Current through Reg. 49, No. 38; September 20, 2024
(a)
Introduction. The Health and Human Services Commission (HHSC) may reward or
penalize a hospital under this section based on the hospital's performance with
respect to exceeding or failing to achieve outcome and process measures
relative to all Texas Medicaid and CHIP hospitals that address the rates of
potentially preventable events.
(b)
Definitions.
(1) Actual to Expected
Ratio--The ratio of actual potentially preventable complications (PPCs) within
an inpatient stay compared with expected PPCs within an inpatient stay, where
the expected number depends on the all patient refined diagnosis related group
at the time of admission (APR DRG or its replacement classification system) is
adjusted for the patient's severity of illness. HHSC, at its discretion,
determines the relative weights of PPCs when calculating the actual to expected
ratio. Expected PPC results calculation is based on the statewide norms and is
calculated from Medicaid traditional fee-for-service (FFS), Children's Health
Insurance Program or CHIP, and, if available, managed care data.
(2) Adjustment time period--The state fiscal
year (September through August) that a hospital's claims are adjusted in
accordance with subsection (f) or (g)(5) of this section. Adjustments will be
done on an annual basis.
(3) All
Patient Refined Diagnosis Related Group (APR DRG)--A diagnosis and procedure
code classification system for inpatient services.
(4) Case-mix--A measure of the clinical
characteristics of patients treated during the reporting time period based on
diagnosis and severity of illness. "Higher" case-mix refers to sicker patients
who require more hospital resources.
(5) Children's Health Insurance Program or
CHIP or Program--The Texas State Children's Health Insurance Program
established under Title XXI of the federal Social Security Act (42 U.S.C.
Chapter 7, Title XXI) and Chapters 62 and 63 of the Texas Health and Safety
Code.
(6) Inpatient claims during
the reporting time period--Includes Medicaid traditional FFS, CHIP, and, if
available, managed care data for inpatient hospital claims filed for
reimbursement by a hospital that:
(A) had a
date of admission occurring within the reporting time period;
(B) were adjudicated and approved for payment
during the reporting time period and the six-month grace period that
immediately followed, except for such claims that had zero inpatient
days;
(C) were not inpatient stays
for patients who are covered by Medicare;
(D) were not claims for patients diagnosed
with major metastatic cancer, organ transplants, human immunodeficiency virus
(HIV), or major trauma; and
(E)
were not subject to other exclusions as determined by HHSC.
(7) HHSC--The Health and Human
Services Commission or its designee.
(8) Hospital--A public or private institution
licensed under Chapter 241 or Chapter 577, Texas Health and Safety Code,
including a general or special hospital as defined by §
RSA
241.003, Texas Health and Safety
Code.
(9) Managed care organization
(MCO)--Managed care is a health care delivery system or dental services
delivery system in which the overall care of a patient is coordinated by or
through a single provider or organization. MCO refers to such a provider or
organization under contract with HHSC to provide services to Medicaid
recipients.
(10) Medicaid
program--The medical assistance program established under Chapter 32, Texas
Human Resources Code.
(11)
Norm--The Texas statewide average or the standard by which hospital PPC
performance is compared.
(12)
Potentially preventable complication (PPC)--A harmful event or negative outcome
with respect to a person, including an infection or surgical complication,
that:
(A) occurs after the person's admission
to an inpatient acute care hospital; and
(B) may have resulted from the care, lack of
care, or treatment provided during the hospital stay rather than from a natural
progression of an underlying disease.
(13) Potentially preventable event (PPE)--A
potentially preventable admission, a potentially preventable ancillary service,
a potentially preventable complication, a potentially preventable emergency
room visit, a potentially preventable readmission, or a combination of those
events, which are more fully defined in §
RSA 354.1070 of this
title.
(14) Present on Admission
(POA) Indicators--A coding system that requires hospitals to accurately submit
principal and secondary diagnoses that are present at the time of admission.
POA codes are essential for the accurate calculation of PPC rates and consist
of the current coding set approved by CMS.
(15) Reporting time period--The period of
time that includes hospital claims that are assessed for PPCs. This may be a
state fiscal year (September through August) or other specified time frame as
determined by HHSC. PPC Reports will consist of statewide and hospital-specific
reports and will be done at least on an annual basis, using the most complete
data period available to HHSC.
(16)
Safety-net hospital--As defined in §
RSA
355.8052 of this title (relating to Inpatient
Hospital Reimbursement).
(c) Calculating a PPC rate. Using inpatient
claims during the reporting time period and HHSC-designated software and
methodology, HHSC calculates an actual PPC rate and an expected PPC rate for
each hospital included in the analysis. The methodology for inclusion of
hospitals in the analysis will be described in the statewide and
hospital-specific reports. HHSC will determine at its discretion the relative
weights of PPCs when calculating the actual to expected ratio. The
actual-to-expected ratio is rounded to two decimal places and used to determine
reimbursement adjustments described in subsection (f) of this
section.
(d) Comparing the PPC
performance of all hospitals included in the analysis. Using the rates
determined in subsection (c) of this section, HHSC calculates a ratio of
actual-to-expected PPC rates.
