June 3, 2021
PARA
WeeklyeJOURNAL NEWS FOR HEALTHCARE DECISION MAKERS
The "In Case You Missed It" Edition Som e Of Ou r M ost Requ est ed Ar t icles Fr om Pr eviou s Edit ion s
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Biof ir e Respir at or y Pan el Codin g: Page 4
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CM S Radiat ion On cology M odel Delay: Page 11
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- PAM A Help Is Her e! - COVID-19 Billing Update: Get The Latest - CM S Pr ice Tr an spar en cy Help - Converting Inpatient Medicare Claims For Outpatient Payments
FAST LINKS
Im plan t able Def ibr illat or ICD-10 Codin g: Page 12
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M edi-Cal Updat ed Billin g Policy For Im m u n e Globu lin s Page 16
- Fin din g Cash In Un lik ely Reven u e St r eam - Billing EPO On An Outpatient Claim - CM S Updat es LTC & SNF Em er gen cy Waiver s
Replacin g Hom e Healt h RAP Page 30
- Administration: Pages 1-42 - HIM /Coding Staff: Pages 1-42 - Providers: Pages 2,3,4,11,12,15,24,30 - Laboratory: Pages 2,16 - PAM A Guidance: Page 2 1 3 - COVID Guidance: Page
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Pulmonology: Page 4 Price Transparency: Page 16 Home Health: Page 9 Compliance: Pages 2,9 Radiation Oncology: Page 11 Finance: Page 21 Outpatient Svcs: Pages 15,17,24
© PARA Healt h Car e An alyt ics an HFRI Company CPT® is a r egist er ed t r adem ar k of t h e Am er ican M edical Associat ion
PARA Weekly eJournal: June 3, 2021
PAM A HELP IS HERE
PARA has developed a 30-minute online presentation that can help keep you compliant with PAMA laboratory rate and reporting requirements. It's vital information for all clinical laboratories. Click t h e sign s t o w at ch . Th en con t act you r PARA Accou n t Execu t ive f or m or e in f or m at ion .
Our amazingguides. Ran di Br an t n er
San dr a LaPlace
Violet Ar ch u let -Ch iu
Vice President of Analytics
Account Executive
Senior Account Executive
rbrantner@hfri.net
splace@para-hcfs.com
varchuleta@para-hcfs.com
719.308.0883
800.999.3332 x 225
800.999.3332 x219
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PARA Weekly eJournal: June 3, 2021
COVID-19 UPDATE
PARA Healt h Car e An alyt ics continues to update COVID-19 coding and billing information based on frequently changing guidelines and regulations from CMS and payers. All coding must be supported by medical documentation.
Download the updated Guidebook by clicking here.
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PARA Weekly eJournal: June 3, 2021
BIOFIRE® RESPIRATORY PANEL CODING AND COVERAGE UPDATE Effective April 1, 2021, three proprietary CPT® codes for Biofire® respiratory panel lab tests will be deleted ? 0098U, 0099U, and 0100U. The change was listed in the November 2020 CPT® Panel meeting agenda: https://www.ama-assn.org/system/files/ 2021-01/cpt-pla-codes-short.pdf
Some have speculated that since COVID-19 was not among the targets tested in these three CPT®s, Biofire® withdrew the codes from active use. 0202U Deemed Non-Covered. Meanwhile, hospitals and laboratories across the US have found that the 22-target Biofire® respiratory panel HCPCS 0202U is non-covered by most MAC?s through Local Coverage Determinations. This has confounded some purchasers of the test since the national Clinical Lab Fee Schedule rate was hefty $416.78. In its response to comments received in the course of adopting LCD L37764, WPS offers the following rationale to a commenter who attempted to persuade the MAC that multiplex testing for more than five targets should be covered: Local Coverage Article for Response to Comments: MolDX: Multiplex Nucleic Acid Amplified Tests for Respiratory Viral Panels (DL37764) (cms.gov) 4
PARA Weekly eJournal: June 3, 2021
BIOFIRE® RESPIRATORY PANEL CODING AND COVERAGE UPDATE ?The commenter makes a hypothetical argument pointing out that there potentially exists a clinical application for a respiratory viral panel in some patients so as to lead to a better outcome. However, the commenter does not provide evidence that any particular panel (where a panel is a specified group of tests which must be ordered together) or any group of panels has clinical utility for a particular population or for beneficiaries with well identified indications. For coverage purposes Palmetto GBA must make coverage decisions regarding specific panels or specific selections of pathogens for specific indications. As such, while we agree that it is conceivable that there exists a patient population who might benefit from a particular group of multiple respiratory viral tests, at this point no evidence has been brought to our attention regarding how a clinician is to identify such a population for any specific available test. Moreover, the only virus group in the core set of pathogens for which treatment is widely (but still not universally) appropriate is influenza. For those cases in which more than one causative virus could be related to the observed signs or symptoms (either due to overlap of typical symptoms or the presence of atypical symptoms), and diagnosis of a specific causative agent is expected to alter treatment in a way that improves the outcome, the clinician could order individual viral tests for which a result would be expected to lead to clinically actionable information. If new evidence develops demonstrating that a particular panel or the use of a particular set of respiratory viral tests, which match the components of a panel, leads to enhanced patient outcomes we would be willing to reconsider this coverage determination. Draft LCDs and established LCDs limiting coverage of multiplex testing have been adopted by most MACs. Multiplex PCR respiratory viral panels of 6 or more pathogens are deemed not medically necessary and therefore non-covered.
Here are links to a few LCDs from MACs across the country Novita Proposed Local Coverage Determination for Respiratory Pathogen Panel Testing (DL38916) (cms.gov) WPS Local Coverage Determination for MolDX: Multiplex Nucleic Acid Amplified Tests for Respiratory Viral Panels (L37764) (cms.gov) Noridian Local Coverage Determination for MolDX: Multiplex Nucleic Acid Amplified Tests for Respiratory Viral Panels (L37315) (cms.gov) CGS Local Coverage Determination for MolDX: Multiplex Nucleic Acid Amplified Tests for Respiratory Viral Panels (L37348) (cms.gov) Palmetto Local Coverage Article for Billing and Coding: MolDX: Multiplex Nucleic Acid Amplified Tests for Respiratory Viral Panels (cms.gov) First Coast Proposed Local Coverage Determination for Respiratory Pathogen Panel Testing (DL38918) (cms.gov) 5
PARA Weekly eJournal: June 3, 2021
BIOFIRE® RESPIRATORY PANEL CODING AND COVERAGE UPDATE PARA inquired of CMS whether hospitals which had purchased the 0202U test could report a lower target-count CPT®, such as 87631, in lieu of 0202U in order to receive some reimbursement for the spent expense of the 22-target respiratory panel.CMS responded by referring the question to local MACs for guidance. MACs tend to limit interaction to identified provider representatives within each jurisdiction; therefore, PARA recommends that hospitals and laboratories reach out to its regional MAC for this coding guidance. A copy of the email from CMS appears here.
