Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Principles of Healthcare Reimbursement Third Edition Chapter 7 Medicare-Medicaid Prospective Payment Systems for Nonhospitalized Patients: Ambulatory Surgical Center Prospective Payment System © 2011 Objectives • Describe the Ambulatory Surgical Center Prospective Payment System • Identify the components, adjustments, and provisions of the ASC PPS • Recall the payment determination steps for ASC payment © 2011 Ambulatory Surgical Centers • Ambulatory surgical centers (ASCs) – Provide designated surgical services to Medicare beneficiaries – Under Medicare supplementary medical insurance program (Part B) – Facility must be Medicare certified © 2011 Ambulatory Surgical Centers • Medicare-certified criteria – Separate entity – Have own national identifier or supplier number – Maintain own licensure, accreditation, governance, professional supervision, administrative functions, clinical services, record keeping, and financial accounting systems – Sole purpose of delivering services in connection with surgical procedures not requiring inpatient admission – Meet all requirement of applicable sections of SSA © 2011 Ambulatory Surgical Centers • Medicare-certified – Accept assignment: Medicare payment as payment in full • Medicare = 80% total payment • Beneficiary = 20% total payment – Payment designed to reimburse for facility resources (cost) • Professional payment is excluded – Physicians reimbursed under Medicare physician fee schedule © 2011 Legislation • Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1980 – Amended the SSA to create ASC PPS – ASC List of Covered Procedures • ASC List • Implemented in 1982 © 2011 Criteria for ASC Procedures • Procedures or services commonly performed in the inpatient setting, but can be safely performed in an ASC • Limited to procedures requiring a dedicated operating room or suite and generally require post-operative care • Limited to procedures that have an operating room time and local, regional, or general anesthesia duration no greater than 90 minutes and recovery room time no greater than 4 hours • Includes procedures not otherwise excluded from Medicare • Excludes procedures that generally result in extensive blood loss, require major or prolonged invasion of body cavities, that directly involve major blood vessels, or that are generally emergency or lifethreatening in nature • Excludes procedures that are regularly and safely provided in the physician office setting © 2011 Site of Service • With the ASC List Medicare is able to influence site of service – Create a motivation for migration from more expensive inpatient setting to less expensive outpatient surgery setting – Without creating a motivation for shifting from less expensive physician office setting to more expensive outpatient surgery setting © 2011 Site of Service (cont.) • How did they create this motivation? – Quantitative criteria (beginning in 1987) • Adds and deletions – Excluded from list • Procedure performed in the inpatient setting 20% or less of the time • Procedure performed in the physician office setting 50% or more of the time • First major revision in 1987 • Next major revision in 1995 • Final major revision in 2004 – Fully revised PPS 2008 © 2011 Legislative History • BBA 1997 – Proposed APCs for HOPPS – Also proposed APCs in ASC setting • BBRA – 3 year phase in period for APCs in ASC setting • BIPA – Delayed implementation to 1/1/02 or after – Changed phase-in period to 4 years • NO CHANGE OCCURRED – Medicare busy with HOPPS and Y2K © 2011 Legislative History (cont.) • 2003: Office of the Inspector General released – Payments for Procedures in Outpatient Departments and Ambulatory Surgical Centers • Need for greater similarity in payment rates between hospital outpatient areas and ASCs • Disparity in payments cost Medicare $1.1 billion for cases studied – Recommendations • Medicare seek authority to update system • Conduct cost survey • Update ASC List (over 70 procedures that do not meet criteria still on list) © 2011 Legislative History (cont.) • MMA – Required the implementation of a new PPS for ASCs – Implementation between 1/1/06 and 1/1/08 © 2011 Revised ASC PPS Effective 1/1/2008 © 2011 ASC PPS • Utilizes the HCPCS Coding System – Yearly update for code changes – Scope of services expanded for CY 2008 (over 700 codes) • ASC services • Office-based procedures © 2011 ASC PPS • Payment rate is based on APC group relative weight – ASC payment is 65% of the OPPS payment • CY 2008 the conversion factor is $41.401 © 2011 ASC PPS • Separately payable