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Posts Tagged ‘Medicare’

Updated Medicare Ambulance Fee Schedule

Thursday, July 29th, 2010

CMS required that all carriers implement increases that were signed into law as a part of the healthcare reform bill by July 6th, 2010. Those increases included a 2% across the board increase for urban ambulance services, 3% across the board increase for rural services, and the 3% across the board plus 22.6% increase on base rates for super rural agencies. In addition to these increases the geographical practice cost index or GPCI was upwardly adjusted which will result in further reimbursement increases for ambulance companies. Please contact us today to find out what your new 2010 reimbursement rates are.

Fractional Mileage - Just Say “No”!

Thursday, July 29th, 2010

Medicare again is proposing to require that ambulance services bill fractional mileage rather than rounding up. EMS faces numerous documentation challenges as it is. This would be one more. We urge you to contact Medicare as they are accepting comments on the matter. Please read the proposed regulation HERE.

To make your comments, go to THIS SITE. Click on “Submit a Comment”. Click the first drop-down menu and select “proposed rules” then enter this code in the “search by code or keyword”: CMS-2010-0209-0001. You will see the proposed rule come up on the search results. Look to the right and click on submit a comment.

Medicare Online Provider Enrollment Now Available

Tuesday, January 27th, 2009

This is exciting news from Cahaba GBA.

Internet-Based Medicare Enrollment Is NOW Available

Internet-Based Medicare Enrollment is now available for Medicare Physicians and Non-Physician Practitioners (All States and the District of Columbia).

It’s Fast, Secure, and Easy!

Now there’s a better way for physicians and non-physician practitioners to enroll or make a change in their Medicare enrollment information.  The Internet-based Provider Enrollment, Chain and Ownership System (PECOS) will allow physicians and non-physician practitioners to enroll, make a change in their Medicare enrollment, view their Medicare enrollment information on file with Medicare, or check on the status of a Medicare enrollment application via the Internet.

The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) will make Internet-based PECOS to all organizational providers and suppliers (except durable medical equipment, prosthetics, orthotics, and supplies (DMEPOS) suppliers) later this year.

Fast
By submitting the initial Medicare enrollment application through Internet-based PECOS, a physician or non-physician practitioner’s enrollment application can be processed as much as 50 percent faster than by paper.  This means that it will take less time to enroll or make a change in an existing enrollment record.  For additional information about the types of changes that must be reported, go to the download section of www.cms.hhs.gov/MedicareProviderSupEnroll.

Secure
Internet-based PECOS meets all required Government security standards in terms of data entry, data transmission, and the electronic storage of Medicare enrollment information.  Only authorized individuals can enter enrollment information into PECOS or view PECOS data from the Internet.  Authorized individuals include physicians and non-physician practitioners.  Their User IDs and passwords protect the access to their enrollment information.  After physicians or non-physician practitioners create User IDs and passwords or change their passwords, they should keep this information secure and not share it with anyone.  By safeguarding their User IDs and passwords, they are taking an important step in protecting their enrollment information.  CMS does not disclose Medicare enrollment information to anyone except when we are authorized or required to do so by law.

Easy
Internet-based PECOS is a scenario-driven application process with front-end editing capabilities and built-in help screens.  The scenario-driven application process will ensure that physicians and non-physician practitioners complete and submit only the information necessary to enroll or make a change in their Medicare enrollment record. 

There are three basic steps to completing an enrollment action using Internet-based PECOS.  Physicians and non-physician practitioners must:

1. Have an NPPES User ID and password to use Internet-based PECOS.
   • For security reasons, physicians and non-physician practitioners should change passwords periodically, at least once a year.  For information on how to change a password, go to the NPPES Application Help page available at https://nppes.cms.hhs.gov/NPPES/Welcome.do and select the “Reset Password Page” under the NPPES Application help page.

2. Go to Internet-based PECOS at https://pecos.cms.hhs.gov and complete, review, and submit the electronic enrollment application via Internet-based PECOS.

3. Print, sign and date the Certification Statement (blue ink recommended) and mail the Certification Statement and all supporting paper documentation to the Medicare contractor. 

Note: A Medicare contractor will not process an Internet enrollment application without the signed and dated Certification Statement and the required supporting documentation.  In addition, the effective date of filing an enrollment application is the date the Medicare contractor receives the signed Certification Statement that is associated with the Internet submission. 

Additional Information

For information about Internet-Based PECOS, including important information that physicians and non-physician practitioners should know before submitting a Medicare enrollment application via Internet-based PECOS, go to www.cms.hhs.gov/MedicareProviderSupEnroll.

Skilled Nursing Facility Consolidated Billing As It Relates to Ambulance Services

Monday, January 26th, 2009

This is an update from Medicare’s Medlearn Matters email update: Link

This Special Edition article describes SNF Consolidated Billing (CB) as it applies to ambulance services for SNF residents.

