Oklahoma Administrative Code
Title 317 - Oklahoma Health Care Authority
Chapter 30 - Medical Providers-Fee for Service
Subchapter 5 - Individual Providers and Specialties
Part 4 - LONG TERM CARE HOSPITALS
Section 317:30-5-62 - Coverage by category
Universal Citation: OK Admin Code 317:30-5-62
Current through Vol. 42, No. 1, September 16, 2024
(a) Adults. There is no coverage for adults.
(b) Children. Payment is made to long term care hospitals for subacute medical and rehabilitative services for persons under the age of 21 within the scope of the Authority's Medical Programs, provided the services are reasonable for the diagnosis and treatment of illness or injury, or to improve the functioning of a malformed body member.
(1)
Inpatient services.
(A) All inpatient services are subject to
post-payment utilization review by the Oklahoma Health Care Authority, or its
designated agent. These reviews will be based on OHCA's, or its designated
agent's, admission criteria on severity of illness and intensity of treatment.
(i) It is the policy and intent of the
Oklahoma Health Care Authority to allow hospitals and physicians the
opportunity to present any and all documentation available to support the
medical necessity of an admission and/or extended stay of a Medicaid recipient.
If the OHCA, or its designated agent, upon their initial review determines the
admission should be denied, a notice is sent to the facility and the attending
physician(s) advising them of the decision. This notice also advises that a
reconsideration request may be submitted within 60 days. Additional information
submitted with the reconsideration request will be reviewed by the OHCA, or its
designated agent, who utilizes an independent physician advisor. If the denial
decision is upheld through this review of additional information, OHCA is
informed. At that point, OHCA sends a letter to the hospital and physician
requesting refund of the Title XIX payment previously made on the denied
admission.
(ii) If the hospital or
attending physician did not request reconsideration by the OHCA, or its
designated agent, the OHCA, or its designated agent, informs OHCA that there
has been no request for reconsideration and as a result their initial denial
decision is final. OHCA, in turn, sends a letter to the hospital and physician
requesting refund of the amount of Title XIX payment previously made on the
denied admission.
(iii) If an OHCA,
or its designated agent, review results in denial and the denial is upheld
throughout the review process and refund from the hospital and physician is
required, the Medicaid recipient cannot be billed for the denied services. The
reconsideration process outlined in (A) of this paragraph will end on July 1,
2006.
(B) If a hospital
or physician believes that an long term care facility admission or continued
stay is not medically necessary and thus not Medicaid compensable but the
patient insists on treatment, the patient must be informed that he/she will be
personally responsible for all charges. If a Medicaid claim is filed and paid
and the service is later denied the patient is not responsible. If a Medicaid
claim is not filed and paid the patient can be billed.
(2)
Utilization control
requirements.
(A)
Certification
and recertification of need for inpatient care. The certification and
recertification of need for inpatient care must be in writing and must be
signed and dated by the physician who has knowledge of the case that continued
inpatient care is required. The certification and recertification documents for
all Medicaid patients must be maintained in the patient's medical records or in
a central file at the facility where the patient is or was a resident.
(i)
Certification. A physician
must certify for each applicant or recipient that inpatient services in a long
term care hospital were needed. The certification must be made at the time of
admission or, if an individual applies for assistance while in a hospital,
before the Medicaid agency authorizes payment.
(ii)
Recertification. A
physician must recertify for each applicant or recipient that inpatient
services in the long term care hospital are needed. Recertification must be
made at least every 60 days after certification.
(B)
Individual written plan of
care.
(i) Before admission to a long
term care hospital, an interdisciplinary team including the attending physician
or staff physician must establish a written plan of care for each applicant or
recipient. The plan of care must include:
(I)
Diagnoses, symptoms, complaints, and complications indicating the need for
admission,
(II) the acuity level of
the individual,
(III)
Objectives,
(IV) Any order for
medication, treatments, restorative and rehabilitative services, activities,
therapies, social services, diet and special procedures recommended for the
health and safety of the patient,
(V) Plans for continuing care, including
review and modification to the plan of care, and
(VI) Plans for discharge.
(ii) The attending or staff
physician and other personnel involved in the recipient's care must review each
plan of care at least every 90 days.
(iii) All plans of care and plan of care
reviews must be clearly identified as such in the patient's medical records.
All must be signed and dated by the physician and other treatment team members
in the required review interval.
(iv) The plan of care must document
appropriate patient and/or family participation in the development and
implementation of the treatment plan.
(C)
Continued stay review. The
facility must complete a continued stay review at least every 90 days.
(i) The methods and criteria for the
continued stay review must be contained in the facility utilization review
plan.
(ii) Documentation of the
continued stay review must be clearly identified as such, signed and dated by
the committee chairperson, and must clearly state the continued stay dates and
time period approved.
Added at 15 Ok Reg 1100, eff 1-6-98 (emergency); Added at 15 Ok Reg 1535, eff 5-11-98; Amended at 23 Ok Reg 771, eff 3-9-06 (emergency); Amended at 23 Ok Reg 2440, eff 6-25-06
Disclaimer: These regulations may not be the most recent version. Oklahoma 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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