MLN Matters. . .Information for Medicare Providers
(Issued by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services)
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MMA - Medicare
Prescription Drug, Improvement and Modernization Act of
2003 Information for Medicare Rural Health Providers,
Suppliers, and Physicians
Provider Types Affected
Medicare rural providers, suppliers, and physicians
Provider Action Needed This
Special Edition summarizes and explains rural health
provisions included in the Medicare Prescription Drug,
Improvement and Modernization Act (MMA) of 2003.
Hospital Inpatient Prospective Payment
System (PPS)
MMA Section 401 - As of April 1, 2004
The urban and rural standardized amounts under the
Hospital Inpatient PPS will be permanently equalized by
establishing a single base payment or standardized amount
for hospitals in all areas of the 50 states, the District
of Columbia, and Puerto Rico. The Centers for Medicare
& Medicaid Services (CMS) has implemented the
following:
- Equalized the standard amounts from April 1, 2003
to March 31, 2004
- Increased the large urban and other area national
adjusted amounts for Puerto Rico retroactive to October
1, 2003
- Equalized the Puerto Rico-specific urban and other
area rates.
Although these changes were not effective in Medicare
systems until April 1, 2004, CMS has calculated the
payment necessary to make up for the six months that
Puerto Rico and other areas did not receive payments
equal to Puerto Rico urban rates.
MMA Section 401(d)(2) - From April 1, 2004
through September 30, 2004 Puerto
Rico-specific other area rates will exceed the Puerto
Rico urban rate so that the requirements of the provision
can be implemented without reprocessing claims.
MMA Section 402 - For discharges on or
after April 1, 2004 The
Disproportionate Share Hospital (DSH) adjustment for
rural hospitals, rural referral centers, Sole Community
Hospitals (SCHs), and urban hospitals with fewer than 100
beds will be increased. The cap on the adjustment will be
12 percent, except for hospitals classified as rural
referral centers. The formulas to establish a
hospital's DSH payment adjustment are based on
the following:
- Hospital's location
- Number of beds
- Status as a rural referral center or SCH.
Under §1886(d)(5)(F) of the Social Security Act
(SSA), Medicare makes additional DSH payments to acute
hospitals that serve a large number of low-income
Medicare and Medicaid patients as part of its Inpatient
PPS.
The new DSH adjustment is not applicable to Pickle
Hospitals, as defined at §1886(d)(5)(F)(i)(II) of
the SSA.
Effective April 1, 2001, as specified in §211 of
the Medicare, Medicaid, and State Children's
Health Insurance Program (SCHIP) Benefits Improvement and
Protection Act of 2000, all inpatient PPS hospitals that
meet the number of beds requirement are eligible to
receive DSH payments when their DSH patient percentage
meets or exceeds 15 percent.
MMA Section 504 - For discharges occurring
on April 1, 2004 through September 30,
2004The current blend of input into
Medicare payments will be changed from 50 percent for
national and 50 percent for Puerto Rico to 62.5 percent
for national and 37.5 percent for Puerto Rico.
On October 1, 2004, the blend will be further adjusted
to 75 percent for national and 25 percent for Puerto
Rico.
For discharges occurring on or after April 1, 2004
through September 30, 2004, the new fixed-loss amount
used to determine the cost outlier threshold is
$30,150.
This fixed-loss amount is part of the equation used to
determine inpatient operating and capital-related costs
in both the operating PPS and the capital PPS. Because
the fixed-loss amount is being changed for discharges
during this period, the resultant new capital PPS rates
are $413.48 for national and $202.96 for Puerto Rico.
These rates were determined by an updated national
Geographic Adjustment Factor/Diagnosis-Related Group
(GAF/DRG) adjustment factor of 1.0025 with an outlier
adjustment of 0.9508 and a Puerto Rico GAF/DRG adjustment
factor of 1.0011 with an outlier of 0.9922.
Hospital Inpatient PPS Wage
Index
MMA Section 403(b) - For discharges occurring on
or after October 1, 2004 The percentage of
hospital inpatient PPS payment adjustment based on the
area hospital wage index will be decreased from 71.1
percent to 62 percent. These payments are adjusted by the
hospital wage index of the area where the hospital is
located or the area in which the hospital is classified.
The decrease in the percentage of Hospital Inpatient PPS
payment adjustment is applicable only if the hospital
would receive higher total payments.
