Ohio Administrative Code
Title 5160 - Ohio Department of Medicaid
Chapter 5160-11 - Independent Laboratory and X-Ray Services
Section 5160-11-11 - Laboratory services
Universal Citation: OH Admin Code 5160-11-11
Current through all regulations passed and filed through September 16, 2024
(A) Definitions and explanations that apply to this chapter of the Administrative Code.
(1)
"Clinical
consultation" is the formal evaluation by a physician or other qualified
healthcare professional, performed on the written order of a treating
practitioner, of test results that appear to be abnormal. Payment for the
clinical consultation is based on the physician fee schedule relative value
file published by the centers for medicare and medicaid services (CMS). (The
procedure code used for clinical consultation is different and separate from
the procedure code for the test whose results are being
evaluated.)
(2)
"Clinical pathology interpretation" is the
interpretation, performed on the written order of a treating practitioner by
another practitioner, of the results of any of a certain group of clinical
diagnostic procedures that are distinguished by three shared traits:
(a)
Separate payment
may be made for interpretation;
(b)
Payment for the
clinical diagnostic procedures themselves is based on the clinical laboratory
fee schedule published by CMS; and
(c)
Payment for the
clinical pathology interpretation is based on the physician fee schedule
relative value file published by CMS. (The procedure code for the clinical
pathology interpretation consists of a professional component modifier appended
to the relevant clinical diagnostic procedure code.)
(3)
"Eligible
provider" has the same meaning as in rule
5160-1-17 of the Administrative
Code.
(4)
"Global procedure" or "total procedure" is a procedure,
in its entirety, that comprises both a technical component (the part of a
laboratory procedure that relies on the technical skill of a trained individual
to secure a specimen and prepare it for analysis) and a professional component
(the part of a laboratory procedure that relies on the professional skill or
training of a physician or other qualified healthcare professional to analyze
the results produced by the technical component and to provide a written report
of findings).
(5)
"Independent" means separate from an attending or
consulting practitioner's office or group practice, an ambulatory surgery
center, a hospital, or a nursing facility. A laboratory facility under the
ownership and direction of an individual practitioner or group practice is
considered to be independent if it is represented to other practitioners that
both the owners and directors and the facility itself are available for the
performance of procedures.
(6)
"Routine
procedure" is a procedure for which no separate payment is made for either of
two reasons:
(a)
It is very common and is performed only in connection
with another procedure (e.g., the collection of a clean-catch urine sample or a
throat swab); or
(b)
It is included in a treatment protocol for which a
composite payment amount has been established (e.g., a specific laboratory test
performed for an individual receiving dialysis, the reading by automated
glucose monitor of blood samples taken from nursing facility residents who have
diabetes).
(7)
For purposes of medicaid, most covered laboratory
procedures fall into two main categories.
(a)
For the
performance of clinical diagnostic procedures, no highly specialized skill is
needed (such as the knowledge and training of a physician or other qualified
healthcare professional).
(i)
Clinical diagnostic procedures have no separate
professional and technical components.
(ii)
Performance of
these procedures is generally predicated on certification of the laboratory
provider under the "Clinical Laboratory Improvement Amendments of 1988" (CLIA,
Pub. L. No. 100-578,
42 U.S.C.
263a as in effect on January 1,
2021).
(iii)
Payment for these procedures is based on the clinical
laboratory fee schedule published by CMS.
(b)
The performance
of professional procedures relies on the skill and training of a physician or
other qualified healthcare professional, usually a pathologist or a
hematologist.
(i)
Pathology procedures have both a professional component
and a technical component. In most instances, these components are
distinguished on claims by the inclusion of a modifier along with the procedure
code. (The professional and technical components of a few procedures may be
represented by separate procedure codes.) The professional component of a
pathology procedure represents the professional services a practitioner renders
in the performance of the procedure. It does not represent the simple reading
of test results, which is included in the associated originating service (e.g.,
office visit or surgery).
(ii)
Some procedures
are exclusively professional in nature and have no technical
component.
(iii)
Only an eligible practitioner or an independent
laboratory submitting claims on behalf of its eligible practitioners may
receive payment for a professional procedure (or a professional component of a
procedure).
(iv)
Payment for pathology procedures and for other
professional procedures or components of procedures is based on the physician
fee schedule relative value file published by CMS. (There are a very few
exclusively technical procedures for which payment is also based on the
physician fee schedule relative value file.)
(B) Providers.
