Current through Reg. 50, No. 26; June 27, 2025
(a) Authority. Payments are made to private
and governmental providers of ground and air ambulance services as specified in
the ambulance program rules in Chapter 354, Subchapter A, Division 9 of this
title (relating to Ambulance Services). The reimbursement determination
authority is specified in §
355.101 of this chapter (relating
to Introduction).
(b) Definitions.
The following words and terms, when used in this section, have the following
meanings unless the context clearly indicates otherwise.
(1) Allowable costs--Expenses that are
reasonable and necessary for the normal conduct of operations relating to the
provision of ground and air ambulance services.
(2) Average Commercial Rate--The average
amount payable by commercial payers for the same service.
(3) Centers for Medicare and Medicaid
Services (CMS)--The federal agency within the United States Department of
Health and Human Services responsible for overseeing and directing Medicare and
Medicaid, or its successor.
(4)
Governmental ambulance provider--An ambulance provider that uses paid
government employees to provide ambulance services. The ambulance services must
be directly funded by a unit of government that has taxing authority or has
direct access to tax revenues, such as a local government, hospital authority,
hospital district, city, county, or state. A private ambulance provider under
contract with a governmental entity to provide ambulance services is not
considered a governmental ambulance provider for the purposes of this
section.
(5) Medicaid
shortfall--The unreimbursed cost to an ambulance provider of providing Medicaid
ambulance services to Medicaid clients.
(6) Private ambulance provider--An ambulance
provider that uses paid employees associated and financed through a private
entity to provide ambulance services and may be under contract with a local,
state, or federal government.
(7)
Uncompensated care costs--The sum of the Medicaid shortfall and the uninsured
costs.
(8) Uninsured costs--The
unreimbursed cost to an ambulance provider of providing ambulance services that
meet the definition of "medical assistance" in Social Security Act
§1905(a) to uninsured patients as defined by CMS.
(9) Unit of service--A unit of service based
on one or more allowable ambulance services provided to a client by all modes
of approved transportation.
(c) Reimbursement methodologies.
(1) Fee-for-service ambulance fee.
Fee-for-service reimbursement is based on the lesser of a provider's billed
charges or the maximum fee established by the Texas Health and Human Services
Commission (HHSC). HHSC establishes fees by reviewing the Medicare fee schedule
and analyzing any other available ambulance-related data. Fee-for-service rates
apply to both private and governmental ambulance providers.
(2) Supplemental payment and enhanced
supplemental payment for governmental ambulance providers. For services
provided through September 30, 2019, a governmental ambulance provider may be
eligible to receive a supplemental payment in addition to the fee-for-service
payment described in paragraph (1) of this subsection. For services provided
beginning October 1, 2019, eligibility for governmental ambulance providers to
receive a supplemental payment, and the methodology for calculating the payment
amount, are described in §
355.8210 of this subchapter
(relating to Waiver Payments to Governmental Ambulance Providers for
Uncompensated Charity Care).
(A) Eligibility
for supplemental payments. A governmental ambulance provider must submit a
written request for determination of eligibility for supplemental payment in a
manner designated by HHSC. If eligible, a governmental ambulance provider may
begin to claim uncompensated care costs related to services provided on or
after the first day of the month after the request for determination of
eligibility is approved. HHSC only considers requests for determination of
eligibility from governmental ambulance providers as defined in subsection (b)
of this section. HHSC will respond to all written requests for consideration,
indicating the requestor's eligibility to receive supplemental payments. An
acceptable request must include:
(i) an
overview of the governmental agency;
(ii) a complete organizational chart of the
governmental agency;
(iii) a
complete organizational chart of the ambulance department within the
governmental agency providing ambulance services;
(iv) an identification of the specific
geographic service area covered by the ambulance department, by ZIP
code;
(v) copies of all job
descriptions for staff types or job categories of staff who work for the
ambulance department and an estimated percentage of time spent working for the
ambulance department and other departments of the governmental
agency;
(vi) a primary contact
person for the governmental agency who can respond to questions about the
ambulance department; and
(vii) a
signed letter documenting the governmental ambulance provider's voluntary
contribution of non-federal funds.