Hospital Market Basket Weight
Updates
MMA Section 404 - By October 1, 2005
The frequency with which CMS revises the category
weights, reevaluates the price priorities for the
category weights, and rebases the hospital market basket
will be determined. The hospital market basket weights
are currently updated once every five years. Annual
Hospital Inpatient PPS standardized amount increases are
determined in part by the projected increase in the
hospital market basket, which is the factor used to
estimate the change in price of goods and services used
to furnish inpatient hospital care.
Critical Access Hospitals
(CAHs)
MMA Section 405(a)
CAHs will be paid under the Standard Method Payment -
Cost-Based Facility Services with Billing of Carrier for
Professional Services, unless they elect to be paid
under the Optional (Elective) Payment Method.
For cost reporting periods beginning on or
after January 1, 2004:
Outpatient CAH services payments have been increased
to the lesser of the following:
- Eighty percent of the 101 percent of reasonable
costs for CAH services, which is up from 100 percent of
reasonable costs for CAH services; or
- One hundred and one percent of the reasonable cost
of the CAH in furnishing CAH services minus the
applicable Part B deductible and coinsurance
amounts.
As of January 1, 2004:
The Optional Payment Method - Cost-Based Facility
Services Plus 115 Percent Fee Schedule Payment for
professional services for outpatient CAH services is
based on the sum of the following:
- The lesser of 80 percent of 101 percent of the
reasonable cost of the CAH in furnishing CAH services
or 101 percent of the outpatient
services less applicable Part B deductible and
coinsurance amounts; and
- One hundred and fifteen percent of the allowable
amount, after applicable deductions, under the Medicare
Physician Fee Schedule for physician professional
services. Payment for non-physician practitioner
professional services is 115 percent of 85 percent of
the allowable amount under the MPFS.
MMA Section 405(a) - For cost reporting
periods beginning on or after January 1,
2004 Reimbursement for services
furnished will be based on 101 percent of the
CAH's reasonable costs, up from 100 percent of
reasonable costs.
MMA Section 405(b) - For services
furnished on or after January 1, 2005
Cost-based reimbursement is extended to on-call emergency
room physician's assistants, nurse
practitioners, and clinical nurse specialists who are
on-call emergency room providers.
MMA Section 405(c) - For services
furnished on or after July 1, 2004
Periodic interim payments will be paid every two weeks to
CAHs that provide inpatient services and meet certain
requirements.
MMA Section 405(d) - For cost reporting
periods beginning on and after July 1,
2004 Physicians or other
practitioners providing professional services in the
hospital are not required to reassign their Part B
benefits to the CAH in order for the CAH to select the
Optional Payment Method. The following applies:
- For CAHs that elected the Optional Payment Method
before November 1, 2003 for a cost reporting period
that began on or after July 1, 2001, the effective date
of this rule is retroactive to July 1, 2001.
- For CAHs that elected the Optional Payment Method
on or after November 1, 2003, the rule will be
effective for cost reporting periods beginning on or
after July 1, 2004.
MMA Section 405(e) - Beginning on January
1, 2004 Prior to January 1, 2004, a
CAH could not operate more than 15 acute care beds or
more than 25 beds if it included up to 10 swing beds.
CAHs may operate up to 25 beds for acute
(hospital-level) inpatient care, subject to the 96-hour
average length of stay for acute care patients. For CAHs
with swing bed agreements, any of its beds may be used to
furnish either inpatient acute care or swing bed
services.
MMA Section 405(f) - The Medicare Rural
Hospital Flexibility Program (FLEX)
This program has been reauthorized to make grants to all
states in the amount of $35 million in each of fiscal
years (FY) 2005 through 2008. The FLEX program makes
grants for specified purposes to states and eligible
small rural hospitals.
MMA Section 405(g) - For cost reporting
periods beginning on or after October 1,
2004
CAHs may establish psychiatric units and rehabilitation
units that are distinct parts (DP) of the hospital. The
total number of beds in each CAH DP may not exceed ten.
These beds will not count against the CAH inpatient bed
limit. The psychiatric and rehabilitation DPs must meet
the applicable requirements for such beds in short-term
general hospitals, and Medicare payments will equal
payments to units of short-term general hospitals for
these services.
MMA Section 405(h) - Until January 1,
2006 States can continue to certify
facilities as necessary providers in order for them to be
designated as CAHs.
