-C.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
After consideration of the comments received, we are finalizing the
introductory paragraph at Sec. 441.313(a) as proposed with one
modification to include the additional reporting requirements to
specify that the State must operate a website consistent with Sec.
435.905(b) of this chapter that provides the results of the reporting
requirements specified at Sec. Sec. 441.302(k)(6) and 441.311.
b. Website Data and Information (Sec. 441.313(a)(1))
We proposed at Sec. 441.313(a)(1) to require that the data and
information States are required to report under Sec. 441.311 be
provided on one web page, either directly or by linking to the web
pages of the MCO, PAHP, PIHP, or primary care case management entity
that is authorized to provide services. We solicited comment on whether
States should be permitted to link to web pages of these managed care
plans and whether we should limit the number of separate web pages that
a State could link to, in place of directly reporting the information
on its own web page.
We received public comments on this proposal. The following is a
summary of the comments we received and our responses.
Comment: A few commenters supported and noted that the States
should have one central web page operated and housed solely by the
State to ensure data and information is reported consistently across
their HCBS programs. One of the commenters suggested a State could, in
their centralized State web page, give users the opportunity to filter
by provider, managed care plan, or locality and include contact
information for managed care plans. A few commenters generally
supported permitting States to link to web pages of managed care plans
to meet the proposed requirement.
Another commenter identified that beneficiaries may rely on their
managed care plan's website for information instead of the State
website and
[[Page 40673]]
recommended limiting web page links to managed care plans' websites,
raising concern that requiring States to post the data and information
from the managed care plans could be duplicative and lead to user
confusion if website updates between the State and managed care plans
were not synched. A few commenters emphasized that having multiple
managed care plan web page links to access the data and information
that States are required to report under Sec. 441.311 could place a
burden on beneficiaries, consumers, and the public, to find and
navigate the unique displays of managed care plan websites.
Response: We thank commenters for their suggestions. We have
attempted to provide States with as much flexibility as possible in
reporting of data and information required at Sec. 441.311. State and
managed care plan reporting of required data and information must be
available and accessible for HCBS beneficiaries and other interested
parties, without placing undue burden on them. Upon further
consideration, we agree that it adds a undue level of complexity and
the potential for duplicate sources of the data and information by
requiring the State to link to individual web pages of managed care
plans.
After consideration of these public comments, we are finalizing the
requirements at Sec. 441.313(a)(1) with a modification to remove the
word, web page, and replace with the word, website, and made minor
formatting changes. We plan to provide technical assistance to States
as needed to address the concerns raised by commenters.
Comment: One commenter agreed that the State should link to managed
care plan web pages to report on the results of the reporting
requirements at Sec. 441.311, rather than have the managed care plans
forward these results to the State to report on their State website.
This commenter also recommended requiring the same language and format
requirements in Sec. 438.10(d) apply to Sec. 441.33 and noted that
many States serve Medicaid HCBS participants who receive services under
managed LTSS and FFS, and that misalignment could occur between the
regulations for managed care and FFS.
Response: Managed care plan websites required at Sec. 438.10(c)(3)
are already subject to the requirements at Sec. 438.10(d), and we have
not identified a compelling reason to make a similar reference in Sec.
441.311. We decline to add mention of Sec. 438.10(d) and are
finalizing the requirements at Sec. 441.311 as proposed.
After consideration of public comments, we are finalizing the
requirements at Sec. 441.313(a)(1) with a modification to require the
State to include all content on one website, either directly or by
linking to websites of individual MCO's, PIHP's, or PAHP's, as defined
in Sec. 438.2. We also are finalizing the requirements at Sec.
441.313(a)(1) with a modification to remove the word, web page, and
replace with the word, website, and make minor formatting changes.
c. Accessibility of Information (Sec. 441.313(a)(2))
At Sec. 441.313(a)(2), we proposed to require that the website
include clear and easy to understand labels on documents and links. We
requested comments on whether these requirements are sufficient to
ensure the accessibility of the information for people receiving HCBS
and other HCBS interested parties and for specific requirements to
ensure the accessibility of the information.
We received public comment on this proposal. The following is a
summary of the comments we received and our responses.
Comment: Two commenters recommended we recognize the communication
needs of deaf, hard of hearing, deaf-blind, and blind individuals,
including those who have low vision, emphasizing that these
beneficiaries should have access to culturally and linguistically
competent services, as well as services and auxiliary aids pursuant to
Title II of the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) of 1990 and
section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 (section 504). They also
recommended that we reference the Twenty-First Century Communications
and Video Accessibility Act of 2010 (Pub. L. 111-260), which includes
the use of clear language, icons, captioned videos, American Sign
Language, and suitable color contrast. The commenters emphasized that
any website materials and reports should be written with
accommodations, including large print and braille, to ensure
beneficiaries have equal, effective, and meaningful website
communication. One commenter recommend that we also consider that due
to the ``digital divide'' many HCBS beneficiaries do not have easy
access to the internet and recommended we require States and managed
care plans to share the information posted on their websites in an
alternative format at the beneficiary's request.
Response: We confirm that our proposal requires States to operate a
website that meets the availability and accessibility requirements at
Sec. 435.905(b) of this chapter, which requires the provision of
auxiliary aids and services at no cost to individuals with disabilities
in accordance with the ADA and section 504. We have attempted to
provide the State with as much flexibility as possible in the design of
their website. We agree that State and managed care plan websites must
be available and accessible for people receiving HCBS and other HCBS
interested parties. Further, we note that States' websites are subject
to State or local laws regarding accessibility, and States must comply
with other applicable laws independent of the requirements at Sec.
441.313(a).
We encourage States to identify inequities for HCBS beneficiaries
who have insufficient internet access and develop mechanisms to
communicate website information that is available and accessible.
After consideration of comments received, we are finalizing Sec.
441.313(a)(2) as proposed.
d. Website Operation Verification (Sec. 441.313(a)(3))
At Sec. 441.313(a)(3), we proposed to require that States verify
the accurate function of the website and the timeliness of the
information and links at least quarterly. We requested comment on
whether this timeframe is sufficient or if we should require a shorter
timeframe (monthly) or a longer timeframe (semi-annually or annually).
We received public comments on these proposals. The following is a
summary of the comments we received and our responses.
Comment: A few commenters responded to our comment solicitation,
expressing alternative timeframes related to the requirements at Sec.
441.313(a)(3). Two commenters suggested websites should be updated on a
more frequent monthly basis to ensure accuracy and functionality. A few
other commenters suggested that websites should be updated semi-
annually. Alternatively, another commenter requested that the
verification of web content be completed annually to minimize
administrative burden on States with significant web content to review
and verify.
Response: We agree that accurate function of the website and the
timeliness of the information is important. We note in section II.B.9.
of the proposed rule (88 FR 27995 through 27996), and reiterate here,
that we believe promoting public transparency and accountability of the
quality and performance of Medicaid HCBS systems, and the availability
of such information will improve the ability of
[[Page 40674]]
beneficiaries, consumer advocates, oversight entities, or other
interested parties to hold States accountable for ensuring that
services are accessible and high quality for people who need Medicaid.
We believe that verification quarterly, is reasonable taking into
account the level of complexity required for such State reporting. We
decline to make any changes to Sec. 441.313(a)(3) in this final rule.
After consideration of the comments received, we are finalizing
Sec. 441.313(a)(3) as proposed.
e. Oral and Written Translation Requirements (Sec. 441.313(a)(4))
At Sec. 441.313(a)(4), we proposed to require that States include
prominent language on the website explaining that assistance in
accessing the required information on the website is available at no
cost and include information on the availability of oral interpretation
in all languages and written translation available in each non-English
language, how to request auxiliary aids and services, and a toll free
and TTY/TDY telephone number.
We received public comment on this proposal. The following is a
summary of the comments we received and our responses.
Comment: Several commenters supported the proposed requirements at
Sec. 441.313(a)(4), One commenter further stated that, to ensure best
quality, instructions to States on expectations for conducting
translation in non-English languages to support the availability of
oral interpretation in all languages and to assure uniformity across
State policies to implement this component of the provision would be
helpful. A few commenters opposed the proposed requirements at Sec.
441.313(a)(4), expressing concern about the State financial and
administrative burden that could occur due to the necessity to hire
vendors to meet the expectations to conduct translation in non-English
languages as required.
Response: We believe that the proposed requirements at Sec.
441.313(a)(4) are important for ensuring that the required information
on the website is accessible to people receiving HCBS and other
interested parties. We reiterate, as noted in the proposed rule (88 FR
27979 and 27995), in Medicaid, enhanced FFP is available at a 90
percent FMAP for the design, development, or installation of
improvements of mechanized claims processing and information retrieval
systems, in accordance with applicable Federal requirements.\156\
Enhanced FFP at a 75 percent FMAP is also available for operations of
such systems, in accordance with applicable Federal requirements.\157\
However, receipt of these enhanced funds is conditioned upon States
meeting a series of standards and conditions to ensure investments are
efficient and effective.\158\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\156\ See section 1903(a)(3)(A)(i) and Sec. 433.15(b)(3), 80 FR
75817-75843; https://www.medicaid.gov/state-resourcecenter/faq-medicaid-and-chip-affordable-care-act-implementation/downloads/affordable-care-act-faq-enhancedfunding-for-medicaid.pdf; https://www.medicaid.gov/federal-policy-guidance/downloads/SMD16004.pdf.
\157\ See section 1903(a)(3)(B) and Sec. 433.15(b)(4).
\158\ See Sec. 433.112 (b, 80 FR 75841; https://www.ecfr.gov/current/title-42/chapter-IV/subchapter-C/part-433/subpart-C.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
After consideration of comments received, we are finalizing the
requirements at Sec. 441.313(a)(4) as proposed.
f. CMS Website Reporting (Sec. 441.313(b))
We proposed at Sec. 441.313(b) that CMS report on its website the
information reported by States to us under Sec. 441.311. For example,
we envisioned that we will update CMS's website to provide HCBS
comparative information reported by States that can be compared to HCBS
information shared by other States. We also envisioned using data from
State reporting in future iterations of the CMS Medicaid and CHIP
Scorecard.\159\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\159\ CMS's Medicaid and CHIP Scorecard. Accessed at https://www.medicaid.gov/state-overviews/scorecard/.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We received public comments on these proposals. The following is a
summary of the comments we received and our responses.
Comment: A few commenters supported the proposal that CMS would
report on its own website the results of the data and information
required to be reported under Sec. 441.311, noting this enables easier
comparison of results across States and serve as a single information
source for users. One commenter suggested we consider a source, such as
an HCBS hub, as defined by the commenter, on the CMS website, where
users can quickly be directed to State HCBS programs and contracted
managed care plan website pages.
One commenter suggested we initiate a best practice using the CMS
website as an example for States to follow and share input with States
on developing their websites to meet the requirements at Sec.
441.313(a). Another commenter recommended we convene a technical expert
panel of relevant interested parties to create a set of guidelines and
best practices that States could leverage to meet the proposed website
transparency requirements at Sec. 441.313(a) to offset States' time
and resource investments in building the website, and to assist with
minimizing the State's risk of updating websites that do not meet
requirements.
Response: We appreciate the submission of these comments and will
take this feedback into consideration as CMS updates its website to
report on the results of the data and information required to be
reported under Sec. 441.311.
After consideration of the comments received, we decline to make
any changes to Sec. 441.313(b) in this final rule and are finalizing
as proposed.
g. Applicability Dates (Sec. 441.313(c))
We proposed at Sec. 441.313(c) to provide States with 3 years to
implement these requirements in FFS delivery systems. For States with
managed care delivery systems under the authority of sections 1915(a),
1915(b), 1932(a), or section 1115(a) of the Act and that include HCBS
in the MCO's, PIHP's, or PAHP's contract, we proposed to provide States
until the first managed care plan contract rating period that begins on
or after 3 years after the effective date of the final rule to
implement these requirements. We based this proposed time period
primarily on the effective date for State reporting at Sec. 441.311.
We solicited comments on whether this timeframe is sufficient,
whether we should require a longer timeframe (4 years) to implement
these provisions, and if a longer timeframe is recommended, the
rationale for that longer timeframe.
We received comments on this proposal. Below is a summary of the
comments and our responses.
Comment: Most commenters supported the timeframe of 3 years
following the effective date of the final rule to implement the website
transparency requirements at Sec. 441.313, emphasizing that these
requirements facilitate the process of comparing results across States
and create a single source where beneficiaries, providers, advocates,
and policymakers can find a ``wealth of information about HCBS
access.'' One commenter expressed support for the proposed section
regarding transparency related to the administration of Medicaid-
covered HCBS but did not believe it should take 3 years to implement. A
few commenters also expressed concerns about the challenges they
believe will be associated with the website transparency requirements
at Sec. 441.313, due to administrative burden States may face with
significant web content to
[[Page 40675]]
review and verify to implement the provision.
Response: We believe that 3 years is a realistic and achievable
timeframe for States to comply with the website transparency
requirements, and we have not identified a compelling reason make
changes to this date. We are finalizing the requirement at Sec.
441.3131(c) as proposed with modifications as described later in this
section. We reiterate, as noted in the proposed rule, in Medicaid,
enhanced FFP is available at a 90 percent FMAP for the design,
development, or installation of improvements of mechanized claims
processing and information retrieval systems, in accordance with
applicable Federal requirements.\160\ Enhanced FFP at a 75 percent FMAP
is also available for operations of such systems, in accordance with
applicable Federal requirements.\161\ However, receipt of these
enhanced funds is conditioned upon States meeting a series of standards
and conditions to ensure investments are efficient and effective.\162\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\160\ See section 1903(a)(3)(A)(i) and Sec. 433.15(b)(3), 80 FR
75817-75843; https://www.medicaid.gov/state-resourcecenter/faq-medicaid-and-chip-affordable-care-act-implementation/downloads/affordable-care-act-faq-enhancedfunding-for-medicaid.pdf; https://www.medicaid.gov/federal-policy-guidance/downloads/SMD16004.pdf.
\161\ See section 1903(a)(3)(B) and Sec. 433.15(b)(4).
\162\ See Sec. 433.112 (b, 80 FR 75841; https://www.ecfr.gov/current/title-42/chapter-IV/subchapter-C/part-433/subpart-C.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
After consideration of public comments, we are finalizing the
substance of Sec. 441.313(c) as proposed, but with minor modifications
to correct erroneous uses of the word ``effective'' and to make
technical modifications at Sec. 441.313(c) to the language pertaining
to managed care delivery systems to improve accuracy and alignment with
common phrasing in managed care contracting policy. We are retitling
the requirement at Sec. 441.313(c) as Applicability date (rather than
Effective date). We are also modifying the language at Sec. 441.313(c)
to specify that States must comply with the requirements in Sec.
441.313(c) beginning 3 years from the effective date of this final
rule.
h. Application to Managed Care and Fee-for Service (Sec. Sec. 441.486,
441.595, and 441.750)
As discussed in section II.B.1. of the proposed rule, section
2402(a)(3)(A) of the Affordable Care Act requires States to improve
coordination among, and the regulation of, all providers of Federally
and State-funded HCBS programs to achieve a more consistent
administration of policies and procedures across HCBS programs. In the
context of Medicaid coverage of HCBS, it should not matter whether the
services are covered directly on a FFS basis or by a managed care plan
to its enrollees. The requirement for consistent administration should
require consistency between these two modes of service delivery. We
accordingly proposed to specify that a State must ensure compliance
with the requirements in Sec. 441.313, with respect to HCBS delivered
both under FFS and managed care delivery systems.
Similarly, because we proposed to apply the reporting requirements
at Sec. 441.311 to other HCBS State plan options, we also proposed to
include these website transparency requirements within the applicable
regulatory sections. Specifically, we proposed to apply the
requirements of Sec. 441.313 to section 1915(j), (k), and (i) State
plan services at Sec. Sec. 441.486, 441.595, and 441.750,
respectively. Consistent with our proposal for section 1915(c) waivers,
we proposed these requirements based on our authority under section
1102(a) of the Act to make and publish rules and regulations that are
necessary for the efficient administration of the Medicaid program. We
believe the same reasons for these requirements for section 1915(c)
waivers are equally applicable for these other HCBS authorities.
We solicited comment on the application of these provisions across
section 1915(i), (j), and (k) authorities.
We did not receive public comments on this provision.
After consideration of public comments received on this rule, we
are finalizing the application of the website transparency requirements
at Sec. 441.313 to section 1915(j), (k), and (i) State plan services.
We are finalizing our proposed requirements at Sec. Sec. 441.486,
441.595, and 441.750 with minor modifications to clarify that the
references to section 1915(c) of the Act are instead references to
section 1915(j), 1915(k), and 1915(i) of the Act, respectively.
i. Summary of Finalized Requirements
After consideration of the public comments, we are finalizing the
requirements at Sec. 441.313 as follows:
We are finalizing the requirement at Sec. 441.313(c),
with a technical modification to the language to improve accuracy and
alignment with common phrasing in managed care contracting policy. We
also are finalizing Sec. 441.313(c) to specify that States must comply
with the requirements as described in Sec. 441.313(c) of this section
beginning 3 years after the effective date of this final rule; and in
the case of the State that implements a managed care delivery system
under the authority of sections 1915(a), 1915(b), 1932(a), or 1115(a)
of the Act and includes HCBS in the MCO's, PIHP's, or PAHP's contract,
the first rating period for contracts with the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP
beginning on or after the date that is 3 years after the effective date
of this final rule.
We are finalizing at Sec. Sec. 441.313(a) and (b) with
minor technical modifications to include the additional requirements at
Sec. 441.302(k)(6).
We are finalizing the requirements at Sec. 441.313(c)
with minor formatting changes.
We are finalizing Sec. Sec. 441.486, 441.595, and 441.750
with minor modifications to clarify that the references to section
1915(c) of the Act are instead references to section 1915(j), 1915(k),
and 1915(i) of the Act, respectively.
10. Applicability of Proposed Requirements to Managed Care Delivery
Systems
As discussed earlier in sections II.B.1., II.B.4., II.B.5.,
II.B.7., and II.J. of this rule, we proposed to apply the requirements
we proposed at Sec. Sec. 441.301(c)(3), 441.302(a)(6), 441.302(k),
441.311, and 441.313 to both FFS and managed care delivery systems.
Although the proposed provisions at Sec. Sec. 441.301(c)(3),
441.302(a)(6) and (k), 441.311, and 441.313 would apply to LTSS
programs that use a managed care delivery system to deliver services
authorized under section 1915(c) waivers and section 1915(i), (j), and
(k) State plan authorities, we believe incorporating a reference in 42
CFR part 438 would be helpful to States and managed care plans.
Therefore, we proposed to add a cross reference to the requirements in
proposed Sec. 438.72 to be explicit that States that include HCBS in
their MCO's, PIHP's, or PAHP's contracts would have to comply with the
requirements at Sec. Sec. 441.301(c)(1) through (3), 441.302(a)(6) and
(k), 441.311, and 441.313. We believed this would make the obligations
of States that implement LTSS programs through a managed care delivery
system clear, consistent, and easy to locate. While we believed the
list proposed in Sec. 438.72 would help States easily identify the
provisions related to LTSS, we identified that a provision specified in
any other section of 42 CFR part 438 or any other Federal regulation
but omitted from Sec. 438.72, is still in full force and effect. We
also noted that Sec. 438.208(c)(3)(ii) currently references Sec.
441.301(c)(1) and (2). We did not propose any changes to the regulatory
[[Page 40676]]
language at Sec. 441.301(c)(1) or (2) or to Sec. 438.208(c)(3)(ii) in
the proposed rule. We included Sec. 441.301(c)(1) and (2) in the
proposed regulatory language at Sec. 438.72 so that it would be clear
that the requirements at Sec. 441.301(c)(1) and (2) continue to apply.
We received various comments and questions about how specific
provisions would be implemented in managed care contexts; these
comments and our responses are addressed in the sections pertaining to
those provisions. We did not receive other comments specifically on
this proposal at Sec. 438.72.
Upon further review, we have determined it necessary to make a
clarifying correction to Sec. 438.72, which we are finalizing with
modifications. We proposed that Sec. 438.72(b) would read that the
State must comply with the review of the person-centered service plan
requirements at Sec. 441.301(c)(1) through (3), the incident
management system requirements at Sec. 441.302(a)(6), the payment
adequacy requirements at Sec. 441.302(k), the reporting requirements
at Sec. 441.311, and the website transparency requirements at Sec.
441.313 for services authorized under section 1915(c) waivers and
section 1915(i), (j), and (k) State plan authorities. We noted that in
some cases, our description of the references in the regulations did
not align with the titles of those regulations (such as at Sec.
441.302(a)(6), in which only Sec. 441.302(a)(6)(i) is specifically
titled requirements, although our intent was for States to comply with
Sec. 441.302(a)(6)(i) through (iii). To avoid confusion due to any
misaligned language, we are removing the narrative descriptions of the
requirements and retaining just the references to the regulatory text.
After consideration of public comments, we are finalizing Sec.
438.72(b) with this modification, which will read that the State must
comply with requirements at Sec. Sec. 441.301(c)(1) through (3),
441.302(a)(6), 441.302(k), 441.311, and 441.313 for services authorized
under section 1915(c) waivers and section 1915(i), (j), and (k) State
plan authorities.
C. Documentation of Access to Care and Service Payment Rates (Sec.
447.203)
Section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act requires that State plans
``assure that payments are consistent with efficiency, economy, and
quality of care and are sufficient to enlist enough providers so that
care and services are available under the plan at least to the extent
that such care and services are available to the general population in
the geographic area.'' Through the provisions we are finalizing in
Sec. 447.203, we are establishing an updated process through which
States will be required to document, and we will ensure, compliance
with the requirements of section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act.
In the 2015 final rule with comment period, we codified a process
that requires States to complete and make public AMRPs that analyze and
inform determinations of the sufficiency of access to care (which may
vary by geographic location in the State) and are used to inform State
policies affecting access to Medicaid services, including provider
payment rates. The AMRP must specify data elements that support the
State's analysis of whether beneficiaries have sufficient access to
care, based on data, trends, and factors that measure beneficiary
needs, availability of care through enrolled providers, and utilization
of services. States are required to update their AMRPs at regular
intervals and whenever the State proposes to reduce FFS provider
payment rates or restructure them in circumstances when the changes
could result in diminished access. Specifically, the AMRP process at
Sec. 447.203 before this final rule (which we refer to in this final
rule preamble as the previous AMRP process) required States to consider
the extent to which beneficiary needs are fully met; the availability
of care through enrolled providers to beneficiaries in each geographic
area, by provider type and site of service; changes in beneficiary
utilization of covered services in each geographic area; the
characteristics of the beneficiary population (including considerations
for care, service and payment variations for pediatric and adult
populations and for individuals with disabilities); and actual or
estimated levels of provider payment available from other payers,
including other public and private payers, by provider type and site of
service. The analysis further required consideration of beneficiary and
provider input, and an analysis of the percentage comparison of
Medicaid payment rates to other public and private health insurer
payment rates within geographic areas of the State, for each of the
services reviewed, by the provider types and sites of service. While
the previous regulations included broad requirements for what an
acceptable methodology used to conduct this analysis must include,
States retained discretion in establishing their processes, including
but not limited to the specification of data sources and analytical
methodologies to be used. For example, States were broadly required to
include actual or estimated levels of provider payments available from
other payers; however, States retained discretion on which payers they
reported on, including where the payment data was sourced from. The
result has been a large analytical burden on States without a
standardization that allows us and other interested parties to compare
data between States to understand whether the Federal access standards
are successfully achieving access consistent with section
1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act for beneficiaries nationwide.
Through the previous AMRP process, we aimed to create a transparent
and data-driven process through which to ensure State compliance with
section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act. Following publication of the 2011
proposed rule and as discussed in both the 2015 final rule with comment
period and the 2016 final rule, as we worked with States to implement
the previous AMRP requirements, many States expressed concerns about
the rule.163 164 165 States were concerned about the
administrative burden of completing the previous AMRPs and questioned
whether the previous AMRP process is the most effective way to
establish that access to care in a State's Medicaid program meets
statutory requirements. States with high managed care enrollment were
also concerned about the previous AMRP process because the few
remaining FFS populations in their State often reside in long-term care
facilities or require only specialized care that is ``carved out'' of
managed care (that is, not covered under the State's contract with
managed care plans), but long-term care and specialized care services
were not required to be analyzed under the previous AMRP process. We
have also heard concerns from other interested parties, including
medical associations and non-profit organizations, that the 2015 final
rule with comment period afforded States too much discretion in
developing access measures which could lead to ineffective monitoring
and enforcement, as well as challenges comparing access across States.
One commenter on the 2015 final rule was concerned that States had too
much discretion in ``. . . setting standards and access measure . . .''
and ``. . . whether they have met their chosen standards'' as this
process relies on self-regulation rather than ``an independent,
objective third party as the primary arbiter of a State's compliance
[[Page 40677]]
. . .'' \166\ Another commenter stated that ``CMS should designate a
limited and standardized set of data measures that would be collected
rather than leaving the decision of which data measures to use to State
discretion'' as this would ``enable the development of key, valid, and
uniform measures; more effective monitoring and enforcement; and will
ensure comparability of objective measures across the States.'' \167\
At the time of publication of the 2011 proposed rule and 2015 final
rule with comment period, we noted our belief that a uniform approach
to meeting the statutory requirement under section 1902(a)(30)(A) of
the Act, including setting standardized access to care data measures,
could prove difficult given then-current limitations on data, local
variations in service delivery, beneficiary needs, and provider
practice roles.168 169
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\163\ 76 FR 26341.
\164\ 80 FR 67576 at 67583 and 67584.
\165\ 81 FR 21479 at 21479.
\166\ American Medical Association, Comment Letter on 2015 Final
Rule with Comment Period (January 4, 2016), https://www.regulations.gov/comment/CMS-2011-0062-0328.
\167\ American Association of Retired Persons, Comment Letter on
2011 Propose Rule (July 5, 2011), https://www.regulations.gov/comment/CMS-2011-0062-0121.
\168\ 76 FR 26341 at 26349.
\169\ 80 FR 67576 at 67577, 67579, 67590.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Separately, the Supreme Court, in Armstrong v. Exceptional Child
Center, Inc., 575 U.S. 320 (2015), ruled that Medicaid providers and
beneficiaries do not have a direct private right of action against
States to challenge Medicaid payment rates in Federal courts. This
decision means provider and beneficiary legal challenges against States
are unavailable in Federal court to supplement our oversight as a means
of ensuring compliance with section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act. The
Armstrong decision also underscored HHS' and CMS' unique responsibility
for resolving issues concerning the interpretation and implementation
of section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act. The Supreme Court's Armstrong
decision placed added importance on CMS' administrative review of SPAs
proposing to reduce or restructure FFS payment rates. Accordingly, the
2015 final rule with comment period was an effort to establish a more
robust oversight and enforcement strategy with respect to section
1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act.
In consideration of State agencies' and other interested parties'
feedback on the previous AMRP process, as well as CMS' obligation to
ensure continued compliance with section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act, we
are updating the requirements in Sec. 447.203. We are rescinding and
replacing the AMRP requirements previously in Sec. 447.203(b)(1)
through (8) with a streamlined and standardized process, described in
Sec. 447.203(b) and (c). This change is informed by a center-wide
review of our policy and processes regarding access to care for all
facets of the Medicaid program. The 2015 final rule with comment period
acknowledged our need to better understand FFS rate actions and their
potential impact on State programs, and the requirements we finalized
require a considerable amount of data from States. To ensure States
were meeting the statutory requirement under section 1902(a)(30)(A) of
the Act, the previous AMRP process was originally intended to establish
a transparent data-driven process for States to measure the current
status of access to services within the State and utilize this process
for monitoring access when proposing rate reductions and
restructurings.\170\ As the rule took effect and as we reviewed States'
previous AMRPs, we found that some rate reductions and restructurings
had much smaller impacts than others. The 2017 SMDL reflected the
experience that certain payment rate changes would not likely result in
diminished access to care and do not require the substantial review of
access data that generally is required under the 2015 final rule with
comment period. Since publication of the 2019 CMCS Informational
Bulletin stating the agency's intention to establish a new access
strategy, we have developed the new process we are finalizing in this
final rule that considers the lessons learned under the previous AMRP
process, and emphasizes transparency and data analysis, with specific
requirements varying depending on the State's current payment levels
relative to Medicare, the magnitude of the proposed rate reduction or
restructuring, and any access to care concerns raised to State Medicaid
agency by interested parties. With these provisions, we aim to balance
Federal and State administrative burden with our shared obligation to
ensure compliance with section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act (and our
obligation to oversee State compliance with the same).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\170\ 80 FR 67576 at 67577.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We received public comments on our overall approach to a new access
strategy as well as broad comments about multiple provisions in the
rule. We received some comments that were outside of the scope of the
proposed rule entirely (for example, related to access in managed care
and coverage of services), and therefore, are not addressed in this
final rule. We also note that some commenters expressed general support
for all of the provisions in section II.C. of this rule, as well as for
this rule in its entirety. In response to commenters who supported
some, but not all, of the policies and regulations we proposed in the
proposed rule (particularly in section II.C related to FFS access), we
are clarifying and emphasizing our intent that each final policy and
regulation is distinct and severable to the extent it does not rely on
another final policy or regulation that we proposed.
While the provisions in section II.C. of this final rule are
intended to present a comprehensive approach to ensuring that FFS
payment rates are adequate to ensure statutorily sufficient access for
beneficiaries, and these provisions complement the goals expressed and
policies and regulations being finalized in sections II.A. (MAC and
BAC) and II.B. (HCBS) of this final rule, we intend that each of them
is a distinct, severable provision, as finalized. Unless otherwise
noted in this rule, each policy and regulation being finalized under
this section II.C is distinct and severable from other final policies
and regulations being finalized in this section or in sections II.A. or
II.B of this final rule, as well as from rules and regulations
currently in effect.
Consistent with our previous discussion earlier in section II. of
this final rule regarding severability, we are clarifying and
emphasizing our intent that if any provision of this final rule is held
to be invalid or unenforceable by its terms, or as applied to any
person or circumstance, or stayed pending further State action, it
shall be severable from this final rule, and from rules and regulations
currently in effect, and not affect the remainder thereof or the
application of the provision to other persons not similarly situated or
to other, dissimilar circumstances. For example, we intend that the
policies and regulations we are finalizing related to the payment rate
transparency publication requirement (section II.C.2.a. of this final
rule) are distinct and severable from the policies and regulations we
are finalizing related to the comparative payment rate analysis
requirement and the payment rate disclosure publication requirement
(sections II.C.2.b. of this final rule, which we further intend are
severable from each other). These provisions are in turn also severable
from the interested parties advisory group provision in section
II.C.2.c. of this final rule, the State analysis procedures for rate
reduction and restructuring SPAs in section II.C.3. of this final rule,
and from the Medicaid provider participation and
[[Page 40678]]
public process to inform access to care policies in section II.C.4. of
this final rule, and each of these in turn is intended to be severable
from each other.
The following is a summary of the general comments we received on
our proposal to rescind the previous AMRP requirements in Sec.
447.203(b)(1) through (8) and replace them with a streamlined and
standardized process in Sec. 447.203(b) and (c), and our responses.
Comment: We received general support from most commenters for our
proposal to rescind the AMRP process finalized in the 2015 final rule
with comment period in its entirety and replace it with new
requirements for payment rate transparency and State analysis
procedures for rate reductions and restructuring as described in the
proposed rule to ensure compliance with section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the
Act. We also received commenter feedback encouraging CMS to ensure the
process replacing the AMRPs is robust and public, and that it ensures
access to critical services is measured adequately.
Response: We thank the commenters for their support and are
finalizing the rescission of the previous AMRP process in its entirety
and its replacement with the new requirements as proposed, apart from
some minor revisions to the proposed regulatory language, which we
address in detail later in this final rule. As of the effective date of
this final rule, States are no longer required to submit AMRPs to CMS
as previously required in Sec. 447.203(b)(1) through (8). We believe
our new policies are robust and that they ensure public transparency
and that access to critical services is measured adequately.
Comment: While most commenters generally supported the proposal to
rescind Sec. 447.203(b) in its entirety and replace it with new
requirements to ensure FFS Medicaid payment rate adequacy, a couple of
commenters recommended that CMS maintain some or all of the AMRP
process for certain providers (that is, FQHCs, clinics, dental care
providers, and community mental health providers), in addition to the
newly proposed payment rate transparency, comparative payment rate
analysis, and payment rate disclosure requirements. Additionally, these
commenters raised concerns that the newly proposed requirements focused
exclusively on fee schedule payment rate transparency and comparison to
Medicare payment rates; therefore, FQHCs, clinics, dental care
providers, and community mental health providers would be excluded from
the proposed payment rate transparency and comparative payment rate
analysis provisions because these providers generally are not paid fee
schedule payment rates (within the meaning of this final rule) and/or
lack corresponding Medicare payment rates. One commenter recommended
keeping the AMRP requirements in place as a separate process for
analyzing access to primary care services provided by FQHCs, clinics,
or dental providers if these providers are excluded from the payment
rate transparency and comparative payment rate disclosure as a way to
assess access to care to these services and providers as they were
previously included in the AMRP requirements. Another commenter stated
that, in comparison to the AMRPs, the provisions in the proposed rule
are an oversimplified approach to evaluating Medicaid FFS payment rates
and do not sufficiently focus on payment levels for a comprehensive
continuum of behavioral health services.
Response: We acknowledge these commenters' support for the previous
AMRP process and suggestion to continue to subject payment rates for
FQHCs, clinics (as defined in Sec. 440.90), dental care providers, and
community mental health providers to the previous AMRP process.
However, we are not incorporating this suggestion, to ensure a
consistent approach to evaluating access to care within FFS and across
delivery systems that more appropriately balances administrative burden
on States and us with the usefulness of the process for ensuring that
payment rates comply with section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act.
To address commenters' concerns about services being excluded from
the payment rate transparency provision in Sec. 447.203(b)(1), we will
briefly address which payment rates are and are not subject to the
payment rate transparency provisions, but this issue is discussed in
greater detail in a later comment response. For purposes of the payment
rate transparency provision in Sec. 447.203(b)(1), Medicaid FFS fee
schedule payment rates are payment amounts made to a provider and known
in advance of a provider delivering a service to a beneficiary by
reference to a fee schedule. To the extent a State pays fee schedule
payment rates for clinic services (as defined in Sec. 440.90), dental
services, and community mental health services that meet the previously
stated description, those payment rates are subject to the payment rate
transparency provisions in Sec. 447.203(b)(1). As for the comparative
payment rate analysis requirements in Sec. 447.203(b)(2)-(3), as
discussed in greater detail later in this final rule, only codes
included on the CMS-published list of evaluation and management (E/M)
Current Procedural Terminology or Healthcare Common Procedure Coding
System (HCPCS) CPT/HCPCS codes are subject to the analysis.
Additionally, as further discussed in a later comment response,
States use provider-specific cost and visit data for a particular
benefit category to set the prospective payment system (PPS) rates that
are paid to FQHCs or rural health clinics (RHCs) in a process governed
by section 1902(bb) of the Act. Because States utilize these data
rather than fee schedule payment rates within the meaning of this final
rule, those rates paid to FQHCs and RHCs are not subject to the new
payment rate transparency provisions in Sec. 447.203(b)(1) or the
comparative payment rate analysis requirements in Sec. 447.203(b)(2)
through (3). Lastly, like all State plan services for which the State
proposes a rate reduction or restructuring in circumstances where the
changes could result in reduced access, FQHC, RHC, clinic (as defined
in Sec. 440.90), dental, and community mental health services are
subject to access analyses in Sec. 447.203(c) for proposed rate
reductions and restructuring.
While we recognize that there may be multiple approaches to
evaluating access to care for Medicaid beneficiaries, we respectfully
disagree with the commenter that the payment rate transparency and
State analysis procedures for rate reductions and restructuring are an
oversimplified approach for evaluating Medicaid FFS payment rates. As
part of a comprehensive review of our policy and processes regarding
access to care for all facets of the Medicaid program, we proposed a
more streamlined approach, as compared to previous AMRP process, that
we intended better to balance Federal and State administrative burden
with our shared obligation to ensure compliance with section
1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act.
Additionally, we disagree with the commenter that, in comparison to
the previous AMRP process, the provisions in the proposed rule do not
sufficiently focus on payment levels for a comprehensive continuum of
behavioral health services. The provisions of this final rule serve as
one part of our comprehensive efforts to ensure that payment levels
across the continuum of behavioral health services are economic and
efficient, as well as consistent with quality and access consistent
with the statute. As we discussed in the proposed rule, we limited the
scope of behavioral health services subject to
[[Page 40679]]
comparative payment rate analysis to include only outpatient
services.\171\ For this final rule, we have revised the outpatient
behavioral health services category of service in Sec.
447.203(b)(2)(iii), which we are finalizing as ``Outpatient mental
health and substance use disorder services.'' This revision will ensure
this final rule is consistent with the services in the Managed Care
final rule (as published elsewhere in this Federal Register) and
reflects a more granular level of service description. As this category
of service remains outpatient, this allows us to focus on ambulatory
care provided by practitioners in an office-based setting without
duplicating existing Federal requirements for demonstrating compliance
with applicable upper payment limits (UPLs) and the supplemental
payment reporting requirements under section 1903(bb) of the Act.
Therefore, between the comparative payment rate analysis requirements
that we are finalizing in this rule (including outpatient mental health
and substance use disorder services) and existing UPL and supplemental
payment reporting requirements (including requirements specific to
inpatient services furnished in psychiatric residential treatment
facilities, institutions for mental diseases, and psychiatric
hospitals), we believe that States and CMS will have available
sufficient information about inpatient and outpatient mental health and
substance use disorder services payment rates to appropriately monitor
payment levels across the continuum of mental health and substance use
disorder services.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\171\ 88 FR 27960 at 28006.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Comment: Several commenters raised concerns about administrative
burden on States to comply with the payment rate transparency
publication, comparative payment rate analysis, and payment rate
disclosure requirements. Commenters were generally concerned about the
compounding effect on already overburdened State resources that would
be required to meet these provisions, the other HCBS and MAC and BAG
provisions of the proposed rule, and the provisions of the Managed Care
proposed rule. Specifically for the payment rate transparency
provisions under Sec. 447.203(b), commenters were generally concerned
about the significant amount of State resources (including number of
staff, staff time, and financial expense) that would be required to
collect, prepare, analyze, and publish the data and information
required.
Additionally, a few commenters expressed concerns about the burden
associated with the proposed rule and stated that they did not believe
the requirement to publish Medicaid payment rates through the payment
rate transparency publication would benefit the Medicaid program by
providing States and CMS with an effective and meaningful way of
ensuring access to care is sufficient. One commenter stated that they
expect their State Medicaid program to limit future program
enhancements and improvements because they would need to redirect
resources to complying with the provisions of the proposed rule, if
finalized.
Response: We appreciate the commenters' concerns, and we would like
to note that the FFS provisions, including the payment rate
transparency, comparative payment rate analysis, and payment rate
disclosure requirements (Sec. 447.203(b)(1) through (5)), interested
parties' advisory group requirements (Sec. 447.203(b)(6)), and State
analysis procedures for payment rate reductions or payment
restructuring (Sec. 447.203(c)), finalized in this rule are expected
to result in a net burden reduction on States compared to the previous
AMRP requirements, as discussed in the proposed rule and in section
III. of this final rule. We are also providing States with a full 2-
year compliance period between the effective date of this final rule
and the initial applicability date of July 1, 2026, rather than 6 or 9
months as finalized with the previous AMRP process.\172\ Given that the
previously referenced requirements of this final rule should be less
burdensome for States than the rescinded, previous AMRP requirements,
and the length of time States have to prepare to implement these new
requirements, we expect that States will be able to meet the payment
rate transparency, interested parties' advisory group, and State
analysis procedures for payment rate reductions or payment
restructuring requirements, if a rate reduction or restructuring is
proposed through a SPA, without needing to limit future program
enhancements or increase the level of State resources dedicated to
ensuring compliance with the access requirement in section
1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\172\ In the 2015 final rule with comment period (80 FR 67576),
the previous AMRPs were originally due on July 1 providing States
with approximately 6 months between the final rule effective date of
January 4, 2016, and due date of July 1, 2016. Based on comments
received on the 2015 final rule with comment period, the 2016 final
rule (81 FR 21479) extended the due date to October 1, 2016,
providing States with an additional 3 months to submit their first
AMRPs for a total of approximately 9 months from the effective date
of the 2015 final rule when States were first notified they would be
required to submit AMRPs.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We would also like to reassure States that the provisions of Sec.
447.203(b)(1) in this final rule include flexibilities that could
further ease the burden on States. For example, the payment rate
transparency publication requirements described in paragraph (b)(1) and
paragraph (b)(1)(ii) have limited formatting requirements, and
therefore we expect many States that already publish at least some of
their Medicaid FFS fee schedule payment rates directly on fee schedules
posted on the State agency's website would only need to make minor
revisions or updates (if any) to comply with the new requirements with
respect to these already-published payment rates. States are not
required to create new fee schedules if their published payment rate
information is already organized in such a way that a member of the
public can readily determine the amount that Medicaid would pay for
each covered service, consistent with Sec. 447.203(b)(1).
Additionally, because commenters informed us that some States use a
contractor to maintain their fee schedules on the contractor's website,
we have revised the language in Sec. 447.203(b)(1) to permit the State
to ``publish all Medicaid fee-for-service payment rates on a website
that is accessible to the general public'' by removing the proposed
requirement that the payment rates be published on a website that is
``developed and maintained by the single State agency.'' This
flexibility is being provided for States to continue utilizing a
contractor to develop fee schedules as well as utilizing a contractor's
(or other third party's) website to publish the payment rate
transparency publication so long as the State publishes a readily
accessible link on its State-maintained website to the required content
and ensures on an ongoing basis that the linked content meets all
applicable requirements of this final rule. We continue to require that
``[t]he website where the State agency publishes its Medicaid fee-for-
service payment rates must be easily reached from a hyperlink on the
State Medicaid agency's website'' in Sec. 447.203(b)(1)(ii). We
acknowledge that States utilization of contractors to meet certain
programmatic responsibilities is a common occurrence, and with this
modification, we are ensuring flexibility for States to rely on these
relationships to meet the payment rate transparency publication
requirement.
With respect to the comparative payment rate analysis in Sec.
447.203(b)(2) and (3), as discussed in the proposed
[[Page 40680]]
rule, States have the flexibility to map their geographical areas to
those used for Medicare payment for purposes of meeting the requirement
that States break down their payment rates by geographical location, as
applicable.\173\ We will provide States with a list of the CPT/HCPCS
codes to be used for comparison in subregulatory guidance, including an
example list, that will be issued prior to the effective date of this
final rule.\174\ While the first published list will be an example list
of codes that would have been subject to the comparative payment rate
analysis if it were in effect for CY 2023, we will publish the initial
list of E/M CPT/HCPCS codes subject to the comparative payment rate
analysis no later than June 30, 2025, to provide States 1 full calendar
year between the issuance of the CMS-published list of E/M CPT/HCPCS
codes and the due date of the comparative payment rate analysis, as
described in the proposed rule.\175\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\173\ 88 FR 27960 at 28013.
\174\ 88 FR 27960 at 28008.
\175\ 88 FR 27960 at 28008 through 28009.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
For the payment rate disclosure in Sec. 447.203(b)(2) and (3),
which requires States to publish the average hourly Medicaid FFS fee
schedule payment rate for personal care, home health aide, homemaker,
and habilitation services, as discussed in detail in a later response
to comments in this section, there is no Medicare comparison component.
Because the disclosure will reflect only the State's payment rate data,
we chose not to specify codes; this will provide States more
flexibility in meeting the requirements in line with each State's
unique circumstances. For example, the payment rate disclosure
requirements can accommodate the flexibility States have in setting
their payment rates and methodologies for personal care, home health
aide, homemaker, and habilitation services, as well as the provider
types licensed to deliver these services to beneficiaries.
We disagree with commenters that the requirement to publish
Medicaid payment rates through the payment rate transparency
publication would not benefit the Medicaid program by providing States
and CMS with an effective and meaningful way of ensuring access to care
is sufficient. As discussed in the proposed rule, payment rate
transparency is a critical component of assessing compliance with
section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act. By publishing their Medicaid payment
rates publicly, States will be providing the necessary information to
evaluate if State payment rates are consistent with efficiency,
economy, and quality of care and are sufficient to enlist enough
providers so that care and services are available under the plan at
least to the extent that such care and services are available to the
general population in the geographic area and interested parties have
basic information available to them to understand Medicaid payment
levels and the associated effects of payment rates on access to care so
that they may raise concerns to State Medicaid agencies via the various
forms of public processes available to interested parties.\176\ Also as
discussed in section V.D. of the proposed rule, we considered, but did
not propose, to require Medicaid payment information be directly
submitted to CMS, rather than publicly published, because this
requirement to publicly display payment rate information is
methodologically similar to the previous regulation at Sec. 447.203,
which required previous AMRPs be submitted to us and publicly published
by the State and CMS. We found this aspect of the rule to be an
effective method of publicly sharing access to care information, as
well as ensuring State compliance, and are carrying it forward into the
provisions finalized in this rule.\177\ Additionally, the Supreme
Court's Armstrong decision underscored the importance of CMS'
determinations, as the responsible Federal agency, regarding the
sufficiency of Medicaid payment rates.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\176\ 88 FR 27960 at 27967.
\177\ 88 FR 27960 at 28075.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Comment: A couple of commenters requested clarification regarding
CMS exempting States that deliver all of their Medicaid services
through managed care from all of the payment rate transparency
provisions under Sec. 447.203(b).
Response: All States are required to comply with the payment rate
transparency publication, comparative payment rate analysis, and
payment rate disclosure provisions finalized in this rule under Sec.
447.203(b), regardless of the quantity of services covered or delivered
or beneficiaries enrolled in managed care. Due to coverage transition
periods, such as where an individual is Medicaid eligible but not yet
enrolled in a managed care plan or benefits are covered
retroactively,\178\ even States that generally enroll all beneficiaries
into managed care plans pay for some services on a FFS basis that are
carved out of the managed care plan contracts, and therefore, are
expected to have Medicaid FFS fee schedule payment rates in effect.
Such Medicaid FFS fee schedule payment rates are subject to the
provisions finalized in this rule under Sec. 447.203(b).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\178\ Once an individual is enrolled in Medicaid, coverage is
effective either on the date of application or the first day of the
month of application. Benefits also may be covered retroactively for
up to three months prior to the month of application if the
individual would have been eligible during that period had he or she
applied. Coverage generally stops at the end of the month in which a
person no longer meets the requirements for eligibility. https://www.medicaid.gov/medicaid/eligibility/.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Comment: Several commenters requested CMS clearly define the
services considered to be categories of services subject to all
provisions under Sec. 447.203(b). One commenter requested CMS publish
information regarding the timing of when States can expect the CMS
published list of E/M CPT/HCPCS codes subject to the comparative
payment rate analysis.
Response: For the payment rate transparency requirements in Sec.
447.203(b)(1), as further discussed in a later response to comments in
this section, services for which providers are paid Medicaid FFS fee
schedule payment rates within the meaning of this final rule, which
generally are payment amounts made to a provider and known in advance
of a provider delivering a service to a beneficiary, are subject to the
requirements of Sec. 447.203(b)(1)(i) through (vi).
For the comparative payment rate analysis described in Sec.
447.203(b)(3)(i), the list of the E/M CPT/HCPCS codes that specifies
the services subject to the analysis will be published in subregulatory
guidance. Prior to the effective date of this final rule, we will issue
subregulatory guidance, including a hypothetical example list of the E/
M CPT/HCPCS codes that would be subject to the comparative payment rate
analysis, if the comparative rate analysis requirements were applicable
with respect to payment rates in effect for CY 2023. This example list
defines the services that would be subject to the comparative payment
rate analysis through the identification of specific E/M CPT/HCPCS
codes that are in effect for CY 2023. In other words, the example list
of E/M CPT/HCPCS codes includes codes that meet the following criteria:
the code is effective for CY 2023; the code is classified as an E/M
CPT/HCPCS code by the American Medical Association (AMA) CPT Editorial
Panel; the code is included on the Berenson-Eggers Type of Service
(BETOS) code list effective for the same time period as the
hypothetical comparative payment rate analysis (CY 2023) and falls into
the E/M family grouping and families and subfamilies for primary care
services, obstetrics and gynecological services, and outpatient
behavioral services (now called
[[Page 40681]]
outpatient mental health and substance use disorder services in this
final rule); and the code has an A (Active), N (Non-Covered), R
(Restricted), or T (Injections) code status on the Medicare Physician
Fee Schedule (PFS) with a Medicare established relative value unit
(RVU) and payment amount for CY 2023. As discussed in the proposed
rule, we expect to provide States with approximately 1 full calendar
year of access to the CMS-published list of E/M CPT/HCPCS codes and
Medicare non-facility payment rates as established in the annual
Medicare PFS rule for a calendar year to provide States with sufficient
time to develop and publish their comparative payment rate analyses as
described in Sec. 447.203(b)(4).\179\ Therefore, we expect that the
first CMS-published list of the E/M CPT/HCPCS codes that actually will
be subject to the comparative payment rate analysis requirements will
be published by July 1, 2025 for CY 2025, to facilitate States'
publication of their comparative payment rate analyses by the
applicability date of July 1, 2026.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\179\ 88 FR 27960 at 28008-28009.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The categories of services subject to the payment rate disclosure
requirements described in Sec. 447.203(b)(3)(ii), as discussed later
in this preamble, are personal care, home health aide, homemaker, and
habilitation services provided under FFS State plan authority,
including sections 1915(i), 1915(j), 1915(k) State plan services;
section 1915(c) waiver authority; and under section 1115 demonstration
authority. We are not identifying codes for these categories of
services because States may use a wide variety of codes to bill and pay
for these services, and because the payment rate disclosure does not
have a comparison element that would necessitate uniformity with
another payer. While we encourage States to organize their payment rate
disclosure on a code basis, when possible, for clarity and formatting
consistency with the comparative payment rate analysis, States have
flexibility in meeting the payment rate disclosure requirements to
ensure each State's unique circumstances can be accounted for in the
disclosure.
Comment: Several commenters urged CMS to delay the proposed
applicability date of the Sec. 447.203(b) provisions, including the
compliance actions described in Sec. 447.203(b)(5), to allow States
sufficient time for compliance. Commenters stated that the amount of
recently proposed Federal changes, including this rulemaking and the
Managed Care proposed rule, raised concerns about State resources
necessary to comply with all new Federal regulations. Some commenters
expressed concern that withholding administrative FFP would further
hinder States' ability to meet the requirements and CMS should only act
after exhausting all other efforts to ensure States are compliant
(including adopting a tiered approach to enforcement and directly
engaging with non-compliant States to create a corrective action plan).
Commenters suggested the following alternative applicability dates:
approximately 3 years from the effective date of a final rule (that is,
January 1, 2027), 4 years (that is, January 1, 2028), or 5 years (that
is, January 1, 2029). Alternatively, a few commenters urged CMS to
accelerate the proposed applicability date of the Sec. 447.203(b)
provisions by one year from January 1, 2026, to January 1, 2025, to
ensure payment rate information is published timely to help address
questions about access, particularly for HCBS. In addition to the
proposed compliance procedures described in Sec. 447.203(b)(5), a
couple of commenters suggested CMS publish an annual calendar for
States to follow and CMS should also report on the timeliness of each
State's compliance with the payment rate transparency, comparative
payment rate analysis, and payment rate disclosure requirements.
Response: We are finalizing the payment rate transparency
requirements in Sec. 447.203(b) with an applicability date of July 1,
2026, which is 6 months later than we proposed. This date is an
alternative applicability date that was described in the proposed rule
to allow for States to have a period of at least 2 years between the
effective date of the final rule and the applicability date for the
Sec. 447.203(b) provisions. The July 1, 2026, applicability date
applies to the payment rate transparency, comparative payment rate
analysis, and payment rate disclosure requirements. For payment rate
transparency, the initial publication of the Medicaid FFS payment rates
shall occur no later than July 1, 2026, and include approved Medicaid
FFS payment rates in effect as of July 1, 2026. For the comparative
payment rate analysis and payment rate disclosure, the initial
comparative payment rate analysis and payment rate disclosure must
include Medicaid payment rates in effect as of July 1, 2025, and be
published no later than July 1, 2026. As finalized in this rule, the
Medicare non-facility payment rates as established in the annual
Medicare PFS final rule for a calendar year included in the comparative
payment rate analysis must be effective for the same time period for
the same set of E/M CPT/HCPCS codes used for the base Medicaid FFS fee
schedule payment rate. The Medicare PFS is published through annual
notice and comment rulemaking, and takes effect January 1 of the
upcoming calendar year. As discussed in the proposed rule, we
acknowledged that Medicare may issue a correction to the Medicare PFS
after the final rule is in effect, and this correction may impact our
published list of E/M CPT/HCPCS codes and we would like to reemphasize
that we expect States to rely on the CMS published list of E/M CPT/
HCPCS codes subject to the comparative payment rate analysis for
complying with the requirements in paragraphs (b)(2) through (4).\180\
States are required to use the Medicare non-facility payment rates as
established in the Medicare PFS final rule for calendar year 2025 for
purposes of the initial comparative payment rate analysis to be
published by July 1, 2026. In accordance with paragraph (b)(4), the
comparative payment rate analysis is required to be updated no less
than every 2 years and by no later than July 1 of the second year
following the most recent update, therefore, the second comparative
payment rate analysis would be for calendar year 2027, the third
analysis would be for calendar year 2029, so on and so forth. Each
comparative payment rate analysis would use the respective year's CMS
published list of E/M CPT/HCPCS codes which will be updated by CMS
approximately one full calendar year before the due date of the next
comparative payment rate analysis and the list will include changes
made to the AMA CPT Editorial Panel and the Medicare PFS based on the
most recent Medicare PFS final rule, as described in the proposed
rule.\181\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\180\ 88 FR 27960 at 28009.
\181\ 88 FR 27960 at 28008.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We are not finalizing the alternative applicability dates,
including dates sooner and later than the July 1, 2026, due date
finalized in this rule, as suggested by commenters. We are not
accelerating the date as we are mindful of the numerous new regulatory
requirements established in this final rule, the Managed Care final
rule (as published elsewhere in this Federal Register), and the
Streamlining Eligibility & Enrollment final rule. We want to ensure
States have adequate time to implement all newly finalized provisions,
with at least 2 years between the effective date and applicability date
as described in the proposed rule.\182\ We
[[Page 40682]]
are also not delaying the applicability date as we believe the
applicability date for the provisions finalized in section II.C. of
this final rule are reasonable given that States should have their
Medicaid FFS fee schedule payment rates data readily available,
Medicare payment rate data are publicly available, and we are making
available supportive guidance and templates with this final rule. In
the beginning of section II. of this final rule, we include a table
with the provisions and relevant timing information and applicability
dates of all provisions in the rule. We believe this table delivers the
information the commenter was seeking. We expect the information
published in this final rule is sufficient for States to comply in a
timely manner and we currently do not intend to publish a calendar in
any other format. We are finalizing the compliance provisions at Sec.