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PARA Weekly eJournal: June 3, 2021
CMS DELAYS AUTOMATIC "BREAKTHROUGH DEVICE" COVERAGE
On May 18, 2021, CMS delayed, for a second time, implementation of the Medicare Innovative Technology (MCIT) program.The program, which was originally planned to take effect in March, 2021, was caught up in the blanket executive order of President Biden on January 20, 2021 which suspended implementation of any rules that were not yet in effect on the date of the inauguration. The MCIT rule would have required Medicare and other insurers to provide coverage for the FDA?s ?Breakthrough Medical Devices? for four years after the device receives FDA ?Breakthrough Device? designation.The effective date of the program is now delayed until December 15, 2021. https://www.federalregister.gov/documents/2021/05/18/2021-10466/medicare-program-medicarecoverage-of-innovative-technology-mcit-and-definition-of-reasonable-and
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PARA Weekly eJournal: June 3, 2021
CMS DELAYS AUTOMATIC "BREAKTHROUGH DEVICE" COVERAGE
The concept of mandating coverage solely on the FDA ?Breakthrough Device? designation for both Medicare and commercial insurers is controversial. Public commenters challenged CMS?premise that the MCIT coverage could result in improved care for Medicare beneficiaries absent specific evidence that the MCIT eligible devices benefit the Medicare population. The FDA Breakthrough Devices Program recognizes medical devices and device-led combination products that meet two criteria: - The device provides for more effective treatment or diagnosis of life-threatening or irreversibly debilitating human disease or conditions - The device must satisfy one of the following elements: it represents a breakthrough technology; no approved or cleared alternatives exist; it offers significant advantages over existing approved or cleared alternatives, including additional considerations outlined in the statute; or device availability is in the best interest of patients The Trump administration rule provided that reimbursement for MCIT devices would follow the established reimbursement processes for New Technology Add-on Payments (NTAP) under the Inpatient Prospective Payment System (IPPS).To be eligible for NTAP payments, a new medical service or technology must meet three criteria: - the medical service or technology must be new; - the medical service or technology must be costly such that the DRG rate otherwise applicable to discharges involving the medical service or technology is determined to be inadequate; and, - the service or technology must demonstrate a substantial clinical improvement over existing services or technologies. Under the Inpatient Prospective Payment System, the amount of additional reimbursement, above the DRG, for new technology varies depending on the hospital?s cost to charge ratio and the DRG reimbursement.At most, the add-on covers one-half the cost of the device (for full details, see section 160 of Chapter 3 of the Medicare Claims Processing Manual at: https://www.cms.gov/Regulationsand-Guidance/Guidance/Manuals/Downloads/ clm104c03.pdf#.) Under the Outpatient Prospective Payment System (OPPS), HCPCS for New Technology items are paid under OPPS as pass-through status G, which utilizes the hospital?s cost-to-charge ratio applied to billed charges in calculating reimbursement.
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PARA Weekly eJournal: June 3, 2021
CMS PRICE TRANSPARENCY COMPLIANCE UPDATE
On M ay 3, 2021, t h e Am er ican Hospit al Associat ion (AHA) r eleased a M em ber Advisor y r egar din g n on com plian ce w it h t h e Cen t er s f or M edicar e & M edicaid Ser vices?(CM S) Hospit al Pr ice Tr an spar en cy r equ ir em en t s. In it , t h ey n ot e t h at CM S h as lau n ch ed pr oact ive au dit s of h ospit al w ebsit es an d h ave evalu at ed com plain t s pr esen t ed t o CM S by con su m er s.
According to the publication, CMS started with auditing larger acute care hospitals and have now expanded their examination of random hospitals.The first set of warning letters were issued the week of April 19th.However, CMS has indicated that they will not announce the list of hospitals that have received warning letters but will publish the identities of the hospitals that remain non-compliant and receive a monetary penalty if they have not addressed the issues within 90 days. PARA HealthCare Analytics, an HFRI Company, is among the leaders in supporting hospitals in achieving readiness for CMS Price Transparency regulations, which will help consumers make more informed healthcare purchasing decisions. To ensure consumers will be able to browse for healthcare services in the same way they shop for other goods and services online, PARA has developed robust and accurate pricing capabilities for area healthcare consumers. The PARA solution includes a patient-facing estimator that delivers user-friendly, procedure-level estimates reflecting patients?specific coverage limits and is updated quarterly for the facility. As a reminder, the CMS Hospital Price Transparency rule requires that hospitals publish detailed pricing information online to help consumers make accurate cost comparisons for a range of treatments and procedures. The rule contains two types of price transparency requirements: - Hospitals must post their entire array of standard charges online in a machine-readable file that is easily accessible from their public website. - Hospitals must publish a document listing pricing for 300 specific shoppable healthcare services. Of these 300 items, 70 have been pre-defined by CMS, while the remaining 230 can be selected at the discretion of the hospital. For both requirements, a range of different price categories must be shown, including gross charges, payer-specific negotiated rates, self-pay discounted rates, and de-identified minimum and maximum negotiated charges. The files also must contain any ancillary charges that are customarily included for the specific shoppable service, such as the costs associated with additional related procedures, tasks, allied services, supplies, or drugs, as well as any professional fees billed separately from the facility bill.
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PARA Weekly eJournal: June 3, 2021
CMS PRICE TRANSPARENCY COMPLIANCE UPDATE
These requirements present challenges when it comes the sheer data mining and payer contract analytics required to deliver on the mandates. PARA?s payer contract models accommodate a variety of settlement methodologies by patient type including MS-DRG, APR-DRG, EAPG, ASC Levels, APC packaging, and percent of charge, among others. For a typical hospital with a 10,000-line chargemaster, seven patient types, and 20 payer contracts, this could mean 1.4M calculations needed to fulfill the mandate. According to an HFMA Article on the topic, this detailed approach could cost a hospital several hundred thousand dollars to contract with a consulting firm. However, PARA's Price Transparency Tool, which uses the actual payer contract language as outlined in the CMS requirements to make those millions of calculations, costs under $30,000 in the first year, with nominal (under $3,000) quarterly maintenance fees thereafter.It is the most cost-effective and comprehensive solution out there today. Consumers expect to shop for healthcare the same way they shop for other goods and services and healthcare providers must be ready to meet that need. Therefore, PARA HealthCare Analytics, has partnered with hospitals across the nation to empower them in providing this required information in a consumer-friendly, intuitive manner. The team at PARA HealthCare Analytics believes that price transparency and Patient Price Estimators are a useful and important component of healthcare consumerism and have spent the past year preparing for the release of these requirements.In speaking with hospital associations, clients, and business vendor groups, we are finding that we are one of the only vendors who can completely satisfy, to the spirit and letter of the law, both CMS requirements in a fully customizable manner. According to Peter Ripper, CEO of PARA, ?The President?s Executive Order in June 2019 promoted increased availability of meaningful pricing information for Patients. The key word here is meaningful. Therefore, since the release of the CMS requirements, we?ve focused on creating an approach to these obligations that would lessen confusion for patients and support the hospital in fulfilling the mandates.With a healthcare environment riddled with various pressures including thin operating margins, health plan competition, and a shortage of resources due to a pandemic, PARA has done the heavy lifting to deliver the best solution possible for our Hospital Partners.?