(B) Eligibility for enhanced supplemental
payments. A governmental ambulance provider must submit an application for
enhanced supplemental payments to HHSC using a form designated by HHSC that
includes the cost and payment data for paid Medicaid and commercial claims for
all procedure codes specified in the application. If HHSC approves the
application, a governmental ambulance provider may begin to claim enhanced
supplemental payments based on the average commercial rate related only to
ground ambulance services reimbursed by Texas Medicaid on a fee-for-service
basis provided on or after the first day of the month after the application is
approved. HHSC will respond to all applications, indicating approval or
disapproval of the applicant's eligibility to receive enhanced supplemental
payments. An acceptable application must include:
(i) proof of enrollment as a Medicaid
provider in the State of Texas at the beginning of the current demonstration
year as defined in §
355.8210 of this
subchapter;
(ii) a primary contact
person for the government agency who can respond to questions about the
ambulance department;
(iii) a
statement from the provider expressing its intent to participate in the
program; and
(iv) a cost report
that includes the cost and payment data for paid Medicaid and commercial claims
for all procedure codes specified by HHSC.
(C) Cost reports. Governmental ambulance
providers that are eligible for supplemental or enhanced supplemental payments
must submit an annual cost report for ground and air ambulance services
delivered to Medicaid and, effective March 1, 2012, uninsured clients on a cost
report form specified by HHSC. Providers certify through the cost report
process their total actual federal and non-federal costs and expenditures for
the cost reporting period. Cost reports must be completed for a full year based
on the federal fiscal year. HHSC may require newly eligible providers to submit
a partial-year cost report for their first year of eligibility. The beginning
date for the partial-year cost report is the provider's first day of
eligibility for supplemental or enhanced supplemental payments as determined by
HHSC. The ending date of the partial-year cost report is the last day of the
federal fiscal year that encompasses the cost report beginning date.
(i) Due date. The cost report is due on or
before March 31 of the year following the cost reporting period ending date,
September 30, and must be certified in a manner specified by HHSC. If March 31
falls on a federal or state holiday or weekend, the due date is the first
business day after March 31. A provider may request in writing, by regular mail
or special mail delivery, an extension of up to 30 days after the due date to
submit a cost report. HHSC will respond to all written requests for extensions,
indicating whether the extension is granted. HHSC must receive a request for
extension before the cost report due date. A request for extension received
after the due date is considered denied. A provider whose cost report is not
received by the due date or the extended due date is ineligible for
supplemental or enhanced supplemental payments for the federal fiscal
year.
(ii) Purpose. A cost report
documents the provider's actual allowable Medicaid and uncompensated care costs
for delivering ambulance services in accordance with the applicable state and
federal regulations. Because the cost report is used to determine supplemental
and enhanced supplemental payments, a provider must submit a complete and
acceptable cost report to be eligible for a supplemental or enhanced
supplemental payment.
(iii)
Allocating allowable costs. A provider's total allowable reported costs for
ambulance services are allocated to Medicaid and uninsured patients based on
the ratio of charges for Medicaid and uninsured patients to the charges for all
patients. Only allocable expenditures related to Medicaid, Medicaid managed
care, and uncompensated care as defined and approved in the Texas Healthcare
Transformation and Quality Improvement 1115 Waiver Program (1115 Waiver) will
be included for supplemental payment.
(D) Calculation of supplemental payments and
enhanced supplemental payments.
(i) For
services provided from October 1, 2011, through February 29, 2012, a
governmental ambulance provider may be eligible to receive a supplemental
payment equal to its Medicaid shortfall for the cost reporting period
multiplied by the federal Medical assistance percentage (FMAP) in effect during
the cost reporting period.