Low Volume Hospitals
MMA Section 406 - Effective October 1,
2004 Low volume hospitals can receive an
additional percentage increase, capped at 25 percent,
based on the relationship between the cost-per-case and
the number of discharges for acute inpatient hospitals. A
low volume hospital is a hospital that has fewer than 800
discharges during the fiscal year and is located more
than 25 road miles from another acute care hospital.
Hospice
MMA Section 408 - Effective December 8,
2003 Nurse practitioners can serve as the
attending physician for a patient who elects the hospice
benefit. Nurse practitioners acting as the attending
physician are prohibited from certifying the terminal
diagnosis.
MMA Section 409 - Demonstration
project A demonstration project will
be conducted for five years to test delivery of hospice
care in rural areas, under which Medicare eligible
individuals without a caregiver at home may receive care
in a facility of 20 or fewer beds. This facility will not
have to offer hospice services in the community or comply
with the 20 percent limit on inpatient days.
MMA Section 512 - Effective on or after
January 1, 2005
MMA provides for coverage of certain physician's
services for certain terminally ill patients.
Beneficiaries entitled to these services are those who
have not yet elected the hospice benefit and have not
previously received these services. The covered services
include evaluating the patient's need for pain
and symptom management, including the need for hospice
care, counseling the beneficiary on end-of-life issues
and care options, and advising the beneficiary regarding
advanced care planning. The covered services are those
furnished by a physician who is the medical director or
employee of a hospice program.
Federally Qualified Health Centers
(FQHCs)
MMA Section 410 - For services furnished on or
after January 1, 2005 Professional services
provided by physicians, physician's assistants,
nurse practitioners, and clinical psychologists who are
affiliated with FQHCs are excluded from the Skilled
Nursing Facility (SNF) PPS in the same manner such
services would be excluded if provided by individuals not
affiliated with FQHCs.
MMA Section 431 - Safe
harbor A final rule will be published
that contains standards for a new safe harbor to the
anti-kickback statute. Under this safe harbor,
prohibitions against kickbacks will not apply to
remuneration under a contract, lease, grant, loan, or
other agreement between certain FQHCs and any individual
or entity that provides items, services, donations, or
loans to the FQHC. The arrangement must contribute to the
FQHC's ability to maintain or increase the
availability or quality of services provided to a
medically underserved population. These standards will
determine whether the arrangement:
- Results in savings of federal grant funds or
increased funds to the FQHC;
- Expands or limits a patient's freedom of
choice; and
- Protects a health care professional's
independent judgment regarding the provision of
medically appropriate treatment.
Rural Health Clinics
(RHCs)
MMA Section 410 - For services furnished on or
after January 1, 2005 Professional services
provided by physicians, physician's assistants,
nurse practitioners, and clinical psychologists who are
affiliated with RHCs are excluded from the SNF PPS, in
the same manner as such services would be excluded if
provided by individuals not affiliated with RHCs.
Rural Community Hospitals
(RCHs)
MMA Section 410(A) - Not before October 1, 2004 or
later than January 1, 2005 A five-year
demonstration program will be conducted to test the
advisability and feasibility of establishing RCHs to
provide Medicare covered inpatient hospital services in
rural areas. A RCH is a hospital located in a rural area,
or reclassified as such, with fewer than 51 acute care
beds that is not currently designated or eligible for
designation as a CAH and makes 24-hour emergency care
services available.
DP psychiatric and rehabilitation beds do not count
toward the bed limit. Not more than 15 hospitals in
states with low population densities will be selected to
participate in the demonstration. Medicare payment to the
hospitals will be on the basis of reasonable costs or a
target amount of prior year
reasonable costs plus the increase in the inpatient
hospital update factor.
Hold Harmless Reimbursement
Provisions
MMA Section 411 - Beginning with cost reporting
periods on and after January 1, 2004 Hold
harmless reimbursement provisions for hospital Outpatient
Department (OPD) services performed at small rural
hospitals and SCHs will be extended for two years. Under
the hold harmless reimbursement provisions, small rural
hospitals and SCHs with no more than 100 beds are paid no
less under the Hospital OPD PPS than they would have been
paid under the prior reimbursement system for covered OPD
services provided before January 1, 2004.
Effective January 1, 2006, payments to small rural
hospitals and SCHs may be increased if a study finds that
rural costs of providing outpatient services is greater
than urban costs of providing outpatient services.
Work Geographic
Adjustment
MMA Section 412 - Work geographic index
The work geographic index will be raised to 1.0 in any
physician payment locality where the index is less than
1.0 during 2004, 2005, and 2006. The work geographic
index reflects the geographic variation in average
professional compensation in one area compared to the
national average.