447.203(b)(5) as proposed. While we currently do not intend to publish
a report of the timeliness of each State's compliance with the payment
rate transparency, comparative payment rate analysis, and payment rate
disclosure requirements, as suggested by a couple of commenters, given
that our work to better ensure access in the Medicaid program is
ongoing, we intend to gain implementation experience with this final
rule, and we will consider the recommendations provided on the proposed
rule to help inform any future rulemaking in this area, as appropriate.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\182\ 88 FR 27960 at 28008.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Comment: A number of commenters suggested CMS conduct the proposed
payment rate transparency publication, comparative payment rate
analysis, and payment rate disclosure on behalf of States to ensure a
consistent, national approach to analyzing and publishing payment rate
information. These commenters stated CMS could do this by requiring
States to submit their fee schedules to CMS or CMS could collect fee
schedule rate information during the SPA approval process. Specifically
for the payment rate disclosure, two commenters suggested using
existing data collection tools, specifically the State of the Workforce
Survey, to source the information required for the disclosure to ease
burden on States.\183\ Additionally, a couple of commenters suggested
CMS create a centralized data repository of all States' payment rate
transparency, comparative payment rate analysis, and payment rate
disclosure publications for public use, including data analysis, if the
proposed requirements are applied to States.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\183\ The State of the Workforce Survey collects comprehensive
data on provider agencies and the Direct Support Professional (DSP)
workforce providing direct supports to adults (age 18 and over) with
intellectual and developmental disabilities (IDD). The goal of the
survey and the resulting data is to help States examine workforce
challenges, identify areas for further investigation, benchmark
their workforce data, measure improvements made through policy or
programmatic changes, and compare their State data to those of other
States and the NCI-IDD average. https://idd.nationalcoreindicators.org/staff-providers/.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Response: As described in section V.D.3 of this final rule, prior
to the issuance of the 2023 proposed rule, we specifically considered
ways for CMS to produce and publish the comparative payment rate
analysis proposed in Sec. 447.203(b)(2) through (3) whereby we would
develop reports for all States demonstrating Medicaid payment rates for
all services or a subset for Medicaid services as a percentage of
Medicare payment rates.\184\ We decided not to propose this approach
because it would rely on T-MSIS data, which would increase the lag in
available data due to the need for CMS to prepare it and then validate
the data with States to ensure the publication is accurate, in addition
to introducing uncertainty into the results due to ongoing variation in
State T-MSIS data quality and completeness. Given the increased lag
time associated with T-MSIS data and uncertainty in results that would
diminish the utility of the comparative payment rate analysis, we
decided producing and publishing the analysis would likely result in
inaccuracies, resulting in burden on States to correspond with CMS to
provide missing information and correct other information. After
considering, and ultimately not proposing, CMS complete a comparative
payment rate analysis on behalf of States, we did not further consider
conducting the payment rate transparency publication or payment rate
disclosure on behalf of States due to the previously stated reasons
(that is, lagging data from T-MSIS and the need that would remain to
validate data with States).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\184\ 88 FR 27960 at 28075.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We are not creating a centralized data repository of all States'
payment rate transparency, comparative payment rate analysis, and
payment rate disclosure publications for public use as suggested by
commenters because we are striving to balance Federal and State
administrative burden with our shared obligation to ensure compliance
with section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act. Requiring States to submit the
information they already published on their State or contractor's
website would be duplicative and create additional burden on States. We
acknowledge that we could also pull data from State or contractor
websites to create a central Federal repository; however, we intend our
initial focus to be on establishing the new payment rate transparency,
comparative payment rate analysis, and payment rate disclosure
requirements; providing States with support during the compliance
period; and ensuring these data are available to beneficiaries,
providers, CMS, and other interested parties for the purposes of
assessing access to care issues. Additionally, we believe that the
States, as stewards of Medicaid payment rate information in each of
their Medicaid programs, are the party in the best position to publish
and analyze their own payment rate information. States' ownership of
payment rate information will ensure accurate payment rate transparency
publications, comparative payment rate analyses, and payment rate
disclosures. Given that our work to better ensure access in the
Medicaid program is ongoing, we intend to gain implementation
experience with this final rule, and we will consider the
recommendations provided on the proposed rule to help inform any future
rulemaking in this area, as appropriate.
While we appreciate the suggestion to utilize existing data
collection tools, specifically the State of the Workforce Survey, we
will not be relying on the State of the Workforce Survey because the
data do not include all States, the District of Columbia, and the
Territories (2021 Survey only sourced data from 28 States and the
District of Columbia);), account for payment rate variation by
population (pediatric and adult), provider type, and geographical
location (2021 Survey only includes mean starting wage, the median
starting wage, as well as the minimum and maximum starting hourly
wages); or include individual providers (2021 Survey only sourced data
from provider agencies). Accordingly, it would not be a sufficient data
source to meet the requirements for the payment rate disclosure as
finalized in this final rule.
Comment: We received some comments about CMS requiring States to
change their payment rates. A couple of commenters requested CMS
require States to change their payment rates when deficiencies are
identified through the payment rate transparency publication,
comparative payment rate analysis, or payment rate disclosure; when
provider shortages are documented; and when reimbursement or payment
rates fall below a certain threshold, such as 50 percent of the
corresponding Medicare payment rate; however, most commenters who
suggested CMS set a threshold did not
[[Page 40683]]
suggest a specific number for the threshold. One commenter specifically
asked if CMS would require States to increase institutional service
payment rates. The commenter was concerned that an increase in a direct
care worker's Medicaid hourly rate, without a corresponding increase in
a Medicaid payment rate for institutional services, would result in
fewer hours of care able to be delivered. We received one comment
requesting CMS to expressly permit States to pay more than Medicare for
services furnished through the FFS system. Additionally, one commenter
expressed caution that increasing payment rate transparency does not
necessarily ensure access to care or coverage of services in Medicaid.
Response: To clarify, the provisions in this final rule do not
require States to change their payment rates. Although we intend for
States to consider the information produced for the payment rate
transparency publication, comparative payment rate analysis, and
payment rate disclosure in an ongoing process of evaluating the State's
payment rate sufficiency and when considering changing payment rates or
methodologies (and we intend to make similar use of the information in
performing our oversight activities and in making payment SPA approval
decisions), we did not propose and are not finalizing that any payment
rate changes necessarily would be triggered by the proposed
requirements.
Specifically, we did not propose, nor are we finalizing, a
requirement that States must increase their institutional or non-
institutional service payment rates through this final rule. Based on
the information provided by the commenter (and without additional
information about providers, such as, number of providers in a State or
number of provider accepting new patients or accepting Medicaid), we
understand the concerns raised to generally be an issue with a State's
limitations on service coverage (that is, a coverage limit of $1,000/
month limit on institutional services is insufficient for the amount of
care required). While we do not have the authority to require States to
change their Medicaid payment rates, we remind States that the Medicaid
program is a Federal-State partnership and States have the flexibility
and responsibility to set payment rates that are consistent with
efficiency, economy, quality of care, and access as required by section
1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act and a coverage limit could be inconsistent
with this standard. We encourage the commenter to utilize the public
process procedures described in Sec. 447.204 to raise these concerns
with their State. We also did not propose and are not finalizing a
regulatory change that explicitly permits States to pay more than
Medicare for services furnished through the FFS system. We acknowledge
that existing UPL requirements limit Medicaid payments to a reasonable
estimate of what Medicare would have paid.\185\ However, outside of the
services subject to UPL requirements limiting aggregate State Medicaid
payment amounts, as the Medicaid program is a Federal-State
partnership, States have the flexibility and responsibility to set
payment rates that are consistent with efficiency, economy, and quality
of care as required by section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act. Currently,
States can set FFS payment rates that are more than Medicare for
numerous services, provided any applicable aggregate UPL is satisfied,
and creating an explicit permission in regulation would not change the
existing flexibilities States have in setting their payment rates.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\185\ Sec. 447.272 for inpatient hospitals, Sec. 447.321 for
outpatient hospitals and clinic services, Sec. 447.325 for other
inpatient and outpatient facilities (nursing facilities,
intermediate care facilities for the developmentally disabled (ICF/
DD), psychiatric residential treatment facilities (PRTF), and
institutions for mental disease (IMDs).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We understand the commenter's concerns that increasing payment rate
transparency does not necessarily ensure access to care or coverage of
services in Medicaid. We acknowledged in the proposed rule that there
may be other causes of access to care issues outside of provider
payment rates, such as beneficiaries experiencing difficulty scheduling
behavioral health care appointments due to a provider shortage where
the overall number of behavioral health providers within a State is not
sufficient to meet the demands of the general population.\186\ However,
we believe it is important to address one of the potential causes of
access to care issues: payment rates that are not sufficient to enlist
an adequate supply of providers as required by section 1902(a)(30)(A)
of the Act. Given that our work to better ensure access in the Medicaid
program is ongoing, we intend to gain implementation experience with
this final rule, and we will consider additional areas of access to
care outside of payment rates to help inform any future rulemaking to
promote improved access to care, as appropriate.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\186\ 88 FR 27960 at 28016.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Comment: A number of commenters requested CMS provide States with
guidance, templates, tools, examples, or descriptions of acceptable
forms for publishing the payment rates, comparative payment rate
analysis, and payment rate disclosure to ensure States understand how
to comply with these provisions. A few commenters requested guidance on
specific aspects of provisions of the proposed rule: accessible web
pages and accounting for additional ways payment rates can vary (such
as site of service and patient acuity). Those commenters also noted
that some States use value-based payment (VBP) methodologies and
requested guidance on how the various provisions of the proposed rule
has accounted for these payment methodologies. Additionally, a couple
of commenters suggested CMS provide guidance to the public to ensure
the newly published data are understandable.
Response: Prior to the effective date of this final rule, we will
issue subregulatory guidance including a hypothetical example list of
the E/M CPT/HCPCS codes that would be subject to the comparative
payment rate analysis, if the comparative rate analysis requirements
were applicable with respect to payment rates in effect for CY 2023;
illustrative examples of compliant payment rate transparency,
comparative payment rate analysis, and payment rate disclosure
publications (including to meet accessibility standards); and a
template to support completion of the additional State rate analysis
under Sec. 447.203(c)(2). We encourage States to review the
subregulatory guidance to be issued prior to the effective date of this
final rule and reach out to CMS for technical guidance regarding
compliance with the comparative payment rate analysis and any other
requirement of this final rule.
We are only requiring the payment rate transparency publication,
comparative payment rate analysis, and payment rate disclosure include
payment rate breakdowns by population (pediatric and adult), provider
type, and geographical location, as applicable. Payment rate variations
by site of service are not required, but States have flexibility to
include this optional payment rate break down in the payment rate
transparency publication. While not required in this final rule, should
a State opt to breakdown their payment rates by site of service, the
State should use the minimum payment amount for purposes of the
requirements of Sec. 447.203(b), because a provider is assured to
receive at least this amount for furnishing the service at any site of
service. At State option, the State could also include additional
payment rate breakdowns a provider might receive at other sites of
service in the State (for example: office, inpatient hospital, school,
mobile unit, urgent
[[Page 40684]]
care facility, nursing facility). We did not propose or finalize in
this rule a requirement for States to include a payment rate breakdown
for site of services because we want our initial focus to be on
establishing the new payment rate transparency, comparative payment
rate analysis, and payment rate disclosure requirements, providing
States with support during the compliance period, and ensuring the data
required under this final rule are available to beneficiaries,
providers, CMS, and other interested parties for the purpose of
assessing access to care issues. We believe that payment rate
breakdowns by population (pediatric and adult), provider type, and
geographical location will provide a sufficient amount of transparency
to ensure that interested parties have basic information available to
them to understand Medicaid payment levels and the associated effects
of payment rates on access to care so that they may raise concerns to
State Medicaid agencies via the various forms of public processes
available to interested parties.
Additionally, payment rate variations based on patient acuity are
also not explicitly required in the payment rate transparency
publication. Payment adjustments for patient acuity generally are
limited to institutional settings (for example, inpatient hospitals and
nursing facilities). Should a State opt to breakdown their payment
rates by patient acuity, to the State should use the minimum payment
amount for purposes of the requirements of Sec. 447.203(b), because a
provider is assured to receive at least this amount for furnishing the
service to any patient. At State option, the State could also include
additional payment rate breakdowns the provider might receive for other
levels of patient acuity. We also acknowledge that prospective payment
system rates, such as Medicare's Patient Driven Payment Model (PDPM)
for nursing facilities and inpatient prospective payment system (IPPS)
for inpatient hospitals, typically account for patient acuity. As
further discussed in a later response to comments in this section, PPS
rates for inpatient hospital, outpatient hospital, and nursing facility
services that are paid to most hospitals and nursing facilities and are
payments based on a predetermined, fixed amount are subject to the
payment rate transparency provision in this final rule. This is because
these PPS rates are typically known in advance of a provider delivering
a service to a beneficiary and fall into the scope of a Medicaid FFS
fee schedule payment rate within the meaning of this final rule, as
discussed in a later response to comments in this section.
We understand the commenters' concerns about ensuring the various
payment rate transparency publications of this final rule are
understandable to the public. We expect State publications of Medicaid
payment rate transparency information, comparative payment rate
analysis, and payment rate disclosures that comply with the
requirements of this final rule to be transparent and clearly
understandable to beneficiaries, providers, CMS, and other interested
parties. Therefore, we do not anticipate a need for guidance for the
public at this time, but we will continue to assess once the
requirements are in effect.
Comment: A couple of commenters suggested CMS conduct provider
shortage assessments and engage providers, beneficiary advocacy
organizations, direct service workers, caregivers, and other relevant
interested parties in the data collection and analysis processes in the
proposed rule and create a Federal-level public comment process within
the CMS review of SPAs and HCBS waiver applications or renewals.
Response: We appreciate the commenters' suggestions; however, we
did not propose to conduct provider shortage assessments, or to engage
with interested parties in the data collection and analysis processes
outside of the work of the interested parties' advisory group in Sec.
447.203(b)(6). After obtaining implementation experience of these new
policies, we will keep these suggestions in mind as we consider whether
additional requirements may be appropriate to propose through future
rulemaking.
Comment: One commenter suggested CMS consider future rulemaking to
require States survey HCBS participants and their support systems to
identify additional access issues and perceived causes, with a
particular focus on assessing access related to unpaid and paid
support. The commenter provided an example of a parent of an adult
child providing a significant number of hours, both paid and unpaid,
which the commenter suggested could be an indicator that the family
cannot find a qualified provider for the services.
Response: We appreciate the commenter's suggestion. Given that our
work to better ensure access in the Medicaid program is ongoing, we
intend to gain implementation experience with this final rule, and we
will consider the recommendations provided on the proposed rule to help
inform any future rulemaking in this area, as appropriate.
Comment: One commenter questioned the relationship between higher
payment rates in FFS and higher rates of accepting new Medicaid
patients, as well as the potential for affecting rates across payers
and delivery systems, noting that even if the State raise the rates for
the Medicaid FFS that does not mean that Medicaid or Medicare managed
care plans, including managed care plans for individuals dually
eligible for both Medicare and Medicaid, also will raise their provider
payment rates. The commenter noted that raising the rates for Medicaid
FFS does not mean that the State will ensure that the managed care
plans operating in the State also pay higher rates, noting that
practitioners are less likely to accept Medicaid if the managed care
plans do not raise payment rates to align when FFS rates have been
increased.
Response: We appreciate the views of the commenter. The provisions
of Sec. 447.203(c) only apply to Medicaid FFS, and do not apply to
Medicaid managed care plans. Requirements for Medicaid managed care are
discussed in the Medicaid Managed Care final rule (as published
elsewhere in this Federal Register). Payment rates that managed care
plans pay to providers are not required to be set at the Medicaid FFS
rate levels as managed care is a risk-based arrangement whereby States
pay managed care plans prospective capitation rates, and plans contract
with network providers and negotiate provider payment rates. Managed
care plans have their own access to care requirements, including the
network adequacy requirements in 42 CFR 438.68. Managed care plan
capitation rates are subject to actuarial soundness requirements at
Sec. 438.4.
1. Fully Fee-For-Service States
We solicited comments on whether additional access standards for
States with a fully FFS delivery system may be appropriate. Because the
timeliness standards of the proposed Medicaid and Children's Health
Insurance Program Managed Care Access, Finance, and Quality proposed
rule (Managed Care proposed rule) at Sec. 438.68 would not apply to
any care delivery in such States, we stated that we were considering
whether a narrow application of timeliness standards to fully FFS
States that closely mirrored the proposed appointment wait time
standards, secret shopper survey requirements, and publication
requirements (as applied to outpatient mental health and substance use
disorder, adult and pediatric; primary care, adult and pediatric;
obstetrics and gynecology; and an additional type of
[[Page 40685]]
service determined by the State) in that rule might be appropriate.
Given that timeliness standards would apply directly to States, we also
solicited comments on a potentially appropriate method for CMS to
collect data demonstrating that States meet the established standards
at least 90 percent of the time.
In developing the proposed rule, with respect to FFS, our intent
and focus was on replacing the previous AMRP process. While we saw
value in discussing and seeking public input on timeliness standards
for fully FFS States that would mirror those proposed in the Managed
Care proposed rule, creating additional alignment between the delivery
systems, we were mindful of the volume of proposed changes that would
require State resources for implementation. Therefore, we chose to
maintain our goal with the FFS provisions of this access rule to
replace the previous AMRP process, and we believed that timeliness
standards were better suited to a larger, ongoing access strategy, to
be considered and proposed in future rulemaking. Nevertheless, we saw
value in gauging the appetite for CMS to adopt timeliness standards in
fully FFS States, and as such included a short section about the
possibility of those standards in the fully FFS context in the proposed
rule. Although we are not finalizing any FFS timeliness standards in
this final rule, we intend to propose them in future rulemaking,
informed by the comments received on this discussion in the proposed
rule. Additionally, by keeping this current rulemaking focused on
replacing the previous AMRP process and not implementing FFS timeliness
standards at this time, we afford ourselves an opportunity to observe
and learn from those standards being established in managed care (and
in the marketplace). Those experiences will provide greater insights
into how to best propose these standards in FFS and provide time to
engage with interested parties on how we might best include newly
proposed FFS timeliness standards in existing requirements, including
those we are finalizing in this rule, mitigating unnecessary burden on
States.
We received public comments in response to this request for
comment. The following is a summary of the comments we received and our
responses.
Comment: Several commenters noted general support for timeliness
standards for fully FFS States. Generally, these commenters agreed that
there is value in aligning access monitoring strategies across delivery
systems so that all Medicaid beneficiaries would benefit from a new
policy, and that these standards could improve access by confirming
whether beneficiaries are actually able to access care in a timely
manner. Some commenters had suggestions if CMS were to adopt timeliness
standards in FFS, such as phasing in the requirements over time or by
service, collecting information on geographic variations in wait times,
and either applying the standards to all FFS programs or allowing
exception for States with minimal covered services delivered through
FFS. Others cited concerns that they would want a future proposal to
address, such as establishing protections for providers who do not have
direct control over their scheduling. Commenters varied on whether they
believed providers should have to perform any additional work to meet
new standards, with one requesting that providers, not just States, be
held accountable for outcomes based on these standards, while another
commenter wanted to ensure these requirements would not add any burden
on providers. One commenter suggested including provider surveys in
addition to participant surveys.
Response: We appreciate the support expressed by a number of
commenters for the concept of applying timeliness standards in fully
FFS delivery systems as a further means to ensure beneficiary access to
covered services. We are also grateful for the suggestions that will
allow us to formulate future proposed rulemaking that considers various
needs and concerns. We note that the request for comment was with
respect to fully FFS States (that deliver no services through managed
care), but we will consider for future rulemaking whether to expand on
that limit, for example, applying standards to States that cover only a
small number of services through managed care delivery, to apply them
to FFS generally, or to maintain the focus on fully FFS States. We
intend to use the experience of the managed care plans and the States
implementing timeliness requirements to assess things like a phased-in
approach, or whether such standards should be proposed for FFS delivery
systems in non-fully FFS States.
Comment: We received a number of comments expressing general
opposition to establishing timeliness standards for services delivered
on a FFS basis, particularly in the context of implementing them
simultaneously with the other access provisions in the proposed rule.
These commenters expressed concern about the burden, both in time and
cost, of establishing the necessary administrative infrastructure to
meet timeliness requirements as well as the requirements proposed in
the proposed rule. One commenter suggested CMS explore how these areas
could be better monitored using existing data collections and
processes. Another pointed out the differences in available resources
between managed care and FFS, such as increased matching rates
associated with managed care External Quality Review that does not
exist with respect to FFS Medicaid, making FFS timeliness standards
more cost prohibitive to implement. Another commenter pointed out that
in FFS delivery systems, States would not know whether wait time issues
identified through monitoring were specific to Medicaid or whether
similar wait time issues were encountered by other patients with other
payers.
Response: We understand the concerns about burden on States, and
for that reason we limited the proposed rule and are only finalizing
provisions that, generally, serve to replace the previous AMRP process.
We see value in the oversight and positive program outcomes that could
be achieved through proposing and implementing FFS timeliness standards
in the future, and also understand there will be differences between
managed care and FFS that create unique issues to address in any future
proposal. For example, there are differences in how providers interact
with plans in a managed care system versus how they interact with the
State Medicaid agency in a FFS system. There are also differences in
the idea of a ``network'' between these delivery models that may impact
how we would assess network adequacy. We will explore how we can best
support States with the administrative burden, and how we can establish
standards that identify problems unique to providing services to
Medicaid beneficiaries.
Comment: Many commenters expressed support for specific aspects of
our request, such as for establishing wait time standards in a FFS
delivery system or utilizing secret shopper surveys for oversight.
These commenters generally pointed to the access improvements such
standards can provide, as they would highlight where there are
deficiencies in finding available providers. One commenter shared
personal experience of longer wait times as a Medicaid beneficiary than
those experienced by non-Medicaid enrollees. One commenter shared
suggestions regarding which benefit categories needed more focus, both
for oversight and in length of wait times, and this commenter along
with a couple others encouraged CMS to align with the Health Insurance
[[Page 40686]]
Marketplace[supreg].\187\ Another commenter cautioned that provider
shortages must be addressed as part of the overall access strategy.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\187\ Health Insurance Marketplace[supreg] is a registered
service mark of the US Department of Health & Human Services.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Response: We appreciate hearing from commenters on the specifics of
the timeliness standards request for comments, as we hope to use this
feedback to inform and enhance a future set of proposals. We also fully
intend to include lessons from the experience of the marketplace and
Medicaid managed care in proposing these future standards for the FFS
delivery system and will continue to engage with interested parties
between now and when we undertake future rulemaking on this topic. We
agree that provider shortages present a challenge to access and the
efficacy of wait time standards, and we will examine how best to
acknowledge that reality while holding States and providers to
appropriate standards.
Comment: Several commenters opposed the specific standards listed
in our request for comment. One encouraged CMS to achieve its access
goals through a focus on payment adequacy rather than wait times.
Similarly, another requested CMS allow States to provide verification
and assurances of sufficient access through other, existing data
collection mechanisms. Another stated wait time standards that do not
account for differences in provider availability, as in whether there
are sufficient providers in a geographic area to meet the standards
based on the beneficiary population in that area, would not achieve the
desired effect of increasing access. One commenter expressed that a
secret survey process would be duplicative of existing directory review
processes already undertaken by States and would also force States to
switch vendors from an existing outside entity performing the role, and
stated CMS should instead allow States to continue with current
practices that achieve a similar purpose. Another questioned the data
integrity of a secret survey approach to oversight, stating there are
inherent challenges in collecting consistent information.
Response: We intend to make every effort to utilize existing
processes and to mitigate duplication wherever possible when we propose
FFS timeliness standards in the future. However, we are exploring
proposing these standards because, in our view, appointment wait time
maximums and secret shopper surveys may provide for unique and valuable
oversight of access that we may wish to propose in the future. As
stated previously, in this rule we prioritized a replacement for an
existing rate-based process, but our evaluation and enhancement of
means to ensure beneficiary access will be ongoing. We will utilize
lessons learned from the implementation of timeliness standards under
managed care to inform our future FFS proposals.
Comment: Some commenters were unclear as to whether CMS was
proposing to implement the timeliness standards for fully FFS States as
proposed in the Managed Care proposed rule. One commenter was concerned
how and when CMS would communicate to States that these requirements
had taken effect. Another pointed out specifically that CMS had
included preamble language without including proposed regulatory text
or burden estimates, which they noted would be significant. The
commenter was concerned that the public had not been afforded a
meaningful opportunity for notice and comment.
Response: We apologize for the confusion experienced by some as to
whether this section of the rule was intended as a proposed policy.
This discussion in the proposed rule was a request for comment, not a
proposed policy. We intend to propose these timeliness standards under
FFS in future rulemaking, affording States and other interested parties
the ability to examine a complete proposal and provide comments that we
would consider in a subsequent finalization decision. We are not
finalizing any timeliness standards for FFS delivery systems in this
final rule.
2. Documentation of Access to Care and Service Payment Rates (Sec.
447.203(b))
We proposed to rescind Sec. 447.203(b) in its entirety and replace
it with new requirements to ensure FFS Medicaid payment rate adequacy,
including a new process to promote payment rate transparency. This new
proposed process would require States to publish their FFS Medicaid
payment rates in a clearly accessible, public location on the State's
website, as described later in this section. Then, for certain
services, States would be required to conduct a comparative payment
rate analysis between the States' Medicaid payment rates and Medicare
rates or provide a payment rate disclosure for certain HCBS that would
permit CMS to develop and publish HCBS payment benchmark data.
a. Payment Rate Transparency Sec. 447.203(b)(1)
In paragraph (b)(1), we proposed to require the State agency to
publish all Medicaid FFS payment rates on a website developed and
maintained by the single State agency that is accessible to the general
public. We proposed that published Medicaid FFS payment rates would
include fee schedule payment rates made to providers delivering
Medicaid services to Medicaid beneficiaries through a FFS delivery
system. We also proposed to require that the website be easily reached
from a hyperlink on the State Medicaid agency's website.
Within this payment rate publication, we proposed that FFS Medicaid
payment rates must be organized in such a way that a member of the
public can readily determine the amount that Medicaid would pay for the
service and, in the case of a bundled or similar payment methodology,
identify each constituent service included within the rate and how much
of the bundled payment is allocated to each constituent service under
the State's methodology. We also proposed that, if the rates vary, the
State must separately identify the Medicaid FFS payment rates by
population (pediatric and adult), provider type, and geographical
location, as applicable.
We noted that longstanding legal requirements to provide effective
communication with individuals with disabilities and the obligation to
take reasonable steps to provide meaningful access to individuals with
limited English proficiency also apply to the State's website
containing Medicaid FFS payment rate information. Under Title II of the
Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990, section 504 of the
Rehabilitation Act, section 1557 of the Affordable Care Act, and
implementing regulations, qualified individuals with disabilities may
not be excluded from participation in, or denied the benefits of any
programs or activities of the covered entity, or otherwise be subjected
to discrimination by any covered entity, on the basis of disability,
and programs must be accessible to people with disabilities.\188\
Individuals with disabilities are entitled to communication that is as
effective as communication for people without disabilities, including
through the provision of auxiliary aids and services.\189\ Section 1557
of the Affordable Care Act requires recipients of Federal financial
assistance, including State Medicaid programs, to take reasonable steps
to provide
[[Page 40687]]
meaningful access to their health programs or activities for
individuals with limited English proficiency, which may include the
provision of interpreting services and translations when
reasonable.\190\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\188\ 29 U.S.C. 794; 42 U.S.C. 18116(a); 42 U.S.C. 12132; 28 CFR
35.130(a); 45 CFR 84.4 (a); 45 CFR 92.2(b).
\189\ 28 CFR 35.160; 45 CFR 92.102; see also 45 CFR 84.52(d).
\190\ 45 CFR 92.101; see also https://www.hhs.gov/civil-rights/for-providers/laws-regulations-guidance/guidance-federal-financial-assistance-title-vi/.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We proposed that for States that pay varying Medicaid FFS payment
rates by population (pediatric and adult), provider type, and
geographical location, as applicable, those States would need to
separately identify their Medicaid FFS payment rates in the payment
rate transparency publication by each grouping or multiple groupings,
when applicable to a State's program. In the event rates vary according
to these factors, as later discussed in this final rule, our intent is
that a member of the public be readily able to determine the payment
amount that will be made, accounting for all relevant circumstances.
For example, a State that varies their Medicaid FFS payment rates by
population may pay for a service identified by code 99202 when provided
to a child at a rate of $110.00 and when provided to an adult at a rate
of $80.00. Because the Medicaid FFS payment rates vary based on
population, both of these Medicaid FFS payment rates would need to be
included separately as Medicaid FFS payment rates for 99202 in the
State's payment rate transparency publication. As another example, a
State that varies their Medicaid FFS payment rates by provider type may
pay for 99202 when delivered by a physician at a rate of $50.00, and
when delivered by a nurse practitioner or physician assistant at a rate
of $45.00.
In the proposed rule, we acknowledged that we are aware that some
State plans include language that non-physician practitioners (NPPs),
such as a nurse practitioner or physician assistant, are paid a
percentage of the State's fee schedule rate. Because the Medicaid FFS
payment rates vary by provider type, both of the Medicaid FFS payment
rates in both situations (fee schedule rates of $50.00 and $45.00)
would need to be separately identified as Medicaid FFS payment rates
for 99202 in the State's payment rate transparency publication,
regardless of whether the State has individually specified each amount
certain in its approved payment schedule or has State plan language
specifying the nurse practitioner or physician assistant rate as a
percentage of the physician rate. Additionally, for example, a State
that varies their Medicaid FFS payment rates by geographical location
may pay for 99202 delivered in a rural area at a rate of $70, in an
urban or non-rural area as a rate of $60, and in a major metropolitan
area as a rate of $50. We are also aware that States may vary their
Medicaid FFS payment rates by geographical location by zip code, by
metropolitan or micropolitan areas, or other geographical location
breakdowns determined by the State. Because the Medicaid FFS payment
rates vary based on geographical location, all Medicaid FFS payment
rates based on geographical location would need to be included
separately as Medicaid FFS payment rates for 99202 in the State's
payment rate transparency publication.
For a State that varies its Medicaid FFS payment rates by any
combination of these groupings, then the payment rate transparency
publication would be required to reflect these multiple groupings. For
example, the State would be required to separately identify the rate
for a physician billing 99202 provided to a child in a rural area, the
rate for a nurse practitioner billing 99202 provided to a child in a
rural area, the rate for a physician billing 99202 provided to an adult
in a rural area, the rate for a nurse practitioner billing 99202
provided to an adult in a rural area, the rate for a physician billing
99202 provided to a child in an urban area, the rate for a nurse
practitioner billing 99202 provided to a child in an urban area, and so
on. We proposed that this information would be required to be presented
clearly so that a member of the public can readily determine the
payment rate for a service that would be paid for each grouping or
combination of groupings (population (pediatric and adult), provider
type, and geographical location), as applicable. We acknowledged that
States may also pay a single Statewide rate regardless of population
(pediatric and adult), provider type, and geographical location, and as
such would only need to list the single Statewide rate in their payment
rate transparency publication.
We acknowledged that there may be additional burden associated with
our proposal that the payment rate transparency publication include a
payment rate breakdown by population (pediatric and adult), provider
type, and geographical location, as applicable, when States' Medicaid
FFS payment rates vary based on these groupings. Despite the additional
burden, we noted our belief that the additional level of granularity in
the payment rate transparency publication is important for ensuring
compliance with section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act, given State Medicaid
programs rely on multiple provider types to deliver similar services to
Medicaid beneficiaries of all ages, across multiple Medicaid benefit
categories, throughout each area of each State.
We further proposed that Medicaid FFS payment rates published under
the proposed payment rate transparency requirement would only include
fee schedule payment rates made to providers delivering Medicaid
services to Medicaid beneficiaries through a FFS delivery system. To
ensure maximum transparency in the case of a bundled fee schedule
payment rate or rate determined by a similar payment methodology where
a single payment rate is used to pay for multiple services, we proposed
that the State must identify each constituent service included in the
bundled fee schedule payment rate or rate determined by a similar
payment methodology. We also proposed that the State must identify how
much of the bundled fee schedule payment rate or rate determined by a
similar payment methodology is allocated to each constituent service
under the State's payment methodology. For example, if a State's fee
schedule lists a bundled fee schedule rate that pays for day treatment
under the rehabilitation benefit and the following services are
included in the day treatment bundle: community based psychiatric
rehabilitation and support services, individual therapy, and group
therapy, then the State would need to identify community based
psychiatric rehabilitation and support services, individual therapy,
and group therapy separately and each portion of the bundled fee
schedule payment rate for day treatment that is allocated to community
based psychiatric rehabilitation and support services, individual
therapy, and group therapy. We proposed to require States identify the
portion of the bundled fee that is allocable to each constituent
service included in the bundled fee schedule payment rate, which would
add an additional level of granularity to the payment rate transparency
publication to enable a member of the public to readily be able to
determine the payment amount that would be made for a service,
accounting for all relevant circumstances, including the payment rates
for each constituent service within a bundle and as a standalone
service. We also proposed to require that the website be easily reached
from a hyperlink to ensure transparency of payment rate information is
available to beneficiaries, providers, CMS, and other interested
parties.
In the proposed rule, we proposed the initial publication of
Medicaid FFS
[[Page 40688]]
payment rates would occur no later than January 1, 2026, and include
approved Medicaid FFS payment rates in effect as of that date, January
1, 2026. We proposed this timeframe to provide States with at least 2
years from the possible effective date of the final rule, if this
proposal were finalized, to comply with the payment rate transparency
requirement. We explained that the proposed timeframe would initially
set a consistent baseline for all States to first publish their payment
rate transparency information and then set a clear schedule for States
to update their payment rates based on the cadence of the individual
States' payment rate changes.
We noted that the same initial publication due date for all States
to publish their payment rates would promote comparability between
States' payment rate transparency publications. In proposing an initial
due date applicable to all States, we reasoned that, once States would
begin making updates to their payment rate transparency publications,
there would be a clear distinction between States that have recently
updated their payment rates and States that have long maintained the
same payment rates. For example, say two States initially publish their
payment rates for E/M CPT code 99202 (office or outpatient visit for a
new patient) at $50. One State annually increases its payment rate by 5
percent over the next 2 years, and would update its payment rate
transparency publication accordingly in 2027 with a payment rate of
$52.50, then in 2028 with a payment rate of $55.13, while the other
State's payment rate for the same service remains at $50 in 2027 and
2028. The transparency of a State's recent payment rates including the
date the payment rates were last updated on the State Medicaid agency's
website, as discussed later, as well as the ability to compare payment
rates between States on accessible and easily reachable websites,
highlights how the proposed payment rate transparency would help to
ensure that Medicaid payment rate information is available to
beneficiaries, providers, CMS, and other interested parties for the
purposes of assessing access to care issues to better ensure compliance
with section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act.
We also proposed that the initial publication include approved
Medicaid FFS payment rates in effect as of January 1, 2026. We proposed
this language to narrow the scope of the publication to CMS-approved
payment rates and methodologies, thereby excluding any rate changes for
which a SPA or similar amendment request is pending CMS review or
approval. SPAs are submitted throughout the year, can include
retroactive effective dates, and are subject to a CMS review period
that varies in duration.191 192
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\191\ In accordance with 42 CFR 430.20, an approved SPA can be
effective no earlier than the first day of the calendar quarter in
which an approvable amendment is submitted. For example, a SPA
submitted on September 30th can be retroactively effective to July
1st.
\192\ In accordance with 42 CFR 430.16, a SPA will be considered
approved unless CMS, within 90 days after submission, requests
additional information or disapproves the SPA. When additional
information is requested by CMS and the State has respond to the
request, CMS will then have another 90 days to either approve,
disapprove, and request the State withdraw the SPA or the State's
response to the request for additional information. This review
period includes two 90-day review periods plus additional time when
CMS has requested additional information which can result is a wide
variety of approval timeframes.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As discussed later in this final rule regarding paragraph (b)(2)
and (b)(3), we encouraged States to use the proposed payment rate
transparency publication as a source of Medicaid payment rate data for
compliance with the paragraph (b)(3)(i)(B) proposed comparative payment
rate analysis and paragraph (b)(3)(ii)(B) proposed payment rate
disclosure requirements. However, we noted that the comparative payment
rate analysis and payment rate disclosure requirements would look to
rates in effect one year before the publication of the required
analysis or disclosure. We include a more in-depth discussion of the
timeframes for publication of the comparative payment rate analysis and
payment rate disclosure in paragraph (b)(4) later in this final rule,
where we note that the 1-year shift in timeframe is necessitated by the
timing of when Medicare publishes their payment rates in November and
the rates taking effect on January 1, leaving insufficient time for CMS
to publish the code list for States to use for the comparative payment
rate analysis and for States develop and publish their comparative
payment rate analysis by January 1. We noted that the ongoing payment
transparency publication requirements would allow the public to view
readily available, current Medicaid payment rates at all times, even if
slightly older Medicaid payment rate information must be used for
comparative payment rate analyses due to the cadence of Medicare
payment rate changes as well as the payment rate disclosure. We are
cognizant that the payment rate disclosure does not depend on the
availability of Medicare payment rates; however, we proposed to provide
States with the same amount of time to comply with both the proposed
comparative payment rate analysis and payment rate disclosure
requirements.
We stated that, if this proposal were finalized at a time that
would not allow for States to have a period of at least 2 years between
the effective date of the final rule and the proposed January 1, 2026,
due date for the initial publication of Medicaid FFS payment rates,
then we proposed an alternative date of July 1, 2026, for the initial
publication of Medicaid FFS payment rates and for the initial
publication to include approved Medicaid FFS payment rates as of that
date, July 1, 2026. This shift would allow more than 2 years from the
effective date of this final rule for States to comply with the payment
rate transparency requirements.
We proposed to require the that the single State agency include the
date the payment rates were last updated on the State Medicaid agency's
website. We also proposed to require that the single State agency
ensure that Medicaid FFS payment rates are kept current where any
necessary updates to the State fee schedules made no later than 1 month
following the date of CMS approval of the SPA, section 1915(c) HCBS
waiver, or similar amendment revising the provider payment rate or
methodology. Finally, in paragraph (b)(1), we proposed that, in the
event of a payment rate change that occurs in accordance with a
previously approved rate methodology, the State would be required to
update its payment rate transparency publication no later than 1 month
after the effective date of the most recent update to the payment rate.
This provision is intended to capture Medicaid FFS payment rate changes
that occur because of previously approved SPAs containing payment rate
methodologies. For example, if a State sets its Medicaid payment rates
for Durable Medical Equipment, Prosthetics, Orthotics and Supplies
(DMEPOS) at a percentage of the most recent Medicare fee schedule rate,
then the State's payment rate would change when Medicare adopts a new
fee schedule rate through the quarterly publications of the Medicare
DMEPOS fee schedule, unless otherwise specified in the approved State
plan methodology that the State implements a specific quarterly
publication, for example, the most recent April Medicare DMEPOS fee
schedule. Therefore, the State's Medicaid FFS payment rate
automatically updates when Medicare publishes a new fee schedule,
without the submission of a SPA because the State's methodology pays a
percentage of the most recent State plan-specified Medicare fee
schedule rate. In this example, the State would need to
[[Page 40689]]
update its Medicaid FFS payment rates in the payment rate transparency
publication no later than 1 month after the effective date of the most
recent update to the Medicare fee schedule payment rate made applicable
under the approved State plan payment methodology.
While there is no current Federal requirement for States to
consistently publish their rates in a publicly accessible manner, we
noted our awareness that most States already publish at least some of
their payment rates through FFS rate schedules on State agency
websites. Currently, rate information may not be easily obtained from
each State's website in its current publication form, making it
difficult to understand the amounts that States pay providers for items
and services furnished to Medicaid beneficiaries and to compare
Medicaid payment rates to other health care payer rates or across
States. However, through this proposal, we sought to ensure all States
do so in a format that is publicly accessible and where all Medicaid
FFS payment rates can be easily located and understood. The new
transparency requirements under this final rule help to ensure that
interested parties have access to updated payment rate schedules and
can conduct analyses that would provide insights into how State
Medicaid payment rates compare to, for example, Medicare payment rates
and other States' Medicaid payment rates. The policy intends to help
ensure that payments are transparent and clearly understandable to
beneficiaries, providers, CMS, and other interested parties. We
solicited comments on the proposed requirement for States to publish
their Medicaid FFS payment rates for all services paid on a fee
schedule, the proposed structure for Medicaid FFS payment rate
transparency publication on the State's website, and the timing of the
publication of and updates to the State's Medicaid FFS payment rates
for the proposed payment rate transparency requirements in Sec.
447.203(b)(1).
We received public comments on these provisions. The following is a
summary of the comments we received and our responses.
Comment: Commenters overwhelmingly supported the proposed payment
rate transparency provision at Sec. [thinsp]447.203(b)(1) in its
entirety. A couple of commenters specifically expressed support for
ensuring the State's website where the payment rate transparency is
published is fully accessible and provides meaningful access for
individuals with limited English proficiency. Additionally, a couple of
commenters stated that their State already publishes their fee
schedules as proposed by the payment rate transparency requirements.
However, a couple of commenters expressed opposition to the
proposed payment rate transparency provision in its entirety.
Commenters in opposition stated the proposed payment rate transparency
requirements would be administratively burdensome for States and that
the payment rate transparency publication would not result in a
meaningful access analysis. One commenter questioned CMS' authority to
require States to publish their payment rates because section
1902(a)(30) of the Act does not explicitly grant CMS this authority.
Response: We thank the commenters for their support of the proposed
payment rate transparency provision at Sec. [thinsp]447.203(b)(1). We
are finalizing the payment rate transparency provisions by adding and
deleting regulatory language for clarification, making minor revisions
to the organizational structure, updating the required timeframe for
compliance and for updating payment rates after SPA or other payment
authority approval, and incorporating a technical change to account for
States submitting SPAs with prospective effective dates. We list and
describe the specific revisions we made to the regulatory language for
the payment rate transparency provision at Sec. [thinsp]447.203(b)(1)
at the end of this section of responses to comments. The policies in
this final rule allow flexibility that we believe will allow some
States to use existing fee schedule publications for compliance, and we
expect additional States will only need minor revisions. We encourage
States that already publish their fee schedules to review the final
regulatory language and reach out to CMS with any questions regarding
compliance.
We disagree with the commenters regarding administrative burden of
the payment rate transparency publication. As documented in section
III. of this final rule, the FFS provisions, including the payment rate
transparency, comparative payment rate analysis, and payment rate
disclosure requirements (Sec. [thinsp]447.203(b)(1) through (5)),
interested parties' advisory group requirements (Sec.
[thinsp]447.203(b)(6)), and State analysis procedures for payment rate
reductions or payment restructuring (Sec. [thinsp]447.203(c)),
finalized in this rule are expected to result in a net burden reduction
on States compared to the previous AMRP requirements. Additionally, as
addressed in another comment response generally discussing commenters'
concerns about State burden, we have described numerous flexibilities
States will have for compliance with this final rule. Specifically for
the payment rate transparency publication, and as discussed in a later
response to comments, States have flexibility to (1) organize and
format their publication, so that they can use existing fee schedule
publications for compliance (assuming all requirements in Sec.
447.203(b)(1) are met); (2) utilize contractors or other third party
websites to publish the payment rate transparency publication on
(however, we remind States that they are still requiring to publish the
hyperlink to the website where the publication is located on the State
Medicaid agency's website as required in Sec. 447.203(b)(1)(ii) of
this final rule); and (3) for the initial publication, if necessary
historical information about bundled payment rates is unavailable to
the State, then the State does not need to include the bundled payment
rate breakdown as required in Sec. 447.203(b)(1)(iv) of this final
rule (however, we remind States that upon approval of a SPA that
revised the bundled payment rate, the State will be required to update
the publication to comply with Sec. 447.203(b)(1)(iv)). Additionally,
we are providing examples of payment rates that are not subject to the
payment rate transparency publication and an illustrative example of a
compliant payment rate transparency (including to meet accessibility
standards) through subregulatory guidance issued prior to the effective
date of this final rule. We expect these flexibilities and
clarifications to minimize the State administrative burden commenters
expressed concern about, which potentially stemmed from an imprecise
understanding of the Medicaid FFS fee schedule payment rates that are
required to be published in the payment rate transparency publication.
Finally, we would expect that States already have the data for the
payment rate transparency publication readily available through
existing fee schedules, SPAs, or other internal documentation, so the
work to compile that data into a format that complies with this final
rule should require minimal effort.
To clarify, the payment rate transparency publication is not an
analysis requirement, but a transparency requirement for States to
publish their Medicaid FFS fee schedule payment rates, as discussed in
detail in a later response to comments in this section. However, an
analysis component is being finalized in Sec. [thinsp]447.203(b)(2)
and (3) called the comparative payment rate
[[Page 40690]]
analysis, which we believe will result in a meaningful access analysis
because it requires States to compare certain of their Medicaid FFS
payment rates to the Medicare non-facility payment rate as established
in the annual Medicare PFS final rule for a calendar year. This access
analysis will help States and CMS to assess compliance with section
1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act where Medicare payment rates serve as a
benchmark for comparing Medicaid payment rates to another of the
nation's large public health coverage programs. As described in the
proposed rule and in greater detail later in this final rule, Medicare
and Medicaid programs cover and pay for services provided to
beneficiaries residing in every State and territory of the United
States, Medicare payment rates are publicly available, and broad
provider acceptance of Medicare makes Medicare non-facility payment
rates as established on the Medicare PFS for a calendar year an
available and reliable comparison point for States to use in the
comparative payment rate analysis.\193\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\193\ 88 FR 27960 at 28011.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We disagree that we do not have the authority to require States to
publish their payment rates. As discussed in the proposed rule, payment
rate transparency is a critical component of assessing compliance with
section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act, which requires that State plans
assure that payments are consistent with efficiency, economy, and
quality of care and are sufficient to enlist enough providers so that
care and services are available under the plan at least to the extent
that such care and services are available to the general population in
the geographic area.\194\ Transparency, particularly the requirement
that States must publicly publish their payment rates, helps to ensure
that interested parties have basic information available to them to
understand Medicaid payment levels and the associated effects of
payment rates on access to care so that they may raise concerns to
State Medicaid agencies via the various forms of public process
available to interested parties. As noted in the proposed rule, most
States already published at least some of their payments through FFS
rate schedule on State agency websites.\195\ Our efforts finalized in
this rule will help ensure all States publish their payment rates
consistently and accessibly so interested parties have fundamental
information about payment rates and can utilize existing public
processes to raise concerns about access. Additionally, the Supreme
Court's Armstrong decision placed added importance on CMS'
determinations, as the responsible Federal agency, regarding the
sufficiency of Medicaid payment rates. The payment rate transparency
requirements included in this final rule reflect that statutory
responsibility to ensure compliance with section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the
Act. We also note that the previous AMRP process that was in effect
prior to this final rule established a transparent data-driven process
to measure access to care in States, including oversight of provider
payment rates, actual or estimated levels of provider payment available
from other payers, and the percentage comparison of Medicaid payment
rates to other public and private health insurer payment rates. This
final rule merely streamlines the approach under the same statutory
authority and shared responsibility that applied for the previous AMRP
process. We remind States of longstanding, general requirement for the
State to maintain statistical, fiscal, and other records necessary for
reporting and accountability under Sec. 431.17(b)(2).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\194\ 88 FR 27960 at 27967.
\195\ 88 FR 27960 at 28000.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Comment: Some commenters expressed concerns about the burden
associated with the payment rate transparency publication. They
specifically cited concern about meeting strict State-level website
accessibility requirements, extensive changes that could be needed to
existing claims payment systems (that is, for a State that does not
currently include beneficiary copayment information on their existing
fee schedules, the State may need to make change requests of their
contractor to modify their claims payment system to produce the
Medicaid payment information required in the payment rate transparency
publication to include the total payment amount a provider would
receive inclusive of beneficiary cost sharing), conducting research on
when payment rates were last updated, and monthly monitoring of
Medicare rates to ensure State fee schedule rates set at a percentage
of Medicare are updated timely.
Response: As described in the proposed rule, longstanding legal
requirements to provide effective communication with individuals with
disabilities and the obligation to take reasonable steps to provide
meaningful access to individuals with limited English proficiency also
apply to the websites containing Medicaid FFS payment rate information.
These requirements apply to all State agency, contractor, or other
third-party websites and any burden associated with meeting those
Federal obligations is not created by policies finalized in this rule.
With respect to any State-level accessibility requirements that might
exceed Federal requirements, we refer the commenter to the State
Medicaid agency or other agency responsible for compliance with State
accessibility requirements for guidance or technical assistance
concerning State-imposed accessibility requirements.
Regarding commenters' concerns that States would need to change
existing claims payment systems (that is, the State may need to make
change requests of their contractor to modify their claims payment
system to produce the Medicaid payment information required for the
payment rate transparency publication that includes beneficiary cost
sharing in fee schedule amounts), we want to clarify State claiming and
payment systems, and the output of these systems, generally are not
subject to the payment rate transparency publication requirements as
the provision only applies to Medicaid FFS fee schedule payment rates.
We do not anticipate it would be unduly burdensome for a State to
maintain its Medicaid FFS fee schedules in an appropriate format
outside of its claiming and payment systems. States are not required to
publish claims data or data about actual payments made to providers
under the payment rate transparency publication provision.
Commenters were concerned about whether beneficiary cost sharing
information should be included in the payment rate transparency
publication. To clarify, the payment rates published under Sec.
447.203(b)(1)(i) must be inclusive of the payment amount from the
Medicaid agency plus any applicable coinsurance and deductibles to the
extent that a beneficiary is expected to be liable for those payments.
By requiring States to publish the payment amount the Medicaid agency
would pay and any beneficiary cost sharing as a single payment amount,
we focus on the total Medicaid payment amount a provider would expect
to receive for furnishing a given service to a Medicaid beneficiary and
which is therefore most relevant to a provider's decision to accept the
Medicaid payment rate, thereby furthering our section 1902(a)(30)(A)
access goals to ensure payment rates are sufficient to enlist enough
providers so that care and services are available under the plan at
least to the extent that such care and services are available to the
general population in the geographic area. Furthermore, this
representation of payment rates is consistent with the
[[Page 40691]]
comparative payment rate analysis,\196\ which minimizes burden on
States by requiring the Medicaid FFS fee schedule payment rate be
displayed in the same way for both publications. Additionally, we
recognize that beneficiary cost sharing amounts can vary depending on
the State Medicaid program and the status of the Medicaid enrollee.
Therefore, we expect States with cost-sharing requirements could
experience additional burden in complying with the payment rate
transparency publication, if States were required to remove variable
cost sharing amount from the Medicaid FFS fee schedule payment rate for
each service subject to the publication.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\196\ 88 FR 27960 at 28013.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Regarding commenters' concerns about conducting research on when
payment rates were last updated, we want to clarify that the
requirement to include the date the rates were last updated refers to a
date for the website publication. In other words, the date should
provide assurance that the rates on the website are current as of the
specified date. We do not expect, nor did we propose, States to examine
historical records to find the dates every rate was last updated.
However, if a State wishes to include that information for all or a
subset of published rates, it can.
Regarding commenters' concerns about monthly monitoring of Medicare
rates to ensure the payment rate transparency publication is up to
date, firstly, to clarify, only States that set their Medicaid payment
rates at a percentage of a Medicare payment rate would be affected by
this consideration. For those States that set their Medicaid payments
rates as a percentage of a Medicare payment rate, we expect the State
to already be monitoring changes in Medicare rates in accordance with
their approved payment methodology and Sec. Sec. 430.10 and 430.20 and
part 447, subpart B, which require States to pay the approved State
plan payment rates in their State plan effective on or after the
approved effective date of the State plan provision. Therefore, if a
State's approved State plan pays a rate based on the most current
Medicare payment rate for a particular service, then payment of any
rate outside of the approved State plan methodology would result in a
State plan compliance issue. We expect that States with such payment
methodologies routinely are monitoring Medicare payment rates to ensure
that their Medicaid payment rates are updated according to the approved
methodology. Medicare fee schedule updates are well documented and
accessible to States on cms.gov, even in the event of a change to a
Medicare payment rate outside the usual cadence of Medicare updates for
that rate (an off-cycle update) and keeping up with Medicare fee
schedule updates is critical for ensuring a State's payment rate
transparency publication is accurate and updated timely.\197\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\197\ https://www.cms.gov/medicare/payment/fee-schedules.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Comment: A few commenters requested clarification on the format of
the payment rate transparency publication, particularly if Medicaid FFS
payment rates should be organized by CPT code.
Response: In this final rule, in regard to the payment rate
transparency provision, we are not requiring States to publish their
payment rates by CPT/HCPCS code, which is required in the comparative
payment rate analysis discussed later in this section. However, we
encourage States to consider organizing their publication by CPT/HCPCS
code, due to the common use of CPT/HCPCS for billing for medical
services across the country, including in State Medicaid programs. The
goal of the payment rate transparency publication is to ensure all
States publish their Medicaid FFS fee schedule payment rates in a
format that is publicly accessible and where all these rates can be
easily located and understood. States can determine what organizational
and formatting structure is most suitable for organizing rates in a
manner that will be easily understood by providers and beneficiaries.
Comment: A couple of commenters requested clarification on the
requirement that States separately identify Medicaid FFS fee schedule
payment rates by population, specifically inquiring if ``population''
referred to beneficiary demographics or waiver/program population.
Response: As indicated in the regulation text, population refers to
beneficiary demographics, specifically adult and pediatric populations.
Under this final rule, States will be required to publish their
Medicaid FFS fee schedule payment rates separately identified by rates
paid for the adult population and the pediatric population, if the
rates differ in the State. As stated in the proposed rule, we
acknowledge that a State may pay a single Statewide rate regardless of
population, provider type, or geographical location, and such a State
would only need to list the single Statewide rate in its payment rate
transparency publication. We also acknowledge that States define
pediatric differently (such as, 18 years old or younger, 19 years old
or younger, and 21 years old or younger) and we encourage States to
disclose the age range the State's Medicaid program uses in the payment
rate transparency publication for transparency purposes.
Comment: Some commenters requested clarification regarding which
payments are subject to the payment rate transparency requirements
outlined in paragraph (b)(1). Multiple commenters questioned if the
following payment methodologies would be subject to the payment rate
transparency requirements under paragraph (b)(1): manually priced items
(for example, physician administered drugs), provider-specific rates
(for example, PPS rates typically paid to FQHCs or all-inclusive per-
visit rates typically paid to clinics (we assume commenters meant
clinics as defined in Sec. 440.90)), per diem rates, cost and cost-
based payment methodologies (including interim payments) typically paid
to facility-based providers, and negotiated rates. Additionally, many
commenters questioned if disproportionate share hospital (DSH)
payments, FFS supplemental payments, or managed care State directed
payments (SDPs) would be included in the payment rate transparency
publication. A couple of commenters stated that only requiring States
to publish base payment rates would not provide a member of the public
with the ability to readily determine the amount Medicaid would pay for
a service because excluding DSH payments and supplemental payments is
an inaccurate, incomplete, and misleading representation of a Medicaid
provider's actual, overall payments from the Medicaid program.
Response: In Sec. 447.203(b)(1) of the proposed rule, we proposed
that ``[t]h State agency is required to publish all Medicaid fee-for-
service payment rates . . . . Published Medicaid [FFS] payment rates
include fee schedule payment rates made to providers delivering
Medicaid services to Medicaid beneficiaries through a [FFS] delivery
system.'' We acknowledge that this language was not clear that we
intended to require the publication requirement to include only
Medicaid FFS fee schedule payment rates. Accordingly, in this final
rule, we have made some revisions to the proposed regulatory language
in Sec. [thinsp]447.203(b)(1) to change the organizational structure
of (b)(1) by adding romanettes and clarify that only Medicaid FFS fee
schedule payment rates are required to be published in the payment rate
transparency publication. Throughout (b)(1), references to ``fee
schedule payment'' were replaced with
[[Page 40692]]
``Medicaid fee-for-service fee schedule payment rates'' for clarity and
consistency. Therefore, in (b)(1) we state that, the State agency is
required to publish all Medicaid FFS fee schedule payment rates.
Further, in Sec. [thinsp]447.203(b)(1)(i), we specify that, ``for
purposes of paragraph (b)(1), the payment rates that the State agency
is required to publish are Medicaid fee-for-service fee schedule
payment rates made to providers delivering Medicaid services to
Medicaid beneficiaries through a fee-for-service delivery system.''
