Current through Register Vol. 63, No. 9, September 1, 2024
(1) The Ground Emergency Medical
Transportation (GEMT) program is a voluntary program that makes supplemental
payments to eligible GEMT providers who furnish qualifying emergency ambulance
services to Oregon Health Authority (Authority) Medicaid recipients:
(a) The supplemental payment covers the gap
between the eligible GEMT provider's total allowable costs for providing GEMT
services as reported on the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS)
approved cost report and the amount of the base payment, mileage, and all other
sources of reimbursement;
(b) The
Authority makes supplemental payments only up to the amount uncompensated by
all other sources of reimbursement. Total reimbursements from Medicaid
including the supplemental payment may not exceed one hundred percent of actual
costs;
(c) The supplemental
payments shall be made at least annually on a lump-sum basis after the
conclusion of each state fiscal year. These payments are not an increase to
current fee-for-service (FFS) reimbursement rates;
(d) This supplemental payment applies only to
GEMT services rendered to Oregon FFS Medicaid recipients by eligible GEMT
providers on or after July 1, 2017.
(2) Definitions:
(a) "Agency" means the Oregon Health
Authority (Authority);
(b) Advanced
Life Support" means special services designed to provide definitive prehospital
emergency medical care, including but not limited to cardiopulmonary
resuscitation, cardiac monitoring, cardiac defibrillation, advanced airway
management, intravenous therapy, administration of drugs and other medicinal
preparations, and other specified techniques and procedures;
(c) "Allowable Costs" means an expenditure
that complies with the regulatory principles as listed in chapter 2 of the Code
of Federal Regulations (CFR) Section 200;
(d) "Basic Life Support" means emergency
first aid and cardiopulmonary resuscitation procedures to maintain life without
invasive techniques;
(e) "Contracts
with a Local Government" means contracts pursuant to a county plan for
ambulance and emergency medical services that is approved by the Oregon Health
Authority with a;
(A) City, county, an Indian
tribe as defined in Section 4 of the Indian Self-Determination and Education
Assistance Act; or
(B) Local
service district, including but not limited to;
(i) A rural fire protection district;
or
(ii) All administrative
subdivisions of such city, county, or local service district.
(f) "Direct Costs"
means all costs that can be identified specifically with a particular final
cost objective in order to meet emergency medical transportation requirements.
This includes unallocated payroll costs for the shifts of personnel, medical
equipment and supplies, professional and contracted services, travel, training,
and other costs directly related to the delivery of covered medical transport
services;
(g) "Eligible GEMT
Provider" means a GEMT provider that meets all the eligibility requirements
described in OAR 410-136-3370(3);
(h) "Federal Financial Participation (FFP)"
means the portion of medical assistance expenditures for emergency medical
services that are paid or reimbursed by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid
Services in accordance with the State Plan for medical assistance. Clients
under Title XIX are eligible for FFP;
(i) "GEMT Services" means the act of
transporting an individual by ground from any point of origin to the nearest
medical facility capable of meeting the emergency medical needs of the patient,
as well as the advanced, limited-advanced, and basic life support services
provided to an individual by eligible GEMT providers before or during the act
of transportation;
(j)
"Governmental Unit" means the entire state, local, or federally-recognized
Indian tribal government, including any component thereof;
(k) "Indirect Costs" means the costs for a
common or joint purpose benefitting more than one cost objective that is
allocated to each objective using an agency-approved indirect rate or an
allocation methodology;
(l)
"Limited Advanced Life Support" means special services to provide prehospital
emergency medical care limited to techniques and procedures that exceed basic
life support but are less than advanced life support services;
(m) "Publicly Owned or Operated" means a unit
of government that is a state, a city, a county, a special purpose district, or
other governmental unit in the state that has taxing authority, has direct
access to tax revenues, or is an Indian tribe as defined in Section 4 of the
Indian Self-Determination and Education Assistance Act;
(n) "Service Period" means July 1 through
June 30 of each Oregon State Fiscal Year (SFY);
(o) "Shift" means a standard period of time
assigned for a complete cycle of work, as set by each eligible GEMT provider.