(1)
Providers. An entity may enroll in medicaid as a
laboratory provider only if the following conditions are satisfied:
(a)
The entity holds
appropriate certification under CLIA; and
(b)
The laboratory
procedures it performs are within its usual scope.
(2)
A facility that
only collects or prepares specimens or that functions only as a mailing service
and does not perform testing is not considered to be a
laboratory.
(C) Coverage.
(1)
Payment is made in accordance with Chapter 5160-2 of
the Administrative Code for the following services, which in a hospital setting
are treated not as laboratory services but rather as hospital services:
(a)
A clinical
diagnostic procedure performed for a hospital inpatient; and
(b)
The technical
component of a pathology procedure performed for a hospital
inpatient.
(2)
Payment can be made only for a laboratory service or
procedure that, in accordance with Chapter 5160-1 of the Administrative Code,
is medically necessary or is medically indicated when performed in conjunction
with a covered preventive health service.
(3)
A laboratory
provider obtains and maintains appropriate documentation.
(a)
A laboratory
service may be rendered on the verbal order of a physician or other qualified
healthcare professional. Unless an exception is stated in this rule, the
laboratory provider may submit a claim only after it has obtained a written
order. A written order may consist of an entry in a person's medical records
(e.g., in an individual practitioner's office, a group practice, or a
hospital). A written order includes the following information:
(i)
The name of the
medicaid-eligible individual;
(ii)
Contact
information for the practitioner ordering the service;
(iii)
Specification
of the service (e.g., procedure code, description, number of
units);
(iv)
At least one appropriate diagnosis
code;
(v)
The date of the order;
(vi)
The names of the
relevant persons or entities involved in providing the service (e.g., referring
laboratory, reference laboratory, interpreting practitioner, radiographer);
and
(vii)
Any additional information necessary to ensure accurate
and timely testing or reporting (e.g., for a Pap test, the beginning date of
the individual's last menstrual period, the individual's age or date of birth,
an indication of previous abnormal results and subsequent
actions).
(b)
A written order may be given in any industry-recognized
format, such as handwriting, typed text, or electronic
transmission.
(c)
No separate written order is needed for a medically
necessary follow-up procedure (e.g., a quantitative test performed in response
to a positive qualitative test result) so long as the procedure is performed in
accordance with appropriate standard practices and is included in the
laboratory provider's written protocols. A written order is needed for any
additional procedure that is based solely on a laboratory provider's internal
protocols.
(d)
A laboratory provider is to keep the following records
for the period of time specified in rule
5160-1-17.2 of the
Administrative Code:
(i)
A copy of each written order for a procedure or service
(clinical diagnostic procedure, pathology procedure, consultation, or
interpretation);
(ii)
A copy of any clinical diagnostic procedure result for
which consultation or interpretation was ordered; and
(iii)
A copy of any
written narrative report prepared by the consulting or interpreting
practitioner.
(4)
Payment may be
made to a physician or other qualified healthcare professional (such as a
pathologist or a hematologist) for the following professional laboratory
services:
(a)
The professional component of a pathology
procedure;
(b)
A global pathology procedure that was performed in the
practitioner's own full-service, in-office laboratory (certified for the
performance of the technical component) on a specimen obtained from an
individual who was not a hospital patient;
(c)
A clinical
pathology consultative service; or
(d)
The professional
administration of a testing device, isotope, or other
material.
(5)
Specific coverage provisions apply to certain groups of
services and procedures.
(a)
Referred procedures.
(i)
In general,
payment for a clinical diagnostic procedure may be made only to the laboratory
provider that actually performs the procedure. Payment may be made to a
referring provider for a clinical diagnostic procedure performed by a reference
laboratory only if all of the following conditions are satisfied:
(a)
The reference
laboratory has the appropriate CLIA certification to perform the
procedure;
(b)
One of the following two sets of criteria is met:
(i)
Either the
referring provider is a FQHC or RHC or the reference laboratory is a hospital,
and the referring provider and the reference laboratory are related in one of
three ways:
(A)
The referring provider is wholly owned by the reference
laboratory;
(B)
The reference laboratory is wholly owned by the
referring provider; or
(C)
Both of them are wholly owned by a third
entity.
(ii)
The referring laboratory is a hospital that performs
clinical diagnostic procedures, the procedure is performed for a hospital
outpatient or hospital emergency department patient, and the referring
laboratory provider and the reference laboratory provider have a written
agreement that specifies which provider is exclusively permitted to submit
claims to the department for clinical diagnostic
procedures.