PARA has done the heavy lifting to deliver the best solution possible for our Hospital Partners.
To f in d ou t m or e abou t ou r solu t ion , please con t act on e of ou r exper t s. . San dr a LaPlace
Violet Ar ch u let -Ch iu
Account Executive
Senior Account Executive
splace@para-hcfs.com
varchuleta@para-hcfs.com
800.999.3332 x 225
800.999.3332 x219
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PARA Weekly eJournal: June 3, 2021
CMS RADIATION ONCOLOGY MODEL DELAYED UNTIL 1-1-2022
Another delay has been announced on Medicare?s ?Radiation Oncology? Innovation model. On September 18, 2020, CMS finalized the Radiation Oncology (RO) Model in the final rule entitled ?Medicare Program; Specialty Care Models to Improve Quality of Care and Reduce Expenditures.? Participation in the program is mandatory for 30% of all radiation oncology providers in the US, and was first slated to go into effect 1/1/2021. Provider feedback persuaded CMS to delay the start to 7/1/2021; but then Congress intervened with the Consolidated Appropriation bill. The Appropriation bill further postponed implementation until January 1, 2022. Here?s a link and an excerpt from the Medicare ?Innovation Center? website promising future updates on the program:
Radiation Oncology Model Initially, CMS intended to run the RO Model for five (5) years beginning on January 01, 2021, ending on December 31, 2025. PARA offers a recap of the provisions in the Radiation Oncology Model in a paper published in September, 2020 at the following link: PARA CMS RO Innovation Program - September 2020 (MBL edits).pdf (para-hcfs.com)
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PARA Weekly eJournal: June 3, 2021
IMPLANTABLE DEFIBRILLATOR ICD-10 CODING
Pr ovider s w h ich of f er au t om at ic car diac def ibr illat or (C1882) pr ocedu r es sh ou ld en su r e t h e HIM depar t m en t is aw ar e of a n ew M LN ar t icle r eleased on Jan u ar y 9, 2021 r egar din g ICD-10 codin g w h ich su ppor t s m edical n ecessit y r equ ir em en t s. The new article stresses the importance of recording ICD10 codes for heart failure to meet the requirements of medical necessity, even if the symptoms of heart failure have been managed successfully.A link and excerpts are provided below: https://www.cms.gov/files/document/se20006.pdf
?The current requirements for reporting heart failure codes (ICD-10 diagnosis codes I50.21, I50.22, I50.23, I50.41, I50.42, and I50.43) for patients with ischemic or non-ischemic cardiomyopathy are based on NCD language, which specifically adds this requirement. ? ?CMS believes that perhaps some have misinterpreted correct coding principles with respect to the use of these codes. CMS agrees that patients do not have to have ?active heart failure? to qualify for an Automatic Implantable Cardioverter Defibrillator (AICD) but they also do not have to have ?active heart failure? in order to append one of these codes.? ? This clarification is particularly important in light of the nationwide Recovery Audit Contractor issue, approved on October 6, 2020, which authorized RACs to examine whether medical necessity requirements were met for inpatient implantable defibrillator claims.Defibrillator claims are usually fairly high cost, due to the expense of the implantable device; failure to meet medical necessity on these cases can represent a large sum that includes out-of-pocket costs to the provider for the device itself. RAC auditors will focus on inpatient defibrillator cases performed after National Coverage Determination 20.4 became effective on February 15, 2018.In addition to requirements related to patient condition as represented on the claim by ICD10 codes, the NCD requires a formal ?shared decision making visit? between the patient and the physician prior to the procedure.If that visit was not conducted, reimbursement will be recouped in full.Since inpatient ICD cases are typically reimbursed at between $30,000 and $90,000, the threat is significant.
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PARA Weekly eJournal: June 3, 2021
IMPLANTABLE DEFIBRILLATOR ICD-10 CODING
A link and an excerpt from the approved issue announcement on the CMS website: https://www.cms.gov/node/1439781 Issue Name: 0195-Implantable Automatic Defibrillator- Inpatient Procedure: Medical Necessity and Documentation Requirements MAC Jurisdiction: All A/B MACs Description: The implantable automatic defibrillator is an electronic device designed to detect and treat life-threatening tachyarrhythmias. The device consists of a pulse generator and electrodes for sensing and defibrillating. Medical documentation will be reviewed for medical necessity to validate that implantable automatic cardiac defibrillators are used only for covered indications. PARA clients can identify the number of inpatient cases at risk of audit by using the CMS Claims Database on the PARA Data Editor. Search inpatient claims for DRG?s 222, 223, 224, 225, 226, and 227:
The National Coverage Determination for Implantable Automatic Defibrillators (NCD 20.4) became effective February 15, 2019.The NCD is available on the CMS Coverage Database at the link below: https://www.cms.gov/medicare-coverage-database/details/ncd-details.aspx?NCDId=110&ncdver=4 &DocID=20.4&bc=gAAAAAIAAAAA&
The NCD requires that most patients receiving an initial ICD placement must first attend a ?formal shared decision making visit? with their doctor prior to the ICD placement procedure.If the ICD is placed without the required prerequisite visit, Medicare will not cover the procedure.Since payment is not predicated upon submitting the visit documentation in advance, many hospitals have been billing ICD cases and receiving substantial payments while unaware that the cases did not meet medical necessity. In addition to other coverage requirements, the shared decision-making visit applies to the following categories of patients who may be considering an implantable ICD procedure: - Patients with a prior MI and a measured Left Ventricular Ejection Fraction (LVEF) < 0.30
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PARA Weekly eJournal: June 3, 2021
IMPLANTABLE DEFIBRILLATOR ICD-10 CODING
- Patients who have severe, ischemic, dilated cardiomyopathy but no personal history of sustained VT or cardiac arrest due to VF, and have NYHA Class II or III heart failure, LVEF < 35% - Patients who have severe, non-ischemic, dilated cardiomyopathy but no personal history of cardiac arrest or sustained VT, NYHA Class II or III heart failure, LVEF < 35%, been on optimal medical therapy for at least three months - Patients with documented, familial or genetic disorders with a high risk of life-threatening tachyarrhythmias (sustained VT or VF, to include, but not limited to, long QT syndrome or hypertrophic cardiomyopathy However, the shared decision-making visit is not required to patients with a personal history of sustained Ventricular Tachyarrhythmia (VT) or cardiac arrest due to Ventricular Fibrillation (VF), or patients that have had an ICD previously and require an ICD replacement procedure. The formal shared decision-making encounter must occur between the patient and a physician or qualified non-physician practitioner using an evidence-based decision tool on ICDs prior to initial ICD implantation. The Colorado Program for Patient Centered Decisions offer such a tool at the following website: https://patientdecisionaid.org/icd/
Hospitals would be well served to ensure that ICD10 coding is appropriate and evidence of the shared decision-making visit is on file prior to performing an implantable defibrillator procedure for a Medicare beneficiary for both inpatient and outpatient cases. The procedure is costly due to the expensive purchased implants ? lost revenue for these procedures is more than benign because the significant cost of the implanted defibrillator device itself is at risk.