The number of hours in a shift may vary by GEMT provider but shall be
consistent to each GEMT provider.
(p) "Treatment in place" means EMT services
(basic, limited-advanced, and advanced life support services) provided by a
Medicaid-enrolled EMS professional to an individual who is released on the
scene without transportation by ambulance to a medical facility.
(3) GEMT Provider Eligibility
Requirements:
(a) To be eligible for
supplemental payments, GEMT providers shall meet the following requirements:
(A) Be enrolled as an Oregon Health Plan
Medicaid provider for the period being claimed on their annual cost report;
and
(B) Provide ground emergency
medical transport services to Medicaid recipients.
(b) GEMT providers must classify as a
Governmental Unit provider in accordance with 2 CFR 200.
(4) Supplemental Reimbursement Methodology
General Provisions:
(a) Computation of
allowable costs and their allocation methodology shall be determined in
accordance with the CMS Provider Reimbursement Manual (CMS Pub. 15-1), CMS
non-institutional reimbursement policies, and 2 C.F.R. Part 200, which
establish principles and standards for determining allowable costs and the
methodology for allocating and apportioning those expenses to the Medicaid
program, except as expressly modified below;
(b) Medicaid base payments to the eligible
GEMT providers for providing GEMT services are derived from the ambulance FFS
fee schedule established for reimbursements payable by the Medicaid program by
procedure code. The primary source of paid claims data, managed care encounter
data, and other Medicaid reimbursements is the Oregon Medicaid Management
Information System (MMIS). The number of paid Medicaid FFS GEMT transports is
derived from and supported by the MMIS reports for services during the
applicable service period;
(c) The
total uncompensated care costs of each eligible GEMT provider available to be
reimbursed under this supplemental reimbursement program shall equal the
shortfall resulting from the allowable costs determined using the Cost
Determination Protocols for each eligible GEMT provider providing GEMT services
to Oregon Medicaid beneficiaries, net of the amounts received and payable from
the Oregon Medicaid program and all other sources of reimbursement for such
services provided to Oregon Medicaid beneficiaries. If the eligible GEMT
providers do not have any uncompensated care costs, then the provider may not
receive a supplemental payment under this supplemental reimbursement program.
Total reimbursement from Medicaid may not exceed one hundred percent of actual
cost of providing services to Oregon Medicaid beneficiaries.
(5) Cost Determination Protocols:
(a) An eligible GEMT provider's specific
allowable cost per-medical transport rate shall be calculated based on the
provider's audited financial data reported on the CMS-approved cost report. The
per-medical transport cost rate shall be the sum of actual allowable direct and
indirect costs of providing medical transport services divided by the actual
number of medical transports provided for the applicable service
period;
(b) Direct costs for
providing medical transport services include only the unallocated payroll costs
for the shifts when personnel dedicate 100 percent of their time to providing
medical transport services, medical equipment and supplies, and other costs
directly related to the delivery of covered services, such as first-line
supervision, materials and supplies, professional and contracted services,
capital outlay, travel, and training. These costs shall be in compliance with
Medicaid non-institutional reimbursement policy and are directly attributable
to the provision of the medical transport services;
(c) Indirect costs are determined in
accordance with one of the following options:
(A) Eligible GEMT providers that receive more
than $35 million in direct federal awards shall either have a Cost Allocation
Plan (CAP) or a cognizant agency-approved indirect rate agreement in place with
its federal cognizant agency to identify indirect cost. If the eligible GEMT
provider does not have a CAP or an indirect rate agreement in place with its
federal cognizant agency and it would like to claim indirect cost in
association with a non-institutional service, it shall obtain one or the other
before it can claim any indirect cost; or
(B) Eligible GEMT providers that receive less
than $35 million of direct federal awards are required to develop and maintain
an indirect rate proposal for purposes of audit. In the absence of an indirect
rate proposal, eligible GEMT providers may use methods originating from a CAP
to identify its indirect cost. If the eligible GEMT provider does not have an
indirect rate proposal on file or a CAP in place and it would like to claim
indirect cost in association with a non-institutional service, it shall secure
one or the other before it can claim any indirect cost; or
(C) Eligible GEMT providers that receive no
direct federal funding can use any of the following previously established
methodologies to identify indirect cost:
(i) A
CAP with its local government; or
(ii) An indirect rate negotiated with its
local government; or
(iii) Direct
identification through use of a cost report.