(ii) For
services provided on or after March 1, 2012, and subject to approval by CMS, a
governmental ambulance provider may be eligible to receive a supplemental
payment equal to its uncompensated care costs for the cost reporting period
multiplied by the FMAP in effect during the cost reporting period.
(iii) Supplemental payments based on
uncompensated care costs are limited by the maximum aggregate amount of the
estimated uncompensated care costs for all eligible governmental ambulance
providers as determined by §
355.8201 of this chapter (relating
to Waiver Payments to Hospitals for Uncompensated Care).
(iv) If the actual aggregate uncompensated
care costs for all eligible governmental ambulance providers is greater than
the maximum aggregate amount of the estimated uncompensated care costs for all
eligible governmental ambulance providers as described in clause (iii) of this
subparagraph, then HHSC will reduce the supplemental payments for all
participating governmental ambulance providers proportionately.
(v) The supplemental payment is contingent
upon the governmental ambulance provider's certificate of public expenditures
submitted with each cost report.
(vi) If the federal government disallows
federal financial participation related to the receipt or use of supplemental
payments under this section, HHSC will recoup an amount equal to the federal
share of supplemental payments overpaid or disallowed.
(E) Enhanced supplemental payment.
(i) For ground services reimbursed on a
fee-for-service basis provided on or after October 1, 2019, a governmental
ambulance provider may be eligible to receive an enhanced supplemental payment
equal to the difference between the average commercial rate and the sum of its
reimbursed costs for the cost reporting period.
(I) HHSC will determine the paid Medicaid
claims fees and enhanced supplemental payment amounts for all procedure codes
specified in the application for each eligible publicly owned fee-for-service
ground emergency ambulance service provider.
(II) HHSC will calculate an overall average
commercial rate for the ambulance service providers based on the cost and
payment data provided from each eligible ambulance provider.
(III) HHSC will apply the overall average
commercial rate to an ambulance provider's total Medicaid utilization to
determine the ambulance provider's total commercial reimbursement.
(IV) HHSC will subtract the ambulance
provider's total Medicaid reimbursement from the ambulance provider's total
commercial reimbursement calculated for each of the eligible
services.
(V) HHSC will calculate
each ambulance provider's maximum payment limit by summing each of the
differences calculated in subclause (IV) of this clause for each of the
provider's eligible services.
(VI)
HHSC will re-determine the average commercial rate at least annually.
(VII) The enhanced supplemental payment is
contingent upon the governmental ambulance provider's data submitted with each
cost report. HHSC will determine payment amounts on a quarterly basis, with a
reimbursement of up to 100 percent for each ambulance provider's average
commercial rate.
(ii) If
CMS disallows federal financial participation related to a provider's receipt
or use of enhanced supplemental payments under this section, HHSC will recoup
from the provider an amount equal to the disallowance. If HHSC identifies an
overpayment to a provider related to the receipt or use of enhanced
supplemental payments under this section, HHSC will recoup from the provider an
amount equal to the overpayment.
(d) General information. In addition to the
requirements of this section, cost reporting guidelines are governed by: §
355.101 of this chapter; §
355.102 of this chapter (relating
to General Principles of Allowable and Unallowable Costs); §
355.103 of this chapter (relating
to Specifications for Allowable and Unallowable Costs); §
355.104 of this chapter (relating
to Revenues); §
355.105 of this chapter (relating
to General Reporting and Documentation Requirements, Methods, and Procedures);
§
355.106 of this chapter (relating
to Basic Objectives and Criteria for Audit and Desk Review of Cost Reports);
§
355.107 of this chapter (relating
to Notification of Exclusions and Adjustments); §
355.108 of this chapter (relating
to Determination of Inflation Indices); §
355.109 of this chapter (relating
to Adjusting Reimbursement When New Legislation, Regulations, or Economic
Factors Affect Costs); and §
355.110 of this chapter (relating
to Informal Reviews and Formal Appeals). If conflicts arise between this
section and other sections governing cost reporting, the provisions of this
section prevail.