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PARA Weekly eJournal: June 3, 2021
CONVERTING INPATIENT MEDICARE CLAIMS FOR OUTPATIENT PAYMENTS
Is you r billin g syst em au t om at ically dr oppin g r even u e code 0360 (oper at in g r oom ) ch ar ges f r om Type of Bill 12X? If so, r ead on . There are important differences in Medicare reimbursement for services provided during inpatient stay which are converted to an outpatient claim due to medical necessity, as opposed to billing an inpatient account on an outpatient claim because the patient has no Part A coverage. Billers who don?t understand the difference could cost the hospital valuable reimbursement. Inpatient operating room HCPCS codes (revenue code 036X)are not reimbursed on TOB 120 if the Medicare beneficiary has no Part A coverage.However, they are payable if the 12X claim is submitted for a beneficiary who is eligible for Part A benefits, but the inpatient stay was deemed not medically necessary. In 2014, Medicare changed its policy to permit reimbursement of inpatient surgery charges in revenue code 0360 reported on an outpatient claim which converted inpatient charges from a stay which did not meet medically necessary criteria: https://www.cms.gov/Outreach-and-Education/Medicare-Learning-Network-MLN/MLNMattersArticles/ Downloads/MM8445.pdf
Sometimes a Medicare beneficiary?s inpatient claim is ineligible for coverage because the inpatient level of care was deemed not medically necessary.In some cases, an audit by the MAC, a RAC, or a QIO may find the documentation does not support an inpatient level of care, and therefore the inpatient claim is denied, but the hospital is permitted to submit an outpatient claim for the individual services instead. In other cases, the hospital?s own utilization management team may identify the case after the patient has been discharged ? but before the claim has been submitted (Condition Code 44.) When an inpatient claim is converted to an outpatient claim due to failure to meet inpatient criteria, medically necessary services provided during the inpatient stay, including services in revenue code 0360, are generally eligible for reimbursement under Medicare Part B. 15
PARA Weekly eJournal: June 3, 2021
MEDI-CAL UPDATED BILLING POLICY FOR IMMUNE GLOBULINS
Superseding communication from the California Department of Health Services (DHCS), Medi-Cal has introduced new changes for billing and claims submission of various HCPCS and CPT® codes for Physician Administered Drugs (PAD). Biologicals are billed with both HCPCS and CPT® codes. HCPCS codes often are more specific than CPT® codes. Providers are instructed to report the corresponding HCPCS code listed in the table below:
For Gammagard Liquid, Gammaked, Gammunex-C and Cutaquig, providers will report with CPT® code 90284. For providers who previously rebilled with CPT® codes and had claims denied, Medi-Cal has instructed providers to rebill with the appropriate HCPCS codes. New Treatment Authorization Requests (TARS) are not necessary for the rebilling of claims. For claims that are outside of timely filing limitations, the restriction is waived, and providers may resubmit previously denied claims. https://files.medi-cal.ca.gov/pubsdoco/newsroom/newsroom_30510_02.aspx 16
PARA Weekly eJournal: June 3, 2021
CONVERTING INPATIENT MEDICARE CLAIMS FOR OUTPATIENT PAYMENTS
In the circumstance that an inpatient stay was deemed not medically necessary, the hospital may submit: - A TOB 13X claim for outpatient services rendered within the 72-hour periodpriorto admission as an inpatient, and - A TOB 12X claim for services rendered after admission to inpatient status, but submitted for outpatient reimbursement due to failure to meet medical necessity ? with the exception of charges in certain revenue codes (the list of excluded revenue codes is provided on page 5.)The 12X claims are always re-bills, after a denied claim or a TOB 110 claim is submitted for the denied or self-denied inpatient stay.These claims should report occurrence span code M1 and condition code W2 (along with other detailed billing requirements explained in the Medicare Claims Processing Manual.) Two Medicare manuals set out the coverage and billing requirements, the Benefits manual and the Claims Processing Manual.Excerpts on the following pages explain the reimbursement provisions for inpatient services that are not payable under Part A due to medical necessity. The Medicare Benefits Policy Manual discusses coverage: https://www.cms.gov/Regulations-and-Guidance/Guidance/Manuals/Downloads/bp102c06.pdf# Medicare Benefits Policy Manual, Chapter 6 10.1 - Reasonable and Necessary Part A Hospital Inpatient Claim Denials (Rev. 182, Issued: 03-21-14, Effective: 10-01-13, Implementation: 04-21-14) If a Medicare Part A claim for inpatient hospital services is denied because the inpatient admission was not reasonable and necessary, or if a hospital determines under 42 CFR §482.30(d) or §485.641 after a beneficiary is discharged that the beneficiary?s inpatient admission was not reasonable and necessary, and if waiver of liability payment is not made, the hospital may be paid for the following Part B inpatient services that would have been reasonable and necessary if the beneficiary had been treated as a hospital outpatient rather than admitted as an inpatient, provided the beneficiary is enrolled in Medicare Part B: - Part B services paid under the outpatient prospective payment system (OPPS), excluding observation services and hospital outpatient visits that require an outpatient status. Hospitals that are excluded from payment under the OPPS are instead paid under their alternative payment methodology (e.g., reasonable cost, all inclusive rate, or Maryland waiver) for the services that are otherwise payable under the OPPS - The following services excluded from OPPS payment, that are instead paid under the respective Part B fee schedules or prospectively determined rates for which payment is made for these services when provided to hospital outpatients: - Physical therapy services, speech-language pathology services, and occupational therapy services (see chapter 15, §§220 and 230 of this manual, ?Covered Medical and Other Health Services,?) - Ambulance services.
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PARA Weekly eJournal: June 3, 2021
CONVERTING INPATIENT MEDICARE CLAIMS FOR OUTPATIENT PAYMENTS
- Prosthetic devices, prosthetic supplies, and orthotic devices paid under the DMEPOS fee schedule (excludes implantable prosthetic devices (other than dental) which replace all or part of an internal body organ (including colostomy bags and supplies directly related to colostomy care) and replacement of such devices) - Durable medical equipment supplied by the hospital for the patient to take home, except durable medical equipment that is implantable - Certain clinical diagnostic laboratory services - Screening and diagnostic mammography services - Annual wellness visit providing personalized prevention plan services Hospitals may also be paid under Part B for services included in the payment window prior to the point of inpatient admission for outpatient services treated as inpatient services (see Pub. 100-04, Medicare Claims Processing Manual, Chapter 4, §10.12, ?Payment Window for Outpatient Services Treated as Inpatient Services?), including services requiring an outpatient status. The hospital can only bill for services that it provided directly or under arrangement in accordance with Part B payment rules. Outpatient therapeutic services furnished at an entity that is wholly owned or wholly operated by the hospital and is not part of the hospital (such as a physician?s office), may not be billed by the hospital to Part B. Reference labs may be billed only if the referring laboratory does not bill for the laboratory test (see Pub. 100-04, Medicare Claims Processing Manual, Chapter 16, §40.1, ?Laboratories Billing for Referred Tests?). The services billed to Part B must be reasonable and necessary and must meet all applicable Part B coverage and payment conditions. Claims for Part B services submitted following a reasonable and necessary Part A claim denial or hospital utilization review determination must be filed no later than the close of the period ending 12 months or 1 calendar year after the date of service (see Pub. 100-04, Medicare Claims Processing Manual, Chapter 1, §70 ?Time Limitations for Filing Part A and Part B Claims?). See Pub. 100-04, Medicare Claims Processing Manual, chapter 4, §240 for required bill types. The Medicare Claims Processing Manual provides billing instructions, including a list of revenue codes that are EXCLUDED from Part B coverage. Revenue code 0360 is not excluded: https://www.cms.gov/Regulations-and-Guidance/Guidance/Manuals/Downloads/clm104c04.pdf Medicare Claims Processing Manual, Chapter 4 -- Part B Hospital (Including Inpatient Hospital Part B and OPPS) 240.1 - Editing Of Hospital Part B Inpatient Services: Reasonable and Necessary Part A Hospital Inpatient Denials (Rev. 4394, Issued: 09-13-19, Effective: 10-01-13, Implementation: 10-15-19)When inpatient services are denied as not medically necessary or a provider submitted medical necessity denial utilizing occurrence span code ?M1?, and the services are furnished by a participating hospital, Medicare pays under Part B for physician services and the non-physician medical and other health services provided in Pub. 100-02, Medicare Benefit Policy Manual, Chapter 6, §10.1, ?Reasonable and Necessary Part A Hospital Inpatient Claim Denials.?
