MEDICARE PHYSICIAN PAYMENT UPDATE
The
Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) will continue to pay
physicians at 2012 levels through 2013. Physician payments were
scheduled to be cut 26.5 percent.
2013
is the second consecutive year with no inflation increase in physician
payments. Medical claims reimbursement for some services will be the
same as they were in 2011.
Revisions
were made to the reporting requirements under the Physician Quality
Reporting System (PQRS) for payment adjustments beginning in 2015 for
eligible professionals who report data on quality measures. Under a new
provision, a professional will be deemed to meet data submission
requirements for the Program, if he or she “satisfactorily participates”
in a qualified clinical data registry. Clarification is required by The
Secretary of the Department of Health and Human Services on how
reporting requirements are to be met and to define a “qualified clinical
data registry”.
MULTIPLE SERVICE PAYMENT POLICIES FOR THERAPY SERVICES
CMS
has a number of policies that limit payment when multiple procedures
are furnished on the same day. Under the American Taxpayer Relief Act,
the multiple procedure payment reduction has been increased to 50
percent for therapy services furnished on or after April 1, 2013.
OVER PAYMENTS
The
time frame in which CMS may recoup over payments made for items and
services was lengthened from 3 years to 5. Under this provision,
providers are deemed to be “without fault” for any over payments
“subsequent to the fifth year following the year in which notice was
sent” as to the amount paid.
EXTENSION OF TWO MEDICAL ASSISTANCE PROGRAMS
Two programs specifically for low-income Medicaid beneficiaries have also been extended through 2013. State
Medicaid plans will provide assistance to those with dual eligibility
in the form of premium support for Part B services for qualifying
Medicare beneficiaries that have incomes between 120% and 135% of the
poverty level. The Transitional Medical Assistance Program provides
low-income families with the ability to continue Medicaid coverage on a
temporary basis once they become employed and collect earnings that
otherwise disqualify them from eligibility. There is an increase in the
amount allocated to the program in 2013, with $485 million available for
the period from January 1, 2013, to September 30, 2013, and $300
million available for the period from October 1, 2013, to December 31,
2013.
LOW-VOLUME HOSPITAL ADJUSTMENT
The
Medicare Program provides a percentage increase for each payment to
certain qualifying low- volume hospitals. Due to the substantially
broadened eligibility criteria, many more hospitals qualify for these
additional payments.
MEDICARE-DEPENDENT HOSPITAL PROGRAM
Medicare-Dependent
Hospitals (MDHs) are typically small rural hospitals with a substantial Medicare
patient population that rely significantly on Medicare payments. They will
continue to receive the increased Medicare payments through October 1,
2013. CMS has indicated that it will issue instructions to hospitals
that forfeited or lost this status effective October 1, 2012, on how to
regain MDH status.
PHYSICIAN WORK GEOGRAPHIC ADJUSTMENT
The
Geographic Practice Cost Index (GPCI) floor of “1.0” for the work
component of physician payment rates will continue through 2013.
Medicare adjusts payments to physicians through the GPCI to reflect the
varying cost of delivering physician services in different locations.
These GPCIs are applied to the three calculation components of a
procedure’s relative value unit: work, practice expense, and
malpractice. The “floor” of 1.0 for the work
component of the formula means that physician payments would not be reduced
in a geographic area just because the relative cost of physician work
fell below the national average.
OUTPATIENT THERAPY SERVICES
There
is an annual per-Medicare-beneficiary cap of $1,500 for outpatient
therapy services (physical and speech therapy combined, and separately
to occupational therapy. In 2006, an exceptions process whereby Medicare
beneficiaries can request and be granted an exception to the caps, and
receive an unlimited amount of therapy services to the extent deemed
medically necessary by Medicare was established. The exceptions process,
which effectively suspends the cap has been extended through December
31, 2013.
Additional
protection to beneficiaries affected by this cap has been added to
protect Medicare beneficiaries from liability for items and services
furnished to them if the Medicare beneficiary and the provider did not
know, and could not have been reasonably expected to know, that the item
or service would be non-covered.
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