We would like to clarify which Medicaid FFS fee schedule payment
rates are subject to the payment rate transparency provisions in Sec.
[thinsp]447.203(b). Medicaid FFS fee schedule payment rates are payment
amounts made to a provider, known in advance of a provider delivering a
service to a beneficiary by reference to a fee schedule. A fee schedule
is a list, table, or similar presentation of covered services and
associated payment amounts that are generally determined at the State's
discretion. We also consider a State to use a fee schedule when the
State has not yet organized its payment amounts into such a
straightforward list, table, or similar presentation, but under the
State's approved payment methodology, the State determines payment
rates based on the application of a mathematical formula to another fee
schedule or other reference rate stated as an amount certain. In other
words, a fee schedule that utilizes a formula, but has not yet been
organized into a list, table, or similar presentation of covered
services and associated payment amounts, is included in the scope of
fee schedules subject to the payment rate transparency provisions. For
example, a Medicaid payment methodology that provides for payment at 80
percent of the corresponding Medicare PFS rate would constitute a
Medicaid fee schedule payment methodology because it applies a formula
to a fee schedule to produce a fee schedule payment rate that is known
in advance of a provider delivering the service. This formula reflects
that the State's fee schedule payment methodology starts with the
Medicare PFS fee schedule, then reduces the fee schedule amount to 80
percent of the Medicare PFS amount to arrive at the Medicaid fee
schedule payment rate. States that utilize the previously described
formula-based methodology that may not currently publish these payment
rates on a fee schedule will be required to publish the actual payment
amounts as determined by their formula in the payment rate transparency
publication under this final rule. This final rule focuses on ensuring
transparency of Medicaid FFS fee schedule payment rates so that they
are ``. . . organized in such a way that a member of the public can
readily determine the amount that Medicaid would pay for the service,''
as stated in the proposed regulatory language in Sec. 447.203(b)(1),
which we are finalizing in Sec. 447.203(b)(1)(iii) of this final rule
with a slight modification to replace ``the service'' with ``a given
service.'' Merely publishing the mathematical formula that a member of
the public would need to use to calculate each payment rate the State
has set for a particular service would not meet this requirement of
this final rule. To summarize, fee schedule payment methodologies that
utilize a formula applied to another fee schedule are included in the
scope of fee schedules, and the payment rate transparency publication
must reflect the actual fee schedule payment rate amounts.
Certain bundled payment rates (as discussed later in this comment
response) and PPS rates for inpatient hospital, outpatient hospital,
and nursing facility services are considered fee schedules payment
rates subject to the payment rate transparency publication because
these payment amounts are also known in advance of a provider
delivering a service to a beneficiary and are stated (or can readily be
stated) as a list, table, or similar presentation.
We recognize that PPS rates are utilized in different contexts in
Medicaid to pay for various services (including for services of FQHCs,
RHCs, inpatient hospitals, outpatient hospitals, inpatient psychiatric
facilities, inpatient rehabilitation facilities, long-term care
hospitals, and nursing facilities) and can be calculated differently,
depending on the service. PPS rates in Medicaid used to pay for
services provided by inpatient hospitals, outpatient hospitals,
inpatient psychiatric facilities, inpatient rehabilitation facilities,
long-term care hospitals, and nursing facilities would be included. In
the context of payment rates to hospitals and nursing facilities, the
term ``encounter rate'' or ``per diem rate'' can also be used to
describe the PPS rate received by these providers. This term generally
describes a daily payment rate that is paid to a hospital or nursing
facility during a patient's admission to a hospital or nursing
facility. In this situation, the PPS payment methodology typically
makes payment based on a predetermined, fixed amount. States often use
or model their payment methodologies after Medicare's prospective
payment systems to pay for outpatient hospital, inpatient hospital, and
nursing facility services. In these situations, under Medicare's
prospective payment systems, Medicare typically pays providers for a
particular service an amount derived based on the services expected to
be received during a visit or course of treatment (for more complex
conditions). For example, under the Medicare IPPS, payment is made
based on the Diagnosis Related Group (DRG) to which the patient
discharge is assigned. States also often use other grouping systems,
such as Medicare's PDPM for nursing facilities, Ambulatory Payment
Classifications under Medicare's hospital outpatient PPS for hospital
outpatient services items, or Medicare's End Stage Renal Disease PPS
for facilities or hospital-based providers that furnish dialysis
services and supplies. These PPS rates for inpatient hospital,
outpatient hospital, and nursing facility services are paid to most
hospitals and nursing facilities and are typically known in advance of
a health care provider delivering a service to a beneficiary.
Therefore, these types of PPS rates would be subject to the payment
rate transparency publication in this final rule.
In contrast, FQHCs and RHCs are paid PPS rates that are developed
under a methodology that is statutorily mandated under section 1902(bb)
of the Act, which generally requires that FQHCs and RHCs receive a per
visit, or encounter, rate that is provider-specific and must be based
on a health center's unique cost and visit data.\198\ This requirement
creates a payment rate floor where FQHC and RHCs cannot be paid less
than the PPS rate developed under this statutorily mandated
methodology. Because this statutory payment floor is set by Congress,
FQHC and RHC payment rates are uniquely situated in a manner that does
not exist for other Medicaid payment rates under State discretion.\199\
Although States must comply with section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act,
this statutory provision does
[[Page 40693]]
not set a specific payment rate floor. Therefore, because of the unique
provider-specific payment floor mandated by Congress for FQHCs and
RHCs, we believe access concerns related to payment rates for FQHCs and
RHCs are attenuated and as such, we are not including FQHC and RHC PPS
rates in the payment rate transparency publication requirement.
Furthermore, because the FQHC and RHC PPS rates are provider-specific
based on an individual provider's costs and scope of service and
required to be paid by States as a floor set by Congress, we generally
do not believe that publication of the individual providers' payment
rates as part of the payment rate transparency provision finalized in
this rule would not result in actionable information for CMS to
consider in ensuring compliance with section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act
as intended through this final rule at this time.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\198\ In the context of payment rates to FQHCs and RHCs, the
terms ``encounter rate,'' ``per visit rate,'' and ``provider-
specific rate'' can also be used to describe the PPS payment rate.
\199\ We acknowledge that Medicaid payment rates for hospice
services also have a statutorily mandated payment floor: the
Medicaid hospice payment rates are calculated based on the annual
hospice rates established under Medicare. These rates are authorized
by section 1814(i)(1)(C)(ii) of the Act, which also provides for an
annual increase in payment rates for hospice care services. However,
we do not believe these rates would be burdensome on States to
include because they are paid to all Medicaid participating hospice
providers and are therefore not carving them out of this
requirement.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In addition, if we were to require States to also publish FQHC and
RHC PPS rates, we would expect a significant increase in burden on
States in meeting this requirement. FQHC and RHC PPS rates are unique
to each FQHC and RHC in a State (rather than a single fee schedule rate
that Medicaid would pay for a given service to any provider in a State)
and, therefore, publicizing the FQHC and RHC rates would represent a
sharp increase in States' efforts for rates that are less concerning to
CMS due to the statutory payment floor in section 1902(bb) of the Act.
We do not believe the increase in burden is justifiable given our aim
to balance Federal and State administrative burden with our shared
obligation to ensure compliance with section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act
with this final rule. Finally, and as discussed in detail in an earlier
response to comments in this section, like all State plan services for
which the State proposes a rate reduction or restructuring in
circumstances where the changes could result in reduced access, FQHC
and RHC services are subject to the access analyses in Sec.
[thinsp]447.203(c) for proposed rate reductions and restructuring.
Certain FFS VBP payment methodologies are also fee schedule payment
methodologies, even if the exact dollar amount that a particular
provider will receive for a given service is not known in advance
because of the need to adjust for metric-based performance. In such a
case, a State might have an approved FFS VBP payment methodology in the
State plan that includes a 2 percent withhold of the fee schedule
payment amount and the potential for an additional 3 percent bonus to
the provider based on the provider's performance for the year on
certain quality measures. Assuming the State's payment methodology
starts with a base payment of 80 percent of the Medicare PFS payment
amount, the provider's minimum payment for the service would be .98 *
(PFS * .80), and the maximum payment (achieved through a retrospective
true-up payment based on final quality performance for the year) would
be 1.03 * (PFS * .80). The provider's minimum and maximum possible
payment amounts are known in advance (2 percent less than the Medicaid
fee schedule amount, and 3 percent more, respectively) and are based on
the application of a formula to a fee schedule. We also consider this
type of FFS VBP arrangement to constitute a fee schedule payment
methodology, because although the State does not know in advance the
final payment amount a given provider will receive for a particular
service (since the provider's quality performance is not known in
advance), the minimum payment amount is calculable in advance based on
the application of a mathematical formula to a fee schedule amount. We
expect the State to use the minimum payment amount for purposes of the
requirements of Sec. 447.203(b), because this is the amount that a
provider is assured to receive for furnishing the service. At State
option, the State could also include information on the maximum payment
amount the provider might receive under the FFS VBP payment
methodology.
We would also like to clarify what payments are not subject to the
payment rate transparency publication provision. Payment rates that are
not subject to the transparency provisions include those where the
minimum fee schedule payment is not known in advance of a provider
delivering a service to a beneficiary because certain variables
required for the payment calculation are unknown until after the
provider has delivered the service. For example, cost-based and
reconciled cost payment methodologies (including those that involve
interim payments) are not subject to the payment rate transparency
provisions because actual cost is unknown until the end of the
provider's reporting period. As another example, FFS supplemental
payment methodologies are not subject to the payment rate transparency
publication provision because these methodologies often utilize
variables, such as claims volume or number of qualifying providers, for
dividing up a pre-determined payment pool, and actual supplemental
payment amounts are unknown until the end of the provider's (or
providers') reporting period.
While a relatively simple FFS VBP payment methodology (such as the
one discussed earlier in this response, with a bonus and withhold
percentage added to or subtracted from a fee schedule rate based on
provider performance) is considered to result in a fee schedule payment
rate subject to the payment rate publication requirement, we
acknowledge that some States already utilize more complex FFS VBP
payment methodologies (including episodes of care \200\ and integrated
care models \201\) that utilize quality and cost measures to determine
the provider's unique payment amount. Providers who participate in one
of these complex VBP payment arrangements generally report quality and
cost data to the State at the end of the provider's reporting period
and then the State uses that data to determine the provider's payment
amount after the provider has furnished services. Excluding complex VBP
payment methodologies from the payment rate transparency publication
balances burden on States to publish the required information with the
ability of interested parties to understand key Medicaid payment levels
so that they may raise concerns to State Medicaid agencies. If we were
to require States to publish payment rates determined by complex FFS
VBP payment methodologies, it would be burdensome on States, as these
payment rates are
[[Page 40694]]
unique to the provider and are determined using variables (the
provider's quality performance and cost of furnishing services) that
are unknown until after a provider's reporting period has ended. As
these measures are generally unknown until after the provider's
reporting period has ended, the State does not know a provider's
payment in advance. Therefore, complex VBP payment methodologies as
previously described are not fee schedule payment methodologies within
the meaning of this final rule that are subject to the payment rate
transparency provision.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\200\ We consider episodes of care to be a complex VBP because
the payment methodology determines the total payment by comparing
the provider's cost of care for an episode to the State determined
thresholds for how much the State expects a provider to spend on an
episode. The provider's cost of care is an unknown variable that can
be higher, the same, or lower than the State's threshold and will
vary from provider to provider and episode to episode. Therefore,
the unknown amount of a provider's cost of care for an episode
relative to the State's threshold affects the actual payment the
provider will receive for delivering a service, creating a situation
where the State is unable to reasonably know a provider's payment in
advance.
\201\ We consider integrated care models to be a complex VBP
because the payment methodologies used in these models, for example,
shared savings methodologies, determine the total payment by
comparing the provider's cost of care to the State determined total
cost of care benchmark for how much the State expects a provider to
spend. The provider's cost of care is an unknown variable that can
be higher, the same, or lower than the State's threshold and will
vary from provider to provider. Additionally, States can apply risk
and gain-sharing arrangements that decreases or increases provider's
payment rate based on their performance in meeting specific quality
goals. Therefore, the unknown amount of a provider's cost of care
relative to the State's total cost of care benchmark and additional
decreases or increases to payment rates based on performance meeting
quality goals affects the actual payment the provider will receive
for delivering a service, creating a situation where the State is
unable to reasonably know a provider's payment in advance.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We also recognize that an advanced payment methodology, as
described in SMDL 20-004, could utilize fee schedule payments within
the meaning of this final rule.\202\ For example, a State could
calculate an advanced payment of $10,000 for a provider that is
expected to furnish 1,000 services and each service is paid at a fee
schedule payment rate of $10. The advanced payment amount was
originally determined by a fee schedule payment rate, which is known in
advance of a provider delivering a service to a beneficiary, and
therefore these rates would appear to be covered by this requirement.
However, there are also features of certain advanced payment
methodologies that could place them outside the scope of this
requirement. For example, an advanced payment methodology that permits
States to include risk adjustments and quality performance adjustments
to the advanced payment amount, and/or requires the State to perform a
reconciliation to the actual number of claims, could mean that the
Medicaid payment amount that the provider could expect to receive could
not be known in advance. At the time of publication of this final rule,
there are no approved SPAs that utilize an advanced payment methodology
as discussed in SMDL 20-004, so we are unable to state definitively
whether any advanced payment methodology that may be used in FFS
Medicaid pursuant to a future SPA would be subject to the payment rate
transparency publication requirement. Without implementation experience
of advanced payment methodologies, we will review future advanced
payment methodologies on a case-by-case basis to determine if the
methodology uses a fee schedule payment methodology within the meaning
of this final rule. We encourage States that propose advanced payment
methodology after finalization of this rule to reach out to CMS for
technical assistance on determining whether advanced payment amounts
are subject to the payment rate transparency publication requirements.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\202\ https://www.medicaid.gov/sites/default/files/2020-09/smd20004.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We interpret the commenter's reference to ``manually priced items''
to mean a provider payment rate that the State determines after a
service or item has been delivered to a beneficiary and the provider
has billed for it. For example, certain durable medical equipment items
that are infrequently furnished to beneficiaries may be paid at the
manufacturer's suggested retail price minus a percentage. This is
described in the approved State plan, and when such an item is
furnished to a beneficiary, the State must manually adjust the amount
paid for the claim to equal the manufacturer's suggested retail price
minus the percentage listed in the State plan, rather than pay a
particular Medicaid FFS fee schedule payment rate. Because these
services and items are infrequently furnished and States manually price
each service and item as they are delivered to the beneficiary, we
understand that it would be impractical and burdensome on States to
maintain current lists of the manufacturer's suggested retail price for
all potential items or services a beneficiary might require and a
provider may bill for, and that States often source these items and
services from multiple manufacturers. Therefore, for the purposes of
the payment rate transparency publication, we consider manually priced
payment methodologies that utilize the manufacturer's suggested retail
price to result in a payment amount that is not known in advance of a
provider delivering a service or item to a beneficiary, and thus not to
be a fee schedule payment methodology subject to the payment rate
transparency publication requirements.
We interpret the commenter's reference to ``negotiated rates'' to
mean a provider payment rate where the individual provider's final
payment rate is agreed upon through negotiation with the State Medicaid
agency. For example, negotiated rates may be offered by a State when a
particular service has very low utilization, a custom item is required
(for example, certain wheelchairs), or the State does not have
information needed to establish a payment rate under an approved State
plan payment methodology (for example, information from other payers,
such as Medicare or the State's employee health insurance on how much
they pay for the service or item) to establish a fixed payment rate. In
these instances, generally, the State has not developed a rate prior to
service delivery; payment for the service or item on a case-by-case-
basis in the circumstances does not constitute a fee schedule payment
methodology. Additionally, DSH payments and supplemental payments are
not subject to the payment rate transparency publication requirement
because they do not fall into the description of Medicaid FFS fee
schedule payment rates for purposes of the payment rate transparency
provision in Sec. [thinsp]447.203(b)(1). Finally, SDPs in Medicaid
managed care delivery systems are outside the scope of Sec.
[thinsp]447.203(b)(1)(i), which is specific to the FFS delivery system.
We invite States to reach out to CMS for technical assistance if
they have a FFS payment rate or methodology that may not clearly align
with the previous descriptions and examples of Medicaid FFS fee
schedule payment rates that are subject to the payment rate
transparency publication provision, and other payment methodologies
that are not.
We disagree with commenters that that only requiring States to
publish base payment rates would not provide a member of the public
with the ability to readily determine the amount Medicaid would pay for
a service. To clarify, we did not intend for the payment rate
transparency publication to reflect the entire universe of payments a
provider may receive. Setting the scope of the publication to Medicaid
FFS fee schedule payment rates, as previously discussed in this
response to commenters, balances burden on States to publish the
required information with the ability of interested parties to
understand key Medicaid payment levels so that they may raise concerns
to State Medicaid agencies. If we were to require States to also
include DSH payments and supplemental payments along with the Medicaid
FFS fee schedule payment rates, it would significantly increase burden
on States and might not result in the public clearly understanding the
amount that any given provider could expect to receive for furnishing
the service to a Medicaid beneficiary, as DSH payments and supplemental
payments are generally paid on a provider-level basis rather than a
service-level basis, and not all providers of a given service will
qualify for these payments.
Comment: One commenter requested clarification regarding whether
payment rates paid to the direct support workforce are subject to the
payment rate transparency publication requirements. Another commenter
questioned if self-directed service payment rates should be published
[[Page 40695]]
separately from agency model personal care services.
Response: We interpret the commenter's reference to ``the direct
support workforce'' to generally mean the direct support workers or
direct support professionals that provide hands-on and in-person
Medicaid services to beneficiaries. To the extent a State's payment
rates to direct support workforce utilize Medicaid FFS fee schedule
payment rates within the meaning of this final rule, as discussed in
detail in an earlier response to comments in this section, those
payment rates would be subject to payment rate transparency
requirements under Sec. [thinsp]447.203(b)(1).
Regarding self-directed service payment rates being separately
published from agency model personal care services, we assume the
commenter was referring to self-directed models with service budget and
agency-provider models authorized under 42 CFR 441.545. We would like
to clarify that, to the extent a State pays an agency-provider a
Medicaid FFS fee schedule payment rate as discussed in detail in an
earlier response to comments in this section, then those payment rates
are subject to the payment rate transparency requirements in Sec.
[thinsp]447.203(b)(1). Self-directed models with service budget \203\
are not subject to the payment rate transparency publication
requirement in Sec. [thinsp]447.203(b)(1). As previously stated,
payment rates that are not subject to the payment rate transparency
publication requirement include those that that are not known in
advance of a provider delivering a service to a beneficiary. Under the
self-directed model with service budget, the State only sets the
beneficiary's overall service budget, and the beneficiary negotiates
the payment rate with the direct support worker; therefore, the State
is not setting the payment rate and does not know in advance what rate
the direct service worker will be paid for furnishing services to the
beneficiary. This does not constitute a fee schedule payment
methodology for purposes of the payment rate transparency publication
requirement, and as such these types of payment rates are excluded from
the publication requirement. We further clarify that we do not expect
States to list each beneficiary's individual self-directed service
budget in the payment rate transparency publication.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\203\ Self-directed services are paid for using an
individualized budget. States are required to describe the method
for calculating the dollar values of individual budgets based on
reliable costs and service utilization, define a process for making
adjustments to the budget when changes in participants' person-
centered service plans occur, and define a procedure to evaluate
participants' expenditures. https://www.medicaid.gov/medicaid/long-term-services-supports/self-directed-services/.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Comment: One commenter expressed concern that requiring States to
publish all Medicaid FFS payment rates online could have unintended
consequences, such as beneficiary confusion about how much their
copayment amount would be if it was included on the State's fee
schedule which typically lists the amount allowed for the service, as
well as State burden from increased documentation on the State's
website. The commenter recommended CMS permit States to provide easily
accessible links where the fee schedules are located to copayment
information already available to providers and clients in a clear and
concise manner.
Response: We understand commenters' concerns about the effects of
the payment rate transparency publication in practice. Regarding
commenters' concerns about beneficiary confusion, we want to clarify
that the payment rates published under Sec. 447.203(b)(1)(i) must be
inclusive of the payment amount from the Medicaid agency plus any
applicable coinsurance and deductibles to the extent that a beneficiary
is expected to be liable for those payments, as discussed earlier in a
response to comments this section. We encourage States, as part of
transparency efforts, to include in the payment rate transparency
publication a link to the page on the website where existing
beneficiary cost sharing information is located so beneficiaries and
other interested parties will be able to easily access this existing
source of information about beneficiary cost sharing obligations.
Additionally, regarding commenters' concerns about burden from
increased documentation on the State's website, as documented in
section III. of this final rule, the FFS provisions, including the
payment rate transparency, comparative payment rate analysis, and
payment rate disclosure requirements (Sec. [thinsp]447.203(b)(1)
through (5)), interested parties' advisory group requirements (Sec.
[thinsp]447.203(b)(6)), and State analysis procedures for payment rate
reductions or payment restructuring (Sec. [thinsp]447.203(c)), are
expected to result in a net burden reduction on States compared to the
previous AMRP requirements. With the finalization of the provisions in
this rule, we aim to balance Federal and State administrative burden
with our shared obligation to ensure compliance with section
1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act (and our obligation to oversee State
compliance with the same). As previously stated, States also have the
flexibility to utilize contractors or other third-party websites to
publish the payment rate transparency publication on (however, we
remind States that they are still requiring to publish the hyperlink to
the website where the publication is located on the State Medicaid
agency's website as required in Sec. 447.203(b)(1)(ii) of this final
rule).
Comment: One commenter requested clarification on the 1-month
update requirement for the payment rate transparency requirement. The
commenter stated that there are instances where SPAs are submitted with
prospective effective dates or where States may face a delayed
operationalization in their claims system that includes approved rate
changes. The commenter noted that, in both instances under the proposed
regulatory language for the payment rate transparency requirement, a
State would be expected to publish rates that are not yet in effect or
not currently being paid to providers. The commenter suggested revising
the regulatory language to require States update rate changes in the
payment rate transparency publication within 1 month of CMS approval of
a SPA, the effective date of payment rate changes, or the date system
changes are operationalized by a State, whichever date occurs latest.
Additionally, one commenter suggested extending the requirement for
updates to the payment rate transparency publication to 2 months
instead of 1 month as proposed.
Response: In response to comments, we have revised the regulatory
language to account for SPAs with prospective effective dates. As
finalized in this rule, Sec. 447.203(b)(1)(vi) now states, ``[t]he
agency is required to include the date the payment rates were last
updated on the State Medicaid agency's website and to ensure these data
are kept current where any necessary update must be made no later than
1 month following the latter of the date of CMS approval of the State
plan amendment, section 1915(c) HCBS waiver amendment, or similar
amendment revising the provider payment rate or methodology, or the
effective date of the approved amendment.'' We are adding this language
as a technical change to account for States submitting SPAs with
prospective effective dates as the proposed regulatory language would
have required State to publish payment rates in the payment rate
transparency publication that were approved, but not yet effective. We
thank the commenter for pointing out this possibility, and we believe
this change will ensure a State's payment rate transparency publication
is as current as possible, and accurate once published.
[[Page 40696]]
However, we have not included regulatory language to account for
system changes with a delayed operationalization date as suggested by
this commenter. In accordance with Sec. Sec. 430.10 and 430.20 and
part 447, subpart B, States are required to pay the approved State plan
payment rates in their State plan effective on or after the approved
effective date. Therefore, payment of any rate outside of the approved
State plan would result in a State plan compliance issue, and non-
compliance is not a circumstance we would accommodate in regulations.
We have also not extended the timeframe from 1 month to 2 months for
States to update their payment rate transparency publications after a
payment rate change. States are aware that a payment rate change is
forthcoming and its requested effective date when they submit a SPA,
and as such, we believe 1 month is more than sufficient to update the
payment rate transparency publication. We invite States to reach out to
CMS for technical guidance regarding any technological or operational
limitations that may impact a State's compliance with the payment rate
transparency publication requirement.
Comment: We received a few comments expressing concern about which
bundled payment rates would be subject to the payment rate transparency
publication as well as concern about the burden imposed on States from
operational challenges to break down bundled payment rates into
constituent services and rates allocated to each constituent service in
the bundle. These commenters also requested clarification on how States
will be required to publish bundled payment rates in the payment rate
transparency publication. Commenters requested clarification regarding
the following instances where bundled payment rates are used by States:
team-based services, provider-specific rates (for example, PPS rates
typically paid for FQHC and RHC services or an encounter rate typically
paid to clinics for clinic services (we assume commenters meant clinic
services as defined in Sec. 440.90) and CCBHC services), and per diem
rates paid for facility or institutional (that is, hospital and nursing
facility) services. These commenters stated that this requirement would
be burdensome, operationally difficult, or not feasible because
individual rates for constituent services within the bundle do not
exist or bundled rates are established on a provider-specific basis
using provider-specific historical cost data and inflationary
adjustments. These commenters requested further clarification regarding
a definition of constituent services, how States should unbundle rates
and services from a bundled rate, as well as additional explanation of
the value CMS believes this requirement will contribute to the Medicaid
program. They encouraged CMS to explicitly exempt facility and
institutional providers from the payment rate transparency publication
requirements.
Response: Bundled payments are a versatile payment methodology that
States can utilize within and across numerous Medicaid benefit
categories. Bundled payments are generally developed using State-
specific assumptions about the type, quantity, and intensity of
services included in the bundle, and generally are based on the payment
rates for the individual constituent services when they are furnished
outside the bundled rate.
In this final rule, we clarify bundled payment rates that are
subject to the requirement in the payment rate transparency publication
provision that States identify how much of the bundled fee schedule
payment rate is allocated to each constituent service under the State's
payment methodology. In the case of a bundled payment methodology, the
State must publish the Medicaid FFS bundled payment rate and, where the
bundled payment rate is based on fee schedule payment rates for each
constituent service, must identify each constituent service included
within the rate and how much of the bundled payment rate is allocated
to each constituent service under the State's methodology.
To explain further, the bundled payment rates that are subject to
this requirement are State-developed payment rates that provide a
single payment rate for furnishing a bundle of services, including
multiple units of service, multiple services within a single benefit
category, or multiple services across multiple benefit categories. In
any of these instances, multiple providers and provider types could
contribute to a bundle of services, which is what we interpret the
comment about team-based services to mean. Bundled payment rates that
are based on fee schedule payment rates for each constituent service
are subject to the requirement to identify each constituent service
included within the rate and how much of the bundled payment rate is
allocated to each constituent service under the State's methodology.
States can develop bundled payment rates for multiple units of a
single service, for example, by setting a daily rate for up to 4 hours
of personal care services a day that includes multiple 15-minute units
of personal care services for which there is a fee schedule payment
rate. States can also develop a bundled payment rate for multiple
services within a single benefit category. For example, within the
rehabilitative services Medicaid benefit, a daily rate for assertive
community treatment, which can include constituent services set at fee
schedule payment rates for assessments, care coordination, crisis
intervention, therapy, and medication management, is considered a
bundled rate. Finally, States can also develop a bundled payment rate
for one or more services across multiple benefit categories. For
example, a daily rate that includes constituent services set at fee
schedule payment rates for up to 2 hours of personal care services, up
to 2 hours of targeted case management services, and 1 hour of physical
therapy services is considered a bundled rate. As all of these examples
describe bundled payment rates comprised of constituent services that
are based on fee schedule payment rates, they are subject to the
bundled rate breakdown requirement in the payment rate transparency
provision. Later in this response, we will discuss how States are
required to allocate the bundled payment rate to each constituent
service under the State's methodology.
Within a bundled payment rate, a constituent service is a Medicaid-
covered service included in a bundle of multiple units of service and/
or multiple services. These constituent services within the bundled
payment rate must correspond to service descriptions in section 3.1-A
of the State plan, which describes covered services. When initially
adding a bundled payment rate to the State plan, States are required to
separately list out each constituent service included in the bundle to
ensure that non-covered services are not included in the bundled
rate.\204\ For example, a bundle for assertive community treatment
covered under the rehabilitative services State plan benefit should not
include room and board, as rehabilitative services are not covered in
institutional settings. Therefore, ``room and board'' is a non-covered
service under the rehabilitative services benefit and would not be a
constituent service in the bundled payment rate.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\204\ https://www.medicaid.gov/sites/default/files/state-resource-center/downloads/spa-and-1915-waiver-processing/bundled-rate-payment-methodology.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We also clarify payment rates that pay for various services and
could be considered a bundled payment rate that
[[Page 40697]]
are not subject to the requirement in the payment rate transparency
publication provision. For purposes of the requirement of this final
rule, this bundled payment rate breakdown requirement only applies to
bundled payment rates that are based on fee schedule payment rates for
each constituent service. Payment rate methodologies that do not
utilize fee schedule payment rates for each constituent service to
create a single State-developed bundled payment rate to pay for a
combination of services, including multiple units of the same service,
multiple services within a single benefit category, or multiple
services across multiple benefit categories, are not subject to the
bundled rate breakdown requirement in the payment rate transparency
publication provision. For example, prospective payment system rates
that States use to pay for services provided in inpatient hospitals,
outpatient hospitals, inpatient psychiatric facilities, inpatient
rehabilitation facilities, long-term care hospitals, and nursing
facilities are not subject to the bundled rate breakdown requirement,
because these PPS rates (as previously mentioned, in the context of
payment rates to hospitals and nursing facilities, the terms
``encounter rate'' or ``per diem rate'' can also be used to describe
the prospective payment system rate received by these providers) do not
utilize fee schedule payment rates to create a single payment rate to
pay for a bundle of services. These PPS payment methodologies generally
pay providers an amount derived based on a formula that accounts for
the resources required to treat a patient, such as the patient's
condition (that is, illness severity or clinical diagnosis), the
provider's operating costs (that is, labor, supplies, insurance), and
adjustment factors (that is, cost of living, case-mix, State determined
factors), such as when an individual has an inpatient hospital stay for
knee replacement surgery. While these PPS rates generally are subject
to the payment rate transparency publication requirement in this final
rule because they are typically known in advance of a provider
delivering a service to a beneficiary, they are not subject to the
breakdown requirement to the extent they do not utilize exclusively fee
schedule payment rates to create a single payment rate for the bundle
of services. Therefore, if we were to require States to also break down
PPS rates, it would significantly increase burden on States and might
not result in the public clearly understanding the amount that any
given provider could expect to receive for the furnishing the services
to a Medicaid beneficiary, as PPS rates are generally not determined
based only on payment rates for constituent services within the meaning
of this final rule. We believe a fee schedule payment rate for each
constituent service is needed to enable the State to perform a
straightforward and reliable allocation of the bundled payment rate to
each included service. Therefore, because PPS rates are not determined
based on fee schedule payment rates for each constituent service within
the meaning of this final rule, States do not need to identify each
constituent service included within a PPS rate and how much of the PPS
rate is allocated to each constituent service under the State's
methodology. In response to the comment asking about FQHC and RHC PPS
rates, please see the discussion earlier in this section explaining why
these rates are carved out of this requirement due to the statutory
floor for rates and consideration of potentially undue burden on
States.
Regarding whether payment rates for CCBHC services are subject to
the bundled payment rate breakdown requirement, PPS rates for CCBHC
demonstration services authorized under section 223 of the Protecting
Access to Medicare Act of 2014 are not subject to the payment rate
transparency publication requirement, including the bundled rate
breakdown requirement, because these payments rates are outside of
Medicaid FFS State plan authority. For CCBHC services covered and paid
for under Medicaid FFS State plan authority, States that use Medicaid
FFS fee schedule rates within the meaning of this rule to pay for CCBHC
services must include these payment rates in the payment rate
transparency provisions. Additionally, Medicaid FFS fee schedule rates
that are bundled payment rates within the meaning of this rule paid to
clinics (as defined in Sec. 440.90), are subject to the bundled rate
breakdown requirement.
Based on this, if a State determines a bundled payment rate is
subject to the bundled payment rate breakdown requirement, we will now
discuss how to allocate the bundled payment rate to each constituent
service under the State's methodology. States have flexibility in
determining the assumptions regarding the type, quantity, intensity,
and price of the constituent services that they factor into the initial
development of a bundled rate.\205\ When States establish the payment
rate for a bundle, States may include the current fee schedule payment
rates for the constituent services to determine the total bundled rate.
For example, a State might pay a $480 bundled rate for assertive
community treatment, based on the application of a small discount
factor to the fee schedule payment rates for all of the constituent
services (assessments, care coordination, crisis intervention, therapy,
and medication management). In this scenario, the State's fee schedule
payment rates might be $50 for an assessment, $30 for care
coordination, $200 for crisis intervention, $200 for 2 hours of
individual therapy, and $20 for medication management. Separately, the
State would pay a total of $500 for all of these services; however, the
State might determine that a provider likely would realize efficiencies
from providing the services together in a coordinated fashion, and so
might reduce the bundled payment rate by 4 percent to account for these
expected savings. Thus, the State's bundled payment rate would be $480,
which would be allocated as follows: $480 * ($50/$500) = $48 for
assessment; $480 * ($30/$500) = $28.80 for care coordination; $480 *
($200/$500) = $192 for crisis intervention; $480 * ($200/$500) = $192
for 2 hours of individual therapy; and $480 * ($20/$500) = $19.20 for
medication management. In this example, the State would identify each
of these constituent services and use these allocation amounts to meet
the requirements finalized in paragraph (b)(1)(iv).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\205\ For new bundled rates, CMS requests information on how
States developed the rates, including: assumptions regarding the
type, quantity, intensity, and price of the component services
typically provided to support the economy and efficiency of the
rate. https://www.medicaid.gov/sites/default/files/state-resource-center/downloads/spa-and-1915-waiver-processing/bundled-rate-payment-methodology.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In response to commenters' request for an explanation of the value
CMS believes the bundled payment rate breakdown requirement will
contribute to the Medicaid program, our rationale is the same as for
this payment rate publication requirement generally. Bundled rates are
not inherently transparent, and in order to achieve the same goal of
transparency in service of ensuring adequate access to covered care and
services, it is important for interested parties to know what is
covered in a bundled rate and how much of the bundle is attributable to
each constituent service, which provides information relevant to
whether the bundled rate is adequate in relation to its constituent
services and enables comparison to how the constituent services are
paid when
[[Page 40698]]
furnished outside the bundle. Our primary goal with the payment rate
transparency publication is ensuring Medicaid payment rates are
publicly available in such a way that a member of the public can
readily determine the amount that Medicaid would pay for a given
service. Transparency helps to ensure that interested parties have
basic information available to them to understand Medicaid payment
levels and the associated effects of payment rates on access to care so
that they may raise concerns to State Medicaid agencies via the various
forms of public process available to interested parties.
In response to commenters' concerns that the bundled payment rate
breakdown provision would be burdensome, operationally difficult, or
not feasible because individual rates for constituent services within
the bundle do not exist, we are providing guidance on how States are
expected to address these circumstances. We acknowledge there are
instances where States may have bundled payment rates that have been in
place for many years, even decades, and the State currently does not
have available information about how the payment rates were developed.
Therefore, the State may lack historical data to perform a reasonable
allocation of the bundled payment rate to constituent services. We also
recognize there are instances where States utilizing bundled payment
rates do not permit providers to bill for the constituent services
separately. In this instance, States may no longer regularly update the
fee schedule amounts for the constituent services included in the
bundled payment rate because the bundle is primarily how the services
are delivered and billed by providers. Therefore, the current fee
schedule payment rates for the constituent services do not reflect how
the State would pay for the constituent services outside of the bundle.
States have flexibility in determining how best to allocate the
bundled payment rate to each constituent service in these scenarios.
Should a State not have certain historical data about the bundled
payment rate available, we are offering a few solutions for the State
to consider. If a State can reasonably calculate missing rates, we
expect them to do so for the purposes of completing the bundled payment
rate allocation. For example, a State may have a bundled payment rate
that includes five constituent services, which the State knows was
calculated by summing the undiscounted fee schedule payment rates for
each of the five constituent services. Today, the State may be unable
to locate the fee schedule amount for one of the constituent services.
In this instance, we would expect the State to reasonably deduce the
allocated rate for the fifth constituent service by summing the four
known rates for the four constituent services and subtracting that
amount from the total bundled payment rate. If a State cannot calculate
a missing portion of a bundled payment rate, they may use current fee
schedule rates. For example, a State may have a bundled payment rate,
but it does not have historical information about how the bundled
payment rate was originally calculated from the constituent services.
In this instance, we would expect the State to use the current fee
schedule rates for the constituent services included in the bundle to
allocate the bundled payment rate for the payment rate transparency
publication. Regardless of the approach States utilize to allocate the
bundled payment rate to the constituent services, we expect States to
include a description of how the bundled payment rate was allocated in
the payment rate transparency publication to ensure that a member of
the public can readily determine the amount that Medicaid would pay for
the bundled service and understand how the State has accomplished a
reasonable allocation of this amount to each constituent service
included in the bundle, as required in Sec. 447.203(b)(1)(iii).
In situations where the State cannot reasonably deduce how to
allocate the bundled payment rate to the constituent services included
in the bundle or the current fee schedule rates for the constituent
services do not serve as a reasonable proxy to determine the allocation
of the bundled payment rate to its constituent services, we invite
States to reach out to us for technical assistance on how to comply
with Sec. 447.203(b)(1)(iv) on a case-by-case basis. We expect this
guidance to provide States with relief from burden associated with
allocating the bundled payment rate to constituent services when
historical information is unavailable, including in certain situations
raised by commenters where individual historical rates for constituent
services within the bundle are no longer available. Regardless of how a
State chooses to address a lack of data related to a bundled payment
rate, we expect the State to update the payment rate transparency
publication with an accurate allocation information following the
effective date or CMS approval date of a SPA, a section 1915(c) HCBS
waiver amendment, or similar amendment amending the bundled payment
rate in question in accordance with Sec. 447.203(b)(1)(vi). These
processes require the State to provide information about the fee
schedule payment rates for the constituent services included in the
bundle, therefore making available the necessary data to perform an
allocation for the payment rate transparency publication.
We also invite States to contact CMS for technical assistance if
they have a bundled payment methodology that does not clearly align
with the previous descriptions and examples of bundled payment rates
that are and are not subject to the bundled payment rate breakdown
requirement. We also encourage States to review our existing Bundled
Rate Payment Methodology resource on Medicaid.gov for more information
about bundled payment methodologies.\206\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\206\ https://www.medicaid.gov/sites/default/files/state-resource-center/downloads/spa-and-1915-waiver-processing/bundled-rate-payment-methodology.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Regarding commenters' concerns about burden on States to break down
institutional services bundled payment rates into constituent services
in the payment rate transparency publication, we understand these
concerns were primarily about operational challenges States would face
if rates paid to hospitals and nursing facilities, as well as cost-
based rates generally, were subject to this provision. As previously
discussed in this response, PPS rates that are not determined based on
fee schedule payment rates for each constituent service within the
meaning of this final rule are not subject to the bundled rate
breakdown requirement in Sec. 447.203(b)(1)(iv); however, PPS rates
generally are considered Medicaid FFS fee schedule payment rates in the
context of this rule and are required to be published in the payment
rate transparency publication under Sec. 447.203(b)(1) as finalized in
this rule. Also previously discussed in this response, PPS rates for
FQHCs and RHCs are not subject to the bundled rate breakdown
requirement in Sec. 447.203(b)(1)(iv) because these payment rates are
not subject to the payment rate transparency publication requirement
under Sec. 447.203(b)(1).
In this final rule, we are revising the regulatory language to make
clear what bundled payment rates are subject to the constituent service
allocation, or breakdown, requirement. We proposed in Sec.
447.203(b)(1) to provide that the State must, ``. . . in the case of a
bundled or similar payment methodology, identify each constituent
service included within the rate and
[[Page 40699]]
how much of the bundled payment rate is allocated to each constituent
service under the State's methodology.'' We are finalizing Sec.
447.203(b)(1)(iv) to state, ``In the case of a bundled payment
methodology, the State must publish the Medicaid fee-for-service
bundled payment rate and, where the bundled payment rate is based on
fee schedule payment rates for each constituent service, must identify
each constituent service included within the rate and how much of the
bundled payment is allocated to each constituent service under the
State's methodology.'' (new language identified in bold). We also
deleted ``or similar'' from ``In the case of a bundled payment
methodology . . .'' because we determined that this language is
unnecessary and potentially confusing; instead, in this final rule, we
are clarifying specifically which bundled payment rates are subject to
the requirement to identify each constituent service included within
the rate and how much of the bundled payment is allocated to each
constituent service under the State's methodology.
Comment: Several commenters offered suggestions and recommendations
for the proposed payment rate transparency requirements. These
suggestions and recommendations include linking together FFS and
managed care plan web pages for full transparency, allowing State
contractors to publish the State's payment rates, requiring the
published format of the payment rates be ready for data analysis,
requiring States to publish information about payment rate models and
methodologies (that is, payment rate development information,
potentially including cost factors and assumptions underlying a rate,
such as wages, employee-related expenses, program-related expenses, and
general and administrative expenses) as well as the frequency and
processes for rate reviews, and requiring States publish additional
granular data, particularly for dental services (for example,
utilization, median payment rates, and service frequency).
Response: We appreciate commenters' suggestions and recommendations
for the payment rate transparency publication requirement. While the
transparency provisions in the Managed Care final rule (as published
elsewhere in this Federal Register) and this final rule share a similar
goal, we are not incorporating the suggestion to require States to link
together FFS and managed care plan web pages for full transparency
because there is often no relationship between FFS Medicaid payment
rates and managed care plan provider rates, as the rates are determined
through different processes, subject to different Federal requirements,
and States, managed care plans, and CMS assess access to care
differently for FFS and managed care. Therefore, we believe that
requiring States link their FFS payment rate transparency publication
websites with managed care plan web pages would not provide
beneficiaries, providers, CMS, and other interested parties with
relevant payment information for the purposes of assessing access to
care issues to better ensure compliance of FFS payment rates with
section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act.
As discussed in an earlier response to comments in this section, we
have revised the regulatory language in Sec. 447.203(b)(1) from what
we originally proposed to permit States the flexibility to continue to
utilize contractors and other third parties for developing and
publishing their fee schedules on behalf of the State. Specifically, in
Sec. 447.203(b)(1), we deleted the language requiring that the website
where Medicaid fee-for-service fee schedule payment rates be published
be ``developed and maintained by the single State agency.'' As
finalized, Sec. 447.203(b)(1) requires the State ``. . . publish all
Medicaid fee-for-service fee schedule payment rates on a website that
is accessible to the general public.'' We continue to require that
``The website where the State agency publishes its Medicaid fee-for-
service payment rates must be easily reached from a hyperlink on the
State Medicaid agency's website.'' in Sec. 447.203(b)(1)(ii).
We are not incorporating the suggestion to require the format of
the payment rate transparency publication be ready for any particular
form of data analysis. Our primary goal with the payment rate
transparency publication is ensuring Medicaid payment rates are
publicly available in such a way that a member of the public can
readily determine the amount that Medicaid would pay for a given
service. Transparency helps to ensure that interested parties have
basic information available to them to understand Medicaid payment
levels and the associated effects of payment rates on access to care so
that they may raise concerns to State Medicaid agencies via the various
forms of public process available to interested parties. Transparency
will provide us and other interested parties with information necessary
that is not currently available at all or not available in a clear and
accessible format for us to ensure the payment rates for consistency
with efficiency, economy, and quality of care and are sufficient to
enlist enough providers so that care and services are available under
the plan at least to the extent that such care and services are
available to the general population in the geographic area. The payment
rate transparency publication is the first step in ensuring payment
rate data is transparent, then the comparative payment rate analysis is
the next step in analyzing the payment rate data relative to Medicare
as a benchmark. Additionally, given the requirements that the payment
rate transparency publications be publicly available, clear, and
accessible, we anticipate that various interested parties will be able
to adapt the published information manually or through technological
means so that it is suited to any analysis they wish to perform.
We are not incorporating the suggestion to require States to
publish information about payment rate models and methodologies (that
is, payment rate development information, potentially including cost
factors and assumptions underlying a rate, such as wages, employee-
related expenses, program-related expenses, and general and
administrative expenses), the frequency and processes for rate reviews,
or additional granular data, particularly for dental services (for
example, utilization, median payment rates, and service frequency),
because we want our initial focus to be on establishing the new payment
rate transparency publication, comparative payment rate analysis, and
payment rate disclosure requirements, providing States with support
during the compliance period, and ensuring these data are available to
beneficiaries, providers, CMS, and other interested parties for the
purposes of assessing access to care issues. While the payment rate
transparency publication does not require additional granular data
outside of payment rate variations by population (pediatric and adult),
provider type, and geographical location, we would like to note that
utilization in the form of the number of Medicaid-paid claims and the
number of Medicaid enrolled beneficiaries who received a service is
required to be included in the comparative payment rate analysis and
payment rate disclosure; however, these requirements do not include
dental services. We acknowledge that the commenters' suggestions would
add relevant and beneficial context to the payment rate information
required to be published by States in this final rule. Given that our
work to better ensure access in the Medicaid program is ongoing, we
intend to gain implementation experience with
[[Page 40700]]
this final rule, and we will consider the recommendations provided on
the proposed rule to help inform any future rulemaking in this area, as
appropriate. While we are not adopting all of these suggestions and
recommendations, we note that States have the flexibility to add the
elements described to their payment rate transparency publications if
they so choose.
We believe that there are minimal qualities that the website
containing the payment rate transparency publication necessarily must
include, such as being able to function quickly and as an average user
would expect; requiring minimal, logical navigation steps; taking
reasonable steps to provide meaningful access to individuals with
limited English proficiency; and ensuring accessibility for persons
with disabilities in accordance with section 504 of the Rehabilitation
Act and Title II of the ADA. An example of this includes a single web
page clearly listing the names of the State's published fee schedules
(such as Physician Fee Schedule, Rehabilitation Services Fee Schedule,
etc.)) as links that transport the user to the relevant State fee
schedule file, which file should be in a commonly accessible file
format that generally can be viewed within a web browser without
requiring the user to download a file for viewing in separate software.
In this example, there is no unnecessary burden (including requiring
payment (paywall)) creation of an account and/or password to view the
web page, or need to install additional software to view the files) on
the individual to trying to view the published fee schedules. We invite
States to reach out to CMS for technical guidance regarding compliance
with the payment rate transparency publication requirement. We also
encourage States to review the subregulatory guidance, which includes
an example of what a compliant payment rate transparency publication
might look like, that we will issue prior to the effective date of this
final rule.
Comment: A few commenters suggested narrowing the scope of the
payment rate transparency requirement. Commenters recommended narrowing
the scope by requiring publication of payment rate transparency
information only about a representative subset of services, a State's
most common provider types and covered services, or the same CMS-
published list of E/M codes that we proposed for the comparative
payment rate analysis requirement. A subset of these commenters
suggested that, once States have acclimated to the requirements of
payment rate transparency, then CMS could expand the requirement
gradually to include all Medicaid FFS payment rates, to ease burden on
States.
Response: We appreciate the commenters' suggestions on narrowing
the scope of the payment rate transparency requirement; however, we are
not changing the scope in this final rule. As previously discussed in
detail in an earlier response to comments in this section, for purposes
of the payment rate transparency provision in Sec. 447.203(b)(1),
Medicaid FFS fee schedule payment rates are FFS payment amounts made to
a provider, and known in advance of a provider delivering a service to
a beneficiary by reference to a fee schedule. While we understand the
broad scope of included rates will require some work for many States to
implement, we believe the time between the effective date of this final
rule and the applicability date of July 1, 2026, for the first
publication of payment rate transparency information is sufficient for
these requirements. Given that our work to better ensure access in the
Medicaid program is ongoing, we intend to gain implementation
experience with this final rule, and we will consider the
recommendations provided on the proposed rule to help inform any future
rulemaking in this area, as appropriate.
Comment: One commenter suggested requiring States identify an
additional level of payment rate variation within the population
(pediatric and adult) where, within the pediatric population, Medicaid
and CHIP pay different rates, which should be disclosed separately in
the payment rate transparency publication.
Response: We appreciate the commenter's suggestion; however, we are
not including a requirement that States break down payment rates to
include separate Medicaid and CHIP payment rate information within the
pediatric population payment rate reporting. Regulations applicable to
CHIP under 42 CFR part 457 and relevant guidance are beyond the scope
of this rulemaking. After obtaining implementation experience with
these new policies, we will consider proposing to require States to
identify additional levels of payment rate variations in the Medicaid
FFS payment rate transparency publication through future rulemaking.
Comment: One commenter suggested applying the payment rate
transparency requirements to all Medicaid HCBS programs.
Response: To the extent a State's Medicaid HCBS program utilizes
Medicaid FFS fee schedule payment rates within the meaning of this
final rule, as discussed in detail earlier in this section, those
payment rates would be subject to payment rate transparency publication
requirements described in Sec. 447.203(b)(1). Additionally, we are
finalizing a similar provision to the Medicaid FFS fee schedule payment
rate transparency requirement for HCBS direct care worker compensation
elsewhere in this final rule. The HCBS Payment Adequacy and Reporting
requirements in this final rule require that States report annually, in
the aggregate for each service, on the percent of payments for
homemaker, home health aide, personal care, and habilitation services
that are spent on compensation for direct care workers, and separately
report on payments for such services when they are self-directed and
facility-based.
Comment: One commenter suggested collecting provider-level data on
all payments, not just fee schedule payment rates, as well as the
source(s) of non-Federal share for payments, to determine net Medicaid
payments (total Medicaid provider payments received minus the
provider's contributions to the non-Federal share through mechanisms
including provider-related donations, health care-related taxes,
intergovernmental transfers, and certified public expenditures) to each
provider.
Response: Existing UPL and the supplemental payment reporting
requirements under section 1903(bb) of the Act, as established by
Division CC, Title II, Section 202 of the Consolidated Appropriations
Act, 2021 (CAA) (Pub L. 116-260),) already require States to submit
provider-level payment data for certain services to CMS. Therefore, we
are not incorporating the suggestion to collect provider-level data on
all payments because this would be duplicative of existing requirements
and because that is not the intention of the payment rate transparency
publication requirement. While we do collect information about the non-
Federal share through SPA reviews, regulatory requirements regarding
collection of non-Federal share data are beyond the scope of this
rulemaking.
Comment: A couple of commenters stated that dually eligible
beneficiaries and their providers face unique issues when accessing and
delivering Medicaid services (such as beneficiaries facing worse
outcomes and having complex needs that require providers to coordinate
and deliver specialized care) and requested CMS include additional
provisions in the payment rate transparency publication requirements
specifically for this group. One commenter suggested CMS require the
[[Page 40701]]
payment rate transparency publication, comparative payment rate
analysis, and payment rate disclosure address the experience of people
who are dual-eligible and include factors related to Medicare coverage.
Another commenter suggested requiring that the payment rates be
disaggregated for the purposes of comparing providers serving dually
eligible beneficiaries from those serving Medicare-only or Medicaid-
only beneficiaries to ensure differences in access to care and payment
rates are documented. The commenter also recommended the payment rate
transparency publication identify when Medicaid is the primary or
secondary payer in the context of a State's lesser-of payment policies
(that is, for dually eligible Qualified Medicare Beneficiaries, States
are obligated to pay Medicare providers for deductibles and co-
insurance after Medicare has paid; however, States limit those payments
to the lesser of the Medicaid rate for the service or the Medicare co-
insurance amount).
Response: We appreciate the commenters' concern for and suggestions
on how we might evaluate access to care for dually eligible
beneficiaries. We are not incorporating the suggestion to require the
payment rate transparency publication, comparative payment rate
analysis, and payment rate disclosure address the experience of people
who are dual-eligible and include factors related to Medicare coverage
because these provisions focus on requiring States to publish and
analyze quantitative data (such as, payment rates, claims volume,
beneficiary counts) to assess access to care, rather than qualitive
data (such as, surveys on beneficiary experience). We are also not
incorporating the suggestion to identify when Medicaid is the primary
or secondary payer in the context of a State's lesser-of payment
policies in the payment rate transparency publication because we remain
focused on the transparency of States' payment rates, rather than
States' payment policies, as a method of assessing consistency with
section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act. Additionally, we are not
incorporating the suggestion to require States disaggregate their
Medicaid FFS fee schedule payment rates for providers serving dually
eligible beneficiaries from those serving Medicare-only or Medicaid-
only beneficiaries because we want our initial focus to be on
establishing the new payment rate transparency, comparative payment
rate analysis, and payment rate disclosure requirements, providing
States with support during the compliance period, and ensuring the data
required under this final rule are to beneficiaries, providers, CMS,
and other interested parties for the purpose of assessing access to
care issues. We believe that payment rate breakdowns by population
(pediatric and adult), provider type, and geographical location will
provide a sufficient amount of transparency to ensure that interested
parties have basic information available to them to understand Medicaid
payment levels and the associated effects of payment rates on access to
care so that they may raise concerns to State Medicaid agencies via the
various forms of public processes available to interested parties.
Monitoring access to care is an ongoing priority of the agency and
we will continue to work with States and other interested parties as we
seek to expand access monitoring in the future, including potentially
through future rulemaking. However, we remain focused on maintaining a
balance in Federal and State administrative burden with our shared
obligation to ensure compliance with section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act
(and our obligation to oversee State compliance with the same).
Comment: A couple of commenters recommended that the payment rate
transparency requirements under Sec. 447.203(b) be applied to payment
rates for services delivered to beneficiaries through managed care to
ensure managed care plan rates are published publicly.
Response: While we appreciate the value in transparency of provider
payment rates in managed care delivery systems, regulations applicable
to managed care under 42 CFR parts 438 and 457 are beyond the scope of
this rulemaking.
Comment: One commenter requested CMS work with States to correct
deficient payment rates once identified by the transparency
requirements.
Response: To clarify, the provisions in this final rule do not
require States to change their provider payment rates. The goal of the
payment rate transparency publication is to ensure all States publish
their Medicaid FFS fee schedule payment rates in a format that is
publicly accessible and where all Medicaid FFS fee schedule payment
rates can be easily located and understood.
Transparency, particularly the requirement that States must
publicly publish their Medicaid FFS fee schedule payment rates, helps
to ensure that interested parties have basic information available to
them to understand Medicaid payment levels and the associated effects
of payment rates on access to care so that they may raise concerns to
State Medicaid agencies via the various forms of public process
available to interested parties. We will utilize the information in the
payment rate transparency publication during SPA reviews and other
situations when States are proposing provider payment rate changes for
services included in the publication and when the public process in
Sec. 447.204 is used to raise access to care issues related to
possible deficient payment rates for services included in the
publication.
After consideration of public comments, we are finalizing all
provisions under Sec. 447.203(b)(1) as proposed, apart from the
following changes:
Updated the organizational structure of (b)(1) to add
romanettes.
Added clarifying language to the proposed language stating
what Medicaid FFS payment rates need to be published.
++ In paragraph (b)(1), the proposed language was revised from
``The State agency is required to publish all Medicaid fee-for-service
payment rates . . .'' to finalize the language as ``The State agency is
required to publish all Medicaid fee-for-service fee schedule payment
rates . . .'' (new language identified in bold)
++ In paragraph (b)(1)(i), the proposed language was revised from
``Published Medicaid fee-for-service payment rates include fee schedule
payment rates . . .'' to finalize the language as ``For purposes of
paragraph (b)(1), the payment rates that the State agency is required
to publish are Medicaid fee-for-service payment rates . . .'' (new
language identified in bold)
Deleted the proposed language specifying that the payment
rate transparency must be developed and maintained on the State
Medicaid agency's website. The proposed language was revised from ``The
State agency is required to publish all Medicaid fee-for-service
payment rates on a website developed and maintained by the single State
agency that is accessible to the general public'' to finalize the
language as ``The State agency is required to publish all Medicaid fee-
for-service payment rates on a website that is accessible to the
general public.'' in paragraph (b)(1).