Medicare Incentive Payment Programs for
Physician Scarcity Areas (PSAs) and Health Professional
Shortage Areas (HPSAs)
MMA Section 413 - For services furnished on or
after January 1, 2005 and before January 1,
2008 For services furnished on or after
January 1, 2005 and before January 1, 2008, a new PSA
incentive payment of five percent will be available to
primary care and specialty physicians in areas that have
few physicians available. Counties will be identified
based separately on the ratio of primary care physicians
to Medicare eligible individuals residing in the county
and on the ratio of specialist care physicians to
Medicare eligible individuals residing in the county. To
the extent that it is feasible, a rural census tract of a
metropolitan statistical area, commonly known as the
Goldsmith Modification area, will be counted as a
scarcity area.
Effective January 1, 2005, the HPSA incentive payment
will be paid automatically for services furnished in full
county primary care geographic area HPSAs and mental
health HPSAs rather than having the physicianidentify
that the services are furnished in such areas. Services
provided in areas other than full county HPSAs will still
require the submission of a modifier to receive the bonus
payment.
CMS will develop a user-friendly Web site that
contains HPSA and PSA information, and before the
beginning of the calendar year, a list of the HPSAs for
which the incentive payments will automatically be made
for the year.
Ambulance Services
MMA Section 414 - Effective July 1,
2004 An alternate fee schedule phase-in
formula will be established for certain providers and
suppliers based on a specified blend of the national fee
schedule and a regional fee schedule based on census
division. This provision is designed to ease the
transition to the national fee schedule. If the alternate
phase-in formula for a census division results in higher
payment, all providers and suppliers in that region will
be paid under that formula and their phase-in will last
through 2010. Mileage payment increases are as
follows:
- Through 2008, mileage payments for ground ambulance
trips that are longer than 50 miles will be increased
by one-quarter of the payment per mile otherwise
applicable to the trip.
- Through 2009, the base payment rate for ambulance
trips that originate in rural areas with a population
density in the lowest quartile of all rural county
populations will be increased by 22.6 percent. This
increase is based on the estimated average cost per
trip in the lowest quartile as compared to the average
cost in the highest quartile of all rural county
populations.
- Through 2006, payments will be increased by two
percent for rural ground ambulance services and by one
percent for non-rural ground ambulance services.
MMA Section 415 - Effective January 1,
2005 Rural air ambulance services
will be reimbursed at the air ambulance rate if the
services:
- Are reasonable and necessary based on the
patient's condition at or immediately prior to
transport; and
- Meet equipment and crew requirements.
Rural air ambulance services are deemed medically
necessary when they are requested by:
- A physician or other qualified person who
reasonably determines that land transport would
threaten the patient's survival or health;
or
- Recognized state or regional Emergency Medical
Services personnel.
In most cases, the presumption of medical necessity
does not apply if:
- There is a financial or employment relationship
between the person requesting the air ambulance or
his/her immediate family and the entity furnishing the
service; or
- The entity requesting the service owns the entity
furnishing the service.
Outpatient Hospital Clinical Diagnostic
Laboratory Tests
MMA Section 416 - For cost reporting periods
beginning July 1, 2004 through June 30, 2006
Part B covered outpatient hospital clinical diagnostic
laboratory tests furnished by rural hospitals with fewer
than 50 beds located in rural areas with a population
density in the lowest quartile of all rural county
populations will be reimbursed on a reasonable cost
basis.
Telemedicine
MMA Section 417 - Telemedicine
demonstration This section extends the
telemedicine demonstration four additional years and
authorizes an additional $30 million in funding. This
demonstration uses high-capacity computer systems and
medical informatics to improve primary care and prevent
health complications in Medicare eligible individuals
with diabetes mellitus who live in isolated rural and
inner city areas.
Originating Telehealth
Sites
MMA Section 418 - For Telehealth service beginning
on January 1, 2006 The Health Resources &
Services Administration (HRSA), in consultation with CMS,
will evaluate the feasibility of including SNFs in the
list of permissible originating sites for telehealth
services beginning on January 1, 2006.
Home Health (HH)
Agencies
MMA Section 421 - For Medicare Part A and Part B
episodes and visits beginning on April 1, 2004 and before
April 1, 2005 There will be a payment increase
of five percent to HH agencies for services furnished in
rural areas.
