Mississippi Administrative Code
Title 23 - Division of Medicaid
Part 200 - General Provider Information
Chapter 4 - Provider Enrollment
Rule 23-200-4.2 - Conditions of Participation
Universal Citation: MS Code of Rules 23-200-4.2
Current through September 24, 2024
A. Providers must comply with the following conditions to participate in the Mississippi Medicaid program:
1. All providers must complete
provider agreements and/or provider enrollment application packages per the
requirements of the Division of Medicaid.
2. The provider must be licensed and/or
certified by the appropriate federal and/or state authority, as
applicable.
3. Agree to furnish
required documentation of the provider's business transactions per
42
C.F.R. §
455.105(b) to
the Division of Medicaid or to the Department of Health & Human Services
(HHS) within thirty-five (35) days of the date on the request.
4. Agree to abide by the requirements of the
Affordable Care Act (ACA) concerning the following:
a) Provider Screening Procedures ( 42 C.F.R.
§§ 455.400-470), based on the category of the provider type, which
includes license verifications, database checks of eligible professionals,
owners, managing employees, etc., fingerprinting and criminal background
checks, and/or unscheduled or unannounced site visits based on required
screening rules.
1) Providers with an expired
license will be denied enrollment.
2) Providers with any current disciplinary
limitations on their license may be denied enrollment.
3) Providers that meet any of the exclusion
requirements according to state and/or federal law will be denied
enrollment.
b) Provider
Application Fees (42 C.F.R. §
455.460).
c) Temporary Moratorium (42 C.F.R. §
455.470).
d) Provider Termination (42 C.F.R. §
455.416).
e) Payment Suspensions (42 C.F.R. §
455.23).
5. The provider agrees to review, complete
and submit a completed re-validation document as required by the policies of
Division of Medicaid. All providers must undergo a revalidation screening
process at least once every five years in accordance with
42 C.F.R. §
455.414.
6. All professional and institutional
providers participating in the Medicaid program are required to keep records
that fully disclose the extent of services rendered and billed under the
program. These records must be retained for a minimum of five (5) years in
order to comply with all federal and state regulations and laws. When there is
a change of ownership or retirement, a provider must continue to maintain all
Medicaid beneficiary records, unless an alternative method for maintaining the
records has been established and approved by the Division of Medicaid. Upon
request, providers are required to make such records available to
representatives of the Division of Medicaid and others as provided by law in
validation of any claims. The Division of Medicaid staff shall have immediate
access to the provider's physical location, facilities, records, documents, and
any other records relating to medical care and services rendered to
beneficiaries during regular business hours. Providers must maintain records as
indicated in Part 200 Chapter 1, Rule
1.3: Maintenance of
Records.
7. The provider must
comply with the requirements of the Social Security Act and federal regulations
concerning: (a) disclosure by providers of ownership and control information;
and (b) disclosure of information by a provider's owners of any persons with
convictions of criminal offenses against Medicare, Medicaid, or the Title XX
services program. If the Division of Medicaid ascertains that a provider has
been convicted of a felony under federal or state law for an offense that the
Division of Medicaid determines is detrimental to the best interests of the
program or of Medicaid beneficiaries, the Division of Medicaid may refuse to
enter into an agreement with such provider, or may terminate or refuse to renew
an existing agreement.
8. The
provider must agree to accept payment for Medicaid covered services in
accordance with the rules and regulations for reimbursement, as declared by the
Secretary of Health and Human Services and by the state of Mississippi, and
established under the Mississippi Medicaid program.
9. The provider must agree to accept, as
payment in full, the amount paid by the Medicaid program for all services
covered under the Medicaid program within the beneficiary's service limits with
the exception of authorized deductibles, co-insurance, and co-payments. All
services covered under the Medicaid program will be made available to the
beneficiary. Beneficiaries will not be required to make deposits or payments on
charges for services covered by Medicaid. A provider cannot pick and choose
procedures for which the provider will accept Medicaid. At no time shall the
provider be authorized to split services and require the beneficiary to pay for
one type of service and Medicaid to pay for another. All services provided to
Medicaid beneficiaries will be billed to Medicaid where Medicaid covers said
services, unless some other resources, other than the beneficiary or the
beneficiary's family, will pay for the service.
10. For most medical services rendered, the
provider must agree to take all reasonable measures to determine the legal
liabilities of third parties including Medicare and private health insurance to
pay for Medicaid covered services, and if third party liability is established,
to bill the third party before filing a Medicaid claim. Exceptions to this rule
are outlined in Part 306 Third Party Recovery. For the purpose of this
provision, the term "third party" includes an individual, institution,
corporation, or public or private agency that is or may be liable to pay all or
part of the medical costs of injury, disease or disability of a Medicaid
beneficiary and to report any such payments as third parties on claims filed
for Medicaid payment.
11.
Participating providers of services under the Medicaid program, i.e.,
physicians, dentists, hospitals, nursing facilities, pharmacies, etc., must
comply with the requirements of Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964,
Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973, and the Age of Discrimination
Act of 1975. Under the terms of these Acts, a participating provider or vendor
of services under any program using federal funds is prohibited from making a
distinction in the provision of services to beneficiaries on the grounds of
race, color, national origin or handicap. This includes, but is not limited to,
distinctions made on the basis of race, color, national origin, age or handicap
with respect to: (a) waiting rooms, (b) hours of appointment, (c) order of
seeing patients, or (d) assignment of patients to beds, rooms or sections of a
facility. The Division of Medicaid is responsible for routine and complaint
investigations dealing with these two (2) Acts.
