Arkansas Administrative Code
Agency 016 - DEPARTMENT OF HUMAN SERVICES
Division 06 - Medical Services
Rule 016.06.09-042 - Prosthetics Update Transmittal #70
Current through Register Vol. 49, No. 9, September, 2024
Section II Prosthetics
Arkansas Medicaid covers apnea monitors only for infants less than one (1) year of age. Use of the apnea monitor must be medically necessary and prescribed by a physician.
A primary care physician (PCP) is not required until an infant's Medicaid eligibility has been determined. No PCP referral for medical services is required for retroactive eligibility periods.
For the initial certification, the prescribing physician must sign form DMS-679A titled Prescription and Prior Authorization Request for Medical Equipment Excluding Wheelchairs and Wheelchair Components. The physician's signature must be an original, not a stamp. When an apnea monitor is prescribed during a hospital discharge, the physician ordering the apnea monitor must be in consultation with a neonatologist or pulmonologist.
As necessary, the primary care physician's (PCP's) name and provider number must also be indicated on DMS-679A titled Prescription and Prior Authorization Request for Medical Equipment Excluding Wheelchairs and Wheelchair Components. The PCP's signature is not required on the initial certification but he or she must sign all re-certifications.
A prior authorization request for an apnea monitor must be submitted to AFMC on form DMS-679A titled Prescription and Prior Authorization Request for Medical Equipment Excluding Wheelchairs and Wheelchair Components. View or print form DMS-679 and instructions for completion. View or print AFMC contact information.
Compliance, and the download monitor report, must accompany the request for continued use of the apnea monitor following the initial sixty-day time period.
Prior authorization is not required for the initial sixty-day period of use of the monitor. If the apnea monitor is needed longer than an initial sixty-day period, prior authorization is required.
A new prescription, documentation of compliance during the initial sixty-day period and proof of medical necessity for the continuation of monitoring are required.
The following criteria, established by the American Academy of Pediatrics, are to be used to evaluate the need for an apnea monitor after the initial sixty-day period:
The use of home cardiorespiratory monitoring in this population should be limited to approximately 43 weeks post conceptual age or after the cessation of extreme episodes, whichever comes last.
In many of these cases, the use of pulse oximetry monitoring is superior and preferred over simple cardiorespiratory monitoring.
An ALTE is defined as "an episode that is frightening to the observer and is characterized by some combination of apnea (central or occasionally obstructive), color change (usually cyanotic or pallid but occasionally erythematous or plethoric), marked change in muscle tone (usually marked limpness), choking or gagging."