MMA Section 701(a) and 701(b) - HH Payment
Update These sections provide for
holding the HH payment update at the current rate of the
HH market basket percentage increase for the last
calendar quarter of 2003 and the first calendar quarter
of 2004.
Beginning with the last three calendar quarters of
2004 and continuing through calendar years 2005 and 2006,
the HH update will be based on the HH market basket
percentage increase minus 0.8 percent. Beginning in 2005,
the annual HH PPS update will be effective in January of
each year rather than in October.
Unused Resident
Positions
MMA Section 422 - Effective July 1,
2005 Resident positions from hospitals that
have not met their resident full-time equivalent (FTE)
cap for the most recently settled or submitted (subject
to audit) cost reporting period will be
redistributed.
Redistribution of these positions is based on the
difference between the hospital's otherwise
applicable FTE cap or otherwise applicable
resident limit and the number of resident slots
filled in the most recently settled/submitted cost
reporting period or the reference resident
level.
There are some exceptions regarding the expansion of
existing programs or previously approved new residency
programs that may apply to the calculation of the
reference resident level. Unused
residency positions are limited to no more than 25 FTEs.
They will be redistributed based on location, with
priority given in the following order:
- Rural hospitals
- Small urban hospitals
- Hospitals that are the only ones with a particular
residency program in the state. Whether the hospital
will be likely to fill such positions within the first
three cost periods after the determination is made will
be taken into account.
Expanded Responsibilities of Office of
Rural Health Policy
MMA Section 432 - Effective December 8,
2003 The HRSA Office of Health
Policy's responsibilities will be expanded to
include the administration of grants, cooperative
agreements, contracts, and other activities that will
improve health care in rural areas.
Medicare Payment Advisory Commission
(MedPAC) Study
MMA Section 433
The MedPAC will analyze how certain rural sections in the
MMA affect total payments, growth in costs, capital
spending, and other payments.
Frontier Extended Stay Clinics
(FESCs)
MMA Section 434(a) - Demonstration
Project A demonstration project will be
conducted for three years under which FESCs located in
isolated rural areas are treated as Medicare providers.
The clinics must be located at least 75 miles from the
nearest acute care hospital or be inaccessible by public
road. The clinics also must be designed to address the
needs of seriously ill, critically ill, or injured
patients who, because of adverse weather conditions or
for other reasons, need monitoring and observation for a
limited period of time.
Indirect Medical Education (IME)
Adjustment
MMA Section 502
For discharges occurring between April 1, 2004 and
October 1, 2004, the IME add-on percentage will be 5.98
percent; during FY 2005, 5.79 percent; during FY 2006,
5.58 percent; during FY 2007, 5.38 percent; and during FY
2008 and future years, 5.5 percent.
Graduate Medical
Education
MMA Section 711
For cost reporting periods beginning on or after October
1, 2004 through September 30, 2013, the freeze on updates
to the hospital per resident amounts that exceed 140
percent of the geographically adjusted national average
will be reinstated.
MMA Section 712 For cost
reporting periods beginning on or after October 1, 2003,
regardless of the reduction in the initial period of
board eligibility by relevant medical boards, the
geriatric exception to allow up to two years of
additional training in a geriatrics program is considered
part of the initial residency period.
MMA Section 713 For the period
January 1, 2004 through January 5, 2004, hospitals will
be allowed to count residents who are training at
non-hospital sites in osteopathic and allopathic family
programs that have been in existence as of January 1,
2002, regardless of the financial arrangement between the
hospital and the supervisory teaching physician.
Additional Information For
detailed information about the MMA, please visit:
http://www.cms.hhs.gov/medicarereform
For the MMA Update, please visit: http://www.cms.hhs.gov/mmu
Disclaimer
Medlearn Matters articles are prepared as a service to
the public and are not intended to grant rights or impose
obligations. Medlearn Matters articles may contain
references or links to statutes, regulations, or other
policy materials. The information provided is only
intended to be a general summary. It is not intended to
take the place of either the written law or regulations.
We encourage readers to review the specific statutes,
regulations, and other interpretive materials for a full
and accurate statement of their contents.
For additional information, please visit the Medlearn
Matters Web page at http://www.cms.hhs.gov/medlearn/matters.
Related Change Request (CR) #:
N/A
Medlearn Matters Number: SE0450
Effective Date: N/A
Implementation Date: N/A
Posted: 12/13/2004
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