Revised the proposed language about a member of the public
being able to readily determine the payment amount for a service from
``Medicaid fee-for-service payment rates must be organized in such a
way that a member of the public can readily determine the amount that
Medicaid would pay for the service'' to finalize the language as
[[Page 40702]]
``Medicaid fee-for-service payment rates must be organized in such a
way that a member of the public can readily determine the amount that
Medicaid would pay for a given service.'' in paragraph (b)(1)(iii).
(new language identified in bold)
Revised the proposed language about bundled payment rates
from ``. . . in the case of a bundled or similar payment methodology,
identify each constituent service included within the rate and how much
of the bundled payment is allocated to each constituent service under
the State's methodology'' to:
++ Delete ``or similar'' from ``In the case of a bundled or similar
payment methodology . . .''
++ Add ``the State must publish the Medicaid fee-for-service
bundled payment rate and, where the bundled payment rate is based on
fee schedule payment rates for each constituent service, must . . .''
The language is finalized as ``In the case of a bundled payment
methodology, the State must publish the Medicaid fee-for-service
bundled payment rate and, where the bundled payment rate is based on
fee schedule payment rates for each constituent service, must identify
each constituent service included within the rate and how much of the
bundled payment is allocated to each constituent service under the
State's methodology.'' in paragraph (b)(1)(iv). (new language
identified in bold)
Revised the applicability date for this section from the
proposed January 1, 2026, to require that the initial publication of
the Medicaid FFS payment rates shall occur no later than July 1, 2026,
and include approved Medicaid FFS payment rates in effect as of July 1,
2026, in paragraph (b)(1)(vi).
Revised the proposed language about updating the
publication after SPA approval from ``The agency is required to include
the date the payment rates were last updated on the State Medicaid
agency's website and to ensure these data are kept current where any
necessary update must be made no later than 1 month following the date
of CMS approval of the State plan amendment, section 1915(c) HCBS
waiver amendment, or similar amendment revising the provider payment
rate or methodology.'' to finalize the language as ``The agency is
required to include the date the payment rates were last updated on the
State Medicaid agency's website and to ensure these data are kept
current, where any necessary update must be made no later than 1 month
following the latter of the date of CMS approval of the State plan
amendment, section 1915(c) HCBS waiver amendment, or similar amendment
revising the provider payment rate or methodology, or the effective
date of the approved amendment.'' in paragraph (b)(1)(vi). (new
language identified in bold)
b. Comparative Payment Rate Analysis and Payment Rate Disclosure Sec.
447.203(b)(2) Through (5)
In paragraph (b)(2), we proposed to require States to develop and
publish a comparative payment rate analysis of Medicaid payment rates
for certain specified services, and a payment rate disclosure for
certain HCBS. We specified the categories of services that States would
be required to include in a comparative payment rate analysis and
payment rate disclosure of Medicaid payment rates. Specifically, we
proposed that for each of the categories of services in paragraphs
(b)(2)(i) through (iii), each State agency would be required to develop
and publish a comparative payment rate analysis of Medicaid payment
rates as specified in proposed Sec. 447.203(b)(3). We also proposed
that for each of the categories of services in paragraph (b)(2)(iv),
each State agency would be required to develop and publish a payment
rate disclosure of Medicaid payment rates as specified in proposed
Sec. 447.203(b)(3). We proposed for both the comparative payment rate
analysis and payment rate disclosure that, if the rates vary, the State
must separately identify the payment rates by population (pediatric and
adult), provider type, and geographical location, as applicable. The
categories of services listed in paragraph (b)(2) include: primary care
services; obstetrical and gynecological services; outpatient mental
health and substance use disorder services; and personal care, home
health aide, and homemaker services, as specified in Sec.
440.180(b)(2) through (4), provided by individual providers and
providers employed by an agency.
In paragraph (b)(2), we proposed to require States separately
identify the payment rates in the comparative payment rate analysis and
payment rate disclosure, if the rates vary, by population (pediatric
and adult), provider type, and geographical location, as applicable.
These proposed breakdowns of the Medicaid payment rates, similar to how
we proposed payment rates would be broken down in the payment rate
transparency publication under proposed Sec. 447.203(b)(1), would
apply to all proposed categories of services listed in paragraph
(b)(2): primary care services, obstetrical and gynecological services,
outpatient mental health and substance use disorder services, and
personal care, home health aide, and homemaker services provided by
individual providers and providers employed by an agency.
We acknowledged that not all States pay varied payment rates by
population (pediatric and adult), provider type, and geographical
location, which is why we have included language ``if the rates vary''
and ``as applicable'' in the proposed regulatory text. We included this
language in the proposed regulatory text to ensure the comparative
payment rate analysis and payment rate disclosure capture all Medicaid
payment rates, including when States pay varied payment rates by
population (pediatric and adult), provider type, and geographical
location. We also included proposed regulatory text for the payment
rate disclosure to ensure that the average hourly payment rates for
personal care, home health aide, and homemaker services provided by
individual providers and providers employed by an agency would be
separately identified for payments made to individual providers and to
providers employed by an agency, if the rates vary, as later discussed
in connection with Sec. 447.203(b)(3)(ii). For States that do not pay
varied payment rates by population (pediatric and adult), provider
type, and geographical location and pay a single Statewide payment rate
for a single service, then the comparative payment rate analysis and
payment rate disclosure would only need to include the State's single
Statewide payment rate.
We proposed to include a breakdown of Medicaid payment rates by
population (pediatric and adult), provider type, and geographical
location, as applicable, on the Medicaid side of the comparative
payment rate analysis in paragraph (b)(2) to align with the proposed
payment rate transparency provision, to account for State Medicaid
programs that pay variable Medicaid payment rates by population
(pediatric and adult), provider type, and geographical location, and to
help ensure the State's comparative payment rate analyses accurately
align with Medicare. Following the initial year that the proposed
provisions proposed would be in effect, these provisions would align
with and build on the payment rate transparency requirements described
in Sec. 447.203(b)(1), because States could source the codes and their
corresponding Medicaid payment rates that the State already would
publish to meet the payment rate transparency requirements.
[[Page 40703]]
We explained that these proposed provisions are intended to help
ensure that the State's comparative payment rate analysis contains the
highest level of granularity in each proposed aspect by considering and
accounting for any variation in Medicaid payment rates by population
(pediatric and adult), provider type, and geographical location, as
previously required in the AMRP process under Sec. 447.203(b)(1)(iv)
and (v), and (b)(3). Additionally, Medicare varies payment rates for
certain NPPs (nurse practitioners, physician assistants, and clinical
nurse specialists) by paying them 85 percent of the full Medicare PFS
amount and varies their payment rates by geographical location through
calculated adjustments to the pricing amounts to reflect the variation
in practice costs from one geographical location to another; therefore,
we explained that the comparative payment rate analysis accounting for
these payment rate variations is crucial to ensuring the Medicaid FFS
payment rates accurately align with FFS Medicare PFS rates.\207\
Medicare payment variations for provider type and geographical location
would be directly compared with State Medicaid payment rates that also
apply the same payment variations, in addition to payment variation by
population (pediatric and adult) which is unique to Medicaid, yet an
important payment variation to take into consideration when striving
for transparency of Medicaid payment rates. For States that do not pay
varied payment rates by population (pediatric and adult), provider
type, or geographical location and pay a single Statewide payment rate
for a single service, Medicare payment variations for provider type and
geographical location would be considered by calculating a Statewide
average of Medicare PFS rates which is later discussed in this final
rule.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\207\ https://www.medpac.gov/wp-content/uploads/2021/11/MedPAC_Payment_Basics_22_Physician_FINAL_SEC.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Similar to the payment rate transparency publication, we
acknowledged that there may be additional burden associated with our
proposal that the payment rate transparency publication and the
comparative payment rate analysis include a payment rate breakdown by
population (pediatric and adult), provider type, and geographical
location, as applicable, when States' payment rates vary based on these
groupings. However, we believe that any approach to requiring a
comparative payment rate analysis would involve some level of burden
that is greater for States that choose to employ these payment rate
differentials, since any comparison methodology would need to take
account--through a separate comparison, weighted average, or other
mathematically reasonable approach--of all rates paid under the
Medicaid program for a given service. In all events, we believe this
proposal would create an additional level of granularity in the
analysis that is important for ensuring compliance with section
1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act. We noted that multiple types of providers,
for example, physicians, physician assistants, and nurse practitioners,
are delivering similar services to Medicaid beneficiaries of all ages,
across multiple Medicaid benefit categories, throughout each State.
Section 1902(a)(30)(A) requires ``. . . that payments are
consistent with efficiency, economy, and quality of care and are
sufficient to enlist enough providers so that care and services are
available under the plan at least to the extent that such care and
services are available to the general population in the geographic
area,'' and we noted our belief that having sufficient access to a
variety of provider types is important to ensuring access for Medicaid
beneficiaries meets this statutory standard. For example, a targeted
payment rate reduction to nurse practitioners, who are often paid less
than 100 percent of the State's physician fee schedule rate, could have
a negative impact on access to care for services provided by nurse
practitioners, but this reduction would not directly impact physicians
or their willingness to participate in Medicaid and furnish services to
beneficiaries. By proposing that the comparative payment rate analysis
include a breakdown by provider type, where States distinguish payment
rates for a service by provider type, we explained that the analysis
would capture this payment rate variation among providers of the same
services and provide us with a granular level of information to aid in
determining if access to care is sufficient, particularly in cases
where beneficiaries depend to a large extent on the particular provider
type(s) that would be affected by the proposed rate change for the
covered service(s).
We identified payment rate variation by population (pediatric and
adult), provider type, and geographical location as the most commonly
applied adjustments to payment rates that overlap between FFS Medicaid
and Medicare and could be readily broken down into separately
identified payment rates for comparison in the comparative payment rate
analysis. For transparency purposes and to help to ensure the
comparative payment rate analysis is conducted at a granular level of
analysis, we explained our belief that it is important for the State to
separately identify their rates, if the rates vary, by population
(pediatric and adult), provider type, and geographical location, as
applicable. We solicited comments on the proposal to require the
comparative payment rate analysis to include, if the rates vary,
separate identification of payment rates by population (pediatric and
adult), provider type, and geographical location, as applicable, in the
comparative payment rate analysis in proposed Sec. 447.203(b)(2).
We acknowledged that States may apply additional payment
adjustments or factors, for example, the Consumer Price Index, Medicare
Economic Index, or State-determined inflationary factors or budget
neutrality factors, to their Medicaid payment rates other than
population (pediatric and adult), provider type, and geographical
location. We stated that we expect any other additional payment
adjustments and factors to already be included in the State's published
Medicaid fee schedule rate or calculable from the State plan, because
Sec. 430.10 requires the State plan to be a ``comprehensive written
statement . . . contain[ing] all information necessary for CMS to
determine whether the plan can be approved to serve as a basis for . .
. FFP . . .'' Therefore, for States paying for services with a fee
schedule payment rate, the Medicaid fee schedule is the sole source of
information for providers to locate their final payment rate for
Medicaid services provided to Medicaid beneficiaries under a FFS
delivery system. For States with a rate-setting methodology where the
approved State plan describes how rates are set based upon a fee
schedule (for example, payment for NPPs are set a percentage of a
certain published Medicaid fee schedule), the Medicaid fee schedule
would again be the source of information for providers to identify the
relevant starting payment rate and apply the rate-setting methodology
described in the State plan to ascertain their Medicaid payment.\208\
We solicited comments on any additional types of payment adjustments or
factors States make to their Medicaid payment rates as listed on their
State fee schedules that should be identified in the comparative
payment rate analysis that we have not
[[Page 40704]]
already discussed in Sec. 447.203(b)(i)(B) of this final rule, and how
the inclusion of any such additional adjustments or factors should be
considered in the development of the Medicare PFS rate to compare
Medicaid payment rates to, as later described in Sec.
447.203(b)(3)(i)(C), of this final rule.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\208\ https://www.medicaid.gov/state-resource-center/downloads/spa-and-1915-waiver-processing/fed-req-pymt-methodologies.docx.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In paragraphs (b)(2)(i) through (iv), we proposed that primary care
services, obstetrical and gynecological services, and outpatient
behavioral health services would be subject to a comparative payment
rate analysis of Medicaid payment rates and personal care, home health
aide, and homemaker services provided by individual providers and
providers employed by an agency would be subject to a payment rate
disclosure of Medicaid payment rates. We begin with a discussion about
the importance of primary care services, obstetrical and gynecological
services, and outpatient behavioral health services as proposed in
Sec. 447.203(b)(2)(i) through (iii), and the reason for their
inclusion in this proposed requirement. Then, we will discuss the
importance and justification for including personal care, home health
aide, and homemaker services provided by individual providers and
providers employed by an agency as proposed in Sec. 447.203(b)(2)(iv).
In Sec. 447.203(b)(2)(i) through (iii), we proposed to require
primary care services, obstetrical and gynecological services, and
outpatient mental health and substance use disorder services be
included in the comparative payment rate analysis, because we believe
that these categories of services are critical preventive, routine, and
acute medical services in and of themselves, and that they often serve
as gateways to access to other needed medical services, including
specialist services, laboratory and x-ray services, prescription drugs,
and other mandatory and optional Medicaid benefits that States cover.
Including these categories of services in the comparative payment rate
analysis would require States to closely examine their Medicaid FFS
payment rates to comply with section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act. As
described in the recent key findings from public comments on the
February 2022 RFI that we published, payment rates are a key driver of
provider participation in the Medicaid program.\209\ By proposing that
States compare their Medicaid payment rates for primary care services,
obstetrical and gynecological services, and outpatient mental health
and substance use disorder services to Medicare payment rates, States
would be required to analyze if and how their payments are consistent
with efficiency, economy, and quality of care and are sufficient to
enlist enough providers so that care and services are available under
the plan at least to the extent that such care and services are
available to the general population in the geographic area.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\209\ Summary of Public Comments in response to the CMS 2022
Request for Information: Access to Coverage and Care in Medicaid &
CHIP. December 2022. For the report, see https://www.medicaid.gov/medicaid/access-care/downloads/access-rfi-2022-report.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In the proposed rule, we noted our belief that Medicare payment
rates for these services are likely to serve as a reliable benchmark
for a level of payment sufficient to enlist providers to furnish the
relevant services to a beneficiary because Medicare delivers services
through a FFS delivery system across all geographical regions of the US
and historically, the vast majority of physicians accept new Medicare
patients, with extremely low rates of physicians opting out of the
Medicare program, suggesting that Medicare's payment rates are
generally consistent with a high level of physician willingness to
accept new Medicare patients.\210\ Additionally, Medicare payment rates
are publicly published in an accessible and consistent format by CMS
making Medicare payment rates an available and reliable comparison
point for States, rather than private payer data which typically is
considered proprietary information and not generally available to the
public. Therefore, we explained that the proposed requirement that
States develop and publish a comparative payment rate analysis would
enable States, CMS, and other interested parties to closely examine the
relationship between State Medicaid FFS payment rates and those paid by
Medicare. This analysis would continually help States to ensure that
their Medicaid payment rates are set at a level that is likely
sufficient to meet the statutory access standard under section
1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act that payments be sufficient to enlist enough
providers so that care and services are available under the plan at
least to the extent that such care and services are available to the
general population in the geographic area.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\210\ Physicians and practitioners who do not wish to enroll in
the Medicare program may ``opt-out'' of Medicare. This means that
neither the physician, nor the beneficiary submits the bill to
Medicare for services rendered. Instead, the beneficiary pays the
physician out-of-pocket and neither party is reimbursed by Medicare.
A private contract is signed between the physician and the
beneficiary that states that neither one can receive payment from
Medicare for the services that were performed. See https://data.cms.gov/provider-characteristics/medicare-provider-supplier-enrollment/opt-out-affidavits.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We noted our belief that the comparative payment rate analysis
would provide States, CMS, and other interested parties with clear and
concise information for identifying when there is a potential access to
care issue, such as Medicaid payment rates not keeping pace with
changes in corresponding Medicare rates and decreases in claims volume
and beneficiary utilization of services. As discussed later in this
section, numerous studies have found a relationship between Medicaid
payment rates and provider participation in the Medicaid program and,
given the statutory standard of ensuring access for Medicaid
beneficiaries, a comparison of Medicaid payment rates to other payer
rates, particularly Medicare payment rates as justified later in this
rule, is an important barometer of whether State payment rates and
policies are sufficient for meeting the statutory access standard under
section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act.
We proposed to focus on these particular services because they are
critical medical services and of great importance to overall
beneficiary health. Beginning with primary care, these services provide
access to preventative services and facilitate the development of
crucial doctor-patient relationships. Primary care providers often
deliver preventive health care services, including immunizations,
screenings for common chronic and infectious diseases and cancers,
clinical and behavioral interventions to manage chronic disease and
reduce associated risks, and counseling to support healthy living and
self-management of chronic diseases; Medicaid coverage of preventative
health care services promotes disease prevention which is critical to
helping people live longer, healthier lives.\211\ Accessing primary
care services can often result in beneficiaries receiving referrals or
recommendations to schedule an appointment with physician specialists,
such as gastroenterologists or neurologists, that they would not be
able to obtain without the referral or recommendation by the primary
care physician. Additionally, primary care physicians provide
beneficiaries with orders for laboratory and x-ray services as well as
prescriptions for necessary medications that a beneficiary would not be
able to access without the primary care physician. Research over the
last century has shown that the impact of the doctor-patient
relationship on
[[Page 40705]]
patient's health care experience, health outcomes, and health care
costs exists \212\ and more recent studies have shown that the quality
of the physician-patient relationship is positively associated with
functional health among patients.\213\ Another study found that higher
primary care payment rates reduced mental illness and substance use
disorders among non-elderly adult Medicaid enrollees, suggesting that
positive spillover from increasing primary care rates also positively
impacted behavioral health outcomes.\214\ Lastly, research has shown
that a reduction in barriers to accessing primary care services has
been associated with helping reduce health disparities and the risk of
poor health outcomes.215 216 These examples illustrate how
crucial access to primary care services is for overall beneficiary
health and to enable access to other medical services. We solicited
comments on primary care services as one of the proposed categories of
services subject to the comparative payment rate analysis requirements
in proposed Sec. 447.203(b)(2)(i).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\211\ https://www.medicaid.gov/medicaid/benefits/prevention/.
\212\ Cockerham, W.C. (2021). The Wiley Blackwell Companion to
Medical Sociology (1st ed.). John Wiley & Sons.
\213\ Olaisen, R.H., Schluchter, M.D., Flocke, S.A., Smyth,
K.A., Koroukian, S.M., & Stange, K.C. (2020). Assessing the
longitudinal impact of physician-patient relationship on Functional
Health. The Annals of Family Medicine, 18(5), 422-429. https://doi.org/10.1370/afm.2554.
\214\ Maclean, Johanna Catherine, McCleallan, Chandler, Pesko,
Michael F., and Polsky, Daniel. (2023). Medicaid reimbursement rates
for primary care services and behavioral health outcomes. Health
economics, 1-37. https://doi.org/10.1002/hec.4646.
\215\ Starfield, B., Shi, L., & Macinko, J. (2005). Contribution
of primary care to health systems and health. The Milbank quarterly,
83(3), 457-502. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1468-0009.2005.00409.x.
\216\ https://health.gov/healthypeople/priority-areas/social-determinants-health/literature-summaries/access-primary-care.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Similar to primary care services, both obstetrical and
gynecological services and outpatient behavioral health services
provide access to preventive and screening services unique to each
respective field. A well-woman visit to an obstetrician-gynecologist
often provides access to screenings for cervical and breast cancer;
screenings for Rh(D) incompatibility, syphilis infection, and hepatitis
B virus infection in pregnant persons; monitoring for healthy weight
and weight gain in pregnancy; immunization against the human
papillomavirus infection; and perinatal depression screenings among
other recommended preventive services.217 218 Behavioral
health care promotes mental health, resilience, and wellbeing; the
treatment of mental and substance use disorders; and the support of
those who experience and/or are in recovery from these conditions,
along with their families and communities. Outpatient behavioral health
services can overlap with preventative primary care and obstetrical and
gynecological services, for example screening for depression in adults
and perinatal depression screenings, but also provide unique preventive
and screening services such as screenings for unhealthy alcohol use in
adolescents and adults, anxiety in children and adolescents, and eating
disorders in adolescents and adults, among other recommended preventive
services.\219\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\217\ Rh(D) incompatibility is a preventable pregnancy
compilation where a woman who is Rh negative is carrying a fetus
that is Rh positive (Rh factor is a protein that can be found on the
surface of red blood cells). When the blood of an Rh-positive fetus
gets into the bloodstream of an Rh-negative woman, her body will
recognize that the Rh-positive blood is not hers. Her body will try
to destroy it by making anti-Rh antibodies. These antibodies can
cross the placenta and attack the fetus's blood cells. This can lead
to serious health problems, even death, for a fetus or a newborn.
Prevention of Rh(D) incompatibility requires screening for Rh
negative early in pregnancy (or before pregnancy) and, if needed,
giving a medication to prevent antibodies from forming.
\218\ https://www.acog.org/clinical/clinical-guidance/committee-opinion/articles/2018/10/well-woman-visit.
\219\ https://www.uspreventiveservicestaskforce.org/uspstf/topic_search_results?topic_status=P.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The US is simultaneously experiencing a maternal health crisis and
mental health crisis, putting providers of obstetrical and
gynecological and outpatient behavioral health services, respectively,
at the forefront.220 221 According to Medicaid and CHIP
Payment and Access Commission (MACPAC), ``Medicaid plays a key role in
providing maternity-related services for pregnant women, paying for
slightly less than half of all births nationally in 2018.'' \222\ Given
Medicaid's significant role in maternal health during a time when
maternal mortality rates in the US continue to worsen and the racial
disparities among mothers continues to widen,223 224
accessing obstetrical and gynecological care, including care before,
during, and after pregnancy is crucial to positive maternal and infant
outcomes.\225\ We solicited comments on obstetrical and gynecological
services as one of the proposed categories of services subject to the
comparative payment rate analysis requirements in proposed Sec.
447.203(b)(2)(ii).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\220\ https://www.whitehouse.gov/wp-content/uploads/2022/06/Maternal-Health-Blueprint.pdf.
\221\ https://www.whitehouse.gov/briefing-room/statements-releases/2022/05/31/fact-sheet-biden-harris-administration-highlights-strategy-to-address-the-national-mental-health-crisis/.
\222\ https://www.macpac.gov/wp-content/uploads/2020/01/Medicaid%E2%80%99s-Role-in-Financing-Maternity-Care.pdf.
\223\ https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/data/hestat/maternal-mortality/2020/maternal-mortality-rates-2020.htm.
\224\ https://www.nytimes.com/2022/02/23/health/maternal-deaths-pandemic.html?smid=url-share.
\225\ https://www.cms.gov/About-CMS/Agency-Information/OMH/equity-initiatives/rural-health/09032019-Maternal-Health-Care-in-Rural-Communities.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Improving access to behavioral health services is a critical,
national issue facing all payors, particularly for Medicaid which plays
a crucial role in mental health care access as the single largest payer
of services and has a growing role in payment for substance use
disorder services, in part due to Medicaid expansion and various
efforts by Congress to improve access to behavioral health
services.226 227 Several studies have found an association
between reducing the uninsured rate through increased Medicaid
enrollment and improved and expanded access to critically needed
behavioral health services.\228\ Numerous studies have found positive
outcomes associated with Medicaid expansion: increases in the insured
rate and access to care and medications for adults with depression,
increases in coverage rates and a greater likelihood of being diagnosed
with a mental health condition as well as the use of prescription
medications for a mental health condition for college students from
disadvantaged backgrounds,\229\ and a decrease in delayed or forgone
necessary care in a nationally representative sample of non-elderly
adults with serious psychological distress.\230\ While individuals who
are covered by Medicaid have better access to behavioral health
services compared to people who are uninsured, some coverage gaps
remain in access to behavioral health care for many people, including
those with Medicaid.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\226\ https://www.medicaid.gov/medicaid/access-care/downloads/coverage-and-behavioral-health-data-spotlight.pdf.
\227\ https://www.medicaid.gov/medicaid/benefits/behavioral-health-services/.
\228\ https://www.cbpp.org/research/health/to-improve-behavioral-health-start-by-closing-the-medicaid-coverage-gap.
\229\ Cowan, Benjamin W. & Hao, Zhuang. (2021). Medicaid
expansion and the mental health of college students. Health
economics, 30(6), 1306-1327. https://www.nber.org/system/files/working_papers/w27306/w27306.pdf.
\230\ Novak, P., Anderson, A.C., & Chen, J. (2018). Changes in
Health Insurance Coverage and Barriers to Health Care Access Among
Individuals with Serious Psychological Distress Following the
Affordable Care Act. Administration and policy in mental health,
45(6), 924-932. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10488-018-0875-9.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In the proposed rule, we noted that some of the barriers to
accessing
[[Page 40706]]
behavioral health treatment in Medicaid reflect larger system-wide
access problems: overall shortage of behavioral health providers in the
United States and relatively small number of psychiatrists who accept
any form of insurance or participate in health coverage programs.\231\
Particularly for outpatient behavioral health services for Medicaid
beneficiaries, one reason physicians are unwilling to accept Medicaid
patients is because of low Medicaid payment rates.\232\ One study found
evidence of low Medicaid payment rates by examining outpatient Medicaid
claims data from 2014 in 11 States with a primary behavioral health
diagnosis and an evaluation and management (E/M) procedure code of
99213 (Established patient office visit, 20-29 minutes) or 99214
(Established patient office visit, 30-39 minutes) and found that
psychiatrists in nine States were paid less, on average, than primary
care physicians.\233\ These pieces of research and data about the
importance of outpatient behavioral health services and the existing
challenges beneficiaries face in trying to access outpatient behavioral
health services underscore how crucial access to outpatient behavioral
health services is, and that adequate Medicaid payment rates for these
services is likely to be an important driver of access for
beneficiaries. We solicited comments on outpatient behavioral health
services as one of the proposed categories of services subject to the
comparative payment rate analysis requirements in proposed Sec.
447.203(b)(2)(iii) which we are finalizing as ``Outpatient mental
health and substance use disorder services.''
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\231\ https://www.kff.org/medicaid/issue-brief/medicaids-role-in-financing-behavioral-health-services-for-low-income-individuals/.
\232\ https://www.healthaffairs.org/do/10.1377/forefront.20190401.678690/full/.
\233\ Mark, Tami L., Parish, William, Zarkin, Gary A., and
Weber, Ellen (2020). Comparison of Medicaid Reimbursements for
Psychiatrists and Primary Care Physicians. Psychiatry services
71(9), 947-950. https://doi.org/10.1176/appi.ps.202000062.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In Sec. 447.203(b)(2)(iv), we proposed to require personal care,
home health aide, and homemaker services provided by individual
providers and providers employed by an agency in the payment rate
disclosure requirements proposed in Sec. 447.203(b)(3)(ii). We noted
that many HCBS providers nationwide are facing workforce shortages and
high staff turnover that have been exacerbated by the COVID-19
pandemic, and these issues and related difficulty accessing HCBS can
lead to higher rates of costly, institutional stays for
beneficiaries.\234\ As with any covered service, the supply of HCBS
providers has a direct and immediate impact on beneficiaries' ability
to access high quality HCBS, therefore, we included special
considerations for LTSS, specifically HCBS, through two proposed
provisions in Sec. 447.203. The first provision in proposed paragraph
(b)(2)(iv) would require States to include personal care, home health
aide, and homemaker services provided by individual providers and
providers employed by an agency to be included in the payment rate
disclosure in proposed paragraph (b)(3)(ii). The second provision in
paragraph (b)(6), discussed in the next section, would require States
to establish an interested parties' advisory committee to advise and
consult on rates paid to certain HCBS providers. We explained that this
provision is intended to help contextualize lived experience of direct
care workers and beneficiaries who receive the services they deliver by
providing direct care workers, beneficiaries and their authorized
representatives, and other interested parties with the ability to make
recommendations to the State Medicaid agency regarding the sufficiency
of Medicaid payment rates for these specified services to help ensure
sufficient provider participation so that these HCBS are accessible to
beneficiaries consistent with section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\234\ https://www.kff.org/coronavirus-covid-19/event/march-30-web-event-unsung-heroes-the-crucial-role-and-tenuous-circumstances-of-home-health-aides-during-the-pandemic/; https://www.macpac.gov/wp-content/uploads/2022/03/MACPAC-brief-on-HCBS-workforce.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The proposed payment rate disclosure would require States to
publish the average hourly payment rates made to individual providers
and to providers employed by an agency, separately, if the rates vary,
for each category of services specified in Sec. 447.203(b)(2)(iv). No
comparison to Medicare payment rates would be required in recognition
that Medicare generally does not cover and pay for these services, and
when these services are covered and paid for by Medicare, the services
are very limited and provided on a short-term basis, rather than long-
term basis as with Medicaid HCBS. While Medicare covers part-time or
intermittent home health aide services (only if a Medicare beneficiary
is also getting other skilled services like nursing and/or therapy at
the same time) under Medicare Part A (Hospital Insurance) or Medicare
Part B (Medical Insurance), Medicare does not cover personal care or
homemaker services.\235\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\235\ https://www.medicare.gov/coverage/home-health-services.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We proposed to require these services be subject to a payment rate
disclosure because this rule aims to standardize data and monitoring
across service delivery systems with the goal of improving access to
care. To remain consistent with the proposed HCBS provisions at Sec.
441.311(d)(2) and (e), where we proposed to require annual State
reporting on access and payment adequacy metrics for homemaker, home
health aide, and personal care services, we proposed to include these
services, provided by individual providers and providers employed by an
agency in the FFS payment rate disclosure proposed in 447.203(b)(2). We
explained that we selected these specific services because we expect
them to be most commonly conducted in individuals' homes and general
community settings and, therefore, constitute the vast majority of FFS
payments for direct care workers delivering services under FFS. We
acknowledged that the proposed analyses required of States in the HCBS
provisions at Sec. 441.311(d)(2) and (e) and in the FFS provisions at
Sec. 447.203(b)(2) are different, although, unique to assessing access
in each program and delivery system. We proposed to include personal
care, home health aide, and homemaker services for consistency with
HCBS access and payment adequacy provisions, and also to include these
services in the proposed provisions of Sec. 447.203(b)(2) to require
States to conduct and publish a payment rate disclosure. We noted our
belief the latter proposal is important because the payment rate
disclosure of personal care, home health aide, and homemaker services
would provide CMS with sufficient information, including average hourly
payment rates, claims volume, and number of Medicaid enrolled
beneficiaries who received a service as specified in proposed Sec.
447.203(b)(3)(ii), from States for ensuring compliance with section
1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act, which requires that payments be consistent
with efficiency, economy, and quality of care and sufficient to enlist
enough providers so that care and services are available under the plan
at least to the extent that such care and services are available to the
general population in the geographic area.
Additionally, we explained that this proposal to include personal
care, home health aide, and homemaker services provided by individual
providers and providers employed by an agency is
[[Page 40707]]
supported by the statutory mandate at section 2402(a) of the Affordable
Care Act. Among other things, section 2402(a) of the Affordable Care
Act directs the Secretary to promulgate regulations ensuring that all
States develop service systems that ensure that there is an adequate
number of qualified direct care workers to provide self-directed
services. We solicited comments on personal care, home health aide, and
homemaker services provided by individual providers and providers
employed by an agency as the proposed categories of services subject to
the payment rate disclosure requirements in proposed Sec.
447.203(b)(2)(iv).
After discussing our proposed categories of services for the
comparative payment rate analysis and payment rate disclosure
requirements, we discussed the similarities and differences between the
proposed rule and services previously included in the AMRP
requirements. We explained that while the proposed rule would eliminate
the previous triennial AMRP process, there are some similarities
between the service categories for which we proposed to require a
comparative payment rate analysis or payment rate disclosure in Sec.
447.203(b)(2) and those subject to the previous AMRP requirements under
Sec. 447.203(b)(5)(ii). Specifically, Sec. 447.203(b)(5)(ii)(A)
previous required the State agency to use data collected through the
previous AMRP process to provide a separate analysis for each provider
type and site of service for primary care services (including those
provided by a physician, FQHC, clinic, or dental care). We proposed the
comparative payment rate analysis include primary care services,
without any parenthetical description. We explained our belief this is
appropriate because the proposed rule includes a comparative payment
rate analysis that is at the Current Procedural Terminology (CPT) or
Healthcare Common Procedure Coding System (HCPCS) code level, as
applicable, the specifics for which are discussed later in this
section. This approach requires States to perform less sub-
categorization of the data analysis, and as discussed later, the
analysis would exclude FQHCs and clinics.
We explained that the previous AMRP process also includes in Sec.
447.203(b)(5)(ii)(C) behavioral health services (including mental
health and substance use disorder); however, we proposed that the
comparative payment rate analysis only would include outpatient
behavioral health services to narrow the scope of the analysis by
excluding inpatient behavioral health services (including inpatient
behavioral health services furnished in psychiatric residential
treatment facilities, institutions for mental diseases, and psychiatric
hospitals). While we acknowledged that behavioral health services
encompass a broad range of services provided in a wide variety of
settings, from outpatient screenings in a physician's office to
inpatient hospital treatment, we proposed to narrow the scope of
behavioral health services to outpatient services only to focus the
comparative payment rate analysis on ambulatory care provided by
practitioners in an office-based setting without duplicating existing
requirements, or analysis that must be completed to satisfy existing
requirements, for upper payment limits (UPL) and the supplemental
payment reporting requirements under section 1903(bb) of the Act, as
established by Division CC, Title II, Section 202 of the CAA, 2021.
The proposed categories of services are delivered as ambulatory
care where the patient does not need to be hospitalized to receive the
service being delivered. Particularly for behavioral health services,
we proposed to narrow the scope to outpatient behavioral health
services to maintain consistency within the categories of service
included in the proposed comparative payment rate analysis and payment
rate disclosure all being classified as ambulatory care. Additionally,
as discussed further in this section of the final rule, we proposed
that the comparative payment rate analysis would be conducted on a CPT/
HCPCS code level, focusing on E/M codes. By narrowing the comparative
payment rate analysis to E/M CPT/HCPCS codes, we proposed States'
analyses includes a broad range of core services which would cover a
variety of commonly provided services that fall into the categories of
service proposed in paragraphs (b)(2)(i) through (iii). To balance
State administrative burden with our oversight of State compliance with
the access requirement in section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act, we also
proposed to limit the services to those delivered primarily by
physicians and NPPs in an office-based setting for primary care,
obstetrical and gynecological, and outpatient behavioral health
services. By excluding facility-based services, particularly inpatient
behavioral health services, we explained our intent to ensure the same
E/M CPT/HCPCS code-level methodology could be used for all categories
of services included in the proposed comparative payment rate analysis,
including the use of E/M CPT/HCPCS codes used for outpatient behavioral
health services. Rather than fee schedule rates, States often pay for
inpatient behavioral health services using prospective payment rate
methodologies, such as DRGs, or interim payment methodologies that are
reconciled to actual cost.\236\ These methodologies pay for a variety
of services delivered by multiple providers that a patient receives
during an inpatient hospital stay, rather than a single ambulatory
service billed by a single provider using a single CPT/HCPCS code.
Variations in these payment methodologies and what is included in the
rate could complicate the proposed comparison to FFS Medicare rates for
the services identified in paragraphs (b)(2)(i) through (iii) and could
frustrate comparisons between States and sometimes even within a single
State. Therefore, we explained that we do not believe the E/M CPT/HCPCS
code level methodology proposed for the comparative payment rate
analysis would be feasible for inpatient behavioral health services or
other inpatient and facility-based services in general.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\236\ https://www.cms.gov/icd10m/version37-fullcode-cms/fullcode_cms/Design_and_development_of_the_Diagnosis_Related_Group_(DRGs).pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
While we considered including inpatient behavioral health services
as one of the proposed categories of services in the comparative
payment rate analysis, we ultimately did not because we already collect
and review Medicaid and Medicare payment rate data for inpatient
behavioral health services through annual UPL and supplemental payment
reporting requirements under section 1903(bb) of the Act. SMDL 13-003
discusses the annual submission of State UPL demonstrations for
inpatient hospital services, among other services, including a complete
data set of payments to Medicaid providers and a reasonable estimate of
what Medicare would have paid for the same services.237 238
UPL requirements go beyond the proposed requirements by requiring
States to annually submit the following data for all inpatient hospital
services, depending on the State's UPL methodology, on a provider level
basis:
[[Page 40708]]
Medicaid charges, Medicaid base payments, Medicaid supplemental
payments, Medicaid discharges, Medicaid case mix index, Medicaid
inflation factors, other adjustments to Medicaid payments, Medicaid
days, Medicare costs, Medicare payments, Medicare discharges, Medicare
case mix index, Medicare days, UPL inflation factors, Medicaid provider
tax cost, and other adjustments to the UPL amount. If we proposed and
finalized inpatient behavioral health services as one of the categories
of services subject to the comparative payment rate analysis, then this
final rule would require States to biennially submit the following data
for only inpatient behavioral health services on a CPT/HCPCS code level
basis: base Medicaid FFS fee schedule payment rate for select E/M CPT/
HCPCS codes (accounting for rate variation based on population
(pediatric and adult), provider type, and geographical location, as
applicable), the corresponding Medicare payment rates, Medicaid base
payment rate as a percentage of Medicare payment rate, and the number
of Medicaid-paid claims. While the UPL requires aggregated total
payment and cost data at the provider level and the proposed
comparative payment rate analysis calls for more granular base payment
data at the CPT/HCPCS code level, the UPL overall requires aggregate
Medicaid provider payment data for both base and supplemental payments
as well as more detailed data for calculating what Medicare would have
paid as the upper payment amount. Therefore, we explained that
proposing to require States include Medicaid and Medicare payment rate
data for inpatient behavioral health services in the comparative
payment rate analysis would be duplicative of existing UPL requirements
that are inclusive of and more comprehensive than the payment
information proposed in the comparative payment rate analysis.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\237\ https://www.medicaid.gov/sites/default/files/Federal-Policy-Guidance/Downloads/SMD-13-003-02.pdf.
\238\ If a State's payment methodology describes payment at no
more than 100 percent of the Medicare rate for the period covered by
the UPL, then the State does not need to submit a demonstration. See
FAQ ID: 92201. https://www.medicaid.gov/faq/?search_api_fulltext=ID%3A92201&sort_by=field_faq_date&sort_order=DESC.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Additionally, section 1903(bb) of the Act requires us to establish
a Medicaid supplemental payment reporting system that collects detailed
information on State Medicaid supplemental payments, including total
quarterly supplemental payment expenditures per provider; information
on base payments made to providers that have received a supplemental
payment; and narrative information describing the methodology used to
calculate a provider's payment, criteria used to determine which
providers qualify to receive a payment, and explanation describing how
the supplemental payments comply with section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the
Act. Section 1903(bb)(1)(C) of the Act requires us to make State-
reported supplemental payment information publicly available. For
States making or wishing to make supplemental payments, including for
inpatient behavioral health services, States must report supplemental
payment information to us, and we must make that information public
and, therefore, transparent. Although the proposed rule sought to
increase transparency, with the proposed provisions under Sec.
447.203(b)(1) through (5) focusing on transparency of FFS base Medicaid
FFS fee schedule payment rate, including inpatient behavioral health
services as a category of service in Sec. 447.203(b)(2) subject to the
comparative payment rate analysis would be duplicative of the existing
upper payment limit and supplemental payment reporting requirements,
which capture and make transparent base and supplemental payment
information for inpatient behavioral health services. However, we
solicited comments regarding our decision not to include inpatient
behavioral health services as one of the categories of services subject
to the comparative payment rate analysis requirements in proposed Sec.
447.203(b)(2) in the final rule, should we finalize the comparative
payment rate analysis proposal.
The AMRP process also previously included in Sec.
447.203(b)(5)(ii)(D) pre- and post-natal obstetric services including
labor and delivery; we proposed to include these services in the
comparative payment rate analysis requirements under proposed Sec.
447.203(b)(2)(ii), but we explained in the proposed rule that we
intended to broaden the scope of this category of services to include
both obstetrical and gynecological services. This expanded proposed
provision would capture a wider array of services, both obstetrical and
gynecological services, for States and CMS to assess and ensure access
to care in Medicaid FFS is at least as great for beneficiaries as is
generally available to the general population in the geographic area,
as required by with section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act. Lastly, similar
to previous Sec. 447.203(b)(5)(ii)(E), which specifies that home
health services were included in the previous AMRP process, we proposed
to include personal care, home health aide, and homemaker services,
provided by individual providers and providers employed by an agency.
This refined proposed provision would help ensure a more standardized
effort to monitor access across Medicaid delivery systems, including
for Medicaid-covered LTSS. We explained our belief that this proposal
also would address public comments received in response to the February
2022 RFI.\239\ Many commenters highlighted the workforce crisis among
direct care workers and the impact on HCBS. Specifically, commenters
indicated that direct care workers receive low payment rates, and for
agency-employed direct care workers, home health agencies often cite
low Medicaid payment as a barrier to raising wages for workers.
Commenters suggested that States should be collecting and reporting to
CMS the average of direct care worker wages while emphasizing the
importance of data transparency and timeliness. We explained that we
were responding to these public comments by proposing to require States
to transparently publish a payment rate disclosure that collects and
reports the average hourly rate paid to individual providers and
providers employed by an agency for services provided by certain direct
care workers (personal care, home health aide, and homemaker services).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\239\ Summary of Public Comments in response to the CMS 2022
Request for Information: Access to Coverage and Care in Medicaid &
CHIP. December 2022. For the report, see https://www.medicaid.gov/medicaid/access-care/downloads/access-rfi-2022-report.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In public comments that we received during the public comment
period for the 2015 final rule with comment period, many commenters
requested that we require States to publish access to care analyses for
pediatric services, including pediatric primary care, behavioral
health, and dental care. At the time, we responded that pediatric
services did not need to be specified in the required service
categories because States were already required through Sec.
447.203(b)(1)(iv) to consider the characteristics of the beneficiary
population, ``including . . . payment variations for pediatric and
adult populations,'' within the previous AMRPs.\240\ Although we
proposed to eliminate the previous AMRP requirements, we noted that the
proposed rule would continue to include special considerations for
pediatric populations that are addressed in the discussion of proposed
Sec. 447.203(b)(2).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\240\ 80 CFR 67576 at 67592.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We proposed to eliminate the following from the previous AMRP
process without replacement in the comparative payment rate analysis
requirement, Sec. 447.203(b)(5)(ii)(F): Any additional types of
services for which a review is required under previous Sec.
447.203(b)(6); Sec. 447.203(b)(5)(ii)(G): Additional types of services
for which
[[Page 40709]]
the State or CMS has received a significantly higher than usual volume
of beneficiary, provider or other interested party access complaints
for a geographic area, including complaints received through the
mechanisms for beneficiary input consistent with previous Sec.
447.203(b)(7); and Sec. 447.203(b)(5)(ii)(H): Additional types of
services selected by the State.
We proposed to eliminate Sec. 447.203(b)(5)(ii)(F) and (G) without
a direct replacement because the proposed State Analysis Procedures for
Rate Reduction or Restructuring described in Sec. 447.203(c) are
inclusive of and more refined than the previous AMRP requirements for
additional types of services for which a review is required under
previous Sec. 447.203(b)(6). Specifically, as discussed later in this
section, we proposed in Sec. 447.203(c)(1) that States seeking to
reduce provider payment rates or restructure provider payments would be
required to provide written assurance and relevant supporting
documentation that three conditions are met to qualify for a
streamlined SPA review process, including that required public
processes yielded no significant access to care concerns for
beneficiaries, providers, or other interested parties, or if such
processes did yield concerns, that the State can reasonably respond to
or mitigate them, as appropriate. If the State is unable to meet all
three of the proposed conditions for streamlined SPA review, including
the absence of or ability to appropriately address any access concern
raised through public processes, then the State would be required to
submit additional information to support that its SPA is consistent
with the access requirement in section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act, as
proposed in Sec. 447.203(c)(2). We proposed to modify this aspect of
the previous AMRP process, because our implementation experience since
the 2017 SMDL has shown that States typically have been able to work
directly with the public (including beneficiaries and beneficiary
advocacy groups, and providers) to resolve access concerns, which
emphasizes that public feedback continues to be a valuable source of
knowledge regarding access in Medicaid. We explained our belief that
this experience demonstrates that public processes that occur before
the submission of a payment SPA to CMS often resolve initial access
concerns, and where concerns persist, they will be addressed through
the SPA submission and our review process, as provided in proposed
Sec. 447.203(c). Rather than services affected by proposed provider
rate reductions or restructurings (previous Sec. 447.203(b)(5)(ii)(F))
and services for which the State or CMS received significantly higher
than usual volume of complaints (previous Sec. 447.203(b)(5)(ii)(G))
being addressed through the previous AMRP process, these services
subject to rate reductions or restructurings and services where a high
volume of complaints have been expressed would now be addressed by the
State analysis procedures in proposed Sec. 447.203(c). We noted our
belief that this approach would ensure public feedback is fully
considered in the context of a payment SPA, without the need to
specifically require a comparative payment rate analysis for the
service(s) subject to payment rate reduction or restructuring under
proposed Sec. 447.203(b)(2).
Lastly, we proposed to eliminate previous Sec.
447.203(b)(5)(ii)(H), requiring the previous AMRP process to include
analysis regarding ``Additional types of services selected by the
State,'' without a direct replacement because our implementation
experience has shown that the majority of States did not select
additional types of service to include in their previous AMRPs beyond
the required services Sec. 447.203(b)(5)(ii)(A) through (G). When
assessing which services to include in the proposed rule, we determined
that the absence of an open-ended type of service option, similar to
Sec. 447.203(b)(5)(ii)(H) is unlikely to affect the quality of the
analysis we proposed to require and therefore, we did not include it in
the proposed set of services for the comparative payment rate analysis.
These proposed shifts in policy were informed by our implementation
experience and our consideration of State concerns about the burden and
value of the previous AMRP process.
In paragraph (b)(3), we proposed that the State agency would be
required to develop and publish, consistent with the publication
requirements described in proposed Sec. 447.203(b)(1) for payment rate
transparency data, a comparative payment rate analysis and payment rate
disclosure. This comparative payment rate analysis is divided into two
sections based on the categories of services and the organization of
each analysis or disclosure. Paragraph (b)(3)(i) describes the
comparative payment rate analysis for the categories of services
described in paragraphs (b)(2)(i) through (iii): primary care services,
obstetrical and gynecological services, and outpatient behavioral
health services. Paragraph (b)(3)(ii) describes the payment rate
disclosure for the categories of service described in paragraphs
(b)(2)(iv): personal care, home health aide, and homemaker services
provided by individual providers and providers employed by an agency.
Specifically, in paragraph (b)(3)(i), we proposed that for the
categories of service described in paragraphs (b)(2)(i) through (iii),
the State's analysis would compare the State's Medicaid FFS payment
rates to the most recently published Medicare payment rates effective
for the same time period for the E/M CPT/HCPCS codes applicable to the
category of service. The proposed comparative payment rate analysis of
FFS Medicaid payment rates to FFS Medicare payment rates would be
conducted on a code-by-code basis at the CPT/HCPCS code level using the
most current set of codes published by us. We explained that this
proposal is intended to provide an understanding of how Medicaid
payment rates compare to the payment rates established and updated
under the FFS Medicare program.
We stated that we would expect to publish the E/M CPT/HCPCS codes
to be used for the comparative payment rate analysis in subregulatory
guidance along with the final rule, if this proposal is finalized. We
proposed that we would identify E/M CPT/HCPCS codes to be included in
the comparative payment rate analysis based on the following criteria:
the code is effective for the same time period of the comparative
payment rate analysis; the code is classified as an E/M CPT/HCPCS code
by the American Medical Association (AMA) CPT Editorial Panel; the code
is included on the Berenson-Eggers Type of Service (BETOS) code list
effective for the same time period as the comparative payment rate
analysis and falls into the E/M family grouping and families and
subfamilies for primary care services, obstetrics and gynecological
services, and outpatient behavioral services (now called outpatient
mental health and substance use disorder services in this final rule);
and the code has an A (Active), N (Non-Covered), R (Restricted), or T
(Injections) code status on the Medicare PFS with a Medicare
established relative value unit (RVU) and payment amount for the same
time period of the comparative payment rate
analysis.241 242 243
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\241\ https://www.ama-assn.org/practice-management/cpt/cpt-evaluation-and-management.
\242\ https://data.cms.gov/provider-summary-by-type-of-service/provider-service-classifications/restructured-betos-classification-system.
\243\ https://www.cms.gov/medicare/medicare-fee-for-service-payment/physicianfeesched.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The CMS-published list of E/M CPT/HCPCS codes subject to the
comparative
[[Page 40710]]
payment rate analysis would classify each E/M CPT/HCPCS code into a
corresponding category of service as described in proposed Sec.
447.203(b)(2)(i) through (iii). As previously discussed, by narrowing
the comparative payment rate analysis to CMS-specified E/M CPT/HCPCS
codes, we proposed States' analyses include a broad range of core
services that would cover a variety of commonly provided services that
fall into the categories of service proposed in paragraphs (b)(2)(i)
through (iii), while also limiting the services to those delivered
primarily by physicians and NPPs in an office-based setting. Based on
the categories of services specified in proposed Sec. 447.203(b)(2)(i)
through (iii), we stated that we would expect the selected E/M CPT/
HCPCS codes to fall under mandatory Medicaid benefit categories, and
therefore, that all States would cover and pay for the selected E/M
CPT/HCPCS codes. To clarify, we did not narrow the list of E/M CPT/
HCPCS codes on the basis of Medicare coverage of a particular code. We
are cognizant that codes with N (Non-Covered), R (Restricted), or T
code statuses have limited or no Medicare coverage; however, Medicare
may establish RVUs, and payment amounts for these codes. Therefore,
when Medicare does establish RVUs and payment amounts for codes with N
(Non-Covered), R (Restricted), or T (Injections) code statuses on the
Medicare PFS, we proposed to include these codes in the comparative
payment rate analysis to ensure the analysis includes a comprehensive
set of codes, for example pediatric services, including well child
visits (for example, 99381 through 99384), that are commonly provided
services that fall into the categories of service proposed in
paragraphs (b)(2)(i) through (iii) and delivered primarily by
physicians and NPPs in an office-based setting, as previously
described.
We proposed that the comparative payment rate analysis would be
updated no less than every 2 years. Therefore, prior to the start of
the calendar year in which States would be required to update their
comparative payment rate analysis, we noted our intent to publish an
updated list of E/M CPT/HCPCS codes for States to use for their
comparative payment rate analysis updates through subregulatory
guidance. The updated list of E/M CPT/HCPCS codes would include changes
made by the AMA CPT Editorial Panel (such as additions, removals, or
amendments to a code definition where there is a change in the set of
codes classified as an E/M CPT/HCPCS code billable for primary care
services, obstetrics and gynecological services, or outpatient
behavioral services) and changes to the Medicare PFS based on the most
recent Medicare PFS final rule (such as changes in code status or
creation of Medicare-specific codes).\244\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\244\ https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/PhysicianFeeSched/PFS-Federal-Regulation-Notices.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We explained that we would intend to publish the initial and
subsequent updates of the list of E/M CPT/HCPCS codes subject to the
comparative payment rate analysis in a timely manner that allows States
approximately one full calendar year between the publication of the
CMS-published list of E/M CPT/HCPCS codes and the due date of the
comparative payment rate analysis. We may issue a correction to the
Medicare PFS after the final rule is in effect, and this correction may
impact our published list of E/M CPT/HCPCS codes. In this instance, for
codes included on our published list of E/M CPT/HCPCS codes that are
affected by a correction to the most recent Medicaid PFS final rule, we
may add or remove an E/M CPT/HCPCS code from the published list, as
appropriate, depending on the change to the Medicare PFS.
Alternatively, depending on the nature of the change, we stated that we
would expect States to accurately identify which code(s) are used in
the Medicaid program during the relevant period that best correspond to
the CMS-identified E/M CPT/HCPCS code(s) affected by the Medicare PFS
correction. We would expect States to rely on the CMS published list of
E/M CPT/HCPCS codes subject to the comparative payment rate analysis
for complying with the proposed requirements in paragraphs (b)(2)
through (4).
We acknowledged that there are limitations to relying on E/M CPT/
HCPCS codes to select payment rates for comparative payment rate
analysis to aid States, CMS, and other interested parties in assessing
if payments are consistent with efficiency, economy, and quality of
care and are sufficient to enlist enough providers so that care and
services are available under the plan at least to the extent that such
care and services are available to the general population in the
geographic area. Providers across the country and within each State
deliver a variety of services to patients, including individuals with
public and private sources of coverage, and then bill them under a
narrow subset of CPT/HCPCS codes that fit into the E/M classification
as determined by the AMA CPT Editorial Panel. The actual services
delivered can require a wide array of time, skills, and experience of
the provider which must be represented by a single five-digit code for
billing to receive payment for the services delivered. While there are
general principles that guide providers in billing the most
representative E/M CPT/HCPCS code for the service they delivered, two
providers might perform substantially similar activities when
delivering services and yet bill different E/M CPT/HCPCS codes for
those activities, or bill the same E/M CPT/HCPCS code for furnishing
two very different services. The E/M CPT/HCPCS code itself is not a
tool for capturing the exact service that was delivered, but medical
documentation helps support the billing of a particular E/M CPT/HCPCS
code.
Although they do not encompass all Medicaid services covered and
paid for in the Medicaid program which are subject to the requirements
in section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act, E/M CPT/HCPCS codes are some of
the most commonly billed codes and including them in the comparative
payment rate analysis would allow us to uniformly compare Medicaid
payment rates for these codes to Medicare PFS rates. As such, to
balance administrative burden on States and our enforcement
responsibilities, we proposed to use E/M CPT/HCPCS codes in the
comparative payment rate analysis to limit the analysis to how much
Medicaid and the FFS Medicare program would pay for services that can
be classified into a particular E/M CPT/HCPCS code. We solicited
comments on the proposed comparative payment rate analysis requirement
in Sec. 447.203(b)(3)(i), including the proposed requirement to
conduct the analysis at the CPT/HCPCS code level, the proposed criteria
that we would apply in selecting E/M CPT/HCPCS codes for inclusion in
the required analysis, and the proposed requirement for States to
compare Medicaid payment rates for the selected E/M CPT/HCPCS codes to
the most recently published Medicare non-facility payment rate as
established in the annual Medicare PFS final rule effective for the
same time period, which is discussed in more detail later in this rule
when describing the proposed provisions of Sec. 447.203(b)(3)(i)(C).
In paragraph (b)(3)(i), we further proposed that the State's
comparative payment rate analysis would be required to meet the
following requirements: (A) the analysis must be organized by category
of service as described in Sec. 447.203(b)(2)(i) through (iii); (B)
the analysis must clearly identify the base Medicaid FFS fee
[[Page 40711]]
schedule payment rate for each E/M CPT/HCPCS code identified by us
under the applicable category of service, including, if the rates vary,
separate identification of the payment rates by population (pediatric
and adult), provider type, and geographical location, as applicable;
(C) the analysis must clearly identify the Medicare PFS non-facility
payment rates effective for the same time period for the same set of E/
M CPT/HCPCS codes, and for the same geographical location as the base
Medicaid FFS fee schedule payment rate, that correspond to the Medicaid
payment rates identified under paragraph (b)(3)(i)(B); (D) the analysis
must specify the Medicaid payment rate identified under paragraph
(b)(3)(i)(B) as a percentage of the Medicare payment rate identified
under paragraph (b)(3)(i)(C) for each of the services for which the
Medicaid payment rate is published under paragraph (b)(3)(i)(B); and
(E) the analysis must specify the number of Medicaid-paid claims within
a calendar year for each of the services for which the Medicaid payment
rate is published under paragraph (b)(3)(i)(B). We solicited comments
on the proposed requirements and content of the items in proposed Sec.