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PARA Weekly eJournal: June 3, 2021
CONVERTING INPATIENT MEDICARE CLAIMS FOR OUTPATIENT PAYMENTS
A hospital may also be paid for Part B inpatient services if it determines under Medicare's utilization review requirements that a beneficiary should have received hospital outpatient rather than hospital inpatient services, and the beneficiary has already been discharged from the hospital (commonly referred to as hospital self-audit). If the hospital already submitted a claim to Medicare for payment under Part A, the hospital would be required to adjust its Part A claim (to make the provider liable) prior to submitting a claim for payment of Part B inpatient services. Whether or not the hospital had submitted a claim to Part A for payment, we require the hospital to submit a Part A claim indicating that the provider is liable under section 1879 of the Act for the cost of the Part A services. The hospital could then submit an inpatient claim for payment under Part B for all services that would have been reasonable and necessary if the beneficiary had been treated as a hospital outpatient rather than admitted as a hospital inpatient, except where those services specifically require an outpatient status. A hospital part B inpatient services claim billed when a reasonable and necessary part A hospital inpatient was denied must be billed with: - A condition code ?W2? attesting that this is a rebilling and no appeal is in process - ?A/B REBILLING? in the treatment authorization field, and - The original, denied inpatient claim (CCN/DCN/ICN) number NOTE: Providers submitting an 837I are instructed to place the appropriate Prior Authorization code above into Loop 2300 REF02 (REF01 = G1) as follows: REF*G1*A/B REBILLING~ For DDE or paper Claims, "A/B Rebilling" will be added in FL 63. NOTE: Providers submitting an 837I are instructed to place the DCN in the Billing Notes loop 2300/NTE in the format: NTE*ADD*ABREBILL12345678901234~ For DDE or paper Claims, Providers are instructed to use the word "ABREBILL" plus the denied inpatient DCN/CCN/ICN shall be added to the Remarks Field (form locator #80) on the claim using the following format: "ABREBILL12345678901234". (The numeric string (12345678901234) is meant to represent original claim DCN/ICN numbers from the inpatient denial.) Not Allowed Revenue Codes: The claims processing system shall set edits to prevent payment on Type of Bill 012x for claims containing the revenue codes listed in the table below.
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PARA Weekly eJournal: June 3, 2021
CONVERTING INPATIENT MEDICARE CLAIMS FOR OUTPATIENT PAYMENTS
Here?s the next section of the Claims Processing Manual, which sets out the excluded revenue codes for inpatient services converted to an outpatient claim because the beneficiary has no Part A coverage, and is eligible for Part B only: 240.2 - Editing Of Hospital Part B Inpatient Services: Other Circumstances in Which Payment Cannot Be Made under Part A (Rev. 4394, Issued: 09-13-19, Effective: 10-01-13, Implementation: 10-15-19) When Medicare pays under Part B for the limited set of non-physician medical and other health services provided in Pub. 100-02, Medicare Benefit Policy Manual, chapter 6, §10.2 (that is, when furnished by a participating hospital to an inpatient of the hospital who is not entitled to benefits under Part A, has exhausted his or her Part A benefits, or receives services not covered under Part A), ? Not Allowed Revenue Codes
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PARA Weekly eJournal: June 3, 2021
FINDING CASH IN UNLIKELY REVENUE STREAM
A Case St u dy In Aged Accou n t s How A Large Health System Reduced Extremely-Aged Account Write-Offs With High Success Rate OVERVIEW A large health system in California, whose fiscal year-end was fast approaching, was faced with a large subset of inventory at 386 days old. It is well known that the longer a claim goes unresolved, the less money there is to collect and the general consensus for aged claims exceeding a year is to write it off. The system wasn?t ready to accept the losses and was not in the position to add resources. The system decided to partner with Healthcare Financial Resources (HFRI) to collect any amount that could be saved, and signed on for a one-time, fiscal year-end project. BACKGROUND The California health system?s fiscal year-end was at the end of March, and upon agreement, HFRI received the placements the first week of February with a four month agreement to boost their year-end collections. This left HFRI with two months to collect as much of the $9 million in placements as possible before the year end, plus an extra two months to collect anything else that could be reclaimed. The age of the accounts and the denial mix were two major contributors to the challenge of resolving this inventory. 31% of the accounts were Managed Medicare and Medicaid with an average age of 409 days. The non-government payers consisted of 69% of the accounts and had an average age of 376 days. Out of the total denial mix, 40% were inpatient contractual reviews and 33% were clinical based rejections. EXECUTION HFRI utilized their process of combined robotic analytics and intelligent automation along with specialized representative experts to collect on the $9 million inventory that was over 386 days old. This process allowed HFRI to quickly identify that out of the $9 million in inventory, $7 million had a chance of collectability while the remaining $2 million was labeled dead inventory. In order to accomplish the goal of making low collectible accounts collectible, strict oversight was required. HFRI organized and distributed the collectible inventory to the remediation specialists whose skill set matched that of the inventory and had them challenge the carriers to the highest degree. The dead inventory was distributed to the analyst team to complete the proper adjustments and to identify exactly what went wrong. After the analysts identified the actual root causes, the problems were compiled into a presentation for the health system, explaining the pain points and how the system could avoid these denials in the future.