(c)
At the request of the department, the referring
provider discloses to the department in writing the following information and
any changes made to it:
(i)
The name, address, and CLIA number of the reference
laboratory;
(ii)
A delineation of the relationship between the referring
provider and the reference laboratory; and
(iii)
A list of all
the clinical diagnostic procedures it routinely refers to the reference
laboratory.
(ii)
In the event
that the department issues payment to both a referring provider and a reference
laboratory for the same clinical diagnostic procedure, the expenditure subject
to recovery is assumed to be the payment issued to the reference
laboratory.
(b)
Procedures bundled into a panel.
(i)
Altered
descriptions of a particular panel are not to be used in place of the official
description established by a national authority such as the American medical
association or the centers for medicare and medicaid services.
(ii)
When a provider
performs all of the constituent procedures of a covered panel (and all of the
constituent procedures are medically necessary or medically indicated), the
entire panel is reported on a claim rather than the separate constituent
procedures.
(iii)
When a provider performs some but not all of the
constituent procedures of a panel, the separate constituent procedures are
reported on a claim.
(iv)
When a provider performs more procedures than are
included in a panel, both the panel and the additional procedures are reported
on a claim.
(c)
Specimen collection.
(i)
Specimen
collection performed in a nursing facility, skilled nursing facility, or
intermediate care facility for individuals with intellectual disabilities is
not a laboratory service.
(ii)
Payment as
laboratory services may be made only for the following specimen collection
procedures:
(a)
Collection of a blood specimen by venipuncture;
(b)
Collection of a
blood specimen by capillary puncture that has the same diagnostic value as a
specimen collected by venipuncture;
(c)
Collection of a
blood specimen from a completely implantable venous access device;
and
(d)
Collection of a blood specimen from an established
central or peripheral venous catheter.
(iii)
The collection
of multiple specimens is considered to be a single procedure in either of the
following circumstances:
(a)
The specimens are collected in a single encounter from
a single body site; or
(b)
The specimens are needed for a single test (e.g., a
glucose tolerance test).
(iv)
Only the
eligible provider that performs a specimen collection may receive payment for
it.
(v)
Payment for specimen collection includes costs for
handling and shipping.
(vi)
Payment for specimen collection is independent of
payment for the laboratory procedure performed on the specimen.
(vii)
No payment is
made for the following specimen collection services:
(a)
Collection of a
blood specimen by capillary puncture when the collection is part of a test
procedure (e.g., bleeding time);
(b)
Collection of a
specimen for a Papanicolaou test (Pap test, Pap smear) or of a tissue specimen
for which there is no discrete procedure code; and
(c)
Travel associated
with the collection of specimens.
(d)
Evocation/suppression testing.
(i)
Only the
laboratory provider performing the technical evocation/ suppression test (the
actual measurement of the chemical constituents) may receive payment for
it.
(ii)
Separate payment may be made to a physician or other
qualified healthcare professional for identifiable evaluation and management
services rendered on the same date of service as an evocation/ suppression
test. Such services include supervision and monitoring of the individual during
testing, intermittent or continual attendance during the administration of the
evocation/suppression agent, and interpretation of the test results in relation
to the individual's condition.
(iii)
Separate
payment may be made in accordance with Chapter 5160-4 of the Administrative
Code for an evocation/suppression testing agent administered to an individual
who is not a hospital patient. Such payment includes costs for the agent itself
and for administration of the agent, which may be intradermal, subcutaneous,
intramuscular, intraarterial, or intravenous (injection by syringe, intravenous
push injection, or intravenous infusion of short duration).
(iv)
Separate payment
may be made to a physician or other qualified healthcare professional for
prolonged infusion services rendered for an individual who is not a hospital
patient. Such payment includes costs for additional supplies used in the
prolonged administration of the evocation/suppression testing
agent.
(e)
Neonatal diagnostic screening. Payment for neonatal
diagnostic screening may be made to a physician laboratory provider, a
professional medical group laboratory provider, a hospital laboratory provider,
or a clinic laboratory provider if both of the following conditions are
satisfied:
(i)
The procedure was performed with a prefabricated laboratory
kit purchased from the Ohio department of health (ODH) laboratory and used for
screening a newborn infant for genetic, endocrine, or metabolic disorders
listed in Chapter 3701-55 of the Administrative Code; and
(ii)
The kit was used
for an initial screening, a repeat screening, or a follow-up screening in
accordance with Chapter 3701-55 of the Administrative
Code.