447.203(b)(3)(i)(A) through (E).
In paragraph (b)(3)(i)(A), we proposed to require States to
organize their comparative payment rate analysis by the service
categories described in paragraphs (b)(2)(i) through (iii). We
explained that this proposed requirement is included to ensure the
analysis breaks out the payment rates for primary care services,
obstetrical and gynecological services, and outpatient behavioral
health services separately for individual analyses of the payment rates
for each CMS-selected E/M CPT/HCPCS code, grouped by category of
service. We solicited comments on the proposed requirement for States
to break out their payment rates at the CPT/HCPCS code level for
primary care services, obstetrical and gynecological services, and
outpatient behavioral health services, separately, in the comparative
payment rate analysis as specified in proposed Sec.
447.203(b)(3)(i)(A).
In paragraph (b)(3)(i)(B), after organizing the analysis by Sec.
447.203(b)(2)(i) through (iii) categories of service and CMS-specified
E/M CPT/HCPCS code, we proposed to require States to clearly identify
the Medicaid base payment rate for each code, including, if the rates
vary, separate identification of the payment rates by population
(pediatric and adult), provider type, and geographical location, as
applicable. We proposed that the Medicaid base payment rate in the
comparative payment rate analysis would only include the State's
Medicaid fee schedule rate, that is, the State's Medicaid base rate for
each E/M CPT/HCPCS code. By specifying the services included in the
comparative payment rate analysis by E/M CPT/HCPCS code, we noted that
we would expect the Medicaid base payment rate in the comparative
payment rate analysis to only include the State's Medicaid fee schedule
rate for that particular E/M CPT/HCPCS code as published on the State's
Medicaid fee schedule effective for the same time period covered by the
comparative payment rate analysis. As an example, the State's Medicaid
fee schedule rate as published on the Medicaid fee schedule effective
for the time period of the comparative payment rate analysis for 99202
is listed as $50.00. This rate would be the Medicaid base payment rate
in the State's comparative payment rate analysis for comparison to the
Medicare non-facility rate, which is discussed later in this section.
Medicaid base payment rates are typically determined through one of
three methods: the resource-based relative value scale (RBRVS), a
percentage of Medicare's fee, or a State-developed fee schedule using
local factors.\245\ The RBRVS system, initially developed for the
Medicare program, assigns a relative value to every physician procedure
based on the complexity of the procedure, practice expense, and
malpractice expense. States may also adopt the Medicare fee schedule
rate, which is also based on RBRVS, but select a fixed percentage of
the Medicare amount to pay for Medicaid services. States can develop
their own PFSs, typically determined based on market value or an
internal process, and often do this in situations where there is no
Medicare or private payer equivalent or when an alternate payment
methodology is necessary for programmatic reasons. States often adjust
their payment rates based on provider type, geography, site of
services, patient age, and in-State or out-of-State provider status.
Additionally, base Medicaid FFS fee schedule payment rate can be paid
to physicians in a variety of settings, including clinics, community
health centers, and private offices.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\245\ https://www.macpac.gov/wp-content/uploads/2017/02/Medicaid-Physician-Fee-for-Service-Payment-Policy.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We acknowledged that only including Medicaid base payments in the
analysis does not necessarily represent all of a provider's revenues
that may be related to furnishing services to Medicaid beneficiaries,
and that other revenues not included in the proposed comparative
analysis may be relevant to a provider's willingness to participate in
Medicaid (such as beneficiary cost sharing payments, and supplemental
payments). We discussed that public comments we received on the 2011
proposed rule and responded to in the 2015 final rule with comment
period regarding the previous AMRPs expressed differing views regarding
which provider ``revenues'' should be included within comparisons of
Medicaid to Medicare payment rates. One commenter ``noted that the
preamble of the 2011 proposed rule refers to `payments' and `rates'
interchangeably but that courts have defined payments to include all
Medicaid provider revenues rather than only Medicaid FFS rates.'' The
commenter stated that if the final rule consider[ed] all Medicaid
revenues received by providers, States may be challenged to make any
change to the Medicaid program that might reduce provider revenues.''
\246\ We proposed to narrow the base Medicaid FFS fee schedule payment
rate to the amount listed on the State's fee schedule in order for the
comparative payment rate analysis to accurately and analogously compare
Medicaid fee schedule rates to Medicare non-facility payment rate as
established in the annual Medicare PFS final rule for a calendar year.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\246\ 80 FR 67576 at 67581.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We explained our belief that this approach would represent the best
way to create a consistent metric across States against which to
evaluate access. Specifically, we did not propose to include
supplemental payments in the comparative payment rate analysis.
Requiring supplemental payment data be collected and included under
this rule would be duplicative of existing requirements. State
supplemental payment and DSH payment data are already subject to our
review in various forms, such as through DSH audits for DSH payments,
and through annual upper payment limits demonstrations, and through
supplemental payment reporting under section 1903(bb) of the
Act.247 248 As such, we explained that
[[Page 40712]]
we do not see a need to add additional reporting requirements
concerning supplemental payments as part of the proposals in this
rulemaking to allow us the opportunity to review the data. Also,
supplemental payments are often made for specific Medicaid-covered
services and targeted to a subset of Medicaid-participating providers;
not all Medicaid-participating providers, and not all providers of a
given Medicaid-covered service, may receive supplemental payments in a
State. Therefore, including supplemental payments in the comparative
payment rate analysis would create additional burden for States without
then also providing an accurate benchmark of how payments may affect
beneficiary access due to the potentially varied and uneven
distribution of supplemental payments. Accordingly, we proposed to
require that States conduct the comparative payment rate analysis for
only Medicaid base payment rates for selected E/M CPT/HCPCS codes. For
each proposed category of service listed in paragraphs (b)(2)(i)
through (iii), this would result in a transparent and parallel
comparison of Medicaid base payment rates that all Medicaid-
participating providers of the service would receive to the payment
rates that Medicare would pay for the same E/M CPT/HCPCS codes.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\247\ CMS State Medicaid Director Letter: SMDL 13-003. March
2013. Federal and State Oversight of Medicaid Expenditures.
Available at https://www.medicaid.gov/sites/default/files/Federal-Policy-Guidance/Downloads/SMD-13-003-02.pdf.
\248\ CMS State Medicaid Director Letter: SMDL 21-006. December
2021. New Supplemental Payment Reporting and Medicaid
Disproportionate Share Hospital Requirements under the Consolidated
Appropriations Act, 2021. Available at https://www.medicaid.gov/federal-policy-guidance/downloads/smd21006.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Additionally, in paragraph (b)(3)(i)(B), we proposed that, if the
States' payment rates vary, the Medicaid base payment rates must
include a breakdown by payment rates paid to providers delivering
services to pediatric and adult populations, by provider type, and
geographical location, as applicable, to capture this potential
variation in the State's payment rates. This proposed provision to
breakdown the Medicaid payment rate is first stated in proposed
paragraph (b)(2) and carried through in proposed paragraph (b)(3)(i)(B)
to provide clarity to States about how the Medicaid payment rate should
be reported in the comparative payment rate analysis.
In paragraph (b)(3)(i)(C), we proposed to require States'
comparative payment rate analysis clearly identify the Medicare non-
facility payment rates as established in the annual Medicare PFS final
rule effective for the same time period for the same set of E/M CPT/
HCPCS codes, and for the same geographical location, that correspond to
the Medicaid payment rates identified under paragraph (b)(3)(i)(B),
including separate identification of the payment rates by provider
type. We did not propose to establish a threshold percentage of
Medicare non-facility payment rates that States would be required to
meet when setting their Medicaid payment rates. Rather, we proposed to
use Medicare non-facility payment rates as established in the Medicare
PFS final rule for a calendar year as a benchmark to which States would
compare their Medicaid payment rates to inform their and our assessment
of whether the State's payment rates are compliant with section
1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act. We explained that benchmarking against FFS
Medicare, another of the nation's large public health coverage
programs, serves as an important data point in determining whether
payment rates are likely to be sufficient to ensure access for Medicaid
beneficiaries at least as great as for the general population in the
geographic area, and whether any identified access concerns may be
related to payment sufficiency. Similar to Medicaid, Medicare provides
health coverage for a significant number of Americans across the
country. In December 2023, total Medicaid enrollment was at 77.9
million individuals \249\ while total Medicare enrollment was at 66.8
million individuals.250 251 Both the Medicare and Medicaid
programs cover and pay for services provided to beneficiaries residing
in every State and territory of the United States. As previously
described, Medicare non-facility payment rates as established in the
annual Medicare PFS final rule for a calendar year for covered, non-
covered, and limited coverage services generally are determined on a
national level as well as adjusted to reflect the variation in practice
costs from one geographical location to another. Medicare also ensures
that their payment rate data are publicly available in a format that
can be analyzed. The accessibility and consistency of the Medicare non-
facility payment rates as established in the annual Medicare PFS final
rule for a calendar year, compared to negotiated private health
insurance payment rates that typically are considered proprietary
information and, therefore, not generally available to the public,
makes Medicare non-facility payment rates as established in the annual
Medicare PFS final rule for a calendar year an available and reliable
comparison point for States to use in the comparative payment rate
analysis.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\249\ https://www.medicaid.gov/medicaid/national-medicaid-chip-program-information/downloads/December-2022-medicaid-chip-enrollment-trend-snapshot.pdf.
\250\ Total Medicare enrollment equals the Tot_Benes variable in
the Medicare Monthly Enrollment Data for December (Month) 2023
(Year) at the national level (Bene_Geo_Lvl). Tot_Benes is a count of
all Medicare beneficiaries, including beneficiaries with Original
Medicare and beneficiaries with Medicare Advantage and Other Health
Plans. We utilized the count of all Medicare beneficiaries because
Original Medicare, Medicare Advantage, and other Health Plans offer
fee-for-service payments to providers. See the Medicare Monthly
Enrollment Data Dictionary for more information about the variables
in the Medicare Monthly Enrollment Data: https://data.cms.gov/sites/default/files/2023-02/1ec24f76-9964-4d00-9e9a-78bd556b7223/Medicare%20Monthly%20Enrollment_Data_Dictionary%2020230131_508.pdf.
\251\ https://data.cms.gov/summary-statistics-on-beneficiary-enrollment/medicare-and-medicaid-reports/medicare-monthly-enrollment.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Additionally, Medicare is widely accepted nationwide according to
recent findings from the National Electronic Health Records Survey. In
2019, 95 percent of physicians accepting new patients overall, and 89
percent of office-based physicians, were accepting new Medicare
patients, and the percentage of office-based physicians accepting new
Medicare patients has remained stable since 2011 when the value was 88
percent, with modest fluctuations in the years in between.\252\ In
regards to physician specialties that align with the categories of
services in this rule, 81 percent of general practice/family medicine
physicians and 81 percent of physicians specializing in internal
medicine were accepting new Medicare patients, 93 percent of physicians
specializing obstetrics and gynecology were accepting new Medicare
patients, and 60 percent of psychiatrists were accepting new Medicare
patients in 2019. Although the percentage of psychiatrists who accept
Medicare is lower than other types of physicians providing services
included in the comparative payment rate analysis, this circumstance is
not unique to Medicare amongst payers. For example, 60 percent of
psychiatrists were also accepting new privately insured patients in
2019.\253\ Therefore, the decreased rate of acceptance by psychiatrists
relative to certain other physician specialists does not make Medicare
an inappropriate benchmark when evaluated against other options for
comparison.\254\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\252\ https://www.kff.org/medicare/issue-brief/most-office-based-physicians-accept-new-patients-including-patients-with-medicare-and-private-insurance/.
\253\ https://www.kff.org/medicare/issue-brief/most-office-based-physicians-accept-new-patients-including-patients-with-medicare-and-private-insurance/.
\254\ https://www.kff.org/medicare/issue-brief/faqs-on-mental-health-and-substance-use-disorder-coverage-in-medicare/.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Historically, Medicare has low rates of physicians formally opting
out of the Medicare program with 1 percent of physicians consistently
opting out between 2013 and 2019 and of that 1 percent of physicians
opting out of Medicare, 42 percent were
[[Page 40713]]
psychiatrists.\255\ This information suggests that Medicare's payment
rates generally are consistent with a high level of physician
willingness to accept new Medicare patients, with the vast majority of
physicians willing to accept Medicare's payment rates. For the reasons
previously described, we proposed to use Medicare non-facility payment
rates as established in the annual Medicare PFS final rule for a
calendar year as a national benchmark for States to compare their
Medicaid payment rates in the comparative payment rate analysis because
we believe that the Medicare payment rates for these services are
likely to serve as a reliable benchmark for a level of payment
sufficient to enlist providers to furnish the relevant services to an
individual. We solicited comments on the proposed use of Medicare non-
facility payment rates as established in the annual Medicare PFS final
rule for a calendar year as a benchmark for States to compare their
Medicaid payment rates to in the comparative payment rate analysis
requirements in proposed Sec. 447.203(b)(3)(i) to help assess if
Medicaid payments are consistent with efficiency, economy, and quality
of care and are sufficient to enlist enough providers so that care and
services are available under the plan at least to the extent that such
care and services are available to the general population in the
geographic area.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\255\ Physicians and practitioners who do not wish to enroll in
the Medicare program may ``opt-out'' of Medicare. This means that
neither the physician, nor the beneficiary submits the bill to
Medicare for services rendered. Instead, the beneficiary pays the
physician out-of-pocket and neither party is reimbursed by Medicare.
A private contract is signed between the physician and the
beneficiary that states that neither one can receive payment from
Medicare for the services that were performed. See 2022 opt-out
affidavit data published by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid
services: https://data.cms.gov/provider-characteristics/medicare-provider-supplier-enrollment/opt-out-affidavits.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In paragraph (b)(3)(i)(C), we proposed to require States to compare
their Medicaid payment rates to the Medicare non-facility payment rates
as established in the annual Medicare PFS final rule effective for the
same time period as the same set of E/M CPT/HCPCS codes paid under
Medicaid as specified under paragraph (b)(3)(i)(B) of this section,
including separate identification of the payment rates by provider
type. We proposed to require States to compare their payment rates to
the corresponding Medicare PFS non-facility rates because we are
seeking a payment analysis that compares Medicaid payment rates to
Medicare payment rates at comparable location of service delivery (that
is, in a non-clinic, non-hospital, ambulatory setting such as a
physician's office). States often pay physicians operating in an office
based on their Medicaid fee schedule whereas they may pay physicians
operating in hospitals or clinics using an encounter rate. The Medicaid
fee schedule rate typically reflects payment for an individual service
that was rendered, for example, an office visit that is billed as a
single CPT/HCPCS code. An encounter rate often reflects reimbursement
for total facility-specific costs divided by the number of encounters
to calculate a per visit or per encounter rate that is paid to the
facility for all services received during an encounter, regardless of
which specific services are provided during a particular encounter. For
example, the same encounter rate may be paid for a beneficiary who has
an office visit with a physician, a dental examination and cleaning
from a dentist, and laboratory tests and for a beneficiary who receives
an office visit with a physician and x-rays. Encounter rates are
typically paid to facilities, such as hospitals, FQHCs, RHCs, or
clinics, many of which function as safety net providers that offer a
wide variety of medical services. Within the Medicaid program,
encounter rates can vary widely in the rate itself and services paid
for through the encounter rate. We explained that States demonstrating
the economy and efficiency of their encounter rates would be an
entirely different exercise to the fee schedule rate comparison
proposed in this rule because encounter rates are often based on costs
unique to the provider, and States often require providers to submit
cost reports to States for review to support payment of the encounter
rate. Comparing cost between the Medicaid and Medicare program would
require a different methodology, policies, and oversight than the
comparative payment rate analysis requirement that we proposed due to
the differences within and between each program. While the Medicare
program has a broad, national policy for calculating encounter rates
for providers, including prospective payment systems for hospitals,
FQHCs, and other types of facilities, Medicare calculates these
encounter rates differently than States may calculate analogous rates
in Medicaid. Therefore, we explained that disaggregating each of their
encounter rates and services covered in each encounter rate to compare
to Medicare's encounter rates would be challenging for States.
From that logic, we likewise determined that the Medicare non-
facility payment rates as established in the annual Medicare PFS final
rule for a calendar year would afford the best point of comparison
because it is the most accurate and most analogous comparison of a
service-based access analysis using Medicare non-facility payment rates
as established in the annual Medicare PFS final rule for a calendar
year as a benchmark to compare Medicaid fee schedule rates on a CPT/
HCPCS code level basis, as opposed to an encounter rate which could
include any number of services or specialties. The Medicare non-
facility payment rate as established in the annual Medicare PFS final
rule for a calendar year is described as ``. . . the fee schedule
amount when a physician performs a procedure in a non-facility setting
such as the office'' and ``[g]enerally, Medicare gives higher payments
to physicians and other health care professionals for procedures
performed in their offices [compared to those performed elsewhere]
because they must supply clinical staff, supplies, and equipment.''
\256\ As such, we stated our belief that the Medicaid fee schedule best
represents the payment intended to pay physicians and non-physician
practitioners for delivery of individual services in an office (non-
facility) setting, and the Medicare non-facility payment rate as
established in the annual Medicare PFS final rule for a calendar year
represents the best equivalent to that amount and consideration.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\256\ https://www.cms.gov/files/document/physician-fee-schedule-guide.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
For the purposes of the comparative payment rate analysis, we
explained in the proposed rule that we would expect States to source
the Medicare non-facility payment rate from the published Medicare fee
schedule amounts that are established in the annual Medicare PFS final
rule through one or both of the following sources: the Physician Fee
Schedule Look-Up Tool \257\ on cms.gov or Excel file downloads of the
Medicare PFS Relative Value with Conversion Factor files \258\ for the
relevant calendar year from cms.gov. We acknowledge that the Physician
Fee Schedule Look-Up Tool is a display tool that functions as a helpful
aid for physicians and NPPs as a way to quickly look up PFS payment
rates, but does not provide official payment rate information. While we
encouraged States to begin sourcing Medicare non-facility payment rates
from the Physician Fee Schedule Look-Up Tool and utilize the Physician
Fee
[[Page 40714]]
Schedule Guide for instructions on using the Look-Up Tool in the
proposed rule, we would like to clarify in this final rule that States
should first download and review the Medicare PFS Relative Value with
Conversion Factor File where States can find the necessary information
for calculating Medicare non-facility payment rates as established in
the annual Medicare PFS final rule for a calendar year. With the
publication of this final rule, we have also issued subregulatory
guidance, which includes an instructional guide for identifying,
downloading, and using the relevant Excel files for calculating the
Medicare non-facility payment rates as established in the annual
Medicare PFS final rule for a calendar year that States will need to
include in their comparative payment rate analysis.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\257\ https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/PFSlookup.
\258\ https://www.cms.gov/medicare/medicare-fee-for-service-payment/physicianfeesched/pfs-relative-value-files.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Statutory provisions at section 1848 of the Act and regulatory
provisions at 42 CFR 414.20 \259\ require that most physician services
provided in Medicare are paid under the Medicare PFS. The fee schedule
amounts are established for each service, generally described by a
particular procedure code (including HCPCS, CPT, and CDT) using
resource-based inputs to establish relative value units (RVUs) in three
components of a procedure: work, practice expense, and malpractice. The
three component RVUs for each service are adjusted using CMS-calculated
geographic practice cost indexes (GPCIs) that reflect geographic cost
differences in each fee schedule area as compared to the national
average.260 261
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\259\ The Medicare Claims Processing Manual contains additional
information about physician service payments in Medicare that are
based on the cited statutory and regulatory requirements. https://www.cms.gov/regulations-and-guidance/guidance/manuals/internet-only-manuals-ioms-items/cms018912.
\260\ https://www.cms.gov/regulations-and-guidance/guidance/manuals/downloads/clm104c12.pdf.
\261\ https://www.cms.gov/medicare/physician-fee-schedule/search/overview.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
For many services, the Medicare PFS also includes separate fee
schedule amounts based on the site of service (non-facility versus
facility setting). The applicable PFS the rate for a service, facility
or non-facility, is based on the setting where the beneficiary received
the face-to-face encounter with the billing practitioner, which is
indicated on the claim form by a place of service (POS) code. We
proposed States use the Medicare non-facility payment rate as
established in the annual Medicare PFS final rule for a calendar year
in the comparative payment rate analysis. We directed States to the
Excel file downloads of the ``PFS Relative Value Files'' which include
the RVUs, GPCIs, and the ``National Physician Fee Schedule Relative
Value File Calendar Year 2023'' file which contains the associated
relative value units (RVUs), a fee schedule status indicator, and
various payment policy indicators needed for payment adjustment (for
example, payment of assistant at surgery, team surgery, or bilateral
surgery). We stated that we would expect States to use the formula for
the Non-Facility Pricing Amount in ``National Physician Fee Schedule
Relative Value File Calendar Year 2023'' file to calculate the ``Non-
Facility Price'' using the RVUs, GPCIs, and conversion factors for
codes not available in the Look-Up Tool.
We explained that Medicaid FFS fee-schedule payment rates should be
representative of the total computable payment amount a provider would
expect to receive as payment-in-full for the provision of Medicaid
services to individual beneficiaries. Section 447.15 defines payment-
in-full as ``the amounts paid by the agency plus any deductible,
coinsurance or copayment required by the plan to be paid by the
individual.'' Therefore, the State's Medicaid base payment rates used
for comparison should be inclusive of total base payment from the
Medicaid agency plus any applicable coinsurance and deductibles to the
extent that a beneficiary is expected to be liable for those payments.
If a State Medicaid fee schedule does not include these additional
beneficiary cost-sharing payment amounts, then the Medicaid fee
schedule amounts would need to be modified to align with the inclusion
of expected beneficiary cost sharing in Medicare's non-facility payment
rates as established in the annual Medicare PFS final rule for a
calendar year.\262\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\262\ According to the Medicare Physician Fee Schedule Guide,
for most codes, Medicare pays 80% of the amount listed and the
beneficiary is responsible for 20 percent.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In paragraph (b)(3)(i)(C), we proposed that the Medicare non-
facility payment rates as established in the annual Medicare PFS final
rule must be effective for the same time period for the same set of E/M
CPT/HCPCS codes that correspond to the base Medicaid FFS fee schedule
payment rate identified under paragraph (b)(3)(i)(B). We included this
language to ensure the comparative payment rate analysis is as accurate
and analogous as possible by proposing that the Medicaid and Medicare
payment rates that are effective during the same time period for the
same set of E/M CPT/HCPCS codes. As later described in this rule, in
paragraph (b)(4), we proposed the initial comparative payment rate
analysis and payment rate disclosure of Medicaid payment rates would be
a retroactive analysis of payment rates that are in effect as of
January 1, 2025, with the analysis and disclosure published no later
than January 1, 2026. For example, the first comparative payment rate
analysis a State develops and publishes would compare base Medicaid FFS
fee schedule payment rate in effect as of January 1, 2025, to the
Medicare non-facility payment rates as established in the annual
Medicare PFS final rule effective January 1, 2025, to ensure the
Medicare non-facility payment rates are effective for the same time
period for the same set of E/M CPT/HCPCS codes that correspond to the
Medicaid FFS fee schedule payment rate identified under paragraph
(b)(3)(i)(B).
Additionally, in paragraph (b)(3)(i)(C), we proposed that the
Medicare non-facility payment rates as established in the annual
Medicare PFS final rule used for the comparison must be for the same
geographical location as the Medicaid FFS fee schedule payment rate.
For States that pay Medicaid payment rates based on geographical
location (for example, payment rates that vary by rural or non-rural
location, by zip code, or by metropolitan statistical area), we
proposed that States' comparative payment rate analyses would need to
use the Medicare non-facility payment rates as established in the
annual Medicare PFS final rule for a calendar year for the same
geographical location as the Medicaid FFS fee schedule payment rate to
achieve an equivalent comparison. We stated that we would expect States
to review Medicare's published listing of the current PFS locality
structure organized by State, locality area, and when applicable,
counties assigned to each locality area and identify the comparable
Medicare locality area for the same geographical area as the Medicaid
FFS fee schedule payment rate.\263\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\263\ https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/PhysicianFeeSched/Locality.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We recognized that States that make Medicaid payment based on
geographical location may not use the same locality areas as Medicare.
For example, a State may use its own State-determined geographical
designations, resulting in 5 geographical areas in the State for
purposes of Medicaid payment while Medicare recognizes 3 locality areas
for the State based on Metropolitan Statistical Area (MSA) delineations
determined by the US Office of Management and Budget (OMB) that are the
result of the application of published standards to
[[Page 40715]]
Census Bureau data.\264\ In this instance, we would expect the State to
determine an appropriate method to accomplish the comparative payment
rate analysis that aligns the geographic area covered by each payer's
rate as closely as reasonably feasible. For example, if the State
identifies two geographic areas for Medicaid payment purposes that are
contained almost entirely within one Medicare geographic area, then the
State reasonably could determine to use the same Medicare non-facility
payment rate as established in the annual Medicare PFS final rule in
the comparative payment rate analysis for each Medicaid geographic
area. As another example, if the State defined a single geographic area
for Medicaid payment purposes that contained two Medicare geographic
areas, then the State might determine a reasonable method to weight the
two Medicare payment rates applicable within the Medicaid geographic
area, and then compare the Medicaid payment rate for the Medicaid-
defined geographic area to this weighted average of Medicare payment
rates. Alternatively, as discussed in the next paragraph, the State
could determine to use the unweighted arithmetic mean of the two
Medicare payment rates applicable within the Medicaid-defined
geographic area. We solicited comments on the proposed use of Medicare
non-facility payment rates as established in the annual Medicare PFS
final rule for a calendar year as a benchmark for States to compare
their Medicaid payment rates to in the comparative payment rate
analysis requirements in proposed Sec. 447.203(b)(3)(i) to help assess
if Medicaid payments are consistent with efficiency, economy, and
quality of care and are sufficient to enlist enough providers so that
care and services are available under the plan at least to the extent
that such care and services are available to the general population in
the geographic area.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\264\ https://www.census.gov/programs-surveys/metro-micro/about/delineation-files.html.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We noted our awareness that States may not determine their payment
rates by geographical location. For States that do not pay Medicaid
payment rates based on geographical location, we proposed that States
compare their Medicaid payment rates (separately identified by
population, pediatric and adult, and provider type, as applicable) to
the Statewide average of Medicare non-facility payment rates as
established in the annual Medicare PFS final rule for a calendar year
for a particular CPT/HCPCS code. The Statewide average of the Medicare
non-facility payment rates as established in the annual Medicare PFS
final rule for a calendar year for a particular CPT/HCPCS code would be
calculated as a simple average or arithmetic mean where all Medicare
non-facility payment rates as established in the annual Medicare PFS
final rule for a calendar year for a particular CPT/HCPCS code for a
particular State would be summed and divided by the number of all
Medicare non-facility payment rates as established in the annual
Medicare PFS final rule for a calendar year for a particular CPT/HCPCS
code for a particular State. This calculated Statewide average of the
Medicare non-facility payment rates as established in the annual
Medicare PFS final rule for a calendar year would be calculated for
each CPT/HCPCS code subject to the comparative payment rate analysis
using the Non-Facility Price for each locality in the State as
established in the annual Medicare PFS final rule for a calendar year.
As previously mentioned, Medicare has published a listing of the
current PFS locality structure organized by State, locality area, and
when applicable, counties assigned to each locality area, and we would
expect States to use this listing to identify the Medicare locality
areas in their State. For example, the Specific Medicare Administrative
Contractor (MAC) for Maryland is 12302 and there are two Specific
Locality codes, 1230201 for BALTIMORE/SURR. CNTYS and 1230299 for REST
OF STATE. After downloading and reviewing the CY 2023 Medicare PFS
Relative Value Files to identify the Medicare Non-Facility Price(s) for
CY 2023 for 99202 in the Specific MAC locality code for Maryland (12302
MARYLAND), the following information can be obtained: Medicare Non-
Facility Price of $77.82 for BALTIMORE/SURR. CNTYS and $74.31 for REST
OF STATE.\265\ These two Medicare Non-Facility Price(s) would be
averaged to obtain a calculated Statewide average for Maryland of
$76.07.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\265\ https://www.cms.gov/medicare/physician-fee-schedule/search?Y=0&T=4&HT=0&CT=1&H1=99202&C=43&M=5.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
For States that do not determine their payment rates by
geographical location, we proposed that States would use the Statewide
average of the Medicare Non-Facility Price(s) as listed on the PFS, as
previously described, because it ensures consistency across all States'
comparative payment rate analysis, aligns with the geographic area
requirement of section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act, and ensures the
Medicare non-facility payment rates as established in the annual
Medicare PFS final rule for a calendar year that States use in their
comparative payment rate analysis accurately reflect how Medicare pays
for services. We explained that this proposal would ensure that all
States' comparative payment rate analyses consistently include Medicare
geographical payment rate adjustments as proposed in paragraph
(b)(3)(i)(C). As previously discussed, we proposed that States that do
pay varying rates by geographical location would need to identify the
comparable Medicare locality area for the same geographical area as
their Medicaid FFS fee schedule payment rate. However, for States that
do not pay varying rates by geographical location, at the operational
level, the State is effectively paying a Statewide Medicaid payment
rate, regardless of geographical location, that cannot be matched to a
Medicare non-facility payment rate as established in the annual
Medicare PFS final rule for a calendar year in a comparable Medicare
locality area for the same geographical area as the Medicaid FFS fee
schedule payment rate. Therefore, to consistently apply the proposed
provision that the Medicare non-facility payment rate as established in
the annual Medicare PFS final rule for a calendar year must be for the
same geographical location as the Medicaid FFS fee schedule payment
rate, States that do not pay varying rates by geographical location
would be required to calculate a Statewide average of the Medicare non-
facility payment rates as established in the annual Medicare PFS final
rule for a calendar year to compare the State's Statewide Medicaid
payment rate.
Additionally, we proposed that States that do not determine their
payment rates by geographical location should use the Statewide average
of the Medicare non-facility payment rates as established in the annual
Medicare PFS final rule for a calendar year to align the implementing
regulatory text with the statute's geographic area requirement in
section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act. Section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act
requires that Medicaid payments are sufficient to enlist enough
providers so that care and services are available under the plan at
least to the extent that such care and services are available to the
general population in the geographic area. Therefore, the proposed
provisions of this rule, which are implementing section 1902(a)(30)(A)
of the Act, must include a method of ensuring we have sufficient
information for determining sufficiency of access to care as compared
to the general population in the geographic area. As we have
[[Page 40716]]
proposed to use Medicare non-facility payment rates as a benchmark for
comparing Medicaid FFS fee schedule payment rate, we believe that
utilizing a Statewide average of Medicare non-facility payment rates as
established in the annual Medicare PFS final rule for a calendar year
for States that do not pay varying rates by geographical location would
align the geographic area requirement of section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the
Act, treating the entire State (throughout which the Medicaid base
payment rate applies uniformly) as the relevant geographic area.
We considered requiring States weight the Statewide average of the
Medicare non-facility payment rates as established in the annual
Medicare PFS final rule for a calendar year by the proportion of the
Medicare beneficiary population covered by each rate, but we did not
propose this due to the additional administrative burden this would
create for States complying with the proposed comparative payment rate
analysis as well as limited availability of Medicare beneficiary and
claims data necessary to weight the Statewide average of the Medicare
non-facility payment rates as established in the annual Medicare PFS
final rule for a calendar year in this manner. As proposed, States that
do not determine their payment rates by geographical location would be
required to consider Medicare's geographically determined payment rates
by Statewide average of the Medicare non-facility payment rates as
established in the annual Medicare PFS final rule for a calendar year.
We explained our belief that an additional step to weight the Statewide
average by the proportion of the Medicare beneficiary population
covered by each rate would not result in a practical version of the
Medicare non-facility payment rate as established in the annual
Medicare PFS final rule for a calendar year for purposes of the
comparative payment rate analysis. Additionally, requiring only States
that do not determine their payment rates by geographical location to
weight Medicare payment rates in this manner would result in additional
administrative burden for such States that is not imposed on States
that do determine their Medicaid payment rates by geographical
location. Additionally, in order to accurately weight the Statewide
average of the Medicare non-facility payment rates as established in
the annual Medicare PFS final rule for a calendar year by the
proportion of the Medicare beneficiary population covered by each rate,
States would likely require Medicare-paid claims data for each code
subject to the comparative payment rate analysis, broken down by each
of the comparable Medicare locality areas for the same geographical
area as the Medicaid FFS fee schedule payment rate that are included in
the Statewide average of Medicare non-facility payment rates as
established in the annual Medicare PFS final rule for a calendar year.
While total Medicare beneficiary enrollment data broken down by State
and county level is publicly available on data.cms.gov, Medicare-paid
claims data broken down by the Medicare locality areas used in the
Medicare PFS and by code level is not published by CMS and would be
inaccessible for the State to use in weighting the Statewide average of
the Medicare non-facility payment rates as established in the annual
Medicare PFS final rule for a calendar year by the proportion of the
Medicare beneficiary population covered by each rate. Accordingly, we
explained our belief that, for States that do not determine their
Medicaid payment rates by geographical location, calculating a simple
Statewide average of the Medicare non-facility rates in the State would
ensure consistency across all States' comparative payment rate
analyses, align with the geographic area requirement of section
1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act, and ensure the Medicare non-facility payment
rates as established in the annual Medicare PFS final rule for a
calendar year that States use in their comparative payment rate
analyses accurately reflect how Medicare pays for services. We
solicited comments regarding our decision not to propose requiring
States that do not pay varying Medicaid rates by geographical location
to weight the Statewide average of the Medicare non-facility payment
rates as established in the annual Medicare PFS final rule for a
calendar year by the distribution of Medicare beneficiaries in the
State.
Furthermore, in paragraph (b)(3)(i)(C), we proposed that the
Medicare non-facility payment rate as established in the annual
Medicare PFS final rule must separately identify the payment rates by
provider type. We previously discussed that some States and Medicare
pay a percentage less than 100 percent of their fee schedule payment
rates to NPPs, including, for example, nurse practitioners, physician
assistants, and clinical nurse specialists. To ensure a State's
comparative payment rate analysis is as accurate as possible when
comparing their Medicaid payment rates to Medicare, we proposed that
States include a breakdown of Medicare's non-facility payment rates by
provider type. The proposed breakdown of Medicare's payment rates by
provider type would be required for all States, regardless of whether
or how the State's Medicaid payment rates vary by provider type,
because it ensures the comparative payment rate analysis accurately
reflects this existing Medicare payment policy on the Medicare side of
the analysis. Therefore, every comparative payment rate analysis would
include the following Medicare non-facility payment rates as
established in the annual Medicare PFS final rule for a calendar year
for the same set of E/M CPT/HCPCS codes paid under Medicaid as
described in Sec. 447.203(b)(3)(i)(B): the non-facility payment rate
as established in the annual Medicare PFS rate as the Medicare payment
rate for physicians and the non-facility payment rate as listed on
Medicare PFS rate multiplied by 0.85 as the Medicare payment rate for
NPPs.
As previously mentioned in this final rule, Medicare pays nurse
practitioners, physician assistants, and clinical nurse specialists at
85 percent of the Medicare PFS rate. Medicare implements a payment
policy where the fee schedule amounts, including the Medicare non-
facility payment rates as established in the annual Medicare PFS final
rule for a calendar year, are reduced to 85 percent when billed by
NPPs, including nurse practitioners, physician assistants, and clinical
nurse specialists, whereas physicians are paid 100 percent of the fee
schedule amounts Medicare non-facility payment rate as established in
the annual Medicare PFS final rule for a calendar year.\266\ As
proposed, States' comparative payment rate analysis would need to match
their Medicaid payment rates for each provider type to the
corresponding Medicare non-facility payment rates as established in the
annual Medicare PFS final rule for a calendar year for each provider
type, regardless of the State paying varying or the same payment rates
to their providers for the same service. As an example of a State that
pays varying rates based on provider type, if a State's Medicaid fee
schedule lists a rate of $100.00 when a physician delivers and bills
for 99202, then the $100.00 Medicaid base payment rate would be
compared to 100 percent of the Medicare non-facility payment rate as
established in the annual Medicare PFS final rule for a calendar year.
If the same State's Medicaid fee schedule lists a rate of $75 when a
nurse practitioner delivers and bills for 99202 (or the State's current
approved State plan
[[Page 40717]]
language states that a nurse practitioner is paid 75 percent of the
State's Medicaid fee schedule rate), then the $75 Medicaid base payment
rate would be compared to the Medicare non-facility payment rate as
established in the annual Medicare PFS final rule for a calendar year
multiplied by 0.85. Both Medicare non-facility payments rates would
need to account for any applicable geographical variation, including
the Non-Facility Price Medicare non-facility payment rate as
established in the annual Medicare PFS final rule for a calendar year
for each relevant locality area or the calculated Statewide average of
the Non-Facility Price Medicare non-facility payment rate as
established in the annual Medicare PFS final rule for a calendar year
for all relevant areas of a State, as previously discussed in this
section, for an accurate comparison to the corresponding Medicaid
payment rate. Alternatively, if a State pays the same $80 Medicaid base
payment rate for the service when delivered by physicians and by nurse
practitioners, then the $80 would be listed separately for physicians
and nurse practitioners as the Medicaid base payment rate and compared
to the Medicare non-facility payment rate as established in the annual
Medicare PFS final rule for a calendar year for physicians and the
Medicare non-facility payment rate as established in the annual
Medicare PFS final rule for a calendar year multiplied by 0.85 for
nurse practitioners.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\266\ https://www.cms.gov/files/document/physician-fee-schedule-guide.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
This granular level of comparison provides States with the
opportunity to benchmark their Medicaid payment rates against Medicare
as part of the State's and our process for ensuring compliance with
section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act. For example, a State's comparative
payment rate analysis may show that the State's Medicaid base payment
rate for physicians is 80 percent of the Medicare non-facility payment
rate as established in the annual Medicare PFS final rule for a
calendar year and their Medicaid base payment rate for nurse
practitioners is 71 percent of the Medicare non-facility payment rate
for NPPs, because the State pays a reduced rate to nurse practitioners.
Although Medicare also pays a reduced rate to nurse practitioners, the
reduced rate the State pays to nurse practitioners compared to
Medicare's reduced rate is still a lower percentage than the physician
rate. However, another State's comparative payment rate analysis may
show that the State's Medicaid base payment rate for physicians is 95
percent of the Medicare non-facility payment rate as established in the
annual Medicare PFS final rule for a calendar year and their Medicaid
base payment rate for nurse practitioners is 110 percent of the
Medicare non-facility payment rate because the State pays all providers
the same Medicaid base payment rate while Medicare pays a reduced rate
of 85 percent of the Medicare non-facility payment rate as established
in the annual Medicare PFS final rule for a calendar year when the
service is furnished by an NPP. By conducting this level of analysis
through the comparative payment rate analysis, States would be able to
pinpoint where there may be existing or potential future access to care
concerns rooted in payment rates. We solicited comments on the proposed
requirement for States to compare their Medicaid payment rates to the
Medicare non-facility payment rate as established in the annual
Medicare PFS final rule for a calendar year, effective for the same
time period for the same set of E/M CPT/HCPCS codes, and for the same
geographical location as the Medicaid FFS fee schedule payment rate,
that correspond to the Medicaid FFS fee schedule payment rate
identified under paragraph (b)(3)(i)(B) of this section, including
separate identification of the payment rates by provider type, as
proposed in Sec. 447.203(b)(3)(i)(C).
In paragraph (b)(3)(i)(D), we proposed to require States specify
the Medicaid base payment rate identified under proposed Sec.
447.203(b)(3)(i)(B) as a percentage of the Medicare non-facility
payment rate as established in the annual Medicare PFS final rule
identified under proposed Sec. 447.203(b)(3)(i)(C) for each of the
services for which the Medicaid base payment rate is published under
proposed Sec. 447.203(b)(3)(i)(B). For each E/M CPT/HCPCS code that we
select, we proposed that States would calculate each Medicaid base
payment rate as specified in paragraph (b)(3)(i)(B) as a percentage of
the corresponding Medicare non-facility payment rate as established in
the annual Medicare PFS final rule specified in paragraph (b)(3)(i)(C).
Both rates would be required to be effective for the same time period
of the comparative payment rate analysis. As previous components of the
proposed comparative payment rate analysis have considered variance in
payment rates based on population the service is delivered to (adult or
pediatric), provider type, and geographical location to extract the
most granular and accurate Medicaid and Medicare payment rate data, we
proposed that States would calculate the Medicaid base payment rate as
a percentage of the Medicare non-facility payment rate as established
in the annual Medicare PFS final rule in the comparative payment rate
analysis to obtain an informative metric that can be used in the
State's and our assessment of whether the State's payment rates are
compliant with section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act. As previously
discussed, benchmarking against Medicare serves as an important data
point in determining whether payment rates are likely to be sufficient
to ensure access for Medicaid beneficiaries at least as great as for
the general population in the geographic area, and whether any
identified access concerns may be related to payment sufficiency. We
proposed that States would calculate their Medicaid payment rates as a
percentage of the Medicare non-facility payment rate as established in
the annual Medicare PFS final rule because it is a common, simple, and
informative statistic that can provide us with a gauge of how Medicaid
payment rates compare to Medicare non-facility payment rates in the
same geographic area. Initially and over time, States, CMS, and other
interested parties would be able to compare the State's Medicaid
payment rates as a percentage of Medicare's non-facility payment rates
to identify how the percentage changes over time, in view of changes
that may take place to the Medicaid and/or the Medicare payment rate.
We explained that being able to track and analyze the change in
percentage over time would help States and CMS identify possible access
concerns that may be related to payment insufficiency.
We noted that the organization and content of the comparative
payment rate analysis, including the expression of the Medicaid base
payment rate as a percentage of the Medicare payment rate, can provide
us with a great deal of information about access in the State. For
example, we would be able to identify when and how the Medicaid base
payment rate as a percentage of the Medicare non-facility payment rate
as established in the annual Medicare PFS final rule for E/M CPT/HCPCS
codes for primary care services may decrease over time if Medicare
adjusts its rates and a State does not and use this information to more
closely examine for possible access concerns. This type of analysis
would provide us with actionable information to help ensure consistency
with section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act by using Medicare non-facility
payment rates as established in the annual Medicare PFS final rule for
a calendar year paid across the same geographical
[[Page 40718]]
areas of the State as a point of comparison for payment rate
sufficiency as a critical element of beneficiary access to care. When
explaining the rationale for proposing to use Medicare non-facility
payment rates as established in the annual Medicare PFS final rule for
a calendar year for comparison earlier in this rule, we emphasized the
ability to demonstrate to States that certain Medicaid payment rates
have not kept pace with changes to Medicare non-facility payment rates
and how the comparative payment rate analysis would help them identify
areas where they also might want to consider rate increases that
address market changes. We solicited comments on the proposed
requirement for States to calculate their Medicaid payment rates as a
percentage of the Medicare non-facility payment rate for each of the
services for which the Medicaid base payment rate is published under
proposed paragraph (b)(3)(i)(B), as described in proposed Sec.
447.203(b)(3)(i)(D). We also solicited comments on any challenges
States might encounter when comparing their Medicaid payment rates to
Medicare non-facility payment rates as established in the annual
Medicare PFS final rule for a calendar year under proposed Sec.
447.203(b)(3)(i)(D), particularly for any of the proposed categories of
service in paragraphs (b)(2)(i) through (iii), as well as suggestions
for an alternative comparative analysis that might be more helpful, or
less burdensome and equally helpful, for States, CMS, and other
interested parties to assess whether a State's Medicaid payment rates
are consistent with the access standard in section 1902(a)(30)(A) of
the Act.
We noted our awareness in the proposed rule that provider payment
rates are an important factor influencing beneficiary access; as
expressly indicated in section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act, insufficient
provider payment rates are not likely to enlist enough providers
willing to serve Medicaid beneficiaries to ensure broad access to care;
however, there may be situations where access issues are principally
due to other causes. For example, even if Medicaid payment rates are
generally consistent with amounts paid by Medicare (and those amounts
have been sufficient to ensure broad access to services for Medicare
beneficiaries), Medicaid beneficiaries may have difficulty scheduling
behavioral health care appointments because the overall number of
behavioral health providers within a State is not sufficient to meet
the demands of the general population. Therefore, a State's rates may
be consistent with the requirements of section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the
Act even when access concerns exist, and States and CMS may need to
examine other strategies to improve access to care beyond payment rate
increases. By contrast, comparing a State's Medicaid behavioral health
payment rates to Medicare may demonstrate that the State's rates fall
far below Medicare non-facility payment rates as established in the
annual Medicare PFS final rule for a calendar year, which would likely
impede beneficiaries from accessing needed care when the demand already
exceeds the supply of providers within a State. In that case, States
may need to evaluate budget priorities and take steps to ensure
behavioral health rates are consistent with section 1902(a)(30)(A) of
the Act.
Lastly, in paragraph (b)(3)(i)(E), we proposed to require States to
specify in their comparative payment rate analyses the number of
Medicaid-paid claims and the number of Medicaid enrolled beneficiaries
who received a service within a calendar year for each of the services
for which the Medicaid base payment rate is published under paragraph
(b)(3)(i)(B). The previous components of the comparative payment rate
analysis focus on the State's payment rate for the E/M CPT/HCPCS code
and comparing the Medicaid base payment rate to the Medicare non-
facility payment rate as established in the annual Medicare PFS final
rule for a calendar year for the same code (separately, for each
Medicaid base payment rate by population (adult or pediatric), provider
type, and geographic area, as applicable). This component examines the
Medicaid-paid claims volume of each E/M CPT/HCPCS code included in the
comparative payment rate analysis relative to the number of Medicaid
enrolled beneficiaries receiving each service within a calendar year.
We proposed to limit the claims volume data to Medicaid-paid claims,
and the number of beneficiaries would be limited to Medicaid-enrolled
beneficiaries who received a service in the calendar year of the
comparative payment rate analysis, where the service would fall into
the list of CMS-identified E/M CPT/HCPCS code(s). In other words, a
beneficiary would be counted in the comparative payment rate analysis
for a particular calendar year when the beneficiary received a service
that is included in one of the categories of services described in
paragraphs (b)(2)(i) through (iii) for which the State has a Medicaid
base payment rate (the number of Medicaid-enrolled beneficiaries who
received a service). A claim would be counted in the comparative
payment rate analysis for a particular calendar year when that
beneficiary had a claim submitted on their behalf by a provider who
billed one of the codes from the list of CMS-identified E/M CPT/HCPCS
code(s) to the State and the State paid the claim (number of Medicaid-
paid claims). With the proposal, we explained that we were seeking to
ensure the comparative payment rate analysis reflects actual services
received by beneficiaries and paid for by the State or realized
access.\267\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\267\ Andersen, R.M., and P.L. Davidson (2007). Improving access
to care in America: Individual and contextual indicators. In
Changing the U.S. health care system: Key issues in health services
policy and management, 3rd edition, Andersen, R.M., T.H. Rice, and
G.F. Kominski, eds. San Francisco, CA: John Wiley & Sons.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We considered but did not propose requiring States to identify the
number of unique Medicaid-paid claims and the number of unique
Medicaid-enrolled beneficiaries who received a service within a
calendar year for each of the services for which the Medicaid base
payment rate is published pursuant to paragraph (b)(3)(i)(B). We
considered this detail in order to identify the unique, or
deduplicated, number of beneficiaries who received a service that falls
into one of the categories of services described in in paragraph
(b)(2)(i) through (iii) in a calendar year. For example, if a
beneficiary has 6 visits to their primary care provider in a calendar
year and the provider bills 6 claims with 99202 for the same
beneficiary, then the beneficiary and claims for 99202 would only be
counted as one claim and one beneficiary. Therefore, we chose not to
propose this aspect because we intend for the comparative payment rate
analysis to capture the total amount of actual services received by
beneficiaries and paid for by the State. We solicited comments
regarding our decision not to propose that States would identify the
number of unique Medicaid-paid claims and the number of unique Medicaid
enrolled beneficiaries who received a service within a calendar year
for each of the services for which the Medicaid base payment rate is
published pursuant to paragraph (b)(3)(i)(B) in the comparative payment
rate analysis as proposed in Sec. 447.203(b)(3)(i)(E).
We also considered but did not propose to require States to
identify the total Medicaid-enrolled population who could potentially
receive a service within a calendar year for each of the services for
which the Medicaid base
[[Page 40719]]
payment rate is published under paragraph (b)(3)(i)(B), in addition to
the proposed requirement for States to identify the number of Medicaid-
enrolled beneficiaries who received a service. This additional data
element in the comparative payment rate analysis would reflect the
number of Medicaid-enrolled beneficiaries who could have received a
service, or potential access, in comparison to the number of Medicaid-
enrolled beneficiaries who actually received a service. We did not
propose this aspect because this could result in additional
administrative burden on the State, as we already collect and publish
similar data through Medicaid and CHIP Enrollment Trends Snapshots
published on Medicaid.gov. We also solicited comments regarding our
decision not to propose that States would identify the total Medicaid-
enrolled population who could receive a service within a calendar year
for each of the services for which the Medicaid base payment rate is
published pursuant to paragraph (b)(3)(i)(B) in the comparative payment
rate analysis as proposed in Sec. 447.203(b)(3)(i)(E).
We proposed to include beneficiary and claims information in the
comparative payment rate analysis to contextualize the payment rates in
the analysis, and to be able to identify longitudinal changes in
Medicaid service volume in the context of the Medicaid beneficiary
population receiving services, since utilization changes could be an
indication of an access to care issue. For example, a decrease in the
number of Medicaid-paid claims for primary care services furnished to
Medicaid beneficiaries in an area (when the number of Medicaid-enrolled
beneficiaries who received primary care services in the area is
constant or increasing) could be an indication of an access to care
issue. Without additional context provided by the number of Medicaid
enrolled beneficiaries who received a service, changes in claims volume
could be attributed to a variety of changes in the beneficiary
population, such as a temporary loss of coverage when enrollees
disenroll and then re-enroll within a short period of time.
Further, if the Medicaid base payment rate for the services with
decreasing Medicaid service volume has failed to keep pace with the
corresponding Medicare non-facility payment rate as established in the
annual Medicare PFS final rule for a calendar year over the period of
decrease in utilization (as reflected in changes in the Medicaid base
payment rate expressed as a percentage of the Medicare non-facility
payment rate as required under proposed Sec. 447.203(b)(3)(i)(D)),
then we would be concerned and would further scrutinize whether any
access to care issue might be caused by insufficient Medicaid payment
rates for the relevant services. With each biennial publication of the
State's comparative payment rate analysis, as proposed in Sec.
447.203(b)(4), discussed later in this section, States and CMS would be
able to compare the number of paid claims in the context of the number
of Medicaid enrolled beneficiaries receiving services within a calendar
year for the services subject to the comparative payment rate analysis
with previous years' comparative payment rate analyses. Collecting and
comparing the number of paid claims data in the context of the number
of Medicaid enrolled beneficiaries receiving services alongside
Medicaid base payment rate data may reveal trends where an increase in
the Medicaid base payment rate is correlated with an increase in
service volume and utilization, or vice versa with a decrease in the
Medicaid base payment rate correlated with a decrease in service volume
and utilization. As claims utilization and number of Medicaid enrolled
beneficiaries receiving services are only correlating trends, we
acknowledge that there may be other contextualizing factors outside of
the comparative payment rate analysis that affect changes in service
volume and utilization, and we would (and would expect States and other
interested parties to) take such additional factors into account in
analyzing and ascribing significance to changes in service volume and
utilization. We are solicited comments on the proposed requirement for
States to include the number of Medicaid-paid claims and the number of
Medicaid enrolled beneficiaries who received a service within a
calendar year for which the Medicaid base payment rate is published
under proposed paragraph (b)(3)(i)(B), as specified in proposed Sec.
447.203(b)(3)(i)(E).
We noted our belief that the comparative payment rate analysis
proposed in paragraph (b)(3) is needed to best enable us to ensure
State compliance with the requirement in section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the
Act that payments are sufficient to enlist enough providers so that
care and services are available to Medicaid beneficiaries at least to
the extent they are available to the general population in the
geographic area. As demonstrated by the findings of Sloan, et al.,\268\
which have since been supported and expanded upon by numerous
researchers, multiple studies examining the relationship between
Medicaid payment and physician participation,269 270 at the
State level,\271\ and among specific provider types,272 273
have found a direct, positive association between Medicaid payment
rates and provider participation in the Medicaid program. While
multiple factors may influence provider enrollment (such as
administrative burden), section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act specifically
concerns the sufficiency of provider payment rates. Given this
statutory requirement, a comparison of Medicaid payment rates to other
payer rates is an important barometer of whether State payment policies
are likely to support the statutory standard of ensuring access for
Medicaid beneficiaries such that covered care and services are
available to them at least to the extent that the same care and
services are available to the general population in the geographic
area.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\268\ Sloan, F. et al ``Physician Participation in State
Medicaid Programs.'' The Journal of Human Resources, Volume 13,
Supplement: National Bureau of Economic Research Conference on the
Economics of Physician and Patient Behavior, 1978, p. 211-245.
https://www.jstor.org/stable/145253?seq=1#metadata_info_tab_contents. Accessed August 16, 2022.
\269\ Chen, A. ``Do the Poor Benefit from More Generous Medicaid
Policies'' SSRN Electronic Journal, January 2014., p. 1-46. https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=2444286. Accessed June
16, 2022.
\270\ Holgash, K. and Martha Heberlein, ``Physician Acceptance
of New Medicaid Patients: What Matters and What Doesn't'' Health
Affairs, April 10, 2019. https://www.healthaffairs.org/do/10.1377/
forefront.20190401.678690/
#:~:text=Physicians%E2%80%99%20acceptance%20of%20new%20Medicaid%20pat
ients%20is%20only,of%20Medicaid%20patients%20already%20in%20the%20phy
sician%E2%80%99s%20care. Accessed June 16, 2022.
\271\ Fakhraei, H. ``Payments for Physician Services: An
analysis of Maryland Medicaid Reimbursement Rates'' International
Journal of Healthcare Technology and Management, Volume 7, Numbers
1-2, January 2005, p. 129-142. https://www.researchgate.net/publication/228637758_Payments_for_physician_services_An_analysis_of_Maryland_Medicaid_reimbursement_rates. Accessed June 16, 2022.
\272\ Berman, S., et al. ``Factors that Influence the
Willingness of Private Primary Care Pediatricians to Accept More
Medicaid Patients,'' Pediatrics, Volume 110, Issue 2, August 2002,
p. 239-248. https://publications.aap.org/pediatrics/article-abstract/110/2/239/64380/Factors-That-Influence-the-Willingness-of-Private?redirectedFrom=fulltext?autologincheck=redirected. Accessed
June 16, 2022.
\273\ Suk-fong S., Tang, et al ``Increased Medicaid Payment and
Participation by Office-Based Primary Care Pediatricians,''
Pediatrics, Volume 141, number 1, January 2018, p. 1-9. https://publications.aap.org/pediatrics/article/141/1/e20172570/37705/Increased-Medicaid-Payment-and-Participation-by. Accessed June 16,
2022.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The AMRP requirements previous addressed this standard under
section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act by requiring States to compare
Medicaid payment rates to the payment rates of other public and private
payers in current
[[Page 40720]]
Sec. 447.203(b)(1)(v) and (b)(3). While we proposed to eliminate the
previous AMRP requirements, we noted our belief that our proposal to
require States to compare their Medicaid payment rates for services
under specified E/M CPT/HCPCS codes against Medicare non-facility
payment rates as established in the annual Medicare PFS final rule for
a calendar year for the same codes, as described in Sec.