Clarification:

The SNF CB requirement makes the SNF responsible for including on the Part A bill that it submits to its Medicare intermediary almost all of the services that a resident receives during the course of a Medicare-covered stay, except for a small number of services that are specifically excluded from this provision. These “excluded” services can be separately furnished to the resident and billed under Medicare Part B by a variety of outside sources. These sources can include other providers of service (such as hospitals), which would submit the bill for Part B services to their Medicare intermediary, as well as practitioners and suppliers who would generally submit their bills to a Medicare Part B carrier. (Bills for certain types of items or equipment would be submitted by the supplier to their Durable Medical Equipment Medicare Administrative Contractor (DME MAC).

When the SNF Prospective Payment System (PPS) was introduced in 1998, it changed not only the way SNFs are paid but also the way SNFs must work with suppliers, physicians, and other practitioners. CB assigns the SNF the Medicare billing responsibility for virtually all of the services that the SNF residents receive during the course of a covered Part A stay. Payment for this full range of service is included in the SNF PPS global per diem rate.

The only exceptions are those services that are specifically excluded from this provision, which remain separately billable to Medicare Part B by the entity that actually furnished the service. See MLN Matters Edition SE0431 for a detailed overview of SNF CB, including a section on services excluded from SNF CB. This instruction can be found at http://www.cms.hhs.gov/MLNMattersArticles/downloads/SE0431.pdf on the CMS website.

Ambulance services have not been identified as a type of service that is categorically excluded from the CB provisions. However, certain types of ambulance transportation have been identified as being separately billable in specific situations, i.e. based on the reason the ambulance service is needed. This policy is comparable to the one governing ambulance services furnished in the inpatient hospital setting, which has been subject to a similar comprehensive Medicare billing or “bundling” requirement since 1983. Since the law describes CB in terms of services that are furnished to a “resident” of a SNF, the initial ambulance trip that brings a beneficiary to a SNF is not subject to CB, as the beneficiary has not yet been admitted to the SNF as a resident at that point.

Similarly, an ambulance trip that conveys a beneficiary from the SNF at the end of a stay is not subject to CB when it occurs in connection with one of the events specified in regulations at 42 CFR 411.15(p)(3)(i)-(iv) as ending the beneficiary’s SNF “resident” status. The events are as follows:

  1. A trip for an inpatient admission to a Medicare-participating hospital or critical access hospital (CAH) (See discussion below regarding an ambulance trip made for the purpose of transferring a beneficiary from the discharging SNF to an inpatient admission at another SNF.);
  2. A trip to the beneficiary’s home to receive services from a Medicare-participating home health agency under a plan of care;
  3. A trip to a Medicare-participating hospital or CAH for the specific purpose of receiving emergency services or certain other intensive outpatient services that are not included in the SNF’s comprehensive care plan (see further explanation below); or
  4. A formal discharge (or other departure) from the SNF that is not followed by readmission to that or another SNF by midnight of that same day.

Ambulance Trips to Receive Excluded Outpatient Hospital Services The regulations specify the receipt of certain exceptionally intensive or emergency services furnished during an outpatient visit to a hospital as one circumstance that ends a beneficiary’s status as an SNF resident for CB purposes. Such outpatient hospital services are, themselves, excluded from the CB requirement, on the basis that they are well beyond the typical scope of the SNF care plan. Currently, only those categories of outpatient hospital services that are specifically identified in Program Memorandum (PM) No. A-98-37, November 1998 (reissued as PM No. A-00-01, January 2000) are excluded from CB on this basis. These services are the following:

  1. Cardiac catheterization;
  2. Computerized Axial Tomography Imaging (CT) scans;
  3. Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) services;
  4. Ambulatory surgery involving the use of an operating room (the ambulatory surgical exclusion includes the insertion of percutaneous esophageal gastrostomy (PEG) tubes in a gastrointestinal or endoscopy suite);
  5. Emergency room services;
  6. Radiation therapy;
  7. Angiography; and
  8. Lymphatic and venous procedures.

Since a beneficiary’s departure from the SNF to receive one of these excluded types of outpatient hospital services is considered to end the beneficiary’s status as an SNF resident for CB purposes with respect to those services, any associated ambulance trips are, themselves, excluded from CB as well. Therefore, an ambulance trip from the SNF to the hospital for the receipt of such services should be billed separately under Part B by the outside supplier. Moreover, once the beneficiary’s SNF resident status has ended in this situation, it does not resume until the point at which the beneficiary actually arrives back at the SNF; accordingly, the return ambulance trip from the hospital to the SNF would also be excluded from CB.