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PARA Weekly eJournal: June 3, 2021
FINDING CASH IN UNLIKELY REVENUE STREAM
Following the set up of the structure of collecting on these accounts, experienced management constantly monitored and calibrated the staff to optimize for efficiency. This strategy proved to be so successful that the health system requested an extension of the contract to have HFRI continue to collect on the accounts. RESULTS The fiscal year-end project lead with 9 million in placements at 386 days and HFRI was able to obtain a 34% net collection rate, with a 27% gross rate over a 9-month period. In the four months HFRI was originally given to work the accounts, a collection growth of $500k per month was achieved for totals of: - $980k by the end of March - $1.5 million by the end of April - $2 million by the end of May At the end of the four months, HFRI collected $2 million and identified that there was $2 million in opportunities remaining and continued to collect on them as the one-time service had grown into a true partnership. After pushing back on the insurance carriers for lack of payment, HFRI was able to collect $2.5 million for a net collection rate of 34%. In addition to bringing in the system?s hard-earned cash, HFRI also provided trending insights into the denials that impacted their bottom line and how to avoid these denials in the future. This included detailed trending on top denial areas including: clinical (37%), contractual underpayments (30%), coding, billing, and rebilling (27%), and coverage and registration issues (6%). In the end, HFRI successfully collected on a subset of inventory that is not typically highly collectible with a good turnaround. HFRI can succeed where others have been unable to and areas that are not necessarily thought of as collectible. ?Some people call themselves vendors when they have no business calling themselves vendors, but HFRI does,? said Corporate Director of Patient Financial Services. CONCLUSION HFRI?s scalable, client-specific accounts receivable resolution and recovery solutions allow hospitals to systematically address problem claims across the full AR spectrum- from long term to a project basis. With the addition of our proprietary intelligent automation working alongside our remediation specialists, we?re able to resolve all claims, regardless of size or age- bringing in the cash and providing real-time trending presentations to provide insight into what is truly driving your delayed payments and offering solutions to prevent these occurrences from happening in the future.
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PARA Weekly eJournal: June 3, 2021
FINDING CASH IN UNLIKELY REVENUE STREAM
If you?re looking for a new AR recovery and resolution provider to partner with long term or on a project basis and would like to see a demo of our system and how it guides our reps to truly allow us to capture missing payments on aged inventory, contact us today to learn more about how we can help your organization accelerate its financial transformation. Our rates are contingency based, so there are no hidden fees and you can cancel at any time for any reason. Our capabilities include: Fiscal year-end projects: We pursue the AR backlogs that your existing staff will not be able to complete by the end of the fiscal year to increase cash collection and reduce write-offs. A time of 3+ months will produce the best results. Primary AR recovery and resolution: We pursue aging and small-balance claims identified by your staff as problematic. If a claim has previously been worked internally, referring it to HFRI?s dedicated, specialized teams can help ensure quicker cash conversion and a reduction of bad debt reserves. Pre write-off AR recovery and resolution: In addition to primary AR recovery and management services, HFRI also offers pre write-off (often known as secondary) insurance AR recovery to help you collect highly aged claims and minimize write-offs. Legacy system conversions: Transitioning to a new system can slow down the claims process and create problems for hospital personnel who must work between two billing platforms. HFRI can provide interim solutions to help you accelerate pre-conversion cash and assist with post-conversion AR resolution. AR recovery projects: HFRI is available to assist you on a temporary project basis to address AR backlogs that can?t be worked by your existing staff. HFRI, a nationwide leader in accounts receivable recovery and resolution, works as a virtual extension of your hospital central billing office to help you resolve and collect more of your insurance accounts receivable faster and improves operating margins through a seamless and collaborative partnership with your internal team. For more information, visit: www.hfri.net 2500 Westfield Dr. Suite 2-300 | Elgin, IL 60124 888.971.9309 | Email Us
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PARA Weekly eJournal: June 3, 2021
BILLING EPO ON AN OUTPATIENT HOSPITAL CLAIM
Epoet in Alf a (EPO) an d Dar bepoet in Alf a (Ar an esp), k n ow n as Er yt h r opoiesis-St im u lat in g Agen t s (ESAs), m ay be cover ed by M edicar e f or t h e t r eat m en t of an em ia t h at of t en r esu lt s f r om ch r on ic k idn ey disease, ch em ot h er apy, an d cer t ain ot h er con dit ion s.ESAs m im ic h u m an pr ot ein er yt h r opoiet in t o st im u lat e a pat ien t ?s bon e m ar r ow , w h ich pr odu ces r ed blood cells.
Medicare requires specific codes and modifiers which differ depending on whether the patient is an End-Stage Renal Disease (ESRD) patient or a non-ESRD patient.
Non-ESRD Patients When an outpatient hospital administers an ESA to anon-ESRDpatient, the ESA is reported under revenue code 0636 with either HCPCS J0881 or J0885: J0881 ? injection darbepoetin alfa, 1 microgram (non-ESRD use) (Aranesp) J0885 ? injection, epoetin alfa (for non-ESRD use), 1000 units (EPO) Modifiers must be appended to the Erythropoiesis Stimulating Agents (ESA) J0881 or J0885 as follows: EA: ESA, anemia, chemo-induced EB: ESA, anemia, radio-induced EC: ESA, anemia, non-chemo/radio The full modifier description is available on the PARA Data Editor Calculator tab, Modifier Lookup feature: 24
PARA Weekly eJournal: June 3, 2021
BILLING EPO ON AN OUTPATIENT HOSPITAL CLAIM
Although Medicare also requests an additional modifier to indicate the route of administration of an ESA, in addition to the EA/EB/EC modifier, they will process claims without the JA or JB modifier: JA: Intravenous administration JB: Subcutaneous administration The PARA Data Editor includes claims data procured from Medicare (without PHI); the EPO line item in the claim below was processed by Medicare, indicating payment on J0881 with modifier EC (but no JA or JB modifier):
Value Codes: When billing the administration of an ESA, the claim must also include the patient?s most recent hematocrit or hemoglobin reading.On an institutional claim, report the hemoglobin using value code 48 and a hematocrit reading with value code 49.On a professional claim, report results in Loop 2400 MEA segment of the CMS-1500. MEA01=TR (for test results), MEA02=R1 (for hemoglobin) or R2 (for hematocrit), and MEA03=the test results. Additional information on medical necessity, reporting, and billing of ESAs for non-ESRD patients begins in paragraph 80.8 of the Medicare Claims Processing Manual, Chapter 17 ? Drugs and Biologicals:
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PARA Weekly eJournal: June 3, 2021
BILLING EPO ON AN OUTPATIENT HOSPITAL CLAIM
https://www.cms.gov/Regulations-and-Guidance/Guidance/Manuals/Downloads/clm104c17.pdf
CMS provides further guidance for hospitals that provide EPO when also billing for unscheduled or emergency dialysis, HCPCS G0257.