447.203(b)(3), would well position States and CMS to continue to meet
the statutory access requirement. Some studies examining the
relationship between provider payments and various access measures have
quantified the relationship between the Medicaid-Medicare payment ratio
and access measures. Two studies observed that increases in the
Medicaid-Medicare payment ratio is associated with higher physician
acceptance rates of new Medicaid patients and with an increased
probability of a beneficiary having an office-based physician as the
patient's usual source of care.274 275 We explained that
these studies led us to conclude that Medicare non-facility payment
rates as established in the annual Medicare PFS final rule for a
calendar year are likely to be a sufficient benchmark for evaluating
access to care, particularly ambulatory physician services, based on
provider payment rates.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\274\ Holgash, K. and Martha Heberlein, Health Affairs, April
10, 2019.
\275\ Cohen, J.W., Inquiry, Fall 1993.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
By comparing FFS Medicaid payment rates to corresponding FFS
Medicare non-facility payment rates as established in the annual
Medicare PFS final rule for a calendar year, where Medicare is a public
payer with large populations of beneficiaries and participating
providers whose payment rates are readily available, we aim to
establish a uniform benchmarking approach that allows for more
meaningful oversight and transparency and reduces the burden on States
and CMS relative to the previous AMRP requirements that do not impose
specific methodological standards for comparing payment rates and that
contemplate the availability of private payer rate information that has
proven difficult for States to obtain due to its often proprietary
nature. We noted that this aspect of the proposal specifically responds
to States' expressed concerns that the previous AMRP requirement to
include ``actual or estimated levels of provider payment available from
other payers, including other public and private payers'' was
challenging to accomplish based on the general unavailability of this
information, as discussed elsewhere in this final rule.
Following the 2011 proposed rule, and as addressed by us through
public comment response in the 2015 final rule with comment period,
States expressed concerns that private payer payment rates were
proprietary information and not available to them and that large
private plans did not exist within some States so there were no private
payer rates to compare to, therefore, the State would need to rely on
State employee health plans or non-profit insurer rates.\276\ States
also expressed that other payer data, including public and private
payers, in general may be unsound for comparisons because of a lack of
transparency about the payment data States would have compared their
Medicaid payment rates to. We discussed how, since 2016, we have
learned a great deal from our implementation experience of the previous
AMRP process. We have learned that very few States were able to include
even limited private payer data in their previous AMRPs. States that
were able include private payer data were only able to do so because
the State had existing Statewide all payer claiming or rate-setting
systems, which gave them access to private payer data in their State,
or the State previously based their State plan payment rates off of
information about other payers (such as the American Dental
Association's Survey of Dental Fees) that gave them access to private
payer data.\277\ Based on our implementation experience and concerns
from States about the previous requirement in Sec. 447.203(b)(1)(v) to
obtain private payer data, we proposed to require States only compare
their Medicaid payment rates to Medicare's, for which payment data are
readily and publicly available.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\276\ Alaska Department of Health and Social Services, Comment
Letter on 2011 Proposed Rule (July 7, 2011), https://www.regulations.gov/comment/CMS-2011-0062-0102.
\277\ https://www.medicaid.gov/sites/default/files/2019-12/co-amrp-2016.pdf, https://www.medicaid.gov/sites/default/files/2019-12/md-amrp-16.pdf, https://www.medicaid.gov/sites/default/files/2019-12/sd-amrp-16.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Next, in paragraph (b)(3)(ii), we proposed that for each category
of services described in proposed paragraph (b)(2)(iv), the State
agency would be required to publish a payment rate disclosure that
expresses the State's payment rates as the average hourly payment
rates, separately identified for payments made to individual providers
and to providers employed by an agency, if the rates differ. The
payment rate disclosure would be required to meet specified
requirements. We explained that we intended this proposal to remain
consistent with the proposed HCBS provisions at Sec. 441.311(d)(2) and
(e) and to take specific action regarding direct care workers per
Section 2402(a) of the Affordable Care Act. HCBS and direct care
workers that deliver these services are unique to Medicaid and often
not covered by other payers, which is why we proposed a different
analysis of payment rates for providers of these services that does not
involve a comparison to Medicare. As previously stated, Medicare covers
part-time or intermittent home health aide services (only if a Medicare
beneficiary is also getting other skilled services like nursing and/or
therapy at the same time) under Medicare Part A (Hospital Insurance) or
Medicare Part B (Medical Insurance); however, Medicare does not cover
personal care or homemaker services. Therefore, comparing personal care
and homemaker services to Medicare, as we proposed in paragraph
(b)(3)(i) for other specified categories of services, would not be
feasible for States, and a comparison of Medicaid home health aide
payment rates to analogous rates for Medicare would be of limited
utility given the differences in circumstances when Medicaid and
Medicare may pay for such services.
As previously discussed, private payer data are often considered
proprietary and not available to States, thereby eliminating private
payers as feasible point of comparison. Even if private payer payment
rate data were more readily available, like Medicare, many private
payers do not cover HCBS as HCBS is unique to the Medicaid program,
leaving Medicaid as the largest or the only payer for personal care,
home health aide, and homemaker services. Given Medicaid's status as
the most important payer for HCBS, we believe that scrutiny of Medicaid
HCBS payment rates themselves, rather than a comparison to other payer
rates that frequently do not exist, is most important in ascertaining
whether such Medicaid payment rates are sufficient to enlist adequate
providers so that the specified services are available to Medicaid
beneficiaries at least to the same extent as to the general population
in the geographic area. We acknowledge that individuals without
insurance may self-pay for medical services provided in their home or
community; however, similar to private payer data, self-pay data is
unlikely to be available to States. Because HCBS coverage is unique to
Medicaid, Medicaid beneficiaries are generally the only individuals in
a given geographic area with access to HCBS.
[[Page 40721]]
Through the proposed payment rate disclosure, Medicaid payments rates
would be transparent and comparable among States and would assist
States to analyze if and how their payment rates are compliant with
section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act.
As noted previously in this section, we proposed to require States
to express their rates separately as the average hourly payments made
to individual providers and providers employed by an agency, if the
rates differ, as applicable for each category of service specified in
proposed Sec. 447.203(b)(2)(iv). We noted our belief that expressing
the data in this manner would best account for variations in types and
levels of payment that may occur in different settings and employment
arrangements. Individual providers are often self-employed or contract
directly with the State to deliver services as a Medicaid provider
while providers employed by an agency are employed by the agency, which
works directly with the Medicaid agency to provide Medicaid services.
These differences in employment arrangements often include differences
in the hourly rate a provider would receive for services delivered, for
example, providers employed by an agency typically receive benefits,
such as health insurance, and the cost of those benefits is factored
into the hourly rate that the State pays for the services delivered by
providers employed by an agency (even though the employed provider does
not retain the entire amount as direct monetary compensation). However,
these benefits are not always available for individual providers who
may need to separately purchase a marketplace health plan or be able to
opt into the State-employee health plan, for example. Therefore, the
provider employed by an agency potentially could receive a higher
hourly rate because benefits are factored into the hourly rate they
receive for delivering services, whereas the individual provider might
be paid a rate that does not reflect employment benefits.
With States expressing their payment rates separately as the
average hourly payment rate made to individual and agency employed
providers for personal care, home health aide, and homemaker services,
States, CMS, and other interested parties would be able to compare
payment rates among State Medicaid programs. Such comparisons may be
particularly relevant for States in close geographical proximity to
each other or that otherwise may compete to attract providers of the
services specified in proposed paragraph (b)(2)(iv) or where such
providers may experience similar costs or other incentives to provide
such services. For example, from reviewing all States' payment rate
analyses for personal care, home health aide, and homemaker services,
we would be able to learn that two neighboring States have similar
hourly rates for providers of these services, but a third neighboring
State has much lower hourly rates than both of its neighbors. This
information could highlight a potential access issue, since providers
in the third State might have an economic incentive to move to one of
the two neighboring States where they could receive higher payments for
furnishing the same services. Such movement could result in
beneficiaries in the third State having difficulty accessing covered
services, compared to the general population in the tri-State
geographic area.
In paragraph (b)(3)(ii), we proposed that the State's payment rate
disclosure must meet the following requirements: (A) the State must
organize the payment rate disclosure by category of service as
specified in proposed paragraph (b)(2)(iv); (B) the disclosure must
identify the average hourly payment rates, including, if the rates
vary, separate identification of the average hourly payment rates for
payments made to individual providers and to providers employed by an
agency by population (pediatric and adult), provider type, and
geographical location, as applicable; and (C) the disclosure must
identify the number of Medicaid-paid claims and the number of Medicaid
enrolled beneficiaries who received a service within a calendar year
for each of the services for which the Medicaid base payment rate is
published under proposed paragraph (b)(3)(ii)(B). We solicited comments
on the proposed requirements and content of the items in proposed Sec.
447.203(b)(3)(ii)(A) through (C).
In paragraph (b)(3)(ii)(A), we proposed to require States to
organize their payment rate disclosures by each of the categories of
services specified in proposed paragraph (b)(2)(iv), that is, to break
out the payment rates for personal care, home health aide, and
homemaker services provided by individual providers and providers
employed by an agency, separately for individual analyses of the
payment rates for each category of service and type of employment
structure. We solicited comments on the proposed requirement for States
to break out their payment rates for personal care, home health aide,
and homemaker services separately for individual analyses of the
payment rates for each category of service in the comparative payment
rate analysis, as described in proposed Sec. 447.203(b)(3)(ii)(A).
In paragraph (b)(3)(ii)(B), we proposed to require States identify
in their disclosure the Medicaid average hourly payment rates by
applicable category of service, including, if the rates vary, separate
identification of the average hourly payment rates for payments made to
individual providers and to providers employed by an agency, as well as
by population (pediatric and adult), provider type, and geographical
location, as applicable. Given that direct care workers deliver unique
services in Medicaid that are often not covered by other payers, we
proposed to require a payment rate disclosure, instead of comparative
payment rate analysis. To be clear, we did not propose to require a
State's payment rate disclosure for personal care, home health aide,
and homemaker services be broken down and organized by E/M CPT/HCPCS
codes, nor did we propose States compare their Medicaid payment rates
to Medicare for these services.
We proposed to require States to calculate their Medicaid average
hourly payment rates made to providers of personal care, home health
aide, and homemaker services, separately, for each of these categories
of services, by provider employment structures (individual providers
and agency employed providers). For each of the categories of services
in paragraph (b)(3)(ii)(A), one Medicaid average hourly payment rate
would be calculated as a simple average (arithmetic mean) where all
payment rates would be adjusted to an hourly figure, summed, then
divided by the number of all hourly payment rates. As an example, the
State's Medicaid average hourly payment rate for personal care
providers may be $10.50 while the average hourly payment rate for a
home health aide is $15.00. A more granular analysis may show that
within personal care providers receiving a payment rate of $10.50, an
individual personal care provider is paid an average hourly payment
rate of $9.00, while a personal care provider employed by an agency is
paid an average hourly payment rate of $12.00 for the same type of
service. Similarly for home health aides, a more granular analysis may
show that within home health aides receiving a payment rate of $15.00,
an individual home health aide is paid an average hourly payment rate
of $13.00, while a home health aide employed by an agency is paid an
average hourly payment rate of $17.00.
We explained that we understand that States may set payment rates
for personal care, home health aide, and
[[Page 40722]]
homemaker services based on a particular unit of time for delivering
the service, and that time may not be in hourly increments. For
example, different States might pay for personal care services using
15-minute increments, on an hourly basis, through a daily rate, or
based on a 24-hour period. By proposing to require States to represent
their rates as an hourly payment rate, we would be able to standardize
the unit (hourly) and payment rate for comparison across States, rather
than comparing to Medicare. To the extent a State pays for personal
care, home health aide, or homemaker services on an hourly basis, the
State would simply use that hourly rate in its Medicaid average hourly
payment rate calculation of each respective category of service.
However, if for example a State pays for personal care, home health
aide, or homemaker services on a daily basis, we would expect the State
to divide that rate by the number of hours covered by the rate.
Additionally, and similar to proposed paragraph (b)(3)(i)(E), we
proposed in paragraph (b)(3)(ii)(B), that, if the States' Medicaid
average hourly payment rates vary, the rates must separately identify
the average hourly payment rates for payments made to individual
providers and to providers employed by an agency, by population
(pediatric and adult), provider type, and geographical location, as
applicable. We included this proposed provision with the intent of
ensuring the payment rate disclosure contains the highest level of
granularity in each element. As previously discussed, States may pay
providers different payment rates for billing the same service based on
the population being served, provider type, and geographical location
of where the service is delivered. We solicited comments on the
proposed requirement for States to calculate the Medicaid average
hourly payment rate made separately to individual providers and to
agency employed providers, which accounts for variation in payment
rates by population (pediatric and adult), provider type, and
geographical location, as applicable, in the payment rate disclosure.
In paragraph (b)(3)(ii)(C), we proposed to require that the State
disclosure must identify the number of Medicaid-paid claims and the
number of Medicaid enrolled beneficiaries who received a service within
a calendar year for each of the services for which the Medicaid payment
rate is published under proposed paragraph (b)(3)(ii)(B), so that
States, CMS, and other interested parties would be able to
contextualize the previously described payment rate information with
information about the volume of paid claims and number of beneficiaries
receiving personal care, home health aide, and homemaker services.
We proposed that the number of Medicaid-paid claims and number of
Medicaid enrolled beneficiaries who received a service be reported
under the same breakdown as paragraph (b)(3)(ii), where the State
provides the number of paid claims and number of beneficiaries
receiving services from individual providers versus agency-employed
providers of personal care, home health aide services, and homemaker
services. As with the comparative payment rate analysis, we proposed
the claims volume data would be limited to Medicaid-paid claims and the
number of beneficiaries would be limited to Medicaid enrolled
beneficiaries who received a service in the calendar year of the
payment rate disclosure, where the services fall into the categories of
service for which the average hourly payment rates are published
pursuant to paragraph (b)(3)(ii)(B). In other words, the beneficiary
would be counted in the payment rate disclosure for a particular
calendar year when the beneficiary received a service that is included
in one of the categories of services described in paragraph (b)(2)(iv)
for which the State has calculated average hourly payment rates (the
number of Medicaid enrolled beneficiaries who received a service). A
claim would be counted when that beneficiary had a claim submitted on
their behalf by a provider who billed for one of the categories of
services described in paragraph (b)(2)(iv) and the State paid the claim
(number of Medicaid-paid claims). We noted we were seeking to ensure
the payment rate disclosure reflects actual services received by
beneficiaries and paid for by the State, or realized access.\278\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\278\ Andersen, R.M., and P.L. Davidson. 2007. Improving access
to care in America: Individual and contextual indicators. In
Changing the U.S. health care system: Key issues in health services
policy and management, 3rd edition, Andersen, R.M., T.H. Rice, and
G.F. Kominski, eds. San Francisco, CA: John Wiley & Sons.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Similar to the comparative payment rate analysis, we considered but
did not propose requiring States to identify the number of unique
Medicaid-paid claims and the number of unique Medicaid enrolled
beneficiaries who received a service within a calendar year for each of
the services for which the average hourly payment rates are published
pursuant to paragraph (b)(3)(ii)(B). We also considered but did not
propose to require States to identify the total Medicaid enrolled
population who could receive a service within a calendar year for each
of the services for which the average hourly payment rates are
published pursuant to paragraph (b)(3)(ii)(B) in addition to proposing
States identify the number of Medicaid enrolled beneficiaries who
received a service. As discussed in the comparative payment rate
discussion, we solicited comments on our decision not to require these
levels of detail for the payment rate disclosure.
Also similar to the comparative payment rate analysis requirement
under proposed paragraph (b)(3)(i)(E), we explained that this
disclosure element would help States, CMS, and other interested parties
identify longitudinal changes in Medicaid service volume and
beneficiary utilization that may be an indication of an access to care
issue. Again, with each biennial publication of the State's comparative
payment rate analysis and payment rate disclosure, States and CMS would
be able to compare the number of Medicaid-paid claims and number of
Medicaid enrolled beneficiaries who received a service within a
calendar year for services subject to the payment rate disclosure with
previous years' disclosures. Collecting and comparing data on the
number of paid claims and number of Medicaid enrolled beneficiaries
alongside Medicaid average hourly payment rate data may reveal trends,
such as where a provider type that previously delivered a low volume of
services to beneficiaries has increased their volume of services
delivered after receiving an increase in their payment rate.
We acknowledged that one limitation of using the average hourly
payment rate is that the statistic is sensitive to highs and lows, so
one provider receiving an increase in their average hourly payment rate
would bring up the average overall while other providers may not see an
improvement. As these are only correlating trends, we also acknowledged
that there may be other contextualizing factors outside of the payment
rate disclosure that may affect changes in service volume and
utilization. We solicited comments on the proposed requirement for
States to include the number of Medicaid-paid claims and number of
Medicaid enrolled beneficiaries who received a service within a
calendar year for which the Medicaid payment rate is published under
paragraph (b)(3)(ii)(B), as specified in proposed Sec.
447.203(b)(3)(ii)(C).
Additionally, in recognition of the importance of services provided
to individuals with intellectual or
[[Page 40723]]
developmental disabilities and in an effort to remain consistent with
the proposed HCBS payment adequacy provisions at Sec. 441.302(k)
(discussed in section II.B.5 of this rule), we solicited comments on
whether we should propose a similar provision that would require at
least 80 percent of all Medicaid FFS payments with respect to personal
care, home health aide, and homemaker services provided by individual
providers and providers employed by an agency must be spent on
compensation for direct care workers. In this final rule, we want to
clarify that this request for comment was distinct from the proposal at
Sec. 441.302(k) as discussed in section II.B.5 of this rule. The
payment adequacy provision finalized in Sec. 441.302(k) is applicable
to rates for certain specified services authorized under section
1915(c) of the Act, as well as sections 1915(j), (k), and (i) of the
Act as finalized at Sec. Sec. 441.464(f), 441.570(f), and
441.745(a)(1)(vi), respectively. The request for comment in this
section of the rule considered expanding that requirement to Medicaid
FFS payments under FFS State plan authority.
In paragraph (b)(4), we proposed to require the State agency to
publish the initial comparative payment rate analysis and payment rate
disclosure of its Medicaid payments in effect as of January 1, 2025, as
required under Sec. 447.203(b)(2) and (b)(3), by no later than January
1, 2026. Thereafter, the State agency would be required to update the
comparative payment rate analysis and payment rate disclosure no less
than every 2 years, by no later than January 1 of the second year
following the most recent update. The comparative payment rate analysis
and payment rate disclosure would be required to be published
consistent with the publication requirements described in proposed
Sec. 447.203(b)(1) for payment rate transparency data.
As previously discussed in this final rule, we proposed that the
Medicaid payment rates included in the initial comparative payment rate
analysis and payment rate disclosure would be those in effect as of
January 1, 2025. Specifically, for the comparative payment rate
analysis, we proposed States would conduct a retrospective analysis to
ensure CMS can publish the list of E/M CPT/HCPCS codes for the
comparative payment rate analysis and States have timely access to all
information required to complete comparative payment rate analysis. As
described in paragraph (b)(3)(i)(C), we proposed States would compare
their Medicaid payment rates to the Medicare non-facility payment rates
as established in the annual Medicare PFS final rule effective for the
same time period for the same set of E/M CPT/HCPCS codes, therefore,
the Medicare non-facility payment rates as published on the Medicare
PFS for the same time period as the State's Medicaid payment rates
would need to be available to States in a timely manner for their
analysis and disclosure to be conducted and published as described in
paragraph (b)(4). Medicare publishes its annual PFS final rule in
November of each year and the Medicare non-facility payment rates as
established in the annual Medicare PFS final rule for a calendar year
are effective the following January 1. For example, the 2025 Medicare
PFS final rule would be published in November 2024 and the Medicare
non-facility payment rates as established in the annual Medicare PFS
final rule would be effective January 1, 2025, so States would compare
their Medicaid payment rates effective as of January 1, 2025, to the
Medicare PFS payment rates effective January 1, 2025, when submitting
the initial comparative payment rate analysis that we proposed would be
due on January 1, 2026.
Also, previously discussed in this final rule, we noted our intent
to publish the initial and subsequent updates to the list of E/M CPT/
HCPCS codes subject to the comparative payment rate analysis in a
timely manner that allows States approximately one full calendar year
between the publication of the CMS-published list of E/M CPT/HCPCS
codes and the due date of the comparative payment rate analysis.
Because the list of E/M CPT/HCPCS codes is derived from the relevant
calendar year's Medicare PFS, the Medicare non-facility payment rates
as established in the annual Medicare PFS final rule that the State
would need to include in their comparative payment rate analysis would
also be available to States. We explained that we expect approximately
one full calendar year of the CMS-published list of E/M CPT/HCPCS codes
and Medicare non-facility payment rates as established in the annual
Medicare PFS final rule for a calendar year being available to States
would provide the States with sufficient time to develop and publish
their comparative payment rate analyses as described in paragraph
(b)(4). We considered proposing the same due date and effective time
period for Medicaid and Medicare payment rates where the initial
publication of the comparative payment rate analysis would be due
January 1, 2026, and would contain payment rates effective January 1,
2026; however, we believe a 2-month time period between Medicare
publishing its PFS payment rates in November and the PFS payment rates
taking effect on January 1 would be an insufficient amount of time for
CMS to publish the list of E/M CPT/HCPCS codes subject to the
comparative payment rate analysis and for States to develop and publish
their comparative payment rate analyses by January 1. While the
proposed payment rate disclosure would not require a comparison to
Medicare, we proposed to use the same due date and effective period of
Medicaid payment rates for both the proposed comparative payment rate
analysis and payment rate disclosure to maintain consistency.
We noted our expectation the proposed initial publication timeframe
would provide sufficient time for States to gather necessary data,
perform, and publish the first required comparative payment rate
analysis and payment rate disclosure. We determined this timeframe was
sufficient based on implementation experience from the previous AMRP
process, where we initially proposed a 6-month timeframe between the
January 4, 2016, effective date of the 2015 final rule with comment
period in the Federal Register, and the due date of the first AMRP,
July 1, 2016. At the time, we believed that this timeframe would be
sufficient for States to conduct their first review for service
categories newly subject to ongoing AMRP requirements; however, after
receiving several public comments from States on the 2015 final rule
with comment period that State agency staff may have difficulty
developing and submitting the initial AMRPs within the July 1, 2016
timeframe, we modified the policy as finalized in the 2016 final
rule.\279\ Specifically, we revised the deadline for submission of the
initial AMRP until October 1, 2016 and we made a conforming change to
the deadline for submission in subsequent review periods at Sec.
447.203(b)(5)(i) to October 1.\280\ We also found that, despite this
additional time, some State were still late in submitting their first
AMRP to us. Therefore, we noted our belief that a proposed initial
publication date of January 1, 2026, thereby providing States with
approximately 2 years between the effective date of the final rule and
the due date of the first comparative payment rate analysis and payment
rate disclosure, would be sufficient. In alignment with the proposed
payment rate transparency requirements, we proposed an alternate date
if this rule is finalized at a time that
[[Page 40724]]
does not allow for States to have a period of 2 years from the
effective date of the final rule and the proposed January 1, 2026, date
to publish the initial comparative payment rate analysis and payment
rate disclosure. We proposed an alternative date of July 1, 2026, for
the initial comparative payment rate analysis and payment rate
disclosure and for the initial comparative payment rate analysis and
payment rate disclosure to include Medicaid payment rates approved as
of July 1, 2025, to allow more time for States to comply with the
initial comparative payment rate analysis and payment rate disclosure
requirements. We acknowledged that the date of the initial comparative
payment rate analysis and payment rate disclosure publication would be
subject to change based on the final rule publication schedule and
effective date. If further adjustment is necessary beyond the July 1,
2026, timeframe to allow more time for States to comply with the
payment rate transparency requirements, then we proposed that we would
adjust date of the initial payment rate transparency publication in 6-
month intervals, as appropriate.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\279\ 81 FR 21479 at 21479-21480.
\280\ 81 FR 21479 at 21480.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Also, in Sec. 447.203(b)(4), we proposed to require the State
agency to update the comparative payment rate analysis and payment rate
disclosure no less than every 2 years, by no later than January 1 of
the second year following the most recent update. We proposed that the
comparative payment rate analysis and payment rate disclosure would be
required to be published consistent with the publication requirements
described in proposed paragraph (b)(1) for payment rate transparency
data. After publication of the 2011 proposed rule, and as we worked
with States to implement the previous AMRP requirements after
publication of the 2015 final rule with comment period, many States
expressed concerns that the previous requirements of Sec. 447.203,
specifically those in previous Sec. 447.203(b)(6) imposed additional
analysis and monitoring requirements in the case of provider rate
reductions or restructurings that could result in diminished access,
were overly burdensome. As described in the 2018 and 2019 proposed
rules, ``a number of States expressed concern regarding the
administrative burden associated with the requirements of Sec.
447.203, particularly those States with a very high beneficiary
enrollment in comprehensive, risk-based managed care and a limited
number of beneficiaries receiving care through a FFS delivery system.''
281 282 Additionally, from our implementation experience, we
learned that the triennial due date for updated AMRPs required by
previous Sec. 447.203(b)(5)(ii) was too infrequent for States or CMS
to identify and act on access concerns identified by the previous
AMRPs. For example, one State timely submitted its initial ongoing AMRP
on October 1, 2016, consistent with the requirements in Sec.
447.203(b)(1) through (5), and timely submitted its first AMRP update
(the next ongoing AMRP) 3 years later, on October 1, 2019. The 2016
AMRP included data about beneficiary utilization and Medicaid-
participating providers accepting new Medicaid patients from 2014 to
2015 (the most recent data available at the time the State was
developing the AMRP), while the 2019 AMRP update included similar data
for 2016 to 2017 (the most recent data then available). The 2019 AMRP
showed that the number of Medicaid-participating providers accepting
new Medicaid patients significantly dropped in 2016, and the State
received a considerable number of public comments during the 30-day
public comment period for the 2019 AMRP update prior to submission to
us per the requirements in Sec. 447.203(b) and (b)(2). This data lag
between a drop in Medicaid-participating providers accepting new
Medicaid patients in 2016 and CMS receiving the next AMRP update with
information about related concerns in 2019 illustrates how the
infrequency of the triennial due date for the AMRP updates could allow
a potential access concern to develop without notice by the State or
CMS in between the due dates of the ongoing AMRP updates. Although
Sec. 447.203(b)(7) previously required States to have ongoing
mechanisms for beneficiary and provider input on access to care, and
States are expected to promptly respond to concerns expressed through
these mechanisms that cite specific access problems, beneficiaries and
providers themselves may not be aware of even widespread access issues
if such issues are not noticed before published data reveal them.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\281\ 83 FR 12696 at 12697.
\282\ 84 FR 33722 at 33723.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We also learned from our previous AMRP implementation experience
that the timing of the ongoing AMRP submissions required by previous
Sec. 447.203(b)(5)(ii) and access reviews associated with rate
reduction or restructuring SPA submissions required by Sec.
447.203(b)(6) have led to confusion about the due date and scope of
routine, ongoing AMRP updates and SPA-connected access review
submissions, particularly when States were required to submit access
reviews within the 3-year period between AMRP updates when proposing a
rate reduction or restructuring SPA, per the requirements in previous
Sec. 447.203(b)(6). For example, one State timely submitted its
initial ongoing AMRP on October 1, 2016, consistent with the
requirements in Sec. 447.203(b)(1) through (5), then the State
submitted a SPA that proposed to reduce provider payment rates for
physical therapy services with an effective date of July 1, 2018, along
with an access review for the affected service completed within the
prior 12 months, consistent with the requirements in Sec.
447.203(b)(6). The State's access review submission consisted of its
2016 AMRP submission, updated with data from the 12 months prior to
this SPA submission, with the addition of physical therapy services for
which the SPA proposed to reduce rates. Because the State submitted an
updated version of its 2016 AMRP in 2018 in support of the SPA
submission, the State was confused whether its next AMRP update
submission was due in 2019 (3 years from 2016), or in 2021 (3 years
from 2018). Based on the infrequency of a triennial due date for AMRP
updates and the numerous instances of similar State confusion during
the implementation process for the previous AMRPs, we identified that
the triennial timeframe was insufficient for the proposed comparative
payment rate analysis and payment rate disclosure.
As we considered a new timeframe for updates to the comparative
payment rate analysis and payment rate disclosure to propose in this
rulemaking, we initially considered proposing to require annual
updates. However, we explained our belief that annual updates would add
unnecessary administrative burden as annual updates would be too
frequent because many States do not update their Medicaid fee schedule
rates for the codes subject to the comparative payment rate analysis
and payment rate disclosure on an annual basis. As proposed, the
categories of services subject to the proposed comparative payment rate
analysis and payment rate disclosure are for office-based visits and,
in our experience, the Medicaid payment rates generally do not change
much over time due to the nature of an office visit.\283\ Office visits
primarily
[[Page 40725]]
include vital signs being taken and the time a patient meets with a
physician or NPP; therefore, States would likely have a considerable
amount of historical payment data for supporting the current payment
rates for such services. Given the relatively stable nature of payment
rates for office visits, our proposal aimed to help ensure the impact
of the comparative payment rate analysis is maximized for ensuring
compliance with section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act while minimizing
unnecessary burden on States by holding all States to a proposed update
frequency of 2 years to capture all Medicaid (and corresponding
Medicare) payment rate changes.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\283\ We acknowledged that Medicaid primary care payment
increase, a provision in the Patient Protection and Affordable Care
Act (ACA, Pub. L. 111-148, as amended), temporarily raised Medicaid
physician fees for evaluation and management services (Current
Procedural Terminology codes 99201-99499) and vaccine administration
services and counseling related to children's vaccines (Current
Procedural Terminology codes 90460, 90461, and 90471-90474). This
provision expired on December 31, 2014. https://www.macpac.gov/wp-content/uploads/2015/03/An-Update-on-the-Medicaid-Primary-Care-Payment-Increase.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As the proposed rule sought to reduce the amount of administrative
burden from the previous AMRP process on States while also fulfilling
our oversight responsibilities, we explained our belief that updating
the comparative payment rate analysis and payment rate disclosure no
less than every 2 years would achieve an appropriate balance between
administrative burden and our oversight responsibilities with regard to
section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act. We noted our intent for the
comparative payment rate analysis and payment rate disclosure States
develop and publish to be time-sensitive and useful sources of
information and analysis to help ensure compliance with section
1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act. If this proposal is finalized, we stated
that both the comparative payment rate analysis and payment rate
disclosure would provide the State, CMS, and other interested parties
with cross-sectional data of Medicaid payment rates at various points
in time. This data could be used to track Medicaid payment rates over
time as a raw dollar amount and as a percentage of Medicare non-
facility payment as established in the annual Medicare PFS final rule
for a calendar year, as well as changes in the number of Medicaid-paid
claims volume and number of Medicaid enrolled beneficiaries who receive
a service over time. The availability of this data could be used to
inform State policy changes, to compare payment rates across States, or
for research on Medicaid payment rates and policies. While we noted our
belief that the comparative payment rate analysis and payment rate
disclosure would provide useful and actionable information to States,
we explained that we did not want to overburden States with annual
updates to the comparative payment rate analysis and payment rate
disclosure. As we proposed to replace the previous triennial AMRP
process with less administratively burdensome processes (payment rate
transparency publication, comparative payment rate analysis, payment
rate disclosure, and State analysis procedures for rate reductions and
restructurings) for ensuring compliance with section 1902(a)(30)(A) of
the Act, we stated our belief that annual updates to the comparative
payment rate analysis and payment rate disclosure would negate at least
a portion of the decrease in administrative burden from eliminating the
previous AMRP process.
With careful consideration, we stated our belief that our proposal
to require updates to the comparative payment rate analysis and payment
rate disclosure to occur no less than every 2 years is reasonable. We
noted our expectation that the proposed biennial publication
requirement for the comparative payment rate analysis and payment rate
disclosure after the initial publication date would be feasible for
State agencies, provide a straightforward timeline for updates, limit
unnecessary State burden, help ensure public payment rate transparency,
and enable us to conduct required oversight. We solicited comments on
the proposed timeframe for the initial publication and biennial update
requirements for the comparative payment rate analysis and payment rate
disclosure as proposed in Sec. 447.203(b)(4).
Lastly, we also proposed in paragraph (b)(4) to require States to
publish the comparative payment rate analysis and payment rate
disclosure consistent with the publication requirements described in
proposed paragraph (b)(1) for payment rate transparency data. Paragraph
(b)(1) would require the website developed and maintained by the single
State Agency to be accessible to the general public. We proposed States
utilize the same website developed and maintained by the single State
Agency to publish their Medicaid FFS payment rates and their
comparative payment rate analysis and payment rate disclosure. We
solicited comments on the proposed required location for States to
publish their comparative payment rate analysis and payment rate
disclosure proposed in Sec. 447.203(b)(4).
In Sec. 447.203(b)(5), we proposed a mechanism to ensure
compliance with paragraphs (b)(1) through (b)(4). Specifically, we
proposed that, if a State fails to comply with the payment rate
transparency and comparative payment rate analysis and payment rate
disclosure requirements in paragraphs (b)(1) through (b)(4) of proposed
Sec. 447.203, including requirements for the time and manner of
publication, that, under section 1904 of the Act and procedures set
forth in regulations at 42 CFR part 430 subparts C and D, future grant
awards may be reduced by the amount of FFP we estimate is attributable
to the State's administrative expenditures relative to the total
expenditures for the categories of services specified in paragraph
(b)(2) of proposed Sec. 447.203 for which the State has failed to
comply with applicable requirements, until such time as the State
complies with the requirements. We also proposed that unless otherwise
prohibited by law, FFP for deferred expenditures would be released
after the State has fully complied with all applicable requirements. We
explained that this proposed enforcement mechanism is similar in
structure to the mechanism that applies with respect to the Medicaid
DSH reporting requirements in Sec. 447.299(e), which specifies that
State failure to comply with reporting requirements will lead to future
grant award reductions in the amount of FFP CMS estimates is
attributable to expenditures made for payments to the DSH hospitals as
to which the State has not reported properly. We proposed this long-
standing and effective enforcement mechanism because we believed it is
proportionate and clear, and to remain consistent with other compliance
actions we take for State non-compliance with statutory and regulatory
requirements. We solicited comments on the proposed method for ensuring
compliance with the payment rate transparency and comparative payment
rate analysis and payment rate disclosure requirements, as specified in
proposed Sec. 447.203(b)(5).
We received public comments on these proposed provisions. The
following is a summary of the comments we received and our responses.
Comparative Payment Rate Analysis Comments and Responses
Comment: Among comments received on the comparative payment rate
analysis, the majority of commenters generally supported the proposal
to require States to develop and publish a comparative payment rate
analysis of Medicaid payment rates for certain categories of services.
These commenters specifically supported the proposed categories of
services, comparing only base payment rates,
[[Page 40726]]
breakdown of Medicaid payment rates by population (pediatric and
adult), use of Medicare non-facility rates as a benchmark for comparing
Medicaid rates, and number of Medicaid services as a data element in
the comparative payment rate analysis. Commenters in support of the
comparative payment rate analysis agreed with CMS that the analysis
requirement would help to ensure necessary information, specifically
Medicaid payment rates and the comparison to Medicare, is available to
CMS for ensuring compliance with section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act and
to interested parties for raising access to care concerns through
public processes.
However, a couple of commenters expressed opposition to the
proposed comparative payment rate analysis. Commenters in opposition
stated the proposed comparative payment rate analysis requirements
would be administratively burdensome on States and create challenges
for States in benchmarking services to Medicare because Medicare uses a
rate setting methodology that is different from each State's Medicaid
program. These commenters expressed concerns about the burden
associated with the comparative payment rate analysis, specifically
about further burden on States that do not use the same procedure/
diagnostics codes or same payment methodologies as Medicare, as well as
data challenges to stratify State payment rates by population, provider
type, and geographic location, and challenges of comparing community
mental health center payment rates to the Medicare equivalent.
Response: We appreciate the commenters' support of the comparative
payment rate analysis at Sec. 447.203(b)(3)(i). We are finalizing the
comparative payment rate analysis provisions as proposed apart from
some minor revisions that ensure clarity and consistent terminology
throughout Sec. 447.203(b), as well as update the name of ``outpatient
behavioral health services'' to ``outpatient mental health and
substance use disorder services'' and the compliance timeframe, as
discussed earlier in this section. We list and describe the specific
revisions we made to the regulatory language for the comparative
payment rate analysis provision at Sec. 447.203(b)(2) through (b)(5)
at the end of this section of responses to comments.
We disagree with commenters regarding burden of the comparative
payment rate analysis and challenges benchmarking services to Medicare.
As documented in section III. of this final rule, the FFS provisions,
including the payment rate transparency, comparative payment rate
analysis, and payment rate disclosure requirements (Sec. 447.203(b)(1)
through (5)), interested parties' advisory group requirements (Sec.
447.203(b)(6)), and State analysis procedures for payment rate
reductions or payment restructuring (Sec. 447.203(c)), are expected to
result in a net burden reduction on States compared to the previous
AMRP requirements. Additionally, as addressed in another comment
response generally discussing commenters' concerns about State burden,
we have described numerous flexibilities States have for compliance
with this final rule. Specifically for the comparative payment rate
analysis, States have flexibility to (1) utilize contractors or other
third party websites to publish the payment rate transparency
publication on (however, we remind States that they are still requiring
to publish the hyperlink to the website where the publication is
located on the State Medicaid agency's website as required in Sec.
447.203(b)(1)(ii) of this final rule); and (2) for the requirement that
States break down their payment rates by geographical location, as
applicable, States have the flexibility to determine an appropriate
method to accomplish the comparative payment rate analysis that aligns
the geographic area covered by each payer's rate as closely as
reasonably feasible. Additionally, we are providing an example list
that defines the categories of services subject to the comparative
payment rate analysis through the finite number of E/M CPT/HCPCS codes
in the list, if it were in effect for CY 2023 and an illustrative
example of a compliant comparative payment rate analysis (including to
meet accessibility standards) through subregulatory guidance that we
will issue prior to the effective date of this final rule.
We do not expect States to experience excessive burden or
challenges in benchmarking services to Medicare because we will issue
subregulatory guidance prior to the effective date of this final rule,
including a hypothetical example list of the CMS-published list of E/M
CPT/HCPCS codes that would be subject to the comparative payment rate
analysis, if the comparative rate analysis requirements were applicable
with respect to payment rates in effect for CY 2023, where all codes on
the CMS-published list of E/M CPT/HCPCS codes have an existing Medicare
payment rate. By ensuring there is an existing Medicare payment rate
for States to compare their Medicaid payment rate to and providing
States with information about where and how to find the Medicare non-
facility payment rate as established in the annual Medicare PFS final
rule for a calendar year for these codes to include in their analysis
(that is, through Excel file downloads of the Medicare PFS Relative
Value Files),\284\ we do not expect States to face challenges with
identifying the applicable Medicare benchmark rates.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\284\ 88 FR 27960 at 28012.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Regarding States that do not use same procedure/diagnostics codes
as Medicare, as described in the proposed rule, E/M CPT/HCPCS codes are
comprised of primarily preventive services which are generally some of
the most commonly billed codes in the U.S.,\285\ therefore, we do not
believe there will be issues with States not using the same procedure/
diagnostics codes as Medicare. However, we recognize that States may
amend existing CPT/HCPCS codes with additional numbers or letters for
processing in their own claims system. If a State does not use the
exact code included in the CMS-published list of E/M CPT/HCPCS codes,
then we expect the State to review the CMS-published list of E/M CPT/
HCPCS codes and identify which of their codes are most comparable for
purposes of the comparative payment rate analysis. We anticipate States
may need to review code descriptions as part of the process of
identifying which codes on the CMS-published list of E/M CPT/HCPCS
codes are comparable to the codes that States utilizes.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\285\ 88 FR 27960 at 28009.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Regarding States that expect to experience challenges benchmarking
services to Medicare because they do not use the same payment
methodologies as Medicare, while Medicare and State Medicaid agencies
may use different methodologies to determine the rate published on
their fee schedules, the comparative payment rate analysis only
requires the base Medicaid FFS fee schedule payment rates as published
on the State's fee schedule and Medicare's rate as published on the PFS
for a particular code to be published in the analysis. The methodology
to determine the payment rate is not relevant to the comparative
payment rate analysis, therefore, having different methodologies to
determine the rate does not affect a States' ability to comply with the
comparative payment rate analysis requirements. Under the comparative
payment rate analysis requirements we are finalizing in this final
rule, Medicare rates serve as a benchmark to which States will compare
certain of their base Medicaid FFS fee schedule payment rates to
[[Page 40727]]
inform their and our assessment of whether the State's payment rates
are compliant with section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act.
Regarding commenters' concerns about data challenges to stratify
State payment rates by population, provider type, and geographic
location for the comparative payment rate analysis, we acknowledge that
not all States pay varied payment rates by population (pediatric and
adult), provider type, and geographical location, which is why we
proposed and are finalizing language noting ``if the rates vary'' and
``as applicable'' in the regulatory text. Therefore, States that do not
pay varied payment rates by population (pediatric and adult), provider
type, and geographical location will not need to list varied rates
based on factors that the State does not use in its rates. For example,
a State that pays different rates by population (pediatric and adult)
but does not vary the rates by provider type or geographic location
will list separate payment rates for services furnished to a pediatric
and to an adult beneficiary, but will not list separate rates based on
provider type or geographical location. If the State pays a single
Statewide payment rate for a single service, the State will only
include the State's single Statewide payment rate in the comparative
payment rate analysis. For States that do pay varied payment rates by
population (pediatric and adult), provider type, and geographical
location, in accordance with Sec. 430.10 and given that States are the
stewards of setting and maintaining Medicaid FFS payment rates, States
are required to maintain sufficient records about current payment
rates, including when payment rates vary, to enable them to meet the
comparative payment rate analysis requirements of this final rule.
Regarding the commenter's concerns about comparing community mental
health center payments to Medicare rates, we would like to clarify that
mental health services provided in a facility-based setting, such as
FQHC, RHC, CCBHC, or clinics (as defined in Sec. 440.90) are excluded
from the comparative payment rate analysis due to the challenges we
expect States to face in disaggregating their rates (including PPS
rates paid to FQHCs or RHCs which are often paid encounter, per visit,
or provider-specific rates and all-inclusive per-visit rates, encounter
rates, per visit rates, or provider-specific rates paid to clinics (as
defined in Sec. 440.90)) for comparison to Medicare, as discussed in
the proposed rule.\286\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\286\ 88 FR 27960 at 28011-28012.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Comment: We received a comment requesting clarification about the
entity responsible for publishing the comparative payment rate
analysis.
Response: The State agency is required to publish a hyperlink where
the comparative, as well as the payment rate disclosure and payment
rate transparency publication, on the State Medicaid agency's website.
As finalized in this rule, Sec. 447.203(b)(3) requires that States'
comparative payment rate analysis, as well as payment rate disclosure,
must be published consistent with the publication requirements in
paragraphs (b)(1) and (b)(1)(ii). Paragraph (b)(1) requires the State
``. . . publish all Medicaid fee-for-service fee schedule payment rates
on a website that is accessible to the general public.'' As discussed
in an earlier response to comments in this section, this language has
been revised from what we originally proposed to permit States the
flexibility to continue to utilize contractors and other third parties
for developing and publishing their fee schedules on behalf of the
State. We continue to require that ``[t]he website where the State
agency publishes its Medicaid fee-for-service payment rates must be
easily reached from a hyperlink on the State Medicaid agency's
website.'' in Sec. 447.203(b)(1)(ii).
Comment: One commenter requested clarification regarding how the
comparative payment rate analysis will be organized, particularly if
the FFS rates included in the analysis would be organized by CPT code.
Response: As finalized by this rule, Sec. 447.203(b)(3)(i)
requires that ``State[s] must conduct the comparative payment rate
analysis at the Current Procedural Terminology (CPT) or Healthcare
Common Procedure Coding System (HCPCS) code level, as applicable, using
the most current set of codes published by CMS . . .'' As such, the
publication is required to be organized at the CPT level. However, to
the extent there are differences in a State's rates based on population
(pediatric and adult), provider type, and geographical location, the
publication may need to have multiple CPT-level rate comparisons to
account for each differing rate.
Comment: One commenter raised concerns regarding the accessibility
of the comparative payment rate analysis due to the extensive amount of
data, which may be overwhelming and difficult for individuals to
understand, for example individuals with disabilities and those who use
screen readers. The commenter recommended that CMS require the analysis
and disclosure be contained in a designated website, rather than linked
from the State Medicaid agency's website to avoid creating potential
confusion. They further recommended CMS require States include plain
language descriptions of the published payment rate data to ensure the
analysis is accessible for individuals with disabilities.
Response: We understand the concern that the amount of data in the
analysis could prove overwhelming to some individuals. However, we
believe it is important for these data to be easily reached for those
interested parties that are trying to locate it. Transparency,
particularly the requirement that States must publicly publish their
payment rates, helps to ensure that interested parties have basic
information available to them to understand Medicaid payment levels and
the associated effects of payment rates on access to care so that they
may raise concerns to State Medicaid agencies via the various forms of
public processes available to interested parties. Therefore, as
finalized in this rule, Sec. 447.203(b)(1) requires the State ``. . .
publish all Medicaid fee-for-service fee schedule payment rates on a
website that is accessible to the general public.'' As discussed in an
earlier response to comments in this section, this language has been
revised from what we originally proposed to permit States the
flexibility to continue to utilize contractors and other third parties
for developing and publishing their fee schedules on behalf of the
State. We continue to require at Sec. 447.203(b)(1)(ii) that the
website where the State agency publishes its Medicaid FFS payment rates
must be easily reached from a hyperlink on the State Medicaid agency's
website.
As described in the proposed rule, longstanding legal requirements
to provide effective communication with individuals with disabilities
and the obligation to take reasonable steps to provide meaningful
access to individuals with limited English proficiency also apply to
the State's website containing Medicaid FFS payment rate information.
We invite States to reach out to CMS for technical guidance regarding
compliance with the comparative payment rate analysis. We also
encourage States to review the subregulatory guidance, which includes
an example of what a compliant comparative payment rate analysis might
look like, that will be issued prior to the effective date of this
final rule.
Comment: A couple of commenters suggested that the proposed
breakdown of the comparative payment rate analysis would result in an
[[Page 40728]]
overwhelming volume of information for the average individual viewing
the data. One commenter suggested requiring States to report the
aggregate fee schedule rate, instead of breaking down a State's payment
rates by categories of services in addition to population, provider
type and geographic location to ensure data is accessible and
meaningful to someone viewing the data.
Response: We understand the commenters' concerns about the
potential for the comparative payment rate analysis to contain a large
amount of information. However, the level of detail we are requiring
will afford States, CMS, and the public the best opportunity to assess
individual rates and how they might impact access to certain services.
Our hope is that the requirements and guidance around the elements to
include, and the consistency this will create across States, will make
the data readily navigable and understandable, even though a high
volume of information may need to be presented to account for the array
of services subject to the comparative payment rate analysis
requirement and the potential complexity of the State's payment rate
structure.
We assume the commenter who suggested an aggregated fee schedule
rate meant we should only require States publish a single Statewide
payment rate or a calculated Statewide average Medicaid payment rate if
they do have varying payment rates for a service by population
(pediatric and adult), provider type, and/or geographic location. We
are not adopting this suggestion because only requiring an aggregated
fee schedule rate would lose the opportunity for States, CMS, and the
public to contextualize payment rates and how they might be impacting
access for different populations in different geographical areas, or
for beneficiaries seeking services from particular provider types.
However, we note that States have the flexibility to add an aggregated
fee schedule rate in addition to breaking down a State's payment rates
for a given service by population (pediatric and adult), provider type,
and geographic location, as applicable, with their comparative payment
rate analysis if they so choose. If a State utilizes this flexibility
to include this or optional additional information, then required data
elements in Sec. 447.203(b)(2) through (3) must be listed first on the
State's website to ensure the analysis presents payment rate
information in a clear and accurate way, particularly for States that
do pay varied rates based on population (pediatric and adult), provider
type, and/or geographic location and opted to include an aggregated fee
schedule rate (that is, a calculated Statewide average Medicaid payment
rate).
The previous AMRP process established a transparent data-driven
process to measure access to care in States; however, during the
implementation period, we found that States produced varied AMRPs that
were difficult to interpret or to use in assessing compliance with
section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act. With this final rule, we are
focusing on payment rate transparency and streamlining information
States are required to publish. Therefore, we expect the comparative
payment rate analysis to be easier to understand and more consistent
across States than the previous AMRPs.
Comment: A few commenters suggested narrowing the scope of the
comparative payment rate analysis to a representative subset of
services or commonly used services with a Medicare equivalent. On the
other hand, one commenter stated that limiting the scope of the
comparative payment rate analysis to E/M codes would not be adequate to
meaningfully assess access to care for all services under the proposed
categories of services.
Response: We appreciate the commenters' suggestions on the scope of
the comparative payment rate analysis. Prior to the effective date of
this final rule, we will issue subregulatory guidance, including a
hypothetical example list of the E/M CPT/HCPCS codes that would be
subject to the comparative payment rate analysis, if the comparative
rate analysis requirements were applicable with respect to payment
rates in effect for CY 2023. The initial CMS-published list of the E/M
CPT/HCPCS codes to be published no later than July 1, 2025, will
contain a finite number of E/M CPT/HCPCS codes subject to the initial
comparative payment rate analysis. While the commenters did not specify
their recommendation for what a representative subset of services would
include or how they would identify commonly provided services with a
Medicare equivalent, we believe the criteria we used to select the E/M
CPT/HCPCS codes for the comparative payment rate analysis \287\
fulfills these commenters' suggestion for a representative set of
commonly provided services with Medicare payment rates for comparison.
We believe the categories of services included in the rule (primary
care services, obstetrical and gynecological services, and outpatient
mental health and substance use disorder services) are a representative
subset of Medicaid services available to beneficiaries that are of
great importance to overall beneficiary health, as described in the
proposed rule.\288\ Additionally, E/M CPT/HCPCS codes are some of the
most commonly billed codes and one of the criteria in the CMS-published
list of the E/M CPT/HCPCS codes is that the Medicare PFS has a payment
amount on the fee schedule, therefore, we believe our list of codes
includes commonly used services with a Medicare equivalent payment
rate.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\287\ 88 FR 27960 at 28008.
\288\ 88 FR 27960 at 28003.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Also as previously discussed in detail in an earlier response to
comments in this section, for purposes of the payment rate transparency
provision in Sec. 447.203(b)(1), Medicaid FFS fee schedule payment
rates are FFS payment amounts made to a provider, and known in advance
of a provider delivering a service to a beneficiary by reference to a
fee schedule. For consistency, we are using the same description of
Medicaid FFS fee schedule payment rates to describe the payment rates
that need to be included in the comparative payment rate analysis in
paragraph (b)(3)(ii)(B) of this section which would also consider
bundled payment rates to be Medicaid FFS fee schedule payment rates for
the purposes of the comparative payment rate analysis. We would also
like to clarify that while prospective payment system rates for
services provided in inpatient hospitals, outpatient hospitals,
inpatient psychiatric facilities, inpatient rehabilitation facilities,
long-term care hospitals, and nursing facilities are subject to the
payment rate transparency publication, these rates are effectively
excluded from the comparative payment rate analysis because of the
criteria we discussed in the proposed rule that we used to identify
which CPT/HCPCS codes would be subject to the analysis (that is, the
code is classified as an E/M CPT/HCPCS code by the AMA CPT Editorial
Panel and the code has an A (Active), N (Non-Covered), R (Restricted),
or T (Injections) code status on the Medicare PFS with a Medicare
established RVU and payment amount for the same time period of the
comparative payment rate analysis).\289\ Prospective payment system
rates are generally used to pay for institutional services (for
example, hospitals and nursing facilities) where E/M services are not
provided. Prospective payment system rates are also not listed on the
Medicare PFS because they do not pay
[[Page 40729]]
for a single code, and therefore, they would not have a code or a
payment rate on the PFS. Also, as discussed in an earlier response to
comments, PPS rates for FQHCs and RHCs are not subject to the payment
rate transparency publication requirement under Sec. 447.203(b)(1).
Rather than further broadening the services subject to the comparative
payment rate analysis requirement, we want our initial focus of this
rulemaking to be on establishing the new payment rate transparency,
comparative payment rate analysis, and payment rate disclosure
requirements, providing States with support during the compliance
period, and ensuring these data are available to beneficiaries,
providers, CMS, and other interested parties for the purposes of
assessing access to care issues.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\289\ 88 FR 27960 at 28008.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We disagree with the commenter that our scope of services subject
to the comparative payment rate analysis will not provide a meaningful
assessment of access. To reemphasize, we believe this list of codes,
including primary care services, obstetrical and gynecological
services, and outpatient mental health and substance use disorder
services, are critical medical services and of great importance to
overall beneficiary health, as described in the proposed rule.\290\ We
acknowledge that the code list is limited to services delivered in an
ambulatory setting, such as a physician's office, and services that are
paid a Medicaid FFS fee schedule rate within the meaning of this final
rule. Therefore, the code list for the comparative payment rate
analysis excludes services delivered in a facility setting and/or
services States pay for using a prospective payment system, for example
hospitals, nursing facilities, FQHCs, and RHCs; however, we believe
these limitations are appropriate to balance administrative burden on
States and our enforcement responsibilities. As previously discussed,
we believe that asking States to disaggregate their prospective payment
system rates for facility-based services to compare to Medicare's
prospective payment system rates often would be challenging for States.
Given that our work to better ensure access in the Medicaid program is
ongoing, we intend to gain implementation experience with this final
rule, and we will consider the recommendations provided on the proposed
rule to help inform any future rulemaking in this area, as appropriate.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\290\ 88 FR 27960 at 28003.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Comment: A couple of commenters suggested aligning the proposed
categories of services with Medicaid service categories as defined in
statute and regulation to minimize confusion and ambiguity about the
services subject to the comparative payment rate analysis. Another
commenter suggested, rather than requiring a specified set of services,
that CMS require the comparative payment rate analysis based on the
percentage of services paid for by the State (that is, each State would
include the services they pay the most for in their Medicaid program).
Response: We understand commenters' concerns about possible
confusion of the categories of services subject to the comparative
payment rate analysis that do not align directly with a Medicaid
services category. Prior to the effective date of this final rule, we
will issue subregulatory guidance including a hypothetical example list
of the E/M CPT/HCPCS codes that would be subject to the comparative
payment rate analysis, if the comparative rate analysis requirements
were applicable with respect to payment rates in effect for CY 2023.
This example list defines the categories of services subject to the
comparative payment rate analysis through the finite number of E/M CPT/
HCPCS codes in the list, if it were in effect for CY 2023. The initial
CMS-published list of the E/M CPT/HCPCS codes actually subject to the
comparative payment rate analysis will be published no later than July
1, 2025. We believe this list of codes will eliminate any confusion and
ambiguity commenters expressed in response to the proposed rule because
it will contain the actual E/M CPT/HCPCS codes subject to the initial
comparative payment rate analysis. We will only be including codes that
satisfy all the defined criteria set forth in this rule. This list will
be updated every other year after 2025, that is, July 1, 2027, 2029, so
on and so forth. We expect States to review the CMS-published list of
the E/M CPT/HCPCS codes to identify the base Medicaid FFS fee schedule
payment rate as specified in Sec. 447.203(b)(3)(i)(B) that is required
to be included in the comparative payment rate analysis.
We are not adopting the commenter's suggestion to require the
comparative payment rate analysis be based on the percentage of
services paid for by the State (that is, each State would include the
services they pay the most for in their Medicaid program), rather than
requiring a specified set of services. In the comparative payment rate
analysis, we are striving for consistency and comparability between
States and Medicare, therefore, we have decided to require States use
the same categories of services and CMS published list of E/M CPT/HCPCS
codes for the analysis.