services (via APCs) – – – – – Radiology services Brachytherapy sources Drugs and biologicals Implantable devices with OPPS pass-through status Corneal tissue acquisition • Integral to surgical service • Performed on same day as surgery • Not bundled under OPPS © 2011 ASC PPS • Device intensive procedures – CMS produces a list of device intensive procedures in OPPS • 50% or more of median cost is due to device – Under ASC PPS payment methodology is modified for these procedures – Allows for equal reimbursement for device regardless of setting • Divides payment into 2 portions – Device portion (not multiplied by CF) – Procedure portion (multiplied by CF) © 2011 Adjustment • Adjustment – Wage index adjust labor portion of payment – Based on MSA – 50% of payment is wage index adjusted © 2011 Provision • Multiple and bilateral procedures – Multiple procedures during same surgical session • Highest level Group = 100% payment • All remaining Groups = 50% payment – Bilateral procedures • 150% payment rate for the Group © 2011 ASC PPS • Transition period – Four year transition period for those services that were on the 2007 ASC List • Procedures added to the scope of services for 2008 are not included in the transition (full ASC APC rate in 2008) • Payment indicators are used to identify procedures that are subject/not subject to the transition © 2011 Payment Steps 1. Report service with HCPCS code 2. APC is assigned 3. Multiple/bilateral provision is applied if applicable 4. Wage index adjusted 5. Payment is made to facility © 2011 Principles of Healthcare Reimbursement Third Edition Chapter 7 Resource-Based Relative Value Scale for Physician Payments © 2011 Objectives • Outline the history and development of the Resource-Based Relative Value Scale (RBRVS) for Physician Payments • Define key terms • Describe the structure of the payment system • Calculate a payment under the RBRVS © 2011 Resource-Based Relative Value Scale (RBRVS) • Federal Payment System for Physicians across Continuum of Care • System of Classifying Health Services • Based on: – Cost of Furnishing Physician Services in Different Settings, – Skills and Training Levels Required to Perform the Services, and – Time and Risk Involved © 2011 History of RBRVS • Concept of Relative Value Scale (RVS) Dates from 1940s • RVS Represents Worth of Healthcare Services • Multiple Views of “Worth” – Historical Charges – Amt. Patients Will Pay – Physicians’ Assessments of Worth – Monetized Societal Good – Micro-costing from Time & Motion Studies – Etc. © 2011 History of RBRVS (cont.) • Consolidated Omnibus Reconciliation Act (COBRA) of 1985: HHS Directed to Develop RVS • Purpose – Decrease Medicare Part B Payments – Eliminate Inequities in Payments • • • • • Specialty Type of Procedure Geographic Locality Service Site Carrier Policies © 2011 History of RBRVS (cont.) • 1985 CMS Awarded Grant to Harvard, William Hsaio – RVS Research – 4,000 Services (85% of Medicare Payments) • Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act (OBRA) of 1989 – CMS to Set Up System of Payment Reform – RBRVS Adopted © 2011 History of RBRVS (cont.) • Jan. 1, 1992 RBRVS Effective (Phase-In Through 1996) • Controlled Fee-forService System Based on CMS’s Estimation of Value of Physician Services (Not PPS) • Services – Physician • • • • Medical/Surgical Diagnostic Radiologic Physical & Occupational Therapy – Physician Assistant – Nurse Practitioner – Nurse Midwife © 2011 Structure of Relative Value Units (RVUs) • HCPCS/CPT Codes Assigned Relative Value Units • RVUs Permit Comparison of Resources by Assigning Weights to Personnel Time, Level of Skill, and Technology • National Averages • RVU Elements – Time & Intensity of Work (Physician Work, WORK) – Cost of Practice (Physician Practice Expense, PE) – Risk of Malpractice (MP) © 2011 Structure of RVUs (cont.) • WORK – Covers Physician’s Salary • Time • Intensity – – – – Mental Effort & Judgment Technical Skill Physical Effort Psychological Stress © 2011 Structure of RVUs (cont.) • PE • MP – Overhead Costs of Practice • Office Rent • Wages of Nonphysician Personnel • Supplies & Equipment – Cost of Premiums for Professional Liability (Malpractice) Insurance – Two Rates • Facility (Hospital, etc.) Lower • Nonfacility (Physician Office) Higher © 2011 Payment Structure: GPCIs • Geographic Practice Cost Index (GPCI) – Adjustment for Geographic Differences in Costs – Each Element of RVU Has Unique GPCI • WORK • PE • MP © 2011 Payment Structure: CF • Conversion Factor (CF) – Converts RVU into Medicare Payment – Conversion Factor is Across-the-Board