(e)
Reporting results of PPC rate calculations. HHSC provides a confidential report
to each hospital included in the analysis regarding the hospital's performance
with respect to potentially preventable complications, including the PPC rates
calculated as described in subsection (c) of this section and the hospital's
actual-to-expected ratio calculated as described in subsection (d) of this
section.
(1) A hospital may request the
underlying data used in the analysis to generate the report via an email
request to the HHSC email address found on the report.
(2) The underlying data contains
patient-level identifiers and other information deemed relevant by
HHSC.
(f) Hospitals
subject to reimbursement adjustment and amount of adjustment.
(1) A hospital with an actual-to-expected PPC
ratio equal to or greater than 1.10 and equal to or less than 1.25 is subject
to a reimbursement adjustment of -2%;
(2) A hospital with an actual-to-expected PPC
ratio greater than 1.25 is subject to a reimbursement adjustment of
-2.5%.
(g) Claims
subject to reimbursement adjustment.
(1) The
reimbursement adjustments described in subsection (f) of this section apply to
all Medicaid fee-for-service claims beginning November 1, 2013 and
after.
(2) The reimbursement
adjustments will occur after the confidential report on which the reimbursement
adjustments are based is made available to hospitals.
(3) The reimbursement adjustments for a
hospital will cease in the adjustment time period that is after the hospital
receives a confidential report indicating an actual-to-expected ratio of less
than 1.10.
(4) On an annual basis
and based on review of the data quality and accuracy, HHSC may determine if
reimbursement adjustments are appropriate.
(5) Based on HHSC-approved POA data screening
criteria, HHSC may implement automatic payment reductions to hospitals who fail
POA screening. The POA screening criteria and methodology will be described in
the statewide and hospital specific reports. At its discretion, HHSC applies
the following adjustments based on POA screening criteria:
(A) Failure to meet POA screening criteria,
first reporting period violation: 2% reduction applied to all Medicaid
fee-for-service claims in the corresponding adjustment period.
(B) Failure to meet POA screening criteria,
two or more violations in a row: 2.5% applied all Medicaid fee-for-service
claims in the corresponding adjustment period.
(C) If a hospital passes POA screening
criteria during a reporting time period, any future violations of the POA
screening criteria will be considered a first violation.
(6) The reimbursement adjustments based on
POA screening criteria will cease when the hospital passes HHSC-approved POA
screening criteria for an entire reporting time period, at which the hospital
will be subject to reimbursement adjustments, if applicable, based on criteria
outlined in subsection (f) of this section.
(7) Hospitals that receive a reimbursement
adjustment based on POA screening criteria outlined in paragraph (5) of this
subsection will not concurrently receive reductions outlined in subsection (f)
of this section.
(h)
Targeted incentive payments for safety-net hospitals.
(1) HHSC determines annually whether a
safety-net hospital may receive an incentive payment for performance on PPC
incidence.
(2) The appropriated
funds for the targeted incentive payments are split in half, 50 percent for
PPCs and 50 percent for potentially preventable readmissions. HHSC may change
the allocated percentages based on review of data and the changing needs of the
program.
(3) The dataset used in
the incentive analysis is the same as the dataset used in the PPC reimbursement
adjustments.
(4) Hospitals that are
eligible for a targeted incentive payment must meet the following requirements:
(A) be a safety-net hospital;
(B) have an actual-to-expected ratio of at
least 10 percent lower than the statewide average (actual-to-expected ratio is
less than or equal to 0.90);
(C)
have not received a penalty for either PPCs or potentially preventable
readmissions; and
(D) are not
low-volume, as defined by HHSC.
(5) Calculation of targeted incentive
payments.
(A) Calculate base allocation. Each
eligible hospital is awarded a base allocation not to exceed
$100,000.
(B) Calculate variable
allocation. Each eligible hospital is awarded a variable allocation, which is
calculated from remaining funds after distribution of base allocations to all
eligible hospitals. The variable allocation has the following components:
(i) Hospital size score. Each eligible
hospital's size divided by the average size of the whole group of hospitals
within each incentive pool. Size is calculated based on total inpatient
facility claims paid to each eligible hospital. Each eligible hospital's size
calculation is capped at 2.00.
(ii)
Hospital Performance score. Each eligible hospital's performance divided by the
average performance of the whole group of hospitals within each incentive pool.
Performance is calculated by actual to expected ratio.
(iii) Composite score. Each eligible hospital
receives a composite score, which is the hospital's size score multiplied by
the hospital's performance score.
(iv) Each hospital's composite score divided
by the sum of all eligible hospitals' composite scores is multiplied by the
remaining incentive funds, after distribution of base allocations.
(C) Calculate final allocation.
The final allocation to each eligible hospital is equal to the eligible
hospital's base allocation plus the eligible hospital's variable
allocation.
(6) Each
eligible hospital's PPC incentive payment will be divided between FFS and MCO
reimbursements based on the percentage of its total paid FFS and MCO Medicaid
inpatient hospital reimbursements for the reporting time period accruing from
FFS.
(7) PPC incentive payments may
be made as lump sum payments or tied to particular claims or recipients at
HHSC's discretion.
(8) HHSC will
post the methodology for calculating and distributing incentives on its public
website.
(9) Targeted incentive
payments for safety-net hospitals are not included in the calculation of a
hospital's hospital-specific limit or low income utilization rate.