Other Ambulance Trips

By contrast, when a beneficiary leaves the SNF to receive offsite services other than the excluded types of outpatient hospital services described above and then returns to the SNF, he or she retains the status of a SNF resident with respect to the services furnished during the absence from the SNF. Accordingly, ambulance services furnished in connection with such an outpatient visit would remain subject to CB, even if the purpose of the trip is to receive a particular type of service (such as a physician service) that is, itself, categorically excluded from the CB requirement.However, effective April 1, 2000, the Balanced Budget Refinement Act of 1999 (BBRA 1999, Section 103) excluded from SNF CB those ambulance services that are necessary to transport an SNF resident offsite to receive Part B dialysis services (Social Security Act, Section 1888(e)(2)(A)(iii)(I)).
Transfers Between Two SNFs

A beneficiary’s departure from an SNF is not considered to be a “final” departure for CB purposes if he or she is readmitted to that or another SNF by midnight of the same day (see 42 CFR 411.15(p)(3)(iv)). Thus, when a beneficiary travels directly from SNF 1 and is admitted to SNF 2 by midnight of the same day, that day is a covered Part A day for the beneficiary, to which CB applies. Accordingly, the ambulance trip that conveys the beneficiary would be bundled back to SNF 1 since, under §411.15(p)(3), the beneficiary would continue to be considered a resident of SNF 1 (for CB purposes) up until the actual point of admission to SNF 2.

However, when an individual leaves an SNF via ambulance and does not return to that or another SNF by midnight, the day is not a covered Part A day and, accordingly, CB would not apply.

Roundtrip to a Physician’s Office

If an SNF’s Part A resident requires transportation to a physician’s office and meets the general medical necessity requirement for transport by ambulance (i.e., using any other means of transport would be medically contraindicated) (see 42 CFR 409.27(c)), then the ambulance roundtrip is the responsibility of the SNF and is included in the PPS rate. The preamble to the July 30, 1999 final rule (64 Federal Register 41674-75) clarifies that the scope of the required service bundle furnished to Part A SNF residents under the PPS specifically encompasses coverage of transportation via ambulance under the conditions described above, rather than more general coverage of other forms of transportation.

Noncoverage of Transportation by Any Means Other Than Ambulance

In contrast to the ambulance coverage described previously, Medicare simply does not provide any coverage at all under Part A or Part B for any non-ambulance forms of transportation, such as ambulette, wheelchair van, or litter van. Further, as noted in the preceding section, in order for the Part A SNF benefit to cover transportation via ambulance, the regulations at 42 CFR 409.27(c) specify that the ambulance transportation must be medically necessary–that is, that the patient’s condition is such that transportation by any other means would be medically contraindicated. This means that in a situation where it is medically feasible to transport an SNF resident by means other than an ambulance–for example, via wheelchair van–the wheelchair van would not be covered (because Medicare does not cover any non-ambulance forms of transportation), and an ambulance also would not be covered (because the use of an ambulance in such a situation would not be medically necessary). As with any noncovered service for which a resident may be financially liable, the SNF must provide appropriate notification to the resident under the regulations at 42 CFR 483.10(b)(6), which require Medicare-participating SNFs to “. . . inform each resident before, or at the time of admission, and periodically during the resident’s stay, of services available in the facility and of charges for those services, including any charges for services not covered under Medicare or by the facility’s per diem rate.”

Cahaba Medicare - Ambulance Correction

Wednesday, January 14th, 2009

Dear Cahaba_News Medicare Part B Ambulance Members, 

Ambulance Corrections

The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) allows providers to take advantage of the telephone reopening line to make simple corrections to processed Medicare claims.

In reviewing several of the ambulance appeals received, it is noted that there are a lot of corrections being sent in as appeals by ambulance providers that can be reviewed on the telephone reopening line. Specifically, allowing ambulance providers to call in only those corrections that require a GW modifier be added to the claim. These are not appeals, but simply corrections to claims that denied because the modifier was not used and the patient was in a Hospice environment.

Effective, Monday, February 9, 2009, if you have a claim that falls into this category and has been denied, you can call the toll-free Clerical Error Reopening lines to get the claim corrected. The Clerical Error Reopening lines are located at 

 

http://www.cahabagba.com/part_b/contact_phone.htm. This will save time and expedite payment avoiding needless paperwork and delays due to timeliness factors for appeals. Additional information on Clerical Error Reopenings is located on our Web site at http://www.cahabagba.com/part_b/claims/clerical_error_reopen.htm.

ABC Billing - DOA

Wednesday, January 14th, 2009

Just a reminder about billing for DOA:

‘‘No Transport’’ Calls and Pronouncement of Death -  If an ambulance supplier responds to an emergency call, but a patient is not transported due to death, three Medicare rules apply.
1. If an individual is pronounced dead prior to the time the ambulance was requested, there is no payment.
2. If the individual is pronounced dead after the ambulance has been requested, but before any services are rendered, a BLS payment will be made and no mileage will be paid.
3. If the individual is pronounced dead after being loaded into the ambulance, the same payment rules apply as if the beneficiary were alive.