Comment: A couple of commenters suggested alternative terms for the
categories of services in the proposed rule. One commenter recommended
using the terms ``substance use disorder and mental health services''
in place of ``behavioral health services'' and requiring the
comparative payment rate analysis include separate analyses for each
condition. Another commenter suggested using gender-inclusive language
such as ``reproductive and sexual health services'' in place of
``obstetrical and gynecological services'' as a category of services in
the comparative payment rate analysis.
Response: We appreciate the commenters' suggestions. We understand
and appreciate the commenter's request for further granularity in the
comparative payment rate analysis by specifying ``substance use
disorder and mental health services'' in place of ``behavioral health
services.'' We have decided to revise the outpatient behavioral health
services category of service in Sec. 447.203(b)(2)(iii) and finalize
it as ``Outpatient mental health and substance use disorder services.''
While this revision does not change the criteria used to identify the
discrete codes included in the BETOS E/M family grouping and families
and subfamilies for the CMS published list of E/M CPT/HCPCS subject to
the comparative payment rate analysis, this revision does ensure this
final rule is consistent with the services in the Managed Care final
rule (as published elsewhere in this Federal Register) for consistency
across Medicaid FFS and managed care delivery systems and reflects a
more granular level of service description as suggested by the
commenter.
We agree with the importance of gender-inclusive language, where
appropriate. However, current medical and procedural terminology
generally still uses the terminology ``obstetrical and gynecological
services.'' We determined consistent language would provide interested
parties the most clarity. Additionally, we selected obstetrical and
gynecological services as a category of service due Medicaid's key role
in providing and paying for maternity-related services for pregnant
women during a maternal health crisis in the US.\291\ We acknowledge
that using the term ``reproductive and sexual health services'' would
be inclusive of more services, that is, male reproductive services in
addition to pregnancy and female reproductive services. However, if we
were to utilize the term ``reproductive and sexual health
[[Page 40730]]
services'' then this would expand the number of services that would be
subject to comparative rate analysis and increase burden on States
complying with the analysis. We want our initial focus to be on
establishing the new payment rate transparency, comparative payment
rate analysis, and payment rate disclosure requirements, providing
States with support during the compliance period, and ensuring these
data are available to beneficiaries, providers, CMS, and other
interested parties for the purposes of assessing access to care issues.
Therefore, we are finalizing ``obstetrical and gynecological services''
as a category of service in Sec. 447.203(b)(2)(ii) subject to the
comparative payment rate analysis. Given that our work to better ensure
access in the Medicaid program is ongoing, we intend to gain
implementation experience with this final rule, and we will consider
the recommendations provided on the proposed rule to help inform any
future rulemaking in this area, as appropriate.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\291\ 88 FR 27960 at 28004.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Comment: A couple of commenters raised concerns about inpatient
behavioral health services not being a category of service in the
comparative payment rate analysis. One of those commenters disagreed
with CMS' justification that including inpatient behavioral health
services would be duplicative of the information captured through UPL
demonstrations because UPL demonstrations do not include the same level
of analysis as proposed in the comparative payment rate analysis. In
particular, the commenter stated that UPL demonstrations do not ensure
hospital base payments are adequate, do not track if Medicaid payments
align with Medicare payment rate increases, and the new supplemental
payment reporting requirements established by the CAA, 2021 focus on
supplemental payments, rather than base payments. Additionally, one
commenter recommended that, if inpatient behavioral health services are
not subject to the comparative payment rate analysis, CMS take
alternative steps to assess access to inpatient behavioral health
services, such as monitoring care transitions between inpatient and
outpatient facilities during temporary or permanent transitions to
inpatient care.
Response: We understand the commenters' concerns about excluding
inpatient behavioral health services from the categories of services
subject to the comparative payment rate analysis. We acknowledge the
importance of inpatient behavioral health services in the spectrum of
behavioral health services for which coverage is available under the
Medicaid program. As discussed in the proposed rule, we recognize that
Medicaid plays a crucial role in mental health care access as the
single largest payer of these services with a growing role in payment
for substance use disorder services, in part due to Medicaid expansion
and various efforts by Congress to improve access to mental health and
substance use disorder services.\292\ In this final rule, we are
revising the outpatient behavioral health services category of service
in Sec. 447.203(b)(2)(iii) and finalizing it as ``Outpatient mental
health and substance use disorder services.'' While the scope of the
comparative payment rate analysis requirement is limited to outpatient
mental health and substance use disorder services, to the extent States
pay for inpatient behavioral health services (including inpatient
services furnished in psychiatric residential treatment facilities,
institutions for mental diseases, and psychiatric hospitals) with a
Medicaid FFS fee schedule payment rate that falls within the meaning of
this rule, as discussed in an earlier response to comments in this
section, then those payment rates would be subject to the payment rate
transparency publication. In addition to subjecting certain inpatient
behavioral health payment rates to the payment rate transparency
publication requirement, we already collect and review Medicaid and
Medicare payment rate data for inpatient behavioral health services
through annual UPL demonstrations and supplemental payment reporting
requirements under section 1903(bb) of the Act. We recognize UPL data
are not an exact duplicate of the data required under the policies we
are finalizing in this rule. With this final rule, our focus is on
improving our oversight of Medicaid payment rates to identify where
rates may be negatively impacting access to care while minimizing
burden imposed on States, which requires us to prioritize areas of
focus. Although the UPL and the supplemental payment reporting
requirements under section 1903(bb) of the Act represent a different
array of data, they still afford us an opportunity for payment
oversight. Therefore, we chose to focus on services and rates not
covered by those requirements.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\292\ 88 FR 27960 at 28004.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We disagree with the commenter that UPL demonstrations do not
ensure hospital base payments are adequate and do not track if Medicaid
payments align with Medicare payment rate increases. We began requiring
annual UPL demonstrations in 2013 to ensure CMS and States have a
better understanding of the variables surrounding rate levels,
supplemental payments and total providers participating in the Medicare
and Medicaid programs and the funding supporting each of the payments
subject to UPL demonstrations.\293\ UPL demonstrations are a comparison
of total Medicaid payments for a particularly benefit category to a
reasonable estimate of what Medicare would have paid. Therefore, UPL
demonstrations fundamentally track if Medicaid payments align with
Medicare payment rates at an aggregate level and provide CMS with
important information for assessing if payment rates comply with
economy and efficiency provisions at section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act,
specifically how total Medicaid payments compare to what Medicare would
have paid for similar services where Medicare acts as a payment limit,
or ceiling, for economic and efficient. We do acknowledge that the new
supplemental payment reporting requirements under section 1903(bb) of
the Act focus on supplemental payments, rather than base payments;
however, base payment data continues to be collected through UPL
demonstrations, providing us, in the aggregate, with detailed
information about both base and supplemental payments for hospitals.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\293\ https://www.medicaid.gov/sites/default/files/Federal-Policy-Guidance/Downloads/SMD-13-003-02.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Additionally, the comparative payment rate analysis utilizes
Medicare rates as a benchmark to which States will compare their
Medicaid FFS fee schedule payment rate to inform their and our
assessment of whether the State's payment rates are compliant with
section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act. We are not requiring States to meet
a threshold percentage of Medicare non-facility payment rates as
established in the annual Medicare PFS final rule for a calendar year
or align with Medicare payment rate increases.
We acknowledge the commenter's request for CMS to take alternative
steps to assess access to inpatient behavioral health services, such as
monitoring care transitions between inpatient and outpatient facilities
during temporary or permanent transitions to inpatient care. We want
our initial focus to be on establishing the new payment rate
transparency, comparative payment rate analysis, and payment rate
disclosure requirements, providing States with support during the
compliance period, and ensuring these data are available to
beneficiaries, providers, CMS, and other interested parties for the
purposes of
[[Page 40731]]
assessing access to care issues. Given that our work to better ensure
access in the Medicaid program is ongoing, we intend to gain
implementation experience with this final rule, and we will consider
the recommendations provided on the proposed rule to help inform any
future rulemaking in this area, as appropriate. We are committed to
helping States and their providers undertake efforts to improve
transitions and improve medical and LTSS coordination by providing
technical assistance, resources, and facilitating the exchange of
information about promising practices of high quality, high impact, and
effective care transition models and processes and we encourage States
to review existing resources about improving care transitions on
Medicaid.gov.\294\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\294\ https://www.medicaid.gov/medicaid/quality-of-care/quality-improvement-initiatives/improving-care-transitions/.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Comment: Some commenters submitted comments about behavioral health
services as a category of service in the comparative payment rate
analysis. A few commenters suggested particular or additional
categories of services for behavioral health services, including
inpatient behavioral health services, substance use disorder services,
mental health services, intensive outpatient services, partial
hospitalization care, opioid treatment programs, services delivered by
providers who do not bill E/M codes, and specialist services provided
to individuals with chronic diseases and disabilities. These commenters
also suggested including codes outside of the E/M category, such as
``H'' HCPCS codes that psychologists, social workers, and marriage and
family therapists often bill to ensure a comprehensive analysis of
behavioral health services in the comparative payment rate analysis.
Response: We appreciate commenters' suggestion for the comparative
payment rate analysis. As stated previously, we are excluding inpatient
behavioral health services because existing UPL and supplemental
payment reporting requirements under section 1903(bb) of the Act
provide for payment oversight for inpatient behavioral health services,
and with the provisions of this final rule, we chose to focus on
services and payment rates not covered by those requirements.
Additionally, we are not considering behavioral health services, now
called outpatient mental health and substance use disorder services in
this final rule, outside the E/M category as suggested by commenters
because E/M CPT/HCPCS codes are some of the most commonly billed codes
and including them in the comparative payment rate analysis would allow
us to uniformly compare Medicaid payment rates for these codes to
Medicare PFS rates. If we were to expand outside of E/M category of
codes, then it is possible Medicare may not have rates established on
the Medicare PFS for States to compare their base Medicaid FFS fee
schedule payment rates too in the comparative payment rate analysis.
Based on the criteria used to narrow the scope of the comparative
payment rate analysis, we are requiting that the code has an A
(Active), N (Non-Covered), R (Restricted), or T (Injections) code
status on the Medicare PFS with a Medicare established RVU and payment
amount for the same time period of the comparative payment rate
analysis as well as the code must be included in the BETOS
Classification System which only includes Psychotherapy--Group and
Psychotherapy--Nongroup (family) under the E/M (category), Behavioral
Health Services (subcategory). Psychotherapy is a type of treatment, or
service, that can help individuals experiencing a wide array of mental
health conditions and emotional challenges, including substance use
disorder and mental health.\295\ While the CMS published list of E/M
CPT/HCPCS codes will not specifically include intensive outpatient
services, partial hospitalization care, opioid treatment programs,
services delivered by providers who do not bill E/M codes, specialist
services provided to individuals with chronic diseases and
disabilities, or H codes for Alcohol and Drug Abuse Treatment \296\ as
suggested by commenters, we believe the services included on the CMS
published list of E/M CPT/HCPCS codes are critical medical services and
of great importance to overall beneficiary health, as described in the
proposed rule.\297\ As previously discussed, the CMS published list of
E/M CPT/HCPCS codes narrows the scope of the comparative payment rate
analysis to selected services delivered in an ambulatory setting, such
as a physician's office, and services that are paid a Medicaid FFS fee
schedule rate within the meaning of this final rule to balance
administrative burden on States and our enforcement responsibilities.
Given that our work to better ensure access in the Medicaid program is
ongoing, we intend to gain implementation experience with this final
rule, and we will consider the recommendations provided on the proposed
rule to help inform any future rulemaking in this area, as appropriate.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\295\ https://www.psychiatry.org/patients-families/psychotherapy.
\296\ https://www.aapc.com/codes/hcpcs-codes-range/.
\297\ 88 FR 27960 at 28003.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Comment: A couple of commenters expressed concerns regarding the
exclusion of facility-based services from the comparative payment rate
analysis. These commenters requested CMS consider additional provisions
for services that are delivered by facility-based providers, which are
often paid via an encounter rate, reimbursement of actual cost, or
cost-based payment methodologies. One commenter suggested requiring
States that pay for behavioral health services using cost-based payment
methodologies publish the provider's payment rate compared to
provider's actual incurred cost because States are already collecting
this information from providers as it is necessary for the State's
cost-based payment methodology.
Response: We appreciate the commenter's suggestions. We assume by
encounter rate that the commenters were referring more broadly to PPS
rates paid to both institutional facilities, such as hospitals and
nursing facilities which are often paid encounter or per diem rates, as
well as non-institutional facilities, such as FQHCs or RHCs which are
often paid encounter, per visit, or provider-specific rates, as
discussed in detail in an earlier response to comments in this section.
We did not propose and are not finalizing in this rule the requirement
that States disaggregate each of their PPS rates (including encounter,
per diem, per visit, and provider-specific rates) and services covered
in each rate to compare to Medicare's prospective payment system rates
when Medicare pays a prospective payment system rate for the same
service. Likewise, we also did not propose and are not finalizing in
this rule the requirement that States publish cost reports or
provider's unique cost information when the State's methodology is
reimbursement of actual cost or cost-based methodologies and services
covered in the reimbursement methodology to compare to actual incurred
cost. Therefore, any policies that require States to disaggregate each
of their PPS rates and services covered in each PPS rate or publish
cost reports or provider's unique cost information in order to compare
to Medicare's prospective payment system rates or the commenter's
suggestion to compare to actual incurred cost, would be challenging for
States because we would require a different methodology, policies, and
oversight relative to the comparative payment rate analysis, as
[[Page 40732]]
discussed in the proposed rule.\298\ As we are seeking an appropriate
balance between administrative burden and our oversight
responsibilities with regard to section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act,
requiring States to publish cost-based Medicaid payments as well as
actual, incurred cost for each unique provider would impose more burden
on States that was not accounted for in the proposed rule. Given that
our work to better ensure access in the Medicaid program is ongoing, we
intend to gain implementation experience with this final rule, and we
will consider the recommendations provided on the proposed rule to help
inform any future rulemaking in this area, as appropriate.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\298\ 88 FR 27960 at 28012.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Comment: Several commenters recommended changes to the analysis,
such as additional categories of services or revisions to the proposed
categories of services subject to the comparative payment rate
analysis. While some commenters generally recommended expanding the
categories of services, including all mandatory Medicaid services,
other commenters recommended specific additional categories of
services, provider types, or costs such as supplies. Those
recommendations included: physician specialist services and specialty/
specialist care (for example, cancer care); subspecialty services (for
example, pediatric ophthalmology); services provided by NPPs; services
delivered in clinics and other settings; prosthetic supplies (for
example, ostomy and urological supplies), home health services (for
example, homemaker and home health aide), sexual and reproductive
health services (for example, midwives, doulas, providers who primarily
serve the sexual and reproductive health needs of people assigned male
at birth, etc.); dental and oral health services (including pediatric
dentistry), ground emergency medical transportation services; cell and
gene therapies; hospital and emergency department services; vaccine
administration services; and habilitation and rehabilitation services
provided by physical therapists. Commenters also suggested processes to
add services when certain criteria are met, for example, adding any
service to the comparative payment rate analysis when access concerns
are raised or identified.
Response: We thank the commenters for the many recommendations for
additional or alternate categories of service. In order to balance
Federal and State administrative burden with our shared obligation to
ensure compliance with section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act (and our
obligation to oversee State compliance with the same), we are
finalizing this rule with a narrow scope of categories of services
subject to the comparative payment rate analysis and not including
additional categories of services suggested by commenters. As discussed
in the proposed rule, we chose primary care services, obstetrical and
gynecological services, and outpatient behavioral health services
(which we are finalizing as outpatient mental health and substance use
disorder services) because they are critical medical services and of
great importance to overall beneficiary health.\299\ Primary care
providers often deliver preventative health care services, write
referrals or recommendations to schedule an appointment with physician
specialists, and write orders for lab and x-ray services and
prescriptions that a beneficiary would not be able to access without
the primary care provider, therefore, access to a primary care provider
is often a gateway to accessing other care. Obstetrical and
gynecological providers and behavioral health providers also deliver
preventive services respective to their field, such as well-woman
visits and screenings for behavioral health conditions (such as alcohol
disorders, anxiety, and eating disorders), respectively. As described
in the proposed rule, the U.S. is simultaneously experiencing a
maternal health crisis and mental health crisis, putting providers of
obstetrical and gynecological and mental health and substance use
disorder services at the forefront.\300\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\299\ 88 FR 27960 at 28003.
\300\ 88 FR 27960 at 28004.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We clarify that we did propose to include in the comparative
payment rate analysis a couple of the services commenters suggested:
care delivered by NPPs, and sexual and reproductive health services (to
the extent these are included within the category of obstetrical and
gynecological services). If a State's base Medicaid FFS fee schedule
payment rate varies by provider type for a particular code subject to
the comparative payment rate analysis, then the payment rates must be
separately identified by provider type, including, but not limited to,
physician, nurse practitioner, and physician assistant, as specified in
Sec. 447.203(b)(3)(i)(B). While we are not including the broader
category of sexual and reproductive health services, obstetrical and
gynecological services are one of the categories of services subject to
the analysis. Lastly, homemaker and home health aide services are
subject to the payment rate disclosure, but not the comparative payment
rate analysis because of a lack of comparable Medicare payment rate.
Finally, we are not including the following services suggested by
commenters in the comparative payment rate analysis: services delivered
in clinics and other settings (as the commenter did not specify, we
assume the commenter meant settings similar to clinics (as defined in
Sec. 440.90)), sexual and reproductive health services (for example,
midwives, doulas, providers who primarily serve the sexual and
reproductive health needs of people assigned male at birth, etc.) to
the extent these are not included within the category of obstetrical
and gynecological services, hospital and emergency department services,
and medical supplies. Our current access strategy focuses broadly on
Medicaid FFS fee schedule payment rates for outpatient practitioner
services. As described in the proposed rule, encounter rates (generally
based on total facility-specific costs divided by the number of
encounters to calculate a per visit or per encounter rate that is paid
to the facility for all services received during an encounter,
regardless of which specific services are provided during a particular
encounter) are typically paid to facilities, such as hospitals, FQHCs,
RHCs, and clinics, and proposing States demonstrate the economy and
efficiency of their encounter rates would be an entirely different
exercise to the comparative payment rate analysis.\301\ Therefore, we
are not including services delivered in clinics and other settings (as
the commenter did not specify, we assume the commenter meant settings
similar to clinics (as defined in Sec. 440.90)) or hospital and
emergency department services in the comparative payment rate analysis.
As previously stated, obstetrical and gynecological services are one of
the categories of services subject to the analysis, but we are not
including the broader category of sexual and reproductive health
services because our focus in this rule is ensuring access to care to
services that can most directly respond to the maternal health crisis
occurring the U.S. As Medicaid plays a key role in providing and paying
for maternity-related services for pregnant women, obstetrical and
gynecological services generally represent the services received
before, during, and after pregnancy.\302\
[[Page 40733]]
We note that one of the criteria used to narrow the CMS published list
of E/M CPT/HCPCS codes requires that the code is included on the
Berenson-Eggers Type of Service (BETOS) code list effective for the
same time period as the comparative payment rate analysis and falls
into the E/M family grouping and families and subfamilies for
obstetrics and gynecological services; this includes prostate cancer
screenings (G0102). Additionally, our current access strategy focuses
on Medicaid FFS fee schedule payment rates for the provision of
outpatient practitioner services, rather than medical supplies.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\301\ 88 FR 27960 at 28012.
\302\ 88 FR 27960 at 28004.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We are also not including the suggestion to create processes to add
services to the comparative payment rate analysis when certain criteria
are met, for example, adding any service to the comparative payment
rate analysis when access concerns are raised or identified, because
these situations will generally trigger the processes in Sec.
[thinsp]447.203(c) which include similar requirements to the
comparative payment rate analysis (that is, requiring State publish or
submit information to CMS about Medicaid payment rates, number of
Medicaid beneficiaries receiving services, and number of Medicaid
services furnished/paid claims). Given that our work to better ensure
access in the Medicaid program is ongoing, we intend to gain
implementation experience with this final rule, and we will consider
the recommendations provided on the proposed rule to help inform any
future rulemaking in this area, as appropriate.
Comment: A few commenters submitted specific CPT/HCPCS codes and
services for CMS' consideration when developing the CMS-published list
of E/M CPT/HCPCS codes subject to the comparative payment rate
analysis. These codes and services included specific obstetric codes
including surgical procedures billed by providers of obstetric-
gynecological services, reproductive care codes, pediatric
ophthalmology codes including surgical procedures and clinical
evaluations, vaccine administration, and other E/M codes. We also
received requests to require analysis of the most frequently billed
surgical codes for obstetrical-gynecological services, as well as
behavioral health services that do not have E/M codes or a Medicare
analog.
Response: We appreciate the commenters' suggestions. Prior to the
effective date of this final rule, we will issue subregulatory guidance
including a hypothetical example list of the E/M CPT/HCPCS codes that
would be subject to the comparative payment rate analysis, if the
comparative rate analysis requirements were applicable with respect to
payment rates in effect for CY 2023. This example list defines the
categories of services subject to the comparative payment rate analysis
through the finite number of E/M CPT/HCPCS codes in the list, if it
were in effect for CY 2023. Several of the commenter's suggested codes
are included in the example list; however, this list is subject to
change when the first CMS-published list of the E/M CPT/HCPCS codes
subject to the comparative payment rate analysis for CY 2025 is
published no later than July 1, 2025. Of the specific codes suggested
by commenters, we can confirm that the following codes would be
included in the CMS published list of E/M CPT/HCPCS codes subject to
the analysis, if it were in effect for CY 2023: CPT 59400-59612, 58300-
58301, 59120-59160, 59812-59857, 99401-99404, 90832-90853, 90791-90792,
96158, and 96165. Because of the criteria outlined in the proposed rule
intended to narrow the scope of codes subject to the comparative
payment rate analysis, CPT 59852 and 59857, peer support services,
psychosocial rehab, and assertive community treatment, as well as
vaccine administration codes are excluded from the comparative payment
rate analysis due to their classification outside of the BETOS
Classification System as E/M codes that are primary care, obstetrical
and gynecological services, or outpatient mental health and substance
use disorder services. Additionally, pediatric ophthalmology surgical
procedures and the top 10 surgical codes billed by obstetrician-
gynecologists to the Medicaid program are excluded from the analysis
because one of the criteria used to narrow the scope of the comparative
payment rate analysis was that for a code to be included on the CMS
published list of E/M CPT/HCPCS codes, the code has to be included on
the Berenson-Eggers Type of Service (BETOS) code list effective for the
same time period as the comparative payment rate analysis and falls
into the E/M family grouping and families and subfamilies for primary
care services, obstetrics and gynecological services, and outpatient
behavioral services (now called outpatient mental health and substance
use disorder services in this final rule). E/M CPT/HCPCS codes are some
of the most commonly billed codes and including them in the comparative
payment rate analysis would allow us to uniformly compare Medicaid
payment rates for these codes to Medicare PFS rates. Therefore, we
narrowed the scope of codes to just E/M codes and surgical codes fall
outside of this scope. As described in the proposed rule, the following
criteria were used to identify the E/M CPT/HCPCS codes to be included
in the comparative payment rate analysis: the code is effective for the
same time period of the comparative payment rate analysis; the code is
classified as an E/M CPT/HCPCS code by the AMA CPT Editorial Panel; the
code is included on the Berenson-Eggers Type of Service (BETOS) code
list effective for the same time period as the comparative payment rate
analysis and falls into the E/M family grouping and families and
subfamilies for primary care services, obstetrics and gynecological
services, and outpatient behavioral services (now called outpatient
mental health and substance use disorder services in this final rule);
and the code has an A (Active), N (Non-Covered), R (Restricted), or T
(Injections) code status on the Medicare PFS with a Medicare
established RVU and payment amount for the same time period of the
comparative payment rate analysis. As discussed in an earlier response
to comments in this section, the revision from outpatient behavioral
services to outpatient mental health and substance use disorder
services does not change the criteria used to identify the discrete
codes included in the BETOS E/M family grouping and families and
subfamilies for the CMS published list of E/M CPT/HCPCS subject to the
comparative payment rate analysis. While the payment rate transparency
publication does not require a comparison to the Medicare non-facility
payment rate as established in the annual Medicare PFS final rule for a
calendar year, it does require transparency of Medicaid payment rates
by requiring States publicly publish all Medicaid FFS fee schedule
payment rates, which will often include a number of the services
requested by commenters to be subject to the comparative payment rate
analysis. Our primary goal with the payment rate transparency
publication is ensuring Medicaid payment rates are publicly available
in such a way that a member of the public can readily determine the
amount that Medicaid would pay for a given service. Transparency helps
to ensure that interested parties have basic information available to
them to understand Medicaid payment levels and the associated effects
of payment rates on access to care so that they may raise concerns to
State Medicaid agencies via the various forms of public process
available to interested parties. Given that our work to better ensure
access in the Medicaid program is
[[Page 40734]]
ongoing, we intend to gain implementation experience with this final
rule, and we will consider the recommendations provided on the proposed
rule to help inform any future rulemaking in this area, as appropriate.
Comment: A few commenters suggested additional data elements and
analyses for the comparative payment rate analysis. A couple of
commenters suggested data elements specifically for comparing FQHC and
non-FQHC settings: number of primary care claims provided in FQHC and
non-FQHC settings, number of patients served in FQHC and non-FQHC
settings, total spending in FQHC and non-FQHC settings. Commenters also
suggested data elements specifically for nursing facility payments,
such as comparing payments to total cost of care, examining the
relationship between payments and quality of care and health
disparities in nursing facilities, and trend data on medical inflation
and practice costs.
Response: We appreciate commenters' suggestions for the comparative
payment rate analysis. As described in the proposed rule, we excluded
encounter rates often paid for facility-based services, including FQHC
and nursing facility services, from the comparative payment rate
analysis due to the challenges we expect States to face in
disaggregating encounter rates for comparison to Medicare. While we are
not adopting these suggestions, we note that States have the
flexibility to add the elements described to their comparative payment
rate analysis if they so choose. We would encourage any State choosing
to disclose additional comparative payment rate analysis for facility-
based services also to publish detailed information about the State's
methodology for disaggregating its payment rates, as applicable, and
identifying analogous Medicare payment rates for comparison.
Comment: We received a few comments in response to our
consideration of requiring States to identify the number of unique
Medicaid-paid claims and the number of unique Medicaid-enrolled
beneficiaries who received a service within a calendar year for each of
the services for which the Medicaid base payment rate is published
pursuant to paragraph (b)(3)(i)(B). We received one comment that
opposed requiring the unique number of claims and beneficiaries while a
few commenters encouraged CMS to require this data element to improve
the collection and quality of data on Medicaid service utilization.
Response: We appreciate the commenters' feedback. As described in
the proposed rule, we considered but did not propose requiring States
to identify the number of unique Medicaid-paid claims and the number of
unique Medicaid-enrolled beneficiaries who received a service within a
calendar year.\303\ Upon further review, we determined the request
regarding unique beneficiaries was inaccurately framed, as a
beneficiary would not duplicate. Nevertheless, we decided not to
require States to identify the number of Medicaid-paid claims (bold
added to highlight the difference between data element we considered
and the data element we are finalizing in this rule). Instead, we are
finalizing the comparative payment rate analysis to require States to
include the number of Medicaid-paid claims (which may duplicate codes)
and the number of Medicaid-enrolled beneficiaries who received a
service within a calendar year for each of the services for which the
base Medicaid FFS fee schedule payment rate is published pursuant to
paragraph (b)(3)(i)(B) of this section, as proposed. Although we do see
value in obtaining unique, or deduplicated, claims counts, we did not
propose this data element because we intend for the comparative payment
rate analysis to capture the total amount of actual services received
by beneficiaries and paid for by the State. To illustrate, and to
correct the example provided in the proposed rule, for a beneficiary
with 6 visits to their primary care provider in a calendar year where
the provider bills 6 claims with CPT code 99202 for the same
beneficiary, the State is required to report 6 claims for CPT code
99202. The beneficiary count would remain 1. If 6 separate
beneficiaries each received a service and the provider bills CPT code
99202 for all of them, the claims count would still be 6, but the
beneficiary count would also be 6. Given that our access work is
ongoing, we intend to gain implementation experience with this final
rule, and we will consider the recommendations provided on the proposed
rule for any additional changes we may propose through future
rulemaking.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\303\ 88 FR 27960 at 28016.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Comment: One commenter recommended CMS allow States to have a 6-
month period to account for lags in claims reporting by providers and
States paying providers' claims for codes required to be in the
comparative payment rate analysis.
Response: We believe the commenter was referring to the claims run
out period where a State may not have received all of their providers'
claims for the codes subject to the comparative payment rate analysis
by the time the analysis is due, which could result in an undercount of
both claims for services furnished and beneficiaries who received a
service during the year. In response to comments and based on the
timing of this final rule, we have revised the timeframes for the
comparative payment rate analysis. The regulatory language finalized in
this rule at paragraph (b)(4) now states the following, ``[t]he State
agency must publish the initial comparative payment rate analysis and
payment rate disclosure of its Medicaid payment rates in effect as of
July 1, 2025, as required under paragraphs (b)(2) and (3) of this
section, by no later than July 1, 2026. Thereafter, the State agency
must update the comparative payment rate analysis and payment rate
disclosure no less than every 2 years, by no later than July 1 of the
second year following the most recent update.'' Therefore, for the
initial comparative payment rate analysis, States will need to include
their claims and beneficiary data required in paragraph (b)(3)(i)(E)
for CY 2025 in the analysis to be published no later than July 1, 2026.
This timing provides a 6-month period for claims run out, as requested
by the commenter.
Comment: One commenter raised concerns regarding the requirement to
separately identify the base Medicaid FFS fee schedule payment rate by
provider type without the inclusion of an additional analysis to assess
whether the State's rate setting process complies with the Mental
Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act (MHPAEA or the Parity Act).
Response: CMS works closely with State Medicaid agencies to ensure
compliance with MHPAEA in Medicaid managed care arrangements, Medicaid
alternative benefit plans (managed care and FFS), and CHIP benefits
(managed care and FFS) whenever changes to coverage of mental health or
SUD benefits are proposed by States. Parity requirements do not apply
to MH or SUD benefits for enrollees who receive only Medicaid non-ABP
FFS State plan coverage; however, CMS encourages States to comply with
parity for all Medicaid beneficiaries.\304\ \305\ Congress has not
extended MHPAEA requirements to non-ABP Medicaid benefits provided
solely through FFS delivery systems. Nonetheless, we encourage our
State Medicaid agency
[[Page 40735]]
partners to ensure their non-ABP FFS benefits voluntarily comply with
MHPAEA. Moreover, CMS reviews State proposals regarding rate reductions
or restructuring to ensure compliance with overarching requirements
under section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Social Security Act ``to assure
that payments are consistent with efficiency, economy, and quality of
care and are sufficient to enlist enough providers so that care and
services are available under the plan, at least to the extent that such
care and services are available to the general population in the
geographic area.'' This review thus helps promote the fundamental
objective of MHPAEA to ensure access to mental health and substance use
disorder treatment services.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\304\ https://www.medicaid.gov/medicaid/benefits/behavioral-health-services/parity/.
\305\ https://www.medicaid.gov/sites/default/files/2023-09/cmcs-mental-health-parity-092023.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Comment: One commenter requested clarification about the Medicare
rate to be used in the comparative payment rate analysis.
Response: As finalized by this rule, Sec.
[thinsp]447.203(b)(3)(i)(C) requires States to compare their base
Medicaid FFS fee schedule payment rate to the Medicare non-facility
payment rates as established in the annual Medicare PFS final rule
effective for the same time period for the same set of E/M CPT/HCPCS
codes, and for the same geographical location as the base Medicaid FFS
fee schedule payment rate, that correspond to the base Medicaid FFS fee
schedule payment rate rates identified under paragraph (b)(3)(i)(B) of
this section, including separate identification of the payment rates by
provider type. That is, States are required to compare their base
Medicaid FFS fee schedule payment rates to the corresponding Medicare
non-facility payment rate as established in the annual Medicare PFS
final rule for a calendar year. As described in the proposed rule, we
expected States to source the Medicare non-facility payment rate as
established in the annual Medicare PFS final rule for a calendar year
from the published Medicare fee schedule amounts on the Medicare PFS
through one or both of the following sources: the Physician Fee
Schedule Look-Up Tool \306\[thinsp]on cms.gov or Excel file downloads
of the Medicare PFS Relative Value Files \307\ for the relevant
calendar year from cms.gov. We acknowledge that the Physician Fee
Schedule Look-Up Tool is a display tool that functions as a helpful aid
for physicians and NPPs as a way to quickly look up PFS payment rates,
but does not provide official payment rate information. While we
encouraged States to begin sourcing Medicare non facility payment rates
from the Physician Fee Schedule Look-Up Tool and utilize the Physician
Fee Schedule Guide for instructions on using the Look-Up Tool in the
proposed rule, we would like to clarify in this final rule that States
should first by downloading and reviewing the Medicare PFS Relative
Value with Conversion Factor File where States can find the necessary
information for calculating Medicare non facility payment rates. Prior
to the effective date of this final rule, we will issue subregulatory
guidance, which includes an instructional guide for identifying,
downloading, and using the relevant Excel files for calculating the
Medicare non-facility payment rates as established in the annual
Medicare PFS final rule for a calendar year that States will need to
include in their comparative payment rate analysis. Therefore, for the
initial comparative payment rate analysis, after Medicare's publication
of the CY 2025 Physician Fee Schedule rate by November 2024, we
encourage States to begin sourcing Medicare non-facility payment rates
as established in the annual Medicare PFS final rule for CY 2025 by
downloading and reviewing the CY 2025 Medicare PFS Relative Value with
Conversion Factor File from cms.gov.\308\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\306\ https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/PFSlookup.
\307\ https://www.cms.gov/medicare/medicare-fee-for-service-payment/physicianfeesched/pfs-relative-value-files.
\308\ https://www.cms.gov/medicare/medicare-fee-for-service-payment/physicianfeesched/pfs-relative-value-files.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Comment: While we received overwhelming support from commenters for
proposing to use Medicare non-facility rates for comparison to Medicaid
rates in the comparative payment rate analysis, some commenters
expressed concerns or suggested alternative comparison points. Many
commenters stated that Medicare payment rates are low and have not kept
up with inflation; therefore, these commenters stated that Medicare is
not an appropriate comparison point for payment rates for many
services, including dental, anesthesiology, and physical therapy. Some
commenters stated that there is limited comparability between Medicaid
and Medicare due to the differences in coverage of services and
populations (for example, Medicare's limited coverage of pediatric
services, behavioral health services (including substance use disorder
and mental health care), and dental care) which results in
fundamentally different payment rate methodologies. A few commenters
expressed that Medicare is not a perfect comparator and should not be
used as the standard for adequacy of Medicaid payment rates, but agreed
it was a useful starting place because Medicare rates are publicly
available. One commenter stated that States aligning Medicaid payment
rates with Medicare rates for psychiatrist services as well as
decreasing administrative burden could help encourage more providers to
enroll in Medicaid.
Many commenters who opposed using Medicare non-facility rates for
the comparative payment rate analysis offered alternative suggestions
for States to compare their payment rates to. Several commenters
suggested private payer rates. One commenter suggested Medicaid rates
from geographically similar States that CMS identifies for States. A
few commenters suggested rates from Federal or State employee dental
plans. Two commenters suggested FAIR Health data \309\ (particularly
for dental services). One commenter suggested Medicare Advantage for
dental, vision, and hearing services. We also received a comment
suggesting CMS develop an alternative to Medicare as a point of
comparison in the comparative payment rate analysis, particularly for
inpatient administered therapies that are paid using DRGs.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\309\ We assume the commenter was referring to https://www.fairhealth.org/.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Response: We thank the commenters for their support of using the
Medicare non-facility rates for comparison to Medicaid rates in the
comparative payment rate analysis. We understand the commenters'
concerns about using Medicare as a benchmark for Medicaid rates to be
compared to in the comparative payment rate analysis; however, we do
not agree that Medicare payment rates are low and have not kept up with
inflation. As described in the proposed rule, Medicare PFS payment
rates are established for each service, generally described by a
particular procedure code (including HCPCS, CPT, and CDT),) using
resource-based inputs to establish RVUs in three components of a
procedure: work, practice expense, and malpractice. The three component
RVUs for each service are adjusted using CMS-calculated geographic
practice cost indexes (GPCIs) that reflect geographic cost differences
in each fee schedule area as compared to the national average.\310\ The
Medicare PFS is revised annually by CMS ensure that our payment systems
are updated to reflect changes in medical practice and the
[[Page 40736]]
relative value of services, as well as changes in the statute.\311\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\310\ 88 FR 27960 at 28012. Note this language has been revised
for accuracy in this final rule,
\311\ https://www.federalregister.gov/documents/2023/11/16/2023-24184/medicare-and-medicaid-programs-cy-2024-payment-policies-under-the-physician-fee-schedule-and-other.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
With regard to commenters who raised concerns about using Medicare
as a point of comparison, we disagree with the commenter that
differences in coverage and populations limits comparability between
Medicare and Medicaid in any way that would make Medicare an
inappropriate comparator. As described in the proposed rule, Medicare
non-facility payment rates as established in the annual Medicare PFS
final rule for a calendar year are utilized in this rule as a benchmark
to compare Medicaid fee schedule rates on a CPT/HCPCS code level
basis.\312\ Medicare PFS payment rates simply serve as a point of
comparison for CMS to consider in assessing if Medicaid payments are
consistent with section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act. Differences in the
methodology that Medicare uses and States use to determine their FFS
fee schedule payment rates does not compromise the value of Medicare as
a reliable benchmark for assessing payment rate sufficiency for
enlisting providers to furnish services to an individual, as required
by section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act. As described in the proposed
rule, Medicare and Medicaid programs cover and pay for services
provided to beneficiaries residing in every State and territory of the
United States, Medicare payment rates are publicly available, and broad
provider acceptance of Medicare makes Medicare non-facility payment
rates as established on the Medicare PFS for a calendar year an
available and reliable comparison point for States to use in the
comparative payment rate analysis.\313\ Also as described in the
proposed rule, base Medicaid FFS fee schedule payment rate are
typically determined through one of three methods: the resource-based
relative value scale (RBRVS), a percentage of Medicare's fee, or a
State-developed fee schedule using local factors.\314\ The RBRVS
system, initially developed for the Medicare program, assigns a
relative value to every physician procedure based on the complexity of
the procedure, practice expense, and malpractice expense. States may
also adopt the Medicare fee schedule rate, which is based on RBRVS, but
select a fixed percentage of the Medicare amount to pay for Medicaid
services. States can develop their own fee schedules, typically
determined based on market value or an internal process, and often do
this in situations where there is no Medicare or private payer
equivalent or when an alternate payment methodology is necessary for
programmatic reasons. Again, one of the criteria for including codes on
the CMS-published list of E/M CPT/HCPCS codes subject to the
comparative payment rate analysis is that there must be a payment rate
on the Medicare PFS so States have a Medicare payment rate to compare
their Medicaid base payment to.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\312\ 88 FR 27960 at 28012.
\313\ 88 FR 27960 at 28011.
\314\ 88 FR 27960 at 28010.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We also disagree with commenters that there is limited
comparability between Medicaid and Medicare due to the differences in
coverage of services and populations. We acknowledge that Medicare and
Medicaid vary in terms of covered services and populations served;
however, the Medicare PFS includes payment rates for covered, non-
covered, and limited coverage services and applies the same resource-
based formula to ensure all PFS rates are determined on a national
level as well as adjusted to reflect the variation in practice costs
from one geographical location to another. As described in the proposed
rule, Medicare PFS non-facility rates serves as a reliable benchmark
for assessing the level of payment sufficiency to enlist providers to
furnish the relevant services to an individual for the following
reasons.\315\ As we have narrowed the scope of the comparative payment
rate analysis to E/M CPT/HCPCS codes, Medicare PFS non-facility payment
rates are comparable to Medicaid FFS fee schedule payment rates because
both fee schedule rates are generally for services provided in a
physician's office and specify the rate paid to a provider for
delivering an individual service (that is, a single FFS payment for a
single service, rather than an encounter rate paying for any number for
services). The accessibility and consistent format of the published
Medicare non-facility payment rates as established in the annual
Medicare PFS final rule for a calendar year makes these rates an
available and reliable comparison point for States to use in the
comparative payment rate analysis for the foreseeable future as the
Medicare PFS is free to the public, updated on an annual basis, and
posted online on an easily located website, relative to private payer
rates that States would need to request access to and perhaps pay for
the information. Medicare also has a low rate of physicians formally
opting out of the program, suggesting that Medicare's payment rates
generally are consistent with a high level of physician willingness to
furnish services to Medicare patients, with the vast majority of
physicians willing to accept Medicare's payment rates. Additionally,
Medicare is another of the nation's large public health coverage
programs which serves as an important data point in determining whether
payment rates are likely to be sufficient to ensure access for Medicaid
beneficiaries at least as great as for the general population in the
geographic area, and whether any identified access concerns may be
related to payment sufficiency.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\315\ 88 FR 27960 at 28011.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We appreciate commenters' alternative suggestions to using Medicare
as a benchmark in the comparative payment rate analysis; however, we
are not incorporating these suggestions due to the following reasons.
As discussed in the proposed rule, we learned from our implementation
experience with the previous AMRP process that very few States were
able to include even limited private payer data in their AMRPs due to
the payment data being proprietary or unsound due to a lack of
transparency about the construction of the payment data or because
States did not have large private plans in their State so there were no
private payer rates to compare to. This resulted in States being unable
fully to comply with the previous AMRP regulations, to the extent they
required an analysis that included private payer rate information.\316\
Without this final rule, requiring States to compare their Medicaid
rates to geographically similar States would not be possible because
not all States currently post their Medicaid FFS fee schedule payment
rates in a transparent and consistent format that would permit data
analysis among States. While some States were able to compare their
payment rates to other States' rates in their previous AMRPs, this was
inconsistent across AMRPs and risked a subjective comparison where
States selected which rates and States they compared themselves to.
Requiring a comparison to Medicare ensures all States are using the
same consistent data point to compare their rates to. Regarding the
suggestion that CMS could identify the geographically similar States
for States to compare their payment rates to, this would require a
different approach than what we proposed due to the variation across
State Medicaid programs and would require careful consideration and
policy development to ensure that any proposal would be consistent with
the statutory requirement in section
[[Page 40737]]
1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act that looks to the ``geographic area'' in
determining whether payment rates are sufficient. Similarly, we would
also not require States compare their rates to rates from Federal or
State employee dental plans because this information might not be
generally available to State Medicaid agencies.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\316\ 88 FR 27960 at 28018.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
At this time and for the purposes of the comparative payment rate
analysis, we are not advocating or requiring States source payment rate
information from any particular data source other than the State's own
Medicaid agency (who is responsible for setting and paying the payment
rates required in the analysis and, therefore has direct access to base
Medicaid FFS fee schedule payment rates required in the analysis) and
publicly available Medicare fee schedule rates (which we have
previously described as an available and reliable comparison point for
States to use in the comparative payment rate analysis). Therefore, we
are not requiring States compare their rates to FAIR Health data
because this data source is outside of the State agency and Medicare's
publicly available fee schedule rates. We would also not require States
compare their rates to Medicare Advantage for dental, vision, and
hearing services because these are not categories of services subject
to the comparative payment rate analysis. As previously stated, only
codes listed on the CMS-published list of E/M CPT/HCPCS codes are
subject to the comparative payment rate analysis. The list does not
include dental, anesthesiology, physical therapy, vision, and hearing
services and these services, among others not on the CMS-published list
of E/M CPT/HCPCS codes, are not subject to the comparative payment rate
analysis requirement. Given that our work to better ensure access in
the Medicaid program is ongoing, we intend to gain implementation
experience with this final rule, and we will consider the
recommendations provided on the proposed rule to help inform any future
rulemaking in this area, as appropriate.
For the previously stated reasons, we believe the Medicare payment
rates for the categories of services subject to the comparative payment
rate analysis are likely to serve as a reliable benchmark for a level
of payment sufficient to enlist providers to furnish the relevant
services to an individual. Therefore, we are finalizing this rule with
the requirement that States use the Medicare non-facility payment rates
as established in the annual Medicare PFS final rule for a calendar
year as the comparison point for States to compare their Medicaid
payment rates to in the comparative payment rate analysis.
We would also like to clarify that the provisions in this final
rule do not require States to change their payment rates, including
requiring States to align their Medicaid payment rates with Medicare
rates for psychiatrist services. Although we intend for States to
consider the information produced for the payment rate transparency
publication, comparative payment rate analysis, and payment rate
disclosure in an ongoing process of evaluating the State's payment rate
sufficiency and when considering changing payment rates or
methodologies (and we intend to make similar use of the information in
performing our oversight activities and in making payment SPA approval
decisions, for example), we did not propose and are not finalizing that
any payment rate changes necessarily would be triggered by the proposed
requirements.
Comment: Some commenters were concerned about how States would be
expected to conduct the comparative payment rate analysis for services
that Medicaid pays for, but Medicare does not. A few commenters
suggested CMS develop a methodology for calculating a proxy rate for
Medicaid services with no equivalent Medicare rate or Medicaid services
that are provided very infrequently in Medicare, so Medicare rates are
not a reliable comparison. Two commenters suggested working with MedPAC
or MACPAC to set appropriate comparison points for services that are
not covered by Medicare, for example contraceptive and pregnancy-
related services.
Response: To clarify, only codes listed on the CMS-published list
of E/M CPT/HCPCS codes are subject to the comparative payment rate
analysis. All codes on this list have an existing Medicare payment
rate, therefore, the development of a proxy rate is unnecessary. Codes
outside of this list, including services that Medicaid pays for, but
Medicare does not, are not subject to the comparative payment rate
analysis requirement. Given that our work to better ensure access in
the Medicaid program is ongoing, we intend to gain implementation
experience with this final rule, and we will consider the
recommendations provided on the proposed rule to help inform any future
rulemaking in this area, as appropriate.
We disagree with the commenter that Medicare rates are not a
reliable comparison when services are provided infrequently to Medicare
beneficiaries. As previously described, Medicare PFS payment rates are
computed using a resource-based formula made up of three components of
a procedure's RVU: physician work, practice expense, and malpractice as
well as geographical differences in each locality area of the
country.\317\ The Medicare PFS is revised annually by CMS to ensure
that our payment systems are updated to reflect changes in medical
practice and the relative value of services, as well as changes in the
statute.\318\ Despite a service being covered and paid for infrequently
by Medicare, the payment rates on the Medicare PFS are consistently
updated with relevant data on a frequent, annual basis.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\317\ 88 FR 27960 at 28012.
\318\ https://www.federalregister.gov/documents/2023/11/16/2023-24184/medicare-and-medicaid-programs-cy-2024-payment-policies-under-the-physician-fee-schedule-and-other.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Comment: A few commenters suggested alternative update frequencies
for the comparative payment rate analysis. Commenter suggestions
included updates annually, every 3 years, and every 4 years.
Commenters' justification ranged from more frequent than 2 years due to
the need for timely publication of Medicaid data to less frequent to
align with the State's existing rate study schedule or because they did
not believe rates would change significantly during a 2-year period.
Additionally, one commenter suggested CMS require States to document
when rates have not changed between comparative payment rate analysis
biennial publications.
Response: We are finalizing the payment rate transparency
requirements, including the comparative payment rate analysis, with an
applicability date of July 1, 2026; however, we are not changing the
proposed timeframe of 2 years for States to update their publications.
We believe requiring updates to the comparative payment rate analysis
every 2 years balances State burden with maintaining up-to-date
information. Given that our work to better ensure access in the
Medicaid program is ongoing, we intend to gain implementation
experience with this final rule, and we will consider the
recommendations provided on the proposed rule to help inform any future
rulemaking in this area, as appropriate.
Comment: One commenter expressed concerns about cross walking a
State's geographical areas to Medicare in the comparative payment rate
analysis. The commenter stated that States may define a geographical
region differently than Medicare and result in a complex and confusing
analysis that would be contrary to CMS' transparency goals.
Response: As discussed in the proposed rule, we recognize that
States
[[Page 40738]]
that make Medicaid payment based on geographical location may not use
the same locality areas as Medicare.\319\ We expect the State to
determine an appropriate method to accomplish the comparative payment
rate analysis that aligns the geographic area covered by each payer's
rate as closely as reasonably feasible. For example, if the State
identifies two geographic areas for Medicaid payment purposes that are
contained almost entirely within one Medicare geographic area, then the
State reasonably could determine to use the same Medicare non-facility
payment rate as established in the annual Medicare PFS final rule in a
calendar year in the comparative payment rate analysis for each
Medicaid geographic area. As another example, if the State defined a
single geographic area for Medicaid payment purposes that contained two
Medicare geographic areas, then the State might determine a reasonable
method to weight the two Medicare payment rates applicable within the
Medicaid geographic area, and then compare the Medicaid payment rate
for the Medicaid-defined geographic area to this weighted average of
Medicare payment rates. States could also calculate the unweighted
arithmetic mean of the two Medicare payment rates applicable within the
Medicaid-defined geographic area. While States have flexibility in
mapping their geographical areas to Medicare's for the comparative
payment rate analysis, we invite States to reach out to CMS for
technical assistance.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\319\ 88 FR 27960 at 28013
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Comment: A few commenters stated that other factors besides rates
impact access to care. Commenters suggested CMS consider regional cost
differences, provider shortages (including number of providers and
their location), and the unique needs of specific populations (such as
dually eligible beneficiaries, or beneficiaries in rural areas of a
State) as factors that impact access to care.
Response: We agree with commenters that other factors besides rates
impact access to care.\320\ After considering feedback received from
States and other interested parties about the previous AMRP process
issued through the 2015 final rule with comment period, as well as our
obligation to ensure continued compliance with section 1902(a)(30)(A)
of the Act, we are finalizing a streamlined and standardized process to
assess access to care that focuses on payment rate transparency. Given
that our work to better ensure access in the Medicaid program is
ongoing, we intend to gain implementation experience with this final
rule, and we will consider the recommendations provided on the proposed
rule to help inform any future rulemaking in this area, as appropriate.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\320\ 88 FR 27960 at 28016-28017.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Comment: A couple of commenters expressed concerns regarding the
privacy of beneficiary information when it comes to the requirement
that the comparative payment rate analysis and payment rate disclosure
must specify the number of Medicaid-paid claims and the number of
Medicaid enrolled beneficiaries who received a service. Commenters
suggested CMS provide an exception when the volume of claims or
beneficiaries is small.
Response: We take privacy and our obligations to protect
beneficiary information very seriously. We remind States of their
obligations to comply with applicable Federal and State privacy laws
with respect to such information, such as the HIPAA Privacy Rule and
Federal Medicaid requirements in section 1902(a)(7) of the Social
Security Act and 42 CFR part 431, subpart F. We are not requiring
States to publish any beneficiary-identifiable information in the
comparative payment rate analysis or payment rate disclosure. We expect
States will ensure that any claims and Medicaid beneficiary data made
publicly available under these requirements have been de-identified in
accordance with the HIPAA Privacy Rule at 45 CFR 164.514(b).
We strongly encourage States to have policies to ensure that all
information, particularly claims and beneficiary data, published in
their comparative payment rate analysis and payment rate disclosure is
de-identified prior to publishing on July 1, 2026. Such policies should
address circumstances in which the number of Medicaid-paid claims and/
or Medicaid enrolled beneficiaries is small. For example, States may
consider implementing a small cell size suppression policy for
publishing data on the State's website, similar to CMS' cell size
suppression policy that no cell (for example, admissions, discharges,
patients, services, etc.) containing a value of 1 to 10 can be reported
directly.\321\ We invite States to reach out to CMS regarding any data
privacy concerns that may impact a States' compliance with the
comparative payment rate analysis or payment rate disclosure
requirements.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\321\ https://resdac.org/articles/cms-cell-size-suppression-policy.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Additionally, to address privacy concerns at the individual level,
we would like to share the following resources for filing civil rights
and HIPAA complaints with the Office for Civil Rights:
Filing a civil rights complaint; \322\ and
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\322\ https://www.hhs.gov/civil-rights/filing-a-complaint/.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Filing a health information privacy or security
complaint.\323\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\323\ https://www.hhs.gov/hipaa/filing-a-complaint/complaint-process/.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Comment: A commenter raised concerns that the comparative payment
rate analysis would incentivize States to raise payment rates for the
categories of services subject to the analysis, but might also lead or
contribute to rate cuts for other services, since the proposed rule
would not provide that States may not cut some rates to make funds
available to raise other rates.
Response: We understand the commenter's concerns about the effects
of the comparative payment rate analysis in practice. We emphasize that
the comparative payment rate analysis will afford more transparency to
CMS and the public about rates for primary care, obstetrical and
gynecological, and outpatient mental health and substance use disorder
services, and will also provide States with an opportunity to identify
where existing rates could create an access issue for the services
subject to the comparative payment rate analysis requirement. If a
State chooses to raise payment rates for the categories of services
subject to the analysis, and in order to do so seeks to reduce rates
for other services, then the State would be required to follow the
State Analysis Procedures for Rate Reduction or Restructuring in Sec.
447.203(c) to ensure the proposed rate reductions do not reduce access
to care to the services for which payment rates would be reduced below
the statutory standard. A public input process to raise access concerns
with States is described in Sec. 447.203(c)(4) of this final rule. We
are confident our policies finalized in this rule will work in
conjunction with each other to ensure ongoing and improved access to
care.
Comment: A couple of commenters requested clarification regarding
the circumstance whereby a comparative payment rate analysis reveals
that a State's Medicaid payment rates are significantly below Medicare
rates. One commenter suggested requiring States to submit a corrective
action plan in those instances.
Response: Transparency, particularly the requirement that States
must publicly publish their payment rates and compare their payment
rates to Medicare, helps to ensure that interested parties have basic
[[Page 40739]]
information available to them to understand Medicaid payment levels and
the associated effects of payment rates on access to care so that they
may raise concerns to State Medicaid agencies via the various forms of
public process available to interested parties. We intend to utilize
the information published by States in their payment rate transparency
publication and comparative payment rate analysis whenever the
provisions of Sec. 447.203(c) are invoked, when a State submits a SPA
that proposes to reduce provider payment rates or restructure provider
payments in circumstances when the changes could result in diminished
access. We did not propose and are not requiring States to submit a
corrective action plan when Medicaid payment rates included in the
comparative payment rate analysis are lower than Medicare payment
rates. While the results of a comparative payment rate analysis would
not themselves require a corrective action plan, Sec. 447.203(c)(5)
does require a State to submit a corrective action plan to remedy an
access deficiency within 90 days from when it is identified to the
State.
Comment: One commenter requested that CMS make UPL demonstration
data and methodologies publicly available for purposes of data
analysis, particularly for inpatient behavioral health services as CMS
did not propose to include these services in the comparative payment
rate analysis.
Response: While the comparative payment rate analysis is limited in
scope to base Medicaid FFS fee schedule payment rates, the payment rate
transparency publication does include PPS rates that are considered fee
schedules payment rates within the meaning of this final rule,
including for inpatient hospital, outpatient hospital, and nursing
facility services. The PPS rates, which are generally the base payment
for these services, and reported through UPLs, will be publicly
available through the payment rate transparency publication. We
acknowledge that supplemental payments as well as UPL data and
methodologies typically are not publicly available currently.
Nevertheless, UPL demonstrations provide us with an opportunity for
payment oversight and we consider UPL demonstrations in assessing State
compliance with the access requirement in section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the
Act.\324\ As previously discussed in an earlier response to comments,
we stated that UPL demonstrations provide CMS with important
information for assessing if payment rates comply with economy and
efficiency provisions at section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act,
specifically how total Medicaid payments compare to what Medicare would
have paid for similar services where Medicare acts as a payment limit,
or ceiling, for economic and efficient. Requiring supplemental payments
as well as UPL data and methodologies be publicly available would
contribute to our transparency efforts; however, the current reporting
format of UPL data would not align with Sec. 447.203(b)(1)(iii) which
requires Medicaid FFS fee schedule payment rates be published and
organized in such a way that a member of the public can readily
determine the amount that Medicaid would pay for a given service.
