Hospital Price Transparency Requirements Set to Take Effect in January
In 2019, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) finalized regulations requiring all hospitals, including inpatient rehabilitation facilities (IRFs), to begin publicly disclosing a wide array of price information. All of these requirements go into effect January 1, 2021, and include two major requirements: 1) the posting of machinereadable files containing all third-party negotiated rates, and 2) a consumer-friendly website for common “shoppable services.”
Jonathan Gold, JD, AMRPA Director of Government Relations and Regulatory Affairs
In its final regulations, CMS defined hospitals subject to the new rule as those other than federally owned facilities, such as Veterans Affairs (VA) hospitals. In the notice-andcomment discussion, CMS affirmed that specialty hospitals such as IRFs were included in the definition of applicable hospitals. The agency also stated that each hospital that operates under its own separate license must separately comply with the requirements. Under the first major requirement of the rule, hospitals must post a machine-readable file that includes standard charge information for all items and services they provide. This includes service packages or bundled rates for an episode of care. The standard charge information must include the following for all items and services: • Gross charges, as reflected on the hospital’s charge master • Discount cash prices offered to self-pay patients • Payer-specific negotiated charges for all third-party payers • De-identified minimum and maximum negotiated charges This information must be updated at least once annually to meet the CMS requirements. Under the second major provision of the new rule, hospitals must post the same standard charge information for at least 300 “shoppable services,” in a consumerfriendly format on its website. Services designated as shoppable must be available for scheduling in advance by the consumer. CMS has designated 70-specific services that must be included, and allows hospitals to choose the additional 270 services to include. If a hospital does not offer 300 total shoppable services, it must post as many items and services as are available. CMS is also permitting hospitals to create a cost-estimator tool on websites in lieu of a list of 300 shoppable services. This information must also be updated at least once annually. CMS has also granted itself enforcement authority under this regulation. CMS stated that it plans to audit hospital websites, and investigate complaints submitted from the
AMRPA Magazine / December 2020 19