A link and an excerpt from the Medicare Claims Processing Manual, Chapter 4 -- Part B Hospital (Including Inpatient Hospital Part B and OPPS) provides guidance on billing emergency dialysis:
https://www.cms.gov/Regulations-and-Guidance/Guidance/Manuals/Downloads/clm104c04.pdf 200.2 - Hospital Dialysis Services For Patients With and Without End Stage Renal Disease (ESRD) (Rev. 2455, Issued: 04-26-12, Effective: 10-01-12, Implementation; 10-01-12) Effective with claims with dates of service on or after August 1, 2000, hospital-based End Stage Renal Disease (ESRD) facilities must submit services covered under the ESRD benefit in 42 CFR 413.174 (maintenance dialysis and those items and services directly related to dialysis such as drugs, supplies) on a separate claim from services not covered under the ESRD benefit. Items and services not covered under the ESRD benefit must be billed by the hospital using the hospital bill type. Medicare will pay them under the Outpatient Prospective Payment System (OPPS) or to a CAH at reasonable cost. Services covered under the ESRD benefit in 42 CFR 413.174 must be billed on the ESRD bill type and paid under the ESRD PPS. This requirement is necessary to properly pay only unrelated ESRD services (those not covered under the ESRD benefit) under OPPS (or to a CAH at reasonable cost). Medicare does not allow payment for routine or related dialysis treatments covered and paid under the ESRD PPS when furnished to ESRD patients in the outpatient department of a hospital. 26
PARA Weekly eJournal: June 3, 2021
BILLING EPO ON AN OUTPATIENT HOSPITAL CLAIM
CMS may, however, cover certain medical situations in which the ESRD outpatient cannot obtain her or his regularly scheduled dialysis treatment at a certified ESRD facility. While Medicare does not cover non-routine dialysis treatments under the ESRD benefit, the OPPS rule for 2003 allows payment for non-routine dialysis treatments furnished to ESRD outpatients in the outpatient department of a hospital. Payment for unscheduled dialysis furnished to ESRD outpatients and paid under the OPPS is limited to the following circumstances: - Dialysis performed following or in connection with a dialysis-related procedure such as vascular access procedure or blood transfusions; - Dialysis performed following treatment for an unrelated medical emergency; e.g., if a patient goes to the emergency room for chest pains and misses a regularly scheduled dialysis treatment that cannot be rescheduled, CMS allows the hospital to provide and bill Medicare for the dialysis treatment; or -
Emergency dialysis for ESRD patients who would otherwise have to be admitted as inpatients for the hospital to receive payment.In these situations, non-ESRD certified hospital outpatient facilities may bill Medicare using the Healthcare Common Procedure Coding System (HCPCS) code G0257 (Unscheduled or emergency dialysis treatment for an ESRD patient in a hospital outpatient department that is not certified as an ESRD facility.)
HCPCS code G0257 may only be reported on type of bill 13X (hospital outpatient service) or type of bill 85X (critical access hospital). HCPCS code G0257 only reports services for hospital outpatients with ESRD. Beginning on and after October 1, 2012, claims containing HCPCS code G0257 on a type of bill other than 13X for outpatient hospital (or 85X for critical access hospital) will be returned to the provider for correction. ESRD Patients Medicare bundles reimbursement all outpatient renal dialysis services to an ESRD facility under the End Stage Renal Disease (ESRD) Prospective Payment System (PPS). ESRD facilities must provide or arrange all outpatient maintenance dialysis services, equipment, and supplies. When a non-ERSD entity provides ERSD-related services, including many lab tests, for an ESRD beneficiary, that provider should bill the ERSD facility, not the Medicare Administrative Contractor (MAC). However, Medicare pays hospitals foremergencyESRD-related services, including lab testing, unscheduled dialysis, Epoetin Alfa (EPO) and Darbepoetin Alfa (Aranesp) provided in an outpatient hospital setting. Laboratory services in the Emergency Department: When Emergency Room services include laboratory services,modifier AY is not necessary. However, when a claim spans two calendar days and revenue code 045x is on a line item date different from the laboratory test, hospitals must append modifier ET to indicate the laboratory test was ordered in conjunction to the emergency room visit.
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PARA Weekly eJournal: June 3, 2021
BILLING EPO ON AN OUTPATIENT HOSPITAL CLAIM
Additional information on ESRD billing may be found in the Medicare Claims Processing Manual, Chapter 8 ? Outpatient ESRD Hospital, Independent Facility, and Physician/Supplier Chain. https://www.cms.gov/Regulations-and-Guidance/Guidance/Manuals/Downloads/clm104c08.pdf#
Additional Resources National Coverage Determination 110.21 https://www.cms.gov/medicare-coverage-database/details/ncd-details.aspx?NCDId=322&ncdver= 1&DocID=110.21&bc=gAAAAAgAAAAA&
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PARA Weekly eJournal: June 3, 2021
BILLING EPO ON AN OUTPATIENT HOSPITAL CLAIM
Local Coverage Billing and Coding Article ?CGS https://www.cms.gov/medicare-coverage-database/details/article-details.aspx?articleId=56462&ContrTypeId= 9&ContrId=238&ContrVer=2&CntrctrSelected=238*2&ver=11&ContrNum=15202&SearchType=Advanced&CoverageSelection= Local&ArticleType=Ed|Key|SAD|FAQ&PolicyType=Both&s=---&Cntrctr=238&ICD=&CptHcpcsCodeJ0881&kq= true&bc=IAAAACAAAAAA&
Local Coverage Billing and Coding Article ? FCSO https://www.cms.gov/medicare-coverage-database/details/article-details.aspx?articleId=57628&ContrTypeId=12&ContrId= 372&ContrVer=1&CntrctrSelected=372*1&ver=8&ContrNum=09302&SearchType=Advanced&CoverageSelection= Local&ArticleType=Ed|Key|SAD|FAQ&PolicyType=Both&s=---&Cntrctr=372&ICD=&CptHcpcsCodeJ0881&kq=t rue&bc=IAAAACAAAAAA&
Local Coverage Billing and Coding Article ? WPS https://www.cms.gov/medicare-coverage-database/details/article-details.aspx?articleId= 56795&ContrTypeId=9&ContrId=267&ContrVer=1&CntrctrSelected=267*1&ver=14&ContrNum= 08202&SearchType=Advanced&CoverageSelection=Local&ArticleType= Ed|Key|SAD|FAQ&PolicyType=Both&s=---&Cntrctr=267&ICD=&CptHcpcsCodeJ0881&kq= true&bc=IAAAACAAAAAA&
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PARA Weekly eJournal: June 3, 2021
REPLACING HOME HEALTH RAP WITH NOA
Home Health claims ?From dates? on or after January 1, 2022 will require the submission of a one-time home health Notice of Admission (NOA). The NOA will replace the current submission of Request for Anticipated Payment (RAP) for every home health period of care. https://www.cms.gov/files/document/r10795otn.pdf
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PARA Weekly eJournal: June 3, 2021
REPLACING HOME HEALTH RAP WITH NOA
The NOA must be submitted within five (5) days from the start of care (SOC) date. The NOA is intended as a one-time submission to establish the home health period of care and covers contiguous thirty (30) day periods of care until the beneficiary is discharged from home health services. HHA providers are reminded, NOA submission criteria requires HHAs to have a verbal or written order from the physician that contains the services required for the initial visit, and include that the HHA has conducted an initial visit at the SOC. In addition, there will be a reduction in payment amount that is tied to any late submission of NOAs; a NOA is untimely if it is not submitted within five calendar days from the start of care (SOC). The penalty adjustment will be equal to a 1/30threduction to the wage-adjusted 30-day period payment amount for each day from the home health start of care (SOC) date until the date the HHA submitted the NOA. No low utilization payment adjustment (LUPA) per-visit payments shall be made for visits that occurred on days that fall within the period of care prior to the submission of the NOA. NOAs will be submitted using Type of Bill (TOB) 32A and may be canceled using TOB 032D. All claims for periods of care following the admission will be submitted using TOB 329. NOAs will require the following data elements: - Type of Bill 032A or 032D - Statement From/Through Dates - Beneficiary?s Name - Beneficiary?s Date of Birth - Beneficiary?s Gender - Beneficiary?s MBI - Admission Date - HHA Provider Identifier (NPI) NOAs will be returned to provider as unprocessed if - Required data elements are missing - From and Through dates are containing future dates