12. Participating providers are prohibited
from making a distinction in the provision of services to Medicaid
beneficiaries on the grounds of being Medicaid beneficiaries. This includes,
but is not limited to, making distinctions with regard to waiting rooms, hours
of appointment, or order of seeing patients, third party sources (pursuant to
federal regulations), and quality of services provided, including those
provided in a facility.
13. The
provider must agree that claims submitted will accurately reflect both the
nature of the service and who performed the service.
14. The provider must maintain a copy of the
Administrative Code for Mississippi Medicaid and all revisions.
15. Participating providers must be eligible
to participate in the Medicaid program as determined by DHHS-Office of
Inspector General (DHHS-OIG). Certain individuals and entities are ineligible
to participate in the Medicaid program on the basis of their exclusion as
sanctioned by DHHS-OIG by authority contained in Sections 1128 and 1156 of the
Social Security Act. The effect of exclusion is that no program payment will be
made for any items or services, including administrative and management
services, furnished, ordered or prescribed by an excluded individual or entity
under the Medicare, Medicaid, and State Children's Health Insurance Programs
during the period of the exclusion. Program payments will not be made to an
entity in which an excluded person is serving as an employee, administrator,
operator, or in any other capacity, for any services including administrative
and management services furnished, ordered, or prescribed on or after the
effective date of the exclusion. In addition, no payment may be made to any
business or facility that submits bills for payment of items or services
provided by an excluded party. The exclusion remains in effect until the
subject is reinstated by action of the DHHS-OIG. It is the responsibility of
each Medicaid provider to assure that no excluded person or entity is employed
in a capacity which would allow the excluded party to order, provide,
prescribe, or supply services or medical care for beneficiaries, or allow the
excluded party to hold an administrative, billing, or management position
involving services or billing for beneficiaries.
16. The provider must verify with the NET
Broker that all non-emergency transportation (NET) services are for a Medicaid
covered service only. The provider is only required to verify the date, time,
beneficiary's Medicaid number, and provide confirmation that a Medicaid covered
service will be provided at the appointment.
B. Out-of-State Providers
1. The Division of Medicaid may enroll an
out-of-state provider to cover medical services if one (1) of the following
conditions is met:
a) That are needed because
of an emergency medical condition as defined in Miss. Admin. Code Title 23,
Part 201, Rule
1.2.G.
b) That are needed because the beneficiary's
health would be endangered if they were required to travel to their state of
residence.
c) That the Division of
Medicaid has determined, on the basis of medical advice, are needed and more
readily available in the other state.
d) The location of services provided is
within:
1) Thirty (30) miles of the
Mississippi state border for a pharmacy, or
2) Sixty (60) miles from the Mississippi
state border for certain other provider types.
e) Or as determined by the Division of
Medicaid.
2. The Division
of Medicaid may use the results of the provider screenings performed by another
state's Medicaid or Children's Health Insurance Program (CHIP) agency in the
state in which the out-of-state provider is located or by a Medicare
Contractor.
3. An out-of-state
provider that has not billed the Division of Medicaid within a three (3) year
period will be disenrolled except for certain providers, as determined by the
Division of Medicaid, that are necessary to maintain access to covered services
not available in Mississippi. Once disenrolled, the out-of-state provider may
reapply in accordance with the out-of-state enrollment policy.
4. Out-of-state providers must adhere to the
Division of Medicaid's policies and procedures.
C. Providers that are closing, discontinuing a service, or otherwise stopping services for reasons unrelated to the beneficiary's condition or medical necessity of the services must provide a thirty (30) day written notice to beneficiaries and the Division of Medicaid prior to ending the services:
1. Providers
must assist with the transition of the beneficiary to another service
provider.
2. Providers who fail to
provide proper notice will not be reimbursed for services provided during the
thirty (30) day period the beneficiary should have been notified unless the
provider was prevented from making the notification due to causes beyond the
reasonable control of the Provider, including but not limited to fire, floods,
embargoes, war, acts of war, insurrections, riots, strikes, lockouts or other
labor disturbances, or acts of God; provided, however, that a Provider so
affected shall use reasonable commercial efforts to avoid or remove such causes
of nonperformance, and shall provide proper notice hereunder immediately
whenever such causes are removed. Changes to the scope of available services or
reimbursement methodology for the provision of certain services through
legislative or regulatory action shall not constitute an unforeseeable
circumstance within the meaning of this section.
3. Facilities and/or entities that employ
multiple enrolled providers are not required to provide the thirty (30) day
notice when an enrolled provider that is employed leaves the facility and/or
entity as long as the beneficiary has been transitioned to another provider
within the same facility/entity and there is no interruption in
services.
42 C.F.R. §§ 431.52, 431.107, 447.15, 455.412, 455.460, 455.470; Miss. Code Ann. §§ 43-13-117, 43-13-118, 43-13-121.
Disclaimer: These regulations may not be the most recent version. Mississippi may have more current or accurate information. We make no warranties or guarantees about the accuracy, completeness, or adequacy of the information contained on this site or the information linked to on the state site. Please check official sources.
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