Therefore, we would need to develop a different methodology, policies,
and oversight than what is being finalized in this rule to ensure UPL
data is transparent. With this final rule, our focus is on improving
our oversight of Medicaid payment rates to identify where rates may be
negatively impacting access to care while minimizing burden imposed on
States, which requires us to prioritize areas of focus. We want our
initial focus to be on establishing the new payment rate transparency,
comparative payment rate analysis, and payment rate disclosure
requirements, providing States with support during the compliance
period, and ensuring the data required under this final rule are
available to beneficiaries, providers, CMS, and other interested
parties for the purpose of assessing access to care issues.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\324\ 88 FR 27960 at 28006.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Payment Rate Disclosure Comments and Responses
Comment: We received general support for our proposal to require
States to develop and publish a payment rate disclosure for certain
HCBS. Commenters specifically expressed support for the proposed
categories of services and calculation of the average hourly payment
rate.
However, a couple of comments expressed opposition of the payment
rate disclosure provision. Commenters in opposition stated the proposed
payment rate disclosure requirements would be administratively
burdensome for States and that it was unclear how calculating an
average hourly payment rate along with publishing data about claims and
beneficiaries would be valuable and informative for payment policy
purposes.
Response: We appreciate the commenters' support of the payment rate
disclosure provision at Sec. [thinsp]447.203(b)(3)(ii). We are
finalizing the payment rate disclosure provisions with an additional
category of service, habilitation, a few minor revisions for
clarification purposes and consistent terminology usage within Sec.
447.203(b), and an update to the compliance timeframe, the latter of
which was discussed earlier in this section. The addition of
habilitation services to the payment rate disclosure is further
discussed in a later response to comments in this section. In this
final rule, we are revising the regulatory language to clarify which
services and payment rates are subject to this requirement. We proposed
in Sec. [thinsp]447.203(b)(3)(ii) that the State would be required to
publish the ``average hourly payment rate, separately identified for
payments made to individual providers and to providers employed by an
agency, if the rates vary'' for each category of service specified in
paragraph (b)(2)(iv). We are finalizing in Sec.
[thinsp]447.203(b)(3)(ii) that States are required to publish the
``average hourly Medicaid fee-for-service fee schedule payment rates,
separately identified for payments made to individual providers and
provider agencies, if the rates vary.'' (new language identified in
bold). We proposed in Sec. [thinsp]447.203(b)(3)(ii)(B) that the State
would be required to ``identify the average hourly payment rates by
applicable category of service, including, if the rates vary, separate
identification of the average hourly payment rates for payments made to
individual providers and to providers employed by an agency, by
population (pediatric and adult), provider type, and geographical
location, as applicable.'' We are finalizing in Sec.
[thinsp]447.203(b)(3)(ii)(B) that the States are required to ``identify
the average hourly Medicaid fee-for-service fee schedule payment rates
by applicable category of service, including, if the rates vary,
separate identification of the average hourly Medicaid fee-for-service
fee schedule payment rates for payments made to individual providers
and provider agencies, by population (pediatric and adult), provider
type, geographical location, and whether the payment rate includes
facility-related costs, as applicable.'' (new language identified in
bold). For clarification and consistent terminology usage of ``Medicaid
fee-for-service fee schedule payment rates,'' similar revisions were
made in Sec. 447.203(b)(2)(iv) and (b)(3)(ii)(B) and (C) and described
in detail at the end of responses to comments in this section. We
utilized the term ``average hourly Medicaid fee-for-service fee
schedule payment rates'' in the payment rate disclosure for
[[Page 40740]]
consistency throughout Sec. [thinsp]447.203(b) where the term Medicaid
FFS fee schedule payment rates is used to describe what payment rates
are subject to the payment rate transparency publication in Sec.
[thinsp]447.203(b)(1)(i). Additionally, we are incorporating the term
``provider agencies'' for clarification purposes to more accurately
reflect what payment rate we are requiring be published. Lastly, we
added the requirement that payments that include facility-related costs
must be separately identified to ensure transparency of payment rates
that may differ due to the inclusion of facility-related costs.
Additional information about these regulatory language changes is
discussed in later responses to comments in this section.
We disagree with the commenters regarding administrative burden of
the payment rate disclosure. As documented in section III. of this
final rule, the FFS provisions, including the payment rate
transparency, comparative payment rate analysis, and payment rate
disclosure requirements (Sec. [thinsp]447.203(b)(1) through (5)),
interested parties' advisory group requirements (Sec.
[thinsp]447.203(b)(6)), and State analysis procedures for payment rate
reductions or payment restructuring (Sec. [thinsp]447.203(c)), are
expected to result in a net burden reduction on States compared to the
previous AMRP requirements. Additionally, as addressed in another
comment response generally discussing commenters' concerns about State
burden, we have described numerous flexibilities States will have for
compliance with this final rule. Specifically for the payment rate
disclosure, and as discussed in a later response to comments, States
have flexibility to (1) utilize contractors or other third party
websites to publish the payment rate disclosure on (however, we remind
States that they are still requiring to publish the hyperlink to the
website where the publication is located on the State Medicaid agency's
website as required in Sec. 447.203(b)(1)(ii) of this final rule), (2)
format and organize the payment rate disclosure how they chose (that
is, we are not requiring certain codes be included as required in the
comparative payment rate analysis) (however, we remind States that the
disclosure is still subject to the publication requirements described
in proposed paragraphs (b)(1) and (b)(1)(ii) for payment rate
transparency data), and (3) calculate the average hourly Medicaid FFS
fee schedule payment rate as a simple average or arithmetic mean where
all payment rates would be adjusted to an hourly figure, summed, then
divided by the number of all hourly payment rates, rather than a
weighted average which would impose more burden on States to calculate.
Additionally, we are providing an illustrative example of a compliant
payment rate disclosure (including to meet accessibility standards)
through subregulatory guidance that we will issue prior to the
effective date of this final rule.
We are not identifying codes for the categories of services subject
to the payment rate disclosure. We are providing States with
flexibility in determining which codes to include in the calculated
average hourly Medicaid FFS fee schedule payment rate for the payment
rate disclosure because States may use a wide variety of codes to bill
and pay for personal care, home health aide, homemaker, and
habilitation services, such as HCPCS codes T1019-T1022 and/or CPT codes
99500- 99602. For example, HCPCS codes T1019-T1022 for home health
services includes T1019 (personal care services that are part of the
individualized plan of treatment, per 15 minutes), T1020 (personal care
services that are part of the individualized plan of treatment, per
diem), T1021 (home health aide or certified nurse assistant, per
visit), and T1022 (contracted home health agency services, all services
provided under contract, per day). One State may use T1019 or T1020
depending on the unit (daily or per diem), a second State may only use
T1021, and a third State may use none of these codes. We expect States
to review their Medicaid FFS fee schedule payment rates for the payment
rate and unit the State uses to pay for each of category of service and
calculate the Medicaid average hourly Medicaid FFS fee schedule payment
rate for personal care, home health aide, homemaker, and habilitation
services, separately by service and provider employment structure as
well as for payments that include facility-related costs, as provided
in this final rule and discussed in later responses to comments in this
section.
Additionally, the list of possible codes States may pay for
personal care, home health aide, homemaker, and habilitation services
is already limited by the available CPT/HCPCS codes, so we did not see
a need to narrow the codes with a CMS-published list of E/M CPT/HCPCS
like the comparative payment rate analysis. As previously discussed, we
recognize that States may amend existing CPT/HCPCS codes with
additional numbers or letters for processing in their own claims
system. If a State does not use CPT or HCPCS codes as published by AMA
and CMS, then we expect the State to review the published lists of CPT
or HCPCS codes and identify which of their codes are most comparable
for purposes of the payment rate disclosure. We anticipate States may
need to review code descriptions of CPT and HCPCS codes for personal
care, home health aide, homemaker, and habilitation services as part of
the process of identifying which CPT and HCPCS codes are comparable to
the codes that States utilizes. We want to ensure the full scope of
personal care, home health aide, homemaker, and habilitation services,
and providers of these services, are included in the payment rate
disclosure for transparency purposes, rather than narrowing the scope
to certain codes and/or provider types, which would result in a limited
disclosure of provider payment rates.
Regarding commenters that were unclear how calculating an average
hourly payment rate along with publishing data about claims and
beneficiaries would be valuable and informative for payment policy
purposes, we are requiring States to separately identify the average
hourly Medicaid FFS fee schedule payment rates for personal care, home
health aide, homemaker, and habilitation services by population
(pediatric and adult), provider type, geographical location, and
whether the payment rate includes facility-related costs, as
applicable, and by provider employment structures (individual providers
and provider agencies). Calculating an average hourly Medicaid FFS fee
schedule payment rate for categories of services subject to the payment
rate disclosure will ensure a standardized unit and permit States, CMS,
and other interested parties to compare payment rates among State
Medicaid programs. As discussed in the proposed rule, HCBS and direct
care workers that deliver these services are unique to Medicaid and
often not covered by other payers, which is why we are proposing a
different disclosure of payment rates for providers of these services
that does not involve a comparison to Medicare. Additionally, private
payer data and self-pay data are often considered proprietary and not
available to States, thereby eliminating private payers as feasible
point of comparison. Because HCBS coverage is unique to Medicaid,
Medicaid beneficiaries are generally the only individuals in a given
geographic area with access to HCBS that is covered by a third-party
payer.\325\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\325\ 88 FR 27960 at 28019
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 40741]]
Comment: Some commenters requested CMS clarify and add to the
proposed categories of services included in the payment rate disclosure
requirements. A few commenters requested clarification regarding
whether services covered under waiver authority or State plan authority
are subject to the disclosure requirements. A couple of commenters
suggested adding regulatory language to explicitly include services
provided through State plan and waiver authority in the payment rate
disclosure. Another couple of commenters requested clarification
specifically about self-directed services when an individual has budget
authority and residential services. A few commenters encouraged CMS to
require States to report payment rate variations by populations served
(that is, populations receiving services under a waiver versus State
plan authority) due to States varying rates for the same service
furnished to different targeted populations under different coverage
authorities.
A few commenters recommended additional categories of services to
the proposed categories of services subject to the payment rate
disclosure. While some commenters recommended expanding the categories
of services generally, a number of commenters specifically recommended
expanding the categories of service to include habilitation services
(including residential habilitation services, day habilitation
services, and home-based habilitation services).
Response: Personal care, home health aide, homemaker, and
habilitation services provided under FFS State plan authority,
including sections 1915(i), 1915(j), 1915(k) State plan services;
section 1915(c) waiver authority; and under section 1115 demonstration
authority are subject to the payment rate disclosure described in Sec.
[thinsp]447.203(b)(3)(ii). We are clarifying that, consistent with the
applicability of other HCBS regulatory requirements to such
demonstration projects, the requirements for section 1915(c) waiver
programs and section 1915(i), (j), and (k) State plan services included
in this final rule, apply to such services included in approved section
1115 demonstration projects, unless we explicitly waive or identify as
not applicable one or more of the requirements as part of the approval
of the demonstration project. Please see section II.B for additional
information on the inclusion of section 1115 demonstrations under the
provisions of this final rule. While we appreciate the commenters'
suggestion to add regulatory language to explicitly include services
provided through State plan and waiver authority in the payment rate
disclosure, we are not incorporating this suggestion as we previously
provided clarification on which authorities are subject to the
disclosure.
As previously discussed, self-directed services delivery models
under which an individual beneficiary has budget authority do not
constitute a fee schedule payment methodology for purposes of the
payment rate transparency publication requirement, as well as the
payment rate disclosure. Generally, under such self-directed services
delivery models, the individual beneficiary determines a reasonable
payment rate for the service in the State-authorized budget for that
beneficiary. As such, these types of payment rates are excluded from
the disclosure requirement. Regarding commenters' request for
clarification about residential services being subject to the
disclosure, as discussed in a later response to comments, personal
care, home health aide, homemaker, and habilitation services, are
inherently delivered in a home or community setting, outside of an
institutional or residential facility. However, we acknowledge that the
addition of habilitation services to the disclosure would now include
residential habilitation services and we further address this in the
later portion of this comment response.
We appreciate commenters' suggestion to require States report
payment rate variations by populations served (that is, populations
receiving services under a waiver versus State plan authority).
However, that level of detailed reporting is beyond the scope of what
we are seeking to implement in this current rulemaking, and would
represent additional burden to States. We are requiring States to
separately identify the average hourly Medicaid FFS fee schedule
payment rates for personal care, home health aide, homemaker, and
habilitation services by various factors that we believe will provide
beneficial insights into these rates.
As stated in the proposed rule, we intend to standardize data and
monitoring across service delivery systems with the goal of improving
access to care, to the extent possible, and particularly for the
payment rate disclosure requirements in Sec. [thinsp]447.203(b)(2)(iv)
and (3)(ii), we intend to remain consistent with the HCBS provisions we
are finalizing at Sec. [thinsp]441.311(d)(2) and (e).\326\ Given the
addition of habilitation services to these HCBS provisions in this
final rule as well as the Managed Care final rule (as published
elsewhere in this Federal Register) provisions at Sec.
[thinsp]438.207(b)(3)(ii) and after consideration of comments, we are
adding habilitation services, including residential habilitation, day
habilitation, and home-based habilitation services, to the payment rate
disclosure requirements in Sec. [thinsp]447.203(b)(2)(iv) and (3)(ii).
Specifically, the regulatory language finalized in this rule at Sec.
[thinsp]447.203(b)(2)(iv) requires States to publish the average hourly
Medicaid FFS payment rate for personal care, home health aide,
homemaker, and habilitation services, as specified in Sec.
440.180(b)(2) through (4) and (6) in the payment rate disclosure. We
note that Sec. 447.203(b)(2)(iv) refers to ``habilitation'' services,
without distinguishing between residential habilitation services, day
habilitation services, and home-based habilitation services. As
previously discussed in section II.B., these categories will be further
described in subregulatory guidance. As discussed in a later response
to comments in this section, we also adding a requirement in the
payment rate disclosure that States must separately identify the
Medicaid FFS fee schedule payment rates for services that include
facility-related costs. We believe this distinction will generally only
arise for habilitation service rates, but we are applying it across all
four service categories to remain consistent with the amended
provisions at Sec. [thinsp]441.311(e)(2), and for consistency in
reporting across all four services within the payment rate disclosure.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\326\ 88 FR 27960 at 28005.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As discussed in the proposed rule, we initially proposed to include
in the payment rate disclosure requirement only personal care, home
health aide, and homemaker services because they are most commonly
conducted in beneficiaries' homes and general community settings and,
therefore, constituted the majority of FFS payments for direct care
workers delivering services under FFS.\327\ However, and as previously
stated, we agree with commenters' recommendation that the payment rate
disclosure should include payment rates for habilitation services. As
such, and to remain consistent with the HCBS provisions at Sec.
[thinsp]441.311(d)(2) and (e) finalized in this rule, we are adding
habilitation services as a category of service subject to the payment
rate disclosure.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\327\ 88 FR 27960 at 28005.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We acknowledge that habilitation services are also generally high-
volume,
[[Page 40742]]
high-cost services particularly in States where individuals with
intellectual or developmental disabilities receive personal care
services through habilitation. In other words, we acknowledge that some
States design the delivery of and payment rates for habilitation
services to include personal care services in these instances. If we
were to exclude habilitation services from the payment rate disclosure
provisions, then we would effectively exclude an important component of
personal care services provided to individuals with intellectual or
developmental disabilities from the payment rate disclosure, which
would not align with our intent to ensure transparency of payment rates
of personal care services within this provision. In instances where
States combine the delivery and payment of habilitation services with
personal care services, requiring reporting on both services supports
our goal of enhancing the transparency of payment rates that support
the delivery of personal care services while accommodating the
potential variation in classification a State utilizes. We want to note
a State has the option to indicate when a habilitation service rate
includes personal care services or otherwise provide further data
nuances while meeting the requirements of this final rule. In addition,
this change provides clarity to States that might have reported on
habilitation services under the personal care category of services in
the payment rate disclosure were it not for this revision to the
disclosure. Given the variation in how States deliver and pay for
habilitation services, separately identifying habilitation as a
category of service supports our payment rate transparency goals to
ensure that interested parties have basic information available to them
to understand Medicaid payment levels and the associated effects of
payment rates on access to care so that they may raise concerns to
State Medicaid agencies via the various forms of public process
available to interested parties.
As previously discussed in detail in an earlier response to
comments in section II. of this final rule, including habilitation
services in HCBS reporting requirements at Sec. [thinsp]441.311(d)(2)
and (e), as well as the payment rate disclosure at Sec.
[thinsp]447.203(b)(2) and (3)(ii), will ensure that services of
particular importance to certain beneficiary populations, namely
individuals with intellectual or developmental disabilities, are not
excluded from our efforts to promote payment rate transparency in the
interest of ensuring adequate access to care. As previously stated, in
accordance with commenters' recommendation, and to remain consistent
with the proposed HCBS provisions at Sec. [thinsp]441.311(d)(2) and
(e) as stated in the proposed rule,\328\ we are adding habilitation
services to the payment rate disclosure to ensure transparency of rates
that disproportionately affect access to services required by a unique
population, individuals with intellectual or developmental
disabilities.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\328\ 88 FR 27960 at 28005.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Comment: A few commenters expressed concern over certain terms used
in the proposed rule. Two commenters noted the terms ``rates,''
``payments,'' ``wage,'' and ``compensation'' were used throughout the
rule and were concerned about potential confusion about complying with
the payment rate disclosure with the terms not clearly defined. One
commenter was concerned the payment rate disclosure required States to
request detailed financial records and information from provider
organizations/agencies, which are often private businesses. Another
couple of commenters requested a Federal-level definition or
description of ``provider type'' and ``geographical location'' in the
context of the payment rate disclosure.
Response: The payment rate disclosure requires States to separately
identify the average hourly Medicaid FFS fee schedule payment rates for
personal care, home health aide, homemaker, and habilitation services
by population (pediatric and adult), provider type, geographical
location, and whether the payment rate includes facility-related costs,
as applicable, and by provider employment structures (individual
providers and provider agencies). We are not requiring in the payment
rate disclosure provisions at Sec. 447.203(b)(3)(ii) that States
collect wage, compensation (including benefits), or financial records
and information from provider agencies or to publish information about
the compensation the provider agency pays to its employee, where
applicable. In section II.C. of this final rule, wage is only mentioned
while summarizing comments received on the February 2022 RFI.\329\
Likewise, compensation is only mentioned in section II.C. of this final
rule while describing the difference between individual providers and
provider agencies and when requesting public comments on whether we
should have proposed a provision similar to the HCBS provisions we
proposed at Sec. 441.302(k)(3)(i) (where we proposed to require at
least 80 percent of all Medicaid FFS payments for certain services be
spent on compensation for direct care workers). Therefore, we are not
requiring that States collect wage or compensation (including benefits)
information from provider agencies to publish information about the
compensation that the provider agency pays to its employee in the
payment rate disclosure provisions at Sec. 447.203(b)(3)(ii). We
consistently used average hourly payment rate to refer to the payment
rate that States are required to publish in the payment rate
disclosure. As finalized in this rule, we are replacing the term
``average hourly payment rate'' with ``average hourly Medicaid FFS fee
schedule payment rate'' for clarity and consistency throughout Sec.
447.203(b).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\329\ Summary of Public Comments in response to the CMS 2022
Request for Information: Access to Coverage and Care in Medicaid &
CHIP. December 2022. For the report, see https://www.medicaid.gov/medicaid/access-care/downloads/access-rfi-2022-report.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We are not specifying a Federal definition for provider type
because of the variety of provider types a State could license and pay
for delivering Medicaid services. States are responsible for licensing
providers in their State and have the flexibility to license a wide
variety of provider types for personal care, home health aide,
homemaker, and habilitation services, including, but not limited to,
personal care attendants, home health aides, certified nursing
assistants, or registered nurses. We would like to ensure the full
scope of providers of personal care, home health aide, homemaker, and
habilitation services across States are included in the payment rate
disclosure for transparency purposes.
Finally, we also are not providing a Federal definition of
geographical location. Because the payment rate disclosure does not
involve a comparison to Medicare (or other payer), the data need only
reflect the State's specific circumstances. Different States have
different methods of assigning payment rates to particular regions and
are therefore best situated to determine how rates must reflect their
State-determined geographical designations.
Comment: A few commenters requested clarification regarding what
CMS meant by ``individual providers'' and ``providers employed by an
agency'' in the payment rate disclosure. Commenters were generally
unsure if States are required to publish the average hourly payment
rate paid to the agency or the compensation the agency pays to its
employee. One commenter
[[Page 40743]]
requested clarification on what CMS considers ``payments made to
individual providers'' and ``payments made. . .to providers employed by
an agency.'' Another commenter noted an example where agencies have
multiple direct care workers as employees and was unsure from the
language in the proposed rule (``providers employed by agency'') what
CMS considered to be the payment rate, either total compensation
(including benefits) divided by total hours, or the hourly base wage of
the direct care workers. One commenter specifically noted the use of
the terms ``direct care worker'' and ``provider'' are both used in 42
CFR 447.203(b)(3)(ii) and stated these terms are often misaligned. The
commenter explains that ``direct care worker'' or ``home care worker''
refers to personal care aides and home health aides, who provide hands-
on services to those in need while ``providers'' are the agencies that
employ direct care workers, train and screen them (health status and
background checks), supervise them, schedule their services, reimburse
their travel expenses, and support their professional development as
well as liaise with service recipients and their families, handle all
service billing, prepare for and respond to emergencies, and ensure
day-to-day compliance with State and Federal standards.
Response: We appreciate the commenters' examples to illustrate the
requested areas of clarification in the rule. As previously stated, in
this final rule, we are revising the language ``to providers employed
by an agency'' in Sec. 447.203(b)(2)(iv), (b)(3)(ii), and
(b)(3)(ii)(B) and finalizing the language as ``provider agencies'' for
clarification purposes to more accurately reflect what payment rate we
are requiring be published which is discussed shortly in this response
to comments. To clarify, in the payment rate disclosure, we are
requiring States to calculate and publish the average hourly Medicaid
FFS fee schedule payment rate that States pay to individual providers
and provider agencies, if the rates vary, and for payments that include
facility-related costs. As described in the proposed rule and this
final rule, individual providers in the context of the payment rate
disclosure at Sec. 447.203(b)(3)(ii) refers to individuals that are
direct care workers and often self-employed or contract directly with
the State to deliver services as a Medicaid provide; additionally, the
individual provider bills the States directly and is paid directly by
the State for services provided. To clarify, individual providers does
not refer to providers delivering services through self-directed models
with service budget authorized under 42 CFR 441.545, as these are not
considered Medicaid FFS fee schedule payment rates for the purposes of
the payment rate transparency publication, as well as the payment rate
disclosure at Sec. 447.203(b)(3)(ii), which was discussed in an
earlier response to commenters.
Provider agency in the context of the payment rate disclosure at
Sec. 447.203(b)(3)(ii) refers to the agency contracted or enrolled
with the State to deliver Medicaid services and the agency in turn
employs or contracts with direct care workers as employees of the
agency that works directly with the Medicaid agency to provide Medicaid
services; additionally, the agency bills the State directly and is paid
directly by the State for services their employees or contractors
provide. Also, as previously stated, to the extent a State pays a
provider agency a Medicaid FFS fee schedule payment rate (as discussed
in detail in an earlier response to comments in this section), then
those payment rates are subject to the payment rate disclosure
requirements at Sec. 447.203(b)(3)(ii).
As previously discussed in an earlier response to comments in this
section, we are not requiring in the payment rate disclosure provisions
at Sec. 447.203(b)(3)(ii) that States collect wage or compensation
(including benefits) information from provider agencies to publish
information about the compensation the provider agency pays to its
employee. While the comment focuses on the daily work of a ``direct
care worker'' and the functions of a ``provider'' to distinguish these
terms, for the purposes of this rule, we focused on the type of
employment structure (that is, individual provider or provider agency)
to best account for variations in types and levels of payment that may
occur for different provider types. We clarify that the codified
regulation text for Sec. 447.203(b)(3)(ii) does not include the phrase
``direct care worker.''
Comment: Many commenters raised concerns and requested
clarification regarding CMS requiring the payment rate being an hourly
unit in the payment rate disclosure. A few commenters requested CMS
clearly define what to include in the average hourly payment rate (for
example, wages or benefits) to ensure the average hourly payment rates
are comparable across States. A couple of commenters requested
clarification on how States should convert half day, per diem, or per
visit payment rates into an average hourly payment rate while one
commenter requested CMS permit States to publish an average payment
rate in the unit the State pays to ease burden on States. Lastly, one
commenter stated that services, such as adult day habilitation or
assisted living waiver, that cannot be calculated as an hourly rate
should be reported as daily rates.
Response: For personal care, home health aide, homemaker, or
habilitation services under FFS State plan authority, including
sections 1915(i), 1915(j), 1915(k) State plan services; section 1915(c)
waiver authority; and under section 1115 demonstration authority, this
final rule requires States to publish a payment rate disclosure that
expresses the State's payment rates as the average hourly Medicaid FFS
fee schedule payment rates, separately identified for payments made to
individual providers and provider agencies, if the rates vary, and for
payments that include facility-related costs, as applicable. States
have flexibility in operating their Medicaid programs to set payment
rates and payment policies for services that cover a particular unit of
time for delivering the service and, therefore, States currently pay
for these services in a wide range of units, from minutes to hourly to
daily to monthly units. As described in the proposed rule, because of
Medicaid's status as the most important payer for HCBS and lack of
other points of comparison (that is, Medicare, private payers, self-
pay), transparency and comparability among States is most important for
assessing compliance with section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act. To ensure
the payment rate disclosure supports our transparency efforts to help
ensure that interested parties have basic information available to them
to understand Medicaid payment levels and the associated effects of
payment rates on access to care so that they may raise concerns to
State Medicaid agencies via the various forms of public processes
available to interested parties, we are requiring States publish their
payment rates in a uniform and comparable format, that is, an average
hourly Medicaid FFS fee schedule payment rate. As previously discussed
in an earlier response to comments in this section, we are not
requiring in the payment rate disclosure provisions at Sec.
447.203(b)(3)(ii) that States to collect wage, compensation (including
benefits), or financial records and information from provider agencies
or to publish information about the compensation the provider agency
pays to its employee, where applicable.
Regarding commenters requesting clarification on how States should
convert half day, per diem, or per visit payment rates into an average
hourly
[[Page 40744]]
payment rate, we would like to clarify that States that pay for the
categories of services specified in paragraph (b)(2)(iv) in a unit
other than an hourly payment rate are expected to calculate an hourly
payment rate using the unit of the rate the State pays for the service
and the number of hours covered by that unit. For example, if a State
provides home health aide services as a half day or on a per diem
(daily) or per visit basis, then the State would be expected to divide
their payment rate for a half day, day, or visit by the number of hours
covered by the rate, such as 8 hours for a full day, to calculate an
average hourly Medicaid FFS fee schedule payment rate for the payment
rate disclosure. States have flexibility in operating their Medicaid
programs to set payment rates and payment policies for services that
cover a particular unit of time for delivering the service. We expect
States have a maximum number of hours factored into their payment rate
for services set on a per diem or per visit basis and States should use
that maximum number in calculating the average hourly Medicaid FFS fee
schedule payment rate, which is a simple average (arithmetic mean)
where all payment rates are summed, then divided by the number of all
hourly payment rates. Regarding commenters who stated that services,
such as adult day habilitation or assisted living waiver, that cannot
be calculated as an hourly rate should be reported as daily rates, we
are not incorporating this suggestion into the final rule as we would
expect States to use the previously described process to calculate an
hourly payment rate from a per diem (daily) rate.
As previously mentioned in an earlier response to comments, this
final rule adds habilitation services to the categories of services
subject to the payment rate disclosure. This final rule is also adding
a requirement that States must separately identify whether the average
hourly Medicaid FFS fee schedule payment rate for services includes
facility-related costs in Sec. 447.203(b)(2) and (3)(ii)(B) to remain
consistent with HCBS provisions finalized in this rule at Sec.
441.311(e)(2). We recognize that habilitation services can mean
residential habilitation, day habilitation, or home-based habilitation
services; as such, payment rates for habilitation services generally
may include facility-related costs, as in the case of residential or
day habilitation services delivered in a residential group home or day
center, whereas home-based habilitation would not include facility-
related costs.\330\ We remind States that we proposed an ``as
applicable'' clause in Sec. 447.203(b)(3)(ii)(B) that applies to the
ways payment rates can vary (that is, by employment structure,
population (pediatric and adult), provider type, geographical
location). The requirement to identify whether a payment rate includes
facility-related costs would also be covered by the ``as applicable''
clause. As such, we would not expect States to identify facility-
related costs for personal care, home health aide, homemaker, and
habilitation service payment rates when they are delivered in a home-
based setting. While Sec. 447.203(b)(2) and (3)(ii)(B) requires that
States must separately identify whether the average hourly Medicaid FFS
fee schedule payment rate includes facility-related costs may not apply
to all services and delivery sites (that is, in home or community
settings), we believe this provision will help to ensure transparency
of payment rates that may differ due to the inclusion of facility-
related costs.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\330\ We remind States that room and board is generally only
coverable and payable to an individual who has been admitted to a
medical institution as an ``inpatient'' as defined in 42 CFR 440.2
and 435.1010. Therefore, room and board in a facility setting that
provides residential or day habilitation service must be excluded
from the average hourly Medicaid FFS fee schedule payment rate for
habilitation services.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Comment: One commenter requested clarification regarding
individually negotiated rates and bundled rates being included in the
average hourly payment rate calculation in the payment rate disclosure.
Response: As previously described in detail in an earlier response
to comments in this section, we interpret the commenter's reference to
``negotiated rates'' to mean a provider payment rate where the
individual provider's final payment rate is agreed upon through
negotiation with the State Medicaid agency. For consistency with the
payment rate transparency publication requirement, negotiated rates are
not subject to the payment rate disclosure provision because these
payment rates are not subject to the payment rate transparency
publication as negotiated rates are not Medicaid FFS fee schedule
payment rates that are known in advance of a provider delivering a
service to a beneficiary.
Also, as previously discussed in detail in an earlier response to
comments in this section, for purposes of the payment rate transparency
provision in Sec. [thinsp]447.203(b)(1), Medicaid FFS fee schedule
payment rates are FFS payment amounts made to a provider, and known in
advance of a provider delivering a service to a beneficiary by
reference to a fee schedule. For consistency, we are using the same
description of Medicaid FFS fee schedule payment rates to describe the
payment rates that need to be included in the payment rate disclosure
in paragraph (b)(3)(ii)(B) of this section which would also consider
bundled payment rates to be Medicaid FFS fee schedule payment rates for
the purposes of the payment rate disclosure.
We also clarify that while PPS rates for services provided in
inpatient hospitals, outpatient hospitals, inpatient psychiatric
facilities, inpatient rehabilitation facilities, long-term care
hospitals, and nursing facilities are subject to the payment rate
transparency publication, these PPS rates are effectively excluded from
the payment rate disclosure because the categories of services
specified in Sec. [thinsp]447.203(b)(2)(iv), personal care, home
health aide, homemaker, and habilitation services, inherently delivered
in a home or community setting, outside of an institutional facility.
Comment: Many commenters suggested additional data elements and
levels of analysis for the payment rate disclosure. A couple of
commenters suggested additional breakdowns of the average hourly
payment rates, including when a State pays different rates for higher
level of need or complexity (such as paying tiered rates for a single
service when provided on nights, weekends, or in a particular
geographical area), demographic information (such as gender and race of
the direct care worker), and type of service provided. Another
commenter suggested CMS require States to identify the average portion
of the average payment rate that is used for compensation to pay the
direct care worker in the payment rate disclosure to enable easier
comparison of compensation between individual providers and to
providers employed by an agency. One commenter suggested requiring
States to publish the rates that provider agencies pay their employees
to ensure payment rates are fully disclosed at the State and provider
levels. One commenter suggested additional data elements be reported by
States in the payment rate disclosure: Medicaid-authorized payment
rates; minimum base wages that would be paid to direct care workers if
the proposed 80 percent requirement is met; average Medicaid payment
rates and average direct care worker wages; the minimum, maximum, and
median rates of wages; and number of direct care workers employed by
the agency.
[[Page 40745]]
Response: We appreciate commenters' suggestions for the payment
rate disclosure. As previously discussed in an earlier response to
commenters, in this final rule, we are revising the proposed language
``to providers employed by an agency'' in in Sec. 447.203(b)(2)(iv),
(b)(3)(ii), and (b)(3)(ii)(B) and finalizing it as ``provider
agencies'' for clarification purposes to more accurately reflect what
payment rate we are requiring be published, that is, the payment rate
the State pays a provider agency for services its employees have
delivered. While the commenters did not provide additional explanation
or examples of what they meant by requiring an additional break down of
the average hourly payment rate by ``type of service provided,'' we
clarify that the payment rate disclosure requires States to publish the
average hourly Medicaid FFS fee schedule payment rate for personal
care, home health aide, homemaker, and habilitation services, which are
types of services, separately. Additionally, while we are not
explicitly requiring States break down their payment rates by higher
level of need or complexity, we did propose and are finalizing the
requirement to break down the average hourly Medicaid FFS fee schedule
payment rate by geographical location, which was one of the examples of
additional criteria the commenter provided for suggested further
breakdown.
However, we are not incorporating the other suggestions to require
the other, additional breakdowns of the average hourly payments rates
as suggested by commenters or to require additional data elements be
reported by States in the payment rate disclosure, to remain consistent
across provisions of this final rule. If we were to include these
suggestions only for the payment rate disclosure, then the payment rate
breakdowns would be inconsistent with the payment rate transparency
publication and comparative payment rate analysis in terms of
requiring, for example, demographic information about the direct care
worker. During the initial compliance period of this final rule and in
consideration of the numerous, concurrent regulatory changes States are
facing, we believe consistency, where possible, across provisions will
contribute to our goal to standardize data and monitoring across
service delivery systems with the goal of improving access to care.
Likewise, we are not incorporating the suggestion to identify the
average portion of the average payment rate that is used for
compensation to pay the direct care worker in the payment rate
disclosure. While the suggestion aligns with the intent of HCBS
provisions we are finalizing in this rule at Sec. 441.302(k) as
discussed in section II.B.5 of this rule, we did not propose to require
80 percent of all payments with respect to services at Sec.
[thinsp]440.180(b)(2) through (4) must be spent on compensation for
direct care workers within the payment rate disclosure, as discussed in
a later response to comments in this section. As we remain focused on
consistency, because we are not requiring a certain percentage of all
payments be spent on compensation for direct care workers, we are also
not requiring at Sec. [thinsp]447.203(b)(3)(ii) that States to
identify the average portion of the average payment rate that is used
for compensation to pay the direct care worker.
We are also not incorporating the suggestion to require States
publish the rates that provider agencies pay their employees because,
similar to private payer data as a point of rate comparison, rates that
provider agencies pay their employees is generally considered
proprietary and this information may not be available to States. As
previously discussed in an earlier response to comments in this
section, we are not requiring in the payment rate disclosure provisions
at Sec. 447.203(b)(3)(ii) that States to collect wage, compensation
(including benefits), or financial records and information from
provider agencies or to publish information about the compensation the
provider agency pays to its employee, where applicable.
We want our initial focus to be on establishing the new payment
rate transparency, comparative payment rate analysis, and payment rate
disclosure requirements, providing States with support during the
compliance period, and ensuring these data are available to
beneficiaries, providers, CMS, and other interested parties for the
purposes of assessing access to care issues. While we are not adopting
these suggestions, we note that States have the flexibility to add the
elements described to their payment rate disclosure publication if they
so choose. We will also review how our finalized policies work in
conjunction with other policies finalized in this rule to identify any
potential areas for future enhancements suggested by the commenters.
Comment: One commenter suggested CMS could ease burden on States by
collecting State payment rates from Dual Special Needs Plans (D-SNPs)
through Medicare Advantage, rather than requiring States to calculate
and publish their average hourly payment rate for the payment rate
disclosure.
Response: We appreciate the commenters' suggestion; however, D-SNPs
do not provide us with the specific data elements (that is, State
Medicaid payment rates, number of Medicaid-paid claims, and number of
Medicaid enrolled beneficiaries) we are requiring in this rule. Some D-
SNPs only cover Medicare services and do not directly pay for Medicaid
services. Other D-SNPs do cover Medicaid services (either directly or
through an affiliated Medicaid managed care plan), but this rule only
applies to Medicaid FFS payment rates. Therefore, as D-SNPs do not
collect or provide us with Medicaid payment rate information that is
relevant to this rule, we will not be incorporating this suggestion.
Additionally, we believe that the States, as stewards of Medicaid
payment rates in the Medicaid program, would be the party best situated
to publish and analyze their own payment rate information for the
payment rate transparency requirements finalized in this rule,
including the payment rate disclosure. States' ownership of payment
rate information will ensure accurate payment rate transparency
publications, comparative payment rate analyses, and payment rate
disclosures.
Comment: A few commenters suggested alternative timelines for
States updating their payment rate disclosures. One commenter suggested
extending the requirement for updates to the payment rate disclosure to
every 3 years, instead of the proposed 2 years, to align with the
State's existing data publication cycle. However, another commenter
suggested the update frequency of the payment rate disclosure be every
year.
Response: We are finalizing the payment rate transparency
requirements, including the payment rate disclosure, with an
applicability date of July 1, 2026; however, we are not changing the
proposed timeframe of 2 years for States to update their payment rate
disclosure. We believe requiring updates to the payment rate disclosure
every 2 years appropriately balances State burden and maintaining up-
to-date information in the payment rate disclosure.
Comment: Most commenters were supportive in response to our request
for public comment on whether we should propose a provision to what we
proposed at Sec. [thinsp]441.302(k) (where we proposed to require that
at least 80 percent of all Medicaid FFS payments with respect to
personal care, home health aide, and homemaker services provided by
individual providers and providers employed by an agency must be spent
on compensation for direct care
[[Page 40746]]
workers) in Sec. [thinsp]447.203(b) on the basis that this provision
would help address the direct care workforce crisis and access issues.
One commenter suggested that if such a provision were proposed and
implemented, then CMS should implement an accountability requirement
where States would be required to validate that direct care workers are
receiving 80 percent of all Medicaid FFS payments.
Some commenters opposed this consideration and suggested that, if
this provision is finalized, the requirement would negatively affect
access to care. These commenters aligned with those in opposition to
the proposed HCBS provisions at Sec. 441.302(k), as discussed in
section II.B.5 of this rule. These commenters opposed this because the
policy does not consider that given low levels of payment for relevant
services, the remaining 20 percent of the payment rate would be
insufficient for the administrative costs (that is, staff, technology,
training, travel, oversight) of running a business, provider agencies
are already challenged by worker shortages, providers would withdraw
from the Medicaid program or stop serving Medicaid beneficiaries, and
the requirement would be ineffective without supportive policies in
place to implement standards for determining sufficient Medicaid
payment rates that provide competitive wages, promote quality services,
and ensure compliance with all State and Federal regulations.
Commenters in opposition recommended alternatives including: a lower
percentage than 80 percent of all Medicaid FFS payments going to
compensation for direct care workers, establishing quality outcome
metrics, and focusing on wage review and transparency.
Response: We thank commenters for their input and suggestions. We
also understand the commenters' concerns. Given that our work to better
ensure access in the Medicaid program is ongoing, we intend to gain
implementation experience with this final rule, particularly from the
HCBS provisions finalized in this rule at Sec. 441.302(k) as discussed
in section II.B.5, and we will consider the recommendations provided on
the proposed rule to help inform any future rulemaking in this area, as
appropriate.
Comment: Many commenters expressed concerns about requiring States
to publish the average hourly payment rate that States pay for personal
care, home health aide, and homemaker services. These commenters were
generally concerned that requiring States to publish this information
could result in unintended consequences or be ineffective for assessing
and improving access to care. The unintended consequences commenters
were primarily concerned about included contributing to providers
leaving areas where there are low Medicaid payment rates which could
create or exacerbate access to care issues in that area and
misunderstandings of the required average hourly payment rate without
additional context about employee benefits (for example, paid time off,
health insurance, pension, employee assistance program) that are not
easily disaggregated from an hourly Medicaid service payment rate.
Regarding commenter concerns that publishing the average hourly rate
would be ineffective, one commenter stated that their State already
publishes provider rates, and it has not resolved issues with low and
unequal payment rates among providers employed by agencies.
Response: We understand commenters' concerns about the effects of
the payment rate disclosure in practice. Regarding commenters' concerns
that providers could leave an area where there are low Medicaid payment
rates, we would like to emphasize that the payment rate disclosure
requirements will afford more transparency to CMS and the public about
rates for HCBS, but they will also provide States with an opportunity
to identify where existing rates could create an access issue. If the
difference in rates between two areas enlists more providers to one
area over another, States may need to consider revisions to their
payment rates to comply with section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act to
``assure that payments . . . are sufficient to enlist enough providers
so that care and services are available under the plan at least to the
extent that such care and services are available to the general
population in the geographic area.'' Therefore, if the transparency
created by the payment rate disclosure requirements induces providers
to switch locations, affecting access to care, we would expect States
to address the rate disparities that the commenter has correctly
identified are negatively impacting access.
Regarding commenters' concerns that there could be
misunderstandings of the published average hourly payment rate without
additional context about employee benefits, the payment rate disclosure
provisions at Sec. 447.203(b)(3)(ii) requires States to separately
identify the average hourly Medicaid FFS fee schedule payment rates for
personal care, home health aide, homemaker, and habilitation services
by population (pediatric and adult), provider type, geographical
location, and whether the payment rate includes facility-related costs,
as applicable, and by provider employment structures (individual
providers and provider agencies). As previously discussed in an earlier
response to comments in this section, we are not requiring in the
payment rate disclosure provisions at Sec. 447.203(b)(3)(ii) that
States to collect wage, compensation (including benefits), or financial
records and information from provider agencies or to publish
information about the compensation the provider agency pays to its
employee, where applicable. In other words, we are focused on payment
rate transparency for personal care, home health aide, homemaker, and
habilitation services rather than what the providers of these services
does with their payment rate (that is, pay for employee benefits).
Given that our work to better ensure access in the Medicaid program is
ongoing, we intend to gain implementation experience with this final
rule, and we will consider the recommendations provided on the proposed
rule to help inform any future rulemaking in this area, as appropriate.
We disagree with the commenters that publishing the average hourly
Medicaid FFS fee schedule payment rate of personal care, home health
aide, homemaker, and habilitation providers through the payment rate
disclosure requirement will be ineffective, including because one
commenter's State already publishes this information, and the commenter
has not seen improvement in low and unequal payment rates among
providers employed by agencies. We believe a broad requirement for all
States that provide personal care, home health aide, homemaker, and
habilitation services through the FFS delivery system will help ensure
consistency across delivery systems in monitoring and ensuring access
to care, particularly with the HCBS provisions at Sec.
[thinsp]441.311(d)(2) and (e), which require annual State reporting on
access and payment adequacy metrics for the same set of services as the
payment rate disclosure as well as with the Managed Care final rule (as
published elsewhere in this Federal Register) provisions at Sec.
[thinsp]438.207(b)(3)(ii) for Medicaid to require a payment analysis of
the total amount paid for homemaker services, home health aide
services, and personal care services and the percentage that results
from dividing the total amount paid by the amount the State's Medicaid
FFS program would have paid for the same claims. While the commenter
did not provide additional details about
[[Page 40747]]
their State's publication of payment rates, we believe that with a
broad rate transparency requirement across delivery systems, we can
reasonably expect that States, CMS, and interested parties will have
transparent payment rate information available to them across delivery
systems. Transparency would continually help States and CMS to ensure
that their Medicaid payment rates are set at a level that is likely
sufficient to meet the statutory access standard under section
1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act that payments be sufficient to enlist enough
providers so that care and services are available under the plan at
least to the extent that such care and services are available to the
general population in the geographic area. Transparency also helps to
ensure that interested parties have basic information available to them
to understand Medicaid payment levels and the associated effects of
payment rates on access to care so that they may raise concerns to
State Medicaid agencies via the various forms of public process
available to interested parties.
Comment: Several commenters expressed concern over low payment
rates in Medicaid, particularly for HCBS, dental services, and
behavioral health care, and the negative impact on access to care. Many
commenters suggested that the primary causes of these low payment rates
in Medicaid are stagnant and insufficient payment rates left unadjusted
for rising costs, inflation, new regulatory requirements, and increased
service expectations over time, particularly for the HCBS direct care
workforce.
A few of these commenters suggested CMS could address these issues
directly by requiring States conduct regular rate reviews (for example,
annual, biennial, triennial, or when a programmatic change occurs),
publish the results, and update their payment rates, when necessary,
based on criteria that CMS sets. One commenter suggested this could be
achieved thorough regular SPA and waiver reviews where CMS could
prevent stagnant and insufficient rates from being maintained.
Particularly for HCBS, one commenter recommended setting a national
standard base pay rate for direct care workers as determined by the
States' cost of living index or requiring States have parity for all
State payment rates, regardless of geographic location, but allow
differences in payment rates for services provided to pediatric and
adult populations.
Response: We appreciate the commenters' suggestions. However, we
are limited in our authority to directly address the commenters'
concerns regarding stagnant and insufficient payment rates. With
limited statutory exceptions (such as for hospice services under
section 1902(a)(13)(B) of the Act and FQHC/RHC services under section
1902(bb) of the Act, which each establish a floor for provider payment
rates which prohibits States from implementing rate reductions below
the amount calculated through the methodology provided in the statute),
we do not have the authority to require States update their payment
rates to a particular level. Section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act requires
that State plans assure that payments are consistent with efficiency,
economy, and quality of care and are sufficient to enlist enough
providers so that care and services are available under the plan at
least to the extent that such care and services are available to the
general population in the geographic area. Under the statutory
authority at section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act and through this final
rule, we are requiring States to develop and publish a payment rate
transparency publication, comparative payment rate analysis of certain
services, and payment rate disclosure for certain HCBS, which are
directed at helping the States and CMS ensure that State payment rates
are consistent with the payment standards under section 1902(a)(30)(A)
of the Act.
While we are not explicitly requiring that States update their
payment rates to a particular level or regularly submit SPAs and/or
waivers (except where desired by the State to implement a programmatic
change, consistent with existing requirements) waivers in this
rulemaking, we believe there are three requirements within our
statutory authority and finalized by this rule that effectively address
the concerns raised by commenters. First, this final rule requires
States to review their payment rates during the development and
publication of their payment rate transparency publications,
comparative payment rate analyses, and payment rate disclosures.
Specifically, the payment rate transparency publication requires States
to regularly review their rates in the course of publishing them and
maintaining the current accuracy of the publication, including
publishing the date the payment rate publication website was last
updated, which will reveal any rates that may be stagnant and
potentially insufficient. States must also ensure the data in the
publication is kept current (that is, updates must be made within 1
month of a rate change). With this final rule, we focused on
transparency to help ensure that interested parties have basic
information available to them to understand Medicaid payment levels and
the associated effects of payment rates on access to care so that they
may raise concerns to State Medicaid agencies via the various forms of
public process available to interested parties. We acknowledge the
provisions finalized in this rule do not specifically require rate
reviews to ensure payment rates are adjusted for rising costs,
inflation, new regulatory requirements, and increased service
expectations that commenters suggested are factors contributing to a
crisis in the HCBS direct care workforce. However, this provision
creates a process to help validate that payment rates are compliant
with section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act.
Second, this final rule requires States to establish an advisory
group for interested parties to advise and consult on certain current
and proposed Medicaid provider payment rates to ensure the relevant
Medicaid payment rates are sufficient to ensure access to homemaker
services, home health aide services, and personal care services for
Medicaid beneficiaries at least as great as available to the general
population in the geographic area. We strongly encourage States to use
this group as part of a process to conduct rate reviews and encourage
eligible participants (including direct care workers, beneficiaries,
beneficiaries' authorized representatives, and other interested parties
impacted by the services rates in question, as determined by the State)
to join their State's interested parties advisory group once
established to bring their concerns directly to States that are setting
the payment rates for HCBS.
Third, this final rule establishes a two-tiered approach for
determining the level of access analysis States would be required to
conduct when proposing provider payment rate reductions or payment
restructurings. The first tier of this approach, Sec.
[thinsp]447.203(c)(1), sets out three criteria for States to meet when
proposing payment rate reductions or payment restructurings in
circumstances when the changes could result in diminished access that,
if met, would not require a more detailed analysis to establish that
the proposal meets the access requirement in section 1902(a)(30)(A) of
the Act. However, meeting the three criteria described in the first
tier does not guarantee that the SPA would be approved, if other
applicable Federal requirements are not met. The second tier of this
approach, Sec. [thinsp]447.203(c)(2) requires the State to conduct a
more extensive access analysis in addition to providing the results of
the analysis in the first tier. We believe this two-tiered approach, in
[[Page 40748]]
combination with updated public process requirements in Sec.
447.203(c)(4) (which this final rule relocates from Sec.
447.203(b)(7)) will help us ensure that a State's proposed Medicaid
payment rates and/or payment structure are consistent with the access
requirement in section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act at the time the State
proposes a payment rate reduction or payment restructuring in
circumstances when the changes could result in diminished access.
After consideration of public comments, we are finalizing all
provisions under Sec. 447.203(b)(2) to (4) as proposed, apart from the
following changes.
Deleted the word ``following'' in two places in the
following sentence in Sec. 447.203(b)(2) ``The State agency is
required to develop and publish a comparative payment rate analysis of
Medicaid payment rates for each of the following categories of services
in paragraphs (b)(2)(i) through (iii) of this section and a payment
rate disclosure of Medicaid payment rates for each of the following
categories of services in paragraph (b)(2)(iv) of this section, as
specified in paragraph (b)(3) of this section.'' The finalized language
now states ``The State agency is required to develop and publish a
comparative payment rate analysis of Medicaid payment rates for each of
the categories of services in paragraphs (b)(2)(i) through (iii) of
this section and a payment rate disclosure of Medicaid payment rates
for each of the categories of services in paragraph (b)(2)(iv) of this
section, as specified in paragraph (b)(3) of this section.'' (bold
added to emphasize the deleted word).
Replaced ``Medicaid payment rates'' with ``Medicaid fee-
for-service fee schedule payment rates'' in Sec. 447.203(b)(2) with
regard to the comparative payment rate analysis. The finalized language
now states ``. . . publish a comparative payment rate analysis of
Medicaid fee-for-service fee schedule payment rates. . .'' for
clarification and consistent terminology usage within Sec. 447.203(b).
Replaced ``Medicaid payment rates'' with ``average hourly
Medicaid fee-for-service fee schedule payment rates'' in Sec.
447.203(b)(2) with regard to the payment rate disclosure. The finalized
language now states ``. . . [publish] . . . payment rate disclosure of
the average hourly Medicaid fee-for-service fee schedule payment
rates'' for clarification and consistent terminology usage within Sec.
447.203(b).
Revised sentence structure organization and added
clarifying language to the proposed language stating how the Medicaid
FFS payment rates published in the comparative payment rate analysis
and the payment rate disclosure need to be listed, if the rates vary.
The proposed language in Sec. [thinsp]447.203(b)(2) stated ``The State
agency is required to develop and publish a comparative payment rate
analysis of Medicaid payment rates for each of the following categories
of services in paragraphs (b)(2)(i) through (iii) of this section and a
payment rate disclosure of Medicaid payment rates for each of the
following categories of services in paragraph (b)(2)(iv) of this
section, as specified in paragraph (b)(3) of this section. If the rates
vary, the State must separately identify the payment rates by
population (pediatric and adult), provider type, and geographical
location, as applicable.''
++ Added the following sentence to address payment rate variation
for the comparative payment rate analysis: ``If the rates vary, the
State must separately identify the payment rates by population
(pediatric and adult), provider type, and geographical location, as
applicable.'' in Sec. [thinsp]447.203(b)(2).
++ Revised the following sentence to add payment rate variation
related to facility-related costs for the payment rate disclosure: ``If
the rates vary, the State must separately identify the payment rates by
population (pediatric and adult), provider type, geographical location,
and whether the payment rate includes facility-related costs, as
applicable.'' (new language identified in bold).
The language is finalized as ``The State agency is required to
develop and publish a comparative payment rate analysis of Medicaid
fee-for-service fee schedule payment rates for each of the categories
of services in paragraphs (b)(2)(i) through (iii) of this section. If
the rates vary, the State must separately identify the payment rates by
population (pediatric and adult), provider type, and geographical
location, as applicable. The State agency is further required to
develop and publish a payment rate disclosure of the average hourly
Medicaid fee-for-service fee schedule payment rates for each of the
categories of services in paragraph (b)(2)(iv) of this section, as
specified in paragraph (b)(3) of this section. If the rates vary, the
State must separately identify the payment rates by population
(pediatric and adult), provider type, geographical location, and
whether the payment rate includes facility-related costs, as
applicable.'' in paragraph (b)(2). (new language identified in bold).
Updated ``Outpatient behavioral health services'' as a
category of service in Sec. [thinsp]447.203(b)(2)(iii) to ``Outpatient
mental health and substance use disorder services.''
Added ``habilitation'' as a category of service in the
payment rate disclosure described in Sec. [thinsp]447.203(b)(2)(iv)
and added a reference to Sec. 440.180(b)(6). The finalized language
now states ``Personal care, home health aide, homemaker, and
habilitation services, as specified in Sec. 440.180(b)(2) through (4)
and (6), provided by individual providers and provider agencies (new
language identified in bold).
Clarified which publication requirements apply to the
comparative payment rate analysis and payment rate disclosure in Sec.
[thinsp]447.203(b)(3) and (b)(4) to align with a previously described
update to the organizational structure of paragraph (b)(1) to add
romanettes to specify the ``publication requirements described in
paragraph (b)(1) through (b)(1)(ii) of this section.'' (new language
identified in bold).
Replaced ``Medicaid base payment rates'' with ``base
Medicaid fee-for-service fee schedule payment rates'' in Sec.
447.203(b)(3)(i)(B) through (E) for clarification and consistent
terminology usage within Sec. 447.203(b).
Replaced ``Medicare non-facility payment rate'' with
``Medicare non-facility payment rate as established in the annual
Medicare Physician Fee Schedule final rule'' in Sec.
447.203(b)(3)(i)(C) and (D) for clarification.
Added ``and whether the payment rate includes facility-
related costs'' in Sec. 447.203(b)(3)(ii)(B) to account for facility-
related costs in habilitation settings, particularly residential
habilitation or day habilitation. The finalized language now states,
``[t]he disclosure must identify the average hourly Medicaid fee-for-
service fee schedule payment rates by applicable category of service,
including, if the rates vary, separate identification of the average
hourly Medicaid fee-for-service fee schedule payment rates for payments
made to individual providers and provider agencies, by population
(pediatric and adult), provider type, geographical location, and
whether the payment rate includes facility-related costs, as applicable
in Sec. 447.203(b)(3)(ii)(B) (new language identified in bold).
Replaced ``average hourly payment rate'' with ``average
hourly Medicaid fee-for-service fee schedule payment rates'' in Sec.
447.203(b)(3)(ii) and (ii)(B) and (C) for clarification and consistent
terminology usage within Sec. 447.203(b).
Replaced ``to providers employed by an agency'' with
``provider agencies''
[[Page 40749]]
in Sec. 447.203(b)(2)(iv), (b)(3)(ii), and (b)(3)(ii)(B) for
clarification.
Replaced ``Medicaid payment rates'' with ``Medicaid fee-
for-service fee schedule payment rates'' in Sec. 447.203(b)(4) for
clarification and consistent terminology usage within Sec. 447.203(b).