(D) If the eligible GEMT provider never
established any of the above methodologies, it may do so, or it may elect to
use the 10 percent de minimis rate to identify its indirect cost.
(d) The GEMT provider-specific,
per-medical transport cost rate is calculated by dividing the total net medical
transport allowable costs of the specific provider by the total number of
medical transports provided by the provider for the applicable service
period;
(e) The costs associated
with Treatment in place shall not be included in the total allowable costs and
must not be counted as an allowable medical transport.
(6) Interim Supplemental Payment:
(a) Each eligible GEMT provider shall compute
the annual cost in accordance with OAR
410-136-3370(5)
and shall submit the completed annual as-filed cost report to the Authority
within five months after the close of the state's fiscal year;
(b) The Authority shall make annual interim
supplemental payments to eligible GEMT providers. The interim supplemental
payment for each eligible GEMT provider is based on the provider's completed
annual cost report in the format prescribed by the Authority and approved by
CMS for the applicable cost reporting year;
(c) To determine the interim supplemental
GEMT payment rate, the Authority shall use the most recently filed cost reports
of all eligible GEMT providers to determine the average cost per transport,
which varies between the providers.
(7) Cost Settlement Process:
(a) The payments and the number of transport
data reported in the as-filed cost report shall be reconciled to the
Authority's MMIS reports generated for the cost reporting period within one
year of receipt of the as-filed cost report. The Authority shall make
adjustments to the as-filed cost report based on the reconciliation results of
the most recently retrieved MMIS report;
(b) Each eligible GEMT provider shall receive
payments in an amount equal to the greater of the interim payment or the total
CMS approved Medicaid-allowable costs for GEMT services;
(c) The Authority shall perform a final
reconciliation where it will settle the provider's annual cost report as
audited within the following calendar quarter. The Authority shall compute the
net GEMT allowable costs using audited per-medical transport cost and the
number of fee-for-service GEMT transports data from the updated MMIS reports.
Actual net allowable costs shall be compared to the total base and interim
supplemental payment and settlement payments made and any other source of
reimbursement received by the provider for the period;
(d) If, at the end of the final
reconciliation, it is determined that the eligible GEMT provider is overpaid,
the provider shall return the overpayment to the Authority, and the Authority
shall return the overpayment to the federal government pursuant to section
433.316 of Title 42 of the Code of Federal Regulations. If an underpayment is
determined, then the eligible GEMT provider shall receive an interim
supplemental payment in the amount of the underpayment. Overpayments and
underpayments shall be processed in accordance with OAR
410-120-1397;
(e) The provider may appeal an Authority
notice of overpayment in the manner provided in OAR
410-120-1560.
(8) Eligible GEMT Provider
Reporting Requirements:
(a) Submit CMS
approved cost reports to the Authority no later than five months after the
close of the SFY, unless the eligible GEMT provider made a written request for
an extension and such request is granted by the Authority;
(b) Provide any supporting documentation to
serve as evidence supporting information on the cost report and the cost
determination, if specifically requested by the Authority;
(c) Keep, maintain, and have readily
retrievable such records to fully disclose reimbursement amounts that the
eligible GEMT provider is entitled to and any other records required by
CMS;
(d) Comply with the allowable
cost requirements provided in Part 413 of Title 42 of the Code of Federal
Regulations, 2 CFR Part 200, and Medicaid non-institutional reimbursement
policy.
(9) Agency
Responsibilities:
(a) The Authority shall, on
an annual basis, submit any necessary materials to the federal government to
provide assurances that claims shall include only those expenditures that are
allowable under federal law;
(b)
The Authority shall complete the audit and final reconciliation process of the
interim supplemental payments for the service period within nine months of the
postmark date of the cost report and conduct on-site audits as
necessary.
Statutory/Other Authority: ORS
413.234
Statutes/Other Implemented: ORS
413.235