(f)
Urine drug screening.
(i)
The performance
of drug screening by urinalysis is subject to the following frequency limits,
which may be exceeded with prior authorization:
(a)
For presumptive
screens, thirty dates of service per benefit year; and
(b)
For definitive
tests, twelve dates of service per benefit year.
(ii)
Prior
authorization is needed for a definitive drug test involving twenty-two or more
drug classes on a single date of service.
(6)
Non-covered
laboratory services.
(a)
No payment is made for the following services:
(i)
Laboratory
services exceeding the provisions set forth in this chapter for which no prior
authorization has been given;
(ii)
Routine
laboratory or screening procedures;
(iii)
Laboratory
services for which a laboratory provider is not appropriately certified under
CLIA;
(iv)
Laboratory services rendered in conjunction with those
non-covered services that are delineated in rule
5160-1-61 of the Administrative
Code; and
(v)
Laboratory services rendered for forensic
investigation, autopsy, or paternity testing.
(b)
Although certain
provisions in Chapter 5160-1 of the Administrative Code allow an eligible
provider to seek payment directly from a medicaid-eligible individual for
services that are not covered by the medicaid program, no laboratory provider
may seek payment for any laboratory service for which it lacks the necessary
CLIA certification.
(D) Claim payment.
(1)
When submitting a claim to the department, a laboratory
provider is to use the code that describes the procedure in the most
detail.
(a)
Analytic procedures can be listed by analyte (the substance
or material being measured), by method, by both analyte and method, or by
specimen type (e.g., urine, blood). Many laboratory procedures, especially drug
tests, have synonyms. Care therefore needs to be taken in the selection of the
most appropriate procedure code.
(b)
A "not otherwise
specified," "miscellaneous," or "unlisted" procedure code in the appropriate
area of specialty may be used only if no other code accurately corresponds to a
procedure. For such a service, the laboratory provider submits a claim "by
report" in accordance with rule
5160-1-60.4 of the
Administrative Code and notes the analyte, the specimen type, and the method in
the claim. The department may deny a claim that omits necessary information or
that includes a "not otherwise specified," "miscellaneous," or "unlisted"
procedure code when an appropriate procedure-specific code is
available.
(2)
When a laboratory provider uses the Ohio department of
health (ODH) laboratory to perform a covered laboratory procedure for a
medicaid-eligible individual, the laboratory provider prepares specimens and
completes necessary paperwork in accordance with all applicable ODH rules and
practices. The laboratory provider is exempt from paying the ODH laboratory for
the service; instead, the department will pay the ODH laboratory. Claims for
such procedures are not to be submitted to the department.
(3)
For a covered
laboratory service represented by a new healthcare common procedure coding
system (HCPCS) procedure code, the initial maximum payment amount is
established in accordance with rule
5160-1-60 of the Administrative
Code.
(4)
For any other covered laboratory service (global
procedure, professional component, or technical component), the initial payment
amount is the lesser of the submitted charge or the applicable medicaid maximum
from the following list:
(a)
For a service that is payable under the clinical
laboratory fee schedule published by CMS, seventy-five per cent of the
Ohio-specific medicare allowed amount for that service; or
(b)
For a service
that is payable under the medicare physician fee schedule, seventy-five per
cent of the Ohio-specific medicare allowed amount for that
service.
(5)
If the medicare amount for a service becomes less than
the current medicaid maximum payment amount, then the medicaid maximum payment
amount for that service is reestablished on the basis of the new medicare
amount:
(a)
For
a service that is payable under the clinical laboratory fee schedule published
by CMS, it is seventy-five per cent of the Ohio-specific medicare allowed
amount for that service; or
(b)
For a service
that is payable under the medicare physician fee schedule, it is seventy-five
per cent of the Ohio-specific medicare allowed amount for that
service.
(6)
Both the medicare physician fee schedule and the
clinical laboratory fee schedule are available from CMS, http://www.cms.gov.
(7)
For convenience, a list of medicaid maximum payment
amounts and additional claim-related information for clinical diagnostic
procedures, molecular pathology procedures, and pathology procedures is
available on the department's 'Fee Schedule and Rates' web page, which may be
accessed through the department's main web page (http://medicaid.ohio.gov).
Replaces: 5160-11- 03.1, part of 5160-11-01, part of 5160-11-02, part of 5160-11-09
Disclaimer: These regulations may not be the most recent version. Ohio 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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