Multiplier (Constant) – CMS Determines Annually and Notifies in Federal Register • Conversion Factor Most Direct Control on Medicare Payments – Raising or Lowering CF Increases or Decreases Medicare Payments to Physicians © 2011 RBRVS Formula • [(WORK RVU) (WORK GPCI) + (PE RVU) (PE GPCI) + (MP RVU) (MP GPCI)] = (SUM) X CF = Medicare Physician Fee Schedule (MPFS) Amount © 2011 Generic Example: RBRVS (99202) WORK PE MP RVU X CF RVU X .88 .79 .05 GPCI 1.00 0.925 0.64 = .88 .73075 .032 1.64275 $37.8975 $62.26 © 2011 Payment Structure • Actual Payment – 80% of National Allowance – Medicare Beneficiaries Responsibility • Part B Deductible • 20% Coinsurance © 2011 Adjustments: Variation to RBRVS Formula – Budget Neutrality (BN) Adjustor – Clinician Type • Participating v. Nonparticipating • Anesthesiologists • Nonphysician Providers – – – – Special Circumstance Underserved Area Incentive for Quality Technology © 2011 Operations: RBRVS & Poor CPT Coding* • 43200 Esophagoscopy – – – – – WORK 1.59 x 1.000 = 1.59 PE 4.13 x 0.925 = 3.82025 MP 0.13 x 0.64 = 0.832 Sum = 5.49345 x CF $37.8975 $208.19 • 43217 with Removal of Tumor, Polyp, or Lesion…. – WORK 2.9, PE 6.95, MP 0.26 (GPCI Stays the Same) – Sum = 9.49515 x CF $37.8975 – $359.84 – Lost $121.65 *Nonfacility, Generic Example © 2011 Future Issues • Adoption of Electronic Health Record • Correction of Overrides of Sustained Growth Rate © 2011 Summary • Payment System Specific to Physician Services across the Continuum of Care • Accurate Coding Necessary for Appropriate Reimbursement © 2011 Principles of Healthcare Reimbursement Third Edition Chapter 7 Medicare-Medicaid Prospective Payment Systems for Nonhospitalized Patients: Ambulance Fee Schedule © 2011 Covered Services • Medicare Part B provides beneficiary coverage for ambulance services – Will provide transport service, only if other means are inadvisable based on the beneficiary’s medical condition – Provided to the nearest facility that is able to provide services for that patient’s condition – Transported • From one hospital to another • To home • To an extended care facility © 2011 History Two types of ambulance service entities 1. Providers: Associated with a medical facility such as a hospital, CAH, SNF, or HHA – Retrospective reasonable cost payment – Previous year’s cost-to-charge ratio (CCR) 2. Suppliers: Not associated with a medical facility – Reasonable charge payment mechanism – Fours ways to report ambulance services © 2011 History (cont.) • Both types used HCPCS Code Set – Providers • A0030–A0999, excluding A0888 (ambulance codes) • And codes to report type of mileage – Suppliers • A0030-A0999, excluding A0888 • Level I codes 93005 and 93041 • Various other Level II codes © 2011 Legislation • BBA of 1997 – Added section 1834(1) to the SSA – Required the creation of a fee schedule to establish prospective payment rates for ambulance services – Devised through negotiated rulemaking (Negotiated Rulemaking Act of 1990) • Negotiated Rulemaking Committee on Medicare Ambulance Services Fee Schedule © 2011 Legislation (cont.) • The committee was instructed to: – Control Medicare expenditures through PPS – Establish service definitions to link payment to the type of service – Consider regional and operational differences – Consider inflation – Construct a phase-in period for implementation – Require providers and supplier to accept Medicare assignment – Reimburse providers and suppliers at the lower of FS or billed charges © 2011 Legislation (cont.) • BBA (cont.) – Established the paramedic intercept service type (discussed under levels of service) • BBRA of 1999 – Modified the definition of rural for the paramedic intercept service type © 2011 Legislation (cont.) • BIPA of 2000 – Excluded CAH from the fee schedule payment methodology when the CAH is the only supplier or provider of ambulance services within a 35 mile drive. • Reasonable cost basis – Increased payment rates for rural ambulance mileage – Modified inflation factor for 7/1/01 to 12/31/01 • Increased 2% – Eliminated blended payment rate for mileage phasein provision for suppliers © 2011 Ambulance FS • Implemented April 1, 2002 • Five year phase-in plan • Reimbursement is based on the level of service provided to the beneficiary – Seven levels of service © 2011 Levels of Service Chart: © 2011 Service Acronym Description Basic Life Support BLS Service level of an Emergency Medical Technician (EMT)-Basic, including the establishment of a peripheral intravenous line. Advanced Life Support, Level 1 ALS1 In emergency cases, an assessment provided by an