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PARA Weekly eJournal: June 3, 2021
CMS UPDATES LTC & SNF EMERGENCY REGULATORY WAIVERS
On April 09, 2021, CMS added more regulatory flexibilities to help contain the spread of COVID-19, but they also discontinued several waiver provisions that affect Long Term Care Facilities (LTCs)and Skilled Nursing Facilities (SNFs.) The new regulatory flexibilities were issued under 1135 waivers and were made to be effective retroactively beginning March 01, 2020 until the end of the emergency declaration. https://www.cms.gov/files/document/covid-19-emergency-declaration-waivers.pdf
The waiver provisions that CMS will end effective May 10, 2021 are detailed below:
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PARA Weekly eJournal: June 3, 2021
CMS UPDATES LTC & SNF EMERGENCY REGULATORY WAIVERS
This blanket waiver was intended to assist nursing homes to take swift action to implement transmissionbased precautions and cohort residents who have been exposed or potentially exposed to COVID-19, CMS waived requirements to provide advance notice prior to transfers or discharges and prior to room or roommate changes. Prior to the emergency blanket waiver, facilities were required to provide notice when transferring or discharging residents. Facilities were required to provide notice of the transfer or discharge to the resident/representative 30 days in advance, or as soon as practicable prior to the transfer or discharge. At this time, CMS believes nursing homes have developed practices that have made them able to efficiently cohort residents and provide the required notice in advance. In view of this, facilities are now required to resume providing notice as required in the regulations: - With 30 days advanced notice, or as soon as practicable before the transfer or discharge of a resident; and - Before a room or roommate change Providers please note: CMS is only ending the waivers at (42CFR 483.10) (6) for providing written notice before a room/roommate change, and at 42CFR 483.15(c) (4)(ii) for timing of notification of transfer or discharge. All other related waivers, which continue to allow facilities to transfer or discharge, and change rooms for the sole purpose of cohorting remain in effect. https://www.govregs.com/regulations/title42_chapterIV-i3_part483_subpartB_section483.15
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PARA Weekly eJournal: June 3, 2021
CMS UPDATES LTC & SNF EMERGENCY REGULATORY WAIVERS
Currently, Federal Regulations require a nursing home complete a baseline care plan and comprehensive care plan within 48 hours and seven days of admission to the facility. In light of the PHE, CMS intended this waiver to aid Nursing Home Facilities implement transmissionbased precautions and cohort residents who have been exposed or potentially exposed to COVID-19. CMS waived these requirements when transferring or discharging residents to another long-term care facility requirements for the certain cohorting purposes of admission, after a comprehensive MDS. CMS believes that nursing homes have developed processes for completing these important care planning tasks which is the CMS rationale for ending this emergency blanket waiver for 42 CFR 483.21 (a)(1)(i), (a)(2)(i) and (b)(2)(i). https://www.govregs.com/regulations/title42_chapterIV-i3_part483_subpartB_section483.21
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PARA Weekly eJournal: June 3, 2021
CMS UPDATES LTC & SNF EMERGENCY REGULATORY WAIVERS
CMS waived the MDS timeframe requirements at 42 CFR 483.20 for assessments to allow providers flexibility in completing and transmitting assessments. CMS intended this waiver to allow facilities to prioritize infection control efforts in response to PHE. In monitoring, CMS found the majority of facilities have been completing and transmitting assessments timely, therefore, CMS believes all providers should be able to complete and transmit MDS assessments as required at 42 CFR 483.20. In addition, CMS believes nursing homes should have developed practices for completing these assessments timely, which are critical for resident care planning. https://www.govregs.com/regulations/title42_chapterIV-i3_part483_subpartB_section483.20
Note: The waiver at 42CFR 483.20(k) relating to Pre-Admission Screening and Annual Resident Preview (PASARR) will NOT end at this time (a link and excerpt are provided on the next page.) 35
PARA Weekly eJournal: June 3, 2021
CMS UPDATES LTC & SNF EMERGENCY REGULATORY WAIVERS
https://www.govregs.com/regulations/title42_chapterIV-i3_part483_subpartB_section483.20
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PARA Weekly eJournal: June 3, 2021
MLN CONNECTS
PARA invites you to check out the mlnconnects page available from the Centers For Medicare and Medicaid (CMS). It's chock full of news and information, training opportunities, events and more! Each week PARA will bring you the latest news and links to available resources. Click each link for the PDF!
Th u r sday, M ay 27, 2021
New s -
Critical Care Evaluation & Management Services: Comparative Billing Report in May Medicare Shared Savings Program: Submit Notice of Intent to Apply Beginning June 1 Submit Medicare GME Affiliation Agreements during COVID-19 PHE by January 1
Com plian ce -
Home Health LUPA Threshold: Bill Correctly
Even t s -
Hospice Quality Reporting Program: Composite Quality Measure Webinar ? June 2
M LN M at t er s® Ar t icles -
Addition of the Shared System CWF to the Business Requirements for the Healthcare Common Procedure Coding System (HCPCS) codes U0002QW and 87635QW Mentioned in Change Request 11765 International Classification of Diseases, 10th Revision (ICD-10) and Other Coding Revisions to National Coverage Determination (NCDs)--July 2021 Quarterly Update to the Medicare Physician Fee Schedule Database (MPFSDB) - July 2021 Update Remittance Advice Remark Code (RARC), Claims Adjustment Reason Code (CARC), Medicare Remit Easy Print (MREP) and PC Print Update
Pu blicat ion s -
Collaborative Patient Care is a Provider Partnership ? Revised Complying with Medicare Signature Requirements ? Revised Medicare Diabetes Prevention & Diabetes Self-Management Training ? Revised Medicare Mental Health ? Revised
View this edition as PDF (PDF)
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PARA Weekly eJournal: June 3, 2021
There were NO new or revised MedLearns released this week. To go to the full Transmittal document simply click on the screen shot or the link.
0
FIND ALL THESE MEDLEARNS IN THE ADVISOR TAB OF THE PDE
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PARA Weekly eJournal: June 3, 2021
There were 2 new or revised Transmittals released this week. To go to the full Transmittal document simply click on the screen shot or the link.
2
FIND ALL THESE TRANSMITTALS IN THE ADVISOR TAB OF THE PDE
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PARA Weekly eJournal: June 3, 2021
The link to this Transmittal R10832OTN
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PARA Weekly eJournal: June 3, 2021
The link to this Transmittal R10831CP
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PARA Weekly eJournal: June 3, 2021
719.308.0883
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