EMT-Intermediate or Paramedic (ALS crew) to determine patient needs and the furnishing of one or more ALS interventions. An ALS intervention is a procedure beyond the scope of an EMT-Basic. Advanced Life Support, Level 2 ALS2 The administration of at least three different medications or the provision of one or more ALS procedures. Specialty Care Transport SCT For critically injured or ill patient, the level of interhospital service furnished is beyond the scope of a paramedic. Ongoing care must be furnished by one or more health professionals in an appropriate specialty area. Paramedic ALS Intercept PI ALS services furnished by an entity that does not provide the ambulance transport. Fixed Wing Air Ambulance FW Destination is inaccessible by land vehicle or great distances or other obstacles (heavy traffic) and the patient’s condition is not appropriate for BLS or ALS ground transportation. Rotary Wing Air Ambulance RW Helicopter transport. Destination is inaccessible by land vehicle or great distances or other obstacles (heavy traffic) and the patient’s condition is not appropriate for BLS or ALS ground transportation. © 2011 Provisions • Immediate response payment – Emergency response involves responding immediately at the basic life support or advanced life support level 1 of service to a 911 or 911-type call – Immediate response is one in which the ambulance begins as quickly as possible to take the steps necessary to respond to a call • Additional payment is provided for the extra overhead expenses incurred to stay prepared at all times for emergency service © 2011 Provisions (cont.) • Multiple-patient transport – Example: traffic accident – 2 passengers • Each beneficiary is reimbursed at 75% of the base rate for the level of service provided – 3 or more passengers • Each beneficiary is reimbursed at 60% of the base rate for the level of service provided – Single payment is made for the mileage – Modifier GM is reported with level of service HCPCS code © 2011 Provisions (cont.) • Transport of deceased patients – Specific rules • Patient is pronounced dead prior to the ambulance being called, no payment is made to the ambulance provider/supplier • Patient is pronounced dead after the ambulance has been called but prior to its arrival, BLS base rate for group transport or air ambulance base rate payment will be made. Mileage will not be reimbursed. • Patient is pronounced dead during transport, payment rules are followed as if the patient were alive. Modifier QL should be reported with the level of service code. © 2011 Adjustments • Regional variations – Based on point of beneficiary pick-up (zip code) – Geographic adjustment factor is applied • Equal to the practice expense portion of the geographic practice cost index used in the Medicare physician fee schedule – Ground transport • 70% of payment rate is adjusted – Air transport • 50% of payment rate is adjusted – Mileage is not adjusted © 2011 Modifiers • HCPCS Level II modifiers – Origin and destination modifier must be reported for each trip – Additional modifiers are used • Provided under arrangement of a provider of services (QM) • Furnished directly by a provider of services (QN) © 2011 Payment Steps • Six step process – Takes into consideration • • • • • Patient service level Modifiers Zip codes Miles Add-on payments © 2011 Payment Steps (cont.) 1. Identify the level of service code for the transportation provided • 2. Determine the number of patients transported • 3. Does the case meet emergency response criteria? If yes, append modifier and reduce payment 4. Apply the regional variation adjustment • 5. 6. Identify zip code Identify the mileage code and number of miles Add together the level of service payment and mileage payment to determine total reimbursement Determine if the Medicare beneficiary was pronounced dead • If yes, append modifier and adjust payment © 2011 Compliance • “Medicare Payments for Ambulance Transports” report – 25% of the ambulance transport claims did not meet CMS program requirements – deficient claims resulted in $402 million of improper payments © 2011 Compliance • OIG recommendations: – Prepayment edits – Post-payment review guidelines – Education, education, education © 2011 Condition Lists • Numerous requests for medical condition lists to aid in determining level of service – Do not use ICD-9-CM – Broad categories of issues – Do not use a HIPAA approved code set • CMS implemented a Medical Conditions List February 2007 – Condition list – Transportation indicators • Assist with determining the appropriate level of service © 2011